On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 8:16 AM, Gilles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello
>
>Before I go ahead and mess with that 6.3 host... I figured I should
> ask the experts.
>
> I'd like to add the APC cache add-on, but I don't know how to do this.
> After compiling and installing /usr/ports/www/pe
Hi Guys,
$ cd /usr/src
$ export D=/jails/src
$ export H=/jails/tld/domain/host
$ export B=/jails/base
$ sudo mkdir -p $D $H B
$ sudo make installworld DESTDIR=$D
$ sudo make distribution DESTDIR=$D
$ sudo rsync -vrlHpEogXtD $D $B
$ cd $B
$ ln -s usr/home
$ cd $B/usr/home
$ mkdir pgollucci
[/etc/
Philip M. Gollucci wrote:
FWIW: the unionfs seems very stable atm the moment.
$ df -h
Filesystem SizeUsed Avail Capacity Mounted
/dev/ar0s1h 24G 12G 11G52%/usr/home
:/usr/home/jails/base 49G 36G 11G77%
/usr/home/j
On Fri, 16 May 2008 10:05:10 +0300, "Odhiambo Washington"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>That is supposed to have happened automatically! The extension is supposed
>to have been added to /usr/local/etc/php/extensions.ini
> so basically you just need to restart apache (after configuring whatever
> opt
Oliver Howe wrote:
> I bought a new storage server and installed freebsd7 onto it.
> it came with two raid partitions, one of 32GB which i used
> for the o/s and one of 4.7TB which i am planning to use as a
> nfs partition. everything went fine during the install, fdisk
> said that there was 4
On Fri, 16 May 2008 09:39:17 +0200, Gilles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>Thanks, but no trace of it:
My mistake. I forgot to run "make install" :-/
But then, I haven't had my first cup of java this morning :-)
Sorry about that, guys.
___
freebsd-questio
Please clarify these :
(1) Is iSCSI initiator not currently implemented for FreeBSD ?
no idea.
(2) There is no "iSCSI target daemon" currently ?
/usr/ports/net/iscsi-target
unless you HAVE to interwork with iSCSI, use ggate.
___
freebsd-questions@fr
hello, I have updated qith command freebsd-update
and hte command
freebsd-update fetch
shows me I have already hte latest patch level 7.0-RELEASE-p1
anyway uname -a shows me always 7.0-RELEASE #0
how can I do to have uname to show me the correct patch level ?
thanks
Rick
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of RJ45
Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 9:29 AM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: freebsd-update question
hello, I have updated qith command freebsd-update
and hte command
freebsd-update fetch
shows me I
RJ45 wrote:
hello, I have updated qith command freebsd-update
and hte command
freebsd-update fetch
shows me I have already hte latest patch level 7.0-RELEASE-p1
anyway uname -a shows me always 7.0-RELEASE #0
how can I do to have uname to show me the correct patch level ?
thanks
Rick
___
shows me I have already hte latest patch level 7.0-RELEASE-p1
anyway uname -a shows me always 7.0-RELEASE #0
how can I do to have uname to show me the correct patch level ?
uname tells you about running kernel
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mail
Le 15/05/08 à 18:02, Mike Ginsburg téléscripta :
> A question to all of your xorg experts.
>
> I'm running FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE-p8 with xorg-7.3.1. Up until today I was
> running on an PCIe RV280 (9200 Pro) with a dvi splitter to give me 2
> monitors.
>
> Today I added a 2nd PCI card (Radeon 9260
I had this weird problem today, and I would like to know what caused it:
I have two home servers, on different locations, on two ADSL lines using
dynamic DNS. One is running Debian, the other FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE.
I usually ssh from one to the other. Today, the debian server had a
public (inte
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 12:51:24AM +0100, Frank Shute wrote:
> On Tue, May 13, 2008 at 10:25:37PM -0600, Chad Perrin wrote:
> >
> > I'm looking for an easier way to insert interrobangs and other non-ASCII
> > characters (em-dashes, et cetera) into text on my FreeBSD laptop than by
> > way of copy/p
Bruce Cran wrote:
Volker Jahns wrote:
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 09:53:02PM +0200, Volker Jahns wrote:
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 12:18:57PM -0700, Chuck Swiger wrote:
On May 15, 2008, at 11:57 AM, Volker Jahns wrote:
FreeBSD 6.2 running on X86 hardware (FSC) shows a remarkable time
drift
runnin
On 5/16/08, Catalin Miclaus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've noticed this was solved after recompiling the kernel.
> Maybe it's also another method available, but since I'm using a custom
> kernel I did not looked for it.
I have the same problem here. Uname shows "7.0-RELEASE" after reboot
and
On Friday 16 May 2008 12:32:35 Manolis Kiagias wrote:
> I had this weird problem today, and I would like to know what caused it:
>
> I have two home servers, on different locations, on two ADSL lines using
> dynamic DNS. One is running Debian, the other FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE.
>
> I usually ssh from o
I have two home servers, on different locations, on two ADSL lines using
dynamic DNS. One is running Debian, the other FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE.
I usually ssh from one to the other. Today, the debian server had a
public (internet) IP ending in 255. The FreeBSD 7.0 system refused to
communicate with i
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
I have two home servers, on different locations, on two ADSL lines
using
dynamic DNS. One is running Debian, the other FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE.
I usually ssh from one to the other. Today, the debian server had a
public (internet) IP ending in 255. The FreeBSD 7.0 system ref
Nikos Vassiliadis wrote:
On Friday 16 May 2008 12:32:35 Manolis Kiagias wrote:
I had this weird problem today, and I would like to know what caused it:
I have two home servers, on different locations, on two ADSL lines using
dynamic DNS. One is running Debian, the other FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE.
I know that recompiling the kernel was a way to do it but I Wanted to
avoid it.
thanks
On Fri, 16 May 2008, Simon Jolle wrote:
On 5/16/08, Catalin Miclaus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I've noticed this was solved after recompiling the kernel.
Maybe it's also another method available, but
i don't think it's freebsd version dependent, unless developers made a bug.
all these systems are behind ADSL routers and use NAT. Their internal
addresses are in the 192.168.0.X range.
I could easily consider this a problem of the (cheap) ADSL routers, but 6
very likely. yesterday i config
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
i don't think it's freebsd version dependent, unless developers made
a bug.
all these systems are behind ADSL routers and use NAT. Their internal
addresses are in the 192.168.0.X range.
I could easily consider this a problem of the (cheap) ADSL routers,
but 6
very l
Hi guys, I need your advice:
I am IT manager with a company who is running couple of websites having 2-3
million hits per month each.
Present configuratoins is:
Dell PowerEdge 2950 (2 processors)
4GB RAM
4 discs (15000rpm SAS 146GB)
RAID10
Operating System: FreeBSD
Actually, company is planning t
Manolis Kiagias wrote:
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
i don't think it's freebsd version dependent, unless developers
made a bug.
all these systems are behind ADSL routers and use NAT. Their
internal addresses are in the 192.168.0.X range.
I could easily consider this a problem of the (cheap) ADSL r
but WHAT are external IP's of these routers. this is important.
if the "problem" host is A.B.C.255 check if routers external IP isn't
A.B.C.something
No, I just checked again with DynDNS update logs and all three routers had
very different IP addresses at the time I was trying.
try freebsd
Hi all - I'm just in the process of replacing an aging Dell system with
a cheap Acer AMD64 box with the latest BIOS. I installed 7.0 from the
release ISOs, then updated the source-tree via cvsup to the latest
7.0-STABLE this morning. I rebuilt world and the kernel (SANTAFE kernel
conf is a plain co
On Thu, 15 May 2008 14:49:26 -0400
"Bob McConnell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>> My code so far:
> >>>
> >>> - tear along dotted line -
> >>> tapFD = open ("/dev/tap0", O_RDWR);
> >>> if (tapFD < 0) {
> >>>fprintf (stderr, "Failed to open /dev/tap0: %d.\n",
>
> Please clarify these :
> (1) Is iSCSI initiator not currently implemented for FreeBSD ?
> (2) There is no "iSCSI target daemon" currently ?
>
Check this post, it has step by step instructions for 6.x:
http://www.southernledger.com/blogs/ee99ee/?p=33
___
Checking with the internal log of the router confirmed the suspicions of
people answering my question: The adsl router is responsible for the problem
with the 255 address. It seems it cuts out these addresses as some kind of
"attack". No changes in configuration (firewall, protection and so on)
unsigned char * buffer = (unsigned char*)malloc(1514);
is stdlib.h included (i'm asking for sure)?
if (buffer = NULL) {
if (buffer == NULL) {
fprintf (stderr, "No memory available.\n");
close (tapFD);
exit(3);
}
When I replace the malloc with an automatic array, the
er
"Bob McConnell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> From: Bob McConnell
>>From: Wojciech Puchar
The basic setup sequence is:
ifconfig tap0 create
ifconfig tap0 inet 10.3.4.254/24
route -v add 10.3.4.0/24 10.3.4.254
>>>
>>> ifconfig tap0 up
>>>
>>> ?
>>>
>>
>> 'ifconfig'
Hello,
I have installed linux-sun-jre1.6.0 and I have an error stating
# java -version
/usr/local/linux-sun-jre1.6.0/bin/java: error while loading shared
libraries: libjli.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or
directory
What do you suggest me to make that work properly - I
From: Wojciech Puchar
>> if (buffer = NULL) {
>>
>> if (buffer == NULL) {
>>
> anyway not using malloc is good habit :) but it should work anyway.
> try
The test after the malloc was the problem. I have been working in a
poorly designed scripting language for several months where the
Thank you for the response Baptiste. I was under the impression that
Xinerama no longer worked with xorg 7.3. I tried setting up my
xorg.conf both with and without it, and it seems to be having problems
re-defining a device on the same PCI bus (1:0:0).
I have it so that X will start up, and
Hello,
I've recently started getting kernel panics with a FreeBSD 6.3 machine,
using a minimal i386 custom kernel. I don't believe it's a hardware
issue as they always seem to coincide with a crash on SqueezeCenter,
apparently during heavy usage of the MySQL backend.
I'm unable to get a cra
How to get the best results from FreeBSD questions.
===
Last update $Date: 2005/08/10 02:21:44 $
This is a regular posting to the FreeBSD questions mailing list. If
you got it in answer to a message you sent, it means that the sender
thinks that a
The trouble with books is that you can't update them the way you can a web page
or any other online documentation. The result is that most leading edge
computer books are out of date almost before they are printed. Unfortunately,
The Complete FreeBSD, published by O'Reilly, is no exception. Inev
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
Checking with the internal log of the router confirmed the suspicions
of people answering my question: The adsl router is responsible for
the problem with the 255 address. It seems it cuts out these
addresses as some kind of "attack". No changes in configuration
(firew
Christopher Key wrote:
Can anyone suggest what I should be doing to try to get a crash dump
successfully to further diagnose this? Is there anything else relevant
I should post?
Configure DDB and obtain the traceback from that instead (see the
developers handbook)
Kris
__
Hello,
I just installed FreeBSD 7.0 on a Dell Vostro 1200. It has Intel's
GM965 chipset and I cannot get X to work at the right resolution of
1280x800.
I updated and reinstalled the x11-drivers/x11-video-i810 and
x11-drivers/x11-intel ports. But X still dies whenever I tell it to
use "i810" drive
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 10:51 PM, Nishita Desai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I updated and reinstalled the x11-drivers/x11-video-i810 and
> x11-drivers/x11-intel ports.
Sorry, that should be xf86-video-i810 and xf86-video-intel.
Regards,
Nishita
___
fre
Nishita Desai wrote:
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 10:51 PM, Nishita Desai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I updated and reinstalled the x11-drivers/x11-video-i810 and
x11-drivers/x11-intel ports.
Sorry, that should be xf86-video-i810 and xf86-video-intel.
Regards,
Nishita
You only need xf86-video-int
> Nishita Desai writes:
Nishita> Hello,
Nishita> I just installed FreeBSD 7.0 on a Dell Vostro 1200. It has Intel's
Nishita> GM965 chipset and I cannot get X to work at the right resolution of
Nishita> 1280x800.
Nishita> I updated and reinstalled the x11-drivers/x11-video-
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 11:04 PM, Dominic Fandrey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You only need xf86-video-intel and enter "intel" as the Driver in your
> xorg.conf. I'm running a GM965 at 1440x900 this way.
>
> I even think that x11-video-i810 and xf86-video-intel conflict. So best
> deinstall both
xorg.conf. I'm running a GM965 at 1440x900 this way.
I even think that x11-video-i810 and xf86-video-intel conflict. So best
deinstall both and only install xf86-video-intel afterwards.
I cannot pkg_delete nor pkg_deinstall xf86-video-i810. Here's the error:
--
pkg_delete: package 'xf86-video-
> Nishita Desai writes:
Nishita> On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 11:04 PM, Dominic Fandrey <[EMAIL
PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> You only need xf86-video-intel and enter "intel" as the Driver in your
>> xorg.conf. I'm running a GM965 at 1440x900 this way.
>>
>> I even think that x11-vide
On Fri, 16 May 2008, Bob McConnell wrote:
From: Wojciech Puchar
if (buffer = NULL) {
if (buffer == NULL) {
anyway not using malloc is good habit :) but it should work anyway.
try
The test after the malloc was the problem. I have been working in a
:)
Kris Kennaway wrote:
Christopher Key wrote:
Can anyone suggest what I should be doing to try to get a crash dump
successfully to further diagnose this? Is there anything else
relevant I should post?
Configure DDB and obtain the traceback from that instead (see the
developers handbook)
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 11:27 PM, Wojciech Puchar
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> deinstall
>
> xorg
> xorg-drivers (both are meta-packages)
>
> cd /usr/ports/x11-drivers/xorg-drivers
> make config
>
> select drivers you need
>
> then make install clean
Thank you all. That seems to have done it.
re
Hi everyone.
I use ipfw on one of our servers to help protect against some HTTP
attacks we were receiving recently. The rules are very basic but were
helping with the type of attack we were receiving:
=
flush="/sbin/ipfw -q flush"
cmd="/sbin/ipfw -q add"
$flus
I have a 486 DEEP GREEN system I would like to put some version of FreeBSD on
(I have my reasons).
I have other inquiries out on this, but if I correctly recall (and that is a
real rusty recall at best), the max memory you could get on one of these beasts
was 48MB, unless they made some bigger,
I asked Jonathan Chen what was the easiest way to do this. Was it
CSup? Also how do I check for the latest version? The manual indicates
pkg_version -v does this, but it does not list all ports and in
particular not the ones I am interested in which are in
/usr/ports/editors. Is there a way
Thomas F Simpson Jr wrote:
I have a 486 DEEP GREEN system I would like to put some version of FreeBSD on
(I have my reasons).
I have other inquiries out on this, but if I correctly recall (and that is a
real rusty recall at best), the max memory you could get on one of these beasts
was 48MB,
Thomas F Simpson Jr wrote:
I have a 486 DEEP GREEN system I would like to put some version of FreeBSD on
(I have my reasons).
I have other inquiries out on this, but if I correctly recall (and that is a
real rusty recall at best), the max memory you could get on one of these beasts
was 48MB
Volker Jahns wrote:
Bruce Cran wrote:
Volker Jahns wrote:
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 09:53:02PM +0200, Volker Jahns wrote:
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 12:18:57PM -0700, Chuck Swiger wrote:
On May 15, 2008, at 11:57 AM, Volker Jahns wrote:
FreeBSD 6.2 running on X86 hardware (FSC) shows a remarkable
I have a 486 DEEP GREEN system I would like to put some version of FreeBSD on
(I have my reasons).
I have other inquiries out on this, but if I correctly recall (and that is a
real rusty recall at best), the max memory you could get on one of these beasts
was 48MB, unless they made some bigg
I'll have to admit to being curious. Why? (And I'm sorry, but I can't help
you. Hope someone else can.)
because it works and is useful, as my 2 486 based routers
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo
Don't know about disk space though.
ca 100MB is minimum, but going down to 40MB is absolutely possible with a
bit of manual work. probably less.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questio
Robert Jesacher wrote:
On 06.05.2008, at 22:02, Ed Maste wrote:
On Tue, May 06, 2008 at 12:44:02PM -0700, Chris St Denis wrote:
I pulled out one of the raid5 drives to test the functionality and
noticed that FreeBSD didn't seem to notice the disk failure at all. I
was expecting kernel messag
On 15.05.2008, at 19:09, Roland Smith wrote:
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 09:36:06AM -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
looks like I cannot create more than 8 partitions at boot time on a
single
disk.
how to overcome this problem ?
thanks
Use fdisk to make up to 4 slices on the disk; e.g. ad0 g
On 06.05.2008, at 22:02, Ed Maste wrote:
On Tue, May 06, 2008 at 12:44:02PM -0700, Chris St Denis wrote:
I pulled out one of the raid5 drives to test the functionality and
noticed that FreeBSD didn't seem to notice the disk failure at all. I
was expecting kernel messages about it, but got not
At 01:46 PM 5/16/2008, Thomas F Simpson Jr wrote:
I have a 486 DEEP GREEN system I would like to put some version of FreeBSD
on (I have my reasons).
I have other inquiries out on this, but if I correctly recall (and that is
a real rusty recall at best), the max memory you could get on one of t
402.896.1157
I have one system running 6.3 with 48 MB ram, but it does freeze from time to
time. I believe it does need more ram and is a system slated for
it doesn't freeze because of that. there are other reason.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.or
how to do it ?
I need to create something like 16 partitions on a disk.
you may create up to 4 slices if you use slices at all (i don't)
on each you can make 7 partitions (8-one for c)
but each partition CAN be partitioned again. so you can make any number of
partitions.
example of my home
In the last episode (May 16), Robert Jesacher said:
> On 06.05.2008, at 22:02, Ed Maste wrote:
>> On Tue, May 06, 2008 at 12:44:02PM -0700, Chris St Denis wrote:
>>> I pulled out one of the raid5 drives to test the functionality and
>>> noticed that FreeBSD didn't seem to notice the disk failure at
At 03:23 PM 5/16/2008, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
402.896.1157
I have one system running 6.3 with 48 MB ram, but it does freeze from
time to time. I believe it does need more ram and is a system slated for
it doesn't freeze because of that. there are other reason.
It could be for other reason
Doesn't seem to work with my IBM ServeRAID 8k
CLI > open /readonly aac0
Executing: open /readonly=TRUE "aac0"
Command Error: current controller software.>
Seems a little odd it's referencing a dll (which doesn't exist on the
system)
Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (May 16), Robert Jes
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 01:52:50PM -0700, Chris St Denis wrote:
> Doesn't seem to work with my IBM ServeRAID 8k
>
> CLI > open /readonly aac0
> Executing: open /readonly=TRUE "aac0"
> Command Error: current controller software.>
You can avoid this issue by building a kernel with the latest aac(
I think I should use portsnap.
# portsnap fetch
# portsnap update # since there already is a /usr/ports subtree
John Wynstra wrote:
I asked Jonathan Chen what was the easiest way to do this. Was it
CSup? Also how do I check for the latest version? The manual
indicates pkg_version -v does th
(1) How do I test the version number of this?
(2) I did portsnap extract as this was the first time I did this (the
previous /usr/ports tree came from the CDROM)
(3) I did another make install and it fails with ...
mv -f ".libs/libgiofam.expT" ".libs/libgiofam.exp"
cc -shared .libs/libgiofam_l
Thanks to all who sent me messages.
I think I see where to go, should I need to turn to a FreeBSD.
Tom Simpson
Mark Busby wrote:
Could you do the job with a stripped down system? Like freenas,
monowall, nanobsd or tinybsd. All based on the bsd system, and with a
little work you can add all th
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