I need Install DB2 in Freebsd with a tool administration like webmin but for database DB2

2008-12-10 Thread Tomás Rodriguez
Hi, everyone. I wanna install DB2 in my unix freebsd, but I never doing that, in fact I need a tool like GUI or like webmin, for the adminsitration of the DB2. who can help me with that. I'll appreciate any help, because I have been very hurry with that I'll developer a tools in DB2 butnever

Re: I need Install DB2 in Freebsd with a tool administration like webmin but for database DB2

2008-12-10 Thread michael
you want to install ibm db2 server? or you want to install db2 client? Tomás Rodriguez wrote: Hi, everyone. I wanna install DB2 in my unix freebsd, but I never doing that, in fact I need a tool like GUI or like webmin, for the adminsitration of the DB2. who can help me with that. I'll

Re: I need Install DB2 in Freebsd with a tool administration like webmin but for database DB2

2008-12-10 Thread Tomás Rodriguez
thanks Michael well I wanna install ibm db2 server for developer one application in PHP or Java, but I need a graphic tools for his administration. thanks again sincerely TOMAS - Original Message From: michael [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Tomás Rodriguez [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: freebsd

Re: I need Install DB2 in Freebsd with a tool administration likewebmin but for database DB2

2008-12-10 Thread Matt Emmerton
Tomas, DB2 comes with a Java-based GUI administration tool called the DB2 Control Center. Unfortunately, it can only be installed on a supported DB2 client platform, such as Linux, Windows or various commercial UNIX platforms. DB2 does not currently have any other type of GUI

RE: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docsonFreeBSD7.0-RELEASE-i386 ?

2008-08-29 Thread David Christensen
Reordered for clarity -- David. I used pkg_add (rather than sysinstall) to install MySQL 5.1 server on another machine. While the port is called 'mysql-server-5.1.22', the package is called 'mysql51-server': # cd /usr/ports/ # make search mysql ... Port: mysql-server-5.1.22

RE: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs on FreeBSD7.0-RELEASE-i386 ?

2008-08-27 Thread David Christensen
Fraser Tweedale wrote: put the following line in /etc/rc.conf: mysql_enable=YES and run (as root): /usr/local/etc/rc.d/mysql-server start # echo 'mysql_enable=YES' /etc/rc.conf # /usr/local/etc/rc.d/mysql-server start Starting mysql. # mysql Welcome to the MySQL

RE: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs onFreeBSD7.0-RELEASE-i386 ?

2008-08-27 Thread joeb
Of David Christensen Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2008 1:47 PM To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: RE: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs onFreeBSD7.0-RELEASE-i386 ? Fraser Tweedale wrote: put the following line in /etc/rc.conf: mysql_enable=YES and run (as root): /usr/local

mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs on FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE-i386 ?

2008-08-26 Thread David Christensen
things working via /etc/rc.d/* scripts and/or /etc/rc.conf -- (apache_enable, hostname, ifconfig_*, defaultrouter, ntpd*, inetd. mysql-5.1 doesn't seem to follow the pattern. Why? Where is the FreeBSD 7.0 system administration documentation for mysqld 5.1? Specifically, how to start it manually

Re: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs on FreeBSD7.0-RELEASE-i386 ?

2008-08-26 Thread freebsdemail
on the Rogers Wireless Network -Original Message- From: David Christensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2008 21:57:10 To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs on FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE-i386 ? freebsd-questions: I am a FreeBSB

Re: mysql-server-5.1.22 system administration docs on FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE-i386 ?

2008-08-26 Thread Fraser Tweedale
the pattern. Why? Where is the FreeBSD 7.0 system administration documentation for mysqld 5.1? Specifically, how to start it manually and how to start it at book via the rc system? TIA, David ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list

webbased email administration

2006-10-12 Thread Andreas Widerøe Andersen
or whatever needed. Can anyone recommend a webbased system for administration of email adresses that will run on FreeBSD? Thanks, Andreas ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions

Re: webbased email administration

2006-10-12 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt
Webmin! Ted - Original Message - From: Andreas Widerøe Andersen [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Sent: Thursday, October 12, 2006 12:09 AM Subject: webbased email administration Hi, We're considering setting up an email service here and we need to give IT admins

Re: webbased email administration

2006-10-12 Thread Patrik Jansson
-POP3, but can easily change to Postfix or whatever needed. Can anyone recommend a webbased system for administration of email adresses that will run on FreeBSD? I'm running Exim with Vexim on a few machines. Not to advanced GUI but it does the job. http://silverwraith.com/vexim/ - Patrik

Re: webbased email administration

2006-10-12 Thread Daniel Gerzo
this. We currently run Sendmail and WU-POP3, but can easily change to Postfix or whatever needed. Can anyone recommend a webbased system for administration of email adresses that will run on FreeBSD? postfix + postfixadmin + mysql (there are also patches to make it work with pgsql), all these tools

Re: webbased email administration

2006-10-12 Thread Jim Pazarena
, but can easily change to Postfix or whatever needed. Can anyone recommend a webbased system for administration of email adresses that will run on FreeBSD? Thanks, Andreas take a look at: http://www.eemam.com ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing

Re: webbased email administration

2006-10-12 Thread albi
On Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:09:35 +0200 Andreas Widerøe Andersen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: We're considering setting up an email service here and we need to give IT admins in various companies the ability to administer their own email addresses (under their domain). postfixadmin is great for this

Systems Administration Tool

2006-09-27 Thread Jim Borland
Hi, Is there any kind of systems administration tool on freebsd to enable the configuration of such things as printers and users? Is there a graphical user interface? Thanks, Jim. Jim Borland Unit 2 Wallace Studios 27 Wallace Avenue

Re: Systems Administration Tool

2006-09-27 Thread Javier Henderson
On Sep 27, 2006, at 10:43 AM, Jim Borland wrote: Hi, Is there any kind of systems administration tool on freebsd to enable the configuration of such things as printers and users? Is there a graphical user interface? Look at the webmin port. -jav

Re: Systems Administration Tool

2006-09-27 Thread Bill Moran
In response to Jim Borland [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Hi, Is there any kind of systems administration tool on freebsd to enable the configuration of such things as printers and users? Is there a graphical user interface? Have a look at webmin. -- Bill Moran Collaborative Fusion Inc

Re: Systems Administration Tool

2006-09-27 Thread Chuck Swiger
Jim Borland wrote: Hi, Is there any kind of systems administration tool on freebsd to enable the configuration of such things as printers and users? Certainly. You can run sysinstall again and do post-installation configuration with that tool, or you can run adduser or other tools directly

Re: Systems Administration Tool

2006-09-27 Thread Bill Moran
In response to Jim Borland [EMAIL PROTECTED]: -Original Message- From: Bill Moran [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 27 September 2006 15:55 To: Jim Borland Cc: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: Systems Administration Tool In response to Jim Borland [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: System administration question

2006-04-12 Thread Norberto Meijome
On Sat, 18 Mar 2006 14:19:34 -0600 (CST) Philip Hallstrom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Is there a port or utility that allows you to monitor system stats by (either interactively or periodically) reading the various stat utilities (fstat, iostat, pstat or swapinfo, systat, top, vmstat, etc.)

System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Paul Schmehl
Is there a port or utility that allows you to monitor system stats by (either interactively or periodically) reading the various stat utilities (fstat, iostat, pstat or swapinfo, systat, top, vmstat, etc.) and sending a report to root that summarizes system condition? Paul Schmehl ([EMAIL

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Martin Hudec
Hello, Paul Schmehl wrote: Is there a port or utility that allows you to monitor system stats by (either interactively or periodically) reading the various stat utilities (fstat, iostat, pstat or swapinfo, systat, top, vmstat, etc.) and sending a report to root that summarizes system

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Paul Schmehl
--On March 18, 2006 8:19:02 PM +0100 Martin Hudec [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Paul Schmehl wrote: Is there a port or utility that allows you to monitor system stats by (either interactively or periodically) reading the various stat utilities (fstat, iostat, pstat or swapinfo, systat, top, vmstat,

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Martin Hudec
Hello Paul, Paul Schmehl wrote: I thought about doing that as well, but I'm wondering if there is something that already exists. (No sense in reinventing the wheel.) Also, feeding the info to a database so trending information would be available as well would probably be a nice feature.

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Philip Hallstrom
Is there a port or utility that allows you to monitor system stats by (either interactively or periodically) reading the various stat utilities (fstat, iostat, pstat or swapinfo, systat, top, vmstat, etc.) and sending a report to root that summarizes system condition? if you want graphs (of

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Paul Schmehl
--On March 18, 2006 2:19:34 PM -0600 Philip Hallstrom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Is there a port or utility that allows you to monitor system stats by (either interactively or periodically) reading the various stat utilities (fstat, iostat, pstat or swapinfo, systat, top, vmstat, etc.) and

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Paul Schmehl
--On March 18, 2006 2:32:52 PM -0600 Paul Schmehl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I just found devel/libstatgrab. I'm going to take a look at that. Nice little app. It has two utilities: saidar and statgrab. The former is a top-like interface that gives you running stats in human-readable form.

Re: System administration question

2006-03-18 Thread Derek Ragona
I use BigSister, it is in the ports. Depending on your server, you can gather more information with a good SNMP MIB. I have BigSister log events into a mysql database which I can then query for more history beyond what is displayed. -Derek At 01:13 PM 3/18/2006, Paul Schmehl

Thank-you for contacting the Astraware Newsletter Administration Team

2006-02-07 Thread newsletter
Thank you for contacting the Astraware Newsletter Administration Team. If you are requesting to be unsubscribed, this will normally be actioned before our next newsletter is sent out. Please allow 24 to 48 hours for unsubscribe requests to take effect. If you have another question regarding

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-22 Thread Igor Robul
Louis LeBlanc wrote: Does it tell you why XP requires any user wishing to print to a network printer must have administrator privileges? It doesnt ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-22 Thread Gerard Seibert
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 15:28:38 +0400 Igor Robul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Louis LeBlanc wrote: Does it tell you why XP requires any user wishing to print to a network printer must have administrator privileges? It doesnt ** Reply Separator ** Monday, August 22, 2005

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-22 Thread Louis LeBlanc
On 08/22/05 04:56 PM, Gerard Seibert sat at the `puter and typed: On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 15:28:38 +0400 Igor Robul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Louis LeBlanc wrote: Does it tell you why XP requires any user wishing to print to a network printer must have administrator privileges? It

RE: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-22 Thread Joshua Weaver
Of Louis LeBlanc Sent: Monday, August 22, 2005 4:29 PM To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru On 08/22/05 04:56 PM, Gerard Seibert sat at the `puter and typed: On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 15:28:38 +0400 Igor Robul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Louis

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-22 Thread Aaron Peterson
On 8/22/05, Joshua Weaver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: What are the symptoms that you need administrator privileges? The default security scheme, even with the SP2 behemoth installed, require an administrator or power user to install the printer, but a user can print to it. Is this just a postfix

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-22 Thread Louis LeBlanc
it was, and spoke to 4 different people until I found someone whose accent wasn't too thick to understand and finally gave up. No, I wasn't too thrilled about it, but I figured that's windows. So, every time I see something about Windows administration, security or otherwise, I flip through or ask about

Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread P.U.Kruppa
On Sat, 20 Aug 2005, Kent Hauser wrote: Hi, I've been a Unix sysadmin (SunOS 3.x, 4.x, Solaris, FreeBSD) for 15 years, but am now being forced to learn how to run a collection of XP boxes. Can anyone recommend a book which explains this confusing beast? I'm talking about a book which

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread Louis LeBlanc
administration books in the bookstores. Although there are several books for Windows users moving to Unix, I've not seen one for the other direction. There is an O'Reilly book called Windows XP Annoyances for Geeks. It may not help; but at least it has a cool title. ;-) Does it tell you why

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread Andrew L. Gould
a hard time figuring the system to what's what in XP. Thanks, Kent There are lots of WinXP administration books in the bookstores. Although there are several books for Windows users moving to Unix, I've not seen one for the other direction. There is an O'Reilly book called

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread Garrett Cooper
figuring the system to what's what in XP. Thanks, Kent There are lots of WinXP administration books in the bookstores. Although there are several books for Windows users moving to Unix, I've not seen one for the other direction. There is an O'Reilly book called Windows XP Annoyances

Re: OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread Nikolas Britton
I have a few tips, I started my computer life as a windows guy (I hate the dam thing now). hmm, Grab a copy of ActiveState's ActivePerl and a find a good Perl for Win32 book. Most everything you want is in the Control Panel and you can find Computer Management in there, To get to Control Panel

Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread Paul Schmehl
--On August 20, 2005 6:02:18 PM -1000 Kent Hauser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I've been a Unix sysadmin (SunOS 3.x, 4.x, Solaris, FreeBSD) for 15 years, but am now being forced to learn how to run a collection of XP boxes. Can anyone recommend a book which explains this confusing beast? I'm

Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread Kurt Buff
Paul Schmehl wrote: --On August 20, 2005 6:02:18 PM -1000 Kent Hauser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I've been a Unix sysadmin (SunOS 3.x, 4.x, Solaris, FreeBSD) for 15 years, but am now being forced to learn how to run a collection of XP boxes. Can anyone recommend a book which explains this

Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-21 Thread stheg olloydson
it was said: Can anyone recommend a book which explains this confusing beast? I'm talking about a book which explains where things are put (equiv of /var/mail, /etc/passwd, /etc/rc.conf), where application data is stored, how printers, disks, etc are shared, how to book in fixit disk mode, how to

WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-20 Thread Kent Hauser
Hi, I've been a Unix sysadmin (SunOS 3.x, 4.x, Solaris, FreeBSD) for 15 years, but am now being forced to learn how to run a collection of XP boxes. Can anyone recommend a book which explains this confusing beast? I'm talking about a book which explains where things are put (equiv of

Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-20 Thread Ovidiu Ene
is this a joke? Kent Hauser wrote: Hi, I've been a Unix sysadmin (SunOS 3.x, 4.x, Solaris, FreeBSD) for 15 years, but am now being forced to learn how to run a collection of XP boxes. Can anyone recommend a book which explains this confusing beast? I'm talking about a book which

OT: Re: WinXP administration guide for unix guru

2005-08-20 Thread Andrew L. Gould
swap space. And also questions like why XP is professional, etc. I know it's a bit off topic, but I'm having a hard time figuring the system to what's what in XP. Thanks, Kent There are lots of WinXP administration books in the bookstores. Although there are several books for Windows users

Re: web-based ldap user administration

2005-05-23 Thread Ian Moore
On Friday 20 May 2005 01:15, Tony Shadwick wrote: As a side note, i've been looking to learn how to use openldap for auth to go along with what I know about NIS. Could you suggest some good reading? I'm trying to do that myself. Have a look at http://books.blurgle.ca/read/chapter/1 - it's

web-based ldap user administration

2005-05-19 Thread Benjamin J Doherty
Friends, Now that I've successfully assembled my LDAP enabled FreeBSD machine with pam_ldap and nss_ldap, I'm looking for a way to allow users to administer their accounts through a web browser. Webmin and Usermin appear to be excellent candidates except for the fact that they don't

Re: web-based ldap user administration

2005-05-19 Thread Tony Shadwick
HmI've worked quite a bit with Webmin and Usermin in the past, and I've found most problems can be worked around by reconfiguring a specific module. What do I mean? I don't have a webmin installation currently, but I had a site that was NIS and I had a unix-know-nothing that wanted to be

Re: web-based ldap user administration

2005-05-19 Thread Benjamin J Doherty
On May 19, 2005, at 10:45 AM, Tony Shadwick wrote: HmI've worked quite a bit with Webmin and Usermin in the past, and I've found most problems can be worked around by reconfiguring a specific module. You're right. I spoke too soon. Webmin and OpenLDAP can work together if you set

Re: best practices for administration

2005-05-12 Thread Joel
the operating system that imply 'administration', ie installing (B software, adding printers, modifying system scripts, etc. There are (B some here who think that putting standard user ID's into (B administrative 'groups' is sufficient for granting such priveledges. (B (BUsers will always

best practices for administration

2005-05-11 Thread David Bear
permissions to do things on the operating system that imply 'administration', ie installing software, adding printers, modifying system scripts, etc. There are some here who think that putting standard user ID's into administrative 'groups' is sufficient for granting such priveledges. hopefully, I'm

Re: best practices for administration

2005-05-11 Thread Chuck Swiger
users permissions to do things on the operating system that imply 'administration', ie installing software, adding printers, modifying system scripts, etc. There are some here who think that putting standard user ID's into administrative 'groups' is sufficient for granting such priveledges

Re: best practices for administration

2005-05-11 Thread Erik Nørgaard
David Bear wrote: Since the BSD community seems to be more security conscious than other (read windows system administrators) groups, I wanted to see if anyone here would have any pointers to best practices documents when administering ANY operating system, not just FreeBSD. I am assuming that

Re: best practices for administration

2005-05-11 Thread Trevor Sullivan
. I'd like to understand what is done generally when granting users permissions to do things on the operating system that imply 'administration', ie installing software, adding printers, modifying system scripts, etc. There are some here who think that putting standard user ID's

[OT] DNS Administration

2004-10-07 Thread Adam Bayless
Is anybody using web based DNS zone administration for their users? I've found several projects out there, but they either seem to be early betas, or only in french, or much too complex/flexible for the average virtual hosting type customer to understand. Before I roll my own I figured

Re: Re: Administration

2004-05-08 Thread Autoresponder
Please register at our secure web site: http://pc-magic.com/register.htm Thank you! Scott (This is an automated response. If this message doesn't pertain then please visit http://pc-magic.com/reginfo.htm) ___ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list

Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Hamed Abangar
Dear members I'm new to this list and also I'm new to FreeBSD environment .I'm network administrator in an isp.Recently i have changed our Internet servers from Linux to freebsd ( cache servers , dns servers , firewall , mail servers) . Every things works well , but i have a problem.I can't

RE: Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Kevin Greenidge
] Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Remote Administration Problem Dear members I'm new to this list and also I'm new to FreeBSD environment .I'm network administrator in an isp.Recently i have changed our Internet servers from Linux to freebsd ( cache servers , dns servers , firewall , mail servers

Re: Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Peter Risdon
Hamed Abangar wrote: Dear members I'm new to this list and also I'm new to FreeBSD environment .I'm network administrator in an isp.Recently i have changed our Internet servers from Linux to freebsd ( cache servers , dns servers , firewall , mail servers) . Every things works well , but i have

Re: Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Peter Risdon
Peter Risdon wrote: Hamed Abangar wrote: i can't login to my server with root account from my home or every other where. Remote root logins are disabled by default. This is probably the best way to leave things. You can log in as a user then su to root, use sudo or whatever. I should have

RE: Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Andras Kende
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Hamed Abangar Sent: Friday, March 26, 2004 2:43 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Remote Administration Problem Dear members I'm new to this list and also I'm new to FreeBSD

Re: Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Matt Coe, CCNA
Hamed Abangar wrote: Dear members I'm new to this list and also I'm new to FreeBSD environment .I'm network administrator in an isp.Recently i have changed our Internet servers from Linux to freebsd ( cache servers , dns servers , firewall , mail servers) . Every things works well , but i have

Re: Remote Administration Problem

2004-03-26 Thread Martin Hudec
Hi Hamed, Why are you using telnet for administration, when there is SSH available? :) In default configuration SSH is not allowing to log in as [EMAIL PROTECTED] What you want to enable is: PermitRootLogin yes in /etc/ssh/sshd_config But is it difficult for you to log in there as normal

cups Administration with Webinterfaces: - Device: Parallel Port missing

2004-03-26 Thread Christian Tanghe
Hi, in brief: My system: FBSD 5.2 Current, Cups, Gimp-print and ghostscript from this days I want to add a locally connected Printer using the webinterface. In the dropdown menue Device apear different printer devices, e.g. LPD/LPR Host or Printer and IPP, but _not_ Parallel Port. 1. what is

Re: cups Administration with Webinterfaces: - Device: Parallel Port missing

2004-03-26 Thread Danny Pansters
On Friday 26 March 2004 15:16, Christian Tanghe wrote: Hi, in brief: My system: FBSD 5.2 Current, Cups, Gimp-print and ghostscript from this days I want to add a locally connected Printer using the webinterface. In the dropdown menue Device apear different printer devices, e.g. LPD/LPR Host

Re: Administration

2004-02-18 Thread Benjamin Walkenhorst
On Tue, 17 Feb 2004 12:08:52 -0800 Derek Burns / Bend-Pak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? Sure, there's ssh. With ssh you can also do sftp, which works like ftp, only it's encrypted via ssh. If your server is on a trusted network, you

Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Derek Burns / Bend-Pak
Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? ___ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Dan Rue
On Tue, Feb 17, 2004 at 12:08:52PM -0800, Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? Sure, If you're familiar with command line, ssh is all you need. If not, check out webmin (/usr/ports/sysutils/webmin). But, really, everything you need to

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread matthew
On Tue, 17 Feb 2004, Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? Is this a trick question? download putty, it is an ssh client fpr windows. make sure sshd is running on your fbsd machine. ssh into is, su to root, and you can administrate

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Andrew L. Gould
On Tuesday 17 February 2004 02:08 pm, Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? Yes. There are many ways. How you administer the server remotely will depend upon many factors: 1. Are you comfortable on the command line, or do you want a

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Marty Landman
At 03:08 PM 2/17/2004, Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? I'm a newbie, which means I do lots of stuff to learn and correct my own errors. My workstation's a pc running win xp and I ssh into my fbsd box for most everything - even on

RE: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Eric F Crist
PROTECTED] Subject: Administration Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? ___ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P.
Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? ___ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Jeremy Faulkner
Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? Install putty on your pc, then you'll be able to ssh into your server. -- Jeremy Faulkner http://www.gldis.ca ___ [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Administration

2004-02-17 Thread Andrew L. Gould
: Administration On Tuesday 17 February 2004 02:08 pm, Derek Burns / Bend-Pak wrote: Is there a way I can administer my FreeBSD web server from my pc? Yes. There are many ways. How you administer the server remotely will depend upon many factors: 1. Are you comfortable on the command line

remote administration of upgrades

2003-09-18 Thread Voracity.net Administrator
Hello, I am concerned about the recent ssh and sendmail security bulletins and would like to patch, but I have a few questions. The server that I administer runs FreeBSD 4.8, and I only have ssh access to it, not physical console access. Additionally, it's a production web server and so it

Re: remote administration of upgrades

2003-09-18 Thread Matthew Seaman
On Thu, Sep 18, 2003 at 01:30:13AM -0700, Voracity.net Administrator wrote: Anyway, I used cvsup to grab the RELENG_4_8 sources with the fixes. I'm now faced with the choice of doing make world (which I have never done) or just recompiling ssh and sendmail and installing them only.

List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Chuck Swiger
Jerry McAllister wrote: [ ... ] Gee whiz. Another round of this argument. Seems it comes along about every 2 or 3 months and is all the same and seems to generate as much unnecessary traffic as spamers do. It just indicates that the advocates do not understand the function or operation of

Re: List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Jerry McAllister
Jerry McAllister wrote: [ ... ] Gee whiz. Another round of this argument. Seems it comes along about every 2 or 3 months and is all the same and seems to generate as much unnecessary traffic as spamers do. It just indicates that the advocates do not understand the function or

Re: List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Chuck Swiger
Jerry McAllister wrote: [ ... ] Yah, and that one has been covered a hundred times too. Oddly enough, several other FreeBSD lists have become moderated in recent times. You want to pay a couple of full time salaries to people to sit around and moderate the list, cough up. Sure, I'm willing to

Re: List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Jerry McAllister
Jerry McAllister wrote: [ ... ] Yah, and that one has been covered a hundred times too. Oddly enough, several other FreeBSD lists have become moderated in recent times. Yes. But they have more specifically limited scope. jerry You want to pay a couple of full time salaries

Re: List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Chuck Swiger
Jerry McAllister wrote: [ ... ] I'm volunteering my time, network bandwidth, Whew. Neighbor, for choice I try to be polite, even in the face of sarcastic comments, false admiration, rhetorical games, and all of the other bullshit that some people exhibit. Most of the time, I leave it at that.

Re: List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Jerry McAllister
So who is mocking. Not I. I would consider voluntarily moderating this list as a monumental job - well beyond anything I would have time for. jerry Jerry McAllister wrote: [ ... ] I'm volunteering my time, network bandwidth, Whew. Neighbor, for choice I try to be polite,

Re: List Administration, was: Re: your mail

2003-06-03 Thread Frank Tegtmeyer
Jerry McAllister [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: So who is mocking. Not I. I would consider voluntarily moderating this list as a monumental job - well beyond anything You don't understand. Its only about moderating postings from non members. Regards, Frank

Re: Doom as a tool for system administration (unique to say the least)

2002-12-03 Thread Adam Weinberger
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 (12.03.2002 @ 1142 PST): Bsd Neophyte said, in 0.4K: i thought this was pretty interesting and i figured i'd share it... Doom as a tool for system administration http://www.cs.unm.edu/~dlchao/flake/doom/ end of Doom as a tool for system

Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Andreas Wideroe Andersen
Dear list readers, I'm going away on a 2 month vacation in a couple of weeks and I need to find a way I can do simple server administration from remote locations. I will most likely not be able to connect via SSH to my 2 servers (Running FreeBSD 4.5 and 4.6 STABLE) since the only internet

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Adam Weinberger
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 /usr/ports/sysutils/webmin - -Adam (10.22.2002 @ 0155 PST): Andreas Wideroe Andersen said, in 0.6K: Dear list readers, I'm going away on a 2 month vacation in a couple of weeks and I need to find a way I can do simple server administration

RE: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Barry Byrne
: 22 October 2002 09:55 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Server administration while on holiday Dear list readers, I'm going away on a 2 month vacation in a couple of weeks and I need to find a way I can do simple server administration from remote locations. I will most likely not be able

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Simon Dick
, Dublin 2, Ireland -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-freebsd-questions;FreeBSD.ORG]On Behalf Of Andreas Wideroe Andersen Sent: 22 October 2002 09:55 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Server administration while on holiday Dear list readers

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Andreas Wideroe Andersen
simple server administration from remote locations. I will most likely not be able to connect via SSH to my 2 servers (Running FreeBSD 4.5 and 4.6 STABLE) since the only internet access I will have is through various Internet Cafes. Does anyone know if there is a tool to do smaller jobs like

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Vallo Kallaste
On Tue, Oct 22, 2002 at 10:55:16AM +0200, Andreas Wideroe Andersen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Dear list readers, I'm going away on a 2 month vacation in a couple of weeks and I need to find a way I can do simple server administration from remote locations. I will most likely not be able

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Simon J Mudd
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Simon Dick) writes: Or the putty ssh client, a single downloadable windows exe file which requires no installation. Yes, I've used this on many ocassions to enter my FreeBSD/Linux machines and in most Internet Cafés you can download it and use it. Simon -- Simon J Mudd,

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread Rus Foster
On 22 Oct 2002, Simon J Mudd wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Simon Dick) writes: Or the putty ssh client, a single downloadable windows exe file which requires no installation. Yes, I've used this on many ocassions to enter my FreeBSD/Linux machines and in most Internet Cafés you can download

Re: Server administration while on holiday

2002-10-22 Thread MikeM
On 10/22/02 at 12:00 PM Andreas Wideroe Andersen wrote: | |Thanks for your suggestions! Webmin is now installed and it does |exactly what I was looking for! = Make sure you activate the SSL option of Webmin. Details here: http://www.webmin.com/ssl.html To Unsubscribe: send mail