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Pcmciautils downloadPCMCIAutils in Launchpad.user/pcmciautils · current · Adélie Linux / Adélie Package Tree · GitLab
Module signing and external certificate handling use the OpenSSL program and crypto library to do key creation and signature generation. You will need openssl to build kernels 3. You will also need openssl development packages to build kernels 4.
Linux documentation for functions is transitioning to inline documentation via specially-formatted comments near their definitions in the source. New versions of util-linux provide fdisk support for larger disks, support new options to mount, recognize more supported partition types, have a fdformat which works with 2. The latest version of e2fsprogs fixes several bugs in fsck and debugfs.
The jfsutils package contains the utilities for the file system. The following utilities are available:. The reiserfsprogs package should be used for reiserfs These utils work on both i and alpha platforms. The latest version of xfsprogs contains mkfs.
It is architecture independent and any version from 2. Quota-tools version 3. Use the recommended version or newer from the table above. A driver has been added to allow updating of Intel IA32 microcode, accessible as a normal misc character device.
If you are not using udev you may need to:. Needs libfuse 2. Absolute minimum is 2. If you have advanced network configuration needs, you should probably consider using the network tools from ip-route2. The packet filtering and NAT code uses the same tools like the previous 2. It still includes backwards-compatibility modules for 2. The PPP driver has been restructured to support multilink and to enable it to operate over diverse media layers.
If you use PPP, upgrade pppd to at least 2. In ancient 2. This information would be given to the kernel by mountd when the client mounted the filesystem, or by exportfs at system startup.
This approach is quite fragile as it depends on rmtab being correct which is not always easy, particularly when trying to implement fail-over. Even when the system is working well, rmtab suffers from getting lots of old entries that never get removed. With modern kernels we have the option of having the kernel tell mountd when it gets a request from an unknown host, and mountd can give appropriate export information to the kernel. This removes the dependency on rmtab and means that the kernel only needs to know about currently active clients.
This can be useful for being notified when a package has been dropped from a repository, since any dropped package will also be orphaned on a local installation unless it was explicitly installed. Like: For recursively removing orphans not installed as part of base group and their configuration files:.
I misunderstood the statement I should have read it as Forum signature: I discuss. I put my thoughts strongly. But I definitely respect all developers and time they put in. Ah yeah right my bad, well there isn't going to be announcment of every package change on the news page, you could subscribe to the mailing list, subscribe to the package removal RSS feed in general look at the available feeds or use some other intermediate utility, e.
You should recognize everything in the pacman -Qm output. Unfortunately my English does not give me the opportunity to correctly add this to the wiki. Perhaps it could go after that section, but it's not really related to it. Unfortunately 'orphan' is used in two different ways to refer to packages - and other than both being potential targets of system clean up, there really isn't any overlap in the meaning one being packages installed as dependencies that are not longer needed, the other being packages that have been dropped from the repos.
Anyone can add it to the wiki - but to me it seems a bit redundant - though I suppose there is precedent in that page already for such things. I think entries in that page that have some short script or pipeline to do some complex but occasionally very handy check is worthwhile - but the entries that are really just examples of basic use of pacman's flags are neither really "tip" nor "trick".
In my opinion, the best way to integrate it into the wiki would be extending the "Listing packages" tip. I amended that "foreign" packages also include packages removed from the repositories. This actually does not help in knowing which package was removed forever from repo, as it lists all upgraded packages too. It should list the correct ones if you don't use the all repos feed, as that one includes testing which naturally will have many packages removed and added.
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