mented, it appears that most new ext3 filesystems default to 256
byte inodes. When I created a filesystem with 128 byte inodes then
FreeBSD could mount it just fine. I didn't try ext2, but I think the
inode is independent of ext2 or ext3. This is for FreeBSD
7.1-RELEASE, so maybe things hav
Ruben de Groot writes:
> On Sat, Nov 07, 2009 at 10:18:21PM -0800, Carl Johnson typed:
>> Frank Shute writes:
>>
>> > On Sat, Nov 07, 2009 at 05:35:58PM -0500, Jerry McAllister wrote:
>> >>
>> > [snip]
>> >>
>> >> No
w every hour, keeps it from getting
> behind too much. Perhaps that is what I'll end up doing, loading the
> ntp server, I guess that would keep it up to date better? Thanks.
If it is consistently off by a certain amount, then you might want to
look into /usr/sbin/ntptime to set a frequency o
t happens, and I have been running unix and linux for about 20
years. I have always had multiple partitions in the past, but for 9.0 I
went with the single partition.
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n noticed
your page and tried the PCnet-PCI II card and it started working. I
would guess that means their Intel card emulation is incomplete.
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Warren Block writes:
> On Tue, 28 Feb 2012, Carl Johnson wrote:
>
>> Warren Block writes:
>>
>>> On Tue, 28 Feb 2012, Da Rock wrote:
>>>
>>>> I'm starting to believe this dog won't hunt (in fact is dead,
>>>> bloated, and ful
> I switched from i386 to amd64 last year so it might be something to do
> with that. I'm currently using 8.2p6.
The only way I have found to do it is [[:<:]] and [[:>:]]. That is very
awkward, so I't love to hear of a shorter way. I found them in the
re_format(7) manpage.
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Fbsd8 writes:
> dmesg command does not show date of last boot.
>
> Are there some other commands to find date of last boot?
In addition to the other responses:
sysctl kern.boottime
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sion if
> required to make this stuff run.
One addition to the points that others have made is that the Linux
compatibility layer appears to be 32 bits only, even for 64 bit versions
of FreeBSD. At least that is true for Release 8.1. If the software is
64 bit linux, then it won't
el: An incorrect partition c may cause problems for standard
> system utilities
> partition h: partition extends past end of unit
>
> I don't care about partition 'h'; it is there only to stop the
> preceding partition from covering the last sector. Are there any real
&
ect-Linux-FAQ/downloadwp8.html. Most of the
links are dead or changed, but a couple of them do have files to
download.
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eport which inode was using a
> particular block.
It looks like the best bet would be fsdb, assuming that it is a UFS
file system. That does have a 'findblk' command to find a file
containing a block, but you would need to calculate the
see 'em with
> "zfs list -t snapshot".
The .zfs directory is hidden by default so you have to specifically ls
or go into them. Do a 'ls' on the base directory of any zfs file
system, and then add .zfs to the end and you should see the .snapshots
directory.
--
C
Flags are explicitely mentioned here. Maybe you can give
> this program a try?
I think that tar will also work (but not gnu tar), and it is part of the
base system. The manpage does show an example of how to do this, but
calls it moving the file heirarchy.
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x27;
and 'mix' settings in mixer(8). I also must have the 'igain' set to
something above 0, but the volume isn't directly controlled by it.
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h
partially updated. That will at least give you some idea about
the schedule.
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f the OP is going to run a 64-bit OS, then hardware vitualization
assist is *required* for VirtualBox to handle it. It is not required
when VirtualBox is running a 32-bit OS. Just another minor detail to
consider.
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aying from audio.
My system uses a Gigabyte GA-MA785GPM-US2H, and the sndstat output is:
FreeBSD Audio Driver (newpcm: 64bit 2009061500/amd64)
Installed devices:
pcm0: (play)
pcm1: (play/rec) default
pcm2: (play/rec)
pcm3: (play/rec)
Let me know if you want further information.
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Carl Johnson writes:
> "Ronald F. Guilmette" writes:
>
>> I've been bringing up a new amd64 box with 8.2-RELEASE. So far I've managed
>> to get everything installed OK, including a boatload of freshly-built ports.
>> I've even gotten flash10 wo
't tried 9.0, but this works
on 8.1-RELEASE and 8.2-RELEASE. You can decide for yourself if that
does what you want.
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hat might have been just because I hadn't
been using enough colors. I put it in but there is no change for my
applications.
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Carl Johnson writes:
> Patrick Lamaiziere writes:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I use sysutils/most to have nice manual pages in color, that's cool but
>> is there a way to do this with the base system (ie without adding port)?
>
> I use a colorized termcap with les
tem requires that you already have the
'ufs2_stage1_5' file in your grub directory.
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C
dev.cpu.1.temperature: 29.2C
for your system?
I have an AMD cpu and the amdtemp kernel module provides that
information. I am not familiar with the Intel cpus, but the coretemp
module is supposed to provide the same information for them. I use
gkrellm for various thing,
x... It's all explained in
> crontab(5).
Just be aware that 'Run once, at startup', means when 'cron' starts, not
just when the system boots, unless they have changed it recently.
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_
of that somewhere, so I grep'ed the man
pages. I found hints on geom(4) and boot0cfg(8), but they certainly
aren't obvious.
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authpriv
The sample file that was mentioned earlier is one source for
information, but the best source is the sudoers(5) man page. Just
search it for syslog and you will find several settings.
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such a hassle
I can't help directly with your problem, but both portupgrade and
portmaster support packages. In both cases you can just supply the -P
or -PP options to specify how to handle packages. I think they both
require that the ports tree be present for the /usr/ports/INDEX file,
but othe
mmands "with root
>> privileges".
>>
>
> "sudo su -" or "sudo sh" and the customer gets a native root shell which
> does *not* log commands !
The sudoers manpage mention the noexec option which is designed to help
with the first problem. They a
;kenv' command seems to have the board name available as
'smbios.system.product'. The 'kenv' command without arguments will show
all values, so you can make sure that is the proper variable.
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edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC i386
>
> push900# which kgzip
> /usr/sbin/kgzip
On my system:
$ uname -a
FreeBSD birch.localnet 9.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.0-RELEASE #0: Tue Jan 3 07:46:30
UTC 2012 r...@farrell.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64
$ whereis kgzip
kgzip: /usr/src/u
g
>>kldload umodem
>>
>
> Done, although kldload u3g tells me that file already exists! Perhaps
> because I booted up with my Huawei dongle plugged in.
> kldstat | grep u3g shows me nothing though.
The command 'kldstat -v' shows tha
ing that FreeBSD doesn't allow using part of a disk,
but grabs the entire disk. That means that VirtualBox can't use
partitions on a disk that any other partitions are being used by
anything else, including FreeBSD itself. Am I wrong about this? I use
VirtualBox using vdmk f
Warren Block writes:
> On Mon, 11 Mar 2013, Carl Johnson wrote:
>
>> It is my understanding that FreeBSD doesn't allow using part of a disk,
>> but grabs the entire disk. That means that VirtualBox can't use
>> partitions on a disk that any other partitions
non-OS components. You can use
> it as a basis to build a program that will send you system messages
> in an audible way in morse code... :-)
Have you looked at the morse man page lately, specifically the -p
option? :-) Just try 'morse -p sos' to test it.
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l will handle these, so you definitely should
experiment first.
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4.2BSD0 0 0
t:2097055 398458884.2BSD0 0 0
I also tried newfs on all the ufs partitions without problems. I just
tried this on a FreeBSD 8.2 system and it works there as well.
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_
e this does not work. Unless I hack the Makefile and force it to
> enable gui mode it just isn't compiled in.
Try running 'make show-options' and see what you get. Mine shows that
virtually everything is disabled. If I run 'make showconfig' then it
shows n
-> 0
>
> Got the sound working like it was.
> How do I get it to stick across reboots?
>
> Which would be the preferred way?
Since you can set it with sysctl then sysctl.conf is the logical place,
although loader.conf might also work. I use sysctl.conf so I know that
wo
efault_unit=1) controls the back panel jacks, and
/dev/mixer2 controls the front panel headphone jack. You will probably
have to just experiment with the different mixer controls to see which
controls which on your system.
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advice on the net with so far isn't working to start
>> it:
>> echo "startkde" > ~/.xinitrc
>> I have attempted startx but the system doesn't know about it.
>> may I have a suggestion to proceed?
Do you have
e testing for flag support out of curiosity, and found
that only cp -p, bsdtar and dump support them. Cpio, afio, gnutar,
gnucp and pax do not support them. I also tested extended attributes
(used for ACLs?), and only bsdtar and dump worked for them. Those
results were for usf, and generally did
t/defaults/loader.conf
> -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 19426 Aug 24 2008 /boot/defaults/loader.conf
>
> No, forget about that, also nonsense, looks to new...
How about /var/empty:
% ls -ldo /var/empty/
dr-xr-xr-x 2 root wheel schg 512 Jul 18 19:16 /var/empty/
It can be changed, but doesn
Chip Camden writes:
> Quoth Carl Johnson on Thursday, 13 January 2011:
>> Polytropon writes:
>>
>> > On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 13:50:27 -0800, Chuck Swiger wrote:
>> >> On Jan 13, 2011, at 1:46 PM, Devin Teske wrote:
>> >> > This is nearly alw
but others not. The newsyslog.conf(5)
manpage mentions a 'C' flag that can be specified.
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To u
o be
the 'Created' time in /etc/rc.conf, as someone suggested earlier. The
following code will extract that and create a file with that timestamp.
I have checked it on my system, but use at your own risk.
file=/etc/install_date
date=$(grep '^# Created: ' /etc/rc.conf | cut -c 12
nk that is default, so somebody had to have manually set the
flag on those files. Whoever did that should have noted that, or didn't
understand what the operation meant.
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t have any non-ASCII characters, or at least not properly
displayable ones. That probably means that you have the wrong locale
set for whatever your display is. If you just want to see only ASCII,
then try 'LANG=C man ports'. If that doesn't work then try setting
LC_ALL=C instead of LAN
quivalent of the binary packages for the entire FreeBSD ports tree.
You don't need them if you install over the net.
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r fstab entry for that was:
>
> /dev/ad1s1 /c ntfsrw 1 0
>
> But now with labels active I really don't know how to proceed.
You can tell what the current labels are with the command 'glabel
status', or 'glabel list
bsd: TCP/IP swiss army knife
netcat-traditional: TCP/IP swiss army knife
netcat6: TCP/IP swiss army knife with IPv6 support
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lei yang writes:
> On Tue, Jul 24, 2012 at 12:03 AM, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> lei yang writes:
>>
>>> On Mon, Jul 23, 2012 at 12:25 AM, Polytropon wrote:
>>>> On Sun, 22 Jul 2012 22:41:57 +0800, lei yang wrote:
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
1 1
/dev/label/OakSwap none swapsw 0 0
I think any of the other label schemes will also work. If you don't
remember which label is which device id, then 'glabel status' will show
that, but you shouldn't need to.
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e FreeBSD, sda3 (oak) chainloader
root(hd1,2)
chainloader +1
boot
title FreeBSD, sda3 (oak) /boot/loader
root (hd1,2,a)
kernel /boot/loader
boot
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vi in FreeBSD is already nvi. The name nvi is a link to vi in
/usr/bin and the source includes nvi at /usr/src/contrib/nvi/.
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idn't show any of them.
Does anybody have any ideas about how to get the system to recognize
all labels? A command after boot would be acceptable since I could
just put it in /etc/rc.local.
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ay I'd say I prefer links for interactive text mode
>> browsing. Still "lynx -dump" is a welcome tool in some
>> of my scripts, and never change a running system. :-)
>>
>
> Ok, the reason I ask is actually because I have this insane (?) idea of
> shoving
> one of the aforementioned solutions onto the installation media so that (gasp)
> we can have that functionality back like we had in the days of sysinstall.
>
> So naturally, my first question is "which one?"
>
> Thoughts?
I just looked at the DVD install disk and it has firefox, links1, links,
and w3m. That should take care of most needs, but I don't know about
the CD disks.
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age. My
experience is that labels in /etc/fstab work fine, but they may or may
not be visible in /dev or with glabel if they are not in fstab.
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Carl Johnson writes:
> I recently installed 9.1 on a system and labels don't seem to work as
> I would expect. I can get them to work in /etc/fstab, but only the
> ones referenced there show up in /dev/ufs and /dev/gpt. I have seen
> this in previous versions, and in those cas
ions, and the command 'gpart list ada0s4' should show the
logical partitions inside of the extended partition. You can also use
'file -s' and possibly do read-only mounts to see exactly what they
contain. The names will probably map out like linux, but the 'sda
Walter Hurry writes:
> On Fri, 25 Jan 2013 21:07:59 -0800, Carl Johnson wrote:
>
>> There is a package called 'linuxfdisk' that is just a FreeBSD
>> implementation of the linux fdisk and will show you what the FreeBSD
>> partitions/slices are. You can also u
ps://github.com/gerard/ext4fuse/
I haven't tried it so I don't know how well it works.
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ded.
Does anybody have any suggestions on what might have happened and what
can be done?
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Kevin Kinsey writes:
> On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 11:51:41AM -0800, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> I ran freebsd-update to update my 8.1-RELEASE system to 8.3-RELEASE
>> (freebsd-update -r 8.3-RELEASE upgrade). It downloaded a bunch of
>> files, asked me to edit some configuration
Gökşin Akdeniz writes:
> Fri, 01 Feb 2013 11:51:41 -0800 tarihinde
> Carl Johnson yazmış:
>>
>> Does anybody have any suggestions on what might have happened and what
>> can be done?
>>
>
> Hello Carl,
>
> What does "# uname -a" or "
Carl Johnson writes:
> Kevin Kinsey writes:
>
>> On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 11:51:41AM -0800, Carl Johnson wrote:
>>> I ran freebsd-update to update my 8.1-RELEASE system to 8.3-RELEASE
>>> (freebsd-update -r 8.3-RELEASE upgrade). It downloaded a bunch of
&g
Paul Macdonald writes:
> On 01/02/2013 22:50, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> Gökşin Akdeniz writes:
>>
>>> Fri, 01 Feb 2013 11:51:41 -0800 tarihinde
>>> Carl Johnson yazmış:
>>>> Does anybody have any suggestions on what might have happened and what
>&g
tes for any
terminal type that you specify.
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/dev/label/rootfs0 is ad2s1a based on the actual disk size
> and a process of elimination.
>
> Does anyone know a magic incantation to output this label->device
> mapping?
Try looking at glabel(8). I don't know what option will list which is
mounted, but &
gt;>
>> tunefs ‐L usr /dev/ad0s1f
You can check to see if it is actually set with:
dumpfs /dev/ad0s1f | grep volname
I have a similar problem with an 8.0 system in which all partitions
are labeled (and verified from a live CD), but nothing s
sing 'glabel status'.
I say mostly because the /usr partition isn't recognized for some
reason, even though dumpfs and tunefs show the label. That label is
also not shown in /dev/ufs or using 'glabel status'. That made the
reboot a little tricky since I had to manually m
Roland Smith writes:
> On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 09:35:08AM -0700, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> Roland Smith writes:
>>
>> > On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 07:46:57PM +0200, David DEMELIER wrote:
>> >> 2010/5/11 Roland Smith :
>> >> > On Tue, May
/scp to work properly. The next release (8.0) is supposed to
support Xen, so I am planning to try that when it comes out
(Aug-Sept?).
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ports very well.
Thanks for any help. I already subscribe to this list, so there is no
need to cc me.
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To u
vogelke+u...@pobox.com (Karl Vogel) writes:
>>> On Wed, 19 May 2010 16:14:52 -0700,
>>> Carl Johnson said:
>
> C> I have been experimenting with FreeBSD for a while, and I consistently
> C> get bash lockups at irregular intervals when it is otherwise idle.
>
ion of 7.3 release, and it's ports system uses audacity
version 2.2. I tested the .ogg file with ogg123 and the file is good.
Thanks for any information on how I can get this to work.
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Roland Smith writes:
> On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 08:04:58PM -0700, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> I just installed the package for the audio player audacious and I
>> discovered that it won't recognize ogg vorbis files. I installed the
>> audacious-plugins package, but I don
Giorgos Keramidas writes:
> On Wed, 19 May 2010 16:14:52 -0700, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> I have been experimenting with FreeBSD for a while, and I consistently
>> get bash lockups at irregular intervals when it is otherwise idle. By
>> lockup, I mean that it stops respondin
Giorgos Keramidas writes:
> On Fri, 21 May 2010 09:30:05 -0700, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> Giorgos Keramidas writes:
>>> Does this lock-up happen if you leave the shell 'idle' for too long
>>> over an ssh session? There may be problems with stateful connecti
ind it. They don't seem to
realize that nobody can solve the problem without their help, and they
don't seem at all interested in working on it.
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http
Giorgos Keramidas writes:
> On Fri, 21 May 2010 09:30:05 -0700, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> Giorgos Keramidas writes:
>>> Does this lock-up happen if you leave the shell 'idle' for too long
>>> over an ssh session? There may be problems with stateful connecti
numeric
> 1a is NOT numeric
> a1 is NOT numeric
You might want to try testing "123..45".
I tried changing:
>if expr "$arg" : "[0-9]*[\.0-9]*$" > /dev/null
to:
if expr "$arg" : "[0-9]*\.*[0-9]
Carl Johnson writes:
> vogelke+u...@pobox.com (Karl Vogel) writes:
>
>>>> On Thu, 24 Jun 2010 09:24:39 +0800,
>>>> Aiza said:
>>
>> A> Receiving a variable from the command line that is suppose to contain
>> A> numeric values.
Carl Johnson writes:
> Carl Johnson writes:
>
>> vogelke+u...@pobox.com (Karl Vogel) writes:
>>
>>>>> On Thu, 24 Jun 2010 09:24:39 +0800,
>>>>> Aiza said:
>>>
>>> A> Receiving a variable from the command line that is supp
the regular expression that
someone else had posted, but I obviously didn't do any better.
> I would personally to use egrep or awk (printf "%s" "${arg}" | egrep
> "${regex}" [0]) instead of expr.
I would probably just perl for the whole thing, especially seeing
/usr/local/etc/rc.d /usr/local/kde4/etc/rc.d"
kdm4_enable="YES"
Or you can omit the local_startup line if you do a:
ln -s /usr/local/kde4/etc/rc.d/kde4 /usr/local/etc/rc.d/
The local_startup wouldn't be necessary if the startup scri
ly muted to too loud
and was distorting, so I had to reduce some of the settings. You can
use sysctl hw.snd.default_unit=1' to set the default mixer device to 1
or whichever you want to use.
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to another
mail program. Thanks for any ideas.
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lobal address
assigned automatically.
Thanks for any advice.
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Vincent Hoffman writes:
> On 30/07/2010 18:48, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> I have running versions of 7.3 and 8.0, so I tried experimenting with
>> 8.1 in VirtualBox, but I ran into a couple of problems. I have an 8.0
>> system that is running a IPv6 tunnel to sixxs.net, and it
Byung-Hee HWANG writes:
> Carl Johnson writes:
>
>> I am experimenting with 8.1 in VirtualBox, but I discovered that I
>> can't get gnus to work. I just brought over my configuration from a
>> working 7.3 system, but on 8.1 it won't read the mail from the
>
Anonymous writes:
> Carl Johnson writes:
>
>> I am experimenting with 8.1 in VirtualBox, but I discovered that I
>> can't get gnus to work. I just brought over my configuration from a
>> working 7.3 system, but on 8.1 it won't read the mail from the
>>
Carl Johnson writes:
> I have running versions of 7.3 and 8.0, so I tried experimenting with
> 8.1 in VirtualBox, but I ran into a couple of problems. I have an 8.0
> system that is running a IPv6 tunnel to sixxs.net, and it is running
> rtadvd to act as the gatway for my network.
Carl Johnson writes:
> I am experimenting with 8.1 in VirtualBox, but I discovered that I
> can't get gnus to work. I just brought over my configuration from a
> working 7.3 system, but on 8.1 it won't read the mail from the
> system. Gnus will start up, but it just re
ash...@freebsd.org (Ashish SHUKLA) writes:
> Carl Johnson writes:
>
> [...]
>
>
>> Now if I could just figure out why gnus doesn't work right under emacs
>> I could finish migrating from Linux to FreeBSD.
>
> I use same .gnus in both GNU/Linux and FreeBSD an
ash...@freebsd.org (Ashish SHUKLA) writes:
> Carl Johnson writes:
>
...
>
> I use following sh script to synchronize my mailbox stuff which includes
> Maildirs, Gnus configuration, procmail configuration, mairix db, etc.
>
...
Thanks, I'll have to think about that.
--
Car
ash...@freebsd.org (Ashish SHUKLA) writes:
> Carl Johnson writes:
>> Anonymous writes:
...
>
>>> Try without ~/.newsrc.eld. BTW, what backend do you use for reading mail?
>>> nnmaildir?
>
>> I just tried it, but there was no difference. I use nnml for the
a FreeBSD 8.1-RELEASE, so they might not work
exactly for other versions. This also assumes that you trust the
certificates in the ca_root_nss package, so you will have to decide that
for yourself.
I have seen several questions and problems about ssl certificates, so
hopefully others will fin
0 *.876 *.*LISTEN
tcp6 0 0 *.921 *.*LISTEN
udp4 0 0 *.608 *.*
udp6 0 0 *.952 *.*
udp6 0 0 *.804 *.*
--
Carl Johnsonca..
Chuck Swiger writes:
> Hi--
>
> On Sep 18, 2010, at 4:27 PM, Carl Johnson wrote:
>> The following are the ports if anybody has any ideas, but I would also like
>> to know how to trace them down myself:
>>
>> tcp4 0 0 *.876 *.*
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