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#120103 karl godt: error unmounting stray partitions. 120103 karl godt: more tweaks.
#120203 pemasu: space in smb or cifs share causes hanging in shutdown
umount -a -t cifs #120203
#v2.20b make shutdown less verbose...
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#120103 karl godt: error unmounting stray partitions. 120103 karl godt: more tweaks.
#120203 pemasu: space in smb or cifs share causes hanging in shutdown
umount -a -t cifs #120203
#v2.20b make shutdown less verbose...
And maybe this is needed:Install the devx and kernel source sfs.
Go to http://support.amd.com/us/gpudownload/Pages/index.aspx
Download the driver for your card.
Open the terminal and run the amd-driver-installer-12-1-x86.x86_64.run
driver:
sh amd-driver-installer-12-1-x86.x86_64.run
When it is finished do the command:
aticonfig --initial
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#aticonfig --initial --input=/etc/X11/xorg.conf
or the whole set:
#modprobe -r dri radeon
#modprobe fglrx.
#aticonfig --initial --input=/etc/X11/xorg.conf
Thanks pemasu, working great and very fast. I really like the new Aurora gtk theme.pemasu wrote:Dpup Exprimo 5.X.13....the real version now uploaded
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songbird_%28software%29Songbird is a funny one. It's a web browser based on the Mozilla codebase, so its look and feel are completely different from the traditional music player. The main panel shows your music collection, you choose the media source from the panel on the left, and the control buttons are along the top. So far, so ordinary, but the main panel is actually a cunningly-disguised browser window!
Am I on the right track looking at this example (not specific to my need but illustrative)?pemasu wrote:I suppose it is kernel based feature. Probably the usb auto suspending is ticked in kernel options. I usually enable it.
So...when there is no activity...the usb device will be sent to autosuspend. At least I know kernel has this option.
Probably that can be disabled with appropriate command or boot time kernel parameter. I am in no need of it....so I wont immediately try to find solution...but I believe the net could offer it.
For example, the usbcore module accepts the parameter blinkenlights to display flashing lights on all supported USB 2.0 hubs (don't ever say the kernel developers don't have a sense of humor). To set this parameter when loading the module dynamically, you would enter:
$
modprobe usbcore blinkenlights=1
But if the usbcore module is built into the kernel, you achieve the same effect by invoking the kernel with the following option:
usbcore.blinkenlights=1
Most module options for modules that are built into the kernel can also be changed at run time by writing to files in the subdirectory named after the module under the /sys/module/ directory. Thus, the blinkenlights option is represented by the file /sys/module/usbcore/blinkenlights. desired.