
banned from #gentoo since sept 2017Neddyseagoon wrote:The problem with leaving is that you can only do it once and it reduces your influence.
you could always become a developer and give us a hand... many hands make light (and hopefully faster) work...miga wrote:I personally wish they would stabilise some ebuilds more quickly
banned from #gentoo since sept 2017Neddyseagoon wrote:The problem with leaving is that you can only do it once and it reduces your influence.
banned from #gentoo since sept 2017Neddyseagoon wrote:The problem with leaving is that you can only do it once and it reduces your influence.

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ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="-x86"

You would probably wantrahulthewall3000 wrote:So, if I add the following lines to my make.conf I would be able to help in the testing?
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ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="-x86"
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ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="x86"
As far as I know I have to use this:gentoofan23 wrote:You would probably wantrahulthewall3000 wrote:So, if I add the following lines to my make.conf I would be able to help in the testing?
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ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="-x86"Code: Select all
ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="x86"
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ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="-x86"
If you want to use the testing branch as your default install, yes.rahulthewall3000 wrote:As far as I know I have to use this:
to be able to use the testing branch of the x86 architecture. Correct me if I am wrong.Code: Select all
ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="-x86"


Then maybe you can tell me something about Xorg 7.3. I recently installed it and everything seemed to work fine except the mouse and touchpad. The touchpad pointer always jumped back to the center of the screen whenever I tried to go to the edge of the screen. And the pointer of my USB mouse only moved in a vertical direction.g2g591 wrote:the testing branch is ~(arch) , not -(arch) . I've been running a "testing" gentoo for a few months, things have seemed stable all around here. im on x86 btw.
i believe it takes much more time in source-based distro than in a binary one , because there are much more factors to consider, and much more dependency combinations to test.What I want is some information on the process of packages being marked as stable. How does that happen, and how long does it take?
Yeah; my feeling is that Gentoo does a lot of the in-depth testing for a great deal of software that everyone else uses. It's easy enough to get everything compiling on one setup (which is what a binary distro effectively is.) The quality of Gentoo bug reporting, both to upstream and from its users, is excellent imo; Gentoo users might be a bit naive as far as #bash is concernedyoshi314 wrote:i believe it takes much more time in source-based distro than in a binary one , because there are much more factors to consider, and much more dependency combinations to test.What I want is some information on the process of packages being marked as stable. How does that happen, and how long does it take?

Because X Server 1.4.0 is buggy. 1.4.1 has been in the planning stage for a few months now, with its release originally scheduled for last November. http://www.x.org/wiki/Server14Branchrahulthewall3000 wrote:For example, xorg-x11-7.3 is masked. While on some other distros it is already the default.