You are running a stable x86 system (at least almost, and for the core components like kernel, system set and X)? Great, we are looking for your help. If you want to try out the following packages and report back (even if everything is running smooth) to me (fauli AT gentoo.org) or the team (x86 AT gentoo.org), we would be happy. Stabilising so many core compontents that might render you system unusable is a big thing, so a lot of testing is appreciated. The packages in detail:
- sys-fs/udev-146-r1
- sys-apps/util-linux-2.16.1
- sys-fs/e2fsprogs-1.41.9 and sys-libs/e2fsprogs-libs-1.41.9
- sys-apps/hal-0.5.13-r2
- sys-apps/usbutils-0.82
- sys-fs/mdadm-3.0
- sys-fs/lvm2-2.02.51-r1
Thanks in advance to everyone who cares
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Kommentare
except mdadm and lvm2 which are not yet installed ^_^
=sys-apps/util-linux-2.16.1
=sys-fs/e2fsprogs-1.41.9
=sys-libs/e2fsprogs-libs-1.41.9
=sys-apps/hal-0.5.13-r2
=sys-apps/usbutils-0.82
=sys-fs/mdadm-3.0
=sys-fs/lvm2-2.02.51-r1
emerged fine (manually removed blocker "device-mapper"), booted fine, X11 fine, mounted crypted partition fine - looks good until now
udev, util-linux, e2fsprogs, e2fsprogs-libs, hal, usbutils-0.86-r1, lvm2
I don't use mdadm on this laptop, but on an amd64 desktop with several RAID arrays, that package works as expected.