Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
Hi,
# date
Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
# emerge openoffice
{ in other terminal }
# date
Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
and portage continues to compile openoffice, it didn't finished yet.
Is it so slow or there are something wrong? My machine is a P4 (with
Hype
Leandro Melo de Sales ha scritto:
Thanks list for all the explanation! :)
Me too. Seems wonderful indeed...I'd never had even *thought* about such
a program!
m.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 15:19, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 6 Dec 2006 15:58:05 +0100, Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
> > > It's never painful if it succeeds, my emerge failed after 16+ hours;
> > > trying again with different CFLAGS now :(
> >
> > You are aware of the the CFLAGS filtering that
Dale wrote:
Let's say in this situation the OP is in now. He can open a screen
session, "screen -S OOo". Then start the emerge of open office like
normal. If he wants to or needs to he can do a ctrl a then hit d and
detach the session. The emerge process knows no difference and keeps
the emerg
Good explanation Alan, thanks! :)
2006/12/6, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 00:03, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Can you please tell me the propose of screen?
>
> Thank you,
>
> Leandro
screen does many functions, but the most useful is probably being able
to
Good! I did it! :) Thanks!
2006/12/5, Hemmann, Volker Armin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hi,
if you don't use openoffice a lot, it is not worth to compile it. Just use the
binary package. It will take some seconds more to start, but once it runs,
there is hardly any difference.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.or
On Wed, 6 Dec 2006 15:58:05 +0100, Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
> > It's never painful if it succeeds, my emerge failed after 16+ hours;
> > trying again with different CFLAGS now :(
>
> You are aware of the the CFLAGS filtering that is performed by the
> openoffice ebuilds, right?
Yes, but there
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 15:47, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 6 Dec 2006 21:37:58 +0800, Chuanwen Wu wrote:
> > Yes,it's OK!I ever compiled openoffice with 12 hours.It was painful!
>
> It's never painful if it succeeds, my emerge failed after 16+ hours;
> trying again with different CFLAGS no
On Wed, 6 Dec 2006 21:37:58 +0800, Chuanwen Wu wrote:
> Yes,it's OK!I ever compiled openoffice with 12 hours.It was painful!
It's never painful if it succeeds, my emerge failed after 16+ hours;
trying again with different CFLAGS now :(
--
Neil Bothwick
Friends may come and go, but enemies acc
Dale wrote:
> Mick wrote:
>>
>> I found it! Search gmane, or google, for "screen buffer in gnome terminal".
>>
>>
>
> I got it to work I think. I added this to /etc/screenrc :
>
>> termcapinfo xterm|xterms|xs|rxvt ti@:te@
>
> You have to hold down the shift key and hit page up or page down tho
Yes,it's OK!I ever compiled openoffice with 12 hours.It was painful!So
now i just
emerge openoffice-bin,which is very good in my machine.
2006/12/6, Leandro Melo de Sales <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hi,
# date
Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
# emerge openoffice
{ in other terminal }
# date
Tu
Mick wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:37, Dale wrote:
>
>> Mick wrote:
>>
>>> On Tuesday 05 December 2006 22:30, Dale wrote:
>>>
It takes a bit to get used to it and figure out the commands but it is
neat just to do what I have listed here. I still can not figure ou
On 06 December 2006 13:07, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 6 Dec 2006 12:05:16 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > > I've not use nohup for a few years, not since I discovered screen,
> > > but ISTR you need to run in in the background.
> >
> > nohup was designed to do things like run a process overnigh
On 06 December 2006 12:05, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> But nohup doesn't give you a way to reconnect the backgrounded process
> or even to see it's output. You kinda just leave it to run till it
> doesn't show up in ps anymore
Not exactly. For seeing its output, there always is "tail -f nohup.out". Yo
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 13:52, Dale wrote:
> I use KDE does that matter? Or will it work the same on any type of
> terminal, Konsole, console or xterm?
KDE doesn't matter. It works on any term, and definitely on the three
you mention.
alan
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
061206 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> What have KDE desktops got to do with virtual terminals?
On the IRIX machine accessed via Kermit from my XT
I used Screen screens to run Mutt & Lynx simultaneously
in the same way I now run them on different KDE desktops.
As I said, the real value of Screen is when y
Mick wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:37, Dale wrote:
>
>> Mick wrote:
>>
>>> On Tuesday 05 December 2006 22:30, Dale wrote:
>>>
It takes a bit to get used to it and figure out the commands but it is
neat just to do what I have listed here. I still can not figure ou
On Wed, 6 Dec 2006 12:05:16 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > I've not use nohup for a few years, not since I discovered screen,
> > but ISTR you need to run in in the background.
>
> nohup was designed to do things like run a process overnight and still
> allow the user to logout from the shell
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 14:13:01 +1300, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
An alternative is 'nohup' - if you know that you are gonna run a long
task and wish to be able to shutdown your terminal window. e.g:
$ nohup emerge kdelibs
$ exit
Shouldn't that be "nohup emerge kdelibs &"?
I've
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 11:28, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 14:13:01 +1300, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
> > An alternative is 'nohup' - if you know that you are gonna run a
> > long task and wish to be able to shutdown your terminal window.
> > e.g:
> >
> > $ nohup emerge kdelibs
> > $
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 04:14, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 December 2006 17:40, "Hemmann, Volker Armin"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user]
>
> Installation of openoffice in 4 hours or more?! :s':
> > Hi,
> >
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:37, Dale wrote:
> Mick wrote:
> > On Tuesday 05 December 2006 22:30, Dale wrote:
> >> It takes a bit to get used to it and figure out the commands but it is
> >> neat just to do what I have listed here. I still can not figure out how
> >> to make it scroll back thoug
On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 14:13:01 +1300, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
> An alternative is 'nohup' - if you know that you are gonna run a long
> task and wish to be able to shutdown your terminal window. e.g:
>
> $ nohup emerge kdelibs
> $ exit
Shouldn't that be "nohup emerge kdelibs &"?
I've not use nohup
On Tue, 5 Dec 2006 20:50:52 -0500, Philip Webb wrote:
> I no longer had any need for Screen, as KDE desktops did it all.
What have KDE desktops got to do with virtual terminals?
> Moreover, all that 'control-a' stuff was a big pain in the head.
It doesn't have to be Ctrl-A, that's only the defa
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 00:03, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Can you please tell me the propose of screen?
>
> Thank you,
>
> Leandro
screen does many functions, but the most useful is probably being able
to disconnect and reconnect sessions. Here's a very simple explanation:
Imagine you
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 17:40, "Hemmann, Volker Armin"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user]
Installation of openoffice in 4 hours or more?! :s':
> Hi,
>
> if you don't use openoffice a lot, it is not worth to compile it. Just
> use th
Dale wrote:
But can you go back to it like you can with screen? I mean if it fails
or something how do you know what happened? I have never used nohup so
maybe I need more info, hence the questions.
It writes a file 'nohup.out' in your working directory with what you
would have seen on
Mark Kirkwood wrote:
> b.n. wrote:
>>
>>> And screen is your second best friend ever (Google is the first).
>>> It's so useful you might consider putting it in your shell profile
>>> so you can't forget to use it
>>
>> Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
>> know ab
061205 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> There are two types of people in the world,
> those who thing screen is the best thing since sliced bread
> and those who have never used it. I can't recall ever reading a comment
> like "I tried screen but didn't like it".
I used to use Screen all the time on a UoT I
b.n. wrote:
And screen is your second best friend ever (Google is the first). It's
so useful you might consider putting it in your shell profile so you
can't forget to use it
Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
know about.
An alternative is 'nohup' - i
Hi,
if you don't use openoffice a lot, it is not worth to compile it. Just use the
binary package. It will take some seconds more to start, but once it runs,
there is hardly any difference.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Tue, 5 Dec 2006 21:39:00 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
> > know about.
>
> It's just so useful, give it a try.
To add a bit more to that, here's something I wrote on screen last year.
A Quick Reference to: Screen
Once
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 22:30, Dale wrote:
> It takes a bit to get used to it and figure out the commands but it is
> neat just to do what I have listed here. I still can not figure out how
> to make it scroll back though.
Need to specify 'stuff' in /etc/screenrc under the section xterm twea
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 22:03, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Can you please tell me the propose of screen?
You can run processes independently of the terminal/console that you started
them in. Try it out. You start a screen session like so:
$ screen -S my_screen_name_1
$
Then, you can
Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Can you please tell me the propose of screen?
>
> Thank you,
>
> Leandro
>
> 2006/12/5, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 22:35:55 +, b.n. wrote:
>>
>> > Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
>> > know about.
On Tue, 2006-12-05 at 19:03 -0300, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Can you please tell me the propose of screen?
>
> Thank you,
>
> Leandro
Think of screen as a virtual terminal (or as many virtual terminals as
you need) that keeps running even when you log out.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mail
Can you please tell me the propose of screen?
Thank you,
Leandro
2006/12/5, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 22:35:55 +, b.n. wrote:
> Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
> know about.
It's just so useful, give it a try.
There are t
On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 22:35:55 +, b.n. wrote:
> Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
> know about.
It's just so useful, give it a try.
There are two types of people in the world, those who thing screen is the
best thing since sliced bread and those who have nev
061205 Leandro Melo de Sales wrote
after compiling Open Office had taken 5 h 12 m :
> Is it so slow or there are something wrong?
> My machine is a P4 (with HyperThreading enabled), 512Mb.
On my AMD Athlon 2500+ with 1024 MB memory
& 13 GB disk available for PORTAGE_TMPDIR , download took 30
And screen is your second best friend ever (Google is the first). It's
so useful you might consider putting it in your shell profile so you
can't forget to use it
Why is using screen so recommended? I never used it, but I'd like to
know about.
m.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 22:49, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Ok... thanks Michael and Neil, I didn't know that compiling
> openoffice take to many times. For next big emerges I'll do what you
> suggested.
For future reference, there are several big packages that can take a
while to compile.
Ok... thanks Michael and Neil, I didn't know that compiling openoffice
take to many times. For next big emerges I'll do what you suggested.
Leandro
2006/12/5, Michael Sullivan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Tue, 2006-12-05 at 16:46 -0300, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> OK. The problem is that I typed
On Tue, 2006-12-05 at 16:46 -0300, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> OK. The problem is that I typed "emerge openoffice" in a xterm. Is it
> possible to turn X off and continue compilation on console?
>
> Leandro
If you can get to your non-X console (Control+Alt+F1) and from there
issue /etc/init.d/
On Tue, 5 Dec 2006 16:46:49 -0300, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> OK. The problem is that I typed "emerge openoffice" in a xterm. Is it
> possible to turn X off and continue compilation on console?
You can stop the emerge with Ctrl-C, switch to a console and do
"ebuild /path/to/ebuild merge" to r
OK. The problem is that I typed "emerge openoffice" in a xterm. Is it
possible to turn X off and continue compilation on console?
Leandro
2006/12/5, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On 12/5/06, Daniel da Veiga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 12/5/06, Leandro Melo de Sales <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> w
On 12/5/06, Daniel da Veiga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 12/5/06, Leandro Melo de Sales <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> # date
> Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
> # emerge openoffice
> { in other terminal }
> # date
> Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
>
> and portage continues to compil
Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
Hi,
# date
Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
# emerge openoffice
{ in other terminal }
# date
Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
and portage continues to compile openoffice, it didn't finished yet.
Is it so slow or there are something wrong? My machine is a P4 (with
Hype
On 05 December 2006 20:21, Leandro Melo de Sales wrote:
> Hi,
>
> # date
> Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
> # emerge openoffice
> { in other terminal }
> # date
> Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
>
> and portage continues to compile openoffice, it didn't finished yet.
> Is it so slow or there
On 12/5/06, Leandro Melo de Sales <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
# date
Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
# emerge openoffice
{ in other terminal }
# date
Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
and portage continues to compile openoffice, it didn't finished yet.
Is it so slow or there are somethin
Dne úterý 05 prosinec 2006 19:21 Leandro Melo de Sales napsal(a):
> Hi,
>
> # date
> Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
> # emerge openoffice
> { in other terminal }
> # date
> Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
>
> and portage continues to compile openoffice, it didn't finished yet.
> Is it so slo
Hi,
# date
Tue Dec 5 10:12:01 BRT 2006
# emerge openoffice
{ in other terminal }
# date
Tue Dec 5 15:24:01 BRT 2006
and portage continues to compile openoffice, it didn't finished yet.
Is it so slow or there are something wrong? My machine is a P4 (with
HyperThreading enabled), 512Mb.
T
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