Hi all,
First time poster to the lists!
Using dwm, loving the minimalism and it's forcing me to learn stuff the hard
way which is all good. But I can't seem to figure out how to apply a patch
to it.
According to the instructions listed here: http://dwm.suckless.org/patches/ I
figured I'm to use
011 08:05, Matthew Seaman
wrote:
> On 22/09/2011 00:51, Andy Zammy wrote:
> > According to the instructions listed here:
> http://dwm.suckless.org/patches/ I
> > figured I'm to use the "tarball method" as that's how ports fetches dwm.
> I
> > tried applyi
Hi,
I used the second section of the handbook (20.4) to create a gmirror. In my
particular setup I had a 1GB /, 6GB swap, 1GB /tmp and the rest of the 1TB
drive was left for /usr
I had to deviate from the handbook when it came to running the dump +
restore commands, as the dump failed due to an i
Thanks very much. Please could I make a suggestion that this be included in
the handbook page?
On 8 Oct 2013 01:31, "Warren Block" wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Oct 2013, Andy Zammy wrote:
>
> Hi,
>>
>> I used the second section of the handbook (20.4) to create a gmirror.
X are gone (though ada0 still shows up). I'm not sure if it's
acceptable to do the dump by booting the 1st hard drive using the
mirror/gm0, and then dump to the 2nd hard drive by mounting what will be
ada1sX. Is this okay to do?
On 8 October 2013 01:31, Warren Block wrote:
> On Tue,
I
On 8 October 2013 01:31, Warren Block wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Oct 2013, Andy Zammy wrote:
>
> Hi,
>>
>> I used the second section of the handbook (20.4) to create a gmirror. In
>> my
>> particular setup I had a 1GB /, 6GB swap, 1GB /tmp and the rest of the 1TB
&
a0 is now mounted as), to ada1s1 (even though this *should* be
the other way around, it's equivalent as far as i can see, isn't it?)?
On 8 October 2013 22:59, Warren Block wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Oct 2013, Andy Zammy wrote:
>
> This is actually trickier than it first looked. First
g my fstab to use mirror/gm0? I can't see why dumping
and restoring is necessary, it's just manually doing what gmirror is there
for in the first place. Correct me if I'm wrong :)
On 9 October 2013 00:11, Warren Block wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Oct 2013, Andy Zammy wrote:
>
>