Monday, July 13, 2009

X is still dead...

I've emerged the following from the x11 overlay:

media-libs/mesa-9999
x11-libs/libdrm-9999
x11-drivers/xf86-video-intel-9999
x11-base/xorg-server-1.6.2

I enabled tiling (it was manually disabled before, as specified in this
gentoo-wiki article)

X is definitely more stable than before, I am able to log in to gnome and use
as normal, although sooner or later the GPU locks up again and I am just left
with a pointer and no keyboard.

Fortunately, this box's main purpose is as a server (primarily development :-),
so running X is not critical. For now, I am going to sit tight and just make
sure to continually run updates. I am going to wait a bit longer before I
upgrade to 2.6.31, simply because I need the kernel to be stable (beyond r2)
and do not want to sacrifice that just to get X running a bit smoother.

To see a more documented recap of what all I did with X, check out this gentoo bugzilla page

I started a couple of small projects this weekend. The first was getting SAMBA/cifs working again in the new network environment. I couldn't figure out why I couldn't see/access my SAMBA share on my gentoo box: nothing had really changed within the local network, other than a slightly different routing prefix... Why would that matter?

Then I remembered setting up my stateful firewall and documenting it on this very blog. Of course SAMBA isn't working, as I explicitly allow traffic over one particular Class C subnet, and since that change, all traffic is blocked. So after a quick few edits to my firewall configuration script and to smb.conf, I was again all set up.

The other small project was deploying some of the past sites I have completed on my web server, to act as a mini portfolio. I haven't decided whether I want to get the sites up and running as they do/did in production, or if I should just take screenshots. Right now I'm leaning towards screenshots, as I don't want to have to reconstruct each site's respective database and data.

This week I hope to get the chance to play around with Windows 7 a bit more and try and figure out why Gnome is running so slowly on my FreeBSD VM. I also plan on finally updating my Dell C610 laptop from Ubuntu 7.04 Feisty Fawn to 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope. This will mark the 5th release of Ubuntu I have used, as I started with the first release, 4.10 Warty Warthog, back in '04. I should take this opportunity to note that without Ubuntu, I would be nowhere near where I am today in terms of experience with Linux. I've always been a fan of Ubuntu's cheesy credo of "Linux for human beings," as it aims to simplify many of the complexities that are typically associated with Linux. Although I had used a few other distros prior to Ubuntu, namely RedHat, SuSE, and Mandrake, it was not until Ubuntu that I felt comfortable with the Linux kernel and using bash. So thank you Canonical for Ubuntu, and thank you to the Debian team for apt-get!

Lastly, this week, I think I'm going to give OSX on a VM another shot.

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