On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 23:07:26 +0100, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> sudo su - -c "chroot /mnt/eee /bin/zsh"
That sudo shouldn't be there, the script used to use sudo for the
commands, but now I just run it as root.
--
Neil Bothwick
It is easier to fix Unix than to live with NT.
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Descrip
On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 15:54:57 -0600, Maxim Wexler wrote:
> > As mentioned yesterday, I now do all emerges in a chroot on my
> > desktop to build binary packages, then emerge -k on the Eee, so Ooo
> > only takes 90 minutes now. The only compiling I do on the Eee is
> > kernel changes.
>
> I've de
> As mentioned yesterday, I now do all emerges in a chroot on my desktop to
> build binary packages, then emerge -k on the Eee, so Ooo only takes 90
> minutes now. The only compiling I do on the Eee is kernel changes.
I've decided to give your method a whirl. Are you talking about distcc
here? Tha
Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> I used to do this. Trust me, it's more trouble than it's worth. A 4G memory
> card just for distfiles will solve the problem nicely.
>
>
This includes the tree, distfiles and all the buildpkges on a fully
loaded KDE desktop.
r...@smoker / # du -shc /usr/portage/
4.4G
On Friday 11 September 2009 22:32:00 Maxim Wexler wrote:
> > As mentioned yesterday, I now do all emerges in a chroot on my desktop to
> > build binary packages, then emerge -k on the Eee, so Ooo only takes 90
> > minutes now. The only compiling I do on the Eee is kernel changes.
>
> This suggests
On Fri, 11 Sep 2009 14:32:00 -0600, Maxim Wexler wrote:
> This suggests using the fetchonly switch, write the files to USB key
> while mobile and compile them later on the desktop. But when I do
>
> % emerge -pfuvND world
>
> I just get page after page of the mirrors list from make.conf.
That's
> Funny thing is, our old phone lines were about that far too. Most of
> the time I got about 3KB/s of throughput. I hope yours is better than that.
>
That's about the top speed here.
> As mentioned yesterday, I now do all emerges in a chroot on my desktop to
> build binary packages, then emerge -k on the Eee, so Ooo only takes 90
> minutes now. The only compiling I do on the Eee is kernel changes.
>
This suggests using the fetchonly switch, write the files to USB key
while mob
Maxim Wexler wrote:
>
>
> Negatory. My dialup is attenuated by 8 miles of analog telephone line.
> When I'm mobile it's a different story.
>
> mw
>
>
>
I was on a really crappy dial-up until recently. You have my deepest
sympathies. Dial-up, of any kind, truly sucks. :-@
Funny thing is, our
> 2. Don't change a winning team! If your kernel run's smoothly with no
> weird glutches in drivers, leave it be. Only update if you want new
> features.
> Just my 2p's worth
> Greetz,
> Mark
Works for my desktop. I haven't updated it for years. Just poked along
fixing this and that; if something
> I have $PORTAGE_TMPDIR on the SD card, which is cheap enough to replace
> if too many OOo compiles toast it.
And I took your advice
>> 2. It's sloow
>
> I was pleasantly surprised at how quickly some compiles completed. Not as
> fast as my desktop of course, but faster than was expecting,
On Wed, Sep 9, 2009 at 6:52 PM, Maxim Wexler wrote:
> HI group,
>
> My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
> and I am determined not to emerge anything I don't really need.
>
> But now that I'm mobile I have the capability of doing a -uD world
> whenever it's required
On Thursday 10 September 2009 6:54:34 pm Stroller wrote:
> On 10 Sep 2009, at 09:30, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > ...
> > But I doubt the wisdom of updating an SSD netbook on the machine
> > itself:
> >
> > 1. Wear on the SSD itself with all those compiles
> > ...
>
> No harm in compiling on a hard-dr
On Thu, 10 Sep 2009 23:54:34 +0100, Stroller wrote:
> I have read many people talk about wear of flash memory to be a
> problem, but I don't think from anyone who's actually HAD a problem
> with it. I have read of many people using it happily for root
> filesystems over periods of years.
So
On 10 Sep 2009, at 09:30, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
But I doubt the wisdom of updating an SSD netbook on the machine
itself:
1. Wear on the SSD itself with all those compiles
...
No harm in compiling on a hard-drive, via NFs or otherwise. I believe
read speed of SSDs is fast, writes are s
>
> > But I doubt the wisdom of updating an SSD netbook on the machine itself:
>
The best solution i've found so far (where RAM wasn't an issue) was to use
"temerge" and 1600M RAM dedicated to it.
netbook may not have that much memory free.
Sorry if this was completely useless.
Rohit
On Thu, 10 Sep 2009 10:30:04 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> But I doubt the wisdom of updating an SSD netbook on the machine itself:
>
> 1. Wear on the SSD itself with all those compiles
I have $PORTAGE_TMPDIR on the SD card, which is cheap enough to replace
if too many OOo compiles toast it.
>
On Wed, Sep 09, 2009 at 07:52:40PM -0600, Penguin Lover Maxim Wexler squawked:
> My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
> and I am determined not to emerge anything I don't really need.
You are a brave, brave man.
With 4+8G, how much non-system space do you have left
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Thursday 10 September 2009 09:58:37 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
>
>> On Donnerstag 10 September 2009, Maxim Wexler wrote:
>>
>>> HI group,
>>>
>>> My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
>>> and I am determined not to emerge anything I d
On Donnerstag 10 September 2009, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 10 Sep 2009 09:58:37 +0200, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> > I do 'it' every morning. I am still tired, eix-sync, when I come back
> > with my tea, I see the updates, emerge -auvD world, ready when the
> > sugar is in the tea. Checking
On Thursday 10 September 2009 09:58:37 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> On Donnerstag 10 September 2009, Maxim Wexler wrote:
> > HI group,
> >
> > My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
> > and I am determined not to emerge anything I don't really need.
> >
> > But now tha
On Thu, 10 Sep 2009 09:58:37 +0200, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> I do 'it' every morning. I am still tired, eix-sync, when I come back
> with my tea, I see the updates, emerge -auvD world, ready when the
> sugar is in the tea. Checking the list. Drinking some of the tea and
> contemplating the up
On Donnerstag 10 September 2009, Maxim Wexler wrote:
> HI group,
>
> My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
> and I am determined not to emerge anything I don't really need.
>
> But now that I'm mobile I have the capability of doing a -uD world
> whenever it's require
090909 Maxim Wexler wrote:
> My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
> and I am determined not to emerge anything I don't really need.
> But now that I'm mobile I have the capability of doing a -uD world
> whenever it's required without having to take days of dialup time
=== On Wed, 09/09, Maxim Wexler wrote: ===
> Is there some sort of rule-of-thumb when it comes to timing or spacing
> their updates that members use to keep gentoo happy?
===
Mine is "at least once a week". But I usually do it every few days on
my desktop.
-- Keith Dart
--
-- ---
HI group,
My netbook has only (4+8)G of sketchy SSD + SDHC RAM for everything
and I am determined not to emerge anything I don't really need.
But now that I'm mobile I have the capability of doing a -uD world
whenever it's required without having to take days of dialup time.
Question is, when's
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