Yesterday I placed an HD with Freebsd 5.3 release in a Dell Dimension
L800CXE. It booted properly. ( since it's running a generic kernel
with only a name change)
However I could not ping anything inside or outside the LAN.
Ex:
ping google.com
ping: cannot resolve google.com: Hostname lookup fa
thanks, but the defaultrouter line was already present in my
/etc/rc.conf.
On Jan 20, 2006, at 1:32 PM, Derek Ragona wrote:
Check your /etc/rc.conf for this line:
defaultrouter="192.168.1.1"
add it and reboot if it is missing
-Derek
At 12:26 PM 1/20/2006, Alvaro J. Gur
setting. Oh and check the LED's on your ethernet interface and router
and hub/switches to be sure you didn't knock a cable loose.
-Derek
At 12:50 PM 1/20/2006, Alvaro J. Gurdián wrote:
thanks, but the defaultrouter line was already present in my
/etc/rc.conf.
On Jan 20, 200
I just installed FreeBSD 6.0 on a computer I want to use to test BIND.
The newest release is 9.3.2, but the one installed with FreeBSD 6.0 is
9.3.1. Since according to the ISC's website there are a few bugs in
9.3.1, I decided to upgrade.
I then looked over the ports and found versions going
I used sysinstall to look for it: the chose
configure->packages->ftp->main site->package selection->DNS
in there I saw several versions of BIND but 9.3.1 was the newest.
What am I doing wrong? I chose FTP to try to get the most up to date
infowhat happened?
I see 9.3.2 on Fresh ports, wh
Oh, I forgot to mention that I had tried that. It downloaded the
package but when I checked, pkg_check bind9-9.3.2 it said the package
did not exist and pkg_check bind9-9.3.1 it gave me all the appropriate
output.
On Jan 31, 2006, at 6:08 PM, lars wrote:
You could also try
# pkg_add -r bi
never been so hard.
Having to set environment variables every time I want to get the newest
version of a program should not be the standard way to operate, I am
sure it isn't.
Thanks.
On Jan 31, 2006, at 6:22 PM, Kevin Kinsey wrote:
Alvaro J. Gurdián wrote:
I used sysinstall to
I used to have FreeBSD on two different boxes, each with a custom
kernel. Then I installed from scratch FreeBSD 5.3 on both boxes and it
runs well. However both show compile errors when i try to make a custom
kernel. Both show the same error. I have even tried to use rename the
file /usr/src/sy
This sounds very interesting. But I am not sure I understand very well
what exactly is the task you were trying to accomplish.
Are you controlling iTunes (and all it's music library) on your Mac
from a FreeBSD box somewhere on the net, and playing it on the FreeBSD
box?
Because that sounds
OK we get it you don't like freeBSD.
Now shut up and quit wasting everyones bandwidth
On Jan 13, 2005, at 7:40 PM, Boris Spirialitious wrote:
Oh, but I do understand! FreeBSD is not good choice for companies
that need support for the latest hardware. Thank you for informing
me.
Boris
Jerry McAllist
If you compiled you kernel, and added options IPFILTER_DEFAULT_BLOCK,
then you need to explicitly allow each service to leave the interface,
as well as come in thru the interface. For example add:
pass in quick proto tcp from any to any port = 53 keep state keep keep
state frags
pass in quick p
correction,
I meant
pass out quick on rl0 proto tcp from any to any port = 53 keep state
frags
pass out quick on rl0 proto udp from any to any port = 53 keep state
frags
I did it in kind of a hurry.
On Jan 17, 2005, at 3:33 PM, Alvaro J. Gurdián wrote:
If you compiled you kernel, and added
Alvaro Gurdián Jr.
La Noticia
System Administrator
Phone: (704) 568-6966 x103
5936 Monroe Road
Charlotte, NC 28212
Begin forwarded message:
From: Alvaro J. Gurdián <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: January 19, 2005 4:05:30 PM EST
To: Joshua Tinnin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Mrs. Bu
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