--On Sunday, December 21, 2003 20:50:22 -0500 Scott W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hey all..was wondering if anyone knew of a utlity to copy the contents
of a text file into an X clipboard buffer?
It's possible via the use of xmessage or any other X editor that allows
you to select all text, but som
--On Sunday, August 08, 2004 18:43:21 -0400 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No, I want a user on 192.168.1.247 to be redirected to 192.168.2.250:80 when
they request 1.2.3.4:80, where 1.2.3.4 is a PUBLIC ip number on the FreeBSD
internet gateway. Again, the configuration is
de0 = PUBLIC IP = 1.2.
--On Monday, January 19, 2004 23:05:02 -0500 Jesse Sheidlower <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I use Mozilla on my 4.8 laptop. Whenever I switch IP addresses,
which is frequent, as I use my computer both in the office and
at home (and on trips, etc.), Mozilla becomes unable to
resolve any sites it hasn'
I've recently set up a new machine with 5.1-RELEASE-p2 and during the
boot I get a series of messages like the following. Is this something
that I should be worried about? (I get two more, longer, batches of
them after it probes pcib1 and pcib2.)
Thanks,
-Pat
acpi0: on motherboard
pcibios: BIOS
I have a system running 5.1-RELEASE-p2 with several jails. Occasionally
I want to determine which jail a given process belongs to. On -STABLE
I could just cat /proc//status and look at the final entry. But
with 5.x procfs id deprecated; so I'd like to find some other way. Any
help would be appr
--On Tuesday, September 16, 2003 09:07:15 +0100 Matthew Seaman
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Sep 16, 2003 at 04:16:31AM +0800, maillist bsd wrote:
I am just testing jail on my FreeBSD4.8-stable box, i found i can not
ssh to the jail environment, but i can telnet to jail environment, the
ssh
I've just installed the ntop port, on a 4.8-STABLE system that has
two NICs. When I run ntop, it always gives me this error:
**ERROR** Reading packets on device 1(sis0): 'read: Bad file descriptor'
In this case sis0 is the second NIC listed. If I swap the order in the
-i option, it will report t
--On Tuesday, September 23, 2003 00:59:30 +0100 Tadimeti Keshav
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is it possible to get all of the ports on a CD set?
This is one area where Linux fares better. Debian
offers a 7 CD (OK they don'y make ISOs) set that
contains all packages.
The short answer is "No".
Some
--On Thursday, September 25, 2003 09:39:12 +0200 Armand Passelac
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[ On Wed, 24 Sep, 2003 at 15:58, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ]
What do you think of Clam so far?
I'm interested in checking something out
It's a good and free product.
It seems to work well.
But it's
--On Wednesday, October 01, 2003 13:22:36 -0400 Chuck Swiger
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Jamie wrote:
[ ... ]
I don't know what the actual rationale is for this. Can anyone
explain why it is oftentimes better to tar something rather than
using cp when copying directories and their contents
--On Wednesday, October 01, 2003 15:12:42 +0200 Felix 'buebo' Kakrow
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I've compiled a port as normal (apache13 in this case). I'd like to run
'make install' now and tell it to install the package to the base of the
root filesystem of a jail from the jail's host. Possib
--On Thursday, October 09, 2003 22:55:26 -0300 "Marc G. Fournier"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You know, its this attitude that would have kept Christopher Columbus in
Europe ... all the "big scary warnings" said that the world was flat back
then, no?
No, not at all. Because by the time of Columbu
--On Tuesday, October 14, 2003 10:07:18 -0700 Rick Duvall
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have about 200 gigs of data to back up every night on multiple machines
on the network. All are either FreeBSD or Linux based. My backup
machine is FreeBSD. I have about 30 gigs of dump drive space, and a 20
--On Tuesday, October 14, 2003 10:55:32 -0700 Rick Duvall
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So to clarify just so that I understand correctly:
1. Each filesystem per system to be backed up qualifies as a dumpfile.
2. Multiple dumpfiles per backup
3. Multiple tapes per backup, as long as 1 dumpfile i
--On Wednesday, August 11, 2004 17:19:52 -0700 "Mohammed Shaikh (Satyam Computer Services)"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a program that can be compiled with no problems on SuSe Linux but
when I try it on freebsd it gives plethora of errors. I have just copied
the whole directory tree from SuS
--On Sunday, August 15, 2004 12:30:01 +0930 "Paul A. Hoadley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Good question---without context, my claim that I can do nothing else
seems wrong. What I should have said is "given I have an interest in
collecting all the spams to non-existent addresses, I don't think I
ca
--On Monday, August 16, 2004 21:37:13 +0930 "Paul A. Hoadley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
On Sun, Aug 15, 2004 at 02:22:02PM -0700, Pat Lashley wrote:
Just FYI, Exim, with the ExiScan patches, can reject at SMTP time;
and also has a 'fakereject' capability which tells t
I've been syncing my Handspring Visor over the USB cable using
coldsync and ugen0 for a couple of years now. One of the recent
system updates introduced ucom and uvisor; and now I can't get
the Visor to sync. (I'm currently running FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE
as of about 29 October.)
The uvisor man page
I'm looking for a good way to provide a single authentication/authorization
database for multiple applications in an environment consisting of a FreeBSD
server and a collection of primarily Windows (XP) clients. We do NOT want
to use the old Windows Domain protocols; and it doesn't look easy to m
Is there any simple clean way to copy an entire directory tree and
preserve both the flags (like schg) AND hard links within the tree?
(And, of course, preserve device special nodes, etc.)
cp -r Copies hardlinked files as separate files
cpioDoesn't preserve flags
pax
--On Thursday, August 21, 2003 22:19:28 +0200 Nico Meijer
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is there any simple clean way to copy an entire directory tree and
preserve both the flags (like schg) AND hard links within the tree?
(And, of course, preserve device special nodes, etc.)
Have you looked at rsyn
--On Thursday, August 21, 2003 15:45:54 -0600 Tillman Hodgson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Thu, Aug 21, 2003 at 02:23:54PM -0700, Pat Lashley wrote:
>> Is there any simple clean way to copy an entire directory tree and
>> preserve both the flags (like schg) AND ha
--On Friday, August 22, 2003 20:17:07 +0930 Malcolm Kay
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Dump/restore is also the only technique I've found to retain the holes in
holey files.
cpio can handle sparse files. I think that was the reason I changed
from a tar/tar pipe to a find/cpio pipe as my standard met
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