On Tuesday 04 September 2007 00:37:15 Beech Rintoul wrote:
>
> Make sure you have this line in /etc/rc.conf:
>
> ifconfig_lo0="inet 127.0.0.1"
>
> Beech
Thanks, I added the line. I did not know it was going to be that simple a
fix.
___
freebsd-quest
On Tuesday 04 September 2007 00:13:13 Pollywog wrote:
> On Monday 03 September 2007 23:08:45 Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> > Pollywog wrote:
> > > bind: Can't assign requested address
> > > channel_setup_fwd_listener: cannot listen to port: 15901
> > > Could
On Monday 03 September 2007 23:08:45 Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> Pollywog wrote:
> > bind: Can't assign requested address
> > channel_setup_fwd_listener: cannot listen to port: 15901
> > Could not request local forwarding.
>
> It seems to me that you have a problem w
On Monday 03 September 2007 23:08:45 Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> Pollywog wrote:
> > bind: Can't assign requested address
> > channel_setup_fwd_listener: cannot listen to port: 15901
> > Could not request local forwarding.
>
> It seems to me that you have a problem w
I installed tightvnc on FreeBSD 6.2 and I start the vncserver on that machine.
Thereafter, I can do vnc via ssh to that vncserver from my kubuntu desktop
with something like this (hostname is the only thing changed to protect the
innocent):
ssh -L 15901:localhost:5901 -N -f -l pollywog
On Monday 03 September 2007 01:46:30 Andrew Gould wrote:
> On 9/2/07, Pollywog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Sunday 02 September 2007 23:37:49 Andrew Gould wrote:
> > > Don't feel guilty. Keep a FreeBSD server running at home while you
> >
> > t
On Monday 03 September 2007 01:37:23 Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> > There must be some trick to accessing a FreeBSD server via VNC.
> > I have done it on Linux but I could not get it to work in FreeBSD.
> > ___
> > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Sunday 02 September 2007 23:37:49 Andrew Gould wrote:
>
> Don't feel guilty. Keep a FreeBSD server running at home while you travel!
> You can backup your data securely and use it remotely via tightvnc.
>
> Andrew
There must be some trick to accessing a FreeBSD server via VNC.
I have done it
On Saturday 01 September 2007 15:07:46 Mel wrote:
> On Saturday 01 September 2007 16:47:49 Xihong Yin wrote:
> > Thanks, I thought it was the problem of the argument. But I still can not
> > connect to my Access Point using wap_supplicant while I can connect by
> > 'ifconfig'. It always connects to
On Friday 31 August 2007 15:32:26 Jerry McAllister wrote:
>
> There will also probably be loads of people replying to tell you
> that it is not a devil but a character representing a daemon that
> is a helpful sprite and that it is not a logo, but a mascot.
I think that is much less different tha
On Thursday 30 August 2007 15:24:23 Glen Barber wrote:
> I must reply to about 25 of these per week... but I never hear anything
> back.
Why would you reply to them? You will just get added to more of their lucky
lottery lists and maybe get the list added too.
__
On Sunday 26 August 2007 17:15:35 Steven wrote:
> Hi I am looking for a list of wireless bands and sub bands that can be
> freely used for a private home network.
I believe that would depend on the country of one's residence. What is legal
in one country might run one afoul of the law (and their
On Friday 24 August 2007 15:33:19 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi, everybody...I've downloaded mplayer but there is not a graphical
> interface... and how do I configure it?
I have used it in Linux and I know that in Linux, to have a graphical
interface, one has to specify that during "configur
On Friday 24 August 2007 00:22:12 Danny Pansters wrote:
> I don't want to hijack this, erm, thread, but I get loads of spam (my mail
> goes through a hosting provider, I (post-)filter locally) and a significant
> part of it is loaded with technical terms, even FreeBSD specific. I suppose
> it's mea
On Thursday 23 August 2007 21:37:53 dgmm wrote:
>
> So rather than look for multiple methods to reduce the amount of incoming
> to *my* address I should just accept it all and filter it locally?
>
> That seems rather irresponsible to me, ANy method which can help stop it
> source appeaers on the
On Sunday 19 August 2007 23:32:58 vuthecuong wrote:
> You can try by adding slash (/) ad the end of above url
> it will be looked like:
> http://hostname/phpMyAdmin/
Thanks, I tried that one too. I am certain it's my configuration.
I will have a look at some tutorials, and I am almost certain th
On Sunday 19 August 2007 15:02:04 Gerard wrote:
> On August 19, 2007 at 10:01AM Pollywog wrote:
> > I did but I think there is another problem somewhere, so for the time
> > being I will do without phpMyAdmin in FreeBSD.
>
> Could you post the relevant portions of the httpd.
On Sunday 19 August 2007 12:45:24 vuthecuong wrote:
> Pollywog wrote:
> > I am running FreeBSD 6.2 and I installed phpMyAdmin from ports, but when
> > I put http://hostname/phpMyAdmin in a browser, I get "the requested URL
> > was not found..."
> >
> > I
On Saturday 18 August 2007 20:26:53 Manolis Kiagias wrote:
>
> I suggest you read the example files in /usr/share/examples/cvsup. You
> will get it instantly.
Thanks. I do get it now, after reading your post and looking at the sample
files.
___
freebs
On Saturday 18 August 2007 19:47:21 Manolis Kiagias wrote:
> Pollywog wrote:
> > Someone please tell me why my supfile is not working. I think the
> > problem is the tag but I am unsure why:
> >
> > *default host=cvsup2.FreeBSD.org
> > *default base=/var/db
>
Someone please tell me why my supfile is not working. I think the problem is
the tag but I am unsure why:
*default host=cvsup2.FreeBSD.org
*default base=/var/db
*default prefix=/usr
*default release=cvs tag=RELENG_6_2
*default delete use-rel-suffix
# If you seem to be limited by CPU rather than
On Saturday 18 August 2007 16:15:53 Nikola Lecic wrote:
> On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 16:53:27 +
>
> Pollywog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I have a problem with the jabberd port in FreeBSD 6.2.
> > The script apparently is not being executed on boot, though it works
>
On Friday 17 August 2007 23:45:36 Harald Schmalzbauer wrote:
> Hello,
>
> english is not my native language so I need some help to understand what
> people mean when they talk about "repo-copy".
> I often see that in CVS logs.
> My standard dictionary couldn't help this time... :(
>
repository cop
On Friday 17 August 2007 17:25:46 Matthew Seaman wrote:
> Yes, there is some more configuration to do. First of all you need
> to make phpmyadmin appear at an appropriate place in your web tree.
> That's what the package message is all about -- which you can see
> again by:
>
> pkg_info -Dx
Someone suggested I try to compile encfs again and since I updated my system
two days ago, I tried again and fusefs-encfs now compiles.
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I have a problem with the jabberd port in FreeBSD 6.2.
The script apparently is not being executed on boot, though it works if
executed manually. Who gets the bug report, the porter? Is the porter the
person named for the port at FreshPorts?
___
free
I am running FreeBSD 6.2 and I installed phpMyAdmin from ports, but when I put
http://hostname/phpMyAdmin in a browser, I get "the requested URL was not
found..."
Is some additional configuration required or is the problem that I can only
access phpMyAdmin from localhost? I have not tried that
On Friday 17 August 2007 04:11:17 Dan Nelson wrote:
> In the last episode (Aug 17), Pollywog said:
> > On Thursday 16 August 2007 21:39:25 Laszlo Nagy wrote:
> > > Now I'm starting to loose my enthusiasm about FreeBSD!
> > >
> > > - sshfs works for Linux,
On Thursday 16 August 2007 21:39:25 Laszlo Nagy wrote:
> Now I'm starting to loose my enthusiasm about FreeBSD!
>
> - sshfs works for Linux, but not for FreeBSD, although ssh is open
> source and well documented. The guy who developed it says that he could
> not implement fuse very well because th
I want to install the LDAP server but it complains that it conflicts with LDAP
client:
===> openldap-server-2.3.37 conflicts with installed package(s):
openldap-client-2.3.37
However, attempting to remove the client to make room for the server results
in another complaint:
pkg_delete: p
On Friday 10 August 2007 01:29:02 Valentin Bud wrote:
>
> A good ideea would be to build screen static. In case you
> update your system, it is possible that the libraries on which screen
> depends might be deleted. To do so
> # make CONFIGURE_ENV=LDFLAGS="-static" build
> # make install
> that
On Thursday 09 August 2007 04:22:26 Latitude wrote:
> I'm interested in changing over to FreeBSD from Windows, but I'll have
> to say, you guys don't really present a forceful argument to Windows
> users of how easy the switch may be. I get knee-deep in FreeBSD jargon
> the second I get to your we
On Thursday 02 August 2007 15:43:36 David Banning wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 02, 2007 at 11:05:47AM +1000, Terry Sposato wrote:
> > Hi David,
> >
> > It is most likely coming to your mailbox setup. You can create an alias
> > for it to be delivered appropriately to your maildir.
>
> Do what configuration
On Saturday 28 July 2007 20:23:16 Erik Trulsson wrote:
> Short answer: It is perfectly normal. Don't worry.
>
>
> Longer answer:
>
> The reason you have all of them installed is that some ports need one of
> them, and others need another one etc.
> It is perfectly safe to have all of them instal
> sudo find / | grep gdm.conf
>
> yields nothing. Where is it storing its settings if not in gdm.conf?
Did you check /usr/local/etc/gdm/ ?
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To uns
On Friday 27 July 2007 02:38:31 Paul Schmehl wrote:
> --On July 27, 2007 2:07:47 AM +0000 Pollywog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> wrote:
> > I had trouble getting CD burning to work, but the FreeBSD Handbook had
> > the info I needed to get it to work. I had to modify my fst
s in Linux, but it
works.
The pertinent sections of my fstab:
/dev/acd0 /cdrom cd9660 ro,noauto 0 0
/dev/cd0 /usr/home/pollywog/cdrom cd9660 ro,noauto,nodev,nosuid 0 0
I also had to add myself (my username) to the operator group. To make it more
convenien
On Tuesday 24 July 2007 18:30:59 Lowell Gilbert wrote:
> I would guess that it's an xauth(1) problem.
> Make sure that XAuthLocation is set ,in sshd_config(5), to the right
> path for the xauth executable (probably /usr/local/bin/xauth, if
> you've done the update to X.Org 7.2.
>
> That's just a sh
On Tuesday 24 July 2007 15:59:22 Terry Todd wrote:
> I have installed Xming successfully on a Windows XP system.
> It works OK to a FC6 system and an older UNIXware system.
>
> However when trying to connect to a FreeBSD 6.2 system with PuTTY
> ssh it doesn't work. PuTTY has Enable X11 forwarding
On Tuesday 24 July 2007 11:33:26 Norberto Meijome wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 02:06:38 -0700
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > * If "root" cannot log in remotely, a cracker has to guess three
>
> guess or brute force - so quite long random passwords (or ssh keys) are
> extremely recommendable.
>
>
On Saturday 14 July 2007 18:39:04 Manolis Kiagias wrote:
>
> Generally the APC UPSes work fine with FreeBSD. There is the apcupsd
> port for controlled unattended shutdowns. They work fine in Linux too
> with the same program.
> You may also find other solutions that work fine with the nutups prog
On Saturday 14 July 2007 17:36:05 Tek Bahadur Limbu wrote:
>
> Thank you for your tips. I will download the FreeSBIE live CD tomorrow
> and follow it up with your suggestions.
>
> One thing I find FreeBSD very fussy and sensitive in comparison to Linux
> OSes is that whenever there is an power out
On Saturday 14 July 2007 00:27:40 Nikola Lecic wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Jul 2007 08:33:04 +1000
>
> "Paul Fraser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Actually that's not entirely true - the only "problem" is sound drops
> > out of sync almost straight away, but otherwise it works just fine.
>
> Hm, this is v
Since FreeBSD does not have ssh-copy-id as part of the OpenSSH package, what
is the best way to copy a public key to an account on another host? Some
Linuxes (Debian and Ubuntu) have a ssh-copy-id script for this in their
OpenSSH packages.
___
freebsd
On Thursday 12 July 2007 19:35:47 RW wrote:
>
> I don't recall ever having a problem with sound on youtube with Flash7
> - the problems were with Flash9 which relies on ALSA.
Does that mean Flash9 is a no-go on FreeBSD?
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
On Thursday 12 July 2007 13:59:54 Andy Greenwood wrote:
>
> I had this same problem recently on my server. the sshd_config man
> page says that the default location for xauth is /usr/X11R6/bin/xauth,
> but mine was installed as /usr/local/bin/xauth. adding
>
> XAuthLocation /usr/local/bin/xauth
>
On Thursday 12 July 2007 00:55:24 Desmond Chapman wrote:
> I am installing FreeBSD and it does not recognize the USB ports, the PS/2
> port, or even the mouse types: Intellimouse, Microsoft Mouse,
> Generic/Auto. How do I go about enabling the mouse daemon? And yes, I have
> tried the set up. It d
On Wednesday 11 July 2007 23:17:42 Albert Shih wrote:
> Le 10/07/2007 à 14:41:01-0700, Pollywog a écrit
>
> > On Sunday 08 July 2007 18:03:49 Pollywog wrote:
> > > I am having some problems with X11 forwarding. I can do X11 forwarding
> > > via ssh between two machin
On Tuesday 10 July 2007 19:24:33 Matt Emmerton wrote:
> > I have been having trouble getting gpg-agent to work. kgpg complained
>
> about
>
> > the agent not running. I added this to my ~/.bashrc:
> >
> > GPG_TTY=`tty`
> > export GPG_TTY
> >
> > This seems to have taken care of the problem but it
I have been having trouble getting gpg-agent to work. kgpg complained about
the agent not running. I added this to my ~/.bashrc:
GPG_TTY=`tty`
export GPG_TTY
This seems to have taken care of the problem but it only works when my default
shell is bash. If my shell is tcsh, it doesn't work. Th
On Tuesday 10 July 2007 14:41:01 Pollywog wrote:
>
> I just did 'ssh' to one of the Linux hosts and when the connection was
> made, I got this:
>
> Warning: No xauth data; using fake authentication data for X11 forwarding.
>
> Does this possibly have som
On Sunday 08 July 2007 18:03:49 Pollywog wrote:
> I am having some problems with X11 forwarding. I can do X11 forwarding via
> ssh between two machines running Linux, but if I try to do this from
> FreeBSD (KDE) to either of the Linux machines, it only works if I use
> startx to star
On Monday 09 July 2007 12:43:45 J.D. Bronson wrote:
> Is there any way to verify ALL power management is disabled?
> I have totally disabled it in my BIOS and I have
> totally disabled it in the hard drives...
>
> Yet I keep hearing a drive spin down and then immediately back up
> over and over (at
On Monday 09 July 2007 12:43:45 J.D. Bronson wrote:
> Is there any way to verify ALL power management is disabled?
> I have totally disabled it in my BIOS and I have
> totally disabled it in the hard drives...
>
> Yet I keep hearing a drive spin down and then immediately back up
> over and over (at
I am having some problems with X11 forwarding. I can do X11 forwarding via ssh
between two machines running Linux, but if I try to do this from FreeBSD
(KDE) to either of the Linux machines, it only works if I use startx to start
KDE on the fbsd machine (a laptop). If I start KDE from kdm, I get
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