On Mon,06/22/09 [21:16:35], Daniel Underwood wrote:
On a BSD box at work (at an extremely fast connection and static IP),
I run an SSH server. I am the only person who uses the server, but I
use it from some locations that are behind a dynamic IP (so I can't
set pf rules to filter by IP). I
OFL amd64
-
-(kar...@spark.ofloo.net)-(22:06:40)
-(~)- mkdir
vor2
mkdir: vor2: Disc quota exceeded
Any help appricated. Is this a problem on my end, or server side?
___
you've got the exact message. why you don't read them?
connection, it's a relatively high-risk target.
What are some good practices for securing this SSH server. Is using a
stored key safer than a password in this instance? I have no
If your password is not trivial, then it is secure.
using RSA/DSA keys is as good, if you are sure nobody will get
If for some reason you would prefer to use password authentication, I
would recommend that you look into automatic brute force detection.
There are a number of utilities in ports available for this purpose,
including security/sshguard and security/denyhosts.
good, but not really important with
The worldwide search for CircusPrincess 2009 is on!
The CircusPrincess, a fairytale come true, is no ordinary circus. It's the
ultimate celebration of female grace, beauty and talent. And now, for the first
time in history, we're inviting the global Internet audience to join us in the
you guys aren't going to believe what i just found on the web for
the ASUS Eee-901 [or is it the 900]. it was for the 9- and
10-inch screens. i was using konq which just segv'd so i am
taking a break and thought i'd share this.
last night, i could
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
If for some reason you would prefer to use password authentication, I
would recommend that you look into automatic brute force detection.
There are a number of utilities in ports available for this purpose,
including security/sshguard and security/denyhosts.
good, but
You can't do more than maybe 10 attempts/second this way, while cracking
10 character password consisting of just small letters and digits needs
10 characters is a longer than usual password. Most people have been
conditioned into using a 7 or 8 character password, which is at least a
so
2009/6/23 Wojciech Puchar woj...@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl:
If for some reason you would prefer to use password authentication, I
would recommend that you look into automatic brute force detection.
There are a number of utilities in ports available for this purpose,
including security/sshguard
DA Forsyth wrote:
On 22 Jun 2009 , freebsd-questions-requ...@freebsd.org entreated
about
freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 264, Issue 3:
I am trying to find out the temperature of my CPU. After a whole night
from dusk till dawn of searching the Web like a furious spider, I got
the following
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 05:35:56PM -0500, Dan Nelson typed:
In the last episode (Jun 22), Ruben de Groot said:
My main concern here is if applying the trivial patch I posted would break
anything in the http protocol layer. And if not, why isn't the POST method
included in the http accept
99% of crack attempts are done by kevin mitnick methods, not password
cracking.
You're right about the probability of password breaking, but
personally I installed denyhosts just because I got sick of this:
indeed, it's very useful but it's not a requirement at all to be secure :)
The only
99% of crack attempts are done by kevin mitnick methods, not password
cracking.
Absolutely true. Mitnick was an early exponent of Social Engineering
attacks, which are still the easiest and most effective methods for
Mitnick just chose the best possible friend - human stupidity. It never
2009/6/23 kalin m ka...@el.net:
hi all..
this is a bit awkward
i'm building php 5.2.10 from source on freebsd 7.0. using:
./configure --with-layout=GNU --with-config-file-scan-dir=/usr/local/etc/php
--disable-all --enable-libxml --with-libxml-dir=/usr/local
--enable-reflection
On 23 jun 2009, at 05:55, Frank Shute wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 07:17:40PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
The last few days I see a dozens of Checksum mismatches when csup-ing
src-all from cvsup.freebsd.org.
No errors appear on ports-all.
Is there a problem with the cvs repository ?
Due to some meteorological disasters I've had to replace my 6.1
FreeBSD system and I've installed 7.2 on the refurbished i386
computer:
freebsd [22:03] ~uname -a
FreeBSD freebsd.connect-a.com.au 7.2-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.2-RELEASE #0:
Fri May 1 08:49:13 UTC 2009
My desktop is KDE Version 4.2.2
why does the speed of a connection make it a higher risk?
Super-fast connections are ideal targets for people to install private
fileservers (among other things).
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
Message: 11
Date: Sat, 20 Jun 2009 16:34:00 -0400
From: Jerry ges...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: No sound, no mouse and now X applications won't start
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Message-ID: 20090620163400.62143...@scorpio.seibercom.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
On Sun, 21 Jun
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 02:43:36PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
On 23 jun 2009, at 05:55, Frank Shute wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 07:17:40PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
The last few days I see a dozens of Checksum mismatches when csup-ing
src-all from cvsup.freebsd.org.
No
Hi,
we have a FreeBSD machine currently using PPPoE with NAT. As we already have
the cable connection which is about the same speed, I was just wondering of
doing some load balancing for the outside connection. I have no experiences
with that and will be really glad if someone could point some
I do not believe that tricks like running ssh on a
non standard port or using port-knocking provide
much extra security.
I can understand that varying the port is not a very strong defensive
measure, but I don't understand your point about port-knocking.
If you configure a complex and
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 02:43:36PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
On 23 jun 2009, at 05:55, Frank Shute wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 07:17:40PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
The last few days I see a dozens of Checksum mismatches when csup-ing
src-all from cvsup.freebsd.org.
No
For those of you, like myself, struggling with hal and printing
(separate issues), check out the links below.
You will note that the freebsd gnome page is at freebsd.org, but the
freebsd kde page is at freebsd.kde.org. The hplip information at the
kde site is not specific to kde. The hal faq at
Looking at my ~/.ssh directory, I see the following permissions:
-rw-r--r--
Which I understand to be equivalent to 644.
I read here http://sial.org/howto/openssh/publickey-auth/ that
~/.ssh ought to have permissions 700.
Which is preferable, and why?
Hello !
Thanks alll of you for taking time to answer my mail. I really appreciate it.
I have (well...the system has) succesfully done the upgrade.
I used both pkg_updating and portupdate-scan to scan UPDATING [pkg_updating
did not show an entry suggesting to update python to version 2.6 (which
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 10:06:03AM -0400, Daniel Underwood wrote:
Looking at my ~/.ssh directory, I see the following permissions:
-rw-r--r--
Which I understand to be equivalent to 644.
I read here http://sial.org/howto/openssh/publickey-auth/ that
~/.ssh ought to have permissions 700.
Thanks. Might as well set to 700 then.
___
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Paul van der Zwan wrote:
On 23 jun 2009, at 05:55, Frank Shute wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 07:17:40PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
The last few days I see a dozens of Checksum mismatches when csup-ing
src-all from cvsup.freebsd.org.
No errors appear on ports-all.
Is there a
Chris Rees wrote:
2009/6/23 kalin m ka...@el.net:
hi all..
this is a bit awkward
i'm building php 5.2.10 from source on freebsd 7.0. using:
./configure --with-layout=GNU --with-config-file-scan-dir=/usr/local/etc/php
--disable-all --enable-libxml --with-libxml-dir=/usr/local
Ruben de Groot wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 05:35:56PM -0500, Dan Nelson typed:
In the last episode (Jun 22), Ruben de Groot said:
My main concern here is if applying the trivial patch I posted would
break anything in the http protocol layer. And if not, why isn't the
POST method
FreeBSD-7.2
openldap-server-2.4.16_1
I just installed this port. For some reason it will not start
correctly. I have all of the information entered in the /etc/rc.conf
file and the slapd.conf and ldap.conf files are configured correctly.
There is no 'PID' file created. Below is what I receive
On 6/23/09, Matej Šerc matej.s...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
we have a FreeBSD machine currently using PPPoE with NAT. As we already have
the cable connection which is about the same speed, I was just wondering of
doing some load balancing for the outside connection. I have no experiences
with
On 6/23/09, Carmel NY carmel...@hotmail.com wrote:
FreeBSD-7.2
openldap-server-2.4.16_1
I just installed this port. For some reason it will not start
correctly. I have all of the information entered in the /etc/rc.conf
file and the slapd.conf and ldap.conf files are configured correctly.
On 23 jun 2009, at 16:39, Carmel NY carmel...@hotmail.com wrote:
FreeBSD-7.2
openldap-server-2.4.16_1
I just installed this port. For some reason it will not start
correctly. I have all of the information entered in the /etc/rc.conf
file and the slapd.conf and ldap.conf files are configured
On 23 jun 2009, at 15:53, Erik Trulsson wrote:
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 02:43:36PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
On 23 jun 2009, at 05:55, Frank Shute wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 07:17:40PM +0200, Paul van der Zwan wrote:
The last few days I see a dozens of Checksum mismatches when
On 23 jun 2009, at 16:06, Daniel Underwood djuatde...@gmail.com wrote:
Looking at my ~/.ssh directory, I see the following permissions:
-rw-r--r--
Which I understand to be equivalent to 644.
I read here http://sial.org/howto/openssh/publickey-auth/ that
~/.ssh ought to have permissions
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 09:31:06AM +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
you guys aren't going to believe what i just found on the web for
the ASUS Eee-901 [or is it the 900]. it was for the 9- and
10-inch screens. i was using konq which just segv'd so i am
taking a break and
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 16:46:42 +0200
Peter Boosten pe...@boosten.org wrote:
Check permissions on /var/run/openldap
drwxr-xr-x 2 ldapldap 512B Jun 23 10:57 openldap/
They appear to be correct. I might add, that I did a complete deinstall
of the port, removed the
kalin m wrote:
Chris Rees wrote:
2009/6/23 kalin m ka...@el.net:
[snip]
Why aren't you using ports?
there isn't ports for all that i need compiling with 5.2.10.
Yes there is. You install the main PHP5 port first, then follow up by
installing the php5-extensions port. When
On Tuesday 23 June 2009 15:41:48 Manish Jain wrote:
I hope the next release will address these problems, as well as a pretty
reasonable request from me much earlier to move vi from /usr/bin to
/bin. Even in single-user mode, you almost always need an editor.
Which is why you have ed(1) - both
Paul van der Zwan wrote:
[snip]
Well at least I am not the only one seeing these errors. I think we can
rule out a local problem and will have to wait for someone to fix this.
Note: I use cvsup to maintain a local copy of the cvs repository.
It is not clear if you too is doing that, or if
Ruben de Groot mai...@bzerk.org wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 05:35:56PM -0500, Dan Nelson typed:
In the last episode (Jun 22), Ruben de Groot said:
My main concern here is if applying the trivial patch I posted would
break anything in the http protocol layer. And if not, why isn't
Can anyone explain this:
Jun 23 17:09:09 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to DOWN
Jun 23 17:22:25 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to UP
What's causing this???
Thanks for yout time
Jack Raats
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 08:14:47 -0700, Gary Kline kl...@thought.org wrote:
ok, sorry. Brain fault: Core dump :-)
Core fault: brain dump. :-)
--
Polytropon
From Magdeburg, Germany
Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0
Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ...
___
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 07:52:27AM -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 09:31:06AM +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
today we have huge flash disks for really cheap, but still don't
have native flash filesystem in any OS, be it FreeBSD or windoze or
mac os x or whatever.
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 05:28:51PM +0200, Jack Raats wrote:
Can anyone explain this:
Jun 23 17:09:09 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to DOWN
Jun 23 17:22:25 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to UP
What's causing this???
The wire was disconnected during that time. Possibly the
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 09:31:06 +0200 (CEST), Wojciech Puchar
woj...@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl wrote:
today we have huge flash disks for really cheap, but still don't have
native flash filesystem in any OS, be it FreeBSD or windoze or mac os x or
whatever.
This flash chips have to emulate hard
2009/6/23 Peter Boosten pe...@boosten.org:
On 23 jun 2009, at 16:06, Daniel Underwood djuatde...@gmail.com wrote:
Looking at my ~/.ssh directory, I see the following permissions:
-rw-r--r--
Which I understand to be equivalent to 644.
I read here
Daniel Underwood wrote:
I do not believe that tricks like running ssh on a
non standard port or using port-knocking provide
much extra security.
I can understand that varying the port is not a very strong defensive
measure, but I don't understand your point about port-knocking.
If you
On Tue 23 Jun 2009 at 07:09:28 PDT dan wrote:
I used both pkg_updating and portupdate-scan to scan UPDATING [pkg_updating
did not show an entry suggesting to update python to version 2.6 (which
Portupdate-scan did)].
Well, I just learned something from this thread. I didn't know about
these
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 09:31:06AM +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
you guys aren't going to believe what i just found on the web for
the ASUS Eee-901 [or is it the 900]. it was for the 9- and
10-inch screens. i was using konq which just segv'd so i am
taking a break and
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 11:03:16 -0400
Carmel NY carmel...@hotmail.com wrote:
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 16:46:42 +0200
Peter Boosten pe...@boosten.org wrote:
Check permissions on /var/run/openldap
drwxr-xr-x 2 ldapldap 512B Jun 23 10:57 openldap/
They appear to be correct. I
In response to Erik Norgaard norga...@locolomo.org:
Daniel Underwood wrote:
I do not believe that tricks like running ssh on a
non standard port or using port-knocking provide
much extra security.
I can understand that varying the port is not a very strong defensive
measure, but I
whatever.
Not so. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_file_system
Most flash devices sold as harddisks have hardware that emulates a
traditional harddisk, representing it as a (P/S)ATA block device. Unless
you can bypass this, there is no need for a special filesystem.
yes this is exactly
99.8% solution waiting for the 99.9% solution.
As for emulating a hard drive, its only slow relative to potential
it's a nonsense to pay for emulation layer that slows down real devices.
And random filesystem writes could be much faster on flash than on disk -
if properly designed
If it's fast enough to allow one to work unimpeded, has acceptable
lifetime/reliability, and uses less power/generates less heat than
traditional platter HD - I'd say it's a good solution. It's not a one
size fits all world.
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 3:10 PM, Kent Stewart kstew...@owt.com wrote:
On Saturday 20 June 2009 11:00:45 am ericr wrote:
Hi,
As the subject says, I can't get the 7.2-RELEASE i386 CD to boot on a
system that has:
Abit KV8 Pro (K8T800P-8237-6A7L1A1BC-26) motherboard with the most recent
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 07:11:48PM +0530, Manish Jain wrote:
Hi,
I have solved most of the problems listed in my previous message with
help from Roland Smith.
The fact still remains that FreeBSD-7.2 has some definite problems on
AMD hardware :
1) On multi-core systems, the cores
David Kelly writes:
Can anyone explain this:
Jun 23 17:09:09 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to DOWN
Jun 23 17:22:25 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to UP
What's causing this???
The wire was disconnected during that time. Possibly the
hub/switch lost power,
Bill Moran wrote:
In response to Erik Norgaard norga...@locolomo.org:
You add an extra layer of inconvenience and complexity, more things that
can fail and possibly result in an insecure server:
I would agree with you, except ...
- dynamically updating firewall rules on the interface
Robert Huff wrote:
David Kelly writes:
Can anyone explain this:
Jun 23 17:09:09 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to DOWN
Jun 23 17:22:25 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to UP
What's causing this???
The wire was disconnected during that time. Possibly the
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 07:23:22PM +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
whatever.
Not so. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_file_system
Most flash devices sold as harddisks have hardware that emulates a
traditional harddisk, representing it as a (P/S)ATA block device. Unless
you can
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 22:50, pradp...@towardsfreedom.com wrote:
On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 21:16:35 -0400
Daniel Underwood djuatde...@gmail.com wrote:
Due to the speed and location of the
connection, it's a relatively high-risk target.
why does the speed of a connection make it a higher risk?
--- On Tue, 6/23/09, ericr erobi...@gmail.com wrote:
From: ericr erobi...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: Can't boot 7.2-RELEASE i386 or AMD64 on an Abit KV8 Pro
motherboard with Sempron 3100+ CPU
To: Kent Stewart kstew...@owt.com, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2009, 12:44
ericr wrote:
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 3:10 PM, Kent Stewart kstew...@owt.com wrote:
On Saturday 20 June 2009 11:00:45 am ericr wrote:
Hi,
As the subject says, I can't get the 7.2-RELEASE i386 CD to boot on a
system that has:
Abit KV8 Pro (K8T800P-8237-6A7L1A1BC-26) motherboard with the most
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 16:07, Gary Klinekl...@thought.org wrote:
you guys aren't going to believe what i just found on the web for
the ASUS Eee-901 [or is it the 900]. it was for the 9- and
10-inch screens. i was using konq which just segv'd so i am
taking a
and lifetime.
Even a flash filesystem will have to do wear levelling.
yes - but it don't have to copy blocks that are free. with disk emulation
- it doesn't know anything about filesystem and don't know what blocks are
free.
___
Jun 23 17:09:09 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to DOWN
Jun 23 17:22:25 zeus kernel: fxp0: link state changed to UP
look at time. it's 13 minutes down
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 05:23:19PM +0200, Fabian Keil typed:
Ruben de Groot mai...@bzerk.org wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 05:35:56PM -0500, Dan Nelson typed:
In the last episode (Jun 22), Ruben de Groot said:
My main concern here is if applying the trivial patch I posted would
Hi,
Is it possible for you to provide us with an updated hardware certified
vendor list for FreeBsd. We would like to know if FreeBSD is supported
on HP Blades and which models, network cards, HBA cards for connecting
to SAN's. Any help will be greatly appreciated. We need this
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 3:18 PM, Thompson,
Rhettrhett.thomp...@soroc.com wrote:
Hi,
Is it possible for you to provide us with an updated hardware certified
vendor list for FreeBsd. We would like to know if FreeBSD is supported
on HP Blades and which models, network cards, HBA cards for
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 12:22:19PM -0700, Kurt Buff wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 16:07, Gary Klinekl...@thought.org wrote:
For a small unit like this, SSD is really nice.
But, for my workstations/servers, I'm wondering if a pure
battery-backed RAM disk, in RAID1 with a regular hard
A port-knocking sequence is really nothing different than a shared password.
Technically and conceptually, that's true. But practically, I'm not
sure you're right. If in addition to attempting to enumerate the
space of possible passwords, an attacker also enumerates the space of
possible
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 09:46:01PM +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
and lifetime.
Even a flash filesystem will have to do wear levelling.
yes - but it don't have to copy blocks that are free. with disk
emulation - it doesn't know anything about filesystem and don't know
what blocks are free.
Daniel Underwood wrote:
A port-knocking sequence is really nothing different than a shared password.
Technically and conceptually, that's true. But practically, I'm not
sure you're right. If in addition to attempting to enumerate the
space of possible passwords, an attacker also enumerates
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 01:10:41PM -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
battery-backed ram sound great for the time being!
if not now [this minute], then relatively soon, i'm guessing
within a few years somebody will have a solid-state device that emulates
the current
There's not NEARLY enough info in OP to answer this - I can't believe
anyone is even trying. It could be many dozen different things.
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Wojciech
Puchar
Sent: Tuesday, June
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 13:59, David Kellydke...@hiwaay.net wrote:
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 01:10:41PM -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
battery-backed ram sound great for the time being!
if not now [this minute], then relatively soon, i'm guessing
within a few years somebody will
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 15:59:44 -0500, David Kelly dke...@hiwaay.net wrote:
We are already there. SSDs are not slower than mechanical disk drives,
they are faster. The only detriments are 1) cost, 2) limited write life.
What about power consumption? Because they seem to be
primarily intended for
RW wrote:
On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 20:58:41 +0100
Chris Whitehouse cwhi...@onetel.com wrote:
I'll probably get flamed for this but since I've been using
ports-mgmt/portmanager I've almost forgotten
about /usr/ports/UPDATING and all that pkgdb -Fu stuff or whatever it
was. I've upgraded ports just
In response to Erik Norgaard norga...@locolomo.org:
Bill Moran wrote:
In response to Erik Norgaard norga...@locolomo.org:
- dynamically updating firewall rules on the interface facing the
Internet is not on my list of good practices. loading or flushing rules
continuously is the
Well, sorta true.
We know that he lost connectivity for 13 minutes. As you said, there
are many reasons why this might be so, and several were suggested. The
two most likely are:
1) power loss to the switch
2) somebody disconnected the cable, then replaced it
Clearly, however, it isn't port
Jerry wrote:
On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 20:58:41 +0100
Chris Whitehouse cwhi...@onetel.com wrote:
I'll probably get flamed for this but since I've been using
ports-mgmt/portmanager I've almost forgotten
about /usr/ports/UPDATING and all that pkgdb -Fu stuff or whatever it
was. I've upgraded ports
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 01:10:41PM -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 12:22:19PM -0700, Kurt Buff wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 16:07, Gary Klinekl...@thought.org wrote:
For a small unit like this, SSD is really nice.
But, for my workstations/servers, I'm wondering if a
On Tuesday 23 June 2009 23:21:21 Chris Whitehouse wrote:
RW wrote:
On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 20:58:41 +0100
Chris Whitehouse cwhi...@onetel.com wrote:
I'll probably get flamed for this but since I've been using
ports-mgmt/portmanager I've almost forgotten
about /usr/ports/UPDATING and all
Since we're speculating, could be the switch disabled the port due to a
security event of some sort (flapping, bpdu guard/filter, etc.) and it's
configured to auto-enable after n minutes. It's all speculation without more
info. If this is the only info available, it's nearly worthless.
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 11:12:05PM +0200, Polytropon wrote:
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 15:59:44 -0500, David Kelly dke...@hiwaay.net wrote:
We are already there. SSDs are not slower than mechanical disk
drives, they are faster. The only detriments are 1) cost, 2) limited
write life.
What about
Bill Moran wrote:
In response to Erik Norgaard norga...@locolomo.org:
Bill Moran wrote:
In response to Erik Norgaard norga...@locolomo.org:
I do, you can put your interface in promiscuous mode and let the daemon
grab packets before they are filtered by the firewall, or open in your
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 09:54:02PM +, Brad Davison wrote:
I have a 7.2-RELEASE system for audio processing (Ardour, JACK, etc.) running
on a dual Xeon 2.8, 2gb ram
drm0: ATI Radeon X1950 on vgapci0
with xorg7.4_2
xorg-server-1.16.1,1
xfce-4.6.1
I was wondering if I was using the
The worldwide search for CircusPrincess 2009 is on!
The CircusPrincess, a fairytale come true, is no ordinary circus. It's the
ultimate celebration of female grace, beauty and talent. And now, for the first
time in history, we're inviting the global Internet audience to join us in the
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 03:18:33PM -0400, Thompson, Rhett wrote:
Is it possible for you to provide us with an updated hardware certified
vendor list for FreeBsd.
There is no such thing, AFAIK. The volunteers who form the FreeBSD
project spend their time improving FreeBSD, not doing formal
when I start upgrading openoffice.org it switches from my localized
language build to standard us en.
Anyone have an idea how to force upgrade to stick with my norwegian
build with portmaster ??
Platform freebsd 7.2 stable (x86)
Blessed be
Whenever I
$ ssh -X u...@server
from my FreeBSD machine, I get the following message (and am
successfully logged in):
Warning: untrusted X11 forwarding setup failed: xauth key data not generated
Warning: No xauth data; using fake authentication data for X11 forwarding.
When I log in to the
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 12:30:25PM -0500, Gary Gatten wrote:
If it's fast enough to allow one to work unimpeded, has acceptable
lifetime/reliability, and uses less power/generates less heat than
traditional platter HD - I'd say it's a good solution. It's not a one
size fits all world.
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 22:21:21 +0100
Chris Whitehouse cwhi...@onetel.com wrote:
RW wrote:
On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 20:58:41 +0100
Chris Whitehouse cwhi...@onetel.com wrote:
I'll probably get flamed for this but since I've been using
ports-mgmt/portmanager I've almost forgotten
about
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 03:59:44PM -0500, David Kelly wrote:
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 01:10:41PM -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
battery-backed ram sound great for the time being!
if not now [this minute], then relatively soon, i'm guessing
within a few years somebody will have a
Attempting to setup cups and samba into a jail. How do you mount/add
device node /dev/ulpt0 within a jail.
Essentially I would like to know, how to add device nodes within jail
/dev for specifically the devices I want?
I have read man pages and tutorials on setting up jails but none show
--- Start of forwarded message ---
Hi,
I am not sure if any card of the type exists, but I am looking for a
PCI-X card with external SATA connector (1 or 2) to supports port
multiplier.
Idea is to attach a bank of disk to use a backup media.
TIA,
Olivier
--- Start of forwarded message ---
Hi,
Is the port security/pgp working on amd64 system?
I copied my public and private keyrings from i386 to amd64 system and
I cannot decipher any file, it keeps on complaining that the pass
phrase is bad.
I already tried to export the key on the i386
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