Guy Dog 5.0.1
I have now tried 500 and 501 and I am curious if a font problem I have is only happening to me.
Sometimes, the characters are not fully formed like the lower part of the "e" character will be gone.
Also, when reading posts on the forum, I am getting faint blue characters with some of them such as the two L's in the word "well" would be light blue.
I have tried changing the font size in Firefox, but that seems to have no effect on the light blue character being displayed.
I have not tried using a different font though.
Also, I had a previous pupsave file that I let 501 update.
The update went ok other than the fact that I previously had selected visa as the driver and now vesa does not work for me.
But now the nv driver works where it did not before.
Sometimes, the characters are not fully formed like the lower part of the "e" character will be gone.
Also, when reading posts on the forum, I am getting faint blue characters with some of them such as the two L's in the word "well" would be light blue.
I have tried changing the font size in Firefox, but that seems to have no effect on the light blue character being displayed.
I have not tried using a different font though.
Also, I had a previous pupsave file that I let 501 update.
The update went ok other than the fact that I previously had selected visa as the driver and now vesa does not work for me.
But now the nv driver works where it did not before.
I have spent most of the last few days running some experiments with various new puplets.
I have discovered (I think) that kernel 2.6.39.4 in several new puplets including slacko, next pup, dpup exprimo, & stu90's d-lite pup does not seem to like the belkin wireless g router I use.
So I was wondering if any of the mentioned puplets could have the kernel rolled back? If it was rolled back would the puplets not work properly?
Does anyone else have any issues with getting online using a belkin wireless g router?
I would be interested in finding out from those who have had kernel panic lockups if they are using a belkin wireless g router.
I have discovered (I think) that kernel 2.6.39.4 in several new puplets including slacko, next pup, dpup exprimo, & stu90's d-lite pup does not seem to like the belkin wireless g router I use.
So I was wondering if any of the mentioned puplets could have the kernel rolled back? If it was rolled back would the puplets not work properly?
Does anyone else have any issues with getting online using a belkin wireless g router?
I would be interested in finding out from those who have had kernel panic lockups if they are using a belkin wireless g router.
- Iguleder
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I remember I wrote a script that replaces the kernel in a Puppy, I can write a new one for you, so you can take Guy Dog (or any other Puppy) and transplant a new kernel - 2.6.32.x could be a great choice.
[url=http://dimakrasner.com/]My homepage[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
That would be great Iguleder When you get time no rush on it. I know you got many things going on right now. They are more important then my little issue.
I should know how to do that already lol. Just never had a need for a different kernel. The native included in the puplets I try have always worked until this belkin router started being used. Really curious as to what it could be with the belkin.
Going to do some internet searching today see if I can find any other known issues with the kernel in recent puplets & belkin routers.
I should know how to do that already lol. Just never had a need for a different kernel. The native included in the puplets I try have always worked until this belkin router started being used. Really curious as to what it could be with the belkin.
Going to do some internet searching today see if I can find any other known issues with the kernel in recent puplets & belkin routers.
- Iguleder
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Umm ... I've got good and bad news.
The good news are that now we have Samba and a nice GTK+ frontend (gadmin-samba) built in dpup and they seem to work, although I haven't shared a printer or something to test.
The bad news is the size of the Samba package - about 30 MB. At the moment, what the official Puppy releases have is an old Samba from 2009, that probably won't work with Windows 7 and 2008 R2.
That package has just smbclient and other important binaries, not the whole deal. However, the smblclient binary is about 4 MB in the package I just built, which is still way too much.
pacer106: thanks for the inspiration, you gave me a very innovative idea - a multi-kernel Puppy (e.g multiple kernels in one Puppy, not multi-boot) - the downside is slower boot times (and size, of course). A kernel choice menu in the boot loader could be a nice addition to Puppy
The good news are that now we have Samba and a nice GTK+ frontend (gadmin-samba) built in dpup and they seem to work, although I haven't shared a printer or something to test.
The bad news is the size of the Samba package - about 30 MB. At the moment, what the official Puppy releases have is an old Samba from 2009, that probably won't work with Windows 7 and 2008 R2.
That package has just smbclient and other important binaries, not the whole deal. However, the smblclient binary is about 4 MB in the package I just built, which is still way too much.
pacer106: thanks for the inspiration, you gave me a very innovative idea - a multi-kernel Puppy (e.g multiple kernels in one Puppy, not multi-boot) - the downside is slower boot times (and size, of course). A kernel choice menu in the boot loader could be a nice addition to Puppy
[url=http://dimakrasner.com/]My homepage[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
I too would like that kernel-switching script; at the moment, I use the method described here: http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=60180Iguleder wrote:pacer106: thanks for the inspiration, you gave me a very innovative idea - a multi-kernel Puppy (e.g multiple kernels in one Puppy, not multi-boot) - the downside is slower boot times (and size, of course). A kernel choice menu in the boot loader could be a nice addition to Puppy
Also, goingnuts has already done a lot of work on multiple kernel pups, he thinks it may be a dead end, maybe you could PM him, ask where he got to, how he did it, etc, it might help you get on the right track a bit quicker...
I was planning on letting users choose a kernel at boot time, too, for Akita.
[b][url=https://bit.ly/2KjtxoD]Pkg[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2U6dzxV]mdsh[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2G49OE8]Woofy[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/bzBU1]Akita[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/SO5ug]VLC-GTK[/url], [url=https://tiny.cc/c2hnfz]Search[/url][/b]
Would not mind giving that a try, would work for my network which has no Windows 7 boxes.Iguleder wrote:The good news are that now we have Samba and a nice GTK+ frontend (gadmin-samba) built in dpup and they seem to work, although I haven't shared a printer or something to test.
[b]Tahr Pup 6 on desktop, Lucid 3HD on lappie[/b]
- Iguleder
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tubeguy - it would be quite problematic to upload those huge packages, since I use a very unstable wireless connection now
pacer106 and sc0ttman - I already know how to do this, I did it once already. I can write a new script, it won't be very hard.
There's only one main issue here - when you replace the current kernel of a Puppy, the new kernel's drivers could have some extra dependencies, so you can't just replace every driver by your kernel's one. However, that's the best bet.
I'm writing a new and improved build script for the 2.6.32.x kernel right now, which is fairly vanilla and uses Unionfs instead of Aufs, as Barry did in his 3.0.4.
I want to write a complete suite of build scripts, for the kernel, Sysprof, ndiswrapper and NVIDIA. I just don't have a good kernel to test the script with at the moment.
pacer106 and sc0ttman - I already know how to do this, I did it once already. I can write a new script, it won't be very hard.
There's only one main issue here - when you replace the current kernel of a Puppy, the new kernel's drivers could have some extra dependencies, so you can't just replace every driver by your kernel's one. However, that's the best bet.
I'm writing a new and improved build script for the 2.6.32.x kernel right now, which is fairly vanilla and uses Unionfs instead of Aufs, as Barry did in his 3.0.4.
I want to write a complete suite of build scripts, for the kernel, Sysprof, ndiswrapper and NVIDIA. I just don't have a good kernel to test the script with at the moment.
[url=http://dimakrasner.com/]My homepage[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
Wow did not intend anything like that but glad I inspired something
Looking forward to testing it out.
Did a little research on my problem with belkin router & not finding much. I did not think of trying to assign the IP & all that myself which from the little info I did find was quoted to have worked. It was dated info though & did not specify what linux version or kernel. So who knows for sure until I try Hoping to do that later today.
Looking forward to testing it out.
Did a little research on my problem with belkin router & not finding much. I did not think of trying to assign the IP & all that myself which from the little info I did find was quoted to have worked. It was dated info though & did not specify what linux version or kernel. So who knows for sure until I try Hoping to do that later today.
- Iguleder
- Posts: 2026
- Joined: Tue 11 Aug 2009, 09:36
- Location: Israel, somewhere in the beautiful desert
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The wonderful 2.6.32.46 is compiling at the moment, let's see if it's any good
So ... if we have the first multi-kernel Puppy - should it have a boot menu with two entries? I think the Arch Linux and Debian Live syslinux.cfg could come in handy
So ... if we have the first multi-kernel Puppy - should it have a boot menu with two entries? I think the Arch Linux and Debian Live syslinux.cfg could come in handy
[url=http://dimakrasner.com/]My homepage[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
[url=https://github.com/dimkr]My GitHub profile[/url]
Experiments are always fun like this background. I have seen a few comments on how speedy Guy Dog is so i thought up this background. Hope it looks proper.
Coming in for a landing in the desert mountains.
guydog-speed by J. P. Stunna, on Flickr
Coming in for a landing in the desert mountains.
guydog-speed by J. P. Stunna, on Flickr
Iguleder there is always the option of an optional SFS file to keep all the additional software separate from the main SFS file.Iguleder wrote:Umm ... I've got good and bad news.
The bad news is the size of the Samba package - about 30 MB. At the moment, what the official Puppy releases have is an old Samba from 2009, that probably won't work with Windows 7 and 2008 R2.
package manager
Nice collection of applications!
I tried 5.0.1 in Intel Atom board combo, and the Package Manager would not function. It downloaded package list from Debian repo then nothing.
Pmount prompts the user to install Rox, but it may be better to just have Rox in there, or link the "Files" button of Pmount to the default file manager.
I tried 5.0.1 in Intel Atom board combo, and the Package Manager would not function. It downloaded package list from Debian repo then nothing.
Pmount prompts the user to install Rox, but it may be better to just have Rox in there, or link the "Files" button of Pmount to the default file manager.
Puppy user since Oct 2004. Want FreeOffice? [url=http://puppylinux.info/topic/freeoffice-2012-sfs]Get the sfs (English only)[/url].
Almost Perfect But....
Hi Iguleder & All,
Guy Dog 5.0.1 is incredibly responsive on my system, even with the installation of Rox-Filer. I decided to install Rox-Filer because (a) I'm lazy and inexperienced; (b) I'm familiar with it; (c) following up on iguleder's suggestion I located what appears to be fairly thorough advice on how to go about how to use the kernel's binfmt_misc module to use wine as an interpreter independent of whatever limitations your file-manager may impose or require [See https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wi ... 2_binaries if you desire to work exclusively with emelfm2] but re-read (a) & (b). Having installed Rox-Filer, as noted by Terry H, pmount still produces the advice to install Rox-Filer rather than initiating it. If fact, I've tried a could of different Rox-Filers, all of which produce the same results.
Raffy has suggested that "Pmount prompts the user to install Rox, but it may be better to just have Rox in there, or link the "Files" button of Pmount to the default file manager."
So my questions are:
(a) Which Rox-Filer, if installed, would automatically enable clicking "mount" in pmount to open the mounted drive/partition in Rox-Filler?
(b) If none of the currently available ones will, what changes need be made after installation to accomplish that?
(c) I looked in /usr/local/bin but did not recognize any file for setting the default file manager. How would someone go about setting Rox-Filer as the default, but perhaps better still, creating an app to switch which is to be the default file manager? or does one exist already?
(d) Rox-Filer seems to lack the pleasing and distinctive taskbar icons (such as the "eye" for show/hide hidden files) displaying only boxes with red-Xs for three actions that can be taken. How would I go about making changes to provide them?
Thanks in advance,
mikesLr
Guy Dog 5.0.1 is incredibly responsive on my system, even with the installation of Rox-Filer. I decided to install Rox-Filer because (a) I'm lazy and inexperienced; (b) I'm familiar with it; (c) following up on iguleder's suggestion I located what appears to be fairly thorough advice on how to go about how to use the kernel's binfmt_misc module to use wine as an interpreter independent of whatever limitations your file-manager may impose or require [See https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wi ... 2_binaries if you desire to work exclusively with emelfm2] but re-read (a) & (b). Having installed Rox-Filer, as noted by Terry H, pmount still produces the advice to install Rox-Filer rather than initiating it. If fact, I've tried a could of different Rox-Filers, all of which produce the same results.
Raffy has suggested that "Pmount prompts the user to install Rox, but it may be better to just have Rox in there, or link the "Files" button of Pmount to the default file manager."
So my questions are:
(a) Which Rox-Filer, if installed, would automatically enable clicking "mount" in pmount to open the mounted drive/partition in Rox-Filler?
(b) If none of the currently available ones will, what changes need be made after installation to accomplish that?
(c) I looked in /usr/local/bin but did not recognize any file for setting the default file manager. How would someone go about setting Rox-Filer as the default, but perhaps better still, creating an app to switch which is to be the default file manager? or does one exist already?
(d) Rox-Filer seems to lack the pleasing and distinctive taskbar icons (such as the "eye" for show/hide hidden files) displaying only boxes with red-Xs for three actions that can be taken. How would I go about making changes to provide them?
Thanks in advance,
mikesLr
Last edited by mikeslr on Sat 22 Oct 2011, 00:33, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Almost Perfect But....
You had the dreaded extra space in your url.......mikeslr wrote:Hi Iguleder & All,
Guy Dog 5.0.1 is incredibly responsive on my system, even with the installation of Rox-Filer. I decided to install Rox-Filer because (a) I'm lazy and inexperienced; (b) I'm familiar with it; (c) following up on iguleder's suggestion I located what appears to be fairly thorough advice on how to go about how to use the kernel's binfmt_misc module to use wine as an interpreter independent of whatever limitations your file-manager may impose or require [See https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wi ... 2_binaries if you desire to work exclusively with emelfm2] but re-read (a) & (b). Having installed Rox-Filer, as noted by Terry H, pmount still produces the advice to install Rox-Filer rather than initiating it. If fact, I've tried a could of different Rox-Filers, all of which produce the same results.
Raffy has suggested that "Pmount prompts the user to install Rox, but it may be better to just have Rox in there, or link the "Files" button of Pmount to the default file manager."
So my questions are:
(a) Which Rox-Filer, if installed, would automatically enable clicking "mount" in pmount to open the mounted drive/partition in Rox-Filler?
(b) If none of the currently available ones will, what changes need be made after installation to accomplish that?
(c) I looked in /usr/local/bin but did not recognize any file for setting the default file manager. How would someone go about setting Rox-Filer as the default, but perhaps better still, creating an app to switch which is to be the default file manager? or does one exist already?
(d) Rox-Filer seems to lack the pleasing and distinctive taskbar icons (such as the "eye" for show/hide hidden files) displaying only boxes with red-Xs for three actions that can be taken. How would I go about making changes to provide them?
Thanks in advance,
mikesLr
Thanks JamesC
Thanks JamesC
Thought LibreOffice Writer on which the post was composed had used an invisible ink font.
How did you figure it out and unhide it? It might be a good thing to know if I ever want to send secret messages?
mikesLr
Thought LibreOffice Writer on which the post was composed had used an invisible ink font.
How did you figure it out and unhide it? It might be a good thing to know if I ever want to send secret messages?
mikesLr