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12:57 AM
@KevinGuan hello
 
@gunr2171 hello
 
ok, so just for some context:
9 hours ago, by gunr2171
So everyone knows, my apartment got hit yesterday by a power surge which knocked out my server. We're not sure if anything is permanent, but all bot activity, including Closey 2, is delayed for about a week.
 
Hmm...
 
I'm trying to find a good way to test if the cpu was hit. we got some "watchdog detected hard and soft lockups of cpu cores" that night
and would not boot
right now it's on and running but we don't know if it's a fluke or not
I found this thread, and I want to try installing it to test it out
(second post)
also, so I don't flood this room, let's move to the testing facility
 
Okay
 
1:00 AM
12 messages moved from SO Close Vote Reviewers
 
So, have you tried mprime ?
 
the main question is "how do I install a package from the AUR?" I'm ok with ubuntu/apt-get commands, but I don't know my way around arch-linux, that's my roommate's area of expertise
 
Ah, that's very simple.
 
I know it's some combination of "pacman" and some flags, or something
 
Wait me, searching for the wiki.
Follow this ^^^
In short words:
> The Arch User Repository (AUR) is a community-driven repository for Arch users. It contains package descriptions (PKGBUILDs) that allow you to compile a package from source with makepkg and then install it via pacman.
 
1:04 AM
"There are three well-known methods to aquire the build files without the use of an AUR helper:" I think we do use a "helper" command
 
Yeah, I even wrote one (but I don't think my code is good anymore ).
 
those three options, curl / git / tar, don't look familiar
 
So you mean that you already have a "helper" installed on your Arch Linux?
Actually you can install a package from AUR without a "helper" (use curl / git / tar instead).
 
i think so, if I remember correctly. but I don't know the name. but I thought my roommate did install some program to fetch a program from the AUR (and manually compile)
@KevinGuan yeah, let's try that
ok, so let's do good-ol curl
 
Okay, wait me.
 
1:07 AM
that should be the package info page
 
Oh yeah, I'm searching for it!
 
(lol, depends on curl)
 
cd /tmp
wget 'https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/snapshot/mprime.tar.gz'
tar xzf mprime.tar.gz
rm mprime.tar.gz

cd /tmp/mprime
makepkg -sricC --noconfirm
cd /tmp

rm -rf mprime
This will auto download, compile and install the package.
 
third command, do you need a - before the xzf?
 
Nope, it's optional.
 
1:10 AM
insert "sure, why not.gif"
 
lol
 
making....
ok, seems to be done
sweet, program installed
let me try this out
thanks for your help
 
Okay
 
eventually i'll understand this
 
:P
Oh, also take a look at makepkg --help to understand what does -sricC --noconfirm mean.
If you would like to know.
 
1:14 AM
I will
 
:)
Looking at the tags of this room...
 
Sam, all Sam
2
brb
 
Cya
 
back, tests seem to be passing so far and all 4 cores are at 100%
 
1:31 AM
Also back.
@gunr2171 So did you solve the problem?
 
well I started running the program, it's been chugging away for the last 10 minutes
no errors so far
that's all i'm looking for, cpu issues
 
Err...what's happening? Doesn't it have a...debug mode?
 
@KevinGuan that's what I'm watching
 
@gunr2171 Hmm...don't understand.
 
the left side is the program, it's running stress tests on the CPU to compute prime numbers
 
1:37 AM
But looks all the things are fine.
 
the right side is top
 
Yes I know it's top.
 
(just checking)
I love how the mprime program takes 400% cpu
 
Yeah, I'm also surprise.
Oh hey, I found something funny:
Prime95 is the freeware application written by George Woltman that is used by GIMPS, a distributed computing project dedicated to finding new Mersenne prime numbers. More specifically, Prime95 refers to the Windows and Mac OS X versions of the software. MPrime is the Linux command-line interface version of Prime95, to be run in a text terminal or in a terminal emulator window as a remote shell client. It is identical to Prime95 in functionality, except it lacks a graphical user interface. Although most of the GIMPS software's source code is publicly available, it is technically not free software...
And this would be also helpful: wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Stress_Test
 
oh look, mprime is in that list
 
1:46 AM
Yes, I was searching for mprime and found that Arch Wiki page.
brb
 
 
11 hours later…
Sam
12:28 PM
@gunr2171 Woot \o/
 

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