[gentoo-user] postfix log: Non-Compliant sender address. Code : -2

2024-03-10 Thread Thelma
I'm trying to send myself an email from remote computer running "postfix" via my domain (hosted by Rogers, formally Shaw). but I'm getting an error message in log: postfix/smtp[8743]: E0DAD17E00DB: to=, relay=mail.shaw-domain.com[xx.xx.xx.xxx]:1025, delay=2.7, delays=0.03/0.01/2/0.68,

Re: [gentoo-user] Emerge trouble with firefox and thunderbird ...

2024-03-10 Thread Walter Dnes
On Sun, Mar 10, 2024 at 08:43:46PM +0100, ralfconn wrote > Given the warning message reported by Peter ("Enable USE=clang unless > you have a very good reason not to.") That message comes from sys-libs/compiler-rt which is a dedicated runtime lib for clang. It makes sense to use clang if

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Emerge trouble with firefox and thunderbird ...

2024-03-10 Thread Carsten Hauck
On 10/03/24 at 01:50, mp666 wrote: On Sat, 9 Mar 2024 08:04:06 +, Wols Lists wrote: For anyone else who hits this sort of problem, I did an USE=-clang emerge --update @world (firefox and thunderbird were the only programs I thought this would touch), and it worked. There were a couple

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: is a global use flag necessary for python?

2024-03-10 Thread Walter Dnes
On Sun, Mar 10, 2024 at 06:43:56PM -, Grant Edwards wrote > Just back up your user data and re-install. Also back up /etc/ for your app configs and stuff like hosts and resolve.conf and make.ccnf and package.use and package.mask etc. And remember /var/lib/. /var/lib/portage/ has your

Re: [gentoo-user] Emerge trouble with firefox and thunderbird ...

2024-03-10 Thread ralfconn
Il 10/03/24 15:08, Peter Humphrey ha scritto: On Sunday, 10 March 2024 07:17:27 GMT Walter Dnes wrote: So there are at least 2 people who've found out that Firefox can and *MUST* be built with USE="-clang". Ah. I'll change my USE flag straight away. Thanks Walter. This got me wondering,

[gentoo-user] Re: is a global use flag necessary for python?

2024-03-10 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2024-03-09, Walter Dnes wrote: > On Sat, Mar 09, 2024 at 07:55:13PM +0100, n952162 wrote >> I just synced my system after a long delay, > > That's your problem right there. Yep, to quote Olivia Rodrigo... Bad idea, right? >> Is there a way to do it globally? > > First of all python

[gentoo-user] Re: How to set up drive with many Linux distros?

2024-03-10 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2024-03-10, Michael wrote: > Perhaps I'm picking up on semantics, but shouldn't this sentence: > > "... The gap between the DOS disklabel and the first partition" > > read: > > "The gap between the MBR and the first partition"? Yes, thanks -- MBR is more accurate, I've changed that sentence.

Re: [gentoo-user] Emerge trouble with firefox and thunderbird ...

2024-03-10 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Sunday, 10 March 2024 07:17:27 GMT Walter Dnes wrote: > So there are at least 2 people who've found out that Firefox can and > *MUST* be built with USE="-clang". Ah. I'll change my USE flag straight away. Thanks Walter. -- Regards, Peter.

[gentoo-user] Re: Emerge trouble with firefox and thunderbird ...

2024-03-10 Thread mp666
On Sat, 9 Mar 2024 08:04:06 +, Wols Lists wrote: > For anyone else who hits this sort of problem, I did an > > USE=-clang emerge --update @world > > (firefox and thunderbird were the only programs I thought this would > touch), and it worked. > > There were a couple of other programs that

Re: [gentoo-user] Re: How to set up drive with many Linux distros?

2024-03-10 Thread Michael
On Friday, 8 March 2024 23:24:02 GMT Grant Edwards wrote: > On 2024-02-22, Grant Edwards wrote: > > For many years, I've used a hard drive on which I have 8-10 Linux > > distros installed -- each in a separate (single) partition. > > > > [...] > > > > Is there an easier way to do this? > >

Re: [gentoo-user] is a global use flag necessary for python?

2024-03-10 Thread Mickaël Bucas
Le dim. 10 mars 2024 à 00:22, n952162 a écrit : > > On 3/9/24 20:51, Walter Dnes wrote: > > On Sat, Mar 09, 2024 at 07:55:13PM +0100, n952162 wrote > >> Hello all, > >> > >> I just synced my system after a long delay, > >That's your problem right there. > > > >> Is there a way to do it