--- vext01 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music
server for a while and it
has performed flawlessly. good good! However
recently I installed freebsd on
my desktop too. I can do the things I want to, it
just seems that i need to
be root to
On Fri, 6 Feb 2004, Edd Barrett wrote:
Hi all,
I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music server for a while and
it has performed flawlessly. good good! However recently I installed freebsd
on my desktop too. I can do the things I want to, it just seems that i need
to be root to do
On Fri, 6 Feb 2004 11:30:38 -
Edd Barrett [EMAIL PROTECTED] probably wrote:
Hi all,
I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music server for a while and
it has performed flawlessly. good good! However recently I installed freebsd
on my desktop too. I can do the things I want to, it
Perhaps you can use sudo for your normal user and setup the sudoers file for only the
privleges you want your normal users to have.
HTH,
Darryl
On Fri, Feb 06, 2004 at 11:30:38AM -, Edd Barrett wrote:
Hi all,
I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music server for a while and
it
Edd Barrett [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi all,
I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music server for a while and
it has performed flawlessly. good good! However recently I installed freebsd
on my desktop too. I can do the things I want to, it just seems that i need
to be root to do a
Darryl Grant wrote:
Perhaps you can use sudo for your normal user and setup the sudoers file
for only the privleges you want your normal users to have.
HTH,
Darryl
I've found this to be handy also in Gnome. Assigning
sudo ppp -background myisp to an icon gives
a better then M$
Make yourself part of the wheel group. That should solve a lot of your
problems.
On Fri, 2004-02-06 at 05:30, Edd Barrett wrote:
Hi all,
I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music server for a while and
it has performed flawlessly. good good! However recently I installed freebsd
on