On Wednesday 15 November 2006 01:24, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
> On Thursday, 9 November 2006 at 8:46:00 -0600, Christopher M. Hobbs wrote:
[sharing ports tree]
> > Also, what about user accounts between machines?
>
> With NFS you typically have the same user ID on all related machines.
>
> > I
On Thursday, 9 November 2006 at 8:46:00 -0600, Christopher M. Hobbs wrote:
> Hello, list!
>
> I've got about six production servers and a couple of workstations
> running FreeBSD 6.1-STABLE and 6.2-PRERELEASE. Some of these machines
> are sitting in DMZ, the others are internal. Currently, each
Hello, list!
I've got about six production servers and a couple of workstations
running FreeBSD 6.1-STABLE and 6.2-PRERELEASE. Some of these machines
are sitting in DMZ, the others are internal. Currently, each of them
has their own ports tree.
How terrible of an idea would it be to take one of
On Thu, Nov 09, 2006 at 09:10:49AM -0600, Christopher Hobbs wrote:
> This message may inadvertently get sent twice. For some reason,
> mx1.freebsd.org has been rejecting messages from my work address. Here's
> the message that I originally attempted to post:
>
> Thanks!
> cmh
>
> -- BEGIN SNIP
On 11/9/06, Christopher Hobbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How terrible of an idea would it be to take one of the production
servers that isn't really doing a whole lot of work, and make it's
/usr/ports available over NFS to the other machines? Am I headed in a
bad direction here?
That's what I
This message may inadvertently get sent twice. For some reason,
mx1.freebsd.org has been rejecting messages from my work address. Here's
the message that I originally attempted to post:
Thanks!
cmh
-- BEGIN SNIP --
Hello, list!
I've got about six production servers and a couple of workstatio