On Saturday 13 October 2012 21:47:01 Gary Kline wrote:
> SO: Is pdfimages going to spit of 6t50 files? as noted
> in last email, only a couple of these images are of any interest
Probably. But Gimp accepts PDF files and gives you the option of importing
images of individual selected
On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 12:18 PM, andrew clarke wrote:
> On Tue 2012-10-09 15:54:23 UTC-0500, ajtiM (lum...@gmail.com) wrote:
>
>> I saw that is no more iso for FreeBSD RC1. Now is for RC2. Is it possible or
>> better safe to use freebsd-update to update 9.1 RC1 to RC2, please?
>
> You can use "fr
I'm struggling with this damn gEDA/SPICE thing - I think I have gEDA
schem figured, but I can't be sure because I can't test it. For the life
of me I can't seem to get my head around it, but then I might just be
too tired.
Can anyone point out what I'm missing? I open geda, create a sch file
Hello.
2012/10/13 12:09:39 -0300 schu...@ime.usp.br => To Peter Vereshagin :
> > y
> > Hello.
> >
> > it's a -questions@ here, right? (=
>
> Indeed. :-)
Ouch! it's already not... But I Cc: there. Oops?
> > What's a specific of the case?
>
> I need quite a lot of such "jails", with some being a
I was installing my system earlier (dual-boot Ubuntu 12.04LTS/FreeBSD
9.0; Ubuntu was already present) and while installing subversion, one of
the many co-dependencies of the many programs that were being installed
was graphviz. Apparently I selected some support options relating to
swig that broke
Hi,
Packages [1] for wine-fbsd64-1.5.15 have been uploaded to mediafire [2]. The
packages for FreeBSD 10 use the pkgng [3] format.
Please read the installation messages, if you use the nVidia graphics driver,
for further information.
If you are having trouble with the FreeBSD-9 packages,
On 14/10/2012 16:37, Joseph a Nagy Jr wrote:
> I was installing my system earlier (dual-boot Ubuntu 12.04LTS/FreeBSD
> 9.0; Ubuntu was already present) and while installing subversion, one of
> the many co-dependencies of the many programs that were being installed
> was graphviz. Apparently I sele
On Sun, 14 Oct 2012 10:37:47 -0500, Joseph a Nagy Jr wrote:
> I was installing my system earlier (dual-boot Ubuntu 12.04LTS/FreeBSD
> 9.0; Ubuntu was already present) and while installing subversion, one of
> the many co-dependencies of the many programs that were being installed
> was graphviz. Ap
I was intending this on my 1TB hard disk (FreeBSD only):
Two slices of 500G
Slice one:
1g/
4gswap
7g/var
1g/tmp
487g /var
Slice two:
500g /backup
I question myself why I should use a 1TB hard disk, but it came with the
hardware J-)
I might better use
On Sun, 14 Oct 2012, Jos Chrispijn wrote:
I was intending this on my 1TB hard disk (FreeBSD only):
Two slices of 500G
Slice one:
1g/
Don't use less than 2G here. You have room.
4gswap
7g/var
Way more than is needed, unless you plan to store non-FreeBSD stuff
the
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On Sunday 14 October 2012 19:05:32 Jos Chrispijn wrote:
> The slice one and two idea is perhaps Windows related, but I thought if
> I want to update my FreeBSD9 t0, let's say 10 or 11, I only have to
> clean slice one and put BSD on that again (having the backup slice
> untouched).
My approach wo
Hello,
Having just installed a new system, I am considering using svn to
get some docs. Perhaps I will create doc under /usr/local like
this:
# cd /usr/local
# mkdir doc
and then:
svn co svn://svn.freebsd.org/doc/release/9.1.0/en_US.ISO8859-1/
I already am running current and stable- this co
On 10/14/2012 12:13 PM, Polytropon wrote:
> On Sun, 14 Oct 2012 10:37:47 -0500, Joseph a Nagy Jr wrote:
>> I was installing my system earlier (dual-boot Ubuntu 12.04LTS/FreeBSD
>> 9.0; Ubuntu was already present) and while installing subversion, one of
>> the many co-dependencies of the many progra
I want to use find to locate files that don't belong to a certain user but
should belong to that user. But there are subdirectories I want to exclude.
I have tried using this, but it doesn't work:
find /path/to/dir -type d ! -uid num \( -type d ! -name dirname -prune \)
If I leave off the par
Did you specify elsewhere what a 'visible' does mean to you?
- if this means network connectivity then you can put jails on the same
network, e. g. the same address on a lo(4) interface
- if this means a read-only access to the directory located outside of a
jail then her4e is the tr
On Sun, Oct 14, 2012 at 8:33 PM, wrote:
>
>> Here is the catch. I know I can read-only mount most static filesystems
> from a template. However, the mutable ones have to be copied.
>
Says who? Is this your requirement? Why?
> Because someone might know the program memory, cpu or network usag
Says who? Is this your requirement? Why?
I meant I don't see how it can be done differently.
If this is really a serious concern of yours, you have much bigger fish to
fry than sysctl(8).
Can you elaborate a bit more on this please?
___
freebsd
On 14/10/2012 22:37, Darrel wrote:
> Having just installed a new system, I am considering using svn to
> get some docs. Perhaps I will create doc under /usr/local like
> this:
>
> # cd /usr/local
> # mkdir doc
The canonical location is /usr/doc -- this stuff is part of FreeBSD
itself, so shouldn
On 15/10/2012 01:32, Paul Schmehl wrote:
> I want to use find to locate files that don't belong to a certain user
> but should belong to that user. But there are subdirectories I want to
> exclude.
>
> I have tried using this, but it doesn't work:
>
> find /path/to/dir -type d ! -uid num \( -typ
2012/10/12 Виталий Туровец :
> 2012/10/12 YC Wang :
>> Hi,all:
>>
>> I read from wikipedia that freebsd supports ipx. But when I tried
>> to set ipx address on em0,it showed the following message:
>>
>> freebsd-yc# ifconfig em0 ipx (netnum.nodenum)
>> ifconfig: socket(family 23,SOCK_DGR
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