1.3.1 is in jaunty, 1.3.4 is in karmic. What version of Ubuntu are you running? Are those new enough for you?
Type: Posts; User: InfinityCircuit; Keyword(s):
1.3.1 is in jaunty, 1.3.4 is in karmic. What version of Ubuntu are you running? Are those new enough for you?
I have now packaged Adriano Foschi's contributed pekwm themes (http://adrinux.wordpress.com/pekwm-themes/) for Debian. If you want to install them on Ubuntu just fetch them from my alioth space:
...
Damn, I was hoping I could get 1st with my 238.1 cm but it was not to be!
At the moment, all proprietary code in the FreeBSD kernel (both closed-source drivers like ath and GPL-incompatible drivers like ZFS) have been cut from Debian GNU/kFreeBSD.
However, this might...
At the moment there will probably not be support for this Linux compatibility layer in Debian GNU/kFreeBSD, at least based on how I interpret the discussion here:...
And I thought you were talking about RPM hell...
How are you installing the theme? You should untar the theme into the ~/.pekwm/themes directory such that there is a directory with the theme name in it. The script in the menu only searches for...
It definitely has to do with your decision to use 0.1.5. There is not really support for backwards compatibility in themes. You should upgrade to 0.1.10.
kronos:/home/dmr# aptitude show equivs
Package: equivs
New: yes
State: installed
Automatically installed: no
Version: 2.0.7-0.1
Priority: extra
Section: admin
Maintainer: Peter Samuelson...
Use dh_installexamples in debian/rules to install examples.
If multiple packages provide the necessary dependencies, then those packages probably all have a "Provides" field. You can list what...
~ $ apt-file search gst/gst.h
libgstreamer0.10-dev: /usr/include/gstreamer-0.10/gst/gst.h
Do you have that installed?
Why are you compiling? If you need emacs23 snapshots just get them from here: http://emacs.orebokech.com/
Just use "debian/rules patch" and "debian/rules unpatch" to test the patches, and then refresh the patch that errors out until this works.
I think you were confusing the output of apt-cache policy with the control file.
Control files that are changed during the build process (not control.in files used in some packages though) are...
I don't believe that that is correct.
http://packages.ubuntu.com/intrepid/gnome
The contents of the installer will probably not change significantly at the end of the dev cycle, so you should be able to use Beta or RC images.
...
Or just:
aptitude install gcc-snapshot
That control file is rather strange.
The canonical description lists the source package first, followed by the binary name. You shouldn't have installed-size or version or any of those in the...
Do you want a tiling window manager? "Usable" is pretty vague.
Calling:
!rm
in bash, because I thought my last command was
rmadison
eee:/home/dmr# aptitude search --disable-columns -F '%p %V' ~n^automake
automake 1:1.10.1-3
automake1.10 <none>
automake1.4 1:1.4-p6-13
automake1.4-doc <none>
automake1.7 1.7.9-9
automake1.9...
Depends on what you are compiling.
I would get:
aptitude install build-essential devscripts automake autoconf m4 autotools-dev subversion cvs git-core bzr bzrtools mercurial darcs xorg-dev
It won't be in d-i though until the next stable, so you will have to install manually via bootstrapping.
Really, don't spread FUD. I remember this.
http://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?t=27582
The forum members were quite helpful. EMD went through the trouble of posting two links to tutorials on...
Use conky.