On Wed, Mar 07, 2007 at 02:43:15AM -0700, RJ45 wrote:
there are many difficulties and YES there is the documentation
on FreeBSD handbook but it does not helped me so much I Still ahve
difficulties.
I isntalled MIT krb5 also and I Am using kadmin from MIT
to manage krb5 server.
So no
On Tue, Mar 06, 2007 at 10:07:57AM -0700, RJ45 wrote:
for example I would like to installa MIT krb5 implementation from ports
instead of using heidmal default this because the kerberos server
on my network is a MIT server and I can't use kadmin on FreeBSD
to administrer the kerberos server
On Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 12:24:03PM +, Alex Zbyslaw wrote:
Tillman Hodgson wrote:
If that still holds true in the -current src, the second mount will
*definitely* cause me backup problems. I may have to move to keeping the
NFS export always mounted, which is not ideal.
Could you use
On Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 03:10:30PM +, Alex Zbyslaw wrote:
Tillman Hodgson wrote:
Yes, that's certainly an issue. Presumably you can lock down the
directory perms to be root only or root/operator though. Depending on
setup and money, backing up the backups to tape would give more
A bit of background:
I run backup scripts (dumps piped through gzip to a fileshare) out of
periodic on a daily, weekly and monthly basis. In the script I mount the
NFS share, perform the dumps, and then umount the share. I was worried
that if a daily backup took a long time (more than twice the
On Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 02:04:38PM -0500, Bob Johnson wrote:
On 2/12/07, Tillman Hodgson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is this normal behaviour? Are there any problems with (performance,
perhaps) that might occur if an NFS share is mounted twice? What if my
backup job is still running, would
On Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 01:42:04PM -0600, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
(Note that that in this case I'm backing up TO the NFS mount, and it's
possible that the same NFS share could be mounted on the same spot
twice, depending on how long it takes for the daily backup job to run).
Following up on my
On 8/4/06, Garrett Cooper [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
Just wondering if it's possible for NIS and Kerberos 5 to work in
tandem with one another, such that NIS would handle groups and
configuration file management and Kerberos would handle authentication
only. Also, is this
On Tue, Mar 07, 2006 at 12:58:59PM +0200, Petre Bandac wrote:
hallo
I am trying to migrate a dual-homed linux box to freebsd; how can I
achieve the src routing iproute2 does on freebsd ?
There isn't currently a direct routing equivalent. I cheat and use IPF
like so (the IPs are faked):
#
On Tue, Mar 07, 2006 at 06:07:48PM +0200, Petre Bandac wrote:
On Tue, 7 Mar 2006 09:49:51 -0600 Anno Domini, the honourable Tillman
Hodgson wrote using one of his keyboards:
On Tue, Mar 07, 2006 at 12:58:59PM +0200, Petre Bandac wrote:
hallo
I am trying to migrate a dual-homed
On Sun, Feb 26, 2006 at 10:08:53AM -0800, Jason C. Wells wrote:
I am not able to use heimdal kerberos telnetd on FreeBSD-6 to provide
remote access to a host. I get this error from my Kermit client:
Kerberos authentication failed!
Kerberos V5 refuses authentication because
On Fri, Feb 24, 2006 at 11:30:27AM +1030, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
Ten years ago today, on 24 February 1996, I submitted for publication
the final version of the first ever book on FreeBSD, Installing and
Using FreeBSD. It was later renamed to The Complete FreeBSD.
I have always retained
the freebsd-current@freebsd.org archives for:
Date: Fri, 2 Dec 2005 16:24:16 -0600
From: Tillman Hodgson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Compaq ProLiant 1600 server freezes when detecting keyboard
controller
Basically, you need to build a kernel without the uhci device and boot
with that.
-T
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 12:35:32PM +0200, Ertan K???ko?lu wrote:
Good news,
System boots flawlessly after removing USB and Firewire in GENERIC kernel.
[My apologies for not jumping into this thread early, in spite of
Ertan's polite email of inquiry. Vacations, yada yada etc :-).]
I can
Howdy,
I've been googling for information about getting a Mac OS X client (a
powerbook running 10.4.1) to work with a VPN server of some sort on
FreeBSD (-current as of April 25 running on sparc64). The VPN server has
a static IP and acts as a firewall and BGP/OSPF router as well (over
tunnels to
On Mon, May 09, 2005 at 05:44:23PM -0700, Damian Sobieralski wrote:
Look into the GSSAPI options for /etc/ssh/ssh_config instead.
Newer OpenSSH versions support Kerberos natively and
don't need PAM hacks.
Thanks Tillman! I was using PAM only based on someone's
recommendation. As I've
On Mon, May 09, 2005 at 08:53:21AM -0700, Damian Sobieralski wrote:
PAM does not map well to Kerberos, unfortunately. Generally speaking
you want to avoid PAM with Kerberos if you can possibly use native
Kerberos
:-)
It seems my ignorance is kicking in here- how would they log into the
On Wed, May 04, 2005 at 02:33:30PM -0700, Damian Sobieralski wrote:
I have a fairly weird question for the group. I recently set up a
FreeBSD 5.3 box to use pam_krb5 for sshd authentication. It worked
great. I created a local workstation user via adduser and when it came
time for the
On Thu, May 05, 2005 at 10:11:30AM -0700, Damian Sobieralski wrote:
Followup up:
If AFTER I log in, I issue kinit and type my password in. Now when I
do a klist I get ticket information. Shouldn't the pam module do this
aotomatically (call kinit)?
PAM does not map well to Kerberos,
Howdy folks,
I'm looking at some milters that would be very useful to my mail
architecture (milter-ahead is one I'm looking at deploying very soon).
What's the best way to add 3rd-party milters so that it's still
maintainable? I'm thinking of writing a port around it (using
mail/rbl-milter)
On Sat, Mar 19, 2005 at 01:53:58PM -0600, Kirk Strauser wrote:
I have a working kdc on my LAN and use OpenSSH's gssapi-with-mic
authentication to connect to other machines. However, I can't
use /usr/bin/ksu to su to root without entering root's password, even if I
have a current, valid
On Sat, Mar 19, 2005 at 08:53:18PM -0600, Kirk Strauser wrote:
On Saturday 19 March 2005 02:22 pm, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
The ksu from the mit-krb5 port works the way you expect it to.
Thanks for the info. Any idea why the one in the base system wouldn't,
though? I'm loathe to replace
On Sun, Mar 13, 2005 at 03:38:46PM -, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I followed the handbook guide to setting it up, and it all seems to be
working ok. I have now setup telnetd as described to test how it is
working. If I have done a kinit previously, it will log in no problem,
but if I do
On Sun, Mar 13, 2005 at 05:30:09PM -, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
what I was assuming would happen when I try to telnet in without a ticket
(i.e. with running kinit) was that I would get asked for a
username/password, and then I would get issued a ticket, rather than
manually having to kinit
On Sun, Feb 13, 2005 at 09:22:45AM -0600, Chris wrote:
2. Telnet passes clear text no matter what.
Not in a Kerberos environment it doesn't, nor in an transport-mode IPsec
environment.
Related to that is connections where transport-level encryption
typically doesn't matter: connecting over a
On Mon, Jan 24, 2005 at 04:00:55PM -0800, Sean Murphy wrote:
Sorry eight for password as well.
Does any know the limits for FreeBSD?
man 1 passwd says
The new password should be at least six characters long (which may be
overridden using the login.conf(5) ``minpasswordlen'' setting for
On Fri, Jan 21, 2005 at 03:20:58PM -0700, Nick Pavlica wrote:
To be sure that I was using up to date versions of each OS I performed
a cvsup and rebuilt the kernel (GENERIC) during the FBSD setup, and a
yum update on the Linux install.
Most likely unrelated to your performance question, but
On Thu, Jan 20, 2005 at 09:11:10PM -0500, Shawn wrote:
I have been attempting to get open vpn working on my freebsd 4.11 Alpha
machine. SO Far I have done the following..
I did the make install for /usr/ports/security/openvpn/
Where is uses SSL Im trying to understand the config file for
On Mon, Jan 10, 2005 at 01:44:57PM -, Scott Bye wrote:
I updated to this via ports, and the services appear to be running and
listening for connections.
However, if I connect to them, I get disconnected immediately, and
nothing appears to be logged for any of the services.
I'm
On Mon, Jan 10, 2005 at 11:19:26AM -0600, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
On Mon, Jan 10, 2005 at 01:44:57PM -, Scott Bye wrote:
I updated to this via ports, and the services appear to be running and
listening for connections.
However, if I connect to them, I get disconnected immediately
On Wed, Jan 05, 2005 at 08:27:51PM -0800, Jay O'Brien wrote:
I want to look at all of the lines in a FreeBSD log file that do not
have an entry from an IP, example 1.2.3.4. Some basic help with the
use of grep would be appreciated. This is one of the arguments I've
tried that didn't work:
On Wed, Dec 01, 2004 at 06:03:05PM -0600, Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P. wrote:
There was some discussion on the lists (IIRC) a while back
on the idea of building a small editor binary that you like
(trying to remember some of the possibilities: zed, ved, led,
sted, (but not ted), ee (already
On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 11:28:18PM -0600, Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Nov 12), Tillman Hodgson said:
I'd like to find a way to have camcontrol (or some other mechanism)
set the SCSI bus speed on this particular SCSI chain early in the
boot process, /before/ it encounters fsck
Howdy foilks,
I have a SCSI controller (the external 68-pin high density connector on
a Compaq Proliant 1600) that seems to ignore it's own settings when I
through its bus speed down. This is a problem, as I'm running into
/many/ SCSI bus reset problems with this ancient DEC 7-bay JBOD tower
that
On Thu, Oct 28, 2004 at 01:16:10PM -0400, Kimberley Chrona wrote:
Hi there
Two very simple questions, can I run FreeBSD on a Sun box and is it
possible to run BSD on VMware
I can't speak to VMware, but you can run FreeBSD on some types of Sun
gear (I'm running it on an Ultra 5, for
On Wed, Oct 27, 2004 at 11:09:46PM +0100, David Jenkins wrote:
NB - I don't want to pipe uptime into awk or use a perl script etc,
I'd much prefer it to be C based.
If you *did* want to do it that way, something like
uptime | sed -e 's/.*: \([0-9.]*\).*/\1/'
is handy.
If any knows where
On Wed, Oct 13, 2004 at 01:58:28PM +0100, Simon Burke wrote:
It may also help if you put the good ole hyphen hyphen space enter'
decent e-mail clients should see this as the start of a sig an will
remove anything below it, i know thunderbird and even gmail does, so
it tidys up the default sig
Howdy,
How does one get Apache compiled with both a statically compiled modperl
(required for www/bricolage) as well as modssl?
I see a www/apache13-modssl and a www/apache13-modperl, but spelunking
through the Makefiles for either doesn't reveal a knob that enables the
other option.
-T
--
On Tue, Oct 12, 2004 at 02:09:33PM -0500, Paul Schmehl wrote:
--On Tuesday, October 12, 2004 10:26:19 AM -0600 Tillman Hodgson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How does one get Apache compiled with both a statically compiled modperl
(required for www/bricolage) as well as modssl?
I see a www
On Tue, Oct 12, 2004 at 03:15:10PM -0500, Paul Schmehl wrote:
--On Tuesday, October 12, 2004 01:43:35 PM -0600 Tillman Hodgson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Install apache13-modssl, then install www/mod-perl.
That's what I have now, and it results in a mod-perl /module/.
www/bricolage
On Wed, Sep 08, 2004 at 05:06:25PM +0100, Matthew Seaman wrote:
The old directory still exists only because there's a readme.html file
in it -- if you delete that and re-run cvsup, the old net/net-snmp
directory will be deleted completely.
Is there a handy way to automate the deletion of
On Thu, Jul 22, 2004 at 02:23:36PM -0400, Bill Moran wrote:
Ray Seals [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have 15 FreeBSD machines on my network (soon to be around 30) and want
to synch all the machines userid and passwords. Is NIS still the
primary way to do this or is there a better solution?
Howdy,
I have a backup connection on an ADSL line with an IP address provided
by DHCP. My main line, which has static IPs, hosts my Bind 9.2.3 DNS
server. I don't have control of the DHCP server for the backup line,
it's simply provided by the ISP.
I'm using dhclient from -CURRENT on i386, dated
On Sat, Jul 03, 2004 at 02:33:22PM -0400, Chuck Swiger wrote:
Grant Peel wrote:
I have recently decided to use some extra disk space on one of my servers
as
backup space. I have NFS client and Servers running OK, but was wondering
how
secure it really is.
NFS is not secure at all. If
On Wed, Apr 21, 2004 at 03:11:55PM +0100, Andy Holyer wrote:
I work for a small special-purpose ISP, and right now I'm configuring
our main Web/Mail/DNS server. It's a Dell Poweredge 750, 2.4Gb with
1Gig of memory and twp 80 GB drives mirrored using vinum.
When I've prepped it up, it's due
On Mon, Apr 12, 2004 at 03:30:42PM +0100, Matthew Seaman wrote:
If you're that worried about WEP not being secure enough, you could
wrap the NFS connections in ipsec instead. It might have a bit of a
performance impact though.
I'm a big fan of running IPsec over wireless connections. But I
On Mon, Mar 15, 2004 at 12:46:31AM -0600, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
I'm interesting in seeing what low-cost gigabit cards are supported
under -stable and which cards might be recommended. I'm looking
specifically at the Linksys EG1032, D-Link DGE-530T, Intel Pro1000MT,
and the Micronet SP2612R
On Fri, Mar 19, 2004 at 10:41:14PM -0800, Chuck McManis wrote:
At 03:24 PM 3/19/2004, you wrote:
Top-posting may be an opinion, but RFC 1855 makes it _standard_ opinion.
Let's get serious for a minute here. Just because someone wrote up an
INFORMATIONAL RFC does NOT make it STANDARD. It
On Fri, Mar 19, 2004 at 05:35:06PM -0500, Al Johnson wrote:
I'm with you... Top-posting makes the most sense for me.
It comes down to opinion I think
My standard response to top-posting:
A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
Q: Why is putting a reply at the top of the
Howdy,
I found a few threads on this topic in google, but they were from a
while ago (-stable and hardware are both moving targets, after all).
I'm interesting in seeing what low-cost gigabit cards are supported
under -stable and which cards might be recommended. I'm looking
specifically at the
On Fri, Mar 05, 2004 at 11:15:09AM -0600, Brian Henning wrote:
Is there a port of freebsd that will run on a sparc classic?
I only see one for 64 bit sparc on the ftp site.
No, there isn't. Sparc64 works wonderfully, however.
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.2.1R/hardware.html
I suspect that
On Sun, Feb 22, 2004 at 06:18:18PM +, Jez Hancock wrote:
On Sat, Feb 21, 2004 at 11:49:22PM -0400, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Doesn't (or didn't?) Linux have a 'feature' that allowed ppl to save their
uptimes through a reboot? So, for instance, if it was a schedualed
reboot, uptime
Howdy folks,
I NFS export my home directory from a 4-STABLE box. In this home
directory are my .vimrc file and a couple of vim plugins that I use.
When I launch vim (which I use with mutt) from a workstation running
RedHat 7.3 it loads and is ready for input virtually instantly. When I
launch
On Mon, Jan 19, 2004 at 09:25:01AM +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
Now, it does NOT work...
192.168.1.0 -- Internet works with no problem (tun0 being the default route
on the FreeBSD gateway)
192.168.0.0 -- Internet doesn't work :(
When you tcpdump both external interfaces, do the packets on
On Mon, Jan 19, 2004 at 05:04:50PM +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
On Monday 19 January 2004 16:21, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
When you tcpdump both external interfaces, do the packets on
the interface that the 1921.68.0.0/24 network is supposed to use look
like you would expect?
Nope
On Sat, Jan 17, 2004 at 06:52:31PM -0500, Mario Antonio wrote:
Dear List,
When I make a serial connection to a FreeBSD server that has its serial port
configured as a console, how can I make the vi editor work?
What doesn't work about it?
And you've already set your TERM environment
On Fri, Jan 16, 2004 at 09:28:47AM -0800, Jason Williams wrote:
Morning everyone.
I'm having a major brain freeze this morning. I dont recall how to find the
reverse for an IP address?
I need to do some testing with a few IP addresses, to ensure they have
valid reverse's set, but dont
On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 03:59:22PM -0500, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Tillman Hodgson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
* I built 4 kernels: 3 customized and GENERIC (see above for why)
Note that kernels are forced into serial compilation anyway,
so the -j flag has no effect on them. This test probably
On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 05:10:01PM +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
On Thursday 15 January 2004 16:41, Dirk Meyer wrote:
Thats easy on your router:
#!/bin/sh
gateway1=10.10.10.1
gateway2=10.10.10.2
dmz=10.10.20.0/24
lan=10.10.30.0/24
ipfw add fwd ${gateway2} ip from ${dmz} to any
On Fri, Jan 16, 2004 at 12:29:37AM +0200, Vahric MUHTARYAN wrote:
Hi
I found old chart about some comparison between some OS FreeBSD , Linux and
like this . Does any body know any new report or chart about performans
between Oss which included FreeBSD of course .
Do a google search for
On Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 02:46:28PM -, Simon Gray wrote:
I've been looking for answers on this for a while but I found nothing nor
no-one who could tell me if and how it is possible.
Let the list know if you find anything interesting.
Easiest way I would of thought would be to use BGP
On Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 06:27:30PM +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
On Wednesday 14 January 2004 17:30, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
I'm a heavy Zebra (migrating to Quagga) user. Using dynamic routing is
very handy, but it won't solve the problem of balancing load across two
connections.
Thanks
On Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 08:10:19PM +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
On Wednesday 14 January 2004 19:50, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
On FreeBSD, source-based routing is done with the IPFW 'fwd' command (or
the IPFilter 'pass out quick on int_2 to int_1' syntax) rather that
using the `route` command
Howdy,
Occasionally the question pops up on the questions@ list about what the
fastest -jX number is for a single CPU system. I had some spare time so
I tried out a small matrix of possibilities.
My conclusion is that using -jX at all is mostly a waste of time on
single CPU systems running
On Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 11:11:22PM -0500, Duane Winner wrote:
I now understand how to use cvsup to keep my src and ports tree current.
I know how to use pkg_add -r to install new sotware, or go into
/usr/ports/whatever to make install. I know how to do portupgrade to
upgrade my installed
On Mon, Jan 12, 2004 at 09:45:20PM -0500, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Tillman Hodgson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Howdy folks,
What's the best way to build ng_one2many interfaces into rc.conf such
that they're brought up (live) at the normal time so that:
1) configuration remains
Howdy folks,
What's the best way to build ng_one2many interfaces into rc.conf such
that they're brought up (live) at the normal time so that:
1) configuration remains centralized in rc.conf
2) other pieces that depend on a network being present don't fail in
enlightening ways?
I want to
On Fri, Jan 09, 2004 at 06:23:45PM -0500, Scott W wrote:
That still doesn't remove (IMHO of course) the validity of my statement
about calling FreeBSD and OS but Linux not based on licensing- FreeBSD
wouldn't exist in it's current incarnation without the use of GPL and
GNU software. Nor
On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 09:14:41PM -0500, David D.W. Downey wrote:
And how is that different from Linux? FreeBSD is an Operating System, so is
Red Hat, Debian, Stampede, SLS, Slackware, and on and on. FreeBSD does the
same thing. FreeBSD didn't develop OpenSSL but it includes it, nor did it
On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 10:39:59PM -0500, Scott W wrote:
snip
Note that I don't entirely disagree with the response- IMHO, RedHat and
SuSe are in fact merely distributions, but Linux as a collection of
kernel + core programs is certainly an OS, in the same manner as *BSD
is.
I think that
On Thu, Jan 01, 2004 at 05:06:23PM -0500, stan wrote:
I have set up the isc-dhcp port on 2 machines. and it is serving addresses,
but I notice that whichever machine gives the lease is the only one that
records the lease in it's leases file.
This seems like a problem.
Yes, I imagine it is
On Thu, Jan 01, 2004 at 06:23:15PM -0600, Eric F Crist wrote:
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:15 pm, Eric F Crist wrote:
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:04 pm, Chris wrote:
If you have source installed, that takes up a bit. If you don't see
yourself doing a makeworld and building kernel - a
On Tue, Dec 23, 2003 at 01:52:46AM +0100, Jaroslaw Nozderko wrote:
I've got the following error:
Filesystem type unknown, partition type 0xa5
Error 17: Cannot mount selected partition
Does GRUB have some problems with FreeBSD partition ?
I recently ran into the same problem - I found the
On Wed, Dec 17, 2003 at 11:08:57PM -0600, Bryan Cassidy wrote:
OK. I've added that to my .procmailrc but when I load Mutt it
still doesn't show any group called freebsd-questions. Do I
have to create a ~/Maildir/freebds-questions directory?
Yes. In my post I talked about having mutt do that
On Mon, Dec 15, 2003 at 07:25:21AM -0800, hugle wrote:
now about this script.
Let's reduce this this to pseudo code to simplify the discussion:
map vlan0 from 192.168.0.0/16 ! to 192.168.0.0/16 (some ports) - (gw2)
map fxp0 from 192.168.0.0/16 ! to 192.168.0.0/16 (other ports) - (gw1)
map rl1
On Sun, Dec 14, 2003 at 06:13:39PM -0500, Hossein wrote:
Hello every body;
In our department we are going to use a 5.1 Stable FreeBSD, and it
must run NIS client to authonticate the users through a Linux NIS server.
The ypbind works well and when I do ypcat passwd I get the
On Sun, Dec 14, 2003 at 06:01:08PM -0500, fbsd_user wrote:
I think you are confused. IPNAT is part of ipfilter firewall and
IPFW is an different firewall who has his own NATD function. You can
not use one part from one and the other part from the other one.
They work as an set,
On Sun, Dec 14, 2003 at 07:23:26PM -0500, fbsd_user wrote:
What do you think IPF is? That's the utility name used to load
filter rules into IPFILTER.
So you are doing just what I said. The original poster said
nothing about doing traffic shaping.
IPNAT will not function with out IPFILTER
I'm trying over here since I didn't have any luck fishing in ports@ :-)
I've since found the parts of the MIT login.krb5 that chown the
forwarded ticket file. That was nice to know to not really relevent :-)
I understand that there's a race condition when having root chown a file
in /tmp to a
On Fri, Nov 28, 2003 at 08:11:23PM -0500, Dragoncrest wrote:
Limiting closed port RST response from 272 to 200 packets per second
snip
Can you disable all PINGS from router to my server?
snip
It may be best to do two things. 1st would be to disable pings to
and from the server at
On Wed, Nov 26, 2003 at 08:02:19PM +0100, Harald Schmalzbauer wrote:
If I unterstand the latest commit messages correctly, the ports tree is in
code freeze. Also -current is in code freeze.
But how do one know? I'm subscribed to current and announce but can't remember
any notice.
Kris sent
On Tue, Nov 25, 2003 at 09:11:28PM +0100, Frank Murphy wrote:
Before going back to the FHS list, I'd like to summarize what I think the
opinions here were. Please correct me if I'm horribly off-base.
The idea of defining a default directory to hold directories for recurring
temporary
On Sat, Nov 22, 2003 at 02:18:30PM -0500, Charles Swiger wrote:
Obviously, a standard that says place mount points anywhere you want
isn't very useful. But if you did come up with a standard, who should
follow it and what would they gain?
I don't want to speak for the FHS, but I do want to
On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 03:41:16PM +0100, Frank Murphy wrote:
The folks at the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS) are discussing
(again) where directories for recurring temporary mount points should go.
Recurring temporary mount points are for things like cdroms, floppies,
and digital cameras
Howdy,
I'm looking for the appropriate portupgrade magic to handle these sorts
of situations automatically:
You may wish to ``make deinstall'' and install this port again
by ``make reinstall'' to upgrade it properly.
If you really wish to overwrite the old port of
On Mon, Nov 17, 2003 at 09:14:31AM -0600, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
Whats the best way to ensure that all perl modules are properly and
automatically upgrade when perl itself is upgraded?
I've since discovered that I can shorten the time somewhat by using
`pkg_info -R perl-5.6.1_14
On Wed, Nov 12, 2003 at 04:55:19PM -0800, Kris Kennaway wrote:
On Wed, Nov 12, 2003 at 04:40:53PM -0700, Aaron Brandt wrote:
Can someone tell me what I need to do to get FreeBSD Sparc 64 installed on
a Ultra Sparc 10. It seems as if the emulation is messed up. I have heard
of doing a
On Mon, Nov 10, 2003 at 06:16:50PM -0800, Will Yardley wrote:
I've asked this before (a long while back), but never got a response.
When I telnet to a Cisco device from a FreeBSD machine, I get this
error:
jazz% telnet somerouterorswitch
Password: Kerberos: No default realm defined
On Sun, Nov 09, 2003 at 07:48:53PM -0700, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC wrote:
On Nov 9, 2003, at 4:28 AM, Kris Kennaway wrote:
On Sun, Nov 09, 2003 at 01:33:23AM -0700, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC
wrote:
Hi
I have a linux server that needs to mount my FBSD server's web volume
and
On Sun, Nov 09, 2003 at 08:49:58PM -0700, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC wrote:
My Linux is now mounting the FreeBSD served mounts, but it takes like
10 minutes for the mount to happen. The exports is simple
/local/web -maproot=root and an address to allow mounting from
The nfsd is the
On Tue, Oct 14, 2003 at 10:54:50AM +0930, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
...
In particular, if you restore /usr/lib you'll replace the C library
/usr/lib/libc.so. It's then possible to crash dynamically linked
processes (since they no longer have libraries), after which you could
be left with a
On Fri, Oct 10, 2003 at 03:06:23PM +0200, Alexander Haderer wrote:
My opinion: yes. Learn the basics of LaTeX and use pdflatex instead of
latex to create pdf files directly from your tex source. The old way of
generating pdf via tex-dvi-ps-pdf via the classic (la)tex commands has
the
On Fri, Oct 10, 2003 at 04:18:38PM +0200, Alexander Haderer wrote:
I agree with the recommendation to learn LaTeX. It's probably the best
way to generate PDF output and it's widely used for document generation.
I disagree that one needs to use pdflatex, though. Those side-effects
you mention
On Fri, Oct 10, 2003 at 07:59:10AM -0600, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
1. \usepackage{times} (or palatino or bookman or whatever font
package you like)
2. use something like this in your Makefile:
ps:
latex some_latex_file.tex
latex
On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 10:16:07AM +0200, Simon Rutishauser wrote:
Hi,
give the Latex Prosper Package a try (you have to fetch it separately).
With it you can create pdf files.
These you can present using xpdf -fullscreen (I think xpdf doesn't need
too much ressources ;-))
Peschmä
I
On Wed, Sep 24, 2003 at 03:37:19PM -0400, synrat wrote:
I'm trying to find vpn software for freebsd that supports pptp.
I don't care much for ipsec, unless I have no other choice.
Goal being :), windows clients mounting samba shares remotely over vpn.
I found a howto for poptop, but it said
On Thu, Sep 18, 2003 at 10:42:13AM -0400, Jerry McAllister wrote:
AFS looks like it replicates files onto multiple servers, so if one
goes down the data is still available somewhere else. The servers do
not share backend filesystems.
Don't you just wish OpenAFS for FreeBSD (and some of
On Sat, Sep 13, 2003 at 05:01:31PM +0200, Guy Van Sanden wrote:
I was looking arround for this, and I found that Kerberos uses DES
encryption, John (on my sytem) reports it rather weak:
snip
I'm now using MD5 passwords in NIS.
Yet it seems the consensus that Kerberos is secure, am I missing
On Fri, Sep 12, 2003 at 11:35:16AM +0200, Guy Van Sanden wrote:
On Tue, 2003-09-09 at 02:15, Tillman Hodgson wrote:
The rough instructions are fairly simple:
* Set up Kerberos and ensure you have a working realm
* Set up NIS, but set all the passwd fields to something that doesn't
On Wed, Sep 10, 2003 at 05:11:58PM -0700, Joseph Yuen wrote:
Got a simple question.
on my 80G harddrive, I originally had 4G files in it
and I used rm command to remove it all. Now my drive
should be totally empty.
But this is what I found when I typed df -H
/dev/ar0s1e 79G 2.0K 72G 0%
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