On Wednesday 08 March 2006 17:04, Josh Paetzel wrote:
> On Wednesday 08 March 2006 11:59, Daniela wrote:
> > On Wednesday 08 March 2006 16:58, Josh Paetzel wrote:
> > > I managed to install a pkg that I created and somehow the file
> > > +COMMENT wasn't created in
On Wednesday 08 March 2006 16:58, Josh Paetzel wrote:
> I managed to install a pkg that I created and somehow the file
> +COMMENT wasn't created in /var/db/pkg/portname. I touched +COMMENT
> in the correct directory because pkg_info was complaining about a
> missing +COMMENT. Some time has gone b
On Wednesday 08 March 2006 14:16, Eugene wrote:
> Hi people,
>
> I have a strange problem with memory.
> System is FreeBSD 5.3, 4GB physical memory.
> Even in very quiet load, memory allocation statistics looks like this:
> last pid: 38330; load averages: 0.67, 1.05, 1.03 up 6+06:50:14
> 15:52
On Wednesday 08 March 2006 04:34, Kristian Vaaf wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I've done some research on how to make ones desktop look the best,
> without being too bloated in terms of looks and functionality but still
> classify as good design and give users a smooth experience.
>
> I've found that if done
I prevent these lockups (besides the obvious), i.e. how do I prevent
Fluxbox from intercepting certain key combinations (Control + Alt + F[n])?
Thanks in advance.
Daniela
--
Hope is the worst of all evils, for it prolongs the torments of man.
___
fr
#x27; show up nothing
> unusual. Just three files from xdm.
> Still no firefox :(
I'd suggest you to run firefox under gdb or with truss. So far I had quite a
few programs not starting up properly and in many cases it would exit just
after accessing a
On Saturday 19 February 2005 07:45, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Daniela
> > Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2005 1:30 PM
> > To: Jan Grant
> > Cc: Alin-Adrian Anton; [EMAI
On Sunday 13 February 2005 09:37, Jan Grant wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Feb 2005, Daniela wrote:
> > Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a
> > router with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet)
> > to another LAN machine. When the
On Saturday 12 February 2005 16:06, Volker Kindermann wrote:
> Hi Daniela,
>
> > Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a
> > router with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet)
> > to another LAN machine. When the router
On Friday 11 February 2005 21:27, Alin-Adrian Anton wrote:
> Daniela wrote:
> > I have two NICs (one inside and one outside interface) with NAT
> > activated. The problem is that every time I establish a connection with a
> > machine on my LAN, it uses the address of the out
machine to use the
other address whenever I connect to a local machine?
Daniela
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On Thursday 28 October 2004 19:44, Miguel Mendez wrote:
> On Thu, 28 Oct 2004 21:13:34 +
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> > I noticed a file called "regs" in my home directory (which is 21 megs
> > in size) and I have no clue wher
On Thursday 28 October 2004 19:35, Benjamin Walkenhorst wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Daniela wrote:
> >I noticed a file called "regs" in my home directory (which is 21 megs in
> > size) and I have no clue where it comes from. The file format is not
> > recognized by
estored) it suddenly worked again.
There seem to be no unusual processes running, but when I'm hacked, I can't
trust the tools on my system any more. Also there were quite a few crashes.
Has anyone seen this file too?
In case anyone wants to know, the offending IP was 2
are bug or
flaky hardware?
Regards,
Daniela
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On Tuesday 05 October 2004 08:57, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> On 2004-10-04 21:54, Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I developed a few rules and techniques for keeping the interest:
> >
> > 1. Avoid doing the same thing over and over again.
> > 2. Do bigger
there's one more technique that will (if done properly)
certainly make UNIX fun again, but it implies a LOT of overhead, and I'm
almost sure you don't want to do this unless you have nothing to do for the
next few months.
Regards,
Daniela
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On Tuesday 28 September 2004 17:42, Kevin Stevens wrote:
> On Tue, 28 Sep 2004, Daniela wrote:
> > I have some problems with an outgoing SSH connection to a machine on my
> > LAN. Connections from the clients to the server work, but not vice
> > versa. The server has two NI
sockstat(1) shows
the inside address being used as expected.
I already examined the routing tables, to no avail. What else should I check?
Regards,
Daniela
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On Sunday 26 September 2004 19:03, Eric Crist wrote:
> What do I have to do to make chmod changes to my bpf devices so that
> they'll return that way once I reboot?
I don't know if there's a simpler way, but you could try to make the change
from one of the /etc/rc* scrip
On Saturday 25 September 2004 14:16, Christian Hiris wrote:
> On Thursday 23 September 2004 19:18, Daniela wrote:
> > VNC is probably a bit too much overhead.
> > There must be some device file where all the screen data goes to. If I
> > knew the name of this file, I could
On Wednesday 22 September 2004 22:58, Christian Hiris wrote:
> On Wednesday 22 September 2004 23:20, Daniela wrote:
> > I'm looking for a tool to record everything that can be seen on a given X
> > display. Ideally, it should have support for limiting recording to a
> >
On Wednesday 22 September 2004 20:01, Peter Risdon wrote:
> Daniela wrote:
> > I'm looking for a tool to record everything that can be seen on a given X
> > display. Ideally, it should have support for limiting recording to a
> > single window, but that's not stric
a similar
result, preferably a neat small command line tool.
If such a thing does not exist, can someone please give me a hint on how I
could do it myself in ASM/C/C++/shellscript/whatever? Is it as simple as
reading from a device file, or can I just put this feature into the X server?
Regard
lease don't point me to libraries doing the job, as I'm doing it in ASM.
It's a quite simplistic program and I don't want it to grow unnecessarily.
Regards,
Daniela
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On Monday 09 August 2004 18:38, Bill Moran wrote:
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi all!
> >
> > I just emptied the system crontab, and don't know how I can recover it.
> > I know that the contents are still somewhere on the drive, as I didn&
-w option to rm
doesn't work here.
Please help me, or at least tell me that there's nothing else I can do, so I
can use the method mentioned above.
Regards,
Daniela
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#x27;t know how to make a
patch for this (well, I tried it, but that made the problem even worse).
Regards,
Daniela
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I've seen lots of Mac emulators in the ports.
Why not use one of these, and run the original program?
AFAIK Mac emulation is not even half as painful as Winblows emulation.
Daniela
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On Wednesday 28 July 2004 16:18, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> > On Wednesday 28 July 2004 15:53, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> >> I figured so...what happens if you add 'keep-state' to rules 2,
> >> >> 20002
> >> >> and 20003?
> >> >
> >> > Nothing.
> >> > BTW, here we have the problem: The initial SYN
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 15:53, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> I figured so...what happens if you add 'keep-state' to rules 2,
> >> 20002
> >> and 20003?
> >
> > Nothing.
> > BTW, here we have the problem: The initial SYN packet isn't matched by
> > rule
> > 11700 (setup keep-state). Setup means t
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 15:23, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> > Yes, it works, but of course I can't leave this rule in all the time.
>
> The SYN/ACK packet that comes back from the remote server is denied by
> rule
>
> > 01900. But it should be allowed by the check-state rule.
> >
> >> Also, I know you
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 15:06, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> > On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:49, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> >> Also, post the relevant ``natd'' line entries in your /etc/natd.conf
> >> >> file.
> >> >
> >> > natd.conf doesn't exist. Do you mean rc.conf? Here it is:
> >> > natd_interface=
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:49, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> Also, post the relevant ``natd'' line entries in your /etc/natd.conf
> >> file.
> >
> > natd.conf doesn't exist. Do you mean rc.conf? Here it is:
> > natd_interface="rl0"
> > natd_enable="YES"
> >
> > But I didn't change anything here, and
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:38, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> Do you have an ``alias_address'' statement in your natd.conf file?
> >
> > I have no natd.conf file. At least I never touched it. But it always
> > worked
> > like a dream. BTW, natd is started with the command line "natd -n rl0".
>
> Also
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:36, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> Do you have an ``alias_address'' statement in your natd.conf file?
> >
> > I have no natd.conf file. At least I never touched it. But it always
> > worked
> > like a dream. BTW, natd is started with the command line "natd -n rl0".
>
> Try
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:27, Hauan, David wrote:
> > >> Did you actually change the IP on the interface itself? If not:
> > >>
> > >> edit /etc/rc.conf and change the IP/Netmask, then:
> > >>
> > >> # /etc/netstart
> > >
> > > Yes, the IP was changed. I ran /etc/netstart, but it didn't
> >
> >
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:21, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> Did you actually change the IP on the interface itself? If not:
> >>
> >> edit /etc/rc.conf and change the IP/Netmask, then:
> >>
> >> # /etc/netstart
> >
> > Yes, the IP was changed. I ran /etc/netstart, but it didn't help. As I
> > said,
On Wednesday 28 July 2004 14:03, Steve Bertrand wrote:
> > Hi all!
> >
> > I recently got a new IP on my outside interface, and I replaced the old
> > IP with the new one in my IPFW ruleset, and restarted natd.
> > Now everything was alright until my network clients (on the inside
> > interface)
>
still
works, but they can't fetch their mail or surf the net.
It looks like something is wrong with my firewall, but I changed nothing but
the old address.
Are there other processes that need to be restarted?
Regards,
Daniela
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; help would be greatly appreciated.
What's the output of `ifconfig ndis0`? If the interface is marked down, you
can try `ifconfig ndis0 up` to get it running. Does it have an IP yet?
Daniela
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27;s
home directory.
This is because every user can have his own desktop, so every user will have
to specify one in order not to get the default one. It's also possible to set
a system-wide default, but I've never done this.
Daniela
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On Tuesday 08 June 2004 00:45, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 07, 2004 at 09:01:15PM +0000, Daniela wrote:
> > On Monday 07 June 2004 19:35, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> > > On Mon, Jun 07, 2004 at 07:14:34PM +, Daniela wrote:
> > > > On Monday 07 Jun
good ideas while bothering with
coding standards. Good would be some convention where you can just modify
your code with sed(1) afterwards, that's not much overhead.
Daniela
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On Monday 07 June 2004 19:35, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 07, 2004 at 07:14:34PM +0000, Daniela wrote:
> > On Monday 07 June 2004 17:28, Tim Traver wrote:
> > >Hi all,
> > >Is there a way to do a quick update of a particular port directory
> > >
st the directories you want, and you can also
put this into the system crontab to periodically run it. That's pretty
convenient.
Daniela
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On Sunday 16 May 2004 22:18, Simon Barner wrote:
> Daniela wrote:
> > Hi!
> >
> > My Mozilla hangs very often, and now I attached to the hanged process
> > with gdb to see what's wrong. I have debug symbols in Mozilla, in every
> > other program and in the e
am, and
maybe I can even fix a bug. I'm familiar with assembly language and also have
basic C knowledge.
Regards,
Daniela
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g
time.
What format do you have it in? Is it an rpm too?
Daniela
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On Monday 10 May 2004 19:05, Marc Fonvieille wrote:
> On Mon, May 10, 2004 at 11:13:01AM -0700, Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote:
> > Hi,
> >If I already have the video cd, what else do I need
> > to be able to play vcd movies on X windows(im using
> > kde 3.1.4, freebsd4.9). In Windows, I usually loc
the second slice on the first IDE
drive, the device file would be: /dev/ad0s2 (at least for 4.9, I think for
5.X it's /dev/ad0s2c but I'm not sure).
Daniela
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On Saturday 17 April 2004 12:38, DoubleF wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 17, 2004 at 10:50:29AM +,
>
> Daniela probably wrote:
> > On Friday 16 April 2004 21:52, Lucas Holt wrote:
> > > > Why would one need C++ if it's converted to C anyway?
> > >
> >
On Saturday 17 April 2004 18:10, Kai Grossjohann wrote:
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > On Friday 16 April 2004 20:31, Kai Grossjohann wrote:
> >> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >> > What? C++ code is converted to C? Which compiler are
On Saturday 17 April 2004 15:30, Dan MacMillan wrote:
> From: Daniela
> Sent: April 17, 2004 04:50
>
> > OO languages can be optimized differently than non-OO languages, and
> > when you translate one language into another, this advantage gets lost.
>
> I challenge you
is counter-intuitive, but that's really just a matter of
taste (the page above uses Intel syntax).
Hope that helps, if not then just ask.
Daniela
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To
you translate one language into another, this advantage
gets lost.
I would rather say, assembly is fast and can be portable, if it's done
properly. Yes, it is an unforgiving language, but I think beginning
programmers need exactly that.
Daniela
On Friday 16 April 2004 20:31, Kai Grossjohann wrote:
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > What? C++ code is converted to C? Which compiler are you using, and
> > why the hell would a compiler do this?
>
> In the old days, C++ was implemented by a program called
On Friday 16 April 2004 19:13, Miles Lubin wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 17:20:36 +
>
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Thursday 15 April 2004 11:10, Lucas Holt wrote:
> > > Many universities teach C++ exclusiveley now. Java and C++ share some
> &g
hat
boring "hello world" stuff. I learned seven programming languages in five
months with this method.
Daniela
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se. Mine is 932532 bytes long (and it was already that
size after a fresh reinstall).
And why? Debug symbols. I love to have them everywhere.
Try to strip the file, and it will be much shorter.
Daniela
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are the contents of the IP header. They are
described in the RFC 791:
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc0791.txt
Daniela
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On Wednesday 31 March 2004 20:10, Matthew Seaman wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 31, 2004 at 08:54:28PM +0000, Daniela wrote:
> > I'm installing FreeBSD 4.9 on a brand-new machine. The problem is that it
> > doesn't recognize my network card, no matter what I do.
> > The vend
pgrade the system
with a custom kernel, and install some already-compiled ports via NFS as
well.
The BIOS has a network boot feature, could I probably make use of that?
Going with 5.X is not an option for me, I need a stable system for server use.
Regard
On Wednesday 03 March 2004 14:02, Sergey 'DoubleF' Zaharchenko wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Mar 2004 06:23:28 +0000
>
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> probably wrote:
> > In this situation, I can only use a single-byte instruction to push 4
> > bytes, everything else co
On Tuesday 02 March 2004 21:19, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> > Here it is:
> >
> > .text
> > .global _start
> > _start:
> > pushl $0
> > movl$1, %eax
> > int $0x80
> >
> > I looked everywhere (Developer's handbook, Google, ...) to find the
> > solution, but all resour
alue I push.
Please, can someone tell me that I made a really stupid error? I'm already
pulling my hair out.
Thanks for your time.
Daniela
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On Saturday 21 February 2004 10:11, Tony Frank wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Sat, Feb 21, 2004 at 02:26:24AM +, Daniela wrote:
> > I'm having problems with an USB ADSL modem (Alcatel Speed Touch). It is
> > recognized at boot time, but when I try to connect, it tells me that th
x27;t help but fall in love
> with FreeBSD!!
I have heard of a machine running FreeBSD 2.2 with 2300+ days uptime and still
running.
Mine has only reached 29 days so far, because I patch my system very often.
Daniela
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nections, and I have a great knowledge
of the TCP/IP standard, but I have never done anything with modems, so I
can't even imagine how this stuff works.
Regards,
Daniela
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On Tuesday 10 February 2004 01:17, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > On Monday 09 February 2004 14:43, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
> > > Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > > I'm having problems starting rshd. I tried it
On Monday 09 February 2004 14:43, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I'm having problems starting rshd. I tried it on two different computers
> > (yes, I know about the security risks, but the port is firewalled off). I
> > can't u
to 38 (ENOTSOCK)
= Socket operation on non-socket. It fails on the following function call:
getpeername(0, (struct sockaddr *)&from, &fromlen)
I'm no expert, but it looks like this can't work. Is this a bug, or is my
installation faulty? BTW, I'm starting rsh
On Sunday 01 February 2004 18:10, Chris Pressey wrote:
> On Sun, 1 Feb 2004 15:33:58 +
>
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Sunday 01 February 2004 01:34, Jez Hancock wrote:
> > > On Sun, Feb 01, 2004 at 01:38:44AM +, Daniela wrote:
> >
On Sunday 01 February 2004 01:34, Jez Hancock wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 01, 2004 at 01:38:44AM +0000, Daniela wrote:
> > I was wondering how I can do the following with sed (or another program):
> > 1. Output only the text from the start of the line to the first pipe
> > charact
On Sunday 01 February 2004 01:27, Robert Barten wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 01, 2004 at 01:38:44AM +0000, Daniela wrote:
> > I was wondering how I can do the following with sed (or another program):
> > 1. Output only the text from the start of the line to the first pipe
> > charact
On Sunday 01 February 2004 00:58, Marty Landman wrote:
> At 08:38 PM 1/31/2004, Daniela wrote:
> >I was wondering how I can do the following with sed (or another program):
>
> How's Perl, Daniela?
>
> >1. Output only the text from the start of the line to the firs
different
shell variables.
Regards,
Daniela
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Hi list!
I'm creating a custom installation CD-ROM (4.9-R).
I have downloaded a subset of the available packages, but the problem is:
I don't know how to automatically create the index for them, and make the
symlinks in the appropriate directories
On Friday 30 January 2004 23:32, Robert Barten wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 31, 2004 at 12:11:54AM +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
> > Just google "sample .bashrc" that should yield something you can begin
> > with. The two aren't *that* different y'know, so don't get stressed
> > about it.
> >
> > +> 2) Is t
t; configure:3909: $? = 1
Enter this in the shell and post the result:
locate librt
Maybe it can tell us what the error is.
Daniela
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On Tuesday 27 January 2004 14:31, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I need information how to either mount an ISO image r/w or find out what
> > options I must give to mkisofs to recreate it.
> > I have to add and remove some files from the
nnot be the case. There are no
> messages in a system log or mysql log.
>
> Any help is greatly appreciated, thanks is advance
Watch your top (or ps -ax) output. Anything odd there?
Daniela
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gards,
Daniela
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give every app its own channel. No more busy soundcards.
There is one drawback: If you want just one app to be able to play sound at a
time, you can only remove write permission for the other channels.
Daniela
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On Friday 23 January 2004 17:13, Martin McCormick wrote:
> I have a cron job that looks for files in /tmp and other
> directories that are more than X days old so that they go away and
> don't keep piling up. Every few days, I get a message like:
>
> --- Forwarded Message
>
>
> Date:
long tags.
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Daniela
> Sent: Monday, January 19, 2004 4:08 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Web Editing?
>
> On Monday 19 January 2004 14:25, Eric F Crist w
On Monday 19 January 2004 14:25, Eric F Crist wrote:
> What do people here use to edit HTML documents? I usually use Dreamweaver,
> but I haven't gotten the time to try to get wine working so I can run
> Dreamweaver on FreeBSD.
> TIA
I like bluefish very much. I heard wml is better, but I haven't
.
> Thanks,
>
> Adam Olsen
>
> Daniela wrote:
> >On Thursday 15 January 2004 21:35, Adam Olsen wrote:
> >>Daniela,
> >>
> >>When I press ctrl+alt+F1, I am on the virtual console, but I cannot see
> >>it because I'm getting the mode out
On Thursday 15 January 2004 21:35, Adam Olsen wrote:
> Daniela,
>
> When I press ctrl+alt+F1, I am on the virtual console, but I cannot see
> it because I'm getting the mode out of range error. X does not
> terminate - and if I press ctrl+alt+F9, I can get back to X just fin
On Thursday 15 January 2004 20:00, Adam Olsen wrote:
> Daniela,
>
> Ok - Everything works perfectly in X. When I switch to the VT, I get a
> mode out of range error. I can switch back to X just fine. Just the VT
> has this problem.
OK, when you press, say, ctrl+alt+F1 to switch
nly a short time ago.
Daniela
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On Thursday 15 January 2004 19:29, Adam Olsen wrote:
> Daniela,
>
> I see it when I switch to a virtual console only. When I switch back to
> X, I'm ok again. Also, if I exit X, I get it the error, but I can
> blindly startx again.
I don't quite understand what you
y
hair out when I found the solution.
Daniela
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ge" error.
> I had this problem with FreeBSD 4.8 as well.
This isn't necessarily nvidia-specific, I have this too with ATI.
Where and when exactly do you see the "mode out of range" error?
My best guess would be that this is an XFree86 bug.
Daniela
On Friday 09 January 2004 17:21, Ernst de Haan wrote:
> You could do something like this:
>
> tail -n `echo \`wc -l in\` | awk '{print $1 " - 10" }' | bc` in > out
>
> where 'in' is the name of the input file and 'out' the name of the
> generated file... but I'm sure there's probably a nicer and sh
he boot order is set correctly. It did
boot a DOS floppy before.
Any help would be appreciated.
Regards,
Daniela
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On Monday 29 December 2003 05:06, Rob wrote:
> Daniela,
>
> This isn't the answer you would like, but tcsh is generally considered a
> bad language for writing scripts*. It's an excellent command-line shell,
> but scripts are not its strong point.
>
> One reason
I'm writing a tcsh script and I can't figure out how to escape that #.
I tried all possible variations, and it always says I have a syntax error.
Here's one:
if ($line =~ "#*")
Or is there another way to find out if the line starts with a has
On Wednesday 24 December 2003 13:24, Sergey 'DoubleF' Zaharchenko wrote:
> On Tue, 23 Dec 2003 18:32:04 +0000
>
> Daniela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> probably wrote:
> > I have a problem with linking:
> > When I invoke make, I always give it the -DNOSTATIC option
On Monday 22 December 2003 00:36, Daniela wrote:
> On Thursday 18 December 2003 03:33, Peter Leftwich wrote:
> > Hi again,
> >
> > Could someone explain how to create a similar bootable CD-R of FreeBSD
> > that, at boot-time, would mount root to a ramdisk and run Gno
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