ster to other servers. My UPS and server are older so the
connection between them is serial. You may get different results with
newer hardware that is USB or if you choose to go the SNMP route.
-- Chris
--
__o "All I was doing was trying to get home from work."
The port security/cfs, Matt Blaze's userland Cryptographic filesystem,
is marked as broken because it does not compile under FreeBSD-7.0 or
later.
I've managed to get it to compile through some simple changes but I
don't know enough about RPC to know if I am on the right track. I'm
asking
On Sep 17, 2008, at 7:52 PM, Edwin Groothuis wrote:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 06:38:56PM -0400, Christopher Sean Hilton
wrote:
The port security/cfs, Matt Blaze's userland Cryptographic
filesystem,
is marked as broken because it does not compile under FreeBSD-7.0 or
later.
ports/1
On Oct 6, 2008, at 5:52 PM, Mel wrote:
On Monday 06 October 2008 21:28:25 Kelly Jones wrote:
Here's one way to install multiple FreeBSD ports "unattended" on a
machine:
cd /usr/port/foo/prog1; make install; cd/usr/ports/foo/prog2; make
install
and so on (perhaps even in a shell script). T
On Thu, Oct 15, 2009 at 08:06:08PM -0400, PJ wrote:
> Polytropon wrote:
> > On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 18:19:16 -0400, PJ wrote:
> >
[snip...]
>
> Anyway, I found the solution on the web... couldn't belive it was that
> simple: just ignore the crap spewed out on the screen and just mount iit
> as y
On Mar 14, 2008, at 11:24 AM, Jason Barnes wrote:
Hi -- I'm running a "Tombstone" machine that's functioning as a
server. The machine is located somewhere with a fast connection, and
not somewhere that I have easy access to. As such, I want this
machine to do its best to boot up and get onto
On Mar 17, 2008, at 4:51 AM, Frank Bonnet wrote:
Hello
I'm setting up a squid cache (3.0.2) machine FreeBSD 7.0 based and I
wonder
if softupdates could help (make it faster ) or not the cache
partition ?
I can't imagine that it would hurt. Last I looked though squid may not
be the be
On Mar 17, 2008, at 11:51 AM, Johan Hendriks wrote:
Squid is a forward proxy whereas varnish is just a reverse proxy
So you can not use it for for lan to wan proxy!
Thanks for the enlightenment. My understanding is that Squid can do
both forward and reverse proxy. At least it it would see
On Mar 17, 2008, at 11:34 AM, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote:
Hi, Ive got a big problem now on a production server.
When i do various things, i am getting "write failed, file system
full"
messages all over the place. Ive gone through and deleted
things i can, and i should have the space now,
On Mar 17, 2008, at 4:14 PM, Daniel Bye wrote:
On Mon, Mar 17, 2008 at 07:34:04PM +, Pollywog wrote:
On Monday 17 March 2008 19:17:58 Wojciech Puchar wrote:
i would say it's absolutely needed.
anyway - any reason to not use soft updates on every filesystem?
What exactly is a soft upda
I submitted a PR on this. In short the problem that I'm having is that
mysqld becomes a daemon and returns control the rcorder subsystem
before it has established it unix domain listening socket. On my
system the next daemon to run is jabberd. Jabberd (from the jabberd2
port) has a componen
On Mar 24, 2008, at 6:40 PM, Jon Theil Nielsen wrote:
I asked this on freebsd-net@ but got no replies. So now I ask the same
question here.
Hi list!
I have speculated a lot about implementation of (Open)LDAP on my
sever. By I haven't yet found the right (and logical) way to do it.
I'm running
On Mar 25, 2008, at 1:53 PM, Outback Dingo wrote:
GOSA is another nice feature full LDAP manager in PHP, does samba,
dns,
mail, web, asterisk etc etc etc
Is Gosa in the ports collection?
-- Chris
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
ht
I've recently started playing with NetBSD and notice that by default
it mounts /tmp as an MFS backed by swap. A quick read of the md,
mount_mfs man page would lead me to believe that
md /tmp rw,async,-s1024m 0 0
will move my /tmp dir to a swap backed 1G space. This would make me
feel
On Jun 2, 2008, at 5:31 PM, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
Color laser is what you want. There are some really
good inexpensive units out there. I recall reading the
inexpensieve Samsung color laser even speaks Postscript.
while i don't use color printers, usually this postscript is
disadventage.
Hi,
I need to use svn to checkout the old "security/cfs" port so I can do
a one-time transfer of some data off of a USB drive. At the end of the
day, I just need the one port so if the cvs repository is available I
could also get it that way. In either case, I'm trying to do the
equivalent of:
On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 11:43:03AM +1030, Shane Ambler wrote:
> On 19/02/2013 05:53, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I need to use svn to checkout the old "security/cfs" port so I can
> > do a one-time transfer of some data off of a USB drive. A
On Mon, Feb 18, 2013 at 11:23:09PM -0500, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 11:43:03AM +1030, Shane Ambler wrote:
> > On 19/02/2013 05:53, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > I need to use svn to checkout the old "s
Is there a reason that the gnome 2 ports don't use the conflicts
mechanism to avoid completely hosing an existing gnome 2 install? On
Friday I came across a gimp script-fu which would slice an image into
pieces and output html that rendered the complete image as a
table. But it was written in pytho
On Sun, Feb 05, 2006 at 02:54:07PM -0600, Conrad Sabatier wrote:
>
> On 05-Feb-2006 Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
> > Is there a reason that the gnome 2 ports don't use the conflicts
> > mechanism to avoid completely hosing an existing gnome 2 install? On
> > [sni
This afternoon I had an interesting problem. Cups failed to startup on
my machine and threw the error:
cupsd: Child exited with status 48
or somesuch. The short story is that rpc.statd had grabbed port 631 on
my machine and that blocked cups from working. Normally this would be
harmless exce
Hi,
I have a question to the community about removable drives, pendrives
and usb and firewire attached hard drives. I'm just wondering how
people are dealing with them in FreeBSD. I don't have any operational
problems with them. I'm just wondering if I'm doing things the hard
way.
First Question:
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 08:43 -0500, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
> Christopher Sean Hilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
[snip]
> > First Question: Which filesystem are people using on usb flash drives
> > and removable hard drives? I'm using a mixture of ufs2, ext2,
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 08:43 -0500, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
[snip]
> Another option is to use the raw device. For things like backups,
> this works well, because you can just direct the output of tar
> directly to the device. Or pass it through compression and encryption
> filters on the way.
>
I
On Mon, Jul 30, 2012 at 08:21:21PM +0300, Jeff Tipton wrote:
> On 07/30/2012 19:46, Bas Smeelen wrote:
> > On 07/30/12 18:21, Michael Powell wrote:
> >> Jeff Tipton wrote:
> >>
> >>> On 07/30/2012 17:19, Christopher Hilton wrote:
> I'm trying to build emacs with gtk2 on my build box and I'm ru
I posted on a similar subject last year but in the end it turned out
to be irrelevant. I'm trying to get the combination of:
a Soekris Net4511,
FreeBSD 8-STABLE from Dec 2011,
an Atheros AR5BMB-44 wifi interface (identified as AR5212 in dmesg),
an Apple Airport Extreme (about
I'm having issues using an ath(4) AR5212 card to connect FreeBSD 8.2 to the
Internet via an Apple AirPort Extreme with WPA protection. Basically the
ath/wlan combo associates to the network and can send packets fine but
receiving fails. The is seen when you try to negotiate a DHCP lease. I have
On Tue, 2006-11-21 at 12:38 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> (Please reply directly to me, as I am not subscribed)
>
> I just bought a VIA external USB enclosure with a Hitachi 200GB ATA drive
> to use for disk-based backups. I put it on my test box here, which I just
> upgraded to 6.2-Prereleas
t;All I was doing was trying to get home from work."
_`\<,_ -Rosa Parks
___(*)/_(*)___
Christopher Sean Hilton
pgp key: D0957A2D/f5 30 0a e1 55 76 9b 1f 47 0b 07 e9 75 0e 14
___
On Mon, 2007-03-12 at 12:00 -0400, Marcelo Maraboli wrote:
>
> I agree. callbacks are not enough, you can reach a
> false conclusion, that´s why I use SPF along with callbacks...
>
> on the same message, my MX concludes:
>
> "you are sending email "from [EMAIL PROTECTED]", but shire.net
> s
Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC wrote:
On Mar 13, 2007, at 6:00 PM, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
On Mon, 2007-03-12 at 12:00 -0400, Marcelo Maraboli wrote:
I agree. callbacks are not enough, you can reach a
false conclusion, that´s why I use SPF along with callbacks...
on the same
I'm having problems getting a good connection from my laptop to my
802.11b network via the iwi interface. The ath interface does this well
and the iwi interface works great with my 802.11g network but it's
unhappy with 802.11b.
-- Chris
___
freebsd-ques
of my mailservers.
-- Chris
__o "All I was doing was trying to get home from work."
_`\<,_ -Rosa Parks
___(*)/_(*)___________
Christopher Sean Hilton chris | at | vindaloo.com
ll actually.
-- Chris
--
__o "All I was doing was trying to get home from work."
_`\<,_ -Rosa Parks
___(*)/_(*)___________
Christopher Sean Hilton
pgp key: D0
s "1400x1050"
EndSubSection
EndSection
The "DefaultDepth 24" is the line that fixed things for me. I think that
"DefaultDepth 32" may also work.
-- Chris
--
__o "All I was doing was trying to get home from work."
Good morning,
I'm having a problem with openldap 2.3.41 compiled from the
openldap23-server port. My box is a long running FreeBSD server
recently upgraded from FreeBSD 5.3-STABLE to FreeBSD 6.3-STABLE via
cvsup/make buildworld
$ uname -a
FreeBSD natasha.lhr-its.com 6.3-STABLE FreeBSD 6.3-ST
Is is considered okay for end users of the ports system to use the
PKGNAMESUFFIX variable? I need to label the python 2.6 port that I've build as
not having threads. Python with threads interferes with the mod_python and
apache in the default configuration. I did the following:
# cd /usr/p
I'm having a problem with aFreeBSD workstation that tried to connect
to a remote VPN via an IPSec tunnel. Here's my setup:
A FreeBSD workstation: W
An OpenBSD router: LR
And another OpenBSD router: RR
A remote FreeBSD server: S
LR and RR are connected via an IPSec tunnel. W shares the local
et
I'm wondering if anyone else is having trouble with the combination
between Kismet and the Orinoco Gold card. This setup worked flawlessly
for me under FreeBSD 5.4 (I retested it last night) but I get no joy
with FreeBSD 6.1-STABLE. Here's what I see:
# ifconfig wi0 list ap
Doesn't list any
Well, it's looking like my venerable Orinoco card (wi0) is getting
a little long in the tooth for kismet. Per my earlier post I can't
seem to get it working with FreeBSD 6.1-STABLE. Can anyone recommend a
better wifi card? I prefer something that will: Work with Kismet, Take
an external Antenna, an
Hi,
I have a Handspring Treo 600 and a program called Wmodem which allows
you to access the wireless modem on the phone and establish a ppp
connection. I've used this since FreeBSD 4.x with serial cable. With 5
I was able to use this with the USB cable. On 6.0 I'm back to using
just the serial cab
On Mon, Jun 12, 2006 at 04:44:48PM -0400, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote:
> On 6/12/06, Ulrich Spoerlein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >Björn König wrote:
> >
>
>
> >> I did a mistake: I unplugged my digital camera accidentally before I
> >unmounted the
> >> filesystem. *doh* This happens very often,
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 08:16:32AM -0400, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
> I'm wondering if anyone else is having trouble with the combination
> between Kismet and the Orinoco Gold card. This setup worked flawlessly
> for me under FreeBSD 5.4 (I retested it last night) but I get
On May 8, 2009, at 10:57 AM, Paul Schmehl wrote:
--On Thursday, May 07, 2009 22:16:01 -0500 Jason Garrett > wrote:
While cryptic, It has worked well for me with multiple FreeBSD and
Linux
hosts on my network.
Hopefully it will work well for me too. However, I am struggling
with the do
I just got an Intel Dual gigabit nic that I planned to use with
FreeBSD 7-STABLE. On startup neither of the Nics attach to the kernel.
They give up with an error message of:
"Setup of shared code failed"
I hunted around on Google for this last night and found something
about the cards
I'm running a Fileserver on a now ancient Asus A7V-E box. Until last
week this box ran FreeBSD 6.2 and it worked okay. Now it runs 7.0-
STABLE. Before last night I had a pair of PCI Dec Tulip Nics in it.
I've since replaced that with a Dual Intel Pro/100 (yes, 100, not 1000
if you saw my oth
On Jun 12, 2008, at 4:03 PM, Robert Huff wrote:
Christopher Sean Hilton writes:
I just got an Intel Dual gigabit nic that I planned to use with
FreeBSD 7-STABLE.
I'm using this on
FreeBSD 7.0-CURRENT #1: Sat Apr 19 23:17:00 EDT 2008 i386
with no problems.
Sounds
On Jun 12, 2008, at 4:43 PM, Robert Huff wrote:
Christopher Sean Hilton writes:
I just got an Intel Dual gigabit nic that I planned to use with
FreeBSD 7-STABLE.
I'm using this on
FreeBSD 7.0-CURRENT #1: Sat Apr 19 23:17:00 EDT 2008 i386
with no problems.
Sounds
On Jun 12, 2008, at 6:38 PM, Robert Huff wrote:
Christopher Sean Hilton writes:
I can try that later but given that the em driver is already in the
kernel I don't expect it to bear fruit. However, can you do a kldstat
on your machine with the em card? It will tell me if there is
I'm looking to put together a "suitable for home use" disk based
backup to replace a broken Tape Changer. My thought is to buy the
Galaxy Metal Gear 3538UEP which is a JBOD/RAID 1 USB disk enclosure.
Does anyone have any experience using this USB Disk enclosure with
FreeBSD 7.0-STABLE or la
I run FreeBSD 7.0-STABLE on a file server and until recently used a
Tape Changer for backups. I'm considering my options for a new backup
solution. I'm actually thinking of ditching tape and using an
externally attached USB or Firewire disk drive.
My experimentation isn't giving me good fee
On Jun 16, 2008, at 7:34 PM, Chuck Swiger wrote:
On Jun 16, 2008, at 3:59 PM, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote:
External drives make nice, fast external hot-standby backups. They
are lousy for making long-term backups that you can take offsite,
though. I can and have restored decade old
On Jun 17, 2008, at 11:40 AM, Oliver Fromme wrote:
Wojciech Puchar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
you must have something wrong. my USB drive gets 27MB/s. yes this
480Mbit/s is USB isn't real, but half of it is.
I agree.
Want to take this private and help figure out what's wrong?
:-)
On Jul 6, 2008, at 4:58 AM, Matthew Seaman wrote:
John Almberg wrote:
[snip]
In the second case, it's really just about competition for
resources. I
suspect that you could have achieved a pretty good speed-up simply by
adding another hard drive to your server and moving all of the
dat
On Jul 6, 2008, at 5:10 PM, John Almberg wrote:
Since MySQL is clearly the bottleneck of the sites, I'd investigate
why in the
world apache2 needs >150M per process.
Now that was a darn good question.
I ran httpd -M and got a list of 60 loaded modules... duh.
I said before I'm just a begi
55 matches
Mail list logo