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1
12th July 03:41
External User
Posts: 1
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Hi,
When I open an app in workspace 1 and then switch to workspace 2 or 3 or 4 I do not wish to see in my toolbar (or whatever it is called in Fluxbox) application one. What do I do to prevent this? Thanks, -- Hareesh Nagarajan WEB: http://puggy.symonds.net/~hareesh -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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2
12th July 03:41
External User
Posts: 1
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I think the taskbar is a tool to see all running apps. See the
do***entation of the taskbar module. If I remember right there isn't an option to show only the apps running in your current workspace. If you to not wish to see your running apps do not start the taskbar module. Regards Frnk -----Original Message----- From: Hareesh Nagarajan [mailto:hareesh.nagarajan@gmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, November 16, 2004 5:16 AM To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: [gentoo-user] Fluxbox query Hi, When I open an app in workspace 1 and then switch to workspace 2 or 3 or 4 I do not wish to see in my toolbar (or whatever it is called in Fluxbox) application one. What do I do to prevent this? Thanks, -- Hareesh Nagarajan WEB: http://puggy.symonds.net/~hareesh -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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3
12th July 03:41
External User
Posts: 1
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It's showing on all disktops because it's sticked clicking button at top
of windows on left will unstick it -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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4
12th July 04:17
External User
Posts: 1
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In the fluxbox menu:
Fluxbox menu > configure > toolbar > iconbar mode > workspace This is in Fluxbox 0.9.9 Eugene. -----Original Message----- From: Hareesh Nagarajan [mailto:hareesh.nagarajan@gmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, 16 November 2004 3:16 PM To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: [gentoo-user] Fluxbox query Hi, When I open an app in workspace 1 and then switch to workspace 2 or 3 or 4 I do not wish to see in my toolbar (or whatever it is called in Fluxbox) application one. What do I do to prevent this? Thanks, -- Hareesh Nagarajan WEB: http://puggy.symonds.net/~hareesh -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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5
12th July 04:18
External User
Posts: 1
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Did that! It works perfectly.
Thanks, -- Hareesh Nagarajan WEB: http://puggy.symonds.net/~hareesh -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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6
12th July 12:04
External User
Posts: 1
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All right... This may be a bug, or it may just be something I screwed
up.. I wanted to ask around and get a consensus on this.. I installed Gentoo on a system with the following specs: CPU: XP 2500+ Barton MB: NForce 2 chipset GPU: Nvidia GeForce FX 5200, 8x AGP HD: 30 G Quantum Fireball IDE, 5400 RPM (Not quite sure of the model) Well, the rest of the specs and details are unimportant at this point because that pretty much tells the story as far hardware goes. So I went through the whole sphiel of installing the OS using the Gentoo NPTL how to, and everything seemed to go to plan. I had three partitions on the drive as follows: hda1: 15M, /boot, Ext2 hda2: 1G, Swap hda3: 28G, / , XFS Once all was said and done. I compiled the the Nvidia Kernel modules and started X. Here's where it gets weird. I started up X, and as expected the Nvidia Logo flashed, but then the screen went blank and the machine entirely locked up. I couldn't hotkey kill X, I couldn't switch virtual terminals, and I couldn't SSH login to the machine from another box. I switched it back to the builtin NV driver, and the X server started up.. And it also worked just fine in Framebuffer mode. So I scratched my head for a bit and decided to try a few diffrent methods of intalling the system. So I tried a stage 2 and stage 3 install with the configurations listed above to the same result. What eventually solved the problem was formatting /dev/hda3 as Ext3. The only thing that I can think of that would cause an issue like this would be some kind of conflict between the XFS drivers and Nvidia Graphics drivers (Or the Kernel AGP drivers for that matter). Any other opinions on this? -- -Jokr 2 Thief Your speedbump on the information super highway. ---- "It dosen't matter how many times you type them... 'u, ur, r ne1 b and y' are *NOT* real words. STOP USING THEM YOU ILLITERATE BASTARDS!" - Me -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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7
12th July 21:33
External User
Posts: 1
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I'd guess that there is a hardware problem, though you didn't mention
the version of nvidia drivers. The reason I'd guess hardware is I've run the same config for some time and did not have that problem. I've since taken that system down and run a dual opteron with a 5900 w/xfs and it only locks up when I do multiple dma requests to video. But even that take a few minutes to occur, and it only lock up graphics. emerge memtest86 stress memtest86 has to be run from boot, so you'll need to add it grub. stress can be run live. Increase the default values until most of swap is used and avg. load is sustained above 20 or so. I generally like to run 5 minute cycles. It could be xorg. The 6.8 version has a fine set of "features", but locking up right away suggests a hardware problem. Bob - -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list |
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