* [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 @ 2008-01-28 21:25 agtdino 2008-01-28 21:54 ` Beso ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-28 21:25 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hi, When compile madwifi-ng I get error: Preparing ath_hal module ../scripts/get_arch.mk:44: *** ARCH mismatch: supplied "x86", determined "x86_64". Alto. * * ERROR: net-wireless/madwifi-ng-0.9.3.3 failed. perhaps is in inestable? I'would tri to maskit. Thank's and regards -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-28 21:25 [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 agtdino @ 2008-01-28 21:54 ` Beso 2008-01-28 22:52 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-28 23:21 ` [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to Mateusz Mierzwinski 2 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-28 21:54 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 649 bytes --] for me madwifi-ng compiles very fine.... maybe you've got some problems on your system.... an output of emerge --info and of make.conf and of the portage log when it fails compiling might help identifying the problem.... 2008/1/28, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Hi, > > When compile madwifi-ng I get error: > > Preparing ath_hal module > ../scripts/get_arch.mk:44: *** ARCH mismatch: supplied "x86", determined > "x86_64". Alto. > * > * ERROR: net-wireless/madwifi-ng-0.9.3.3 failed. > > perhaps is in inestable? > I'would tri to maskit. > > Thank's and regards > > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1037 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-28 21:25 [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 agtdino 2008-01-28 21:54 ` Beso @ 2008-01-28 22:52 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-29 7:51 ` Beso 2008-01-28 23:21 ` [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to Mateusz Mierzwinski 2 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-28 22:52 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Montag, 28. Januar 2008, agtdino wrote: kernel version? -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-28 22:52 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-29 7:51 ` Beso 2008-01-29 8:17 ` agtdino 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-29 7:51 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 457 bytes --] it does gets indicated in emerge --info if i don't remember wrong. anyway, based on my experience it works fine from 2.6.20 to 2.6.24, so i think that there's some misconfiguration issues on the host system on which is trying to install it. 2008/1/28, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Montag, 28. Januar 2008, agtdino wrote: > > kernel version? > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 806 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 7:51 ` Beso @ 2008-01-29 8:17 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 8:31 ` Steev Klimaszewski 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-29 8:17 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hi, This is emerge --info output Portage 2.1.4 (default-linux/amd64/2006.1, gcc-4.2.2, glibc-2.7-r1, 2.6.24-gentoo x86_64) ================================================================= System uname: 2.6.24-gentoo x86_64 AMD Athlon(tm) 64 Processor 3000+ Timestamp of tree: Mon, 28 Jan 2008 15:29:01 +0000 ccache version 2.4 [enabled] app-shells/bash: 3.2_p33 dev-java/java-config: 1.3.7, 2.1.3 dev-lang/python: 2.3.6-r3, 2.4.4-r6, 2.5.1-r5 dev-python/pycrypto: 2.0.1-r6 dev-util/ccache: 2.4-r7 sys-apps/baselayout: 1.12.11.1 sys-apps/sandbox: 1.2.18.1-r2 sys-devel/autoconf: 2.13, 2.61-r1 sys-devel/automake: 1.4_p6, 1.5, 1.6.3, 1.7.9-r1, 1.8.5-r3, 1.9.6-r2, 1.10.1 sys-devel/binutils: 2.18-r1 sys-devel/gcc-config: 1.4.0-r4 sys-devel/libtool: 1.5.24 virtual/os-headers: 2.6.24 ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="amd64 ~amd64" CBUILD="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" CFLAGS="-march=k8 -pipe -O2" CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" CONFIG_PROTECT="/etc /usr/kde/3.5/env /usr/kde/3.5/share/config /usr/kde/3.5/shutdown /usr/share/config /var/service" CONFIG_PROTECT_MASK="/etc/env.d /etc/env.d/java/ /etc/fonts/fonts.conf /etc/gconf /etc/php/apache2-php5/ext-active/ /etc/php/cgi-php5/ext-active/ /etc/php/cli-php5/ext-active/ /etc/revdep-rebuild /etc/splash /etc/terminfo /etc/texmf/web2c /etc/udev/rules.d" CXXFLAGS="-march=k8 -pipe -O2" DISTDIR="/usr/portage/distfiles" FEATURES="autoconfig ccache distlocks metadata-transfer parallel-fetch sandbox sfperms strict unmerge-orphans userfetch" GENTOO_MIRRORS="http://distfiles.gentoo.org http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/distributions/gentoo ftp://mirrors.blueyonder.co.uk/sites/gentoo ftp://ftp.join.uni-muenster.de/pub/linux/distributions/gentoo ftp://ftp.wh2.tu-dresden.de/pub/mirrors/gentoo http://mirror.switch.ch/mirror/gentoo/ ftp://mirror.switch.ch/mirror/gentoo/ ftp://ftp.solnet.ch/mirror/Gentoo http://www.mirror.ac.uk/mirror/www.ibiblio.org/" LANG="es_ES.utf8" LC_ALL="es_ES.utf8" LINGUAS="es" MAKEOPTS="-j2" PKGDIR="/usr/portage/packages" PORTAGE_RSYNC_OPTS="--recursive --links --safe-links --perms --times --compress --force --whole-file --delete --stats --timeout=180 --exclude=/distfiles --exclude=/local --exclude=/packages --filter=H_**/files/digest-*" PORTAGE_TMPDIR="/var/tmp/portage" PORTDIR="/usr/portage" SYNC="rsync://rsync.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" USE="X a52 aac alsa amd64 apache2 arts automount avi berkdb bidi bitmap-fonts cdda cdio cdr cli cpdflib cracklib crypt ctype cups curl dba dlloader dri dts dvd dvdread encode ffmpeg firefox fortran freetype gd gdbm gdexternal glade glitz gnome gnutls gpm gtk gtk2 httpd iconv ipv6 irmc isdnlog jpeg kde lame live mad matroska midi mikmod mjpeg mmx2 mp3 mpeg mplayer mudflap musepack mysql ncurses network new-login nls nptl nptlonly nvidia ogg oggvorbis opengl openmp pam pcre pdf pdo-external pear perl photo-viewer php php5 png ppds pppd python quicktime readline reflection samba scanner sdl session simplexml soap soup spell spl sqlite ssl stream svg symlink syslog tcpd theora tk transcode truetype truetype-fonts type1-fonts unicode usb useflag utf8 v4l2 vcd vlc vlm vorbis wxwindows xinerama xml xorg xsl xv xvid zlib" ALSA_CARDS="ali5451 als4000 atiixp atiixp-modem bt87x ca0106 cmipci emu10k1x ens1370 ens1371 es1938 es1968 fm801 hda-intel intel8x0 intel8x0m maestro3 trident usb-audio via82xx via82xx-modem ymfpci" ALSA_PCM_PLUGINS="adpcm alaw asym copy dmix dshare dsnoop empty extplug file hooks iec958 ioplug ladspa lfloat linear meter mulaw multi null plug rate route share shm softvol" APACHE2_MODULES="actions alias auth_basic auth_digest authn_anon authn_dbd authn_dbm authn_default authn_file authz_dbm authz_default authz_groupfile authz_host authz_owner authz_user autoindex cache dav dav_fs dav_lock dbd deflate dir disk_cache env expires ext_filter file_cache filter headers ident imagemap include info log_config logio mem_cache mime mime_magic negotiation proxy proxy_ajp proxy_balancer proxy_connect proxy_http rewrite setenvif so speling status unique_id userdir usertrack vhost_alias" ELIBC="glibc" INPUT_DEVICES="keyboard mouse" KERNEL="linux" LCD_DEVICES="bayrad cfontz cfontz633 glk hd44780 lb216 lcdm001 mtxorb ncurses text" LINGUAS="es" USERLAND="GNU" VIDEO_CARDS="nvidia" Unset: CPPFLAGS, CTARGET, EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS, INSTALL_MASK, LDFLAGS, PORTAGE_COMPRESS, PORTAGE_COMPRESS_FLAGS, PORTAGE_RSYNC_EXTRA_OPTS, PORTDIR_OVERLAY This is my make.conf # These settings were set by the catalyst build script that automatically built this stage # Please consult /etc/make.conf.example for a more detailed example CFLAGS="-march=k8 -pipe -O2" CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" CXXFLAGS="${CFLAGS}" MAKEOPTS="-j2" USE="curl soup glitz svg pdf irmc arts useflag lame scanner encode vlc kde usb vorbis quicktime mjpeg network X glade dvd dvdread ffmpeg mpeg mad wxwindows aac dts a52 theora oggvorbis freetype bidi xv svga gnutls stream vlm httpd cdda vcd cdio live mysql python photo-viewer mpeg mplayer musepack ogg aac nvidia utf8 dri mmx2 opengl cups ssl gtk samba cli apache2 ctype gd jpeg mysql pcre pdo-external pear png simplexml soap sqlite truetype xml xsl zlib nls spell gtk2 gnome dvd alsa cdr php session gdexternal cpdflib berkdb dba php5 unicode mikmod sdl mp3 nptl nptlonly new-login dlloader symlink mmx sse sse2 3dnowext 3dnow xvid v4l2 avi transcode xinerama nvidia matroska syslog automount firefox iconv jpeg tk" #GENTOO_MIRRORS="http://linuv.uv.es/mirror/gentoo" GENTOO_MIRRORS="http://distfiles.gentoo.org http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/distributions/gentoo ftp://mirrors.blueyonder.co.uk/sites/gentoo ftp://ftp.join.uni-muenster.de/pub/linux/distributions/gentoo ftp://ftp.wh2.tu-dresden.de/pub/mirrors/gentoo http://mirror.switch.ch/mirror/gentoo/ ftp://mirror.switch.ch/mirror/gentoo/ ftp://ftp.solnet.ch/mirror/Gentoo http://www.mirror.ac.uk/mirror/www.ibiblio.org/" FEATURES="ccache autoconfig distlocks metadata-transfer parallel-fetch sandbox sfperms strict" CCACHE_SIZE="2G" CCACHE_DIR="/var/tmp/ccache" LINGUAS="es" PKGDIR=/usr/portage/packages PORTAGE_TMPDIR=/var/tmp/portage #RESUMECOMMAND="/usr/bin/axel -v -a -o /\${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \${URI}" #FETCHCOMMAND="/usr/bin/axel -v -a -o /\${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \${URI}" #RESUMECOMMAND_HTTP="/usr/bin/axel -v -a -o /\${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \ ${URI}" #FETCHCOMMAND_HTTP="/usr/bin/axel -v -a -o /\${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \ ${URI}" #SYNC="rsync://rsync.europe.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" #ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~amd64" FETCHCOMMAND="/usr/bin/axel -a -o \${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \${URI}" RESUMECOMMAND="${FETCHCOMMAND}" FETCHCOMMAND_HTTP="/usr/bin/axel -a -o \${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \${URI}" RESUMECOMMAND_HTTP="${FETCHCOMMAND}" ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="amd64 ~amd64" AUTOCLEAN="yes" SYNC="rsync://rsync.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" VIDEO_CARDS="nvidia" INPUT_DEVICES="keyboard mouse" SANE_BACKENDS="snapscan" APACHE2_MODULES="actions alias auth_basic auth_digest authn_anon authn_dbd authn_dbm authn_default authn_file authz_dbm authz_default authz_groupfile authz_host authz_owner authz_user autoindex cache dav dav_fs dav_lock dbd deflate dir disk_cache env expires ext_filter file_cache filter headers ident imagemap include info log_config logio mem_cache mime mime_magic negotiation proxy proxy_ajp proxy_balancer proxy_connect proxy_http rewrite setenvif so speling status unique_id userdir usertrack vhost_alias" Thank's and regards I have recente update kernel.2.6.24 revdep-rebuild non resolve the problem and maskit the package don't. Than'ks and regards El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 07:51 +0000, Beso escribió: > it does gets indicated in emerge --info if i don't remember wrong. > anyway, based on my experience it works fine from 2.6.20 to 2.6.24, so > i think that there's some misconfiguration issues on the host system > on which is trying to install it. > > 2008/1/28, Volker Armin Hemmann > <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > On Montag, 28. Januar 2008, agtdino wrote: > > kernel version? > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > -- > dott. ing. beso -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 8:17 ` agtdino @ 2008-01-29 8:31 ` Steev Klimaszewski 2008-01-29 9:00 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 9:47 ` Beso 0 siblings, 2 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Steev Klimaszewski @ 2008-01-29 8:31 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > Hi, Hi! I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently incompatible (well there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper fix) with 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will need to compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a release (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two patches) that is compatible with 2.6.24. Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely necessary, I would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 -- Steev -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 8:31 ` Steev Klimaszewski @ 2008-01-29 9:00 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 9:56 ` Beso 2008-01-29 9:47 ` Beso 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-29 9:00 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hello, Thank's for the response I will change kernel to 2.6.23-r6. Regard's El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 02:31 -0600, Steev Klimaszewski escribió: > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > Hi, > Hi! > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently incompatible (well > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper fix) with > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will need to > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a release > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two patches) that is > compatible with 2.6.24. > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely necessary, I > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > -- Steev > -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 9:00 ` agtdino @ 2008-01-29 9:56 ` Beso 2008-01-29 10:52 ` agtdino 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-29 9:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1553 bytes --] i think that if you're using the flags you're using you're a real gentoo poweruser. but the fact that the profile is still set to 2006.1 makes me wonder if you really know what you're doing... someone who usually uses the flags you're using also uses the latest profile. i really think that you should update your profile (use eselect profile to do it, i think that 2006.1 would disappear in some months) and then compile at least the base system from the amd64 branch. then you could use gcc-4.2.2and other things the way you want. i personally use a lot of unstable stuff, but the base system is amd64 and not ~amd64. 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Hello, Thank's for the response I will change kernel to 2.6.23-r6. > > Regard's > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 02:31 -0600, Steev Klimaszewski escribió: > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > > Hi, > > Hi! > > > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently incompatible (well > > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper fix) with > > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will need to > > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a release > > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two patches) that is > > compatible with 2.6.24. > > > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely necessary, I > > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > > > -- Steev > > > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1950 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 9:56 ` Beso @ 2008-01-29 10:52 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 11:22 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-29 10:52 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Well, my system is uptime since for a long time and has many updates more than I belive!,, :D For the moments is running well, I dont be a freek of gentoo but when I buy the amd64 system I had to make something hard step's to startit, perhaps it's not something clean and it's has profiles to the pass. I go to think in change this profile, or it reinstall from scratch ( is more fastest but the less interesting :( ) Thank's and regards El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 09:56 +0000, Beso escribió: > i think that if you're using the flags you're using you're a real > gentoo poweruser. but the fact that the profile is still set to 2006.1 > makes me wonder if you really know what you're doing... > someone who usually uses the flags you're using also uses the latest > profile. > i really think that you should update your profile (use eselect > profile to do it, i think that 2006.1 would disappear in some months) > and then compile at least the base system from the amd64 branch. then > you could use gcc-4.2.2 and other things the way you want. i > personally use a lot of unstable stuff, but the base system is amd64 > and not ~amd64. > > 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > Hello, Thank's for the response I will change kernel to > 2.6.23-r6. > > Regard's > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 02:31 -0600, Steev Klimaszewski > escribió: > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > > Hi, > > Hi! > > > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently > incompatible (well > > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper > fix) with > > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will > need to > > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a > release > > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two > patches) that is > > compatible with 2.6.24. > > > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely > necessary, I > > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > > > -- Steev > > > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > -- > dott. ing. beso -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 10:52 ` agtdino @ 2008-01-29 11:22 ` Beso 2008-01-29 22:30 ` agtdino 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-29 11:22 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2899 bytes --] well, just removing ~amd64 from your make.conf and eselect profile set default-linux/amd64/2007.0 and then emerge -uDNvp will let you see what would compile. if you instead want to rebuild from scratch then funtoo has recent compiled stages that would let you not compile a lot of updated stuff. 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Well, my system is uptime since for a long time and has many updates > more than I belive!,, :D > For the moments is running well, I dont be a freek of gentoo but when I > buy the amd64 system I had to make something hard step's to startit, > perhaps it's not something clean and it's has profiles to the pass. > I go to think in change this profile, or it reinstall from scratch ( is > more fastest but the less interesting :( ) > > Thank's and regards > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 09:56 +0000, Beso escribió: > > i think that if you're using the flags you're using you're a real > > gentoo poweruser. but the fact that the profile is still set to 2006.1 > > makes me wonder if you really know what you're doing... > > someone who usually uses the flags you're using also uses the latest > > profile. > > i really think that you should update your profile (use eselect > > profile to do it, i think that 2006.1 would disappear in some months) > > and then compile at least the base system from the amd64 branch. then > > you could use gcc-4.2.2 and other things the way you want. i > > personally use a lot of unstable stuff, but the base system is amd64 > > and not ~amd64. > > > > 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Hello, Thank's for the response I will change kernel to > > 2.6.23-r6. > > > > Regard's > > > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 02:31 -0600, Steev Klimaszewski > > escribió: > > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > Hi! > > > > > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently > > incompatible (well > > > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper > > fix) with > > > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will > > need to > > > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a > > release > > > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two > > patches) that is > > > compatible with 2.6.24. > > > > > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely > > necessary, I > > > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > > > > > -- Steev > > > > > > > -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > -- > > dott. ing. beso > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 4738 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 11:22 ` Beso @ 2008-01-29 22:30 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 23:08 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-29 22:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hi, # eselect profile list Available profile symlink targets: [1] default-linux/amd64/2006.1 * [2] default-linux/amd64/2006.1/desktop [3] default-linux/amd64/2006.0/no-symlinks [4] default-linux/amd64/2006.1/no-multilib [5] default-linux/amd64/2007.0 [6] default-linux/amd64/2007.0/desktop [7] default-linux/amd64/2007.0/no-multilib [8] default-linux/amd64/2007.0/server [9] hardened/amd64 [10] hardened/amd64/multilib [11] selinux/2007.0/amd64 [12] selinux/2007.0/amd64/hardened #eselect profile set 6 And then - sos - # emerge --update --deep --newuse --pretend --verbose world Total: 478 packages (1 upgrade, 396 downgrades, 14 new, 1 in new slot, 66 reinstalls, 5 blocks), Size of downloads: 480,074 kB so bad! :----( perhaps with the 2Gb of ccache that I have saved could take this process only one or 2 days. Thank's for the tip El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 11:22 +0000, Beso escribió: > well, just removing ~amd64 from your make.conf and eselect profile set > default-linux/amd64/2007.0 and then emerge -uDNvp will let you see > what would compile. > if you instead want to rebuild from scratch then funtoo has recent > compiled stages that would let you not compile a lot of updated stuff. > > 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > Well, my system is uptime since for a long time and has many > updates > more than I belive!,, :D > For the moments is running well, I dont be a freek of gentoo > but when I > buy the amd64 system I had to make something hard step's to > startit, > perhaps it's not something clean and it's has profiles to the > pass. > I go to think in change this profile, or it reinstall from > scratch ( is > more fastest but the less interesting :( ) > > Thank's and regards > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 09:56 +0000, Beso escribió: > > i think that if you're using the flags you're using you're a > real > > gentoo poweruser. but the fact that the profile is still set > to 2006.1 > > makes me wonder if you really know what you're doing... > > someone who usually uses the flags you're using also uses > the latest > > profile. > > i really think that you should update your profile (use > eselect > > profile to do it, i think that 2006.1 would disappear in > some months) > > and then compile at least the base system from the amd64 > branch. then > > you could use gcc-4.2.2 and other things the way you want. i > > personally use a lot of unstable stuff, but the base system > is amd64 > > and not ~amd64. > > > > 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Hello, Thank's for the response I will change kernel > to > > 2.6.23-r6. > > > > Regard's > > > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 02:31 -0600, Steev > Klimaszewski > > escribió: > > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > Hi! > > > > > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is > currently > > incompatible (well > > > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the > proper > > fix) with > > > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then > you will > > need to > > > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they > put out a > > release > > > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on > two > > patches) that is > > > compatible with 2.6.24. > > > > > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is > absolutely > > necessary, I > > > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > > > > > -- Steev > > > > > > > -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > -- > > dott. ing. beso > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > -- > dott. ing. beso -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 22:30 ` agtdino @ 2008-01-29 23:08 ` Beso 2008-01-30 1:20 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-29 23:08 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 9354 bytes --] the real problem stands in the keyword.... the amd64 would downgrade a lot of stuff.... before doing it it's better to identify the normal programs, like kde, gnome, and similar and let them be for the moment as ~amd64.... but at least stuff like, gcc, glibc, baselayout, kernel and some other base stuff should stay on the amd64 branch.... you won't be able to downgrade glibc so that one for the moment would stay on the unstable branch.... but if you don't feel in the mood to downgrade cause the ~amd64 being to amd64, then just update the profile and you should see something like 100 packages.... also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in recompiling stuff.... the 2gb of ccache would help, but not a lot.... 400+ packages would mean about 3-4 days on a amd64 2ghz single core, so prepare for a looong time of compile time.... also the 5 blockers are not good and should be fixed in some way before proceeding to the recompile.... if you decide to modify the use flags when changing profile it's the best time.... so my advice is the following: 1. take some time to look at the use flags (emerge ufed and see a description of them and also add/remove them from the ufed gui in make.conf) 2. add LDFLAGS="--as-needed" into make.conf 3. take some time to see what packages are needed on ~amd64 (normally kde, gnome, and other normal use packages like firefox, ktorrent or similar or even xorg are good also on ~amd64 and don't need a downgrade), but others as gcc, baselayout, libstdc++, dhcpclient, dhcpcd, network related packages and kernel modules are normally best on amd64. i'm not saying that using them on ~amd64 won't work, but on this branch you might experience various problems. after deciding what you want to mantain as ~amd64 you add them to package.keywords in /et/portage/ with ~amd64 flag and then remove the flag in make.conf. after that retry the update and see that the number of packages has decreased dramatically. take another look at the downgraded stuff and after being sure you could start the update of your system. this step is a little boring, but after some time spent on configuration, unmask and mask you'll find yourself with a system with the following characteristics: - base system = stable - cutting edge apps, which sometimes could bring out some problems, but that wouldn't be caused by system packages faults. if you want to see some more stuff i reccomend the following overlays: - sunrise: has a lot of extra interesting stuff of various kind, from developer stuff to user apps as miro, the free web tv player that challenges joost. - sabayon: has some interesting things like the kde4 style kicker for 3.5.8branch - flameeyes-overlay: has some memory improved stuff like patched codecs and the oxy-cursors that are really great. from this overlay be sure not to compile the xine-lib because it's not meant to work with versions of amarok before the 2.0 and since it has some issues caused by the developing process (this xine-lib is meant for integration with kde4 and phonon). i recommend the other codecs like giflib and theora since they have a patch for shared memory improvements. i also reccomend the ffmpeg with hardcoded-tables flag from this overlay. - berkano: has some media related packages like x264-svn, new k3b and some other media packages - x11: if you want svn versions of xorg and its components add this overlay. i've seen some great improvements with the new xf86-video-ati after it has ggod support for x200m and rs690 and the new mesa and glitz from svn have some font antialiasing stuff that is really interesting. to add them emerge layman and use it to update and mantain the new repositories. on gentoo wiki there are wikis on how to install and use layman. if you need some help with the packages or use flags feel free to ask. i'll try explaining what are my experiences with them. remember to run revdep-rebuild after updating since it's very likely to have broken linkage after an update of 400 packages. ps. consider the profile update as a gentoo full update. if you think about distro that use versioning then it's similar to updating to ubuntu 7 from ubuntu 6. so it's normal to have a lot of packages pushed in considering use flags changes and keywords ones. 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Hi, > > > # eselect profile list > Available profile symlink targets: > [1] default-linux/amd64/2006.1 * > [2] default-linux/amd64/2006.1/desktop > [3] default-linux/amd64/2006.0/no-symlinks > [4] default-linux/amd64/2006.1/no-multilib > [5] default-linux/amd64/2007.0 > [6] default-linux/amd64/2007.0/desktop > [7] default-linux/amd64/2007.0/no-multilib > [8] default-linux/amd64/2007.0/server > [9] hardened/amd64 > [10] hardened/amd64/multilib > [11] selinux/2007.0/amd64 > [12] selinux/2007.0/amd64/hardened > > #eselect profile set 6 > > And then - sos - > > # emerge --update --deep --newuse --pretend --verbose world > > > Total: 478 packages (1 upgrade, 396 downgrades, 14 new, 1 in new slot, > 66 reinstalls, 5 blocks), Size of downloads: 480,074 kB > > so bad! :----( > > perhaps with the 2Gb of ccache that I have saved could take this process > only one or 2 days. > > Thank's for the tip > > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 11:22 +0000, Beso escribió: > > well, just removing ~amd64 from your make.conf and eselect profile set > > default-linux/amd64/2007.0 and then emerge -uDNvp will let you see > > what would compile. > > if you instead want to rebuild from scratch then funtoo has recent > > compiled stages that would let you not compile a lot of updated stuff. > > > > 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > Well, my system is uptime since for a long time and has many > > updates > > more than I belive!,, :D > > For the moments is running well, I dont be a freek of gentoo > > but when I > > buy the amd64 system I had to make something hard step's to > > startit, > > perhaps it's not something clean and it's has profiles to the > > pass. > > I go to think in change this profile, or it reinstall from > > scratch ( is > > more fastest but the less interesting :( ) > > > > Thank's and regards > > > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 09:56 +0000, Beso escribió: > > > i think that if you're using the flags you're using you're a > > real > > > gentoo poweruser. but the fact that the profile is still set > > to 2006.1 > > > makes me wonder if you really know what you're doing... > > > someone who usually uses the flags you're using also uses > > the latest > > > profile. > > > i really think that you should update your profile (use > > eselect > > > profile to do it, i think that 2006.1 would disappear in > > some months) > > > and then compile at least the base system from the amd64 > > branch. then > > > you could use gcc-4.2.2 and other things the way you want. i > > > personally use a lot of unstable stuff, but the base system > > is amd64 > > > and not ~amd64. > > > > > > 2008/1/29, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > > Hello, Thank's for the response I will change kernel > > to > > > 2.6.23-r6. > > > > > > Regard's > > > > > > El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 02:31 -0600, Steev > > Klimaszewski > > > escribió: > > > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > Hi! > > > > > > > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is > > currently > > > incompatible (well > > > > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the > > proper > > > fix) with > > > > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then > > you will > > > need to > > > > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they > > put out a > > > release > > > > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on > > two > > > patches) that is > > > > compatible with 2.6.24. > > > > > > > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is > > absolutely > > > necessary, I > > > > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > > > > > > > -- Steev > > > > > > > > > > -- > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > > > dott. ing. beso > > > > -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > -- > > dott. ing. beso > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 15235 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 23:08 ` Beso @ 2008-01-30 1:20 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 6:55 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2008-01-30 8:18 ` [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 Beso 0 siblings, 2 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 1:20 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > the real problem stands in the keyword.... the amd64 would downgrade a lot > of stuff.... before doing it it's better to identify the normal programs, > like kde, gnome, and similar and let them be for the moment as ~amd64.... > but at least stuff like, gcc, glibc, baselayout, kernel and some other base > stuff should stay on the amd64 branch.... you won't be able to downgrade > glibc so that one for the moment would stay on the unstable branch.... but > if you don't feel in the mood to downgrade cause the ~amd64 being to > amd64, then just update the profile and you should see something like 100 > packages.... > also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in > recompiling stuff.... yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. > the 2gb of ccache would help, but not a lot.... 400+ packages would mean > about 3-4 days on a amd64 2ghz single core, so prepare for a looong time of > compile time.... also the 5 blockers are not good and should be fixed in > some way before proceeding to the recompile.... no, it would mean something around 12h. Depending on the packages. > if you decide to modify the use flags when changing profile it's the best > time.... yeah, check which flags changed, and which ones you really need. That way you might be able to cut down the amount of packages. > so my advice is the following: > 1. take some time to look at the use flags (emerge ufed and see a > description of them and also add/remove them from the ufed gui in > make.conf) > 2. add LDFLAGS="--as-needed" into make.conf really, don't do it. > > Total: 478 packages (1 upgrade, 396 downgrades, 14 new, 1 in new slot, > > 66 reinstalls, 5 blocks), Size of downloads: 480,074 kB check your keywords - and blockers are easily solved. Usually you need to unmerge something. And the blocking ebuild tells you what. And agtdino and Beso: DO NOT TOP POST. This is not a Windows mailing list. -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 1:20 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 6:55 ` Duncan 2008-01-30 8:04 ` Volker Armin Hemmann ` (2 more replies) 2008-01-30 8:18 ` [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 Beso 1 sibling, 3 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2008-01-30 6:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de> posted 200801300220.21430.volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de, excerpted below, on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 02:20:21 +0100: >> also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in >> recompiling stuff.... > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. I think the breakage in most of the common stuff Gentoo devs anyway use has been fixed by now. I know I've had surprisingly few problems (read, ZERO problems) with it here. Surprising, as I expected at least a few, but I've seen exactly ZERO. That said, especially for those who just want things to work, without having to futz with LDFLAGS and remerge something occasionally, I'd still not recommend it. For those that enjoy the challenge of such things, however, I'd say great! Go for it! And for those in the middle, well, YMMV, as the saying goes. You probably lean one way or the other, so take your pick. As for amd64 vs. ~amd64, I'm 100% ~amd64 here, and have been from when I started on Gentoo. In fact, I've read suggestions that Gentoo tends to work better at ~arch than at stable, because ~ is where most developers are, and it's not uncommon for certain incompatibilities with "old" software, that is, the crufty stable stuff from months or years ago that's common in stable, to be overlooked until some poor stable keyword user files a bug. Yes, before stabilizing, the arch-devs and arch- testers normally test a package against a full-stable system, but it's simply not possible to test against every permutation of USE flags and mix of merged apps. While it's certainly true that ~arch packages have the same issue, at least there there's a decently active community of testers actively reporting bugs and devs fixing them. Were it conveniently possible, I'd say the most trouble-free scenario would be to take only ~arch packages that had been ~arch for say a week, minimum, after verifying that nobody had run into and filed any serious bugs on them. That'd be after the initial test wave had done its installation and testing, but before the cruft that often attaches to stable had set in. <brainstorming> What would be great would be a keyword system that would allow just this, say ~ for initial testing, automatically upgraded to / after the week UNLESS they've been marked ~~, with the extra ~ automatically added to ~ packages by a script if a bug has been filed, blocking the automatic upgrade to /, and a bugzilla keyword that a dev could add to put the package back on automated / track if they've decided the bug isn't worth derailing the automated / upgrade over. Then people could go full testing ~ mode if they wanted, / mode if they wanted almost ~ but wanted to be spared the pain of the most obvious bugs as found in the initial testing wave, and full stable arch if they wanted crufty old packages, say for a server only upgraded for security issues or the like, somewhere. </brainstorming> Of course, YMMV, but ~ for the entire system, with appropriate site based masking as Gentoo already makes possible with /etc/portage/package.mask and the like, isn't as terrible or system breaking as some folks like to make it out to be. By policy, ~ is only for stable track packages in the first place. Obviously broken packages and those not considered stable candidates normally never get even the ~ keyword, as they are kept in development overlays or in the tree but without keywords or fully hard masked, so ~ packages aren't the broken things a lot of people make them out to be. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 6:55 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan @ 2008-01-30 8:04 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 8:43 ` Beso 2008-01-30 8:32 ` Beso 2008-02-03 13:42 ` [gentoo-amd64] new laptop ionut cucu 2 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 8:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Duncan wrote: > Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de> posted > 200801300220.21430.volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de, excerpted below, > > on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 02:20:21 +0100: > >> also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in > >> recompiling stuff.... > > > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. > > I think the breakage in most of the common stuff Gentoo devs anyway use > has been fixed by now. I know I've had surprisingly few problems (read, > ZERO problems) with it here. Surprising, as I expected at least a few, > but I've seen exactly ZERO. > > That said, especially for those who just want things to work, without > having to futz with LDFLAGS and remerge something occasionally, I'd still > not recommend it. For those that enjoy the challenge of such things, > however, I'd say great! Go for it! And for those in the middle, well, > YMMV, as the saying goes. You probably lean one way or the other, so > take your pick. aren't bug reports with --as-needed closed as invalid per default? > > As for amd64 vs. ~amd64, I'm 100% ~amd64 here, and have been from when I > started on Gentoo. when I started with gentoo, there was no 'stable' or 'unstable'. And IMHO that was a lot better. But some day some people tried to turn gentoo into a 'debian from source'. > In fact, I've read suggestions that Gentoo tends to > work better at ~arch than at stable, because ~ is where most developers > are, and it's not uncommon for certain incompatibilities with "old" > software, that is, the crufty stable stuff from months or years ago > that's common in stable, to be overlooked until some poor stable keyword > user files a bug. Yes, before stabilizing, the arch-devs and arch- > testers normally test a package against a full-stable system, but it's > simply not possible to test against every permutation of USE flags and > mix of merged apps. While it's certainly true that ~arch packages have > the same issue, at least there there's a decently active community of > testers actively reporting bugs and devs fixing them. from my experience, go stable or unstable. But don't mix. And a better name for stable would be 'stale'. That said, a lot of problems who hit me as an unstable user hit my 'stable' friends too. So why use 'stable' at all? > > > <brainstorming> What would be great would be a keyword system that would > allow just this, say ~ for initial testing, automatically upgraded to / > after the week UNLESS they've been marked ~~, with the extra ~ > automatically added to ~ packages by a script if a bug has been filed, > blocking the automatic upgrade to /, and a bugzilla keyword that a dev > could add to put the package back on automated / track if they've decided > the bug isn't worth derailing the automated / upgrade over. Then people > could go full testing ~ mode if they wanted, / mode if they wanted almost > ~ but wanted to be spared the pain of the most obvious bugs as found in > the initial testing wave, and full stable arch if they wanted crufty old > packages, say for a server only upgraded for security issues or the like, > somewhere. </brainstorming> what would be great would be recognizing that 'stable' does not work. > > Of course, YMMV, but ~ for the entire system, with appropriate site based > masking as Gentoo already makes possible with /etc/portage/package.mask > and the like, isn't as terrible or system breaking as some folks like to > make it out to be. By policy, ~ is only for stable track packages in the > first place. Obviously broken packages and those not considered stable > candidates normally never get even the ~ keyword, as they are kept in > development overlays or in the tree but without keywords or fully hard > masked, so ~ packages aren't the broken things a lot of people make them > out to be. exactly. ~arch is not for broken packages, brocken or highly experimental stuff is in package.mask. -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 8:04 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 8:43 ` Beso 2008-01-30 16:59 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-30 8:43 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5250 bytes --] 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Duncan wrote: > > Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de> posted > > 200801300220.21430.volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de, excerpted > below, > > > > on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 02:20:21 +0100: > > >> also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in > > >> recompiling stuff.... > > > > > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. > > > > I think the breakage in most of the common stuff Gentoo devs anyway use > > has been fixed by now. I know I've had surprisingly few problems (read, > > ZERO problems) with it here. Surprising, as I expected at least a few, > > but I've seen exactly ZERO. > > > > That said, especially for those who just want things to work, without > > having to futz with LDFLAGS and remerge something occasionally, I'd > still > > not recommend it. For those that enjoy the challenge of such things, > > however, I'd say great! Go for it! And for those in the middle, well, > > YMMV, as the saying goes. You probably lean one way or the other, so > > take your pick. > > aren't bug reports with --as-needed closed as invalid per default? they might be, but the fact is that the flag is good and working well. > > > As for amd64 vs. ~amd64, I'm 100% ~amd64 here, and have been from when I > > started on Gentoo. > > when I started with gentoo, there was no 'stable' or 'unstable'. > > And IMHO that was a lot better. But some day some people tried to turn > gentoo > into a 'debian from source'. hmmm.... from what i remember gento always had stable/unstable branches. i've started using it about 4 or 5 years ago and for what i remember the 2 branches were there already.... > In fact, I've read suggestions that Gentoo tends to > > work better at ~arch than at stable, because ~ is where most developers > > are, and it's not uncommon for certain incompatibilities with "old" > > software, that is, the crufty stable stuff from months or years ago > > that's common in stable, to be overlooked until some poor stable keyword > > user files a bug. Yes, before stabilizing, the arch-devs and arch- > > testers normally test a package against a full-stable system, but it's > > simply not possible to test against every permutation of USE flags and > > mix of merged apps. While it's certainly true that ~arch packages have > > the same issue, at least there there's a decently active community of > > testers actively reporting bugs and devs fixing them. > > from my experience, go stable or unstable. But don't mix. And a better > name > for stable would be 'stale'. > > That said, a lot of problems who hit me as an unstable user hit my > 'stable' > friends too. So why use 'stable' at all? well, i had more problems with whole unstable system. the whole unstable could mix up your system, since a daily update, as i do, especially on system packages is bad. it could push in some bad stuff inside. > > > > > <brainstorming> What would be great would be a keyword system that would > > allow just this, say ~ for initial testing, automatically upgraded to / > > after the week UNLESS they've been marked ~~, with the extra ~ > > automatically added to ~ packages by a script if a bug has been filed, > > blocking the automatic upgrade to /, and a bugzilla keyword that a dev > > could add to put the package back on automated / track if they've > decided > > the bug isn't worth derailing the automated / upgrade over. Then people > > could go full testing ~ mode if they wanted, / mode if they wanted > almost > > ~ but wanted to be spared the pain of the most obvious bugs as found in > > the initial testing wave, and full stable arch if they wanted crufty old > > packages, say for a server only upgraded for security issues or the > like, > > somewhere. </brainstorming> > > what would be great would be recognizing that 'stable' does not work. the problem is that stable needs a lot of testing. and the devs don't have the time to test is anymore. kde3.5.8 went stable yesterday, but i've been using it from when it got into portage without problems. also, there are a lot of unstable packages that the people need so what i'd suggest is the removal of stable for non-system packages. > > > Of course, YMMV, but ~ for the entire system, with appropriate site > based > > masking as Gentoo already makes possible with /etc/portage/package.mask > > and the like, isn't as terrible or system breaking as some folks like to > > make it out to be. By policy, ~ is only for stable track packages in > the > > first place. Obviously broken packages and those not considered stable > > candidates normally never get even the ~ keyword, as they are kept in > > development overlays or in the tree but without keywords or fully hard > > masked, so ~ packages aren't the broken things a lot of people make them > > out to be. > > exactly. > > ~arch is not for broken packages, brocken or highly experimental stuff is > in > package.mask. or doesn't get into portage at all.... usually a package that is broken isn't in portage, unless it has already gotten into, but was found broken. -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 7104 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 8:43 ` Beso @ 2008-01-30 16:59 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 19:09 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > aren't bug reports with --as-needed closed as invalid per default? > > they might be, but the fact is that the flag is good and working well. if you can't report bugs, a flag is not good. > > when I started with gentoo, there was no 'stable' or 'unstable'. > > > > And IMHO that was a lot better. But some day some people tried to turn > > gentoo > > into a 'debian from source'. > > hmmm.... from what i remember gento always had stable/unstable branches. no ;) -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 16:59 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 19:09 ` Beso 2008-01-30 19:47 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-30 19:09 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 654 bytes --] 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > > > aren't bug reports with --as-needed closed as invalid per default? > > > > they might be, but the fact is that the flag is good and working well. > > if you can't report bugs, a flag is not good. for what i know a bug is a bug when you have tested that it doesn't present on an all-stable system. to report a bug just remove the flag and see what hapens. if it's still there then the bug is present. i don't see the difficulty. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1054 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 19:09 ` Beso @ 2008-01-30 19:47 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 20:02 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 19:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > > > aren't bug reports with --as-needed closed as invalid per default? > > > > > > they might be, but the fact is that the flag is good and working well. > > > > if you can't report bugs, a flag is not good. > > for what i know a bug is a bug when you have tested that it doesn't present > on an all-stable system. to report a bug just remove the flag and see what > hapens. if it's still there then the bug is present. i don't see the > difficulty. you not only have to remove the flag but to rebuild the complete system. -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 19:47 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 20:02 ` Beso 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-30 20:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1289 bytes --] 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > > > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann < > volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > > > > aren't bug reports with --as-needed closed as invalid per default? > > > > > > > > they might be, but the fact is that the flag is good and working > well. > > > > > > if you can't report bugs, a flag is not good. > > > > for what i know a bug is a bug when you have tested that it doesn't > present > > on an all-stable system. to report a bug just remove the flag and see > what > > hapens. if it's still there then the bug is present. i don't see the > > difficulty. > > you not only have to remove the flag but to rebuild the complete system. this thing doesn't results to me. but this is not a problem since till now i haven't got any problem with it, but only satisfactions. i'm not here to force anyone on having it, but since it is just widely accepted as not problematic and since i haven't got any problems with it, then there's no harm in advising people to use it. -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2039 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 6:55 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2008-01-30 8:04 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-30 8:32 ` Beso 2008-01-30 17:42 ` Duncan 2008-02-03 13:42 ` [gentoo-amd64] new laptop ionut cucu 2 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-30 8:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5652 bytes --] 2008/1/30, Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net>: > > Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de> posted > 200801300220.21430.volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de, excerpted below, > on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 02:20:21 +0100: > > >> also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in > >> recompiling stuff.... > > > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. > > I think the breakage in most of the common stuff Gentoo devs anyway use > has been fixed by now. I know I've had surprisingly few problems (read, > ZERO problems) with it here. Surprising, as I expected at least a few, > but I've seen exactly ZERO. > > That said, especially for those who just want things to work, without > having to futz with LDFLAGS and remerge something occasionally, I'd still > not recommend it. For those that enjoy the challenge of such things, > however, I'd say great! Go for it! And for those in the middle, well, > YMMV, as the saying goes. You probably lean one way or the other, so > take your pick. for me it has worked as a charm and as i've said: the ebuilds that are broken by it usually have ldflags removed so there's no need to worry anymore for it. i found it something awesome after the libexpat-2 update. without it i would have to emerge abour 300 packages (kde stuff, gcc, mime-shared, firefox ecc) but with it i only needed something like 10-15 packages of which 7 were updates and 2 or 3 had use flags changed. the doc about that flag is about 2 and a half years old and wasn't updated since then. i bet that every single dev would advise to us the flag if you happen to do have some packages that need to recompile broken stuff (x264-svn, ffmpeg and xine-lib would push some package recompile). i'd also advise to use the the --buildpkg feature for some high compiling time packages like kdebase, gcc, openoffice or mplayer. since these packages are likely to be the same for quite some time and they might be pushed into recompilation by some other updates having them packaged on disk (they'd require disk space when packaged) would mean to skip all the compilation part and jump directly to the install one (of course if they would need to be recompiled portage would do it). As for amd64 vs. ~amd64, I'm 100% ~amd64 here, and have been from when I > started on Gentoo. In fact, I've read suggestions that Gentoo tends to > work better at ~arch than at stable, because ~ is where most developers > are, and it's not uncommon for certain incompatibilities with "old" > software, that is, the crufty stable stuff from months or years ago > that's common in stable, to be overlooked until some poor stable keyword > user files a bug. Yes, before stabilizing, the arch-devs and arch- > testers normally test a package against a full-stable system, but it's > simply not possible to test against every permutation of USE flags and > mix of merged apps. While it's certainly true that ~arch packages have > the same issue, at least there there's a decently active community of > testers actively reporting bugs and devs fixing them. well, i'm more pleased by live ebuilds. i personally use a good ammount of live packages, especially multimedia, xorg and some network stuff like networkmanager and knm. Were it conveniently possible, I'd say the most trouble-free scenario > would be to take only ~arch packages that had been ~arch for say a week, > minimum, after verifying that nobody had run into and filed any serious > bugs on them. That'd be after the initial test wave had done its > installation and testing, but before the cruft that often attaches to > stable had set in. > > <brainstorming> What would be great would be a keyword system that would > allow just this, say ~ for initial testing, automatically upgraded to / > after the week UNLESS they've been marked ~~, with the extra ~ > automatically added to ~ packages by a script if a bug has been filed, > blocking the automatic upgrade to /, and a bugzilla keyword that a dev > could add to put the package back on automated / track if they've decided > the bug isn't worth derailing the automated / upgrade over. Then people > could go full testing ~ mode if they wanted, / mode if they wanted almost > ~ but wanted to be spared the pain of the most obvious bugs as found in > the initial testing wave, and full stable arch if they wanted crufty old > packages, say for a server only upgraded for security issues or the like, > somewhere. </brainstorming> usually that's the point of hard masking. when a package doesn't work then it goes hardmasked. Of course, YMMV, but ~ for the entire system, with appropriate site based > masking as Gentoo already makes possible with /etc/portage/package.mask > and the like, isn't as terrible or system breaking as some folks like to > make it out to be. By policy, ~ is only for stable track packages in the > first place. Obviously broken packages and those not considered stable > candidates normally never get even the ~ keyword, as they are kept in > development overlays or in the tree but without keywords or fully hard > masked, so ~ packages aren't the broken things a lot of people make them > out to be. i still think that having the base system on the unstable arch isn't a very good idea. i've used the same stuff for quite some time, but i found out that it isn't a very good stuff. or at least 6 months ago wasn't a good idea. -- > Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. > "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- > and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 7210 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 8:32 ` Beso @ 2008-01-30 17:42 ` Duncan 2008-01-30 19:06 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2008-01-30 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> posted d257c3560801300032m6f6c51adwc9f4bd75da066609@mail.gmail.com, excerpted below, on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 09:32:57 +0100: > i'd also advise to use the the --buildpkg feature for some high > compiling time packages like kdebase, gcc, openoffice or mplayer. since > these packages are likely to be the same for quite some time and they > might be pushed into recompilation by some other updates having them > packaged on disk (they'd require disk space when packaged) would mean to > skip all the compilation part and jump directly to the install one (of > course if they would need to be recompiled portage would do it). IMO --buildpkg (or better yet, FEATURES=buildpkg, if you've got 2-4 gigs of room for the packages) is one of the most under-advertised power-user tools Gentoo has. The binaries are just so handy to have around, giving one all the advantages of a binary distribution if you need to remerge or need to fetch a "pristine" config file for some reason, without losing all the benefits and extra control allowed by from-source, since you compile everything initially anyway. Of course, if something big dependency-wise changes, one often ends up rebuilding from-source anyway, so the linking gets updated to the new dependencies, so buildpkg is not a cure-all, but it certainly has its uses, and I'd be hard pressed to try to do without it! > i still think that having the base system on the unstable arch isn't a > very good idea. i've used the same stuff for quite some time, but i > found out that it isn't a very good stuff. or at least 6 months ago > wasn't a good idea. I've never had serious issues in that regard. I'd suggest it's because I /always/ use --update --deep --newuse on my emerge world updates, so stuff tends to be pretty up to date anyway, and due to regular use of revdep-rebuild and emerge --depclean to keep the system hygiene level high. The one hassle there is, is that ~arch may have multiple version updates in the time there's only a single stable version update. It's not uncommon for USE flags to change, thus triggering a --newuse rebuild, and/ or for various bugs and their fixes discovered during the ~ phase to be judged -rX worthy, and stable folks and those that don't routinely use --deep get to skip a lot of that. The cure, of course, is a faster machine! =8^) Gentoo was reasonable with my old dual Opteron 242, but merges for things such as gcc, glibc, and DEFINITELY whole desktop updates like KDE, tended to be a chore. The upgrade to dual dual-core Opteron 290s, combined with 8 gigs memory (tho 4 gig would do) and putting PORTAGE_TMPDIR on tmpfs, made a HUGE difference. Where KDE 3.5 updates, for example, would take ~12 hours back when I had a gig of memory and no tmpfs, and ~8 hours after upgrading the memory, I was running the KDE4-svn ebuilds from the overlay, and could compile all of KDE4 (well, most, I didn't have kdeedu or kdedevel merged) in ~4 hours with the dual dual-cores and PORTAGE_TMPDIR on tmpfs with 8 gigs memory, generally < 2 hours with everything ccached if I did it daily, and often closer to a single hour! Really. Those who've not yet had a chance to try quad cores (however you get them) and a good 4 gigs memory minimum, it really /does/ make running Gentoo pretty trivial. A couple years from now when that's a lower end new system, it's likely Gentoo and other from-source distributions will see a fresh rise in popularity, because the time differences between grabbing a binary update and grabbing a from-source update begin to be pretty trivial, while all the advantages of from source, in particular, greater control of dependencies without bloat, remain. At that level, the admin time, just figuring out what you are going to install, and dealing with the config updates, etc, is as much a factor as the compile time. By the time we reach 8 cores and a full 8 to 16 gig RAM, that admin time will be the MAJOR factor, with the actual compile time almost entirely a non-factor, so the advantages of running binary pretty much disappear while the advantages of running from-source remain as big as they ever were! -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 17:42 ` Duncan @ 2008-01-30 19:06 ` Beso 2008-01-31 10:14 ` Duncan 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-30 19:06 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5743 bytes --] 2008/1/30, Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net>: > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> posted > d257c3560801300032m6f6c51adwc9f4bd75da066609@mail.gmail.com, excerpted > below, on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 09:32:57 +0100: > > > i'd also advise to use the the --buildpkg feature for some high > > compiling time packages like kdebase, gcc, openoffice or mplayer. since > > these packages are likely to be the same for quite some time and they > > might be pushed into recompilation by some other updates having them > > packaged on disk (they'd require disk space when packaged) would mean to > > skip all the compilation part and jump directly to the install one (of > > course if they would need to be recompiled portage would do it). > > IMO --buildpkg (or better yet, FEATURES=buildpkg, if you've got 2-4 gigs > of room for the packages) is one of the most under-advertised power-user > tools Gentoo has. The binaries are just so handy to have around, giving > one all the advantages of a binary distribution if you need to remerge or > need to fetch a "pristine" config file for some reason, without losing > all the benefits and extra control allowed by from-source, since you > compile everything initially anyway. i only use it on system packages like gcc that are mandatory for compiling something (just in case something breaks) and on some big packages that don't update frequently (kdebase, kdelibs). this requires less space than buildpkg for all world packages. of course having this option enabled needs frequent distcleans after updates since there's the risk of having there different versions of the same package that aren't used. Of course, if something big dependency-wise changes, one often ends up > rebuilding from-source anyway, so the linking gets updated to the new > dependencies, so buildpkg is not a cure-all, but it certainly has its > uses, and I'd be hard pressed to try to do without it! it sure helps when a rebuild is triggered after a lib soname update or relinking issues. in that case there's no need to recompile but only to relink and having binary builds helps a lot. > i still think that having the base system on the unstable arch isn't a > > very good idea. i've used the same stuff for quite some time, but i > > found out that it isn't a very good stuff. or at least 6 months ago > > wasn't a good idea. > > I've never had serious issues in that regard. I'd suggest it's because > I /always/ use --update --deep --newuse on my emerge world updates, so > stuff tends to be pretty up to date anyway, and due to regular use of > revdep-rebuild and emerge --depclean to keep the system hygiene level > high. the problem is always there: major or blocking bugs getting into the unstable branch after the update of the package (has happened with dhcpcd for example) that makes gentoo devs mask the package the next day or so. so for people like me that update daily this could be troublesome if it happens on the system packages. The cure, of course, is a faster machine! =8^) Gentoo was reasonable > with my old dual Opteron 242, but merges for things such as gcc, glibc, > and DEFINITELY whole desktop updates like KDE, tended to be a chore. The > upgrade to dual dual-core Opteron 290s, combined with 8 gigs memory (tho > 4 gig would do) and putting PORTAGE_TMPDIR on tmpfs, made a HUGE > difference. Where KDE 3.5 updates, for example, would take ~12 hours > back when I had a gig of memory and no tmpfs, and ~8 hours after > upgrading the memory, I was running the KDE4-svn ebuilds from the > overlay, and could compile all of KDE4 (well, most, I didn't have kdeedu > or kdedevel merged) in ~4 hours with the dual dual-cores and > PORTAGE_TMPDIR on tmpfs with 8 gigs memory, generally < 2 hours with > everything ccached if I did it daily, and often closer to a single hour! this is a high end machine. opteron is better than a normal athlon x2 in terms of compilation and having 8gb on a server mobo, that differs from normal mobos, is not affordable for every user. my system is about the average one (2ghz processor, 1gb ram, 80gb hdd) for notebooks and quite average one for desktops. remember that nuveau devs still work on athlons or pentium 3 hw, and that hw is not dead yet. your system nowadays is a middle-high end one. Really. Those who've not yet had a chance to try quad cores (however you > get them) and a good 4 gigs memory minimum, it really /does/ make running > Gentoo pretty trivial. A couple years from now when that's a lower end > new system, it's likely Gentoo and other from-source distributions will > see a fresh rise in popularity, because the time differences between > grabbing a binary update and grabbing a from-source update begin to be > pretty trivial, while all the advantages of from source, in particular, > greater control of dependencies without bloat, remain. At that level, > the admin time, just figuring out what you are going to install, and > dealing with the config updates, etc, is as much a factor as the compile > time. By the time we reach 8 cores and a full 8 to 16 gig RAM, that > admin time will be the MAJOR factor, with the actual compile time almost > entirely a non-factor, so the advantages of running binary pretty much > disappear while the advantages of running from-source remain as big as > they ever were! well, this is true for minor packages, but kdelibs or kdebase for example are still quite big and if you're not a developer you won't go around compiling it everyday or so. -- > Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. > "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- > and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 7358 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 19:06 ` Beso @ 2008-01-31 10:14 ` Duncan 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2008-01-31 10:14 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> posted d257c3560801301106o7d8c3b15mf6e0a4a075bcfbde@mail.gmail.com, excerpted below, on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 19:06:47 +0000: > 2008/1/30, Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net>: >> >> Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> posted >> d257c3560801300032m6f6c51adwc9f4bd75da066609@mail.gmail.com, excerpted >> below, on Wed, 30 Jan 2008 09:32:57 +0100: >> >> IMO --buildpkg (or better yet, FEATURES=buildpkg, if you've got 2-4 >> gigs of room for the packages) is one of the most under-advertised >> power-user tools Gentoo has. The binaries are just so handy to have >> around, giving one all the advantages of a binary distribution if you >> need to remerge or need to fetch a "pristine" config file for some >> reason, without losing all the benefits and extra control allowed by >> from-source, since you compile everything initially anyway. > > > i only use it on system packages like gcc that are mandatory for > compiling something (just in case something breaks) and on some big > packages that don't update frequently (kdebase, kdelibs). this requires > less space than buildpkg for all world packages. of course having this > option enabled needs frequent distcleans after updates since there's the > risk of having there different versions of the same package that aren't > used. Disk space is cheap! =8^) As I said, I do FEATURES=buildpkg so have packages for the entire system. I keep them in a dedicated RAID-6 LVM volume, along with a backup volume of the same size. Since my last disk upgrade when I increased the sizes of the volumes, I've not yet run out of space and only eclean-pkg once in awhile when I decide I've not done it recently, so maybe twice a year and it might be 9 months between runs. My system runs ~1 gig for a full set of packages, but I'd say closer to 2 gigs is the minimum one should consider viable for such an endeavor, given that ideally you keep both the present version and the last known working version at least until you've verified that a new version of a package works. AFAIK, I ran 2 gig package partitions before, but that didn't really leave me as much room as I'd have liked. I'm running 4 gig volumes now, as I said, two of them, the working copy and a backup I take every so often. Right now, df says I'm using 1.9 gigs out of 4 gigs on my working package volume, and that's with both KDE 3.5.x and 4.0.x-SVNs merged (but no GNOME tho I do have GTK, so figure about the same if you just run KDE and GNOME normally, one copy of each). The only problem with that system is that for live builds, like my kde- svn builds, the new copy replaces the old one if I don't specifically save the old ones off, and if that new copy doesn't end up working, as is quite possible with live-svn... I could script a solution that automatically saves off the old copy, keeping several versions of it much like logrotate does, but I haven't as I really haven't had the time I've wanted to get kde-4.x customized to my liking, so I've kept kde-3.5.x as my (very customized) main desktop for the time being, and it's therefore no big deal if the kde4-svn live ebuilds go tits-up on me for awhile. In fact, I was saying how easy it is to keep kde-svn compiled now that I upgraded to dual dual-core Opterons... and it's true. Once I got past the initial compile (that was back in November, so things were quite rough still and it took a bit of effort to get the USE flags and etc right so it would compile the first time), it has been much easier to keep up with routinely updating the compiled builds, than it has to actually run them, and go in and get things customized to my liking in the environment. I've played around with it some, but I've actually been disappointed as I've simply not had the time I had expected to have to get it running to my liking, so mostly, it just sits, and gets updated, and seldom gets run as I continue to run kde-3.5.x for my daily work. It has been quite frustrating, actually, because I've /not/ had that time -- putting in 10 hours a week more at work really takes the time away from other things! But things are getting rather back to normal, now, so I'm hoping I get to it in the next couple weeks... > it sure helps when a rebuild is triggered after a lib soname update or > relinking issues. in that case there's no need to recompile but only to > relink and having binary builds helps a lot. ?? I can see how ccache would help, and maybe keeping the sources around with the previous compile job in place so you can simply run make && make install and it'll use existing work where it can, but the binary packages are already dynamic stub-linked, so you'd still have to rebuild them. I don't quite get what you are saying here, unless you're talking about ccache, or under the misimpression that the binary packages aren't rebuilt when they need to relink against a new *.so -- they are, from all I know. > the problem is always there: major or blocking bugs getting into the > unstable branch after the update of the package (has happened with > dhcpcd for example) that makes gentoo devs mask the package the next day > or so. so for people like me that update daily this could be troublesome > if it happens on the system packages. Well, that's why I was wishing there was a convenient way to run ~arch, but only emerge packages that had been ~arch keyworded for a week or so, thus getting past the initial testing wave and any serious bugs that might have prompted a new -rX release or a remasking. However, there again, the binpkg repository is nice, as one can simply roll back to whatever they had previously installed, if necessary. > The cure, of course, is a faster machine! =8^) Gentoo was reasonable >> with my old dual Opteron 242, but merges for things such as gcc, glibc, >> and DEFINITELY whole desktop updates like KDE, tended to be a chore. >> The upgrade to dual dual-core Opteron 290s, combined with 8 gigs memory >> (tho 4 gig would do) and putting PORTAGE_TMPDIR on tmpfs, made a HUGE >> difference. > this is a high end machine. opteron is better than a normal athlon x2 in > terms of compilation and having 8gb on a server mobo, that differs from > normal mobos, is not affordable for every user. my system is about the > average one (2ghz processor, 1gb ram, 80gb hdd) for notebooks and quite > average one for desktops. remember that nuveau devs still work on > athlons or pentium 3 hw, and that hw is not dead yet. your system > nowadays is a middle-high end one. Well, dual-cores are standard now for new gear anyway, and 1-2 gig memory, but I get your point. My machine is certainly a low to middling high-end machine today tho really only for the memory and dual dual- cores. However, it's not /that/ great (except the 8 gig memory), as it's the older socket-940 Opterons, none of the new virtualization stuff, etc, and I have the top of the end of the line 2.8 GHz, while as I said, most desktops come with dual-core now, and often run 3.2 GHz or higher. Still, the next paragraph (which I'm snipping) /did/ talk about it being common "a couple years from now", and I think that's a reasonable prediction, except perhaps 4 gig memory instead of the 8 gig I have, but 4 gig is still within the comfort range for what I'm talking -- the 8 gig is really a bit over the top currently, and it CERTAINLY was before I upgraded to the dual-cores so was running only dual CPUs, roughly the equivalent of a single dual-core today. As I said, those who've not yet had a change to try quad cores (whether single-core quad socket, dual-core dual socket as I have, or the new quad- core)... it makes a MUCH bigger difference than I had expected it to. Once they and 4 gigs memory become common, I really DO think from source could take-off, because it really /does/ become trivial to do the compiling -- as I found with kde-4 as I discussed above, the actual compiling starts to become much less of an issue than the standard sysadmin overhead, and people have to deal with that regardless of what distribution they choose, binary or from-source. > well, this is true for minor packages, but kdelibs or kdebase for > example are still quite big and if you're not a developer you won't go > around compiling it everyday or so. See, that was exactly my reaction back with the dual single-cores (so equivalent to today's single dual-cores). Minor packages were trivial, but the big stuff, gcc, glibc, kdelibs, kdebase, etc, were "practically managable", but still decidedly NOT trivial. I feel like I'm repeating myself (and I am =8^), but I really /was/ shocked at how much of a difference the 4 cores (and a decent amount of memory, but I had that first, so the bottleneck here was eliminated with the 2 to 4 cores upgrade -- tho I did increase CPU speed substantially as well, 1.6 to 2.8 GHz) made! It's really almost embarrassing how trivially easy and fast it is to compile even the "big" packages. When all of KDE can be upgraded in 4 hours from scratch, an hour if upgraded daily from svn with ccache active, even formerly big individual packages... just aren't much of a sweat any more. It's kinda like how compiling the kernel used to be a big thing on 386s and even Pentiums, but on even half-decent modern hardware, the lowest end x86_64 around (well, with perhaps the exception of Via's Isaiah or whatever it is, I honestly don't know how it does), and even with a couple generations old Athlon 1.X GHz (pre-Athlon XP), it might be five minutes or so, or even 10, but it's little more than a coffee or two at most, certainly not the half-day affair it used to be! Well, with quad- cores (again, however you get them, so dual-dual-cores or quad-single- cores included) and say 4 gig of memory to work with, pretty much any single package, even the ones like gcc/glibc/kdelibs that used to be a big deal, is that trivial. (I just checked. Merging kdelibs-9999.4, the kde4 svn version, took all of 5 minutes, 37 seconds, based on the random entry in emerge.log I checked. Of course, that's with ccache enabled and only a bit of update since the previous day, but it still has a bit of compiling and all that linking to do. That's about right since as I said, all of KDE often takes only an hour, if done daily.) As for the kernel, it has really ceased even to be a decent measure of performance, it's done so fast. Maybe a minute. I've honestly not timed it since I got the new CPUs in. I can just see a future boot solution containing an initial book kernel in BIOS, using it to load /boot with the kernel sources, and compiling them dynamically from source based on detected hardware at every boot, then using kexec to switch to the new, freshly compiled kernel! =8^) If the previous work were kept, so only newly detected hardware and any admin's config changes had to be built, it'd literally only add a few seconds to the boot process, maybe 10 seconds if no config changes, 30 seconds to a minute if you move the disk to a new machine and it has to rebuild almost the entire kernel. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-01-30 6:55 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2008-01-30 8:04 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 8:32 ` Beso @ 2008-02-03 13:42 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-03 13:55 ` Beso 2 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-03 13:42 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hi List, I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the following issue the processor overheats until the laptop closes(100 degrees Celsius). This happened when I had two parallel emerges. So I went to the shop and changed it with another one, same model. This one can hold up to 3 parallel emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a movie, again it reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I doing something wrong here? I'm I missing something (this is the first laptop I have) ?. Or just by coincidence this one is broken too. I've looked on the Internet but I hadn't found any similar issues. Thanks! -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-03 13:42 ` [gentoo-amd64] new laptop ionut cucu @ 2008-02-03 13:55 ` Beso 2008-02-03 15:05 ` ionut cucu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-03 13:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2320 bytes --] 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > Hi List, > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the following > issue the processor overheats until the laptop closes(100 degrees > Celsius). This happened when I had two parallel emerges. So I went to > the shop and changed it with another one, same model. This one can hold > up to 3 parallel emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a movie, > again it reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I doing something wrong > here? I'm I missing something (this is the first laptop I have) ?. Or > just by coincidence this one is broken too. I've looked on the Internet > but I hadn't found any similar issues. Thanks! > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points says?! mine is something like this: critical (S5): 105 C passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 devices=CPU0 active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 you might have different values but at least you should have one active and one passive. second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the packages from one emerge don't collide with the ones from the other. for example, knetworkmanager needs networkmanager which needs dhcdb which needs dhclient. if you emerge something that would emerge dhclient then you'd emerge 2 times dhclient or you might risk one of the 2 emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet been installed. you could push up the number of processes to be build together by increasing the makeopts for example to -j6 or more. increase the number and see your processors loads. the best number is the one that puts your processors to about 80% of cpu so that you'd still have 20% of cpu power to do other things. also add the niceness option so that you don't see slowdowns when you compile and use some other program. third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume that you've done it and you're starting both acpi and acer-acpi at boot. anyway, the important thing is are the trip_points. if you don't have them then you might need to make a script to get the thermal temperature and to slowdown manually the processor when it pushes too much up the temperature. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3050 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-03 13:55 ` Beso @ 2008-02-03 15:05 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-03 15:49 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-03 15:05 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > Hi List, > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the following > > issue the processor overheats until the laptop closes(100 degrees > > Celsius). This happened when I had two parallel emerges. So I went > > to the shop and changed it with another one, same model. This one > > can hold up to 3 parallel emerges but it overheats when I'm > > watching a movie, again it reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I > > doing something wrong here? I'm I missing something (this is the > > first laptop I have) ?. Or just by coincidence this one is broken > > too. I've looked on the Internet but I hadn't found any similar > > issues. Thanks! -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points says?! mine is > something like this: > > critical (S5): 105 C > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 devices=CPU0 > active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > you might have different values but at least you should have one > active and one passive. I have only the critical level set > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the packages > from one emerge don't collide with the ones from the other. for > example, knetworkmanager needs networkmanager which needs dhcdb which > needs dhclient. if you emerge something that would emerge dhclient > then you'd emerge 2 times dhclient or you might risk one of the 2 > emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet been installed. you could > push up the number of processes to be build together by increasing > the makeopts for example to -j6 or more. increase the number and see > your processors loads. the best number is the one that puts your > processors to about 80% of cpu so that you'd still have 20% of cpu > power to do other things. also add the niceness option so that you > don't see slowdowns when you compile and use some other program. Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, after the main installation process, but thanks for the j6 idea > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume that you've > done it and you're starting both acpi and acer-acpi at boot. anyway, > the important thing is are the trip_points. if you don't have them > then you might need to make a script to get the thermal temperature > and to slowdown manually the processor when it pushes too much up the > temperature. acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing error...will search the bugs later, but is it really necessary? if so could you please elaborate a little because I was under the impression that the fans were hardware controlled by default -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-03 15:05 ` ionut cucu @ 2008-02-03 15:49 ` Beso 2008-02-04 7:39 ` ionut cucu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-03 15:49 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3607 bytes --] 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > Hi List, > > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the following > > > issue the processor overheats until the laptop closes(100 degrees > > > Celsius). This happened when I had two parallel emerges. So I went > > > to the shop and changed it with another one, same model. This one > > > can hold up to 3 parallel emerges but it overheats when I'm > > > watching a movie, again it reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I > > > doing something wrong here? I'm I missing something (this is the > > > first laptop I have) ?. Or just by coincidence this one is broken > > > too. I've looked on the Internet but I hadn't found any similar > > > issues. Thanks! -- > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points says?! mine is > > something like this: > > > > critical (S5): 105 C > > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 devices=CPU0 > > active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > > > you might have different values but at least you should have one > > active and one passive. > I have only the critical level set > > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the packages > > from one emerge don't collide with the ones from the other. for > > example, knetworkmanager needs networkmanager which needs dhcdb which > > needs dhclient. if you emerge something that would emerge dhclient > > then you'd emerge 2 times dhclient or you might risk one of the 2 > > emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet been installed. you could > > push up the number of processes to be build together by increasing > > the makeopts for example to -j6 or more. increase the number and see > > your processors loads. the best number is the one that puts your > > processors to about 80% of cpu so that you'd still have 20% of cpu > > power to do other things. also add the niceness option so that you > > don't see slowdowns when you compile and use some other program. > Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, after the main > installation process, but thanks for the j6 idea > > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume that you've > > done it and you're starting both acpi and acer-acpi at boot. anyway, > > the important thing is are the trip_points. if you don't have them > > then you might need to make a script to get the thermal temperature > > and to slowdown manually the processor when it pushes too much up the > > temperature. > acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing error...will > search the bugs later, but is it really necessary? if so could you > please elaborate a little because I was under the impression that the > fans were hardware controlled by default > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list acer-acpi is usually necessary for acer notebooks to work well. it is mandatory for hotkeys and other stuff and is necessary to correct some acer's modifications in the acpi. so for what i know acer-acpi is manadatory for acer notebooks as it is asus-acpi on asus notebooks. try to see if everything fixes after you install it (try unmasking newer versions if you cannot install stable ones). the fans are ususally board controlled as it is the passive mode that reduces the cpu speed, but they can be forced via scripts. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 4684 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-03 15:49 ` Beso @ 2008-02-04 7:39 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 8:11 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2008-02-04 9:01 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Beso 0 siblings, 2 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 7:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 15:49:47 +0000 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > Hi List, > > > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the > > > > following issue the processor overheats until the laptop > > > > closes(100 degrees Celsius). This happened when I had two > > > > parallel emerges. So I went to the shop and changed it with > > > > another one, same model. This one can hold up to 3 parallel > > > > emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a movie, again it > > > > reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I doing something wrong > > > > here? I'm I missing something (this is the first laptop I > > > > have) ?. Or just by coincidence this one is broken too. I've > > > > looked on the Internet but I hadn't found any similar issues. > > > > Thanks! -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > > > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points says?! > > > mine is something like this: > > > > > > critical (S5): 105 C > > > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 devices=CPU0 > > > active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > > > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > > > > > you might have different values but at least you should have one > > > active and one passive. > > I have only the critical level set > > > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the > > > packages from one emerge don't collide with the ones from the > > > other. for example, knetworkmanager needs networkmanager which > > > needs dhcdb which needs dhclient. if you emerge something that > > > would emerge dhclient then you'd emerge 2 times dhclient or you > > > might risk one of the 2 emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet > > > been installed. you could push up the number of processes to be > > > build together by increasing the makeopts for example to -j6 or > > > more. increase the number and see your processors loads. the best > > > number is the one that puts your processors to about 80% of cpu > > > so that you'd still have 20% of cpu power to do other things. > > > also add the niceness option so that you don't see slowdowns when > > > you compile and use some other program. > > Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, after the > > main installation process, but thanks for the j6 idea > > > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume that > > > you've done it and you're starting both acpi and acer-acpi at > > > boot. anyway, the important thing is are the trip_points. if you > > > don't have them then you might need to make a script to get the > > > thermal temperature and to slowdown manually the processor when > > > it pushes too much up the temperature. > > acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing error...will > > search the bugs later, but is it really necessary? if so could you > > please elaborate a little because I was under the impression that > > the fans were hardware controlled by default > > -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > acer-acpi is usually necessary for acer notebooks to work well. it is > mandatory for hotkeys and other stuff and is necessary to correct some > acer's modifications in the acpi. so for what i know acer-acpi is > manadatory for acer notebooks as it is asus-acpi on asus notebooks. > try to see if everything fixes after you install it (try unmasking > newer versions if you cannot install stable ones). > the fans are ususally board controlled as it is the passive mode that > reduces the cpu speed, but they can be forced via scripts. > > > > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). So I'm just asking for the cooling process is it mandatory. The issue here is not some hotkeys but the temperature...I wish to know weather this one is broken to or not. From what I've read on the http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi/ this program/driver is mostly for the lcd, battery lifetime etc. But being the second laptop with the same issue makes me wonder...I wish i could compile this.... -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: new laptop 2008-02-04 7:39 ` ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 8:11 ` Duncan 2008-02-04 11:23 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 9:01 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Beso 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2008-02-04 8:11 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com> posted 20080204093928.052665b5@cuci, excerpted below, on Mon, 04 Feb 2008 09:39:28 +0200: > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile > (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). I don't know anything about the laptop driver, but from my experience, missing stuff is often due to parallel make. Try setting MAKEOPTS=-j1 and see if it makes a difference. It may be worth adding the result of trying that to the bug, as well, regardless of whether it works or not. (FWIW, I'm running dual-dual-core Opterons, 8 gigs RAM, and have MAKEOPTS="-j20 -l12", and once in awhile when I'm doing nothing else, I'll run simply -j, unlimited jobs, just for kicks, as it's fun watching the load average go to several-hundred! =8^) The more jobs, of course the more likely one is to run into parallel-make problems, so I probably run into them more frequently then most, and am therefore learning the hard way what sorts of errors they produce. =8^) One other possibility, not so likely but possible since it's kernel sources you are dealing with and they of course come from another package, double-check permissions, particularly if you use FEATURES=userpriv. Make sure the portage user has write permissions in the kernel dir and subdirs. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: new laptop 2008-02-04 8:11 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan @ 2008-02-04 11:23 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 13:39 ` Duncan 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 11:23 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 08:11:12 +0000 (UTC) Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net> wrote: > ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com> posted 20080204093928.052665b5@cuci, > excerpted below, on Mon, 04 Feb 2008 09:39:28 +0200: > > > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile > > (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). > > I don't know anything about the laptop driver, but from my > experience, missing stuff is often due to parallel make. Try setting > MAKEOPTS=-j1 and see if it makes a difference. It may be worth > adding the result of trying that to the bug, as well, regardless of > whether it works or not. > > (FWIW, I'm running dual-dual-core Opterons, 8 gigs RAM, and have > MAKEOPTS="-j20 -l12", and once in awhile when I'm doing nothing else, > I'll run simply -j, unlimited jobs, just for kicks, as it's fun > watching the load average go to several-hundred! =8^) The more jobs, > of course the more likely one is to run into parallel-make problems, > so I probably run into them more frequently then most, and am > therefore learning the hard way what sorts of errors they produce. > =8^) > > One other possibility, not so likely but possible since it's kernel > sources you are dealing with and they of course come from another > package, double-check permissions, particularly if you use > FEATURES=userpriv. Make sure the portage user has write permissions > in the kernel dir and subdirs. > Wow! You're a genius man! With -j1 it worked -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: new laptop 2008-02-04 11:23 ` ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 13:39 ` Duncan 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2008-02-04 13:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com> posted 20080204132343.1b6c190c@cuci, excerpted below, on Mon, 04 Feb 2008 13:23:43 +0200: > Wow! You're a genius man! With -j1 it worked Perhaps you've heard the popular FLOSS community observation/saying: "With enough eyes, all bugs are shallow." I'm glad to help prove that once again on this one! =8^) -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 7:39 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 8:11 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan @ 2008-02-04 9:01 ` Beso 2008-02-04 9:26 ` Beso 2008-02-04 11:51 ` ionut cucu 1 sibling, 2 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-04 9:01 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5483 bytes --] 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 15:49:47 +0000 > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > Hi List, > > > > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the > > > > > following issue the processor overheats until the laptop > > > > > closes(100 degrees Celsius). This happened when I had two > > > > > parallel emerges. So I went to the shop and changed it with > > > > > another one, same model. This one can hold up to 3 parallel > > > > > emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a movie, again it > > > > > reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I doing something wrong > > > > > here? I'm I missing something (this is the first laptop I > > > > > have) ?. Or just by coincidence this one is broken too. I've > > > > > looked on the Internet but I hadn't found any similar issues. > > > > > Thanks! -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > > > > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points says?! > > > > mine is something like this: > > > > > > > > critical (S5): 105 C > > > > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 devices=CPU0 > > > > active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > > > > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > > > > > > > you might have different values but at least you should have one > > > > active and one passive. > > > I have only the critical level set > > > > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the > > > > packages from one emerge don't collide with the ones from the > > > > other. for example, knetworkmanager needs networkmanager which > > > > needs dhcdb which needs dhclient. if you emerge something that > > > > would emerge dhclient then you'd emerge 2 times dhclient or you > > > > might risk one of the 2 emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet > > > > been installed. you could push up the number of processes to be > > > > build together by increasing the makeopts for example to -j6 or > > > > more. increase the number and see your processors loads. the best > > > > number is the one that puts your processors to about 80% of cpu > > > > so that you'd still have 20% of cpu power to do other things. > > > > also add the niceness option so that you don't see slowdowns when > > > > you compile and use some other program. > > > Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, after the > > > main installation process, but thanks for the j6 idea > > > > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume that > > > > you've done it and you're starting both acpi and acer-acpi at > > > > boot. anyway, the important thing is are the trip_points. if you > > > > don't have them then you might need to make a script to get the > > > > thermal temperature and to slowdown manually the processor when > > > > it pushes too much up the temperature. > > > acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing error...will > > > search the bugs later, but is it really necessary? if so could you > > > please elaborate a little because I was under the impression that > > > the fans were hardware controlled by default > > > -- > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > acer-acpi is usually necessary for acer notebooks to work well. it is > > mandatory for hotkeys and other stuff and is necessary to correct some > > acer's modifications in the acpi. so for what i know acer-acpi is > > manadatory for acer notebooks as it is asus-acpi on asus notebooks. > > try to see if everything fixes after you install it (try unmasking > > newer versions if you cannot install stable ones). > > the fans are ususally board controlled as it is the passive mode that > > reduces the cpu speed, but they can be forced via scripts. > > > > > > > > > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile > (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). So I'm just asking for > the cooling process is it mandatory. The issue here is not some hotkeys > but the temperature...I wish to know weather this one is broken to or > not. From what I've read on the http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi/ this > program/driver is mostly for the lcd, battery lifetime etc. But being > the second laptop with the same issue makes me wonder...I wish i could > compile this.... > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > well, we have a little problem about trip points, since the only indicated there is the critical one and you don't have passive ones. well, we'll need to do a little work on the manual scripts to have the fan work and to be sure that the thermal won't reach critical trip point where it would shutdown. i'll take a look and post some scripts that should help. you'll have to be sure that you have installed lm_sensors and cpufrequtils and that you have compiled the cpufreq modules into the kernel or as modules and you'll have them loaded at boot. we'll have to make the processor slow down when the thermal goes too high. also i'd like to know what are the capabilities of your processors: a cat on the /proc/cpuinfo and then on cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU(x)/info where (x) is the number of the core to know what sort of management it can support. you should have cpu0 and cpu1 if you have a dualcore. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 7298 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 9:01 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Beso @ 2008-02-04 9:26 ` Beso 2008-02-04 13:48 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 11:51 ` ionut cucu 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-04 9:26 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 8423 bytes --] 2008/2/4, Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com>: > > > > 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 15:49:47 +0000 > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 > > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > > > Hi List, > > > > > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the > > > > > > following issue the processor overheats until the laptop > > > > > > closes(100 degrees Celsius). This happened when I had two > > > > > > parallel emerges. So I went to the shop and changed it with > > > > > > another one, same model. This one can hold up to 3 parallel > > > > > > emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a movie, again it > > > > > > reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I doing something wrong > > > > > > here? I'm I missing something (this is the first laptop I > > > > > > have) ?. Or just by coincidence this one is broken too. I've > > > > > > looked on the Internet but I hadn't found any similar issues. > > > > > > Thanks! -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > > > > > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points says?! > > > > > mine is something like this: > > > > > > > > > > critical (S5): 105 C > > > > > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 devices=CPU0 > > > > > active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > > > > > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > > > > > > > > > you might have different values but at least you should have one > > > > > active and one passive. > > > > I have only the critical level set > > > > > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the > > > > > packages from one emerge don't collide with the ones from the > > > > > other. for example, knetworkmanager needs networkmanager which > > > > > needs dhcdb which needs dhclient. if you emerge something that > > > > > would emerge dhclient then you'd emerge 2 times dhclient or you > > > > > might risk one of the 2 emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet > > > > > been installed. you could push up the number of processes to be > > > > > build together by increasing the makeopts for example to -j6 or > > > > > more. increase the number and see your processors loads. the best > > > > > number is the one that puts your processors to about 80% of cpu > > > > > so that you'd still have 20% of cpu power to do other things. > > > > > also add the niceness option so that you don't see slowdowns when > > > > > you compile and use some other program. > > > > Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, after the > > > > main installation process, but thanks for the j6 idea > > > > > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume that > > > > > you've done it and you're starting both acpi and acer-acpi at > > > > > boot. anyway, the important thing is are the trip_points. if you > > > > > don't have them then you might need to make a script to get the > > > > > thermal temperature and to slowdown manually the processor when > > > > > it pushes too much up the temperature. > > > > acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing error...will > > > > search the bugs later, but is it really necessary? if so could you > > > > please elaborate a little because I was under the impression that > > > > the fans were hardware controlled by default > > > > -- > > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > acer-acpi is usually necessary for acer notebooks to work well. it is > > > mandatory for hotkeys and other stuff and is necessary to correct some > > > acer's modifications in the acpi. so for what i know acer-acpi is > > > manadatory for acer notebooks as it is asus-acpi on asus notebooks. > > > try to see if everything fixes after you install it (try unmasking > > > newer versions if you cannot install stable ones). > > > the fans are ususally board controlled as it is the passive mode that > > > reduces the cpu speed, but they can be forced via scripts. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile > > (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). So I'm just asking for > > the cooling process is it mandatory. The issue here is not some hotkeys > > but the temperature...I wish to know weather this one is broken to or > > not. From what I've read on the http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi/ this > > program/driver is mostly for the lcd, battery lifetime etc. But being > > the second laptop with the same issue makes me wonder...I wish i could > > compile this.... > > -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > well, we have a little problem about trip points, since the only > indicated there is the critical one and you don't have passive ones. > well, we'll need to do a little work on the manual scripts to have the fan > work and to be sure that the thermal won't reach critical trip point where > it would shutdown. > i'll take a look and post some scripts that should help. you'll have to be > sure that you have installed lm_sensors and cpufrequtils and that you have > compiled the cpufreq modules into the kernel or as modules and you'll have > them loaded at boot. we'll have to make the processor slow down when the > thermal goes too high. also i'd like to know what are the capabilities of > your processors: > a cat on the /proc/cpuinfo and then on cat > /proc/acpi/processor/CPU(x)/info where (x) is the number of the core to know > what sort of management it can support. you should have cpu0 and cpu1 if you > have a dualcore. > > > -- > dott. ing. beso i forgot to mention the other files in the cpu and thermal directory. they would help setting up the scripts. also you'll need /dev/cpu/microcode, /dev/cpu/cpuid, /dev/cpu/msr, Intel MCE features, Intel core2/ newer xeon compiled directly into the kernel and not as modules. they're in the processor types and features of the kernel. also you'll need the following from the power management options: - acpi support ---> everything compiled into the kernel and not as modules with the exception of dock, asus extras, toshiba extras, acpi container, smart battery system which are not mandatory. - cpu frequency scaling │ │ [*] CPU Frequency scaling │ │ │ │ [*] Enable CPUfreq debugging │ │ │ │ <*> CPU frequency translation statistics │ │ │ │ [*] CPU frequency translation statistics details │ │ │ │ Default CPUFreq governor (userspace) ---> │ │ │ │ <M> 'performance' governor │ │ │ │ <M> 'powersave' governor │ │ │ │ --- 'userspace' governor for userspace frequency scaling │ │ │ │ <M> 'ondemand' cpufreq policy governor │ │ │ │ <M> 'conservative' cpufreq governor │ │ │ │ --- CPUFreq processor drivers │ │ │ │ < > AMD Opteron/Athlon64 PowerNow! │ │ │ │ <*> Intel Enhanced SpeedStep (deprecated) │ │ │ │ <*> ACPI Processor P-States driver │ │ │ │ --- shared options │ │ │ │ [*] /proc/acpi/processor/../performance interface (deprecated) after controlling this and recompiling if necessary reboot (if you've recompiled) and do another cat on the thermal trip points to see if it shows also other states. if it doesn't we will really have to impose the throttling manually when the temperature goes too high. we'll use the cpufreq governor to impose the speed when needed and then we'll impose throttling (processor suspension) when the thermal temp goes too high with it. if your pc supports limits and other speq steps we could have it lower the current state to a lower one to cool off a bit. but for this there's the need to know what your processor can do. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 20712 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 9:26 ` Beso @ 2008-02-04 13:48 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 14:21 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 13:48 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 09:26:57 +0000 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > 2008/2/4, Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 15:49:47 +0000 > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 > > > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Hi List, > > > > > > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the > > > > > > > following issue the processor overheats until the laptop > > > > > > > closes(100 degrees Celsius). This happened when I had two > > > > > > > parallel emerges. So I went to the shop and changed it > > > > > > > with another one, same model. This one can hold up to 3 > > > > > > > parallel emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a > > > > > > > movie, again it reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I > > > > > > > doing something wrong here? I'm I missing something (this > > > > > > > is the first laptop I have) ?. Or just by coincidence > > > > > > > this one is broken too. I've looked on the Internet but I > > > > > > > hadn't found any similar issues. Thanks! -- > > > > > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > > > > > > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points > > > > > > says?! mine is something like this: > > > > > > > > > > > > critical (S5): 105 C > > > > > > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 > > > > > > devices=CPU0 active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > > > > > > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > > > > > > > > > > > you might have different values but at least you should > > > > > > have one active and one passive. > > > > > I have only the critical level set > > > > > > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the > > > > > > packages from one emerge don't collide with the ones from > > > > > > the other. for example, knetworkmanager needs > > > > > > networkmanager which needs dhcdb which needs dhclient. if > > > > > > you emerge something that would emerge dhclient then you'd > > > > > > emerge 2 times dhclient or you might risk one of the 2 > > > > > > emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet been installed. > > > > > > you could push up the number of processes to be build > > > > > > together by increasing the makeopts for example to -j6 or > > > > > > more. increase the number and see your processors loads. > > > > > > the best number is the one that puts your processors to > > > > > > about 80% of cpu so that you'd still have 20% of cpu power > > > > > > to do other things. also add the niceness option so that > > > > > > you don't see slowdowns when you compile and use some other > > > > > > program. > > > > > Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, > > > > > after the main installation process, but thanks for the j6 > > > > > idea > > > > > > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume > > > > > > that you've done it and you're starting both acpi and > > > > > > acer-acpi at boot. anyway, the important thing is are the > > > > > > trip_points. if you don't have them then you might need to > > > > > > make a script to get the thermal temperature and to > > > > > > slowdown manually the processor when it pushes too much up > > > > > > the temperature. > > > > > acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing > > > > > error...will search the bugs later, but is it really > > > > > necessary? if so could you please elaborate a little because > > > > > I was under the impression that the fans were hardware > > > > > controlled by default -- > > > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > > > acer-acpi is usually necessary for acer notebooks to work well. > > > > it is mandatory for hotkeys and other stuff and is necessary to > > > > correct some acer's modifications in the acpi. so for what i > > > > know acer-acpi is manadatory for acer notebooks as it is > > > > asus-acpi on asus notebooks. try to see if everything fixes > > > > after you install it (try unmasking newer versions if you > > > > cannot install stable ones). the fans are ususally board > > > > controlled as it is the passive mode that reduces the cpu > > > > speed, but they can be forced via scripts. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile > > > (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). So I'm just > > > asking for the cooling process is it mandatory. The issue here is > > > not some hotkeys but the temperature...I wish to know weather > > > this one is broken to or not. From what I've read on the > > > http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi/ this program/driver is mostly > > > for the lcd, battery lifetime etc. But being the second laptop > > > with the same issue makes me wonder...I wish i could compile > > > this.... -- > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > well, we have a little problem about trip points, since the only > > indicated there is the critical one and you don't have passive ones. > > well, we'll need to do a little work on the manual scripts to have > > the fan work and to be sure that the thermal won't reach critical > > trip point where it would shutdown. > > i'll take a look and post some scripts that should help. you'll > > have to be sure that you have installed lm_sensors and cpufrequtils > > and that you have compiled the cpufreq modules into the kernel or > > as modules and you'll have them loaded at boot. we'll have to make > > the processor slow down when the thermal goes too high. also i'd > > like to know what are the capabilities of your processors: > > a cat on the /proc/cpuinfo and then on cat > > /proc/acpi/processor/CPU(x)/info where (x) is the number of the > > core to know what sort of management it can support. you should > > have cpu0 and cpu1 if you have a dualcore. > > > > > > -- > > dott. ing. beso > > i forgot to mention the other files in the cpu and thermal directory. > they would help setting up the scripts. also you'll > need /dev/cpu/microcode, /dev/cpu/cpuid, /dev/cpu/msr, Intel MCE > features, Intel core2/ newer xeon compiled directly into the kernel > and not as modules. they're in the processor types and features of > the kernel. also you'll need the following from the power management > options: > - acpi support > ---> everything compiled into the kernel and not as modules with the > exception of dock, asus extras, toshiba extras, acpi container, smart > battery system which are not mandatory. > - cpu frequency scaling > │ │ [*] CPU Frequency > scaling > │ │ > │ │ [*] Enable CPUfreq > debugging > │ │ > │ │ <*> CPU frequency > translation statistics > │ │ > │ │ [*] CPU frequency > translation statistics > details │ │ > │ │ Default CPUFreq > governor (userspace) ---> > │ │ > │ │ <M> 'performance' > governor > │ │ > │ │ <M> 'powersave' > governor > │ │ > │ │ --- 'userspace' governor > for userspace frequency scaling > │ │ > │ │ <M> 'ondemand' cpufreq > policy governor > │ │ > │ │ <M> 'conservative' cpufreq > governor > │ │ > │ │ --- CPUFreq processor > drivers > │ │ > │ │ < > AMD Opteron/Athlon64 > PowerNow! > │ │ > │ │ <*> Intel Enhanced > SpeedStep (deprecated) > │ │ > │ │ <*> ACPI Processor > P-States driver > │ │ > │ │ --- shared > options > │ │ > │ │ [*] > /proc/acpi/processor/../performance interface (deprecated) > > after controlling this and recompiling if necessary reboot (if you've > recompiled) and do another cat on the thermal trip points to see if > it shows also other states. if it doesn't we will really have to > impose the throttling manually when the temperature goes too high. > we'll use the cpufreq governor to impose the speed when needed and > then we'll impose throttling (processor suspension) when the thermal > temp goes too high with it. if your pc supports limits and other speq > steps we could have it lower the current state to a lower one to cool > off a bit. but for this there's the need to know what your processor > can do. I've just done what you've advised me and ...already my CPU is cooling down...but I've noticed the following: sensors only detects my CPU sensor(souldn't there be others?, and yes I've ran sensors-detect), I can;t seem to be able to to start fancontrol because pwmconfig can't gind any pwm sensors. Also on you config I seem not to be able to change my Cpu's freq with kLaptop.Thanks for the help so far! -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 13:48 ` ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 14:21 ` Beso 2008-02-04 14:53 ` ionut cucu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-04 14:21 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 12929 bytes --] 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 09:26:57 +0000 > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > 2008/2/4, Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > > > 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 15:49:47 +0000 > > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > > > On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 13:55:56 +0000 > > > > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > 2008/2/3, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Hi List, > > > > > > > > I've just bought a new laptop Acer 5715Z and I've have the > > > > > > > > following issue the processor overheats until the laptop > > > > > > > > closes(100 degrees Celsius). This happened when I had two > > > > > > > > parallel emerges. So I went to the shop and changed it > > > > > > > > with another one, same model. This one can hold up to 3 > > > > > > > > parallel emerges but it overheats when I'm watching a > > > > > > > > movie, again it reaches the 100 degrees limit. I'm I > > > > > > > > doing something wrong here? I'm I missing something (this > > > > > > > > is the first laptop I have) ?. Or just by coincidence > > > > > > > > this one is broken too. I've looked on the Internet but I > > > > > > > > hadn't found any similar issues. Thanks! -- > > > > > > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > first: maybe the thermal isn't set right. > > > > > > > what does cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/trip_points > > > > > > > says?! mine is something like this: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > critical (S5): 105 C > > > > > > > passive: 76 C: tc1=3 tc2=1 tsp=150 > > > > > > > devices=CPU0 active[0]: 67 C: devices= FN1 > > > > > > > active[1]: 57 C: devices= FN2 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > you might have different values but at least you should > > > > > > > have one active and one passive. > > > > > > I have only the critical level set > > > > > > > second: don't do parallel emerge if you're not sure that the > > > > > > > packages from one emerge don't collide with the ones from > > > > > > > the other. for example, knetworkmanager needs > > > > > > > networkmanager which needs dhcdb which needs dhclient. if > > > > > > > you emerge something that would emerge dhclient then you'd > > > > > > > emerge 2 times dhclient or you might risk one of the 2 > > > > > > > emerges to fail because a dep hasn't yet been installed. > > > > > > > you could push up the number of processes to be build > > > > > > > together by increasing the makeopts for example to -j6 or > > > > > > > more. increase the number and see your processors loads. > > > > > > > the best number is the one that puts your processors to > > > > > > > about 80% of cpu so that you'd still have 20% of cpu power > > > > > > > to do other things. also add the niceness option so that > > > > > > > you don't see slowdowns when you compile and use some other > > > > > > > program. > > > > > > Well the parallel emerges are done just to load the cpu, > > > > > > after the main installation process, but thanks for the j6 > > > > > > idea > > > > > > > third: have you installed acpi and acer-acpi?! i presume > > > > > > > that you've done it and you're starting both acpi and > > > > > > > acer-acpi at boot. anyway, the important thing is are the > > > > > > > trip_points. if you don't have them then you might need to > > > > > > > make a script to get the thermal temperature and to > > > > > > > slowdown manually the processor when it pushes too much up > > > > > > > the temperature. > > > > > > acer_acpi refuses to compile with some file missing > > > > > > error...will search the bugs later, but is it really > > > > > > necessary? if so could you please elaborate a little because > > > > > > I was under the impression that the fans were hardware > > > > > > controlled by default -- > > > > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > acer-acpi is usually necessary for acer notebooks to work well. > > > > > it is mandatory for hotkeys and other stuff and is necessary to > > > > > correct some acer's modifications in the acpi. so for what i > > > > > know acer-acpi is manadatory for acer notebooks as it is > > > > > asus-acpi on asus notebooks. try to see if everything fixes > > > > > after you install it (try unmasking newer versions if you > > > > > cannot install stable ones). the fans are ususally board > > > > > controlled as it is the passive mode that reduces the cpu > > > > > speed, but they can be forced via scripts. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Unfortunately asus_acpi doesn't compile > > > > (http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=208577). So I'm just > > > > asking for the cooling process is it mandatory. The issue here is > > > > not some hotkeys but the temperature...I wish to know weather > > > > this one is broken to or not. From what I've read on the > > > > http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi/ this program/driver is mostly > > > > for the lcd, battery lifetime etc. But being the second laptop > > > > with the same issue makes me wonder...I wish i could compile > > > > this.... -- > > > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > well, we have a little problem about trip points, since the only > > > indicated there is the critical one and you don't have passive ones. > > > well, we'll need to do a little work on the manual scripts to have > > > the fan work and to be sure that the thermal won't reach critical > > > trip point where it would shutdown. > > > i'll take a look and post some scripts that should help. you'll > > > have to be sure that you have installed lm_sensors and cpufrequtils > > > and that you have compiled the cpufreq modules into the kernel or > > > as modules and you'll have them loaded at boot. we'll have to make > > > the processor slow down when the thermal goes too high. also i'd > > > like to know what are the capabilities of your processors: > > > a cat on the /proc/cpuinfo and then on cat > > > /proc/acpi/processor/CPU(x)/info where (x) is the number of the > > > core to know what sort of management it can support. you should > > > have cpu0 and cpu1 if you have a dualcore. > > > > > > > > > -- > > > dott. ing. beso > > > > i forgot to mention the other files in the cpu and thermal directory. > > they would help setting up the scripts. also you'll > > need /dev/cpu/microcode, /dev/cpu/cpuid, /dev/cpu/msr, Intel MCE > > features, Intel core2/ newer xeon compiled directly into the kernel > > and not as modules. they're in the processor types and features of > > the kernel. also you'll need the following from the power management > > options: > > - acpi support > > ---> everything compiled into the kernel and not as modules with the > > exception of dock, asus extras, toshiba extras, acpi container, smart > > battery system which are not mandatory. > > - cpu frequency scaling > > │ │ [*] CPU Frequency > > scaling > > │ │ > > │ │ [*] Enable CPUfreq > > debugging > > │ │ > > │ │ <*> CPU frequency > > translation statistics > > │ │ > > │ │ [*] CPU frequency > > translation statistics > > details │ │ > > │ │ Default CPUFreq > > governor (userspace) ---> > > │ │ > > │ │ <M> 'performance' > > governor > > │ │ > > │ │ <M> 'powersave' > > governor > > │ │ > > │ │ --- 'userspace' governor > > for userspace frequency scaling > > │ │ > > │ │ <M> 'ondemand' cpufreq > > policy governor > > │ │ > > │ │ <M> 'conservative' cpufreq > > governor > > │ │ > > │ │ --- CPUFreq processor > > drivers > > │ │ > > │ │ < > AMD Opteron/Athlon64 > > PowerNow! > > │ │ > > │ │ <*> Intel Enhanced > > SpeedStep (deprecated) > > │ │ > > │ │ <*> ACPI Processor > > P-States driver > > │ │ > > │ │ --- shared > > options > > │ │ > > │ │ [*] > > /proc/acpi/processor/../performance interface (deprecated) > > > > after controlling this and recompiling if necessary reboot (if you've > > recompiled) and do another cat on the thermal trip points to see if > > it shows also other states. if it doesn't we will really have to > > impose the throttling manually when the temperature goes too high. > > we'll use the cpufreq governor to impose the speed when needed and > > then we'll impose throttling (processor suspension) when the thermal > > temp goes too high with it. if your pc supports limits and other speq > > steps we could have it lower the current state to a lower one to cool > > off a bit. but for this there's the need to know what your processor > > can do. > I've just done what you've advised me and ...already my CPU is cooling > down...but I've noticed the following: sensors only detects my CPU > sensor(souldn't there be others?, and yes I've ran sensors-detect), I > can;t seem to be able to to start fancontrol because pwmconfig can't > gind any pwm sensors. Also on you config I seem not to be able to > change my Cpu's freq with kLaptop.Thanks for the help so far! > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > what do the files inside /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/ and /proc/acpi/processor/ contain?! for klaptop, you have to first configure it. set everything to conservative, it should raise your processor speed based on your needs. be sure also to add cpufrequtils as a service at boot and to load the eventual modules at boot time by adding them to the /etc/modules.autoload/kernel-2.6 so that they load at boot. without cufrequtils and the modules (if you've build the stuff as modules and you've done it if you've used my config) you won't be able to switch. without rebooting you could open konsole and start cpufrequtils with /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils start and then add it with rc-update add cpufrequtils default and then modprobe cpufreq_powersave && modprobe cpufreq_conservative && modprobe cpufreq_performance. now you should be able to switch them with klaptop. don't use kpowersaved since it doesn't work anymore or at least on my pc it cannot find acpid started. if you'd like a monitor for kde there are different solutions: - one is superkaramba with some theme like aero-aio - kima which is directly included into the kicker as an applet and can monitor thermal, processor temp, processor load, uptime, battery and processor and /proc speed. i prefer this solution since it's faster to see and never gets covered by apps letting me see always the state of the system. for lm_sensors instead, is quite ok to not have fan control since the fan on a notebook is not usually connected to some control sensor but is controlled directly by acpi. on notebooks usually you might find some monitor for cpu core, for some removable media like pccards and nand devices like mmd. the only thing that is useful is the core processor monitor which gives you the temp of the core(s) and it lets you have an idea of how your processor works . remember that thermal temp might be different and usually is higher than core temp. also some helpful utils for kde are: klipper (fabulous klipboard); kompose (osx kompose changer), ksynaptic (if you have synaptic or alps touchpads that usually get installed in notebooks), knetworkmanager + networkmanager and the new kde4 like kicker that includes a built-in search module that improves usability of kde. other useful kicker applets are the shutdown and block applets, the kmixer applet (this lets you remove from start kmix), the show desktop applet and the trash can applet. also for full kde experience i suggest kaffeine + xine (not 1.1.10 since it has some problems with external linkage) and amarok + xine. install xft and cairo with svg and pdf flags and search for the font antialiasing wiki that was on xeffects if i remember right. also ksplash-engine-moodin is wonderful for personalizing the ksplash and oxy-cursors from flameeyes-overlay are wonderful cursor themes. if you like osx be sure to search for a baghira how to and on how to make kde identical to osx (don't use kxdocker, though). and before using compiz be aware that ati drivers don't work well with it. for tuning ati drivers visit phoronix forums and you'll have a lot of info about them. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 20070 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 14:21 ` Beso @ 2008-02-04 14:53 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 15:52 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 14:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 4591 bytes --] On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 14:21:29 +0000 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 09:26:57 +0000 > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > what do the files inside /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/ and > /proc/acpi/processor/ contain?! cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/TZ01/ cooling_mode polling_frequency state temperature trip_points cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/TZ01/* <setting not supported> <polling disabled> state: ok temperature: 0 C critical (S5): 100 C cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0/ info limit performance power throttling the content of the /proc/acpi/processor/CPUx files it attached since is rather large for an email > for klaptop, you have to first configure it. set everything to > conservative, it should raise your processor speed based on your > needs. be sure also to add cpufrequtils as a service at boot and to > load the eventual modules at boot time by adding them to > the /etc/modules.autoload/kernel-2.6 so that they load at boot. > without cufrequtils and the modules (if you've build the stuff as > modules and you've done it if you've used my config) you won't be > able to switch. without rebooting you could open konsole and start > cpufrequtils with /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils start and then add it with > rc-update add cpufrequtils default and then modprobe > cpufreq_powersave && modprobe cpufreq_conservative && modprobe > cpufreq_performance. now you should be able to switch them with > klaptop. Not yet I'm not....also the profiles in klaptop(which just overheated again and it's at 90 degrees and rising in 800Mhz) are named as the P0,1,2 states(x Mhz, y mW,z uS) and not as they were(conservatve.....) don't use kpowersaved since it doesn't work anymore or at > least on my pc it cannot find acpid started. if you'd like a monitor > for kde there are different solutions: > - one is superkaramba with some theme like aero-aio > - kima which is directly included into the kicker as an applet and can > monitor thermal, processor temp, processor load, uptime, battery and > processor and /proc speed. i prefer this solution since it's faster > to see and never gets covered by apps letting me see always the state > of the system. > for lm_sensors instead, is quite ok to not have fan control since the > fan on a notebook is not usually connected to some control sensor but > is controlled directly by acpi. on notebooks usually you might find > some monitor for cpu core, for some removable media like pccards and > nand devices like mmd. the only thing that is useful is the core > processor monitor which gives you the temp of the core(s) and it lets > you have an idea of how your processor works . remember that thermal > temp might be different and usually is higher than core temp. Thanks, that I did not knew, I'm new to laptops and their fan "drivers"/sensors and such. I never did had an temp issue on my machine, although it has to speed states. > also some helpful utils for kde are: klipper (fabulous klipboard); > kompose (osx kompose changer), ksynaptic (if you have synaptic or > alps touchpads that usually get installed in notebooks), > knetworkmanager + networkmanager and the new kde4 like kicker that > includes a built-in search module that improves usability of kde. > other useful kicker applets are the shutdown and block applets, the > kmixer applet (this lets you remove from start kmix), the show > desktop applet and the trash can applet. also for full kde experience > i suggest kaffeine + xine (not 1.1.10 since it has some problems with > external linkage) and amarok + xine. install xft and cairo with svg > and pdf flags and search for the font antialiasing wiki that was on > xeffects if i remember right. also ksplash-engine-moodin is wonderful > for personalizing the ksplash and oxy-cursors from flameeyes-overlay > are wonderful cursor themes. if you like osx be sure to search for a > baghira how to and on how to make kde identical to osx (don't use > kxdocker, though). and before using compiz be aware that ati drivers > don't work well with it. for tuning ati drivers visit phoronix forums > and you'll have a lot of info about I'm a fluxbox fan, my brother nags me about kde though he knows these, but I'm so worried about the temp(now for some reason it's dropping to 70 celsius). So I don't need no fancontrols but what do I need to keep these temps stable and below 60?Because now I'm sure it heats up for no reason and then when it feels like it it cools down. [-- Attachment #2: mdea --] [-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 1296 bytes --] processor id: 0 acpi id: 1 bus mastering control: yes power management: yes throttling control: yes limit interface: yes active limit: P0:T0 user limit: P0:T0 thermal limit: P0:T0 state count: 3 active state: P2 states: P0: 1467 MHz, 35000 mW, 10 uS P1: 1067 MHz, 23600 mW, 10 uS *P2: 800 MHz, 16000 mW, 10 uS active state: C3 max_cstate: C8 bus master activity: 00000000 maximum allowed latency: 6666 usec states: C1: type[C1] promotion[C2] demotion[--] latency[001] usage[00003700] duration[00000000000000000000] C2: type[C2] promotion[C3] demotion[C1] latency[001] usage[00277478] duration[00000000002011424878] *C3: type[C3] promotion[--] demotion[C2] latency[017] usage[01264857] duration[00000000008391353640] state count: 8 active state: T8 state available: T0 to T7 states: T0: 100% T1: 88% T2: 75% T3: 63% T4: 50% T5: 38% T6: 25% T7: 13% ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 14:53 ` ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 15:52 ` Beso 2008-02-06 11:50 ` ionut cucu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-04 15:52 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 4960 bytes --] 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 14:21:29 +0000 > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > 2008/2/4, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > > > > > On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 09:26:57 +0000 > > > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > what do the files inside /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/ and > > /proc/acpi/processor/ contain?! > cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/TZ01/ > cooling_mode polling_frequency state temperature > trip_points > cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/TZ01/* > <setting not supported> > <polling disabled> > state: ok > temperature: 0 C > critical (S5): 100 C > cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0/ > info limit performance power throttling > > the content of the /proc/acpi/processor/CPUx files it attached since is > rather large for an email > > for klaptop, you have to first configure it. set everything to > > conservative, it should raise your processor speed based on your > > needs. be sure also to add cpufrequtils as a service at boot and to > > load the eventual modules at boot time by adding them to > > the /etc/modules.autoload/kernel-2.6 so that they load at boot. > > without cufrequtils and the modules (if you've build the stuff as > > modules and you've done it if you've used my config) you won't be > > able to switch. without rebooting you could open konsole and start > > cpufrequtils with /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils start and then add it with > > rc-update add cpufrequtils default and then modprobe > > cpufreq_powersave && modprobe cpufreq_conservative && modprobe > > cpufreq_performance. now you should be able to switch them with > > klaptop. > Not yet I'm not....also the profiles in klaptop(which just overheated > again and it's at 90 degrees and rising in 800Mhz) are named as the > P0,1,2 states(x Mhz, y mW,z uS) and not as they were(conservatve.....) > > don't use kpowersaved since it doesn't work anymore or at > > least on my pc it cannot find acpid started. if you'd like a monitor > > for kde there are different solutions: > > - one is superkaramba with some theme like aero-aio > > - kima which is directly included into the kicker as an applet and can > > monitor thermal, processor temp, processor load, uptime, battery and > > processor and /proc speed. i prefer this solution since it's faster > > to see and never gets covered by apps letting me see always the state > > of the system. > > for lm_sensors instead, is quite ok to not have fan control since the > > fan on a notebook is not usually connected to some control sensor but > > is controlled directly by acpi. on notebooks usually you might find > > some monitor for cpu core, for some removable media like pccards and > > nand devices like mmd. the only thing that is useful is the core > > processor monitor which gives you the temp of the core(s) and it lets > > you have an idea of how your processor works . remember that thermal > > temp might be different and usually is higher than core temp. > Thanks, that I did not knew, I'm new to laptops and their fan > "drivers"/sensors and such. I never did had an temp issue on my > machine, although it has to speed states. > > also some helpful utils for kde are: klipper (fabulous klipboard); > > kompose (osx kompose changer), ksynaptic (if you have synaptic or > > alps touchpads that usually get installed in notebooks), > > knetworkmanager + networkmanager and the new kde4 like kicker that > > includes a built-in search module that improves usability of kde. > > other useful kicker applets are the shutdown and block applets, the > > kmixer applet (this lets you remove from start kmix), the show > > desktop applet and the trash can applet. also for full kde experience > > i suggest kaffeine + xine (not 1.1.10 since it has some problems with > > external linkage) and amarok + xine. install xft and cairo with svg > > and pdf flags and search for the font antialiasing wiki that was on > > xeffects if i remember right. also ksplash-engine-moodin is wonderful > > for personalizing the ksplash and oxy-cursors from flameeyes-overlay > > are wonderful cursor themes. if you like osx be sure to search for a > > baghira how to and on how to make kde identical to osx (don't use > > kxdocker, though). and before using compiz be aware that ati drivers > > don't work well with it. for tuning ati drivers visit phoronix forums > > and you'll have a lot of info about > I'm a fluxbox fan, my brother nags me about kde though he knows these, > but I'm so worried about the temp(now for some reason it's dropping to > 70 celsius). > So I don't need no fancontrols but what do I need to keep these temps > stable and below 60?Because now I'm sure it heats up for no reason and > then when it feels like it it cools down. > > right now i'm studying some scripts to adapt them to your hw. i'll let you know when i finish them and i'll post them for you to test. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 6214 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 15:52 ` Beso @ 2008-02-06 11:50 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-06 13:44 ` Beso 2008-02-07 7:59 ` ionut cristian cucu 0 siblings, 2 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-06 11:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 15:52:18 +0000 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > right now i'm studying some scripts to adapt them to your hw. i'll > let you know when i finish them and i'll post them for you to test. Wouldn't you rather give me a few hints first on how to get my trip_points set first? Afterwards I can also test the scripts. You can understand my impacience here. -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-06 11:50 ` ionut cucu @ 2008-02-06 13:44 ` Beso 2008-02-06 14:30 ` Brett Johnson 2008-02-07 7:59 ` ionut cristian cucu 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-06 13:44 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1313 bytes --] 2008/2/6, ionut cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 15:52:18 +0000 > Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > > right now i'm studying some scripts to adapt them to your hw. i'll > > let you know when i finish them and i'll post them for you to test. > > Wouldn't you rather give me a few hints first on how to get my > trip_points set first? Afterwards I can also test the scripts. You can > understand my impacience here. the trip_points cannot be set manually, since the trip_points file is readonly for the moment my problem is that i cannot make the script to read the acpi temperature. for now i'd suggest for you to add some sensor monitor, like kima for kde, or some others and use them to identify the acpi temperature. when your thermal reaches 80° you'd have to set the cpufreq to powersave so that the processor goes to the lowest freq and the thermal temperature goes down. the console command to do this is: cpufreq-set -g powersave when the temperature goes around 60°-62° you can reset the conservative governor so that you will have the processor go faster when you need it. cpufreq-set -g conservative. as soon as i finish the scripts to automatically adjust the processor based on thermal readings i'll post them to you. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1671 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-06 13:44 ` Beso @ 2008-02-06 14:30 ` Brett Johnson 2008-02-06 15:45 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Brett Johnson @ 2008-02-06 14:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Wed, 2008-02-06 at 13:44 +0000, Beso wrote: > > the trip_points cannot be set manually, since the trip_points file is > readonly > for the moment my problem is that i cannot make the script to read the > acpi temperature. > for now i'd suggest for you to add some sensor monitor, like kima for > kde, or some others and use them to identify the acpi temperature. > when your thermal reaches 80° you'd have to set the cpufreq to > powersave so that the processor goes to the lowest freq and the > thermal > > temperature goes down. the console command to do this is: > cpufreq-set -g powersave > when the temperature goes around 60°-62° you can reset the > conservative governor so that you will have the processor go faster > when you need it. > cpufreq-set -g conservative. > > as soon as i finish the scripts to automatically adjust the processor > based on thermal readings i'll post them to you. > I have not been following this thread to closely so I apologize if this has already been mentioned. Have you considered ncpufreqd? According to the Gentoo power management guide: "Toggles the used governor between performance and powersave depending on system temperature. Very useful on laptops with notorious heat problems." -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-06 14:30 ` Brett Johnson @ 2008-02-06 15:45 ` Beso 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-06 15:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1654 bytes --] 2008/2/6, Brett Johnson <brett@blzj.com>: > > > On Wed, 2008-02-06 at 13:44 +0000, Beso wrote: > > > > > the trip_points cannot be set manually, since the trip_points file is > > readonly > > for the moment my problem is that i cannot make the script to read the > > acpi temperature. > > for now i'd suggest for you to add some sensor monitor, like kima for > > kde, or some others and use them to identify the acpi temperature. > > when your thermal reaches 80° you'd have to set the cpufreq to > > powersave so that the processor goes to the lowest freq and the > > thermal > > > > temperature goes down. the console command to do this is: > > cpufreq-set -g powersave > > when the temperature goes around 60°-62° you can reset the > > conservative governor so that you will have the processor go faster > > when you need it. > > cpufreq-set -g conservative. > > > > as soon as i finish the scripts to automatically adjust the processor > > based on thermal readings i'll post them to you. > > > I have not been following this thread to closely so I apologize if this > has already been mentioned. Have you considered ncpufreqd? According to > the Gentoo power management guide: > > "Toggles the used governor between performance and powersave depending > on system temperature. Very useful on laptops with notorious heat > problems." this could be a workaround for the issue. try emerging and testing it. if this still doesn't work let me know so that i can continue to work on the scripts. for the moment i'll stop working on them and wait for a positive or negative answer from you. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2005 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-06 11:50 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-06 13:44 ` Beso @ 2008-02-07 7:59 ` ionut cristian cucu 2008-02-07 8:48 ` Beso 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cristian cucu @ 2008-02-07 7:59 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 ncpufreqd will not start but it doesn't print any errors either. But strange issue: I did a test: MAKEOPTS="-j" emerge amarok and guess what the temp did not budge a degree over 50, but this morning as I'm writing this my cpu is on 62% usage but the temp is 95 degrees. This puzzles me. Stopping any emerge process did help, but last night it went for hours with full 100% CPU load and now it overheats with "-j1". It is clear, to me, that something somewhere is wicked. LATER: I've just noticed that TZ01 in kima was 0 rebooting set it to 50 and now with emerge keeping the cpu at max speed and load gives me only 55 degrees. So how I will do a kernel update maybe will fix my problem, because it looks to me like it's comming from there. Isn't it? -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-07 7:59 ` ionut cristian cucu @ 2008-02-07 8:48 ` Beso 2008-02-07 14:16 ` ionut cristian cucu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-07 8:48 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1598 bytes --] 2008/2/7, ionut cristian cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > ncpufreqd will not start but it doesn't print any errors either. have you set the /etc/ncpufreqd.conf? also, have you started cpufrequtils as a daemon and loaded the various cpufreq modules?! without them ncpufreqd won't work. to see if it starts try looking at the system log. But > strange issue: I did a test: MAKEOPTS="-j" emerge amarok and guess > what the temp did not budge a degree over 50, but this morning as I'm > writing this my cpu is on 62% usage but the temp is 95 degrees. it's impossible for the thermal to be at only 50 when compiling unlimited jobs. maybe the temp you're seeing is the core and not the thermal one. it makes sense that core is at 50° and thermal at 95°. This > puzzles me. Stopping any emerge process did help, but last night it > went for hours with full 100% CPU load and now it overheats with > "-j1". It is clear, to me, that something somewhere is wicked. > LATER: I've just noticed that TZ01 in kima was 0 rebooting set it to > 50 and now with emerge keeping the cpu at max speed and load gives me > only 55 degrees. So how I will do a kernel update maybe will fix my > problem, because it looks to me like it's comming from there. Isn't > it? then the tz01 is the processor core thermal and not the thermal itself. then you should have another thermal zone other than TZ01. try looking in the /proc/acpi. or better do a ls -lR /proc/acpi > proc-contents.txt and append it here. it might be useful to see what your proc contains. -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2220 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-07 8:48 ` Beso @ 2008-02-07 14:16 ` ionut cristian cucu 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cristian cucu @ 2008-02-07 14:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1988 bytes --] 2008/2/7, Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com>: > 2008/2/7, ionut cristian cucu <cuciferus@gmail.com>: > > ncpufreqd will not start but it doesn't print any errors either. > > have you set the /etc/ncpufreqd.conf? I've looked there and apart from an /proc/acpi/CPU witch had to be corrected to CPU0 everything else was oki also, have you started cpufrequtils as > a daemon and loaded the various cpufreq modules?! Yup > without them ncpufreqd won't work. to see if it starts try looking at the > system log. I have not yet setup the system log yet, and gentoo-wiki is not up > > > But > > strange issue: I did a test: MAKEOPTS="-j" emerge amarok and guess > > what the temp did not budge a degree over 50, but this morning as I'm > > writing this my cpu is on 62% usage but the temp is 95 degrees. > > > it's impossible for the thermal to be at only 50 when compiling unlimited > jobs. maybe the temp you're seeing is the core and not the thermal one. it > makes sense that core is at 50° and thermal at 95°. Hmm I might have a little bit exagerated but hwmon1/2 were constant and certainly in sane values > > > This > > puzzles me. Stopping any emerge process did help, but last night it > > went for hours with full 100% CPU load and now it overheats with > > "-j1". It is clear, to me, that something somewhere is wicked. > > LATER: I've just noticed that TZ01 in kima was 0 rebooting set it to > > 50 and now with emerge keeping the cpu at max speed and load gives me > > only 55 degrees. So how I will do a kernel update maybe will fix my > > problem, because it looks to me like it's comming from there. Isn't > > it? > > then the tz01 is the processor core thermal and not the thermal itself. then > you should have another thermal zone other than TZ01. try looking in the > /proc/acpi. or better do a ls -lR /proc/acpi > proc-contents.txt and append > it here. it might be useful to see what your proc contains. > > > -- > dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: proc-content.txt --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 3181 bytes --] /proc/acpi/: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 ac_adapter -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 alarm dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 battery dr-xr-xr-x 5 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 button -r-------- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 dsdt dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 embedded_controller -r--r----- 1 root haldaemon 0 Feb 7 09:43 event -r-------- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 fadt dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 fan -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 power_resource dr-xr-xr-x 4 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 processor -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 sleep dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 thermal_zone -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 wakeup /proc/acpi/ac_adapter: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 AC /proc/acpi/ac_adapter/AC: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 state /proc/acpi/battery: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 BAT0 /proc/acpi/battery/BAT0: total 0 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 alarm -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 state /proc/acpi/button: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 lid dr-xr-xr-x 4 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 power dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 sleep /proc/acpi/button/lid: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 LID0 /proc/acpi/button/lid/LID0: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 state /proc/acpi/button/power: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 PWRB dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 PWRF /proc/acpi/button/power/PWRB: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info /proc/acpi/button/power/PWRF: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info /proc/acpi/button/sleep: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 SLPB /proc/acpi/button/sleep/SLPB: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info /proc/acpi/embedded_controller: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 EC0 /proc/acpi/embedded_controller/EC0: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info /proc/acpi/fan: total 0 /proc/acpi/power_resource: total 0 /proc/acpi/processor: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 CPU0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 CPU1 /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 limit -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 performance -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 power -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 throttling /proc/acpi/processor/CPU1: total 0 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 info -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 limit -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 power -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 throttling /proc/acpi/thermal_zone: total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 TZ01 /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/TZ01: total 0 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 cooling_mode -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 polling_frequency -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 state -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 temperature -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 7 16:15 trip_points ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] new laptop 2008-02-04 9:01 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Beso 2008-02-04 9:26 ` Beso @ 2008-02-04 11:51 ` ionut cucu 1 sibling, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: ionut cucu @ 2008-02-04 11:51 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 09:01:41 +0000 Beso <givemesugarr@gmail.com> wrote: > > well, we have a little problem about trip points, since the only > > indicated > there is the critical one and you don't have passive ones. > well, we'll need to do a little work on the manual scripts to have > the fan work and to be sure that the thermal won't reach critical > trip point where it would shutdown. > i'll take a look and post some scripts that should help. you'll have > to be sure that you have installed lm_sensors and cpufrequtils and > that you have compiled the cpufreq modules into the kernel or as > modules and you'll have them loaded at boot. we'll have to make the > processor slow down when the thermal goes too high. also i'd like to > know what are the capabilities of your processors: > a cat on the /proc/cpuinfo and then on > cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU(x)/info where (x) is the number of the > core to know what sort of management it can support. you should have > cpu0 and cpu1 if you have a dualcore. cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU1/info processor id: 1 acpi id: 2 bus mastering control: yes power management: yes throttling control: yes limit interface: yes cat /proc/cpuinfo <snip as the first is the same as the second> processor : 1 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 6 model : 15 model name : Intel(R) Pentium(R) Dual CPU T2310 @ 1.46GHz stepping : 13 cpu MHz : 1467.000 cache size : 1024 KB physical id : 0 siblings : 2 core id : 1 cpu cores : 2 fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 10 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall lm constant_tsc arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good pni monitor ds_cpl est tm2 ssse3 cx16 xtpr lahf_lm bogomips : 2927.97 clflush size : 64 cache_alignment : 64 address sizes : 36 bits physical, 48 bits virtual power management: I'm soooo curious to get to the bottom of this as I've seen a post saying that on windows a guy had the same issue and resolved it with some "empowering (TM) Acer" drivers. But I've only seen one post -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 1:20 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 6:55 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan @ 2008-01-30 8:18 ` Beso 2008-01-31 22:19 ` agtdino 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-30 8:18 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2562 bytes --] 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > the real problem stands in the keyword.... the amd64 would downgrade a > lot > > of stuff.... before doing it it's better to identify the normal > programs, > > like kde, gnome, and similar and let them be for the moment as > ~amd64.... > > but at least stuff like, gcc, glibc, baselayout, kernel and some other > base > > stuff should stay on the amd64 branch.... you won't be able to downgrade > > glibc so that one for the moment would stay on the unstable branch.... > but > > if you don't feel in the mood to downgrade cause the ~amd64 being to > > amd64, then just update the profile and you should see something like > 100 > > packages.... > > also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some time in > > recompiling stuff.... > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. it doesn't anymore. it works very well. > the 2gb of ccache would help, but not a lot.... 400+ packages would mean > > about 3-4 days on a amd64 2ghz single core, so prepare for a looong time > of > > compile time.... also the 5 blockers are not good and should be fixed in > > some way before proceeding to the recompile.... > > no, it would mean something around 12h. Depending on the packages. 400 packages of which gcc and gnome ones is more than 12h.... > if you decide to modify the use flags when changing profile it's the best > > time.... > > yeah, check which flags changed, and which ones you really need. That way > you > might be able to cut down the amount of packages. > > > so my advice is the following: > > 1. take some time to look at the use flags (emerge ufed and see a > > description of them and also add/remove them from the ufed gui in > > make.conf) > > 2. add LDFLAGS="--as-needed" into make.conf > > really, don't do it. really do it!!!! the flag works very well and doesn't give any breakage anymore.... the packages that are broken by this flags have all ldflags removed in the ebuild so there's no reason to not use it. > > Total: 478 packages (1 upgrade, 396 downgrades, 14 new, 1 in new slot, > > > 66 reinstalls, 5 blocks), Size of downloads: 480,074 kB > > check your keywords - and blockers are easily solved. Usually you need to > unmerge something. And the blocking ebuild tells you what. > > > And agtdino and Beso: > > DO NOT TOP POST. > > This is not a Windows mailing list. this is how web gmail works when replying. -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3733 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-30 8:18 ` [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 Beso @ 2008-01-31 22:19 ` agtdino 2008-02-01 8:26 ` Beso 0 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-31 22:19 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 After a few days I have now the system in a stable branch, and my profile is now apoint to the correct 2007.0 :-) Now I'm more stable (xD) than when I decide to deinstall debian-amd64 and install gentoo-amd64. In two, I probe testing or unnestable packages, because there was the only ( in there moment ) way to probe this architecture. Thank's for the tip, regard's El mié, 30-01-2008 a las 09:18 +0100, Beso escribió: > > > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann > <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > the real problem stands in the keyword.... the amd64 would > downgrade a lot > > of stuff.... before doing it it's better to identify the > normal programs, > > like kde, gnome, and similar and let them be for the moment > as ~amd64.... > > but at least stuff like, gcc, glibc, baselayout, kernel and > some other base > > stuff should stay on the amd64 branch.... you won't be able > to downgrade > > glibc so that one for the moment would stay on the unstable > branch.... but > > if you don't feel in the mood to downgrade cause the ~amd64 > being to > > amd64, then just update the profile and you should see > something like 100 > > packages.... > > also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some > time in > > recompiling stuff.... > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. > > it doesn't anymore. it works very well. > > > > the 2gb of ccache would help, but not a lot.... 400+ > packages would mean > > about 3-4 days on a amd64 2ghz single core, so prepare for a > looong time of > > compile time.... also the 5 blockers are not good and should > be fixed in > > some way before proceeding to the recompile.... > > no, it would mean something around 12h. Depending on the > packages. > > 400 packages of which gcc and gnome ones is more than 12h.... > > > > if you decide to modify the use flags when changing profile > it's the best > > time.... > > yeah, check which flags changed, and which ones you really > need. That way you > might be able to cut down the amount of packages. > > > so my advice is the following: > > 1. take some time to look at the use flags (emerge ufed and > see a > > description of them and also add/remove them from the ufed > gui in > > make.conf) > > 2. add LDFLAGS="--as-needed" into make.conf > > really, don't do it. > > really do it!!!! the flag works very well and doesn't give any > breakage anymore.... the packages that are broken by this flags have > all ldflags removed in the ebuild so there's no reason to not use it. > > > > > Total: 478 packages (1 upgrade, 396 downgrades, 14 new, 1 > in new slot, > > > 66 reinstalls, 5 blocks), Size of downloads: 480,074 kB > > check your keywords - and blockers are easily solved. Usually > you need to > unmerge something. And the blocking ebuild tells you what. > > > And agtdino and Beso: > > DO NOT TOP POST. > > This is not a Windows mailing list. > > this is how web gmail works when replying. > > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > -- > dott. ing. beso -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-31 22:19 ` agtdino @ 2008-02-01 8:26 ` Beso 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-02-01 8:26 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 4036 bytes --] no problem. if you need other help ask on the forums or here. glad we could help you. 2008/1/31, agtdino <agtdino@teleline.es>: > > After a few days I have now the system in a stable branch, and my > profile is now apoint to the correct 2007.0 :-) > > Now I'm more stable (xD) than when I decide to deinstall debian-amd64 > and install gentoo-amd64. In two, I probe testing or unnestable > packages, because there was the only ( in there moment ) way to probe > this architecture. > > Thank's for the tip, regard's > > > El mié, 30-01-2008 a las 09:18 +0100, Beso escribió: > > > > > > 2008/1/30, Volker Armin Hemmann > > <volker.armin.hemmann@tu-clausthal.de>: > > On Mittwoch, 30. Januar 2008, Beso wrote: > > > the real problem stands in the keyword.... the amd64 would > > downgrade a lot > > > of stuff.... before doing it it's better to identify the > > normal programs, > > > like kde, gnome, and similar and let them be for the moment > > as ~amd64.... > > > but at least stuff like, gcc, glibc, baselayout, kernel and > > some other base > > > stuff should stay on the amd64 branch.... you won't be able > > to downgrade > > > glibc so that one for the moment would stay on the unstable > > branch.... but > > > if you don't feel in the mood to downgrade cause the ~amd64 > > being to > > > amd64, then just update the profile and you should see > > something like 100 > > > packages.... > > > also adding --as-needed as LDFLAGS should help you save some > > time in > > > recompiling stuff.... > > > > yeah - no. Don't do it. It breaks stuff. > > > > it doesn't anymore. it works very well. > > > > > > > the 2gb of ccache would help, but not a lot.... 400+ > > packages would mean > > > about 3-4 days on a amd64 2ghz single core, so prepare for a > > looong time of > > > compile time.... also the 5 blockers are not good and should > > be fixed in > > > some way before proceeding to the recompile.... > > > > no, it would mean something around 12h. Depending on the > > packages. > > > > 400 packages of which gcc and gnome ones is more than 12h.... > > > > > > > if you decide to modify the use flags when changing profile > > it's the best > > > time.... > > > > yeah, check which flags changed, and which ones you really > > need. That way you > > might be able to cut down the amount of packages. > > > > > so my advice is the following: > > > 1. take some time to look at the use flags (emerge ufed and > > see a > > > description of them and also add/remove them from the ufed > > gui in > > > make.conf) > > > 2. add LDFLAGS="--as-needed" into make.conf > > > > really, don't do it. > > > > really do it!!!! the flag works very well and doesn't give any > > breakage anymore.... the packages that are broken by this flags have > > all ldflags removed in the ebuild so there's no reason to not use it. > > > > > > > > Total: 478 packages (1 upgrade, 396 downgrades, 14 new, 1 > > in new slot, > > > > 66 reinstalls, 5 blocks), Size of downloads: 480,074 kB > > > > check your keywords - and blockers are easily solved. Usually > > you need to > > unmerge something. And the blocking ebuild tells you what. > > > > > > And agtdino and Beso: > > > > DO NOT TOP POST. > > > > This is not a Windows mailing list. > > > > this is how web gmail works when replying. > > > > > > -- > > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > > > > > > -- > > dott. ing. beso > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 7193 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 8:31 ` Steev Klimaszewski 2008-01-29 9:00 ` agtdino @ 2008-01-29 9:47 ` Beso 2008-01-29 10:30 ` agtdino 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Beso @ 2008-01-29 9:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 849 bytes --] this is not true!!!! i have madwifi-ng-0.9.3.3 updated on 17 jan 2008 compiled on 2.6.24 and it works very well (with sandbox disabled). 2008/1/29, Steev Klimaszewski <steev@gentoo.org>: > > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > Hi, > Hi! > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently incompatible (well > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper fix) with > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will need to > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a release > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two patches) that is > compatible with 2.6.24. > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely necessary, I > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > -- Steev > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- dott. ing. beso [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 2008-01-29 9:47 ` Beso @ 2008-01-29 10:30 ` agtdino 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: agtdino @ 2008-01-29 10:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 I've 2.6.23-gentoo-r5 and all is now ok! * net-wireless/madwifi-ng-tools Latest version available: 0.9.3.3 Latest version installed: 0.9.3.3 Size of files: 3,408 kB Homepage: http://www.madwifi.org/ Description: Next Generation tools for configuration of Atheros based IEEE 802.11a/b/g wireless LAN cards License: || ( BSD GPL-2 ) Now I've madwifi-ng-tools too Than'k for the tip, for me is solved. El mar, 29-01-2008 a las 09:47 +0000, Beso escribió: > this is not true!!!! i have madwifi-ng-0.9.3.3 updated on 17 jan 2008 > compiled on 2.6.24 and it works very well (with sandbox disabled). > > 2008/1/29, Steev Klimaszewski <steev@gentoo.org>: > > On Tue, 2008-01-29 at 09:17 +0100, agtdino wrote: > > Hi, > Hi! > > I am the maintainer of madwifi-ng - it is currently > incompatible (well > there is a patch in bugzilla however it is not the proper fix) > with > 2.6.24 - if you absolutely must have 2.6.24, then you will > need to > compile the madwifi modules from svn, until they put out a > release > (which *should* be soon, they are only waiting on two patches) > that is > compatible with 2.6.24. > > Sorry for your troubles, for now, unless it is absolutely > necessary, I > would suggest continuing using 2.6.23-r6 > > -- Steev > > -- > gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > -- > dott. ing. beso -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to... 2008-01-28 21:25 [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 agtdino 2008-01-28 21:54 ` Beso 2008-01-28 22:52 ` Volker Armin Hemmann @ 2008-01-28 23:21 ` Mateusz Mierzwinski 2008-01-28 23:24 ` Mark Haney 2 siblings, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Mateusz Mierzwinski @ 2008-01-28 23:21 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hello! I just want to ask if anyone know any good howto for Gentoo about Postfix and simple mail server? I've seen current howto on gentoo-wiki and it's old. Any tips or links? -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to... 2008-01-28 23:21 ` [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to Mateusz Mierzwinski @ 2008-01-28 23:24 ` Mark Haney 2008-01-28 23:45 ` Mateusz Mierzwinski 2008-01-29 10:06 ` Peter Humphrey 0 siblings, 2 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Mark Haney @ 2008-01-28 23:24 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Mateusz Mierzwinski wrote: > Hello! > > I just want to ask if anyone know any good howto for Gentoo about > Postfix and simple mail server? I've seen current howto on gentoo-wiki > and it's old. Any tips or links? Not sure exactly what you need with postfix, but this is the one I used on a non-gentoo system and it worked pretty well for me. http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/virt-mail-howto.xml -- Libenter homines id quod volunt credunt -- Caius Julius Caesar Mark Haney Sr. Systems Administrator ERC Broadband (828) 350-2415 Call (866) ERC-7110 for after hours support -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to... 2008-01-28 23:24 ` Mark Haney @ 2008-01-28 23:45 ` Mateusz Mierzwinski 2008-01-29 2:15 ` Isaac Conway 2008-01-29 10:06 ` Peter Humphrey 1 sibling, 1 reply; 56+ messages in thread From: Mateusz Mierzwinski @ 2008-01-28 23:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 I need only simple email server gentoo based on amd64 arch. Thanks for info ;) Mark Haney pisze: > Mateusz Mierzwinski wrote: >> Hello! >> >> I just want to ask if anyone know any good howto for Gentoo about >> Postfix and simple mail server? I've seen current howto on >> gentoo-wiki and it's old. Any tips or links? > > Not sure exactly what you need with postfix, but this is the one I > used on a non-gentoo system and it worked pretty well for me. > > http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/virt-mail-howto.xml > > -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to... 2008-01-28 23:45 ` Mateusz Mierzwinski @ 2008-01-29 2:15 ` Isaac Conway 0 siblings, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Isaac Conway @ 2008-01-29 2:15 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Although not Gentoo based, this is one of the clearest and most straightforward setups I have seen. It really fully utilizes a lot of the cool features in each package. Config is basically identical, but the install parts are easier on Gentoo. http://www.wistful.net/wiki/Ed's_FreeBSD_Virtual_Mail_How-To Isaac Conway Mateusz Mierzwinski wrote: > I need only simple email server gentoo based on amd64 arch. Thanks for > info ;) > > Mark Haney pisze: >> Mateusz Mierzwinski wrote: >>> Hello! >>> >>> I just want to ask if anyone know any good howto for Gentoo about >>> Postfix and simple mail server? I've seen current howto on >>> gentoo-wiki and it's old. Any tips or links? >> >> Not sure exactly what you need with postfix, but this is the one I >> used on a non-gentoo system and it worked pretty well for me. >> >> http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/virt-mail-howto.xml >> >> > -- Isaac D. Conway http://www.conwaynetworks.com -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to... 2008-01-28 23:24 ` Mark Haney 2008-01-28 23:45 ` Mateusz Mierzwinski @ 2008-01-29 10:06 ` Peter Humphrey 1 sibling, 0 replies; 56+ messages in thread From: Peter Humphrey @ 2008-01-29 10:06 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Monday 28 January 2008 23:24:47 Mark Haney wrote: > Mateusz Mierzwinski wrote: > > Hello! > > > > I just want to ask if anyone know any good howto for Gentoo about > > Postfix and simple mail server? I've seen current howto on gentoo-wiki > > and it's old. Any tips or links? > > Not sure exactly what you need with postfix, but this is the one I used > on a non-gentoo system and it worked pretty well for me. > > http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/virt-mail-howto.xml Isn't there something for the simple case of a home network with a few machines passing admin messages among themselves? The one you quote is way over the top for that case, though no doubt good at what it does do. -- Rgds Peter -- gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 56+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-02-07 14:16 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 56+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2008-01-28 21:25 [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 agtdino 2008-01-28 21:54 ` Beso 2008-01-28 22:52 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-29 7:51 ` Beso 2008-01-29 8:17 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 8:31 ` Steev Klimaszewski 2008-01-29 9:00 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 9:56 ` Beso 2008-01-29 10:52 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 11:22 ` Beso 2008-01-29 22:30 ` agtdino 2008-01-29 23:08 ` Beso 2008-01-30 1:20 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 6:55 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2008-01-30 8:04 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 8:43 ` Beso 2008-01-30 16:59 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 19:09 ` Beso 2008-01-30 19:47 ` Volker Armin Hemmann 2008-01-30 20:02 ` Beso 2008-01-30 8:32 ` Beso 2008-01-30 17:42 ` Duncan 2008-01-30 19:06 ` Beso 2008-01-31 10:14 ` Duncan 2008-02-03 13:42 ` [gentoo-amd64] new laptop ionut cucu 2008-02-03 13:55 ` Beso 2008-02-03 15:05 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-03 15:49 ` Beso 2008-02-04 7:39 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 8:11 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2008-02-04 11:23 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 13:39 ` Duncan 2008-02-04 9:01 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Beso 2008-02-04 9:26 ` Beso 2008-02-04 13:48 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 14:21 ` Beso 2008-02-04 14:53 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-04 15:52 ` Beso 2008-02-06 11:50 ` ionut cucu 2008-02-06 13:44 ` Beso 2008-02-06 14:30 ` Brett Johnson 2008-02-06 15:45 ` Beso 2008-02-07 7:59 ` ionut cristian cucu 2008-02-07 8:48 ` Beso 2008-02-07 14:16 ` ionut cristian cucu 2008-02-04 11:51 ` ionut cucu 2008-01-30 8:18 ` [gentoo-amd64] madwifi-ng not compile in amd64 Beso 2008-01-31 22:19 ` agtdino 2008-02-01 8:26 ` Beso 2008-01-29 9:47 ` Beso 2008-01-29 10:30 ` agtdino 2008-01-28 23:21 ` [gentoo-amd64] Good Postfix / Mail Server how to Mateusz Mierzwinski 2008-01-28 23:24 ` Mark Haney 2008-01-28 23:45 ` Mateusz Mierzwinski 2008-01-29 2:15 ` Isaac Conway 2008-01-29 10:06 ` Peter Humphrey
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