yum list display some package in 2 rows
by Ambrogio
Hi all,
I use yum list in a script to have everytime I need a list of package
available.
Some packages, that have long names, are displayed in 2 rows, so scripts
are more hard to be coded.
There is an option to have a more simple list of packages, less readable
by umans, but more readable by computer?
Tnx
Ambrogio
15 years, 4 months
mouse buttons stop working
by Bjørge Solli
Hi
System: Fedora 10 (both 32 and 64 bit)
I have a strange problem. The mouse buttons stop working suddenly and
without any obvious reason. The cursor works fine and the keyboard works
fine, but no clicking with the mouse. I have seen this on two machines
with two different users and four different usb mouses (both wireless
and cabled). I believe it is a software related problem. Any ideas?
I use Ctrl+Alt+Arrow buttons to switch desktops and it might be that
switching desktop is a common factor.
regards
Bjørge Solli
15 years, 4 months
rubygems on Fedora 10
by José Tiburcio Ribeiro Netto
Hello!
Those of you that are developing Ruby on Rails applications on Fedora 10,
installed rubygems from the rpm on the official Fedora's repository, or from
source (rubyforge.org)?
Are there any conflicts when using "gem install some_gem"? Or when executing
"gem update --system"?
Thanks.
15 years, 4 months
F10 - Problem initializing Catalyst Control Center
by Clodoaldo Neto
Problem initializing Catalist Control Center. Fedora 10 x86_64. On
board graphics Radeon HD3200. Motherboard ECS A780GM-A (V1.1).
ATI driver installed with yum:
# yum install kmod-fglrx
When I go to System Tools -> ATI Catalyst Control Center a dialog box
appears with this:
"Initialization Error
No ATI graphics driver is installed, or the ATI driver is not
functioning properly. Please install de ATI driver appropriate for you
ATI hardware, or configure using aticonfig."
# aticonfig --initial=check
Check: Found fglrx section.
Xorg.0.log: http://pastebin.com/f46d4f7cb
xorg.conf: http://pastebin.com/f3ed68173
Regards, Clodoaldo
15 years, 4 months
campcaster on fedora?
by Dave Stevens
I hope the subject line is self-explanatory, but in case it isn't, does anyone
have Campcaster (radio station automation software) in an rpm? It seems the
default builds are .debs.
Dave
--
Canada must refuse to be entangled in any more wars fought to make the world
safe for capitalism.
-- The Regina Manifesto, 1933
15 years, 4 months
evolution email
by Harry R.
Oh well,
After trying for a couple of days to get Evolution NOT to return those infamous sync errors
that it has been doing for years, after reading a LOT on the Net about this and other evolution
problems, after trying to import my old mailboxes (does not work always, or actually, it almost
never works), after trying to get it to understand an Mbox layout, and doing evrything again
and again, it now freezes at random and even crashed at typing email number 2.
Evolution is I am sorry to say probably the most disappointing email client I have ever worked
with. Back to the basics.
H.
15 years, 4 months
Re: [ale] Firefox Running Slow in Linux
by Marc Ferguson
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 3:38 PM, Jim Kinney <jim.kinney(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Everything M. Warfield said and what specifically is the scrolling
> issue you see? Hangs on scroll, jumpy scroll, won't scroll, etc?
>
> I have a dual Op with 4GB RAM and 64-bit firefox. As my memory gets
> chewed up, firefox performance degrades. 3.0.5 seems better than prior
> 3.0.x version but it still will crash and vanish thanks to crappy
> javascript all over the place. I also run the adobe testing version of
> flash for 64-bit Linux. It _mostly_ works but I have seen it tear down
> firefox to a bit heap of weeping page faults.
>
> 2009/2/2 Marc Ferguson <marcferguson(a)gmail.com>:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I know I'll probably get hazed by this already saturated question, but I
> > haven't found any solid answers to my issue from the archives. I'm
> running
> > Fedora 10 x86_64 and loving the "adventure" of running an 64 bit system.
> > I'm also running Firefox 3.0.x (x86_64), but I've noticed that it's not
> very
> > smooth compared to it running on a Windows machine and I'm little
> confused
> > why.
> >
> > It's more the scroll bar than anything else. It's something small, but
> it's
> > ruining the surfing experience and I'm a little embarrassed to let other
> > people use it on my desktop. I don't want to give Linux a bad name and
> > these folks are primarily Windows/MAC users. So; their experience with
> > using Firefox on my system is a tainted one.
> >
> > I've tried running Swiftfox, but I haven't gotten it to load (that's
> another
> > issue) so I'm kind of stuck with Firefox.
> >
> > --
> > Marc F.
> >
> > www.fergytech.com
> > Registered Linux User: #410978
> >
> > "When life gives me lemons... I make Linuxaide, hmm good stuff!" -Marc F.
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ale mailing list
> > Ale(a)ale.org
> > http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> >
> >
>
>
>
> --
> --
> James P. Kinney III
> _______________________________________________
> Ale mailing list
> Ale(a)ale.org
> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>
Wow, again, the community comes with the MANsers! I'll post my specs when I
get in, but I'm shocked to see that Mozilla doesn't have much love for our
market. I assumed that since it was FOSS that it would give more love to
Linux, but I guess Windows has more pull than I thought. That's what I get
for ASSuming things. Reid, I look forward to "nightly" adventures... so
I'll look into the latest beta build too.
Oh and to confirm, it probably is my nVidia car. Ever since I've been
running this system and learning about Linux (9+ months), there has ALWAYS
been a common denominator... and that's my graphics card (nVidia GeForce
8600 GT). If I didn't need 3D support A LOT of my issues would have gone
away. Amazing how troublesome this awesome little graphics card has become
to FOSS users.
--
Marc F.
www.fergytech.com
Registered Linux User: #410978
"When life gives me lemons... I make Linuxaide, hmm good stuff!" -Marc F.
15 years, 4 months
Re: IPv6 and localhost
by Allen Kistler
Bill Davidsen <davidsen(a)tmr.com> wrote:
> "Wolfgang S. Rupprecht" <wolfgang rupprecht+gnus200901 gmail com>
>> Allen Kistler <an037-ooai8(a)yahoo.com> writes:
>>>
>>> So the question really is: Is there a reason localhost is not both
>>> the IPv4 loopback and the IPv6 loopback (*other* than hiding some bugs
>>> in some programs)? Or should Fedora (and eventually Red Hat) change
>>> the default /etc/hosts shipped/created with anaconda?
>>
>> One of the first things I do on an install is get rid of the lame
>> distribution /etc/hosts file. I've done this since fc4 and fedora,
>> just like netbsd and openbsd has no need for the silly targeted
>> localhost names. The other silly thing is the "localhost.localdomain"
>> entry coming first. Really, what is that about??? "localhost" has
>> worked just fine for over 2 decades. Software understands it. What
>> advantage is there to rocking the boat?
>
> Using the hosts file for the local name and the names of a few useful hosts is
> protection against some fascist ISP deciding to block or DNAT all DNS queries to
> the ISP servers. So they can block lookup of sites they deem harmful.
I'm not certain I follow how the ISP gets involved with the definition
of localhost in /etc/hosts, but I haven't seen any reason not to call
the lack of an IPv6 definition for localhost (specifically not
"localhost6") a bug and to try to get it fixed.
My inclination is to file a bug against the F11 alpha when it comes out
next week, since it's anaconda that creates the default file content. I
expect some resistance to change, but I can only hope that BZ doesn't
become the venue of a debate on it, though.
15 years, 4 months