On Monday 15 November 2010 18:07:27 Alan McKinnon wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 17:10 on Monday 15 November 2010, J.
Roeleveld
did opine thusly:
snipped
How is this different from:
1) take a backup
2) check for bad sectors (badblocks)
3) restore backup
This is also
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 03:33:19 Dale wrote:
Adam Carter wrote:
One post mentioned that this needs to be reinstalled, I AGREE.
Re installation may be *correct*, but sometimes its impractical. I would
1. Pull the drive, and connect it to another fully patched, fully
security
Am 15.11.2010 23:50, schrieb Mick:
Thanks Stefan, I'm afraid I'm still getting the same problem:
rsync: opendir /mnt/User_WinXP/System Volume Information failed:
Permission denied (13)
Why is rsync trying to open this directory, when I thought I've asked it to
exclude it?
Maybe you did
Hi,
I have an up-to-date ~amd64 GenToo installation with has been
built on a current AMD64 (Phenom II) machine where I used
-mtune=native in etc/make.conf since I didn't think of the case
that I would need to port this system to a somewhat older Opteron
based machine (still AMD64)
But after
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 10:33:34 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
I have an up-to-date ~amd64 GenToo installation with has been
built on a current AMD64 (Phenom II) machine where I used
-mtune=native in etc/make.conf since I didn't think of the case
that I would need to port this system to a
J. Roeleveld writes:
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 03:33:19 Dale wrote:
That's not doable here tho. This is a Linux only house. My nieces
puter is the only puter in the house with windoze on it and it is
just visiting. It does have NTFS so I am sort of chicken to hook it
up to my Linux
Apparently, though unproven, at 11:33 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Helmut
Jarausch did opine thusly:
Hi,
I have an up-to-date ~amd64 GenToo installation with has been
built on a current AMD64 (Phenom II) machine where I used
-mtune=native in etc/make.conf since I didn't think of the case
J. Roeleveld writes:
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 03:33:19 Dale wrote:
That's not doable here tho. This is a Linux only house. My nieces
puter is the only puter in the house with windoze on it and it is
just visiting. It does have NTFS so I am sort of chicken to hook it
up to my Linux
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 10:53:28 Alex Schuster wrote:
J. Roeleveld writes:
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 03:33:19 Dale wrote:
That's not doable here tho. This is a Linux only house. My nieces
puter is the only puter in the house with windoze on it and it is
just visiting. It does
On 11/16/10 10:56:29, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Backup your portage related data and re-install.
Seriously - you know you are looking at doing emerge -e world and
will
need to
fiddle stuff to make it complete successfully.
If you just reinstall, put your old world file and /etc/portage/
Hi, after updating Chromium to chromium-7.0.517.44 from portage i
can't move it between different screens, if i go to Preferencies -
Personal - Theme and enable Use borders and title bar (so it shows
kwin) i can move chromium windows between screens as i normally do
with any other app. Before the
Hello,
I think You could try:
1) change cflags in make.conf
2) bootstrap.sh
3) emerge -e system
4) emerge -e world
In other words this is how to build a system from stage 1.
On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 12:06 PM, Helmut Jarausch
jarau...@igpm.rwth-aachen.de wrote:
On 11/16/10 10:56:29, Alan
On 16 November 2010 09:00, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote:
Am 15.11.2010 23:50, schrieb Mick:
Thanks Stefan, I'm afraid I'm still getting the same problem:
rsync: opendir /mnt/User_WinXP/System Volume Information failed:
Permission denied (13)
Why is rsync trying to open this
On Tuesday 16 November 2010, Mick wrote:
Try:
'rsync -a -l -v --exclude */System Volume Information
-e ssh -c blowfish -l root /mnt/User_WinXP/
10.10.10.25:/home/httpd/backup'
From man rsync
Note that if you don’t specify --backup-dir, (1) the --omit-dir-times option
will be implied, and (2)
On 2010-11-16, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
spinrite claims to make the head do other things than what the drive
firmware makes it do.
I'm afraid I'll have to call bullshit on that. I don't see how some
bit of PC software can make a drive head move. The firmware on the
drive
Apparently, though unproven, at 17:34 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Grant
Edwards did opine thusly:
On 2010-11-16, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
spinrite claims to make the head do other things than what the drive
firmware makes it do.
I'm afraid I'll have to call bullshit on
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 07:10:02 +0100, Grant Edwards wrote about
[gentoo-user] Re: How to configure thochpad sensitivity (using hal)?:
On 2010-11-15, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com wrote:
Whether Xorg uses HAL or not is controlled by a USE flag isn't it?
So upstream choses the defaults for
On 16 November 2010 16:20, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 17:34 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Grant
Edwards did opine thusly:
On 2010-11-16, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
spinrite claims to make the head do other things than what the
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 16:20:37 Alan McKinnon wrote:
for several reasons, first being that the thing is written in
assembler.
Ah! Come back 1974 - all is forgiven :-)
--
Rgds
Peter. Linux Counter 5290, 1994-04-23.
On 2010-11-16, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 17:34 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Grant
Edwards did opine thusly:
On 2010-11-16, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
spinrite claims to make the head do other things than what the drive
On 2010-11-16, David W Noon dwn...@ntlworld.com wrote:
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 07:10:02 +0100, Grant Edwards wrote about
[gentoo-user] Re: How to configure thochpad sensitivity (using hal)?:
On 2010-11-15, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com wrote:
Whether Xorg uses HAL or not is controlled by
- Original Message
From: Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Cc: Grant Edwards grant.b.edwa...@gmail.com
Apparently, though unproven, at 17:34 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Grant
Edwards did opine thusly:
On 2010-11-16, J. Roeleveld
Hi,
today I updated my bind from 9.4.3_p5 to 9.7.1_p2. I noticed
a few changes in configuration so first I did full backup, then
uninstalled 9.4.3_p5 first, removed all configuration files,
then emerged 9.7.1_p2, and configured it to run from chroot.
named seems to start normally:
#
Apparently, though unproven, at 21:17 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Jarry did
opine thusly:
Hi,
today I updated my bind from 9.4.3_p5 to 9.7.1_p2. I noticed
a few changes in configuration so first I did full backup, then
uninstalled 9.4.3_p5 first, removed all configuration files,
then
On 16. 11. 2010 20:47, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Do you absolutely *have* to run bind? Aside from it being a 100% RFC-compliant
reference server, it's a pig to run in real life. For an auth server, powerdns
is very good. For a cache, unbound.
Well, not *absolutely*, but I'm an old dog used to work
Apparently, though unproven, at 22:37 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Jarry did
opine thusly:
Failing that, there's kill -9, this won't break anything but might
disconnect a client.
Well, I could kill the process while working in terminal. But when
I forget to do it and try to shutdown
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 14:15:00 Alan McKinnon wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 15:28 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Mick did
opine thusly:
On 16 November 2010 09:00, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote:
Am 15.11.2010 23:50, schrieb Mick:
You don't show us what you did ...
Apparently, though unproven, at 23:12 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Mick did
opine thusly:
Don't think of --exclude as being a file path match, think of it as more
a regex (usually just a literal one). It specifies a pattern that if
found if the full pathname, results in the file not being
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 19:20:02 +0100, Grant Edwards wrote about
[gentoo-user] Re: How to configure thochpad sensitivity (using hal)?:
On 2010-11-16, David W Noon dwn...@ntlworld.com wrote:
[snip]
No, the USE flags are purely a Portage thing. The USE flags
determine which options are
On Tuesday 16 November 2010 22:26:28 Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
Am 2010-11-16 22:24, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
Apparently, though unproven, at 23:12 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Mick
did
opine thusly:
Excellent, it worked! :-)
Glad to hear it.
I could help because part of my
I have an up-to-date ~amd64 GenToo installation with has been
built on a current AMD64 (Phenom II) machine where I used
-mtune=native in etc/make.conf since I didn't think of the case
that I would need to port this system to a somewhat older Opteron
based machine (still AMD64)
But after
Am 2010-11-16 22:24, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
Apparently, though unproven, at 23:12 on Tuesday 16 November 2010, Mick did
opine thusly:
Excellent, it worked! :-)
Glad to hear it.
I could help because part of my job is running a rather big public ftp mirror
that management graciously
Am 2010-11-16 21:55, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
I've seen the weirdest inexplicable things from bind (and vixie-cron too, now
that I think of it).
OT: what is your recommended alternative to vixie-cron then?
thx, S
On 11/16/2010 11:47 AM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
For an auth server, powerdns is very good...
By 'auth' do you mean something like DNSSEC? If not, who's doing
the auth-ing?
The problem is, it runs forever, and does not want to stop:
Standard practice for any daemon that doesnt want to stop via the init
script, most graceful to most forceful;
1. Try the daemons native shutdown command (some have an option to shutdown
only after any connected clients are serviced,
On 11/16/2010 11:47 AM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
For an auth server, powerdns is very good...
By 'auth' do you mean something like DNSSEC? If not, who's doing
the auth-ing?
He means authoritative server (ie a server that has a copy of the zone file)
- not authentication.
I've copy/pasted below a new post to the devicekit-devel mail list. I can't
vouch for the accuracy of any of it, but it did catch my attention:
===
There seems to be a lack of information in a central place about what to
use
Apparently, though unproven, at 00:28 on Wednesday 17 November 2010, David W
Noon did opine thusly:
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 19:20:02 +0100, Grant Edwards wrote about
[gentoo-user] Re: How to configure thochpad sensitivity (using hal)?:
On 2010-11-16, David W Noon dwn...@ntlworld.com wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 01:20 on Wednesday 17 November 2010, walt did
opine thusly:
On 11/16/2010 11:47 AM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
For an auth server, powerdns is very good...
By 'auth' do you mean something like DNSSEC? If not, who's doing
the auth-ing?
Do you
Apparently, though unproven, at 01:12 on Wednesday 17 November 2010, Stefan G.
Weichinger did opine thusly:
Am 2010-11-16 21:55, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
I've seen the weirdest inexplicable things from bind (and vixie-cron too,
now that I think of it).
OT: what is your recommended
I have a main machine and a backup machine. The main machine is 64-bit
and the backup is 32-bit, but otherwise very similar setup. I
haven't updated the backup (32-bit machine) for a while, and decided to
do so today (115 packages emerge). I normally...
emerge -pv --deep --update world |
I was having trouble getting g-cpan to work with a Bundle of CPAN perl
modules and I got frustrated and started to install it with perl
-MCPAN -e instead. After a little while I thought better of it and
exited the installation, but should I now have perl modules spread
across my filesystem that
do so today (115 packages emerge). I normally...
emerge -pv --deep --update world | less
...before updating, to check for booby-traps. Today, the output on the
backup machine blasted to screen, and did not stop until finished.
Meanwhile, the bottom of the screen shows lines 1-4/4 (END) .
but should I now have perl modules spread
across my filesystem that aren't known by portage? Is there any way
to clean them up? Would installing the same Bundle with g-cpan be
guaranteed to straighten everything out?
qfile -orphans ?
but should I now have perl modules spread
across my filesystem that aren't known by portage? Is there any way
to clean them up? Would installing the same Bundle with g-cpan be
guaranteed to straighten everything out?
qfile -orphans ?
That sounds promising but I get:
# qfile --orphans
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 00:20:01 +0100, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote about
Re: [gentoo-user] bind-9.7.1_p2 does not want to stop...:
Am 2010-11-16 21:55, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
I've seen the weirdest inexplicable things from bind (and vixie-cron
too, now that I think of it).
OT: what is your
On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 05:42:24PM -0800, Grant wrote:
qfile -orphans ?
That sounds promising but I get:
# qfile --orphans
Usage: qfile opts filename : list all pkgs owning files
qfile --orphans needs to take input a filename.
So to go through your system looking for all orphaned
My ASUS A8V motherboard went down so I change it with another ASUS MB M2NPV
along with CPU. Both CPU's were AMD so no need to change flags.
Have two hard drives both SATA 200G and 500G
However, after trying to boot I get:
VFS: Cannot open root device sda3 or unknown-block (0,0)
In grub.conf I
Joseph wrote:
My ASUS A8V motherboard went down so I change it with another ASUS MB
M2NPV along with CPU. Both CPU's were AMD so no need to change flags.
Have two hard drives both SATA 200G and 500G
However, after trying to boot I get:
VFS: Cannot open root device sda3 or unknown-block (0,0)
Alan McKinnon wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 00:28 on Wednesday 17 November 2010, David W
Noon did opine thusly:
On Tue, 16 Nov 2010 19:20:02 +0100, Grant Edwards wrote about
[gentoo-user] Re: How to configure thochpad sensitivity (using hal)?:
On 2010-11-16, David W
qfile -orphans ?
That sounds promising but I get:
# qfile --orphans
Usage: qfile opts filename : list all pkgs owning files
qfile --orphans needs to take input a filename.
So to go through your system looking for all orphaned files, you do
something like
find / -exec qfile -o '{}'
On 11/16/10 21:04, Dale wrote:
Joseph wrote:
My ASUS A8V motherboard went down so I change it with another ASUS MB
M2NPV along with CPU. Both CPU's were AMD so no need to change flags.
Have two hard drives both SATA 200G and 500G
However, after trying to boot I get:
VFS: Cannot open root
Joseph wrote:
On 11/16/10 21:04, Dale wrote:
Joseph wrote:
My ASUS A8V motherboard went down so I change it with another ASUS MB
M2NPV along with CPU. Both CPU's were AMD so no need to change flags.
Have two hard drives both SATA 200G and 500G
However, after trying to boot I get:
VFS: Cannot
On 11/16/10 21:45, Dale wrote:
[snip]
The BIOS sees both HD but, boot sector is working OK as grub comes up
but then I get a message:
VFS: Cannot open root device sda3 or unknown-block (0,0)
please append a correct root= boot option; here are the available
partitions:
0300 4191302 hda driver:
Joseph wrote:
On 11/16/10 21:45, Dale wrote:
[snip]
The BIOS sees both HD but, boot sector is working OK as grub comes up
but then I get a message:
VFS: Cannot open root device sda3 or unknown-block (0,0)
please append a correct root= boot option; here are the available
partitions:
0300
On 11/16/10 22:40, Dale wrote:
Thanks for the hint.
What should I look for? I think lspci list some chipset, MCP51 but
kernel is not listing anything on MCP51
Try lspci -k from the CD. That should tell you what driver the CD is
using. Then while in the kernel config, just look for that
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 1:11 PM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
On Thursday 11 November 2010 18:07:35 Paul Hartman wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 12:05 PM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
If the soldering isn't done correctly, the battery-pack can literally
explode when put
Joseph syscon...@gmail.com writes:
So now system boots but I can not seem to the network card going.
On the lspci -k I think you mean lspci -nn (there is no switch -k)
No, he does mean 'lspci -k'. The -k switch lists the kernel driver which
is handling each item. If you do this from the CD
Joseph wrote:
On 11/16/10 22:40, Dale wrote:
Thanks for the hint.
What should I look for? I think lspci list some chipset, MCP51 but
kernel is not listing anything on MCP51
Try lspci -k from the CD. That should tell you what driver the CD is
using. Then while in the kernel config, just
=== On Tue, 11/16, Joseph wrote: ===
Anyhow, dmesg |grep eth shows:
forcedeth :00:14.0 ifname eth0, PHY OUI addr. 00:17:31:83:a1:53
udev: renamed network interface eth0 to eth1
Any idea why is it renaming network interface?
I have forcedeth loaded in the kernel but it is not bringing
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