Linas,

 

I have only used Ubuntu and Debian by using  Stephen’s instructions located at;

https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OPENMEETINGS/Tutorials+related+to+OpenMeetings
 

 

They should be a good guide for you, as long as you know how FreeBSD works and 
you can match the instructions to FreeBSD.  If you get stuck, please email back 
and I will respond if I can assist you.

 

I will also try to build a FreeBSD server, but this will take me time. 

 

Thanks,

 

George Kirkham

 

 

From: Linas Redeckis [mailto:linre...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, 21 December 2012 11:07 PM
To: openmeetings-user@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: Openmeetings on FreeBSD startup

 

So.. almost a year passed. Maybe anyone did come up with a way of launching OM2 
on FreeBSD startup?

Thanks in advance,
Linas

On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 2:35 PM, Linas Redeckis <linre...@gmail.com> wrote:

Did that before - nothing happens. Tho, it is hard to tell what happens then, 
because i can't find log files about system trying to execute this.
Any other way?
As noob, i tried this thing: i created start_red5.sh file in 
/usr/local/etc/rc.d directory, and wrote lines "cd /usr/local/www/red5" and 
"touch file". This way i hope to find file "file" in directory, proving the 
startup script works. And it does. But adding line "bash red5.sh" doesnt seem 
to work at all.. also did "sh red5.sh" with same result.

I dont think its true that noone uses FreeBSD and Openmeetings. But there's so 
little information about it on the net. Strange.

 

On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 12:14, Mahmut TEKER <teker.mah...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi,

   I think, you should write your script that before it enters to the related 
folder where red5.sh resides and then try to start the red5.sh.

   Sometimes it can failure trying to startup red5.sh from a remote folder. You 
can use "cd" command before "sh" command I think.

  Regards,


_Mahmut

23.01.2012 12:03, Linas Redeckis yazmış:

         

        Hi,
        I think i need to start red5.sh after system restart. Anyone did this?
        Should be pretty simple, but i'm too fresh at unix systems, so have no 
luck doing this.
        I made Ooo start on startup by simply creating ooo.sh file in 
/usr/local/etc/rc.d and put the Ooo start line in this file. Now Ooo starts as 
process after system restart.
        Why this doesnt work on Openmeetings?

 

 

 

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