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a1b07eafc1
a/tar-1.35-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. x/mesa-23.2.0_rc1-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. OK, usually I won't use rc versions even in -current, but in this case I'm going to. Some time ago my desktop machine with RS880 / Radeon HD 4290 graphics on the motherboard began acting up with the screen going black for a few seconds before returning. This after an hour or so of uptime, usually, then becoming more frequent with more uptime. Eventually I'd lose mouse and/or keyboard too, and have to reboot. Here's a couple of errors from dmesg: [ 9942.677675] [drm:r600_ib_test [radeon]] *ERROR* radeon: fence wait timed out. [ 9942.677741] [drm:radeon_ib_ring_tests [radeon]] *ERROR* radeon: failed testing IB on GFX ring (-110). I also noticed that the backtrace started with ttm_bo_release, and seeing this in recent kernel patches had been chalking this up to a kernel bug. I *still* think it could be, and there are a bunch of kernel patches coming soon to -stable from Alex Deucher that could address the underlying causes (not for 6.1.39 though, unfortunately). Anyway, I'd recently figured out that reverting Mesa sufficiently made the issue go away. And now it seems this 23.2.0 release candidate also fixes the issue. Yes, I could go search for the commits to cherry-pick, but we'll be moving to mesa-23.2.0 when it's released, so we might as well start testing now. |
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make_world.sh | ||
README.TXT |
This is the source used for Slackware. To look for a particular bit of source (let's say for 'cp'), first you would look for the full path: fuzzy:~# which cp /bin/cp Then, you grep for the package it came from. Note that the leading '/' is removed, and ^ and $ mark the beginning and end of the pattern to match: fuzzy:~# grep ^bin/cp$ /var/lib/pkgtools/packages/* /var/lib/pkgtools/packages/coreutils-9.0-x86_64-3:bin/cp From this, you can see that 'cp' came from the coreutils-9.0-x86_64-3 package. The source will be found in a corresponding subdirectory. In this case, that would be ./a/coreutils/. All of these packages have scripts that extract, patch, and compile the source automatically. These are the 'SlackBuild' scripts. Have fun! --- Patrick J. Volkerding volkerdi@slackware.com