If one were to *not* use the installer to setup a FreeBSD system, (aka,
like *old* dos, each step done manually), what are the manual steps
involved?
Matthew Seaman wrote:
On Mon, May 17, 2004 at 01:00:37AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Has there been any new work on the installer or planned?
Jeff Elkins wrote:
No responses on this yet, but I can hope :)
Another issue: After changing the permissions on the /dev/pass* devices,
following a reboot, they all reverted, rendering k3b useless.
I'd appreciate some help...
I've enabled the ATAPI/CAM driver in my kernel under freebsd
If your hard drive is IDE, then /dev/da0 is definately wrong. :)
Try /dev/ad0.
This is presuming of course that rawio doesn't do anything *bad* to your
data.
Rishi Chopra wrote:
I am newbie who just installed RawIO ('cd /usr/ports/benchmarks/rawio',
'make install') but am having trouble running
It should.
To test it after running the dump do a
restore -i -f /mnt/backup_drive/ad0backup/main_backup11_03
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Was working my way through dump and was going over what the
-L switch is used for. I guess one would use this when you
are dumping a mounted file system correct?
He
Set your SmartHost in your sendmail config to relay through your ISP's
SMTP relay will fix the problem.
Robert Huff wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> The timeouts look suspicious. Is your upstream blocking outgoing SMTP
> connections (perhaps in an attempt to stop spam)? A quick way to check
>
You need to configure sendmail to route via your ISP's SMTP gateway.
Many IP's are listed in a 'dial up user blacklist', and yahoo, aol, etc
will reject your mail otherwise.
REF: SmartHost in you sendmail config. webmin is your friend.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/06/2003
you must use the f flag when manipulation files.
no f flag equals attempt to access tape drive.
Martin McCormick wrote:
The command
tar ztf /usr/local/src/ports.tar.gz
produces a table of contents just like the man page says it should.
The man page also says that individual files can be recover
If all you are wanting to do is hide the boot messages at boot time,
the splash boot screen would be an option.
look in /boot/defaults
Yong Yi wrote:
Anyone know whether it'd be possible to cleanly disable
printing the kernel boot messages (the bold white text)?
Meaning, short of commenting out the
a shell script ending with .sh with chmod +x in dir /usr/local/etc/rc.d
man heir
jason dictos wrote:
Hello again,
So there's /etc/rc, and etc/rc.local, and then there's the fancy rc.conf
scripts which stat programs. /etc/rc and /etc/rc.local don't appear to be
"designated" places for starti
YOu X-Windowing installation is *not* right.
Update your XFree86 to the latest available (via packages), not
you might need to download and upgrade your FreeBSD 4.5 to 4.8-RELEASE
or 4.9-PRERELEASE, this should give much up to date video card drivers,
then you run XFree86 -configure and follow ins
AMD Duron, Athlon, et al, are all i386 compatible processors
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
FreeBSD-
Do AMD Duron processors fall under the AMD64 release category, because on
your website it only says that AMD Opteron and Athlon prcoessors are the
AMD64 architecture.
Thanks
_
Please spit out and attach as plain text tht outputs of
ifconfig
netstat -rn
ps ax | grep dh
Richard Morse wrote:
Hi! I just CVSup'd (last Thursday) and upgraded my system to RELENG_4.
I now cannot connect (seemingly) to the network. Whenever I try to
ping and outside system, I get "ping
Please use the port mpd instead.
Chris Knipe wrote:
Lo all,
Very arb and weird problem... I've followed all the docs that google could
return (they all mostly the same in any case), and yeah...
My PPTP server *does* work.. As long as I don't terminate more than one
connection at a time to the ser
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