On Tuesday 27 October 2009 09:10:13 Alan McKinnon wrote:
You enabled scrollback so now the console has retained enough of the kernel
console output that you can scroll back to the beginning without using all
128K.
Symbol: VGACON_SOFT_SCROLLBACK_SIZE [=256]
Prompt: Scrollback Buffer
On Tuesday 27 October 2009 23:32:07 Marcus Wanner wrote:
Note that I do not have the same ethernet card as is mentioned in the
link above, and have not been able to find out exactly what it's name
is, besides the fact that the name includes Tornado. Also note that it
worked fine in the Gentoo
Mick wrote:
To read your PCI connected devices you need:
lspci -v
HTH.
That is the key command in my opinion. That will tell you what driver
it is using for what device. If it works while booted on the Live CD,
then that driver is most likely what you need. Take the name of the
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 03:50:56 Maxim Wexler wrote:
So, since in the digital world, things don't just happen, can
someone enlighten me, or anyone else who's interested, in the
connection between the scrollback buffer and usb-storage, if any?
There isn't a connection. Why do you
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 02:28:43 James wrote:
PS, if one of you really smart guys figures out mass/parallel
upgrades, then I'd use that, even set up my own server
to keep it efficient. I'm not smart enough (not enough time
at current mental aptitude) to set all of that up, unless
Hi,
This was working just fine:
kernel 2.6.31-r3 + xorg-server-1.6.5 + ati-drivers-9.10
Now
kernel 2.6.31-r4 + xorg-server-1.7.1 + ati-drivers-9.10
fail with
(II) Loading /usr/lib64/xorg/modules/drivers/fglrx_drv.so
dlopen: /usr/lib64/xorg/modules/drivers/fglrx_drv.so: undefined symbol:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009, Paul Hartman wrote:
Does flash work in other browsers? 64-bit or 32-bit?
What package does nspluginviewer belong to on your system? I think it
should be using Qt4 if it's the KDE4 version. Mine is from
kde-base/nsplugins-4.3.2 and is located in
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:05:21 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
This was working just fine:
kernel 2.6.31-r3 + xorg-server-1.6.5 + ati-drivers-9.10
Now
kernel 2.6.31-r4 + xorg-server-1.7.1 + ati-drivers-9.10
fail with
(II) Loading /usr/lib64/xorg/modules/drivers/fglrx_drv.so
Marcus Wanner wrote:
On 10/27/2009 7:38 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 01:32:07 Marcus Wanner wrote:
Hi!
I just followed the (excellent, easily understandable) gentoo
installation handbook up to chapter 10, where it says to reboot. I did
so, but I had the same
On 28 Oct, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:05:21 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
This was working just fine:
kernel 2.6.31-r3 + xorg-server-1.6.5 + ati-drivers-9.10
Now
kernel 2.6.31-r4 + xorg-server-1.7.1 + ati-drivers-9.10
fail with
(II) Loading
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 12:12:32 +0200, Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:05:21 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
This was working just fine:
kernel 2.6.31-r3 + xorg-server-1.6.5 + ati-drivers-9.10
Now
kernel 2.6.31-r4 + xorg-server-1.7.1 +
On 28 Oct, Jesús Guerrero wrote:
There's a thread in the forum as well. Searching for fglrx it's the first
one right now, though it's titled towards nvidia. But just look inside.
there are instructions on how to revert back. However, the following rule
always holds true if you are using fglrx
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:45:27 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 28 Oct, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:05:21 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
This was working just fine:
kernel 2.6.31-r3 + xorg-server-1.6.5 + ati-drivers-9.10
Now
kernel 2.6.31-r4 +
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 12:59:59 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out to me.
There should be a warning, since, as many others found out, as well,
it's not that easier to step back to xorg-server-1.6.5
not that easy ... now there's an understatement :-)
But doable, as I
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 12:59:59 +0200, Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:45:27 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 28 Oct, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:05:21 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
This was working just fine:
kernel 2.6.31-r3
On Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009, Jesús Guerrero wrote:
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 12:59:59 +0200, Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:45:27 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 28 Oct, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 12:05:21 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 28 Oct, Jesús Guerrero wrote:
There's a thread in the forum as well. Searching for fglrx it's the first
one right now, though it's titled towards nvidia. But just look inside.
there are instructions on how to revert back. However, the
On Wednesday 28 October 2009, Robin Atwood wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009, Paul Hartman wrote:
Does flash work in other browsers? 64-bit or 32-bit?
What package does nspluginviewer belong to on your system? I think it
should be using Qt4 if it's the KDE4 version. Mine is from
I've edited your message when quoting it in order to meet my agenda.
On 28 Oct 2009, at 00:28, James wrote:
PS, if one of you really smart guys figures out mass/parallel
upgrades, then I'd use that, even set up my own server
to keep it efficient. I'm not smart enough (not enough time
at
On 27 Oct 2009, at 23:32, Marcus Wanner wrote:
...
To sum it up: How do I figure out what the name of my card is, and
after that, what driver do I need?
Boot once again with the LiveCD, and the lspci and lshw commands
should work from there.
You can also run `lsmod` which will show
On 10/28/2009 06:38 AM, Damien Sticklen wrote:
Marcus Wanner wrote:
lscpi returns command not found
Are you using the lspci command as root?
Yes, I haven't set up a non-root user yet.
Marcus
On 10/27/2009 09:42 PM, Dale wrote:
Marcus Wanner wrote:
On 10/27/2009 9:28 PM, Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 28.10.2009 02:22, schrieb Marcus Wanner:
On 10/27/2009 8:36 PM, James wrote:
Marcus Wanner marcusw at cox.net writes:
To sum it up:
On 10/28/2009 04:01 AM, Dale wrote:
Mick wrote:
To read your PCI connected devices you need:
lspci -v
HTH.
That is the key command in my opinion. That will tell you what driver
it is using for what device. If it works while booted on the Live CD,
then that driver is most likely
I'd like to receive ELOG messages in my inbox, but I'm hesitant to
leave my mail server's user:passwd in plain text in /etc/make.conf.
Do there exist public mail servers where I can send messages like this
to be delivered? I guess that's called an open replay? If I use my
ISP's mail server,
Jonathan Callen a...@gentoo.org writes:
Harry Putnam wrote:
In fact what does `developer' buy you?
Among other things, it enables I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING, which tells you
the expected audience :). Seriously, the developer profiles are mainly
for Gentoo Devs, people who are going to be doing
On Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009, Grant wrote:
I'd like to receive ELOG messages in my inbox, but I'm hesitant to
leave my mail server's user:passwd in plain text in /etc/make.conf.
what?
Do there exist public mail servers where I can send messages like this
to be delivered? I guess that's
Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com writes:
Alan, what does it get you? In fact what does `developer' buy you?
x86/10.0 gives you a baseline for that release
x86/10.0/desktop|developer|server give you a profile more suited (tweaked)
for
that kind of usage.
[...]
Nice.. thanks
I see I
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 18:52:33 Harry Putnam wrote:
Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com writes:
Alan, what does it get you? In fact what does `developer' buy you?
x86/10.0 gives you a baseline for that release
x86/10.0/desktop|developer|server give you a profile more suited
Am 28.10.2009 17:47, schrieb Volker Armin Hemmann:
Is your mail server really configured that local root mail needs a password?
I don't have a local mail server on my desktop maschine. Sure, I could
install some kind of relay to my non-local mailserver but then I need to
store username and
Am Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009 00:32:07 schrieb Marcus Wanner:
To sum it up: How do I figure out what the name of my card is, and after
that, what driver do I need?
Boot from a LiveCD, like Knoppix or GRML, run lspci -vv from there and post
the output.
Bye...
Dirk
signature.asc
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 19:35:00 Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 28.10.2009 17:47, schrieb Volker Armin Hemmann:
Is your mail server really configured that local root mail needs a
password?
I don't have a local mail server on my desktop maschine. Sure, I could
install some kind of relay
Am Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009 18:56:33 schrieb Dirk Heinrichs:
Am Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009 00:32:07 schrieb Marcus Wanner:
To sum it up: How do I figure out what the name of my card is, and after
that, what driver do I need?
Boot from a LiveCD, like Knoppix or GRML, run lspci -vv from there
Am 28.10.2009 18:59, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 19:35:00 Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 28.10.2009 17:47, schrieb Volker Armin Hemmann:
Is your mail server really configured that local root mail needs a
password?
I don't have a local mail server on my desktop maschine.
On Mittwoch 28 Oktober 2009, Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 28.10.2009 18:59, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 19:35:00 Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 28.10.2009 17:47, schrieb Volker Armin Hemmann:
Is your mail server really configured that local root mail needs a
password?
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 20:44:59 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
That kind of delivery limits the access to this mails to the local
maschine. If I want to read local I don't need mails, I could just read
the logfiles from portage in /var/log/
But I am aware that solving this problem is
Am 28.10.2009 19:57, schrieb Alan McKinnon:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 20:44:59 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
That kind of delivery limits the access to this mails to the local
maschine. If I want to read local I don't need mails, I could just read
the logfiles from portage in /var/log/
But
That kind of delivery limits the access to this mails to the local
maschine. If I want to read local I don't need mails, I could just read
the logfiles from portage in /var/log/
But I am aware that solving this problem is nothing that portage has to
do, as it is no problem with portage
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 21:27:48 Grant wrote:
That kind of delivery limits the access to this mails to the local
maschine. If I want to read local I don't need mails, I could just
read the logfiles from portage in /var/log/
But I am aware that solving this problem is nothing
Not sure this is related with the OP's problem, I have noticed that on my
system I can scroll up in a console if it displays the output of a command,
e.g. ls, but I cannot scroll up on the boot messages. Also, I cannot scroll
up on the log messages on VT12. Is there something that I need to
That kind of delivery limits the access to this mails to the local
maschine. If I want to read local I don't need mails, I could just
read the logfiles from portage in /var/log/
But I am aware that solving this problem is nothing that portage has
to do, as it is no problem with
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 20:10:52 Maxim Wexler wrote:
Not sure this is related with the OP's problem, I have noticed that on my
system I can scroll up in a console if it displays the output of a
command, e.g. ls, but I cannot scroll up on the boot messages. Also, I
cannot scroll up on
Marcus Wanner wrote:
On 10/28/2009 04:01 AM, Dale wrote:
Mick wrote:
To read your PCI connected devices you need:
lspci -v
HTH.
That is the key command in my opinion. That will tell you what driver
it is using for what device. If it works while booted on the Live CD,
then
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 21:22:44 Grant wrote:
That kind of delivery limits the access to this mails to the local
maschine. If I want to read local I don't need mails, I could just
read the logfiles from portage in /var/log/
But I am aware that solving this problem is
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 18:52:33 Harry Putnam wrote:
Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com writes:
Alan, what does it get you? In fact what does `developer' buy you?
x86/10.0 gives you a baseline for that release
x86/10.0/desktop|developer|server
On Wed, 2009-10-28 at 09:36 -0700, Grant wrote:
I'd like to receive ELOG messages in my inbox, but I'm hesitant to
leave my mail server's user:passwd in plain text in /etc/make.conf.
Do there exist public mail servers where I can send messages like this
to be delivered? I guess that's called
On Thursday 29 October 2009 00:03:36 Dale wrote:
So this is why OOo won't compile all of a sudden. May have to put -kde
in package.use then. See if that helps.
Thanks Alan.
Dale
:-) :-)
P. S. Should I report the failure or do they already know about this?
The bug report shows
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 23:22:44 Grant wrote:
If the relay you use requires a username/password or ssl, it supports
that too.
So I need a relay somewhere along with ssmtp to get a message to an
email address?
[The receiving smtp server likely does not require a username/password,
On 10/28/2009 5:39 PM, Dale wrote:
Marcus Wanner wrote:
On 10/28/2009 04:01 AM, Dale wrote:
Mick wrote:
To read your PCI connected devices you need:
lspci -v
HTH.
That is the key command in my opinion. That will tell you what driver
it is using for what
Marcus Wanner wrote:
On 10/28/2009 5:39 PM, Dale wrote:
Marcus Wanner wrote:
On 10/28/2009 04:01 AM, Dale wrote:
Mick wrote:
To read your PCI connected devices you need:
lspci -v
HTH.
That is the key command in my opinion. That will tell you what driver
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 09:10:33AM +, Neil Bothwick wrote
That's a correct assumption. The assumption about which options you don't
need may not have been so correct. It's safer to start with a bloated but
working kernel and whittle it down gradually.
And keep backup copies of each
Hi everybody,
I've got an interesting issue today which I half-resolved, but am still
wondering whether I missed something important or did something that'll
bite me in the end.
So here's short story: I've been running older kernel (2.6.22-gentoo-r9)
and KDE3 on my laptop(x86,i945) for quite
On 10/26/09, Neil Bothwick n...@digimed.co.uk wrote:
On Sun, 25 Oct 2009 22:52:26 -0600, Maxim Wexler wrote:
Could be over-zealous whittling. Why not use the Live DVD .config
unchanged?
OK, done. Crashed. Almost identical to the first post in this thread.
And keep backup copies of each working .config file as you go merrily
whittling away, so you can fall back to something other than back to
square 1.
I keep all my spares in /boot/safe.
mw
Hi all,
is it me, or does Kgpg (KDE4) indeed miss menu items for Keys/export ,
Keys/reload and so forth? I haven't noticed anything like that with
any other application so far so I'm curious if that's something in my
settings, or shall I stroll over to bugs.kde.org and file it?
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