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11:03
hellocall;
@Kamiccolo I've already tried it when I was looking for a better alternative on build systems
although it is great, and it can speed up the process, especially in case of large-scale C++ projects
I still think tup is the friendliest and easiest to read and write
while it is also lightning fast, and can deal with large number of files as well
but again, this all comes down to personal preference really
 
2 hours later…
13:01
@PeterVaro mhm... in comment section it mentions Shake and llbuild as well... sigh it becomes more and more complicated...
@DmitriChubarov
Dmitri
@DmitriChubarov could you assist me further?
Within the /usr/bin folder there are files such as gcc-4.9, gcc5 and such
13:22
@prameshshakya @prameshshakya We need to figure out what causes the "no such file or directory". You do not have /usr/bin/gcc do you?
-6
Q: How to calculate the sum (of digits) with a condition, for number?

i1474696I have a number: N = 1589. I can calculate this sum (right to left) until it is smaller then 10, with this precedence: 9 + 8 + 5 + 1 = 23 9 + 8 + 5 = 22 9 + 8 = 17 I can calculate this sum (right to left) until it is smaller then 10, with C: int N = 1589, S = 0, A = 0, B = 0; while (S < 10) ...

@Dmi
@DmitriChubarov No, i donot have the gcc folder....but /usr/bin folder does have gcc-4.9, gcc-5 and such folders
*files
@YeuSeChia what have You tried so far?
Ok, /usr/bin/gcc is a symbolic link. If you need to compile something right now just use gcc-5 command instead of gcc.
@prameshshakya I'd put a link to the question here for reference stackoverflow.com/q/40675310/1328439
@DmitriChubarov so the problem is in establishing the symbolic link? am i right here?
13:25
@prameshshakya if you have root access to the system, you could create the symbolic link using ln -s /usr/bin/gcc-5 /usr/bin/gcc. Reinstalling the gcc package would probably be a good idea.
@ DmitriChubarov I've already tried reinstalling the gcc package but the problem persists..
@DmitriChubarov establishing the symbolic link seems to work
Much thanks
@DmitriChubarov just as an aside, could you elaborate why the problem arose in the first place?
@prameshshakya It seems that for some reason it fails to create the symlink. Something else might be not working on your system. Figuring that out would require debugging the package post-installation script.
@DmitriChubarov i certainly donot have the expertise for such level of debugging, would it be too much to ask for your help?
@DmitriChubarov appreciate the help anyways....goodday sir
@prameshshakya I would suggest you post a new question on askubuntu.com on why apt-get install gcc fails to create the /usr/bin/gcc symlink
@prameshshakya btw. When you executed sudo apt-get install gcc you did not reinstall it. To reinstall you need to apt-get remove gcc and then apt-get install gcc again.
13:42
@Kamiccolo the problem is, I don't have lwn subscription (I will have in a weeks but until then) the article you linked is a subscribers only one -- so I don't have access to teh comment section :/
@DmitriChubarov or use the designated flag for that purpose: # apt-get --reinstall install <pkg-name>
14:05
@PeterVaro sorry, will.post a free link in a moment
 
2 hours later…
16:00
I'm stuck on a linux driver issue - can I ask about it on stackoverflow or is there another website I should use?
Precise question: "Does a driver have to have a compatible string for modprobe to use? What if it doesn't? I can't find the compatible string in the fixed_phy driver: lxr.free-electrons.com/source/drivers/net/phy/…;
@stanri what do You mean by "compatible string"? I guess I've just saw an issue with WiFi drivers on #linux-wireless. Apparently it was not loading properly because of... "bad" naming.
Are You talking about "compatible" flag in Device Tree?
@Kamiccolo modprobe compares a driver's .compatible string with the corresponding field in the device tree to see if the driver is applicable for that hw... yes.
> An important thing to note when writing kernel modules, is that the automatic loading mechanism (modprobe, actually) depends on an entry for the “compatible” string in /lib/modules/{kernel version}/modules.ofmap and other definition files in the same directory.

The correct way to make this happen for your own module, is to copy the *.ko file to somewhere under the relevant /lib/modules/{kernel version}/kernel/drivers/ directory and go
16:16
My issue is that I want to use this driver (kernel.org/doc/menuconfig/drivers-net-phy-Kconfig.html, Fixed_phy) on an ethernet interface (eth1) and I don't know (1) what the .ko name is to modprobe it or 2 what the compatible field should be so that linux knows to use that driver.
16:59
@stanri in this specific case, I presume it's fixed and fixed_phy modules.
with CONFIG_FIXED_PHY enabled. Of course.
As far as I read, at least at 2014, DeviceTree did not support fixed PHYs: stackoverflow.com/questions/21108274/…
17:44
documentation for including a fixed phy in the device tree
so that's my next plan
@stanri aha, 2015. Thanks!

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