thanks Ayan,
but isn't there any command in freebsd to do it for me??
On Mon, Jun 3, 2013 at 11:06 AM, Ayan George wrote:
> On 06/03/2013 02:28 AM, s m wrote:
> > hi folks,
> >
> > i want to change a specified byte in a hex file. i want to edit my file
> and
> > change byte 0x28a content from
hi folks,
i want to change a specified byte in a hex file. i want to edit my file and
change byte 0x28a content from 0x08 to 0x14.
i try to do it with hex-editor in windows but this file is too big and i
can't transfer it to the other system. i think it should be done by some
commands such as "dd
thanks Carl,
i tried your your manual step by steps on FreeBSD8.2 but error happened.
this is what i've done:
gpart create -s MBR ad3
ad3 created
gpart add -t freebsd ad3
ad3s1 added
gpart create -s BSD -n 20 ad3s1
gpart: geom 'ad3s1': File Exists
if i do not run the second command and run the th
James wrote:
Several modest servers applied well will take you further than one big
iron—and for less cost.
James I agree. I have witnessed the benefit of what you say. Putting
your faith in one big server can be a problem if the box fails,
especially hardware failure.
Keeping a spare serve
Several modest servers applied well will take you further than one big
iron—and for less cost.
--
James.
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Hi all - I may be building a system which does not have any onboard
sounds thus need to find either a pci-e or usb solution which will work
with FreeBSD. I've combed newegg and have to say I never realized how
crappy the sound cards have become - that used to be a big thing back in
the day!
Could
Hi - I am trying to replace an aging workstation on its last legs and
have been waiting on the release of the new Intel hardware. They did so
this weekend and I am leaning towards the E3-1245V3 over the vanilla i7s
because of the extended page support for virutualization.
So.. before I get kne
You mean like a high end rack mount server that's FreeBSD's primary use?
One catch about ram, the faster ram comes in smaller sticks. I have
four 8Gb sticks for 32Gb, but it's not the fastest ram. The fastest ram
tends to be 2Gb sticks. At the moment, FreeBSD's set to a max of 64
cores on a
I'm a sub second speed freak. What is the max number of cpu's and memory
size that Freebsd can handle? Can it handle 16 4ghz cpu's and 32gb of
memory? I need a gaming server with some really big balls for hundreds
of jails. Money is not a deciding factor here, horse power is.
__
s m writes:
> thanks guys,
>
> i understand another solution is GPT partitioning. but i prefer to have
> more partitions in traditional freebsd (with MBR table i think). using GPT
> is the last solution for me.
>
> i should create more than 8 partitions with gpart command (flag n which
> identifi
thanks RW,
do you have any suggestions how i can do that? with gpart command?
On Sun, Jun 2, 2013 at 3:51 PM, RW wrote:
> On Sun, 2 Jun 2013 11:35:58 +0430
> s m wrote:
>
> > thanks guys,
> >
> > i understand another solution is GPT partitioning. but i prefer to
> > have more partitions in trad
On Sun, 2 Jun 2013 11:35:58 +0430
s m wrote:
> thanks guys,
>
> i understand another solution is GPT partitioning. but i prefer to
> have more partitions in traditional freebsd (with MBR table i think).
> using GPT is the last solution for me.
>
> i should create more than 8 partitions with gpar
I had to use tap0 instead of tun0 to get a connexion.
I first create it with "ifconfig tap0 create" and then make the connexion
with "openvpn --config .ovpn --dev tap0".
This works for me.
2013/6/1 Teske, Devin
>
> On May 29, 2013, at 8:52 AM, Pol Hallen wrote:
>
> >> It's a while since I looke
thanks guys,
i understand another solution is GPT partitioning. but i prefer to have
more partitions in traditional freebsd (with MBR table i think). using GPT
is the last solution for me.
i should create more than 8 partitions with gpart command (flag n which
identifies entries) but i have error
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