* [gentoo-user] Kino Crashes Opening Files [not found] ` <27dd34e60905130919n2a8f11e1s49999be4d349849b@mail.gmail.com> @ 2009-05-15 10:25 ` dhk 2009-05-15 10:29 ` Saphirus Sage 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: dhk @ 2009-05-15 10:25 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user I originally posted this question to the kino group. The chain of emails is below. The problem is that kino crashes when opening a file, clicking on a folder that has a video file in it, or when passing it in on the command line. I removed and reinstalled kino, but the same thing happens. I compiled the source manually and the problem wasn't there. Now I think it has something to do with the Gentoo environment or the ebuild. One thing I noticed on my system is that in /usr/portage/media-video/kino there are two ebuilds a 1.3.1 and a 1.3.3 I have 1.3.1 installed. The diffs to these files are as follows. $ diff kino-1.3.1.ebuild kino-1.3.3.ebuild 1c1 < # Copyright 1999-2008 Gentoo Foundation --- > # Copyright 1999-2009 Gentoo Foundation 3c3 < # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.1.ebuild,v 1.7 2008/12/21 14:44:31 nixnut Exp $ --- > # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.3.ebuild,v 1.1 2009/03/29 13:39:42 patrick Exp $ 11c11 < KEYWORDS="amd64 ppc ppc64 sparc x86" --- > KEYWORDS="~amd64 ~ppc ~ppc64 ~sparc ~x86" 29a30 > dev-util/intltool I'm not sure if the 1.3.3 file is causing a problem somehow. Any ideas? Thanks, dhk Dan Dennedy wrote: > On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 4:54 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >> Dan Dennedy wrote: >>> On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 3:08 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>> dhk wrote: >>>>> Carl Karsten wrote: >>>>>> On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 5:27 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>>>> I don't edit video very often so I don't know exactly when this >>>>>>> problem >>>>>>> started. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Whenever I try to open a file kino crashes. It starts fine, but as >>>>>>> soon >>>>>>> as I try to open a .kino, .dv and other type files it crashes. When >>>>>>> I'm >>>>>>> in the kino gui the crash occurs when I click on the folder that has >>>>>>> the >>>>>>> .kino file. On the command line it crashes when I pass the file in as >>>>>>> a >>>>>>> parameter. >>> More than likely the libdv or libavcodec libraries changed somehow and >>> Kino needs to be rebuilt. If you are going to rebuild it, see if there >>> is a v1.3.3, the latest release, available - it will clear up many of >>> those GTK+ warnings. >>> >>>>>> post the command line and resulting output. >>>>>> >>> [...] >>>>> /Video/Capture/MomAndDad50thAnniversary $ kino take1.kino >>> [...] >>>>> Kino experienced a segmentation fault. >>> $ gdb kino >>> (gdb) run take1.kino >>> ...segfault >>> (gdb) where >>> >>> send the output. >>> >> I think the problem is in the environment or setup somewhere. I don't have >> the answer, but I think I'm getting closer. So please bear with me as I >> explain. >> >> First) This is kino version 1.3.1 I'm working with. There isn't any >> libavcodec package in the portage tree as far as I've seen, but there is a >> libavc1394 version 0.5.3. The highest version of lbdv is 1.0.0-r2. > > I do not know the gentoo package names; libavcodec is a part of FFmeg. > > $ ldd $(which kino) > and see if it is linked to a libavcodec > >> Second) I tried compiling the source so I could run the program through the >> gdb debugger. When I ran the program without gdb it runs fine, but the same >> problem exists with the crashing. However, when running the program through >> gdb it SIGSEGV because it can't find the magick.glade and kino.glade file. >> The program was looking for them in /usr/local/share/kino/ and that path >> and the file don't exist. > > You have to install it to put resources in the expected location. > >> Third) Then I did a make clean and ran configure with my own --prefix and >> copied the two .glade file to that location. I redid the steps above >> running kino with and without gdb and to my surprise everything worked. >> Except for some missing icons , which is understandable since I change the >> --prefix, everything I tested was functional. I could open files and play >> them. > > Like I said, Kino needed to be rebuilt for some reason or another. Or, > something special about the gentoo build is triggering a bug. > >> So now is the problem with the way kino is getting installed on Gentoo amd64 >> or am I picking up older files from previous versions that don't work? Any >> ideas? I think we're getting closer? > > Remove it entirely, re-emerge it. If the problem remains, file a bug > with gentoo. If there is a patch that belongs upstream, someone should > attach it to the Kino SourceForge tracker. Kino is no longer actively > maintained, so someone needs to step up if they need it to work for > them because no one else is going out of there way to resolve issues > for various environments. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Kino Crashes Opening Files 2009-05-15 10:25 ` [gentoo-user] Kino Crashes Opening Files dhk @ 2009-05-15 10:29 ` Saphirus Sage 2009-05-15 12:12 ` dhk 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Saphirus Sage @ 2009-05-15 10:29 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user dhk wrote: > I originally posted this question to the kino group. The chain of > emails is below. > > The problem is that kino crashes when opening a file, clicking on a > folder that has a video file in it, or when passing it in on the > command line. I removed and reinstalled kino, but the same thing > happens. I compiled the source manually and the problem wasn't > there. Now I think it has something to do with the Gentoo environment > or the ebuild. > > One thing I noticed on my system is that in > /usr/portage/media-video/kino there are two ebuilds a 1.3.1 and a > 1.3.3 I have 1.3.1 installed. The diffs to these files are as follows. > > $ diff kino-1.3.1.ebuild kino-1.3.3.ebuild > 1c1 > < # Copyright 1999-2008 Gentoo Foundation > --- > > # Copyright 1999-2009 Gentoo Foundation > 3c3 > < # $Header: > /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.1.ebuild,v 1.7 > 2008/12/21 14:44:31 nixnut Exp $ > --- > > # $Header: > /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.3.ebuild,v 1.1 > 2009/03/29 13:39:42 patrick Exp $ > 11c11 > < KEYWORDS="amd64 ppc ppc64 sparc x86" > --- > > KEYWORDS="~amd64 ~ppc ~ppc64 ~sparc ~x86" > 29a30 > > dev-util/intltool > > I'm not sure if the 1.3.3 file is causing a problem somehow. > > Any ideas? > > Thanks, > dhk > > Dan Dennedy wrote: >> On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 4:54 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>> Dan Dennedy wrote: >>>> On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 3:08 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>> dhk wrote: >>>>>> Carl Karsten wrote: >>>>>>> On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 5:27 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>>>>> I don't edit video very often so I don't know exactly when this >>>>>>>> problem >>>>>>>> started. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Whenever I try to open a file kino crashes. It starts fine, >>>>>>>> but as >>>>>>>> soon >>>>>>>> as I try to open a .kino, .dv and other type files it crashes. >>>>>>>> When >>>>>>>> I'm >>>>>>>> in the kino gui the crash occurs when I click on the folder >>>>>>>> that has >>>>>>>> the >>>>>>>> .kino file. On the command line it crashes when I pass the >>>>>>>> file in as >>>>>>>> a >>>>>>>> parameter. >>>> More than likely the libdv or libavcodec libraries changed somehow and >>>> Kino needs to be rebuilt. If you are going to rebuild it, see if there >>>> is a v1.3.3, the latest release, available - it will clear up many of >>>> those GTK+ warnings. >>>> >>>>>>> post the command line and resulting output. >>>>>>> >>>> [...] >>>>>> /Video/Capture/MomAndDad50thAnniversary $ kino take1.kino >>>> [...] >>>>>> Kino experienced a segmentation fault. >>>> $ gdb kino >>>> (gdb) run take1.kino >>>> ...segfault >>>> (gdb) where >>>> >>>> send the output. >>>> >>> I think the problem is in the environment or setup somewhere. I >>> don't have >>> the answer, but I think I'm getting closer. So please bear with me >>> as I >>> explain. >>> >>> First) This is kino version 1.3.1 I'm working with. There isn't any >>> libavcodec package in the portage tree as far as I've seen, but >>> there is a >>> libavc1394 version 0.5.3. The highest version of lbdv is 1.0.0-r2. >> >> I do not know the gentoo package names; libavcodec is a part of FFmeg. >> >> $ ldd $(which kino) >> and see if it is linked to a libavcodec >> >>> Second) I tried compiling the source so I could run the program >>> through the >>> gdb debugger. When I ran the program without gdb it runs fine, but >>> the same >>> problem exists with the crashing. However, when running the program >>> through >>> gdb it SIGSEGV because it can't find the magick.glade and kino.glade >>> file. >>> The program was looking for them in /usr/local/share/kino/ and that >>> path >>> and the file don't exist. >> >> You have to install it to put resources in the expected location. >> >>> Third) Then I did a make clean and ran configure with my own >>> --prefix and >>> copied the two .glade file to that location. I redid the steps above >>> running kino with and without gdb and to my surprise everything worked. >>> Except for some missing icons , which is understandable since I >>> change the >>> --prefix, everything I tested was functional. I could open files >>> and play >>> them. >> >> Like I said, Kino needed to be rebuilt for some reason or another. Or, >> something special about the gentoo build is triggering a bug. >> >>> So now is the problem with the way kino is getting installed on >>> Gentoo amd64 >>> or am I picking up older files from previous versions that don't >>> work? Any >>> ideas? I think we're getting closer? >> >> Remove it entirely, re-emerge it. If the problem remains, file a bug >> with gentoo. If there is a patch that belongs upstream, someone should >> attach it to the Kino SourceForge tracker. Kino is no longer actively >> maintained, so someone needs to step up if they need it to work for >> them because no one else is going out of there way to resolve issues >> for various environments. >> > > I've only been using Kino for a short time, but 1.3.3 has been perfectly find on my amd64 system. Consider unmasking it and installing that version, see if that gets around whatever the problem is. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Kino Crashes Opening Files 2009-05-15 10:29 ` Saphirus Sage @ 2009-05-15 12:12 ` dhk 2009-05-15 12:41 ` dhk 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: dhk @ 2009-05-15 12:12 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Saphirus Sage wrote: > dhk wrote: >> I originally posted this question to the kino group. The chain of >> emails is below. >> >> The problem is that kino crashes when opening a file, clicking on a >> folder that has a video file in it, or when passing it in on the >> command line. I removed and reinstalled kino, but the same thing >> happens. I compiled the source manually and the problem wasn't >> there. Now I think it has something to do with the Gentoo environment >> or the ebuild. >> >> One thing I noticed on my system is that in >> /usr/portage/media-video/kino there are two ebuilds a 1.3.1 and a >> 1.3.3 I have 1.3.1 installed. The diffs to these files are as follows. >> >> $ diff kino-1.3.1.ebuild kino-1.3.3.ebuild >> 1c1 >> < # Copyright 1999-2008 Gentoo Foundation >> --- >>> # Copyright 1999-2009 Gentoo Foundation >> 3c3 >> < # $Header: >> /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.1.ebuild,v 1.7 >> 2008/12/21 14:44:31 nixnut Exp $ >> --- >>> # $Header: >> /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.3.ebuild,v 1.1 >> 2009/03/29 13:39:42 patrick Exp $ >> 11c11 >> < KEYWORDS="amd64 ppc ppc64 sparc x86" >> --- >>> KEYWORDS="~amd64 ~ppc ~ppc64 ~sparc ~x86" >> 29a30 >>> dev-util/intltool >> I'm not sure if the 1.3.3 file is causing a problem somehow. >> >> Any ideas? >> >> Thanks, >> dhk >> >> Dan Dennedy wrote: >>> On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 4:54 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>> Dan Dennedy wrote: >>>>> On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 3:08 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>>> dhk wrote: >>>>>>> Carl Karsten wrote: >>>>>>>> On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 5:27 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>>>>>> I don't edit video very often so I don't know exactly when this >>>>>>>>> problem >>>>>>>>> started. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Whenever I try to open a file kino crashes. It starts fine, >>>>>>>>> but as >>>>>>>>> soon >>>>>>>>> as I try to open a .kino, .dv and other type files it crashes. >>>>>>>>> When >>>>>>>>> I'm >>>>>>>>> in the kino gui the crash occurs when I click on the folder >>>>>>>>> that has >>>>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>> .kino file. On the command line it crashes when I pass the >>>>>>>>> file in as >>>>>>>>> a >>>>>>>>> parameter. >>>>> More than likely the libdv or libavcodec libraries changed somehow and >>>>> Kino needs to be rebuilt. If you are going to rebuild it, see if there >>>>> is a v1.3.3, the latest release, available - it will clear up many of >>>>> those GTK+ warnings. >>>>> >>>>>>>> post the command line and resulting output. >>>>>>>> >>>>> [...] >>>>>>> /Video/Capture/MomAndDad50thAnniversary $ kino take1.kino >>>>> [...] >>>>>>> Kino experienced a segmentation fault. >>>>> $ gdb kino >>>>> (gdb) run take1.kino >>>>> ...segfault >>>>> (gdb) where >>>>> >>>>> send the output. >>>>> >>>> I think the problem is in the environment or setup somewhere. I >>>> don't have >>>> the answer, but I think I'm getting closer. So please bear with me >>>> as I >>>> explain. >>>> >>>> First) This is kino version 1.3.1 I'm working with. There isn't any >>>> libavcodec package in the portage tree as far as I've seen, but >>>> there is a >>>> libavc1394 version 0.5.3. The highest version of lbdv is 1.0.0-r2. >>> I do not know the gentoo package names; libavcodec is a part of FFmeg. >>> >>> $ ldd $(which kino) >>> and see if it is linked to a libavcodec >>> >>>> Second) I tried compiling the source so I could run the program >>>> through the >>>> gdb debugger. When I ran the program without gdb it runs fine, but >>>> the same >>>> problem exists with the crashing. However, when running the program >>>> through >>>> gdb it SIGSEGV because it can't find the magick.glade and kino.glade >>>> file. >>>> The program was looking for them in /usr/local/share/kino/ and that >>>> path >>>> and the file don't exist. >>> You have to install it to put resources in the expected location. >>> >>>> Third) Then I did a make clean and ran configure with my own >>>> --prefix and >>>> copied the two .glade file to that location. I redid the steps above >>>> running kino with and without gdb and to my surprise everything worked. >>>> Except for some missing icons , which is understandable since I >>>> change the >>>> --prefix, everything I tested was functional. I could open files >>>> and play >>>> them. >>> Like I said, Kino needed to be rebuilt for some reason or another. Or, >>> something special about the gentoo build is triggering a bug. >>> >>>> So now is the problem with the way kino is getting installed on >>>> Gentoo amd64 >>>> or am I picking up older files from previous versions that don't >>>> work? Any >>>> ideas? I think we're getting closer? >>> Remove it entirely, re-emerge it. If the problem remains, file a bug >>> with gentoo. If there is a patch that belongs upstream, someone should >>> attach it to the Kino SourceForge tracker. Kino is no longer actively >>> maintained, so someone needs to step up if they need it to work for >>> them because no one else is going out of there way to resolve issues >>> for various environments. >>> >> > I've only been using Kino for a short time, but 1.3.3 has been perfectly > find on my amd64 system. Consider unmasking it and installing that > version, see if that gets around whatever the problem is. > > I don't see a version 1.3.3 on my amd64, but I seem to have an ebuild for it. I don't think I have it masked either. All I see is media-video/kino gstreamer dvdr sox in the package.use file. # emerge --search kino !!! CONFIG_PROTECT is emptySearching... [ Results for search key : kino ] [ Applications found : 1 ] * media-video/kino Latest version available: 1.3.1 Latest version installed: 1.3.1 Size of files: 10,804 kB Homepage: http://www.kinodv.org/ Description: Kino is a non-linear DV editor for GNU/Linux License: GPL-2 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Kino Crashes Opening Files 2009-05-15 12:12 ` dhk @ 2009-05-15 12:41 ` dhk 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: dhk @ 2009-05-15 12:41 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user dhk wrote: > Saphirus Sage wrote: >> dhk wrote: >>> I originally posted this question to the kino group. The chain of >>> emails is below. >>> >>> The problem is that kino crashes when opening a file, clicking on a >>> folder that has a video file in it, or when passing it in on the >>> command line. I removed and reinstalled kino, but the same thing >>> happens. I compiled the source manually and the problem wasn't >>> there. Now I think it has something to do with the Gentoo environment >>> or the ebuild. >>> >>> One thing I noticed on my system is that in >>> /usr/portage/media-video/kino there are two ebuilds a 1.3.1 and a >>> 1.3.3 I have 1.3.1 installed. The diffs to these files are as follows. >>> >>> $ diff kino-1.3.1.ebuild kino-1.3.3.ebuild >>> 1c1 >>> < # Copyright 1999-2008 Gentoo Foundation >>> --- >>>> # Copyright 1999-2009 Gentoo Foundation >>> 3c3 >>> < # $Header: >>> /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.1.ebuild,v 1.7 >>> 2008/12/21 14:44:31 nixnut Exp $ >>> --- >>>> # $Header: >>> /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/media-video/kino/kino-1.3.3.ebuild,v 1.1 >>> 2009/03/29 13:39:42 patrick Exp $ >>> 11c11 >>> < KEYWORDS="amd64 ppc ppc64 sparc x86" >>> --- >>>> KEYWORDS="~amd64 ~ppc ~ppc64 ~sparc ~x86" >>> 29a30 >>>> dev-util/intltool >>> I'm not sure if the 1.3.3 file is causing a problem somehow. >>> >>> Any ideas? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> dhk >>> >>> Dan Dennedy wrote: >>>> On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 4:54 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>> Dan Dennedy wrote: >>>>>> On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 3:08 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>>>> dhk wrote: >>>>>>>> Carl Karsten wrote: >>>>>>>>> On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 5:27 AM, dhk <dhkuhl@optonline.net> wrote: >>>>>>>>>> I don't edit video very often so I don't know exactly when this >>>>>>>>>> problem >>>>>>>>>> started. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Whenever I try to open a file kino crashes. It starts fine, >>>>>>>>>> but as >>>>>>>>>> soon >>>>>>>>>> as I try to open a .kino, .dv and other type files it crashes. >>>>>>>>>> When >>>>>>>>>> I'm >>>>>>>>>> in the kino gui the crash occurs when I click on the folder >>>>>>>>>> that has >>>>>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>>> .kino file. On the command line it crashes when I pass the >>>>>>>>>> file in as >>>>>>>>>> a >>>>>>>>>> parameter. >>>>>> More than likely the libdv or libavcodec libraries changed somehow >>>>>> and >>>>>> Kino needs to be rebuilt. If you are going to rebuild it, see if >>>>>> there >>>>>> is a v1.3.3, the latest release, available - it will clear up many of >>>>>> those GTK+ warnings. >>>>>> >>>>>>>>> post the command line and resulting output. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>> [...] >>>>>>>> /Video/Capture/MomAndDad50thAnniversary $ kino take1.kino >>>>>> [...] >>>>>>>> Kino experienced a segmentation fault. >>>>>> $ gdb kino >>>>>> (gdb) run take1.kino >>>>>> ...segfault >>>>>> (gdb) where >>>>>> >>>>>> send the output. >>>>>> >>>>> I think the problem is in the environment or setup somewhere. I >>>>> don't have >>>>> the answer, but I think I'm getting closer. So please bear with me >>>>> as I >>>>> explain. >>>>> >>>>> First) This is kino version 1.3.1 I'm working with. There isn't any >>>>> libavcodec package in the portage tree as far as I've seen, but >>>>> there is a >>>>> libavc1394 version 0.5.3. The highest version of lbdv is 1.0.0-r2. >>>> I do not know the gentoo package names; libavcodec is a part of FFmeg. >>>> >>>> $ ldd $(which kino) >>>> and see if it is linked to a libavcodec >>>> >>>>> Second) I tried compiling the source so I could run the program >>>>> through the >>>>> gdb debugger. When I ran the program without gdb it runs fine, but >>>>> the same >>>>> problem exists with the crashing. However, when running the program >>>>> through >>>>> gdb it SIGSEGV because it can't find the magick.glade and kino.glade >>>>> file. >>>>> The program was looking for them in /usr/local/share/kino/ and that >>>>> path >>>>> and the file don't exist. >>>> You have to install it to put resources in the expected location. >>>> >>>>> Third) Then I did a make clean and ran configure with my own >>>>> --prefix and >>>>> copied the two .glade file to that location. I redid the steps above >>>>> running kino with and without gdb and to my surprise everything >>>>> worked. >>>>> Except for some missing icons , which is understandable since I >>>>> change the >>>>> --prefix, everything I tested was functional. I could open files >>>>> and play >>>>> them. >>>> Like I said, Kino needed to be rebuilt for some reason or another. Or, >>>> something special about the gentoo build is triggering a bug. >>>> >>>>> So now is the problem with the way kino is getting installed on >>>>> Gentoo amd64 >>>>> or am I picking up older files from previous versions that don't >>>>> work? Any >>>>> ideas? I think we're getting closer? >>>> Remove it entirely, re-emerge it. If the problem remains, file a bug >>>> with gentoo. If there is a patch that belongs upstream, someone should >>>> attach it to the Kino SourceForge tracker. Kino is no longer actively >>>> maintained, so someone needs to step up if they need it to work for >>>> them because no one else is going out of there way to resolve issues >>>> for various environments. >>>> >>> >> I've only been using Kino for a short time, but 1.3.3 has been perfectly >> find on my amd64 system. Consider unmasking it and installing that >> version, see if that gets around whatever the problem is. >> >> > > I don't see a version 1.3.3 on my amd64, but I seem to have an ebuild > for it. I don't think I have it masked either. All I see is > media-video/kino gstreamer dvdr sox in the package.use file. > > # emerge --search kino > !!! CONFIG_PROTECT is emptySearching... > [ Results for search key : kino ] > [ Applications found : 1 ] > > * media-video/kino > Latest version available: 1.3.1 > Latest version installed: 1.3.1 > Size of files: 10,804 kB > Homepage: http://www.kinodv.org/ > Description: Kino is a non-linear DV editor for GNU/Linux > License: GPL-2 > > > Never mind I found it. Version 1.3.3 was masked. I had to add media-video/kino ~amd64 to the package.keywords file. Now the problem is gone. Thanks all. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2009-05-15 12:41 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <4A055AA6.8070402@optonline.net> [not found] ` <549053140905090712l73073245sa22d32d5086e5519@mail.gmail.com> [not found] ` <4A0599E4.6010207@optonline.net> [not found] ` <4A094AA3.9080902@optonline.net> [not found] ` <27dd34e60905120922u391eceeeg9e48f85e11456655@mail.gmail.com> [not found] ` <4A0AB4D8.3030203@optonline.net> [not found] ` <27dd34e60905130919n2a8f11e1s49999be4d349849b@mail.gmail.com> 2009-05-15 10:25 ` [gentoo-user] Kino Crashes Opening Files dhk 2009-05-15 10:29 ` Saphirus Sage 2009-05-15 12:12 ` dhk 2009-05-15 12:41 ` dhk
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