Drew Tomlinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The time server is a FreeBSD 6.0 box on my network. My other FreeBSD
box and two Windows boxes get time from it just fine. Even the Gentoo
box will set its clock with ntpd -gq. I am currently using this
brute force method via a cron job as a
Hi all,
Just got a bridge setup to put in to monitor network traffic. I wonder
if there's a need to put in iptables/ebtables into it.
the bridge(br0) does not have an ip address.
--
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!!
Neuromancer 10:55:46 up
On Sun, 2006-02-12 at 18:21 -0600, John Jolet wrote:
On 2/12/06 6:10 PM, Iain Buchanan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 09:47 +1000, Alan E. Davis wrote:
On 2/13/06, Gerhard Hoogterp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Under linux that's not nessecary
as you can just use long
Is there a package in gentoo for an open source tool like CPanel or
Ensim Pro web hosting tools, or something of the like?
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
* Alan E. Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] [13/02/06 02:08]:
On 2/13/06, Gerhard Hoogterp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Under linux that's not nessecary
as you can just use long filenames including spaces..
I do that, of course. It solves 95% of my issues. Somehow, I still
miss that feature.
On 13 February 2006 00:25, Abhay Kedia wrote:
On Monday 13 February 2006 00:29, Uwe Thiem wrote:
No, they are not. That's OSS stuff and not present on my box since I
don't use OSS.
I have this in my /etc/udev/rules.d/50-udev.rules which is related to ALSA
# alsa devices
SUBSYSTEM==sound,
On 2/12/06, Uwe Thiem [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How about dsp and such? Shouldn't there be rules to create them as well?
Yes, your 50-udev.rules file should contain:
/etc/udev/rules.d/50-udev.rules:KERNEL==adsp,
NAME=sound/%k, SYMLINK+=%k, GROUP=audio
On 2/12/06, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm thinking of some obsure case where the code or data needed to read swap
has been swapped out.
BTW, I have been using swap on LVM (on an encrypted PV) for quite some
time, without any trouble, including using suspend-to-ram and
On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 14:02 +0930, Iain Buchanan wrote:
just for fun, I wrote this leedle script
I should have explained it a bit more - the script looks for a .comment
file, and matches the first word in that file. Anything after this word
is a comment for the file.
so if you said ~/.bin/ls
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