RedCrap already has everyone where they want them; in their back
pocket, filling their wallet more and more everyday. Alongside VA
Research.
So, if this really bothers you, do something about it. Make a company
and start marketing the hell out of Debian. That's most of what
Redhat is -
is there already someone building a gnu finger package??
Hi. I posted an intent to package this a while back. I am in
consultation with the author at present.
Cheers,
Matt
/ Matt Kern Tel: (01223) 366290
| | [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://xanadu.pet.cam.ac.uk/~mwk20/
| O O
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 12:46:27PM -0700, Joey Hess wrote:
Joel Klecker wrote:
What does it use as a datafile? If it doesn't use it already, I
suggest /usr/share/zoneinfo/iso3166.tab.
My data were extracted from the original ISO document, which includes
more information. I know you cann't
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 07:53:07PM +0200, Michael Meskes wrote:
I just checked via dselect to see which packages on my slink/potato machine
are not found in the potato archive. I wonder what happened to them.
Here's my list (after removing the obvious ones like libgtk1.1.*):
manpages-net
I
On Tue, 18 May 1999, David Welton wrote:
So, if this really bothers you, do something about it. Make a company
and start marketing the hell out of Debian. That's most of what
Redhat is - marketing. That's not a bad thing, necessarily -
marketing is what it takes to get your name out in the
Title: RE: evan leibovitch and the LPI certification tests
RedCrap already has everyone where they want them; in their back
pocket, filling their wallet more and more everyday. Alongside VA
Research.
I find it offensive that you attack VA research,
who provides many of the resources
On Tue, 18 May 1999, Brent Fulgham wrote:
RedCrap already has everyone where they want them; in their back
pocket, filling their wallet more and more everyday. Alongside VA
Research.
I find it offensive that you attack VA research,
who provides many of the resources we enjoy
as Debian
On Tue, 18 May 1999, Joey Hess wrote:
Well, we've established that no site in the US will carry the crypto stuff.
So what if I'm in the US and want to get non-US stuff? Since non-us has
disappeared into the distribution, I can't add a line to apt pointing to
non-us. So what am I supposed to
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 10:49:09AM -0400, Phillip R. Jaenke wrote:
That's MY opinion. Not necessarily yours. I can't get a system without
RedHat preinstalled from VA Research last I checked, they never returned
my calls, so as far as I'm concerned, they're about as good a company as
Compaq or
On Tue, 18 May 1999, Oleg Krivosheev wrote:
May 18 16:37:55 reboot /usr/sbin/gpm[109]: Error in protocol
May 18 16:37:55 reboot last message repeated 12 times
I have this too:
May 19 01:57:34 crux /usr/sbin/gpm[652]: No data
visually, both gpm and X mouse work just fine
Well,under X I have
Hi everyone,
some days ago someone had a question about cutting a package into
parts. The answer was yes, and one of the reasons: it can decrease
the downloads which is espetially good if someone has modem...
I was thinking about this, and there's one thing which is not the
best it could be,
Phillip R. Jaenke [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
And what about their 'partners'? I have yet to see one of their contracts.
And I'm just getting this eerie feeling that, well, it's an exclusive
contract. If you offer RedHat, you only offer RedHat as far as Linux go,
at least on preinstalled
Hi people,
device3dfx is a kernel module to allow user-space applications (quake
:}) access to 3Dfx cards without needing to be run as root.
This package consists *only* of a GPL'd kernel module. As such it can
IMHO go into main. It could be argued that you can only use it via the
Glide
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 10:49:09AM -0400, Phillip R. Jaenke wrote:
I find it offensive that you attack VA research,
who provides many of the resources we enjoy
as Debian developers.
That's MY opinion. Not necessarily yours. I can't get a system without
RedHat preinstalled from VA
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 02:51:20AM +0200, Gabor Fleischer wrote:
I was thinking about this, and there's one thing which is not the
best it could be, I think: Let's see libc, and the packages that
are compiled from the same source, for example locales.
[...]
There could be a value in the
On Mon, May 17, 1999 at 12:40:44AM -0700, Jonathan Walther wrote:
Package: ssh
Export-Restricted: United States
Import-Restricted: Russia, France
i haven't had time to read or think about your entire proposal yet, but
my initial reaction to this is that using country names is wrong, it
should
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 10:49:09AM -0400, Phillip R. Jaenke wrote:
That's MY opinion. Not necessarily yours. I can't get a system without
RedHat preinstalled from VA Research last I checked, they never returned
my calls, so as far as I'm concerned, they're about as good a company as
Compaq or
Debian is about freedom, specifically freedom of software. Being seen as
examplary citizens can only help our cause. We have a sterling reputation
for high standards.
I agree with you on using the two letter iso country codes. However, I
don't see a need for the extra fields Use-Restricted
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 04:44:55PM -0500, Oleg Krivosheev wrote:
May 18 16:37:55 reboot /usr/sbin/gpm[109]: Error in protocol
May 18 16:37:55 reboot last message repeated 12 times
visually, both gpm and X mouse work just fine
any ideas/advices ?
This is an artifact of the kernel handing
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 02:51:20AM +0200, Gabor Fleischer was heard to say:
Hi everyone,
[snip]
There could be a value in the control file like: Last-changed-version or
something similar. apt/dselect could decide from this wether it
needs to download this
In foo.debian-devel, you wrote:
I was browsing the debian-devel archives recently and came across an old
thread on distributing binary diffs of packages. Did anything ever come out
of
that? It looked pretty intriguing but even the program mentioned (xdiff)
seems
to have vanished from
-Original Message-
From: Brian Almeida [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Phillip R. Jaenke [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Brent Fulgham [EMAIL PROTECTED]; debian-devel@lists.debian.org
debian-devel@lists.debian.org
Date: Tuesday, May 18, 1999 7:35 PM
Subject: Re: evan leibovitch and the LPI certification tests
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 10:49:09AM -0400, Phillip R. Jaenke wrote:
On Tue, 18 May 1999, Brent Fulgham wrote:
RedCrap already has everyone where they want them; in their back
pocket, filling their wallet more and more everyday. Alongside VA
Research.
I find it offensive that you
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 07:24:40PM -0700, Aaron Van Couwenberghe wrote:
Ever tried mass-installing Debian? It's simply impossible -- complete, new
debian installations take at least two hours of babysitting.
This makes debian a product VA is incapable of marketing.
Of course, there are
Wow... Debian gets *lots* of publicity on linux.com. Very cool!
--
David N. Welton Sors immanis - et inanis - rota tu volubilis,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] status malus - vana salus - semper dissolubilis,
http://www.efn.org/~davidwobumbrata - et velata - michi quoque
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Wed, 19 May 1999 00:27:16 -0500, David Welton wrote:
Wow... Debian gets *lots* of publicity on linux.com. Very cool!
Not that it does any good. Wow, this site runs on Debian. *click*
Cool, a Linux computer. *click* Whoa, I can only get
Justin Maurer wrote:
If you have a compiler packaged, somebody else is working on kernels,
i am not sure when the kernel changes will be merged into the linus kernels.
whispervger/whisper
would you like me to start a list on the ift server? i expect it will be
extremley low traffic until
Michael Meskes wrote:
I just checked via dselect to see which packages on my slink/potato machine
are not found in the potato archive. I wonder what happened to them.
Here's my list (after removing the obvious ones like libgtk1.1.*):
conf
Oh my goodness! A conf user! I thought those all
One other problem, it needs big warnings, anyone with access to the
device can crash the machine no problem...
Its vaguely possible that it could also allow more, however I've never
seen anyone mention such..
Zephaniah E. Hull..
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 09:04:18PM +0100, Steve Haslam wrote:
Hi
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 12:27:16AM -0500, David Welton wrote:
Wow... Debian gets *lots* of publicity on linux.com. Very cool!
Debian seems to be leaping major hurdles at VA.. They've gone from
quietly giving va.debian.org to making big donations to the project to
making active announcements
On Mon, May 17, 1999 at 05:02:30PM -0400, Bob Hilliard wrote:
I have recently adopted wordinspect and am trying to compile it
for potato. The slink version lists the following dependencies:
Depends: dict, libc6 (= 2.0.7u), libglib1.1 (= 1.1.3-2), libgtk1.1
(= 1:1.1.\2-2), xlib6g (=
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 08:35:50PM -0400, Brian Almeida wrote:
a) Debian really has a long way to go for someone to do mass installs of it,
unattended.
True. Do you think any systems vendor uses the normal installation procedure
to install the system software on machines during production? I
Justin Maurer wrote:
Justin, can you find out if those machines are binary compatible.
I've heard that there are two general types flying around (5i and
3i, iirc). I wonder if one new architecture is enough or if we
need both - like for mips.
which two machines? the ones the puffins
apcupsd is a package to monitor and control APC UPS's.
Leon
--
Leon Breedt | Developer, Obsidian Systems
Debian/GNU Linux| Because you want to get there...Today
Debian Developer| [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Make
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 03:52:11AM -0400, Zephaniah E. Hull wrote:
One other problem, it needs big warnings, anyone with access to the
device can crash the machine no problem...
Its vaguely possible that it could also allow more, however I've never
seen anyone mention such..
Someone needs
Leon Breedt wrote:
apcupsd is a package to monitor and control APC UPS's.
May I ask you where I can download its source code? :)
I was looking for it some time ago and wasnt able to find any sources of
relatively new versions of apcupsd.
Anyways, great to have this package in Debian.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Marco d'Itri) writes:
On May 18, Erik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Howabout instead of having eth0, eth1, etc. have like home, work, etc.
the files could then have an extra section, called DEVICE or something, that
You could make a symlink.
Nope, that would start home and
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 06:10:34PM -0500, David Welton wrote:
RedCrap already has everyone where they want them; in their back
pocket, filling their wallet more and more everyday. Alongside VA
Research.
As far as Big Companies go, redhat isn't so bad. Be very thankful
they didn't go the
Gabor Fleischer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi everyone,
some days ago someone had a question about cutting a package into
parts. The answer was yes, and one of the reasons: it can decrease
the downloads which is espetially good if someone has modem...
I was thinking about this, and
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 12:20:35PM +0100, Philip Hands wrote:
Perhaps a better goal (although significantly more difficult) would be
to design a system where we can have multiple symmetric masters, where
you can upload to any of them, and the propagate packages amongst
themselves.
The
On Wed, 19 May 1999, Remco van de Meent wrote:
Leon Breedt wrote:
apcupsd is a package to monitor and control APC UPS's.
May I ask you where I can download its source code? :)
http://www.brisse.dk/site/apcupsd/index.htm#TOP
I was looking for it some time ago and wasnt able to find any
Um, It is very similar to tleds, and it is not really worth it, tleds has
many more better features...
Therfore, I hereby retract my ITP netleds.
Michael Beattie ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
PGP Key available, reply with pgpkey as subject.
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 10:17:11PM -0700, Erik wrote:
Well, actualy i have semi-mass installed machines...I did 30 or so machines,
all i really had to do was put all the packages i wanted to install into
a single dir that i nfs mounted(from the base system). i dpkg -i'd those with
a program i
Antti-Juhani Kaijanaho writes (Re: (LONG) Correct non-US solution):
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 12:20:35PM +0100, Philip Hands wrote:
Perhaps a better goal (although significantly more difficult) would be
to design a system where we can have multiple symmetric masters, where
you can upload to any
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 08:26:21AM -0500, Richard Kaszeta wrote:
Note that CTAN recently has split their archive into main and non-free
trees based upon licenses like we do. :)
Yes, I've noticed it.
What criteria do they use? The DFSG? The OSD? A YAFSG (yet another
free software guideline)?
Package: kterm
Kterm package's mainainer Yoshiaki Yanagihara [EMAIL PROTECTED] is
very very busy in his main work. He can't maintain some packages. kterm
is one of them.
We disccussed this point, and I will take over kterm's maintainer.
I will upload the package in this week end.
-
Wed
Package: canna
canna package's mainainer Yoshiaki Yanagihara [EMAIL PROTECTED] is
very very busy in his main work. He can't maintain some
packages. Canna is one of them.
We disccussed this point, and I will take over kterm's maintainer.
Canna is a japanese input system.
I will upload the
Hello, esteemed members of the Debian enthusiast community!
Over the last year and a half, as I have been involved in the Debian
project, dpkg's shortcomings have been becoming ever more clear to me.
Anybody who has worked any significant amount on dpkg knows that its sources
are
Package: im
IM package's mainainer Yoshiaki Yanagihara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
is very very busy in his main work. He can't maintain some
packages. IM is one of them.
We disccussed this point, and I will take over kterm's maintainer.
IM is Internet Message, Mail and News Message Dispatch Agent
On 19 May 1999, Goswin Brederlow wrote:
Its rather difficult to split package into the right amount of
chunks. Each chunk has some overhead for download and state
information (/var/lib/dpcg gets big). I think the idea of bindiffs
would be far more usefull.
I wouldn't go as far. I'm not
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 11:14:18PM +0900, ISHIKAWA Mutsumi wrote:
Package: canna
canna package's mainainer Yoshiaki Yanagihara [EMAIL PROTECTED] is
very very busy in his main work. He can't maintain some
packages. Canna is one of them.
We disccussed this point, and I will take over
Package: kon2
Package: konfont
KON2 and konfont packages' mainainer Yoshiaki Yanagihara
[EMAIL PROTECTED] is very very busy in his main work.
He can't maintain some packages. KON2 and konfont is one of them.
We disccussed this point, and I will take over kterm's maintainer.
KON2 is Kanji ON
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Marco d'Itri) writes:
On May 18, Nag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
#20734 general autoup.sh
http://www.debian.org/Bugs/db/20/20734.html
#20743 general autoup.sh: wtmp, utmp and btmp
I'm trying to find the source code to the debian install program (Boot 1 and
2) but can't locate it on the FTP. Can anyone point me to it?
___
Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com
Brian Almeida [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Subject: Re: Intent to maintainer change: canna
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Usually, you don't need to announce a maintainer change to the lists if it's
already been agreed to by both the old and new maintainers, just mark
something like '* New
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 05:24:08AM -0700, Aaron Van Couwenberghe wrote:
Why C++? Well, personally, I have been seeing all of these
applications pop recently that are for package management, aside from dpkg.
Examples include dconfig and apt. Other ideas have been floating about, like
Hello, esteemed members of the Debian enthusiast community!
So, whether or not I recieve the approval of this community, I'm
going to be working on a complete rewrite of dpkg. No, it won't even
*resemble* the old dpkg; I guarantee it to become contraversial. I'll let
the masses
Branden Robinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 03:32:20PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm not the only one to be annoyed at the nag messages that are sent out.
Can the script please be disabled. There are better ways to find out bugs
you have open.
Hellow Aaron and fellow Debian enthusiasts. :-)
Aaron, I would like to get involved with your attempt at rewriting
dpkg, especially since it is something I've considered attempting.
-Ossama
--
Ossama Othman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Center for Distributed Object Computing, Washington University, St.
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 07:40:57AM -0700, Tyger Sunshine-Hill wrote:
I'm trying to find the source code to the debian install program (Boot 1 and
2) but can't locate it on the FTP. Can anyone point me to it?
See the package boot-floppies.
--
%%% Antti-Juhani Kaijanaho % [EMAIL PROTECTED] %
Hi Anthony,
On 20 May, Anthony Towns wrote:
One alternative that's probably worth considering is improving libdpkg, so
that Apt and friends can make use of dpkg that way, and provide their own
front ends however they see fit.
I don't think that is a complete solution. Improving libdpkg
Hi, Yeah, you can say I told you so even though...
I thought my email got censured... I guess it just got lost, this deb-devel
list is busy !!
I'm shooting for trinux... it has all the things I like about corporate
teamwork like security type integrity and qa controls.
And none of the other
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 04:45:11PM +0200, Christian Kurz wrote:
And what do you propose should be done with bugs that are so old? Still
let them stay open and look somewhere else? No, that isn't a solution.
The solution is to contact the developer and ask them about the bugs and
try to track
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 08:47:20PM +0200, J.H.M. Dassen wrote:
The requirements have been strenghtened; a proper locale now looks like
LC_CTYPE=en_US.iso-8859-1
so you may want to try LC_CTYPE=de_DE.iso-8859-1 .
Hmm, after installing -6 all works well again without changing the locale
Yep, that's my thought as well. Now, a boxed Debian/book set that gets sold in
the software, not just the book section of stores. THAT would not only increase
sales of the book, but would make Debian a LOT more popular, and get us more
publicity as a distribution. It wouldn't even constitute
* Aaron Van Couwenberghe said:
Notably, I'm going to be writing it in C++. This will add about 270k
to the boot disks' root image, but as the floppy install methods are for the
most part phasing out under the shadow of easier methods, I'm not going to
Are you sure about that? If yes, the
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 10:03:12AM -0500, Ossama Othman wrote:
Hi Anthony,
And I don't particularly think it's much of a gain to say You want
access to dpkg's internals? Just use C++!. C++ is all well and good,
but it's not *that* good.
Hrm. I would have to disagree with you. Using
* Ossama Othman said:
One alternative that's probably worth considering is improving libdpkg, so
that Apt and friends can make use of dpkg that way, and provide their own
front ends however they see fit.
I don't think that is a complete solution. Improving libdpkg would
be good but,
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 10:03:12AM -0500, Ossama Othman wrote:
On 20 May, Anthony Towns wrote:
One alternative that's probably worth considering is improving libdpkg, so
that Apt and friends can make use of dpkg that way, and provide their own
front ends however they see fit.
I don't
Le Wed, May 19, 1999 at 05:24:08AM -0700, Aaron Van Couwenberghe écrivait:
constructive feedback and ideas is encouraged to respond, but negative
responses will be ignored. Whether or not the community approves of this,
I will pursue it, and let the chips fall where they may.
And what about
I've been thinking a bit about the need for mass-installations. Having
done a few of them, it gets to be a tad tedious ...
Currently, the preinst and postinst scripts ask the user questions, and
make changes according to the responses. Instead of that, we need a
general service script that
Hi,
I don't know which (pseudo-)package I should submit to, so I post it
to this list.
It seems telnet98_98.02.16.orig.tar.gz in
non-us.debian.org:/debian-non-US/dists/potato/main/source
differs from that of telnet98_98.02.16-3.dsc.
Altough telnet98_98.02.16-3.dsc says
Hi Marek,
On 19 May, Marek Habersack wrote:
* Ossama Othman said:
I don't think that is a complete solution. Improving libdpkg would
be good but, as Aaron described, that would just be adding/modifying
code to code that is already brittle.
Well, a complete rewrite and redesign in C
Over the last few days quite a few cutting-edge development projects have
been posted. In particular,
Qt2.0 beta at http://master.debian.org/~heiko/qt2/,
Configurator Panel at http://linuxlabs.lci.ufrj.br/~lages/cpanel
Does debian maintain a list of other cutting-edge software developments
which
PLEASEtalk to the guys at Coral! They have been putting out some
ideas in this area.
PS: I'm not (yet) a developer, I'd like to learn more about the 'nuts
and bolts' of the distribution and programming specifics for linux
(I've been playing around with gtk++ and VDK for a while now) before I
* Ossama Othman said:
be good but, as Aaron described, that would just be adding/modifying
code to code that is already brittle.
Well, a complete rewrite and redesign in C would help...
Yep, I agree. Although, I still like Aaron's idea.
Yes, it is nice as a venture, IMHO, but at
On 19 May 1999, Dean Carpenter wrote:
I've been thinking a bit about the need for mass-installations. Having
done a few of them, it gets to be a tad tedious ...
Currently, the preinst and postinst scripts ask the user questions, and
make changes according to the responses. Instead of
* Kenneth Scharf said:
(I've been playing around with gtk++ and VDK for a while now) before I
would even consider it. I currently write stuff for an NT platform
under C++ using the Rational Rose OO modeling tool, so I agree with
your idea of using C++ for this work. GOOD LUCK!
NT (and M$
On Wed, 19 May 1999, Christian Kurz wrote:
Branden Robinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 03:32:20PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm not the only one to be annoyed at the nag messages that are sent
out.
Can the script please be disabled. There are
On Tue, 18 May, 1999, Michael Stone wrote:
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 02:26:09PM -0700, Chris Waters wrote:
Michael Stone [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Because too many people don't use debian kernel images.
If people don't use the tools, then they don't get the benefits of the
tools, which
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 12:35:27PM -0400, Dale Scheetz wrote:
No one needs to take on that job, as the BTS already reports all open bugs
twice a week to every developer.
It does? It sure didn't send that anything like that to me...
--
enJoy -*/\*- http://jagor.srce.hr/~jrodin/
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 09:12:29AM -0700, Dean Carpenter wrote:
Now during installation, the exim preinst and postinst scripts would
source the install-response file, creating the variables with the
responses they need. At this point, it's just as if they've asked the
questions and retrieved
Joost Kooij wrote:
If you're talking about the files in /etc/menu-methods/, those are not
programs, they are merly scripts interpreted by install-menu and
install-fvwmgenmenu.
I think we can agree that the programs/scripts are guilty of causing the
segfaults?
This is a script
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 11:08:02AM -0400, Brian Almeida wrote:
Considering the X bug list, I'm sure branden got a quite large mailing from
'Nag'
about old bugs - yet from what I understand, he can't possibly go through
that list
until some modifications are done to the BTS. 'Nag' also goes
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 05:23:47PM +0200, Sven LUTHER wrote:
Please don't go into the C++ vs C flamewar here, ...
it is as possible to do bad and unmaintainable code in C++ as it is
possible to do good and maintainable code in C or another not OO
language.
what you need is good design,
[You don't need to send me an extra Cc as I read the lists on which I
write. Thanks!]
Dale Scheetz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 19 May 1999, Christian Kurz wrote:
Branden Robinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 03:32:20PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm
Brian Almeida [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 04:45:11PM +0200, Christian Kurz wrote:
And what do you propose should be done with bugs that are so old? Still
let them stay open and look somewhere else? No, that isn't a solution.
The solution is to contact the developer and
Hi,
On Wed, 19 May 1999, Joey Hess wrote:
This is a script
#!/bin/cat
hello, world!
There is no official definition of script and program that I know of.
So, although I can understand your sentiments, I certainly do not agree
with your strictness in the matter. But again, this is IMHO not
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 03:28:16PM -0400, Branden Robinson wrote:
I'd like to correct you on this point.
I can and do periodically go through the massive list of ancient bugs
against X. It's just too much for me to handle. In many cases there is
too little information in the bug report for
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 05:24:08AM -0700, Aaron Van Couwenberghe wrote:
So, whether or not I recieve the approval of this community, I'm
going to be working on a complete rewrite of dpkg. No, it won't even
*resemble* the old dpkg; I guarantee it to become contraversial. I'll let
the
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 09:28:33PM +0200, Christian Kurz wrote:
So where's the problem with getting an reminder about your old open
bugs, which you need to fix?
I don't NEED a reminder about my bugs. There should be an option to TURN THE
BLOODY
THING OFF.
--
Brian Almeida [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On May 19, Craig Brozefsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This would make is easier for programs like ipmasq or leafnode or
whatever to put hooks to start themselves up or shut themselves down
as an itnerface goes up or down. Perhaps we even do soemthing like:
/etc/network/eth0.postup.leafnode
On Tue, May 18, 1999 at 03:45:23PM +0200, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
The problem is the versioning. How to choose the version numbers in the two
sets so that users will automatically get the potato package when they will
choose to replace 'stable' by 'unstable' (or when potato will become
Hi,
I will package the GNOME User's Guide, as I want to include it with
the GNOME update for slink. I will do the english version for now,
maybe later the other languages as well. But someone else is free to
pick them up.
The license is GPL, source is available at
On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 02:36:15PM +0200, Marco d'Itri wrote:
This would make is easier for programs like ipmasq or leafnode or
whatever to put hooks to start themselves up or shut themselves down
as an itnerface goes up or down. Perhaps we even do soemthing like:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Marco d'Itri) writes:
On May 19, Craig Brozefsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This would make is easier for programs like ipmasq or leafnode or
whatever to put hooks to start themselves up or shut themselves down
as an itnerface goes up or down. Perhaps we even do
I am going to orphan two packages - libcdaudio and libcdaudio-dev. The
grip package, which I maintain, does not use libcdaudio any more. Cdgrab
also used to depend on libcdaudio, but it does not any more.
There is only one problem with those packages - the new upstream is
available, and James
Joost Kooij wrote:
Technically, I wholeheartedly agree with you in the above matter. The
problem _at_hand_ is that a lot of people are seeing a segmentation
fault message. The /primary/ causes are the buggy scripts in
/etc/menu-methods and these should be fixed first.
No, the primary
On Sun, 16 May 1999, Massimo Dal Zotto wrote:
Hi,
# /etc/network/eth0
IPADDR=192.168.0.1
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
NETWORK=192.168.0.0
BROADCAST=192.168.0.255
GATEWAY=192.168.0.1
As we're discussing things here... i think it's important that we add the
possbility to attach
If there's noone objecting to the addition of IPv6 stuff to the interface
we could work out a proper way of specifying it on the debian-ipv6 list.
IPv6 is supposed to be the future so either we do it now or later. Might as
well be now.
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