On Sun, 13 Oct 2013 13:17:20 +1000, yudi v wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 2:47 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
> > In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 486, Issue 7, Message: 5
> > On Sat, 28 Sep 2013 16:25:33 +0200 Roland Smith wrote:
> > > On Fri, Sep 27, 2013 at 05:37:
ernate - ie save RAM and
all state to disk and power off, then reload all RAM and state on power
return - is a 300MHz Compaq Armada 1500C (mfg '98), but using the older
APM BIOS rather than ACPI. (It's still running, 24/7/365 since 2002 :)
cheers, Ian
_
#x27;t comment on the rest of your message(s).
cheers, Ian
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ould have known
a week sooner :)
Anyone running a FreeBSD system with possibly untrusted local users
running multicast (in the case of CVE-2013-3077) or running servers
using SCTP (in the case of CVE-2013-5209) would naturally have read
these and have applied updates before t
age: 0.05% 99.94% 0.00% last 529us
dev.acpi_ibm.0.fan_speed: 2254
dev.acpi_ibm.0.fan_level: 1
dev.acpi_ibm.0.thermal: 47 46 42 -1 -1 -1 29 -1
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 47.0C
State: discharging
Remaining capacity: 95%
Remaining time: 2:36
Present rate: 1731
2e3
>
> (This is a small VirtualBox VM.)
>
> Kernel config is at http://paste2.org/h17Ih0PD
Please Walter, it's not fair to make us do the work of figuring out what
you've changed from GENERIC in that, when all you need to provide is:
# diff -uw /path/to/GENERIC /p
eystroke saver (at the very least).
As I said, unless you're into the arcane maths needed to run fdisk and
bsdlabel manually, sade (or its functions in sysinstall) is the only
safe and sane way to manage MBR disks. I'd love to be proven wrong ..
And credit to you, Devin, for developin
eBSD 8.4 and booting into it when ever needed. If I can do
> this as described above, I will have plenty of space on the disk for the
> future and a new FreeBSD release.
Sure. Another option would be a much smaller new s2 after the bigger s1
as a 'transit lounge' between slices
ecific action, like a program which has aborted,
> an unverified backup or the successful completition of
> a task.
Indeed it is. On an old laptop using APM I used to play little tunes as
the battery got down to 30, 20, 10%, noiser just before forced suspend,
which saved me not a few time
On Tue, 2 Apr 2013 01:00:44 -0400, Stephen Cook wrote:
> On 4/1/2013 5:23 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
Actually, I forwarded a message that Joe posted
to -jail and -ports. Proper attribution is what this issue's all about.
It's been pointed out to me privately that cross-posting is fro
Posted so people following -questions can gather what Joe Barbish is
fishing for in the present thread regarding copyright and licensing.
cheers, Ian
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2013 12:26:16 -0400
From: Fbsd8
To: Dirk Engling
Cc: po...@freebsd.org, freebsd-j
Joe, your mailer dropped -questions from the ccs on your response.
Fixed, Ian
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Fri, 22 Mar 2013 18:12:18 -0400
From: Fbsd8
To: freebsd-j...@freebsd.org
Cc: Ian Smith , Dirk Engling
Subject: Re: Handbook Jail Chapter rewrite available for critique
On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 11:21:29 -0400, Alejandro Imass wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 3:35 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
> > On Tue, 19 Mar 2013 17:53:30 +0100, Dirk Engling wrote:
[.. also chopping mercilessly ..]
> > > # Copyright 2010, Qjail project. A
ain the idea of removing all of
the worthy content of the present Chapter 16 - even if it does need some
updating - and replace it with this effort is laughable, yet stranger
things have happened if there's any disconnect between developers and
documenters .. witness the Handbook firewall
with
messed up screen, can you ping it, or maybe ssh in, or is it dead?
If you boot it but don't start X, can it come back from suspend?
Frankly, unless you're _really_ keen to get STR working, this could turn
into not just a rabbithole, but the whole warren - you'll have to really
want to be the bunny!
Sounds like a very nice machine otherwise :)
cheers, Ian
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rs.html
> (7.2.1.2 Firefox and Adobe Flash Plugin) - no problem
>
> In fact, no problems at all!
>
> I can't recommend it enough.
>
> Anton
Suspend and resume?
cheers, Ian
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:25 +1100
===
I forwarded the above (plus dig results proving there was nothing wrong
with our reverse DNS on some big nameservers) to postmas...@zoneedit.com
but have received no response, and of course we have no way to contact
$poor_innocent. Not a good look.
cheers, Ian
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or what level of
testing it's had in the field, but I have to assume you've already
discussed your issues with its author, Ruslan Bukin ?
Sorry I can't offer anything more concrete, and good luck.
cheers, Ian
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lling X on 9.1 before newer packages
are available - and it IS painful or at least very slow to build on the
likes of 1GHz laptops - I can't see any reason the X that was working
as of mid-October would be any problem, unless there's been some major
revision or security scare since? The
add it.
If I were going to install say X + KDE on that laptop - which I'm not -
I'd merrily use what was fresh in October and upgrade as packages become
available again, and build anything needing 'more freshness' from ports.
cheers, Ian
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echo "ok !"
> fi
> done
Or, to avoid subshell(s) created in pipeline(s), and subsequent loss of
variables set in the subshell(s) to their parents, rather than using:
cat foo.txt | while read LINE1
[..]
cat bar.txt | while read LINE2
[..]
done
[..]
done
you can use:
while read LINE1
[..]
while read LINE2
[..]
done < bar.txt
[..]
done < foo.txt
cheers, Ian
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be documented in the actual sound driver's
> documentation, as pcm and mixer are interfaces to the driver
> functionality (FreeBSD kernel mixer <-> hardware driver).
>
> Because of use the source Luke, I found "use igain for the mic
> 20dB boost" in /usr/src/s
eral. It's very fast and light, too, for recording or playback.
cheers, Ian
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up' for me, at least.
Probably worth mentioning that this only ever affected RELENG_9_1, ie
9.1 BETAs and RCs, not RELENG_9 (ie 9-STABLE) sources.
Thanks Bjoern!
cheers, Ian
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2012 12:20:23 + (UTC)
From: Bjoern A. Zeeb
To: FreeBSD Rel
d the elapsed time. If
> that has been possible, chances are good that KDE in its
> much advanced manner has something comparable.
Maybe there's something new in KDE4. I'm sticking with 3.5 on my T23;
I only have 768MB RAM :) and it does everything I need on the desktop.
It
ings are poorly explained.
Those guys were losing 768MB or more, but had plenty to spare. You?
I'm still running an older Xorg here, so had no idea about any default
10 minute blanktime. I'll remember that ..
[..]
cheers, Ian
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ly should
only be shown on verbose dmesg IMO, as they tend to alarm people - QED]
> On 08/16/12 00:06, Steve O'Hara-Smith wrote:
> >Are you running any kind of screensaver ?
> >Sometimes the OpenGL screen saver modules crash without proper
> > hardware support. If you're running a screensaver try disabling it and just
> > using display blanking.
>
> I'm not running a screensaver, just blanking the screen.
Yes but how, where, using what software? It's still the main suspect ..
cheers, Ian
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EWALL_VERBOSE
> options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
> options IPDIVERT
> options IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT
>
> (the rest like in GENERIC).
Just to mention: you don't actually need to include FIREWALL* or DIVERT
in kernels these days; a GENERIC kernel will work fin
ould be
relatively trivial, without needing to mess with the shutdown code.
Present circumstances don't permit me to work on this further, but I do
think it could be a worthwhile and not so hard project for 'someone' :)
cheers, Ian
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On Mon, 23 Jul 2012 13:13:47 +0300, Eugen Konkov wrote:
> ????, Ian.
> ?? ?? 23 2012 ?., 8:27:50:
> IS> In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 424, Issue 10, Message: 10
> IS> On Sun, 22 Jul 2012 14:55:46 +0300 Eugen Konkov
> wrote:
> IS> Hi Eugen,
22) to w.x.y.z
dst-port 22 in recv ng0 setup
Myself, I'd be more interested in a last-match timestamp than a count
for table entries, but that won't happen either for the above reasons :)
cheers, Ian
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On Sun, 8 Jul 2012 21:00:40 +0100, Bruce Cran wrote:
> On 08/07/2012 16:06, Ian Smith wrote:
> > In general they're not distinct in usage from any other type of disk.
>
> The more expensive disks of course support TRIM so you'd want to pass -t to
> newfs to enab
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 422, Issue 10, Message: 29
On Sun, 8 Jul 2012 07:41:59 -0400 Carmel wrote:
> On Sat, 7 Jul 2012 20:36:36 -0600 (MDT)
> Warren Block articulated:
>
> > On Sat, 7 Jul 2012, Carmel wrote:
> >
> > > This is probably a dumb question, but does gpart even work on
On Mon, 25 Jun 2012 09:43:35 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
> On Mon, 25 Jun 2012, Ian Smith wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 22 Jun 2012 06:47:48 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
> > > On Fri, 22 Jun 2012, Ian Smith wrote:
> > >
> > > Well, there is devel/ar
On Fri, 22 Jun 2012 06:47:48 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
> On Fri, 22 Jun 2012, Ian Smith wrote:
>
> > I thought I saw something somewhere (maybe just wishful thinking) about
> > FreeBSD on the Arduino, which normally runs a sort of embedded Linux,
> > that c
he quadricopter to follow me around the
room at parties - at my age I need something really impressive :)
On the FreeBSD side there's advanced work, I gather, on ARM and Atmel
MEGA 32-bit and MIPS platforms at least. Personally I consider these
'big iron' and far prefer writing in
some threads in May on
freebsd-stable@ subject: "[stable 9] broken hwpstate calls" that may or
may not have yet resulted in a patch you could try.
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2012-May/thread.html
Thread continues in June, as a perhaps more general
spewing
spam, provider complains and/or cuts access .. you know the deal.
In that sort of environment, none of the punters had any clue about
forging MACs or anything vaguely like that, and it stopped people
randomly plugging boxes into the network. Horses for co
g
resident troll for Microsoft out of the woodwork for a proper full-tilt
rant, replete with inimitable "socialism/fascism" jibe. Gotta love it!
Ian
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C filtering
rules (remembering the reversed order of MAC addresses vs IP addresses,
and to allow broadcasts as well), pass good guys and/or block bad guys,
then deal with your normal IPv4|v6 traffic in a separate section(s).
Or you could just split the flows into two streams, one for layer2 for
y to me dst-port PORT1 limit src-addr 9
to prevent any one source address opening more than 9 connections, or
fwd IP,PORT2 tcp from any to me dst-port PORT1 limit dst-port 42
to limit total open connections by everyone to dst-port PORT1 to 42.
cheers, Ian
_
ely logged, but last-resort stuff.
OTOH this may be something postmaster@ does routinely, what do I know :)
> Maybe I should resend the message to postmas...@freebsd.org instead
> of freebsd-questions-ow...@freebsd.org?
>
> This problem relates
Jos, did you not get my response to your original query over a week ago?
I see it made the list archives. Anyway this second time around, Robert
Bonomi wins gold for the best guess, with even fewer clues to go on :-)
cheers, Ian (who probably said too much, but doesn't r
On Mon, 21 May 2012 16:30:59 +0100, Paul Macdonald wrote:
> On 21/05/2012 14:50, Ian Smith wrote:
> > In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 416, Issue 1, Message: 26
> > On Mon, 21 May 2012 10:06:12 +0100 Paul Macdonald wrote:
> >
> > > can anyone sug
.0.0.0/8 to any
t23# ipfw -q add 137 deny all from 180.0.0.0/8 to any
t23# ipfw show 137
001370 0 deny ip from 180.0.0.0/8 to any
So what doesn't work? (apart from scattergun removal of small pieces of
a whole lot of Asian countries, incl. Japan, Indonesia, Aust
vr0 - but the network cannot connect
> to the internet via rl0.
>
> If there are any commands that would help collect information leading
> to the answer I would appreciate any feedback.
rc.firewall, though not perfect, provides a good, safe basic firewall
for your
from the just-rolled maillog.0, the other finds maillog.0
has disappeared before getting to run bzip2 on it? So, two files per
day, and the above message?
> On my other FreeBSD server the same cronjob goes ok...
Check /etc/crontab and /etc/newsyslog.conf on both, and make sure you'
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 414, Issue 1, Message: 13
On Sun, 06 May 2012 21:48:19 +0100 Chris Whitehouse wrote:
> On 06/05/2012 17:31, Ian Smith wrote:
> > Anton, I'm not sure what the state of the art is for multiple network
> > profiles for such as wireless vs wire
rt is for multiple network
profiles for such as wireless vs wired, home and work etc, but look
around. I recall one called just 'profile' from years ago, and more
recently talk of 'failover' setups for wired/wireless nets (probably in
n...@freebsd.org), but I've no
the wireless connection,
> even to the router:
>
> % ping 192.168.1.1
> PING 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1): 56 data bytes
> ping: sendto: No route to host
> ping: sendto: No route to host
> ^C
What sayeth 'netstat -finet -rn' ?
cheers, Ian
___
On Wed, 2 May 2012, Arthur Chance wrote:
> On 05/01/12 20:01, Ian Smith wrote:
> > In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 413, Issue 4, Message: 7
> > On Tue, 01 May 2012 12:59:36 +0100 Arthur Chance
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Every once in a while the nigh
;authpriv.none;kern.!=info;mail.crit;news.err;ntp.err;local0.none;ftp.none
/var/log/messages
kern.=info /var/log/kerninfo.log
# touch /var/log/kerninfo.log
# service syslogd restart
cheers, Ian
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http://lis
hat complicated to change hostname(1)
t23# grep hostname /etc/rc.conf
hostname="t23.smithi.id.au"
t23# hostname
t23.smithi.id.au
t23# hostname boofar
t23# hostname
boofar
t23# csh
boofar# exit
exit
t23# hostname
boofar
t23# hostname t23.smithi.id.au
t23# hostname
t23.smithi.id.au
cheers
works
fine now !
Thanks a lot for the fix, but this server is a clean install of 9.0-RELEASE
that I installed about 2-3 months ago. I never changed the permission myself on
that file so I guess there is something wrong that would need to be fixed
(unless it's already fixed in newer versio
e something working out of the
box I guess, I doubt we're supposed to change permissions to make it work
Any help would be appreciated.
Regards
~~
Ian Lord
MSD Informatique
143 Rue des Fauvettes
St-Colomban (Québec) J5K 0E2
Tél: (514) 776-MSDI ->
g sleep 60
# /usr/bin/jobs -l
# jobs -l
[1] + 86819 Running sleep 60
# exit
t23# jobs -l
[1] + 86793 Running sleep 60
t23# jobs -l
[1]86793 Done sleep 60
t23# jobs -l
t23#
cheers, Ian
_
ne who's been
subscribed to freebsd-security@ for 12 or so years, I look forward to
seeing informed responses to some of schultz' issues. In any event,
{s,}he promptly took Julian's advice to post it there, where one aspect
has already attrac
iting from the dummynet pipe or from
ng_ipfw(4) node is not passed though the firewall again. Other-
wise, after an action, the packet is reinjected into the firewall
at the next rule.
It seems that you may have one_pass set to 1. Set to 0, packets
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 391, Issue 10, Message: 25
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 01:44:53 -0600 Tim Daneliuk wrote:
> On 12/04/2011 01:04 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
>
>
> >
> > For one, google 'icmp redirect attack'
>
&
ll need to generally deny inbound pings except friendlies
# pingok="{ was a list of IP addresses[/masks] allowed to ping }"
#% XXX better using a pre-loaded table (for OOB on the fly additions)
pingok="table\(8\)"
$fwadd pass icmp from any to any in r
On Tue, 22 Nov 2011 11:40:45 -0500, William Bulley wrote:
> According to Ian Smith on Sat, 11/19/11 at 13:29:
> >
> > Unfortunately that concentrates on creating a GPT layout, encouraging a
> > Linux-like single (plus a boot) partition - forget using dump/restore -
ice 4)
% fdisk -p ad0
# /dev/ad0
g c232581 h16 s63
p 1 0x0b 63 8385867
p 2 0xa5 8385930 125821080
p 3 0xa5 134207010 33543342
p 4 0xa5 167750730 66685815
a 4
cheers, Ian
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ng and maintaining
many existing systems. I've yet to install RC1, and here's RC2, but I'm
encouraged to see the memstick.img has dropped GPT partitioning for MBR
with a single provider (eg da0a) so it can be again used by sysinstall;
in my case I'd rather use that than manually newfs needed partitions.
I hope someone will correct any now-obsolete concerns I've expressed :)
cheers, Ian
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ps the -o and -p options to tar(1) might help here, but the bottom
line is that msdosfs is not really a suitable target for UFS files. I
tend to use zip(1) - which keeps perms and ownership, though not hard
links - to stash dirs and files on msdosfs, but format flash disks - or
at least
in its development. There is just no 'esteemed
leadership' assigning tasks to teams of programmers, let alone having
absurd goals of 'beating Microsoft' in the consumer gadgetry market; by
and large, people work on what interests them or their employers.
Microsoft's
On Wed, 6 Jul 2011, Unga wrote:
> On Tue, 7/5/11, Ian Smith wrote:
> > > Does anybody successfully use the "ipfw fwd"? If so
> > > in which FreeBSD version?
>
> > Not I, but many do. On the face of it the rule looks
> > correct. Do you
&g
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 370, Issue 2, Message: 14
On Mon, 4 Jul 2011 09:11:07 -0700 (PDT) Unga wrote:
> --- On Mon, 7/4/11, Unga wrote:
>
> > From: Unga
> > Subject: ipfw: getsockopt(IP_FW_ADD): Invalid argument
> > To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> > Date: Monday, July 4, 2011
e 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
UNREF FILE I=804237 OWNER=smithi MODE=100640
SIZE=0 MTIME=Jun 29 20:29 2011
CLEAR? no
** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
401132 files, 8584016 used, 3155190 free (88926 frags, 383
mple' ruleset in
/etc/rc.firewall especially regarding placement of NAT rules, never mind
whether using natd or ipfw nat, rather than the poor Handbook examples.
Depending on what protocol port 12345 is, you may be better off using
static rather than dynamic rules to handle it .. anoth
;t be loaded as a module as it impacts many parts of the stack.
Neither do you have to use ipfw nat; natd works as well as ever, but I'd
be surprised if this isn't an issue more to do with your rule placement.
cheers, Ian
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freebsd-question
...
Not at all; sysinstall just sees it as a primary partition (ie FreeBSD
slice) of type 0x05 (IIRC) ie as a non-bootable partition, completely
ignored by boot0{,ext} or any 'normal' MBR code for that matter .. the
FreeBSD convention of naming these as s5 etc is a convenient fiction
I am Ian Davies ;an accredited vendor of Alliot Groups, a
subsidiary firm of Emirates International Holding (EIH); A
private
equity funds holding company that focuses on hedge funds.
I have contacted you in the hope that you can be my
associate to assume the new recipient of a Fixed
I am Ian Davies ;an accredited vendor of Alliot Groups, a subsidiary firm of
Emirates International Holding (EIH); A private equity funds holding company
that focuses on hedge funds.
I have contacted you in the hope that you can be my associate by accepting to
stand as the legal recipient to a
ng to deal with perhaps half of 25,000 similarly vulnerable laptops,
at least 1% of which will be trying hard to spam or portscan the planet
at any given time - nearly all, as Martin points out, without intent or
knowledge of their poor blighted owners .. and they're a smarter crew!
chee
stamping
their feet, demanding we change the way we've always used these lists.
> are you implying that these
> students are using the University's web mail for possible illegal
> actions and no one is policing that action?
Ah Jerry, good to see you end your admonition wit
loadable, rule-based
> forwarding disabled, default to deny, logging disabled
> ipfw0: bpf attached
There are a number of outstanding PRs regarding module loading by natd
and (if used) firewall_nat, and the use of these by /etc/rc.firewall.
If enabling natd in
andard and does not say anything about
> the interfaces, that info is in rc.conf above
>
> === /var/log/messages extract
> dhcpd: bridge0: not found
Yes; at that time your bridge hadn't been created, ie it had no members.
cheers, Ian
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affect its environment when used in pipelines.
The braces aren't relevant because it's a pipeline, so even without:
echo | B=2; echo $B
writes '', but
echo | { B=2; echo $B; }
or (equivalent within a pipeline)
echo | ( B=2; echo $B; )
writes '2'.
cheer
ies? and YMMV.
Colour me very surprised not having to be root to do any of those,
especially those that do write to the kernel message buffer ..
cheers, Ian
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Apart from charging Svein Skogen with 'signature too long' :) I can't
imagine why they or their robot might have taken offense. At least at
lists.freebsd.org only something pretty ex
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.01; Windows 95)"
84.127.236.75 - - [06/Feb/2011:10:25:53 +1100] "GET http://www.ebay.com/
HTTP/1.1" 403 287 "-" "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.01; Windows 95)"
(forbidden browser strings &/or IP addresses in $apachedir
led analysis of IPv4 depletion
stats and predictions over many years, hard to go past Geoff Huston's:
http://www.potaroo.net - blog
http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2010-10/when.html - explanatory column Oct '10
http://www.potaroo.net/tools/ipv4/index.html - the modelling as of today
che
d some
new techniques. I expect to steal lots of it wholesale (acknowledged :)
cheers, Ian
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On Sat, 15 Jan 2011, Ian Smith wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Jan 2011, per...@pluto.rain.com wrote:
[..]
> > Last I knew having a file open, even for writing, was no protection
> > against its last link being removed. The _inode_ won't go away
> > until the last handle is
On Sat, 15 Jan 2011, per...@pluto.rain.com wrote:
> Ian Smith wrote:
>
> > Swe, I suspect the reason you can't just delete these files is
> > likely because something has them open for writing, and the system
> > won't let you remove such files, naturally
l
worth implementing, now that you've been bitten. If you don't want to
look at your logs too often or need blow-by-blow details, reducing the
logging level to more severe problems may prove more useful longterm.
cheers, Ian
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, for years now.
Seeing Gary already has the module built, he could save it, remove then
install the package and replace the module IF php was otherwise built
with the same options, but the only way to get the module is build it.
In the almost singular case of php, I'd stick with building th
saver! +1 for you and your wiki page. +1 for Warren's page
> (
> http://www.wonkity.com/~wblock/docs/html/disksetup.html#_the_old_standard_way_tt_fdisk_8_tt_and_tt_bsdlabel_8_tt)
> and +5 for Ian and his incredible patience. Hodgepodging Warren's and
> Bruce's pages tog
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011, Adam Vande More wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 3:06 AM, Ian Smith wrote
>
> > Your dd of the first 71 sectors looked right, MBR looks ok, sectors 1-62
> > are zeroes, boot1 and boot2 from sector 63-70 seem normal, after you
> > used 'W
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 09:11:55 +, Bruce Cran wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 20:06:42 +1100 (EST)
> Ian Smith wrote:
>
> > Just be sure NOT to use the 'A' option for auto-partitioning again;
> > I'm sure I saw some problem with that on 8.1, not sure if
On Wed, 5 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 5, 2011 at 12:44 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
> >
> > Saw Chris' later message that -F isn't there for him, but here's what
> > should be, on the data, the sure-fire way to clobber that last sector:
> &g
lve fewer keystrokes -- as in
> this case.
Do you know of any 'less useless' or more economical way to do such as:
% cat /boot/boot1 /boot/boot2 | diff - /boot/boot
%
?, Ian
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On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Warren Block wrote:
> On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Chris Brennan wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
> >
> > > On Mon, 3 Jan 2011 16:31:17 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
> > > [.. trimming ccs, selec
I've offended some gods?
> Well, the irony here, the failing drive is *ALSO* 8.1, I can slap
> that back in and fire it up, it still boots and works, I just didn't
> want to take the risk of the drive's cheese sliding off it's cracker.
How hard is it to re
On Mon, 3 Jan 2011, Ian Smith wrote:
> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/da4 skip=N
>
> where N is the known total number of sectors minus 34, should do it?
Argh .. that should be seek=N, not skip. Up way too late ..
cheers, Ian
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ackup table, thanks. So:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/da4 skip=N
where N is the known total number of sectors minus 34, should do it?
If not, we can't rule out Mike's concerns about BIOS incompatibility
or such, but this sure sounds like the next thing Chris should try.
cheers, Ian
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On Sun, 2 Jan 2011 01:15:35 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 1, 2011 at 10:20 PM, Ian Smith wrote:
[..]
> > The bsdlabel lives in sector 1 (counting from 0) of the slice concerned,
> > specifically the first 0x114 (276d) bytes, in the second sector of the
> > b
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 10, Message: 23
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 19:37:10 -0500 Michael Powell
wrote:
> Ian Smith wrote:
>
> > In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 343, Issue 5, Message: 10
> > On Tue, 28 Dec 2010 11:02:45 -0500 Chris Brennan
> > wrote
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 11:17:48 -0500, Chris Brennan wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 12:24 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
>
> > I don't expect this to be anything like that. Please show a) how many
> > slices you allocated and how big this FreeBSD slice is and b) how you
>
x27;t expect this to be anything like that. Please show a) how many
slices you allocated and how big this FreeBSD slice is and b) how you
partitioned the FreeBSD slice into (and sizes of) / /var/ /usr [/tmp?]
and especially swap.
I wouldn't allocate any less than 1GB for your
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