I am kinda new to FBSD, still kinda learning stuff. Anyway, when my
system boots i see all kinda fragmentation information. How do I correct
this? Any good reading material? Also, what should I do when I shutdown
my system incorrectly and boot up again? Last questions! I promise. Is
there a file
Fragmentation is a non-event in 99.999% of cases. It is nothing like
micro$lop fragments and (before you ask, no there is no defrag tool,
'cos it is not required)
The shutdown question -- well you should not shutdown incorrectly ;-)
- see man shutdown and friends
(BTW - letting the FreeBSD box
This is off topic, I was wondering if there is a pretty little gui that
will run when booting. Kinda like windows, lindows, and even Redhat
Fedora has one; which can be switched back and forth. Basically, so I
don't have to see the text scrolling down and just see a loader with %.
Maybe in the
Joshua Lewis wrote:
/dev/ad1s1 what? a, d, e, f,g ??
Do I specify? I am using the whole drive. should I change it to /dev/ad1s1a?
Thank you,
Joshua Lewis
Anubis
Joshua Lewis wrote:
The last time I edited this file my system ceased to boot. I have made
what
looks to me like a valid entry. This
This is off topic, I was wondering if there is a pretty little gui that
will run when booting. Kinda like windows, lindows, and even Redhat
Fedora has one; which can be switched back and forth. Basically, so I
don't have to see the text scrolling down and just see a loader with %.
Maybe in the
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 12:03 am, Bruce Hunter wrote:
This is off topic, I was wondering if there is a pretty little gui
that will run when booting. Kinda like windows, lindows, and even
Redhat Fedora has one; which can be switched back and forth.
Basically, so I don't have to see the text
Thanks for your help Kent
I read something about using portversion -c with the portupgrade command
to upgrade installed pkgs that needed to be updated.
When I run portversion -c :: I get a print out of things needed to be
upgraded and at the end, it shows a 'if' statment.
How do you use this
Hello to you all,
I am new to freeBSD and this mailing list. I have run into
some problems and am not sure where to post my question. I am running
FreeBSD 5.2 i386 and am having some problems getting gnome to work. I have
searched through the handbook and several other text
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 08:34:24AM +0300, Odhiambo Washington wrote:
My colleague is trying to find the maximum amount of virtual
memory that FreeBSD is able to allocate to a program.
He's trying 4*1020*1024*1024 for kern.maxdsiz and FreeBSD
fries up.
On i386 the CPU can only address 4GB of
On Tue, 2004-06-08 at 09:40, n3rdBoy . wrote:
When I am logged in as root X11 and gnome start fine when I type
'startx', when I am logged in as a normal user I type 'startx' and only X11
starts. I have followed the instructions in the handbook and modified
/root/.xsession. any
Try to move /root/.xinitrc to /home/you/
It should work. ;)
On Tue, 08 Jun 2004 07:40:05 +, n3rdBoy .
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello to you all,
I am new to freeBSD and this mailing list. I have run
into some problems and am not sure where to post my question. I am
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 12:37 am, Bruce Hunter wrote:
Thanks for your help Kent
I read something about using portversion -c with the portupgrade
command to upgrade installed pkgs that needed to be updated.
When I run portversion -c :: I get a print out of things needed to
be upgraded and
on FreeBSD 4.6 fetch from perl script in /etc/Crontab not working (it is
update.pl for drWeb antivirus), message fetch: operation timeout received,
from console fetch also not operate, but the same perl script running from
console operate OK
please where is problem?
---
Vilo Kyjac
netadmin SMU
Hi all,
I have been using /usr/ports/www/firefox for sometime now.
Recently I installed /usr/ports/www/linux-mozillafirebird to experiment with
some of the plugins. Something that I noticed was that linux-mozillafirebird is
blazingly fast compared to firefox.
I'm talking about the speed at
Currently I am running 5.2.1
I am doing a buildworld, buildkernel,installkernel, installworld
Whatever you want to call it.
I read something about turning off debugging in the current release and
how it will help to speed up my system. How the heck would I go about
doing this? Does it have to do
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 01:02 am, Wilkinson, Alex wrote:
Hi all,
I have been using /usr/ports/www/firefox for sometime now.
Recently I installed /usr/ports/www/linux-mozillafirebird to
experiment with some of the plugins. Something that I noticed was
that linux-mozillafirebird is blazingly
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 10:04:23AM +0200, Viliam Kyjac wrote:
on FreeBSD 4.6 fetch from perl script in /etc/Crontab not working (it is
update.pl for drWeb antivirus), message fetch: operation timeout received,
from console fetch also not operate, but the same perl script running from
console
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 05:20, Ben Paley wrote:
On Monday 07 June 2004 16:44, Malcolm Kay wrote:
Notice the size recorded for this slice is zero.
If the cylinders=155061 heads=16 sectors/track=63 is somewhere
near the reasonable possible geometry description then virtually
the entire
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 04:48:25AM -0400, Bruce Hunter wrote:
Currently I am running 5.2.1
I am doing a buildworld, buildkernel,installkernel, installworld
Whatever you want to call it.
I read something about turning off debugging in the current release and
how it will help to speed up my
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 10:38, Malcolm Kay wrote:
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 05:20, Ben Paley wrote:
But seriously, does any of this suggest a course of action to you? I'm
planning to try the set sysid to 0 plan... what if that doesn't work?
Sounds like an excellent idea. Perhaps windows is
Hi,
I have a 20gb harddisk with 3 primary partitions:
1st: DOS
2nd: Freebsd
3rd: reserved for linux
and an extended partition(which contains my windows
files)
Before installing linux.. I can see this at freebsd
boot manager menu
F1:DOS
F3:Freebsd
After installing linux and lilo..
F1:DOS
Hello,
I am troubleshooting a Plextor 708UF DVD burner[0] on
FreeBSD CURRENT:
neely:/home/richard$ uname -a
FreeBSD neely.taosecurity.com 5.2-CURRENT FreeBSD
5.2-CURRENT #1: Sat Jun 5 20:35:43 EDT 2004
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/neely
i386
The box is a Shuttle SB52G2[1] with
I have upgraded our LDAP server to 5.2.1Release running openldap-2.1.30
server/client + pam_ldap-1.6.9 + nss_ldap-1.204_5. The previous
configuration (openldap20-2.0.25_4 + nss_ldap-1.204_1 + pam_ldap-1.6.1)
was runing OK on FreeBSD 5.1R
After the upgrade I have 2 major problems.
1) I'm
On Tue, 08 Jun 2004 04:03:31 -0400, Bruce Hunter wrote:
This is off topic, I was wondering if there is a pretty little gui that
will run when booting.
man splash
In my /boot/loader.conf I haver:
splash_bmp_load=YES
bitmap_load=YES
bitmap_name=/boot/daemon_640.bmp
qvb
--
pica
On 08/06/04 02:21 -0400, Bruce Hunter wrote:
This is off topic, I was wondering if there is a pretty little gui that
will run when booting. Kinda like windows, lindows, and even Redhat
Fedora has one; which can be switched back and forth. Basically, so I
don't have to see the text scrolling
[It's not generally good policy to ask multiple questions in one email. As
crazy as it sounds, you're better off sending a seperate email for each
question. See http://www.lemis.com/questions.html]
Bruce Hunter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This is off topic, I was wondering if there is a pretty
I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a thin
client laptop. Will running it all day without suspend mode use a lot of
power?
Is it true that the heat buildup in a home system (rather than a heavily
fanned commercial system) will kill the drives faster and this is a
Hello,
I included the wrong dmesg snippet in my original
post. When I showed the following, I used an excerpt
for the DVD burner connected via _FireWire_:
--
cd1 at sbp0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0
cd1: PLEXTOR DVDR PX-708A 1.06 Removable CD-ROM
SCSI-0 device
cd1: 50.000MB/s transfers
cd1: Attempt
On Jun 8, 2004, at 8:21 AM, Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a
thin
client laptop. Will running it all day without suspend mode use a lot
of
power?
Not necessarily. If you want to measure it, make sure you have a
decent UPS (which
The main cost of having computers for most companies lies not in
software or hardware, but in support. I have been pondering the wisdom
of automating the upgrade process, so that sources are cvsup'ed nightly
and make buildworld buildkernel etc and portupgrade happen overnight
maybe once a week
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Peter Risdon wrote:
The main cost of having computers for most companies lies not in
software or hardware, but in support. I have been pondering the wisdom
of automating the upgrade process, so that sources are cvsup'ed nightly
and make buildworld buildkernel etc and
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The main cost of having computers for most companies lies not in
software or hardware, but in support. I have been pondering the wisdom
of automating the upgrade process, so that sources are cvsup'ed nightly
and make buildworld buildkernel etc and
I am kinda new to FBSD, still kinda learning stuff. Anyway, when my
system boots i see all kinda fragmentation information. How do I correct
this? Any good reading material?
Do not correct it. It is not at all the same thing as fragmentation
in Microsloth systems and is not a problem.
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a thin
client laptop. Will running it all day without suspend mode use a lot of
power?
Is it true that the heat buildup in a home system (rather than a heavily
fanned commercial
Hello All!
I have a strange question and I couldn't answer it myself in any
documentation.
Can I get some e-mail address [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If I can, what should I do or who should I be?
I need this for working with FreeBSD people and mailing lists.
My understanding is that you have to
: So *my* summary for your private server would be:
: - Leaving it on all day will not kill your harddisks, in the
: contrary: even cheap ones will live longer.
: - AMD processors tend to run hot, so if you have one, you should
: look for a good fan.
The guy who built mine installed 2 fans,
I also have an always-on headless server running for like 3 years now
without any problem.
I use it for: apache, samba, vpn, postfix (the usual server apps).
I think the key is to use the minimal (translate: cooler, less power
hungry) components.
Mine is P2-400 with 5400 rpm HDDs.
A UPS would
Hi folks,
This is an interesting topic.
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Peter Risdon wrote:
The main cost of having computers for most
companies lies not in
software or hardware, but in support. I have been
pondering the wisdom
of automating the upgrade process, so that sources
are cvsup'ed
I install F-Prot from the ports. If I run check-updates.pl from the
console I get a sucessful update everytime (or a nothing updates found
message) but if I added the script into the crontab (via crontab -e as
root) I get the following Email:
***
* F-Prot
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 23:02:31 +0800 (CST)
Stephen Liu [EMAIL PROTECTED] spake thus:
Hi folks,
This is an interesting topic.
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Peter Risdon wrote:
The main cost of having computers for most
companies lies not in
software or hardware, but in support. I have been
The last time I edited this file my system ceased to boot. I have made what
looks to me like a valid entry. This is the same thing I entered in last
time. I am not going to save this but does it look valid to anyone out there?
# DeviceMountpoint FStype Options
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Peter Risdon wrote:
The main cost of having computers for most companies lies not in software or
hardware, but in support. I have been pondering the wisdom of automating the
upgrade process, so that sources are cvsup'ed nightly and make buildworld
buildkernel etc and
Vince Hoffman wrote:
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Peter Risdon wrote:
I have been pondering the wisdom
of automating the upgrade process,
You may want to have a look at freebsd-update. Its a binary updater,
Client/Server config, the server code and info on what it is, is available
from
Peter Ulrich Kruppa wrote:
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Peter Risdon wrote:
The main cost of having computers for most companies lies not in
software or hardware, but in support. I have been pondering the
wisdom of automating the upgrade process, so that sources are
cvsup'ed nightly and make buildworld
Any comments on a good anti-spam app that works with sendmail for a mail
server?
--
Best regards,
Chris
___
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, Jun 07, 2004, Bill Campbell wrote:
On Mon, Jun 07, 2004, Jay Moore wrote:
On Monday 07 June 2004 10:29 am, Bill Moran wrote:
Just make sure they are truly dynamic ips. Many people block ips
identified as DSL connections. Those are not necessarily dynamic ip
based.
The easiest way
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004, Chiang Seng Chang wrote:
I also have an always-on headless server running for like 3 years now
without any problem.
I use it for: apache, samba, vpn, postfix (the usual server apps).
I think the key is to use the minimal (translate: cooler, less power
hungry) components.
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 00:45, Kris Kennaway wrote:
On Mon, Jun 07, 2004 at 09:01:15PM +, Daniela wrote:
On Monday 07 June 2004 19:35, Kris Kennaway wrote:
On Mon, Jun 07, 2004 at 07:14:34PM +, Daniela wrote:
On Monday 07 June 2004 17:28, Tim Traver wrote:
Hi all,
Jason Richmond [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
To Whom it May Concern,
I have built a NAS product that uses FreeBSD. I have customized the kernel
and built a custom web interface. After reading through the FreeBSD legal
section I am fairly certain that distribution of this product does not
Hello there,
i don't know where to ask.. i have tried in many irc channels, but no
one could help me..
so i'm trying to make buildworld, but there i get an error, always the
same.. i have tried in fresh installed os, with GENERIC kernel and with
my own, cvsup source and so on.. but nothing goes
How do I install freebsd and another Os in a pc with
2gigabyte hdd disk eg Window XP and freebsd.
How do I format a system that has freebsd 4.5 in it
Thanks you and God bless
__
Do you Yahoo!?
Friends. Fun. Try the all-new Yahoo!
I have been doing some research on FreeBSD and I want to use it as my OS but
i have no idea on what files I need to download from the ftp sites. If
anyone can help with my problem I would appreciate it a lot. I have a really
good computer and I am sure that is more than capable of running
Well... X is not started automatically (a.k.a. no gdm/kdm)... sometimes
I'd like to play with some X stuff...
I know there are other solution, like build on a fast machine and
install onto the slow one. I didn't bother because 1) the server is
still working while the upgrade is taking it's
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 17:45:09 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] spake thus:
Hey
I've found some documented problems with this on google but nothing that really
helped me. I have an IBM Thinkpad R40 and finding chipset information for it all the
docs say that it's an Ethernet Driver(ya i know) so the
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 17.08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I install F-Prot from the ports. If I run check-updates.pl from the
console I get a sucessful update everytime (or a nothing updates found
message) but if I added the script into the crontab (via crontab -e as
root) I get the following
Peter Risdon writes:
I suppose what I'm driving at is whether the RELENG_4 branch sees
many commits that are likely to be problematic.
In general, no.
On the other hand ... think of this as a Murphy's Law scenario:
if you automate, it _will_ break horribly two days before
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 00:59:58 -0700
Kent Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 12:37 am, Bruce Hunter wrote:
Thanks for your help Kent
I read something about using portversion -c with the portupgrade
command to upgrade installed pkgs that needed to be updated.
When I
Bill Moran wrote:
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
cvsup'ing overnight is routine and fine.
The make build/install stuff seems a bit more delicate. I'm happy that I
have figured out how to automate this, but not _whether_ I should do so.
I am of course only considering tracking RELENG_4
Robert Huff wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
I suppose what I'm driving at is whether the RELENG_4 branch sees
many commits that are likely to be problematic.
In general, no.
On the other hand ... think of this as a Murphy's Law scenario:
if you automate, it _will_ break horribly two days
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], Jonathon McKitrick (jm) writes:
jm I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a thin
jm client laptop. Will running it all day without suspend mode use a lot of
jm power?
Turn the monitor off, especially if it is getting old. I have a 19inch
dauda braimah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How do I install freebsd and another Os in a pc with
2gigabyte hdd disk eg Window XP and freebsd.
How do I format a system that has freebsd 4.5 in it
Have you read the install docs?:
Hello.
I have a perl module (Adobe's FDF toolkit) that uses two .so files as part
of it's magic. These files come precompiled for Linux. Not surprisingly, when
I try to do a perl use on the module I get an error like this:
Can't load '/usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.6.1/FDF.so' for module
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bill Moran wrote:
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
cvsup'ing overnight is routine and fine.
The make build/install stuff seems a bit more delicate. I'm happy that I
have figured out how to automate this, but not _whether_ I should do so.
asuming that you have done the whole fdisk/disklabel/newfs you can list
the contents of /dev thus, ls /dev to find out. It will be ad1s1d oassume
something like that
I do have several ad1* devices in /dev but I can not mount them. So I
asume they are just there to be there?
Why would it be
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Huff wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
I suppose what I'm driving at is whether the RELENG_4 branch sees
many commits that are likely to be problematic.
In general, no.
On the other hand ... think of this as a Murphy's Law
On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 12:36:47 -0400
Bill Moran [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Huff wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
I suppose what I'm driving at is whether the RELENG_4 branch sees
many commits that are likely to be problematic.
In
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 11:27:29AM -0500, Jason Godfrey wrote:
Hello.
I have a perl module (Adobe's FDF toolkit) that uses two .so files as part
of it's magic. These files come precompiled for Linux. Not surprisingly, when
I try to do a perl use on the module I get an error like this:
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 09:36 am, Bill Moran wrote:
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Huff wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
I suppose what I'm driving at is whether the RELENG_4 branch
sees many commits that are likely to be problematic.
In general, no.
On the other
Hello Dan,
there is a separate list on ACPI: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
May you wish to subscribe to it.
Regards,
Oliver Fischer
Dan Cojocar wrote:
Hello,
I noticed that my hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active is set -1 and i can't change this
value, what is this meaning?
Thanks,
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 05:18:07PM +0100, Richard Caley wrote:
: In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], Jonathon McKitrick (jm) writes:
:
: jm I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a thin
: jm client laptop. Will running it all day without suspend mode use a lot of
: jm
[Please use reply all to include the mailing list in subsequent questions,
I do not always have time to respond to all follow-ups.]
dauda braimah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Bill,
thanks for that email and the prompt reply.
What practical minimum size required to install
freebsd and XP
I
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004, Kent Stewart wrote:
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 09:36 am, Bill Moran wrote:
Peter Risdon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Huff wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
I suppose what I'm driving at is whether the RELENG_4 branch
sees many commits that are likely to be problematic.
Jonathon McKitrick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 05:18:07PM +0100, Richard Caley wrote:
: In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], Jonathon McKitrick (jm) writes:
:
: jm I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a thin
: jm client laptop. Will running it
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 10:38 am, Bill Moran wrote:
[Please use reply all to include the mailing list in subsequent
questions, I do not always have time to respond to all follow-ups.]
dauda braimah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Bill,
thanks for that email and the prompt reply.
What
On Jun 8, 2004, at 1:27 PM, Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
Hopefully I'll get my flat screen back soon from repair. I guess
those use
less power, right? Also, a 1.8GHz Athlon won't use any more power than
necessary during idle time, right?
Yes, a flat screen typically uses about 50W; a big CRT might
can't believe I'm answering this especially on here but the min spec for
XP is 1.5 gig that doesn't leave much for BSDs or to run any
applications in either OS hard disks are cheap as chips these days think
its time to upgrade
arden
On Tue, 2004-06-08 at 18:38, Bill Moran wrote:
[Please
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 01:21:01PM +0100, Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
I have my desktop configured to run as a server and app server for a thin
client laptop. Will running it all day without suspend mode use a lot of
power?
Is it true that the heat buildup in a home system (rather than a
asuming that you have done the whole fdisk/disklabel/newfs you can list
the contents of /dev thus, ls /dev to find out. It will be ad1s1d oassume
something like that
I do have several ad1* devices in /dev but I can not mount them. So I
asume they are just there to be there?
Why
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 02:42:16PM -0400, Joe Altman wrote:
: Take the side off of your case, turn the open side toward the wall,
Why against the wall? So nothing damages it?
: with some space between it and the wall. Especially during the summer.
My setup has a fan in the back, and also one
Bill Campbell writes:
The original Latin is ``Quod Erat Demonstrandum'', translates to
that was demonstrated (about as much as I remember from five
years of Latin).
Perfect passive periphrastic, if I've got it right.
Robert Huff
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 07:51:51PM +0100, Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 02:42:16PM -0400, Joe Altman wrote:
: Take the side off of your case, turn the open side toward the wall,
Why against the wall? So nothing damages it?
Yes; spills, flying objects, whatever. Most
On Tue, Jun 08, 2004 at 03:05:14PM -0400, Joe Altman wrote:
: Yes; spills, flying objects, whatever. Most importantly, it's not on
: the floor, and securely on my desk. I deal w/ the noise by keeping the
What is so bad with the floor?
: That reminds me: is a CD/RW a feasible data backup device?
Hi all,
I'm upgrading some machines from 4.8-RELEASE to 4.10-RELEASE. The
machines in question are dual-processor xeon boxes. Now, my boss is
adamant in that he doesn't want hyperthreading enabled on the machines.
In 4.8-RELEASE things were simple... I just didn't add the options HTT
line to
I tried to install FBSD 5.2.1 on Toshiba Satellite A15-S127 (Mobile Intel
Celeron Id=0xf27 Stepping = 7 2GHz/256M/30G CDRW, USB floppy.
During boot from installation floppy kernel hungs just after:
pcibios: BIOS version 2.10
Using $PIR table, 6 entries at 0xc00f01a0
pcib0: Host to PCI bridge at
Hi,
What is so bad with the floor?
Ever move into a beautiful house only to find the floor *flooded* at the
first serious cloud break? ;-)
BTW - I'd make sure I'd get/have a decent computer case with a decent
PSU with enough room for some decent 80mm or larger low noise fans
rather than
Bill Campbell wrote:
snip of on topic stuff ;-)
The original Latin is ``Quod Erat Demonstrandum'', translates to that was
demonstrated (about as much as I remember from five years of Latin).
Quod erat demonstrandum is correct. The translation is rather : what
needed to be proven, what needed
Charles Swiger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jun 8, 2004, at 1:59 PM, Bill Moran wrote:
Hopefully I'll get my flat screen back soon from repair. I guess
those use
less power, right?
I remember having this conversation with someone not too long ago, and
our
consensus was that flat
Nico Meijer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
What is so bad with the floor?
Ever move into a beautiful house only to find the floor *flooded* at the
first serious cloud break? ;-)
BTW - I'd make sure I'd get/have a decent computer case with a decent
PSU with enough room for some decent
Hi guys!
I have one question for you.
I had an intel mainboard on i845 chipset. All was beautiful with
4.9 Release.
When I got i865 chipset I have many problems...
first time, when I reinstalled FreeBSd It was rebooting when I boot that,
then it was some eroor with
On Tuesday 08 June 2004 10:35, Chris wrote:
Any comments on a good anti-spam app that works with sendmail for a mail
server?
Yeah, try SpamAssassin. I've been using it since January, and have almost
zero SPAM delivered to my inbox now. I think in all that time it has only
had one false
On 2004-06-07 13:10, Goodleaf, John [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's a hard problem. How do you provide conventions that don't annoy
the hell out of programmers, but which ensure that legibile,
maintainable code is left?
First of all, I should note this: As long as there is a way to
On Jun 8, 2004, at 2:54 PM, Cordula's Web wrote:
AMD processors now have fairly good thermal behavior when they are
idle, although it obviously helps if one can enable APCI and power
management capabilities to either throttle down the CPU speed or even
go into sleep mode.
What about other
On 2004-06-08 18:41, Mantas Audickas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello there,
i don't know where to ask.. i have tried in many irc channels, but no
one could help me..
so i'm trying to make buildworld, but there i get an error, always the
same.. i have tried in fresh installed os, with GENERIC
Bill Moran wrote:
Nico Meijer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
What is so bad with the floor?
Ever move into a beautiful house only to find the floor *flooded* at the
first serious cloud break? ;-)
BTW - I'd make sure I'd get/have a decent computer case with a decent
PSU with enough room for some
Charles Swiger wrote:
On Jun 8, 2004, at 1:59 PM, Bill Moran wrote:
Hopefully I'll get my flat screen back soon from repair. I guess
those use
less power, right?
I remember having this conversation with someone not too long ago, and
our
consensus was that flat screens used just as much power
On Jun 8, 2004, at 4:06 PM, Bill Moran wrote:
Charles Swiger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No need to guess, use an amp-meter. :-)
What a crazy idea.
I seem to remember plugging monitors into a UPS in an attempt to use
the cheesy
load meter lights to tell which was drawing more juice, when that
Chris wrote:
Any comments on a good anti-spam app that works with sendmail for a mail
server?
Yes. You can have a look at messagewall its in the ports.
www.messagewall.org
Been using it for the past year now and it's works just fine.
___
[EMAIL
Hi everyone,
I maybe didn't see something, for sure it's a dumb problem
I installed MySQL 4.0.20 from sources downloaded on MySQL website and then I checked
before adding my mysql user on the box if there was one I never installed MySQL
before and I already have a mysql user but I
I am trying to learn unix. I need a recommendation for a good beginers book
(eg: Unix for dummies)
I install Freebsd on an old desktop, but I have never used unix, and need a
starting point.
Thanx
Later,
Leon
A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject.
Sir Winston
On Jun 8, 2004, at 5:06 PM, Bernt. H wrote:
No need to guess, use an amp-meter. :-)
Well If it measure trueRMS then you could use it, otherwise no.
You are correct that one needs to measure the voltage and use the RMS
value, or DC series equivalent if you like that phrase, in order to
figure
1 - 100 of 137 matches
Mail list logo