On Thu, 22 Jan 2009, Josh wrote:
I am in the process of building NetBSD dom0 machines after having
problems with trying to get linux to work beyond a snails pace on the
hardware we have.
I just used the howto provided here:
http://www.netbsd.org/ports/xen/howto.html
Only issue from that was gr
I am in the process of building NetBSD dom0 machines after having
problems with trying to get linux to work beyond a snails pace on the
hardware we have.
I just used the howto provided here:
http://www.netbsd.org/ports/xen/howto.html
Only issue from that was grub did not boot the xen.gz kernel,
On Sat, 17 Jan 2009, Lars NoodC)n wrote:
> I looked at a lot of systems when planning some projects, and when it
> came down to NetBSD or OpenBSD, the deciding factor for me was pfsync.
>
> Can I ask what tasks or activities you have been using NetBSD for?
>
> regards,
> -Lars
Xen Dom0 installati
Diana Eichert wrote:
>... but I also have FreeBSD, NetBSD, Linux ..
I looked at a lot of systems when planning some projects, and when it
came down to NetBSD or OpenBSD, the deciding factor for me was pfsync.
Can I ask what tasks or activities you have been using NetBSD for?
regards,
-Lars
On Fri, 16 Jan 2009, Allie Daneman wrote:
That's exactly my problem. I have to use this Linux POS to get the job done
and I feel bad about it. I've loved OpenBSD for years but it can't do what I
need in a PC for my daily driverI'm pissed because I can't contribute to
helping the issue eith
On Fri, 16.01.2009 at 14:42:05 -0500, Nick Guenther wrote:
> Out of curiousity, what are you doing in Java that needs Windows?
Maybe writing Java apps that use specific Windows APIs (at least
"optionally")? I'm guess that you don't get these in non-Windows builds
of Java...
Kind regards,
--Toni
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 3:03 PM, Allie Daneman wrote:
> Not an option...see I work in a unique situation. I need a laptop running XP
> that I can use to VPN into work for email,etc. I also need XP running on the
> local LAN for access to local boxes that require the windows java based
> client. Be
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 3:03 PM, Allie Daneman wrote:
> Marti Martinez wrote:
>>
>> Obviously none of us know WHAT you're really trying to do, so this
>> suggestion may or may not be workable for you, but in your situation
>> my preferred solution is to set up a crap machine with XP as the
>> nati
That's a great theory but it's not my situation. I use SAE and metric
now but am looking for something that does it better. Why would I dump
what works when I'm just asking for more options ? Sure I could go with
the easy option and run 2 maybe 3 laptops if I want to run an OpenBSD
desktop...b
On Jan 16, 2009, at 12:05 PM, Allie Daneman wrote:
BingoI don't run this stuff voluntarily...I have to for work.
If work is all SAE, and you have metric and SAE tools, do you bring
your metric tools on the job site? No, because for the most part they
won't fit, and you might strip the b
bofh wrote:
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 2:42 PM, Nick Guenther wrote:
Out of curiousity, what are you doing in Java that needs Windows?
I have commercial crap that is used to manage windows crap but is
written in java. Guess what do they call when they need to access
storage? C:\ . I'm sur
Marti Martinez wrote:
Obviously none of us know WHAT you're really trying to do, so this
suggestion may or may not be workable for you, but in your situation
my preferred solution is to set up a crap machine with XP as the
native OS, and just use rdesktop to log in to it.
Not an option...see I wo
Obviously none of us know WHAT you're really trying to do, so this
suggestion may or may not be workable for you, but in your situation
my preferred solution is to set up a crap machine with XP as the
native OS, and just use rdesktop to log in to it.
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 12:32 PM, Allie Daneman
Nick Guenther wrote:
Out of curiousity, what are you doing in Java that needs Windows?
Ahh yes...for work I need to run a java based app that primarily has a
Windows client. I have to run it in Windows for work although I tried
Wine and it failed miserably. I tried Qemu as well and that's when
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 2:42 PM, Nick Guenther wrote:
> Out of curiousity, what are you doing in Java that needs Windows?
I have commercial crap that is used to manage windows crap but is
written in java. Guess what do they call when they need to access
storage? C:\ . I'm sure there're ple
Out of curiousity, what are you doing in Java that needs Windows?
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 2:32 PM, Allie Daneman wrote:
> That's exactly my problem. I have to use this Linux POS to get the job done
> and I feel bad about it. I've loved OpenBSD for years but it can't do what I
> need in a PC for m
That's exactly my problem. I have to use this Linux POS to get the job
done and I feel bad about it. I've loved OpenBSD for years but it can't
do what I need in a PC for my daily driverI'm pissed because I can't
contribute to helping the issue either so I should probably just shut up
and do
On Jan 16, 2009, at 11:00 AM, Allie Daneman wrote:
I need to run Java on the guest...hence the reason Qemu doesn't work
for me. T need virtualization software that runs java on an XP
guest. The version of OpenBSD doesn't matter ;) I've been running it
since 2.8 and am running current today
I need to run Java on the guest...hence the reason Qemu doesn't work for
me. T need virtualization software that runs java on an XP guest. The
version of OpenBSD doesn't matter ;) I've been running it since 2.8 and
am running current today as a serverwhich is what I want to change.
Look, do
Why you need java on guest system? Native JDK is available for
OpenBSD/i386 and OpenBSD/amd64.
Ok, here's my dilemna. I love OpenBSD but due to the fact that I can't
run a virtual instance of XP with Java on Qemu I'm screwed. I have to
use a Linux box (ducking) with virtualbox to get my work done. Has
anyone successfully ported virtualbox to be run on OpenBSD as the host
or been able to
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