Michael wrote:
> On Tuesday, 25 June 2024 00:47:07 BST Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> The first option in the man page explains what you did:
>>>
>>> https://linux.die.net/man/8/dracut
>>>
>>> -f, --force
>>> overwrite existing initramfs file.
>>>
>>> Did you have an initramfs already in there?
On Tuesday, 25 June 2024 00:47:07 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > The first option in the man page explains what you did:
> >
> > https://linux.die.net/man/8/dracut
> >
> > -f, --force
> > overwrite existing initramfs file.
> >
> > Did you have an initramfs already in there?
>
> I had
Dale wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> On my new rig, I'm trying to set up the PS1 and alias variables. I
> found the bash page on the Gentoo wiki but it seems to detail doing it
> for each user in their home directories. Since I'm the only one using
> this rig, I prefer to set it globally and have the
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 22:52:31 BST Dale wrote:
>> Grant Edwards wrote:
>>> On 2024-06-24, Dale wrote:
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
>> Have you seen this before?
> No, because I've never used dracut.
I just had a
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 22:03:14 BST Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
Have you seen this before?
>>> No, because I've never used dracut.
>> I just had a thought. I have /usr on the root partition now. Do I even
>> need a
On Monday, 24 June 2024 22:52:31 BST Dale wrote:
> Grant Edwards wrote:
> > On 2024-06-24, Dale wrote:
> >> Michael wrote:
> >>> On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
> Have you seen this before?
> >>>
> >>> No, because I've never used dracut.
> >>
> >> I just had a thought. I
On Monday, 24 June 2024 22:03:14 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
> >> Have you seen this before?
> >
> > No, because I've never used dracut.
>
> I just had a thought. I have /usr on the root partition now. Do I even
> need a init thingy?
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2024-06-24, Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
>>>
Have you seen this before?
>>> No, because I've never used dracut.
>> I just had a thought. I have /usr on the root partition now. Do I even
>> need a init thingy?
On 2024-06-24, Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
>> On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
>>
>>> Have you seen this before?
>> No, because I've never used dracut.
>
> I just had a thought. I have /usr on the root partition now. Do I even
> need a init thingy?
Same question as always:
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> Have you seen this before?
> No, because I've never used dracut.
I just had a thought. I have /usr on the root partition now. Do I even
need a init thingy?
>
>
>> (chroot) livecd /usr/src/linux # dracut --kver=$(cat
>>
On Monday, 24 June 2024 20:47:15 BST Dale wrote:
> Have you seen this before?
No, because I've never used dracut.
> (chroot) livecd /usr/src/linux # dracut --kver=$(cat
> include/config/kernel.release)
> dracut[I]: Executing: /usr/bin/dracut --kver=6.9.4-gentoo
> dracut[F]: Can't write to
>
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 17:54:44 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> I also ran into that locale thing again. Using your export command,
>> fixed it, again. I find it odd that the commands to reset the
>> environment does not reset that somehow. Anyway, it works. I have that
>> LC_ALL set on
On Monday, 24 June 2024 17:54:44 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > For an ESP on a disk partition, it would be FAT32 (while FAT12 or FAT16
> > can be used for removable media). VFAT is an extension to FAT allowing
> > long filenames. In any case it's just a symlink:
> >
> > ~ $ ls -la
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 14:25:47 BST Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> You should at least try to launch a X11 session using a console and see
>>> what is printed out on the CLI after you exit (or if it crashes).
>>>
>>> ~ $ exec dbus-launch --exit-with-session startplasma-x11
>>
On Monday, 24 June 2024 15:29:21 BST Dale wrote:
> Dale wrote:
> If a person is trying to copy another install and runs into a failure in
> a package to compile, skip ahead and deal with the locale section first
> then come back. This failure is between syncing the tree and during the
>
On Monday, 24 June 2024 14:25:47 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > You should at least try to launch a X11 session using a console and see
> > what is printed out on the CLI after you exit (or if it crashes).
> >
> > ~ $ exec dbus-launch --exit-with-session startplasma-x11
>
> I tried every
On Monday, 24 June 2024 15:29:21 BST Dale wrote:
> If a person is trying to copy another install and runs into a failure in
> a package to compile, skip ahead and deal with the locale section first
> then come back.
Yes, I've been doing that for some time now, having tripped over something as
Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
>> On Monday, 24 June 2024 06:19:10 BST Dale wrote:
>>> William Kenworthy wrote:
...
> Now to ponder what comes next.
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
Hi Dale, did I see in one of your early emails you created an
xorg.conf for nvidia?
Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 24 June 2024 06:19:10 BST Dale wrote:
>> William Kenworthy wrote:
>>> ...
>>>
Now to ponder what comes next.
Dale
:-) :-)
>>> Hi Dale, did I see in one of your early emails you created an
>>> xorg.conf for nvidia? Have you followed the
On Monday, 24 June 2024 06:19:10 BST Dale wrote:
> William Kenworthy wrote:
> > ...
> >
> >> Now to ponder what comes next.
> >>
> >> Dale
> >>
> >> :-) :-)
> >
> > Hi Dale, did I see in one of your early emails you created an
> > xorg.conf for nvidia? Have you followed the gentoo Xorg
On Monday, 24 June 2024 02:55:33 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > On Sunday, 23 June 2024 23:37:15 BST Dale wrote:
> >> Michael wrote:
> >>> On Sunday, 23 June 2024 13:19:18 BST Dale wrote:
> >> I kinda like /boot on its own partition. If /boot gets corrupted
> >> somehow, I can get the
On 24/06/2024 02:55, Dale wrote:
Now to ponder what comes next.
Stibbons?
Cheers,
Wol
William Kenworthy wrote:
> ...
>> Now to ponder what comes next.
>>
>> Dale
>>
>> :-) :-)
>>
> Hi Dale, did I see in one of your early emails you created an
> xorg.conf for nvidia? Have you followed the gentoo Xorg guide where
> it says to try first without that file? I doubt the knoppix etc
...
Now to ponder what comes next.
Dale
:-) :-)
Hi Dale, did I see in one of your early emails you created an xorg.conf
for nvidia? Have you followed the gentoo Xorg guide where it says to
try first without that file? I doubt the knoppix etc use a conf file
and so must depend on the
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 23 June 2024 23:37:15 BST Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> On Sunday, 23 June 2024 13:19:18 BST Dale wrote:
That's my thinking. The only benefit to reinstalling is correcting the
partition boo boo.
>>> What in particular are you referring to? I thought you
On Sunday, 23 June 2024 23:37:15 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > On Sunday, 23 June 2024 13:19:18 BST Dale wrote:
> >> That's my thinking. The only benefit to reinstalling is correcting the
> >> partition boo boo.
> >
> > What in particular are you referring to? I thought you created an
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 23 June 2024 13:19:18 BST Dale wrote:
>>
>> That's my thinking. The only benefit to reinstalling is correcting the
>> partition boo boo.
> What in particular are you referring to? I thought you created an ESP, / and
> /home partitions, if I recall.
>
I was thinking
On Sunday, 23 June 2024 13:19:18 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > On Sunday, 23 June 2024 08:53:01 BST Dale wrote:
> >> Top posting for consistency.
> >>
> >> I booted the Gentoo GUI media. I opened a window just in case it
> >> rebooted or something while I took a little nap. The
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 23 June 2024 08:53:01 BST Dale wrote:
>> Top posting for consistency.
>>
>> I booted the Gentoo GUI media. I opened a window just in case it
>> rebooted or something while I took a little nap. The resolution is
>> 1080P which is what I expected the monitor to run at.
On Sunday, 23 June 2024 08:53:01 BST Dale wrote:
> Top posting for consistency.
>
> I booted the Gentoo GUI media. I opened a window just in case it
> rebooted or something while I took a little nap. The resolution is
> 1080P which is what I expected the monitor to run at. When I got back
> up
On Sunday, 23 June 2024 02:21:11 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > On Saturday, 22 June 2024 19:13:42 BST Dale wrote:
> >> Dale wrote:
> >>> Michael wrote:
> >> root@Gentoo-1 ~ # xrandr --verbose
> >> Can't open display
> >> root@Gentoo-1 ~ #
> >>
> >>
> >> That's after I started
Top posting for consistency.
I booted the Gentoo GUI media. I opened a window just in case it
rebooted or something while I took a little nap. The resolution is
1080P which is what I expected the monitor to run at. When I got back
up a few minutes ago, the same window was there. It ran for
On 22/06/2024 21:04, Michael wrote:
This is the other info except nothing xorg there, just wayland. See
below for more on that.
root@Gentoo-1 ~ # cat/home/dale/.local/share/sddm/wayland-session.log
I thought you said you were having a problem starting a X session, not
starting a Wayland
Hi Mark,
I think you have a good point. I think I missed something. Gentoo can
be complicated to get going the first time with all the config options.
Once it is going tho, it goes. I feel I missed either a config option
in the guide or maybe some package is missing that isn't pulled in as a
Michael wrote:
> On Saturday, 22 June 2024 19:13:42 BST Dale wrote:
>> Dale wrote:
>>> Michael wrote:
>
>> root@Gentoo-1 ~ # xrandr --verbose
>> Can't open display
>> root@Gentoo-1 ~ #
>>
>>
>> That's after I started display-manager but this time, it did nothing.
>> The screen stayed on a
Dale,
Sorry for top posting but I'm travelling and responding on my phone.
I don't think this is you hardware and probably not KDE. It's possibly
some Gentoo-ish issue.
To test and get a KDE config I would boot a Kubuntu flash drive and
choose the 'Try it's option which installs
On Saturday, 22 June 2024 19:13:42 BST Dale wrote:
> Dale wrote:
> > Michael wrote:
> root@Gentoo-1 ~ # xrandr --verbose
> Can't open display
> root@Gentoo-1 ~ #
>
>
> That's after I started display-manager but this time, it did nothing.
> The screen stayed on a console. I did move the cable
Howdy again.
Put in other card. It's a NVS 510. Anyway, output of some common log
files.
root@Gentoo-1 ~ # tail -f /var/log/messages
Jun 22 13:47:29 Gentoo-1 kernel: elogind-daemon[1756]: New session 5 of
user root.
Jun 22 13:47:58 Gentoo-1 sddm-helper[2518]:
pam_unix(sddm-greeter:session):
Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
>> On Friday, 21 June 2024 20:02:22 BST Dale wrote:
>>> Howdy,
>>>
>>> On my new rig, I've got everything installed. I mostly been on a
>>> console which has worked without issue. Now I've started using the GUI,
>>> KDE, and I'm having issues. I wanted to run a
Michael wrote:
> On Friday, 21 June 2024 20:02:22 BST Dale wrote:
>> Howdy,
>>
>> On my new rig, I've got everything installed. I mostly been on a
>> console which has worked without issue. Now I've started using the GUI,
>> KDE, and I'm having issues. I wanted to run a command to generate a
>>
kde hasn't been accessible enough for screen reader users like me to
install it and use it. That out of the way, could that be kde locking
your screen for you using a 1 minute time limit? If so, maybe that can be
adjusted. The gsettings app likely isn't on your machine so it won't help
for me
On Friday, 21 June 2024 20:02:22 BST Dale wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> On my new rig, I've got everything installed. I mostly been on a
> console which has worked without issue. Now I've started using the GUI,
> KDE, and I'm having issues. I wanted to run a command to generate a
> xorg.conf file and it
Howdy,
On my new rig, I've got everything installed. I mostly been on a
console which has worked without issue. Now I've started using the GUI,
KDE, and I'm having issues. I wanted to run a command to generate a
xorg.conf file and it generate all the needed info regarding hardware
and such
On 18/06/2024 12:00, Michael wrote:
On Monday, 17 June 2024 16:43:04 BST Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
So Skype for Linux isn't updated anymore other than its Snap version. So
I tried to install that by following the instructions here:
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Snap
As well as here for
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 20:06:17 BST Eli Schwartz wrote:
> On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On interrupting one such hang, I found that 32 install jobs had been
> > waiting to run; is this limit hard coded? I also saw "too many jobs" or
> > something, and "could not read job
Howdy,
On my new rig, I'm trying to set up the PS1 and alias variables. I
found the bash page on the Gentoo wiki but it seems to detail doing it
for each user in their home directories. Since I'm the only one using
this rig, I prefer to set it globally and have the commands behave the
same way
On 6/20/24 12:07 PM, Jack wrote:
> Again, I don't know if it matters in this case, but my understanding is
> that MAKEOPTS only affects jobs using make. I don't know if there are
> equivalent controls for ninja or other build systems. Might that be
> relevant here? If you run top, limit to
On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm finding
> the system stalling because it can't handle all its install jobs. I have this
> set:
>
> $ grep '\-j' /etc/portage/make.conf
> EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 16:29:11 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:40:12 BST Michael wrote:
> > On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
> > > On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
> >
On 20/06/2024 16:29, Peter Humphrey wrote:
Anyway, it still rankles that I can't use more than half the machine's power
because of limits in portage. This can't be the only 64GiB machine in gentoo-
land, surely.
Well, I think my machine has 4x32GiB slots, and two are full, so that
makes 64GiB
On 6/20/24 11:29 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:40:12 BST Michael wrote:
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
finding the system stalling
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:40:12 BST Michael wrote:
> On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
> > On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
> > > finding the system stalling because it can't handle all its
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
> On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Hello list,
> >
> > While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
> > finding the system stalling because it can't handle all its install jobs.
> > I have this set:
> >
> > $
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
> On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Hello list,
> >
> > While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
> > finding the system stalling because it can't handle all its install jobs.
> > I have this set:
> >
> > $
On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
Hello list,
While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm finding
the system stalling because it can't handle all its install jobs. I have this
set:
$ grep '\-j' /etc/portage/make.conf
EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs
Hello list,
While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm finding
the system stalling because it can't handle all its install jobs. I have this
set:
$ grep '\-j' /etc/portage/make.conf
EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs --load-average=30 [...]"
MAKEOPTS="-j16 -l16"
The CPU has
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 08:01:54 BST jdm wrote:
> I decided to uninstall, then do a sync and then install again but now
> getting lots of soft blocks. Think I'll wait until it's not in testing.
I had just started building a new KDE system on my Ryzen M9 box, starting with
no USE flags set,
Thanks,
I decided to uninstall, then do a sync and then install again but now
getting lots of soft blocks. Think I'll wait until it's not in testing.
John
On Wed, 19 Jun 2024 17:47:49 -0500
Dale wrote:
> jdm wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've installed KDE Plasma 6 (plasma-meta) and all packages
jdm wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've installed KDE Plasma 6 (plasma-meta) and all packages have built
> with no problem but whenever I start in wayland session it crashes out
> after a couple of seconds of logging in. X sessions works with no
> problems.
>
> So wondering if this is problem with just my PC
With nvidia driver, you have to use nvidia-smi utility to get that
information. While the driver takes over the hardware, no other type of
software can access same sensors. So when using nvidia-drivers, no
ssensors command.
On 6/19/2024 10:30 PM, Dale wrote:
Howdy,
I got the new Nvidia
Howdy,
I got the new Nvidia Quadro P1000 video card in the other day. I got it
installed. I was using the nouveau drivers in the kernel. They weren't
up to the task. The display was slow and the mouse pointer was also
slow to respond and jerky like. So, I downloaded and installed the
Nvidia
On Wednesday, 19 June 2024 08:58:52 BST jdm wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've installed KDE Plasma 6 (plasma-meta) and all packages have built
> with no problem but whenever I start in wayland session it crashes out
> after a couple of seconds of logging in. X sessions works with no
> problems.
>
> So
Hello,
I've installed KDE Plasma 6 (plasma-meta) and all packages have built
with no problem but whenever I start in wayland session it crashes out
after a couple of seconds of logging in. X sessions works with no
problems.
So wondering if this is problem with just my PC or a more general issue
On Monday, 17 June 2024 16:43:04 BST Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> So Skype for Linux isn't updated anymore other than its Snap version. So
> I tried to install that by following the instructions here:
>
>https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Snap
>
> As well as here for AppArmor:
>
>
>
On Monday, 17 June 2024 13:39:35 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> On 17/06/2024 12:17, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> > Sadly, the FBR never made it into commercial deployment.
>
> Was that the one with the heavy water moderator? So a thermal runaway
> was impossible because you'd have no moderator left?
No,
So Skype for Linux isn't updated anymore other than its Snap version. So
I tried to install that by following the instructions here:
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Snap
As well as here for AppArmor:
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Security_Handbook/Linux_Security_Modules/AppArmor
After I did
Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> Hello, Wol.
>
> On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 13:39:35 +0100, Wols Lists wrote:
>> On 17/06/2024 12:17, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
>>> Sadly, the FBR never made it into commercial deployment.
>> Was that the one with the heavy water moderator? So a thermal runaway
>> was impossible
Hello, Wol.
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 13:39:35 +0100, Wols Lists wrote:
> On 17/06/2024 12:17, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> > Sadly, the FBR never made it into commercial deployment.
> Was that the one with the heavy water moderator? So a thermal runaway
> was impossible because you'd have no
On 17/06/2024 12:17, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
Sadly, the FBR never made it into commercial deployment.
Was that the one with the heavy water moderator? So a thermal runaway
was impossible because you'd have no moderator left?
Cheers,
Wol
Hello, Peter.
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 23:52:15 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday, 16 June 2024 20:39:52 BST Wol wrote:
> > ... Back in the ancient days, you had a switch panel you toggled to put in
> > the boot code.
> I remember that. It was 1974. 24 key switches and lots of buttons.
Dale wrote:
>
> I have to say, mobos and CPUs have come a long ways since my last build
> about 10 or 11 years ago. When the ASUS first booted and I went into
> the BIOS thing, is it still called BIOS, it was very different. I think
> my current rig allows you to use the mouse. It's slow tho.
On 15/06/2024 21:10, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
Why didn't you keep a copy of the old file?
Because that's one of the itsy-bitsy routine things that ought to be
automatic, not something that each user should have to think out for
himself.
Dunno which update tool it is, but istr there is a tool
On Sonntag, 16. Juni 2024, 12:59:54 CEST Michael wrote:
> I'm not the right person to comment reliably on this, because I don't use
> systemd and do not use LVM, but until someone else chimes in I'll give it a
> go ... :-)
>
I found the solution for my specific setup (lvm+luks+secureboot:
On 6/16/24 7:22 PM, Wols Lists wrote:
> On 16/06/2024 23:39, Nuno Silva wrote:
>>> And of course, all the rules get bent by the various
>>> manufacturers. Bear in mind that basic EFI predates vFAT so even in
>>> UEFI vFAT isn't actually mandatory. Apple don't use it, iirc. There's
>>> nothing
Wols Lists wrote:
> On 16/06/2024 09:40, Michael wrote:
>> Now to get temp sensors and stuff to work. I want to keep a eye on
>> temps for a bit. I think the boot media was reporting the wrong
>> info.
>> Even the ambient temp was to high for this cool room. It showed
>>
On 16/06/2024 09:40, Michael wrote:
Now to get temp sensors and stuff to work. I want to keep a eye on
temps for a bit. I think the boot media was reporting the wrong info.
Even the ambient temp was to high for this cool room. It showed like
100F or something when my A/C is set to 68F or so.
On 16/06/2024 23:39, Nuno Silva wrote:
And of course, all the rules get bent by the various
manufacturers. Bear in mind that basic EFI predates vFAT so even in
UEFI vFAT isn't actually mandatory. Apple don't use it, iirc. There's
nothing stopping GNU's OpenBIOS project or whatever it is using
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 20:39:52 BST Wol wrote:
> ... Back in the ancient days, you had a switch panel you toggled to put in
> the boot code.
I remember that. It was 1974. 24 key switches and lots of buttons. You set an
address on the key switches and hit SET, then ditto its contents and STORE.
On 2024-06-16, Wol wrote:
> On 15/06/2024 20:35, Dale wrote:
>> I'm not opposed to efi. I remember when the old Grub reached its
>> end of life. Grub2 is different but it works. I don't use the eye
>> candy part so that makes it even easier. The biggest thing, I copy
>> my kernels and such
On 15/06/2024 20:35, Dale wrote:
I'm not opposed to efi. I remember when the old Grub reached its end of
life. Grub2 is different but it works. I don't use the eye candy part
so that makes it even easier. The biggest thing, I copy my kernels and
such over manually and I keep a couple older
Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 12:55 AM Dale wrote:
>> Besides, for the wattage
>> the CPU uses, the cooler I have is waay overkill. I think my cooler
>> is rated well above 200 watts. The CPU is around 100 watts, 105 I think
>> or maybe 95.
> So, I am just picking someplace
Mark Knecht wrote:
>
> Dale - sorry to bother you.
>
> Mark
No bother at all. Could learn something. FYI. I read most every post
on this list. Unless it is something I know absolutely nothing about or
don't use at all, I read the posts. I just might learn something.
I might add, stress-ng
Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday, 16 June 2024 14:35:34 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> I mentioned I found the correct drivers for the CPU and other temps
>> sensors but needed to reboot.
> What sensors are you using now? I just rely on what gkrellm finds; where it
> shows more than one CPU or GPU temp I
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 12:55 AM Dale wrote:
>
> Besides, for the wattage
> the CPU uses, the cooler I have is waay overkill. I think my cooler
> is rated well above 200 watts. The CPU is around 100 watts, 105 I think
> or maybe 95.
So, I am just picking someplace a little random to reply
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 5:59 AM Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
>
> Am Sat, Jun 15, 2024 at 04:07:28PM -0700 schrieb Mark Knecht:
>
> >Now, the fun part. I wrote you a little Python program which on
> > my system is called Dales_Loop.py. This program has 3
> > parameters - a value to count to, the
On 2024-06-14, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> Hello, Netfab.
>
> On Fri, Jun 14, 2024 at 18:22:11 +0200, netfab wrote:
>> Le 14/06/24 à 17:53, Alan Mackenzie a tapoté :
>> > Right now, I have a problem. Is there any convenient way I can get
>> > the older standard file contents back again, so as to be
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 14:35:34 BST Dale wrote:
> I mentioned I found the correct drivers for the CPU and other temps
> sensors but needed to reboot.
What sensors are you using now? I just rely on what gkrellm finds; where it
shows more than one CPU or GPU temp I choose the highest one.
--
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 16 June 2024 09:40:57 BST you wrote:
>> On Sunday, 16 June 2024 05:55:45 BST Dale wrote:
>>> William Kenworthy wrote:
On 16/6/24 07:07, Mark Knecht wrote:
>
>
>> I still don't understand the efi thing. I'm booted up tho. I'm
> happy.
>
>>
Am Sat, Jun 15, 2024 at 04:07:28PM -0700 schrieb Mark Knecht:
>Now, the fun part. I wrote you a little Python program which on
> my system is called Dales_Loop.py. This program has 3
> parameters - a value to count to, the number of cores to be used,
> and a timeout value to stop the program.
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 12:39:40 BST efeizbu...@disroot.org wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I've been trying to update my clang but I keep getting linking errors.
> I'm on the default/linux/amd64/23.0/split-usr/musl profile. My system
> has been acting kind of weird ever since the profile updates 17 ->
Hi everyone,
I've been trying to update my clang but I keep getting linking errors.
I'm on the default/linux/amd64/23.0/split-usr/musl profile. My system
has been acting kind of weird ever since the profile updates 17 -> 23.
Can anyone point me in the right direction here?
emerge --info
I'm not the right person to comment reliably on this, because I don't use
systemd and do not use LVM, but until someone else chimes in I'll give it a go
... :-)
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 09:04:26 BST Alexander Puchmayr wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I just tried to prepare my new laptop for
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 09:40:57 BST you wrote:
> On Sunday, 16 June 2024 05:55:45 BST Dale wrote:
> > William Kenworthy wrote:
> > > On 16/6/24 07:07, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> > I still don't understand the efi thing. I'm booted up tho. I'm
> > >>
> > >> happy.
> > >>
> > >>
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 05:55:45 BST Dale wrote:
> William Kenworthy wrote:
> > On 16/6/24 07:07, Mark Knecht wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> > I still don't understand the efi thing. I'm booted up tho. I'm
> >>
> >> happy.
> >>
> >> > Now to get temp sensors and stuff to work. I want to keep a eye
Hi there,
I just tried to prepare my new laptop for UFEI+secureboot by creating a single
unified kernel image including kernel,initrd,microcode,etc.
NB: The partition layout has a vfat/Efi partition and a luks encrypted lvm
container holding SYS(Root), Data(home) and swap.
I added uki and
William Kenworthy wrote:
>
> On 16/6/24 07:07, Mark Knecht wrote:
>>
>> > I still don't understand the efi thing. I'm booted up tho. I'm
>> happy.
>> > Now to get temp sensors and stuff to work. I want to keep a eye on
>> > temps for a bit. I think the boot media was reporting the wrong info.
On 16/6/24 07:07, Mark Knecht wrote:
> I still don't understand the efi thing. I'm booted up tho. I'm happy.
> Now to get temp sensors and stuff to work. I want to keep a eye on
> temps for a bit. I think the boot media was reporting the wrong info.
> Even the ambient temp was to high for
> I still don't understand the efi thing. I'm booted up tho. I'm happy.
> Now to get temp sensors and stuff to work. I want to keep a eye on
> temps for a bit. I think the boot media was reporting the wrong info.
> Even the ambient temp was to high for this cool room. It showed like
> 100F
On Saturday, 15 June 2024 23:00:07 BST Jack wrote:
> A bit of searching found the wiki page for dispatch-conf, which
> includes:
>
> Before running dispatch-conf for the first time, the settings in
> /etc/dispatch-conf.conf should be edited, and the archive directory
> specified in
On 2024.06.15 02:38, Vitaliy Perekhovy wrote:
On Fri, Jun 14, 2024 at 04:54:09PM -0400, Jack wrote:
> I don't have any such directory. What package does it belong to,
or is
> it a config setting for portage or another package?
Yes, it is a configuration of portage itself. There is an env
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