From owner-freebsd-ports Thu Jul 20 22:30: 8 2000 Delivered-To: freebsd-ports@freebsd.org Received: from cx587235-a.chnd1.az.home.com (cx587235-a.chnd1.az.home.com [24.11.88.170]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 88DA637B6BA for ; Thu, 20 Jul 2000 22:30:03 -0700 (PDT) (envelope-from jjreynold@home.com) Received: from whale.home-net (whale [192.168.1.2]) by cx587235-a.chnd1.az.home.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id WAA63339 for ; Thu, 20 Jul 2000 22:29:55 -0700 (MST) (envelope-from jjreynold@home.com) Received: (from jjreynold@localhost) by whale.home-net (8.9.3/8.9.3) id WAA06556; Thu, 20 Jul 2000 22:29:54 -0700 (MST) (envelope-from jjreynold@home.com) From: John Reynolds MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <14711.57298.708626.568226@whale.home-net> Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2000 22:29:54 -0700 (MST) To: ports@freebsd.org Subject: GNOME cpuload applet + OS version update == breakage X-Mailer: VM 6.73 under Emacs 20.6.1 Cc: Sender: owner-freebsd-ports@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.org Hi all, as we've gone through the 4.0-RELEASE/STABLE transition to 4.1-RC (soon to be RELEASE/STABLE) the cpuload applet under GNOME appears to be broken without some sort of recompile. Now I get the following message when going into X with GNOME and the cpuload applet in the panel: Can only run on FreeBSD 4.0-RELEASE i386 Two days ago I installed 4.0-RELEASE from the CDs onto this machine (the old "no time to upgrade" syndrome caught me) but I've since updated the world to 4.1-RC through sources. I've tried deleting and reinstalling the gnomeapplets port but I still get the same thing. What part of GNOME needs to be recompiled to make this applet happy? I also saw this same thing when I originally started running GNOME under 3.4-STABLE and I transitioned to 3.5-STABLE. At the time, I had to resort to deleting every bloody component of GNOME and compiling the whole thing again before I could get the cpuload applet to work. There's got to be an easier solution. On a related note, how does one "recursively delete" a port? Say if I wanted to delete all of GNOME, how does one do this? When I did it "manually" I took the ouptut of the target pretty-print-run-depends-list and did a "foreach" on all those packages listed and deleted them. Again, there's just gotta be a better way ... -Jr -- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= John Reynolds Chandler Capabilities Engineering, CDS, Intel Corporation jreynold@sedona.ch.intel.com My opinions are mine, not Intel's. Running jjreynold@home.com FreeBSD 4.0-STABLE. FreeBSD: The Power to Serve. http://members.home.com/jjreynold/ Come join us!!! @ http://www.FreeBSD.org/ =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-ports" in the body of the message