Is there any chance that a more recent version of heimdal would be included
in a future release of FreeBSD?
The current version is pretty archaic.
kronos# kadmin -v
kadmin (Heimdal 0.6.3)
Copyright 1999-2004 Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan
Send bug-reports to heimdal-b...@pdc.kth.se
On Mon, Jan 12, 2009, Jay Hall wrote:
> I am in the process of redesigning my organization's network. And,
> since we will be using mostly Macintosh OS X clients, I am considering
> using NFS. However, I will need the ability to perform user/group
> authentication since users may not always
I am in the process of redesigning my organization's network. And,
since we will be using mostly Macintosh OS X clients, I am considering
using NFS. However, I will need the ability to perform user/group
authentication since users may not always log in from the same PC.
Essentially, each
Not to be presumptious, or rude, but I've read the first part of this
thread (a bit late, yes) and I'm just confused.
If you're going to go so far as to prep the drive at home, before
driving to the NOC, with a unrunnable OS on a labeled disk, it seems silly.
I propose:
Do a typical insta
On Mon, Jan 12, 2009, Joe Kraft wrote:
>I have a personal network behind a FreeBSD firewall running IPFW. It's been
>working fine for years, but as I'm getting more mobile in my work I'd like
>to be able to access my network while traveling.
>
>At work the problem is solved with an IPSEC VPN clien
Rem P Roberti wrote:
if I remember rigth I had the same problem months ago, but I'm not
really sure how I solved it.
First try to delete the lines 44 - 49 of yourr's .cf file. then try to
restart sendmail.
if that doesn't work try dnl after every line in the .mc file. e.x
INPUT_MAIL_FILTER(`c
Aggelidis Nikos wrote:
hi to all the list,
i have a question concerning samba and freebsd:
whenever i use the option username map = /usr/local/etc/samba/smbusers
in my smb.conf
, and i try to connect to samba server like this
#smbclient //apollo/username
Password:
session setup failed: NT_STAT
I have a personal network behind a FreeBSD firewall running IPFW. It's been
working fine for years, but as I'm getting more mobile in my work I'd like
to be able to access my network while traveling.
At work the problem is solved with an IPSEC VPN client that I run to connect
to the appropriate s
Jason Lenthe writes:
> I remember seeing something on the internet that recommended
> setting a flag in the port to install CUPS to /usr/bin. That was
> too drastic for my tastes, so I decided to just set up FreeBSD
> printing and be done with it.
From my /etc/make.conf:
#
#
Ewald Jenisch wrote:
>
> Should I go for the standard vanilla FreeBSD lpr that comes with the
> system or use anything else? If "anything else" - what (CUPS,...?)
>
> Please note that I want to print both from gnome (X-win) as well as
> via the commadline.
>
I was looking forward to using CUPS
On Mon, Jan 12, 2009 at 01:15:52PM -0800, mojo fms wrote:
> I can run a check disk on it and it returned that the file system was
> previously mounted on /mnt/backup and returns that the file system is in
> good shape. I will have to wait until I get back in front of it to attempt
> the dump pipe
I can run a check disk on it and it returned that the file system was
previously mounted on /mnt/backup and returns that the file system is in
good shape. I will have to wait until I get back in front of it to attempt
the dump piped to restore. I have never had to recover a drive like that,
is th
On Mon, Jan 12, 2009 at 8:08 PM, Neal Hogan wrote:
> I installed the firmware stuff from the dragonfly bwi(4) man page, yet I
> have the same issue. Is there a way to tell whether the firmware they
> provide supports my card? Like I said, I can locate my access point (and
> others that are around)
I installed the firmware stuff from the dragonfly bwi(4) man page, yet I
have the same issue. Is there a way to tell whether the firmware they
provide supports my card? Like I said, I can locate my access point (and
others that are around) and ask for an IP . . . it seems as though I'm so
close. I'
I prefer print/apsfilter from ports. To get color postscript printing
and duplex printing you may need to change the default configuration,
which will probably end up somewhere under /usr/local/etc/apsfilter
- Bob
On 1/12/09, Ewald Jenisch wrote:
> Hi,
>
> For a system set up from scratch (7.1)
>> On Sun, 11 Jan 2009 20:08:18 -0600,
>> Jeffrey Goldberg said:
J> if [ $UID -ne 0 ] ; then ...
J> Does anyone have a recommendation of how to run this simple test in /bin/sh
J> and how to write tests reasonably portably?
I think your best bet for comparisons like this is to use case. I st
"Garrett Cooper" writes:
> Dag-Erling Smørgrav writes:
> > Peter Jeremy writes:
> > > If you press any key during the first spinner [...] You can then
> > > enter the name of the program you wish to run - eg /boot/loader.old
> > That won't work - he changed the forth code, not the compiled code
firmware_get: failed to load firmware image bwi_v3_ucode4
bwi0: request firmware bwi_v3_ucode4 failed
bwi0: bwi_stop
looks like here is a problem
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-question
On 1/12/09, Neal Hogan wrote:
> Hello,
>
>I am attempting to get by broadcom wifi card up and running, am sick of
> trying to get ndis working, and am attempting to use the bwi driver
> (originating in dragonflyBSD). I'm hoping others here have tried to do the
> same and have some pointers. I'
On Mon, Jan 12, 2009 at 6:50 AM, Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote:
> Peter Jeremy writes:
>> Kamlesh Patel writes:
>> > How do i recover the system from this error. I can't reload the
>> > loader.old
>>
>> If you press any key during the first spinner [...] You can then
>> enter the name of the progra
On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 18:30:29 +0100 (CET), Andreas Davour
wrote:
> I just did something stupid and deleted my temproot before I had
> finished merging some stuff by hand. Can I recreate it, or is it
> actually living somewhere in /usr/src before being copied into /var by
> mergemaster? Can I find
Hello,
I am attempting to get by broadcom wifi card up and running, am sick of
trying to get ndis working, and am attempting to use the bwi driver
(originating in dragonflyBSD). I'm hoping others here have tried to do the
same and have some pointers. I'm using 7.1-RELEASE (system/source are
in-
On Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 08:08:16PM -0500, William Gordon Rutherdale wrote:
> I'm afraid it's gone from bad to worse.
>
> The 7.1 system may have recognised the ethernet adapter, but it seemed
> to fail writing to the hard drive.
>
> I got this during installation:
>
>Progres
On Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 02:23:25AM +, RW wrote:
> On Sat, 10 Jan 2009 20:09:57 +
> Chris Whitehouse wrote:
>
> > Why not as a matter of curiosity? It has its limitations (eg max file
> > size) but it's very cross platform.
>
> ntfs is much more robust than fat32, if you crash windows o
Hi,
For a system set up from scratch (7.1) I'm about to set up printing.
Printer: Minolta C351 (basically a networked PS-Printer also capable
of color)
My requirements: Print from mutt (mail), print text files, print
PS-files with the ability to print duplex and 2-up both in color and
b/w.
Shou
Stefan Miklosovic wrote:
Hi all,
I decided to set up my own CVSup server just for my local
network. After reading all related stuff I should find, I have
solid knowledge about this issue but one thing disturbed my mind.
My pc, server which I will mirroring from, is also downloading
source tree
Always read /usr/ports/UPDATING before any upgrade. After that you can
use portmaster (the one I use) or portupgrade to upgrade all those
outdated ports with a single command : portmaster -avd
On Mon, 2009-01-12 at 10:08 -0500, Tsu-Fan Cheng wrote:
> Hi,
> I just csup my port tree this morning (
Tsu-Fan Cheng writes:
>I just csup my port tree this morning (01/12), and realized
> there is a whole lot ports need my attention (49 of them). I
> checked out UPDATES and found out that gnome and GTK+ have just
> been updated. But i don't have gtkmm or gnome-session installed,
> I wonder
Hi,
I just csup my port tree this morning (01/12), and realized there is
a whole lot ports need my attention (49 of them). I checked out
UPDATES and found out that gnome and GTK+ have just been updated. But
i don't have gtkmm or gnome-session installed, I wonder if I should
still upgrade my ports
Peter Jeremy writes:
> Kamlesh Patel writes:
> > How do i recover the system from this error. I can't reload the
> > loader.old
>
> If you press any key during the first spinner [...] You can then
> enter the name of the program you wish to run - eg /boot/loader.old
That won't work - he changed
"Eitan Shefi" writes:
> I run "sysctl -a | less"
why?
DES
--
Dag-Erling Smørgrav - d...@des.no
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questio
vim /usr/ports/UPDATING:
20090107:
AFFECTS: users of security/libgcrypt
AUTHOR: ra...@freebsd.org
libgcrypt has been upgraded to 1.4.3 which has a shared library
version bump. You need to reinstall all ports depending on it.
Use something like this:
portupgrade -rf libgcrypt
portm
I get this error in /var/spool/lpd/:
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1: Shared object "libgcrypt.so.15" not found, required by
"libgs.so.8"
I use apsfilter, so I guess this must be something to do with ghostscript?
Any advice?
many thanks
anton
--
Anton Shterenlikht
Room 2.6, Queen's Building
Mech Eng De
Jos Chrispijn wrote:
[Lowell Gilbert] Uit een eerder bericht van 10-1-2009 15:51 ::
Could be hardware trouble, I suppose.
I know FreeBSD can detect hardware probs better than other OS'es; but
why didn't 6.x detect this malfunction then?
I believe Murphy and his law, but for mee it seems a li
Hi perryh!
On Mon, 12 Jan 2009, per...@pluto.rain.com wrote:
> > ... I do have a Linux OS that I have access
> > to that strangely does use vpnc successfully.
>
> That may help quite a bit. You can use something like tcpdump or
> wireshark on the FreeBSD system to monitor the traffic between th
> ... I do have a Linux OS that I have access
> to that strangely does use vpnc successfully.
That may help quite a bit. You can use something like tcpdump or
wireshark on the FreeBSD system to monitor the traffic between the
Linux system and the Cisco while connecting and doing something
simple
36 matches
Mail list logo