After the last major update of www/firefox to version 23 firefox
rejects of moving/swapping the tabs. They are static now. I do not
know whether this has to do with the great pixman update, because
coincidentally I made bot the pixman update and the update of firefox
towards revision 23 slipped
El día Monday, October 14, 2013 a las 08:54:56AM +0200, O. Hartmann escribió:
After the last major update of www/firefox to version 23 firefox
rejects of moving/swapping the tabs. They are static now. I do not
know whether this has to do with the great pixman update, because
coincidentally
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 1:21 AM, Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
On Sun, 13 Oct 2013 23:01:02 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Polytropon wrote:
On Sun, 13 Oct 2013 13:24:30 -0400, Kenta Suzumoto wrote:
Hi all. Is it possible to install FreeBSD without
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 09:50:48 +0200
Matthias Apitz g...@unixarea.de wrote:
El día Monday, October 14, 2013 a las 08:54:56AM +0200, O. Hartmann
escribió:
After the last major update of www/firefox to version 23 firefox
rejects of moving/swapping the tabs. They are static now. I do not
El día Monday, October 14, 2013 a las 10:23:49AM +0200, O. Hartmann escribió:
I have a 10-CURRENT r255948 from October 1st, with all ports from head
too, rev. r328930.
FF is version 24.0 in the r328930 ports and the tabs can be moved fine
with drag and drop.
HIH
matthias
David Demelier wrote:
Hello there,
I'm writing because after a power failure I was unable to log in on my
FreeBSD 9.2-RELEASE. The SU+J journal were executed correctly but some
files disappeared, including /etc/pwd.db. Thus I was unable to log in.
I've been able to regenerate the
On 14/10/2013 06:37, Beeblebrox wrote:
Hi,
I Inadvertently posted the gnome-keyring bit. That's almost standard error
message on FreeBSD-Gnome. The relevant bit for the error is in fact:
slim: gkr-pam: no password is available for user
However, the user cannot login on a tty without providing a
Michael Powell wrote:
[snip]
The other box is my first foray into the land of GPT, along with SU+J. It
was sitting at the 'couldn't mount... Press return for /bin/sh' line.
There was an error indicating that replaying one or more journals had
failed. I was able to successfully fsck all the
Has the DEFAULT_VERSIONS= been extended to include ports other than
python=2.7 python2=2.7 python3=3.3 perl5=5.18 ruby=2.0 tcltk=8.6 as
presently shown in UPDATING? Are their plans to extend it to ports like
db6, mysql56\*, etcetera?
--
Jerry ♔
Disclaimer: off-list followups get on-list replies
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 05:02:22 -0400
Michael Powell wrote:
David Demelier wrote:
Hello there,
I'm writing because after a power failure I was unable to log in on
my FreeBSD 9.2-RELEASE. The SU+J journal were executed correctly
but some files disappeared, including /etc/pwd.db. Thus I
Just a friendly reminder vBSDcon is less than 2 weeks away from October 25 –
27, 2013 in Herndon, VA. Online registrations are open for 9 more days and
will close on October 23, 2013. On-site registrations will be available
throughout the entirety of vBSDcon. Attendees may register for
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Polytropon wrote:
On Sun, 13 Oct 2013 23:01:02 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Polytropon wrote:
On Sun, 13 Oct 2013 13:24:30 -0400, Kenta Suzumoto wrote:
Hi all. Is it possible to install FreeBSD without formatting the disk?
Yes. The installer
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, O. Hartmann wrote:
FF is in my case 24, too:
pkg info firefox
firefox-24.0,1
Have you done updating the ports regarding
20130929
in /usr/ports/UPDATING? I did on all boxes and on all boxes I did the
tab-stickyness is present.
Firefox 24 allows tab moves for me on both
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 07:51:15 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
It is possible to mount filesystems manually from the shell and have
bsdinstall continue with the install without formatting them. It's been
a while since I tried that, and I don't recall the exact details.
bsdinstall(8)
The brutal and brute-force approach can work - better if you boot from
a USB stick, of course. You can untar base.tzx and kernel.tzx in your
/, with filesystems mounted. As Polytropon says, do a backup of what
you'll want afterwards.
This approach will leave a lot of cruft (old versions of
On 14.10.2013 14:39, RW wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 05:02:22 -0400
Michael Powell wrote:
David Demelier wrote:
Hello there,
I'm writing because after a power failure I was unable to log in on
my FreeBSD 9.2-RELEASE. The SU+J journal were executed correctly
but some files disappeared,
Hi people,
I'm very interested to tuning /etc/sysctl.conf according to the
specifications of my PC. I've been reading some guides [1], tutorials
[2-3], QA [4] and the FreeBSD Handbook's related section 12.12 Tuning with
sysctl(8), but I think it's much more convenient if I contrast it with
other
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 6:34 PM, David Demelier
demelier.da...@gmail.com wrote:
Why? SU+J is enabled by default. Isn't the purpose of a journaled file
system to ensure that any bad shutdown will protect data?
On GNU/Linux, on Windows you will not require anything else to recover
your data.
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 11:34 AM, David Demelier
demelier.da...@gmail.comwrote:
Why? SU+J is enabled by default. Isn't the purpose of a journaled file
system to ensure that any bad shutdown will protect data?
As already stated, those measures are to preserve fs integrity eg meta data
is in
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 6:47 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 11:34 AM, David Demelier
demelier.da...@gmail.comwrote:
Why? SU+J is enabled by default. Isn't the purpose of a journaled file
system to ensure that any bad shutdown will protect data?
As
Mmm... just a correction in /etc/sysctl.conf, it seems that by mistake I've
copied a website link into the file. Sorry, it was a copy-paste error :)
% cat /etc/sysctl.conf
# $FreeBSD: release/9.2.0/etc/sysctl.conf 112200 2003-03-13 18:43:50Z mux $
#
# This file is read when going to multi-user
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 11:50 AM, CeDeROM cede...@tlen.pl wrote:
Then why random files gets damaged as well even they are not
accessed/written on power loss? :-)
Prove they weren't.
--
Adam Vande More
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 6:56 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 11:50 AM, CeDeROM cede...@tlen.pl wrote:
Then why random files gets damaged as well even they are not
accessed/written on power loss? :-)
Prove they weren't.
Hmm, maybe /etc/pwd.db as David
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 18:35:49 +0200
Carlos Jacobo Puga Medina cjpug...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi people,
I'm very interested to tuning /etc/sysctl.conf according to the
specifications of my PC.
As a general rule it is more appropriate to think of tuning in
terms of the workload you intend
On 10/14/2013 12:50 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 6:47 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 11:34 AM, David Demelier
demelier.da...@gmail.comwrote:
Why? SU+J is enabled by default. Isn't the purpose of a journaled file
system to ensure that any
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 7:09 PM, Brad Mettee bmet...@pchotshots.com wrote:
On 10/14/2013 12:50 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
Then why random files gets damaged as well even they are not
accessed/written on power loss? :-)
Random files can be affected because the sectors of the hard disk containing
the
Hi Steve,
I use it as a paticular desktop PC. Well, if you need more details about
it, please, let me know.
What do you think about current tuning?
Thanks
--CJPM
2013/10/14 Carlos Jacobo Puga Medina cjpug...@gmail.com
Mmm... just a correction in /etc/sysctl.conf, it seems that by mistake
On Oct 12, 2013, at 10:56 AM, Mark Felder wrote:
On Sat, Oct 12, 2013, at 10:53, aurfalien wrote:
Hi,
I would like to first say that by no means is this a hey, why is my Mac
faster then my PC kind of email.
I'm really hoping its an LSI driver issue.
It may very well be an LSI
On 10/14/2013 6:16 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
Isn't there Journal to prevent and reverse such damage?
Unlike other journaling filesystems, UFS+J only protects the metadata,
not the data itself - i.e. I think it ensures you won't have to run a
manual fsck, but just like plain old UFS files may be
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 18:34:36 +0200
David Demelier wrote:
On 14.10.2013 14:39, RW wrote:
If you are having problems with data integrity you might try
gjournal or zfs instead.
Why? SU+J is enabled by default. Isn't the purpose of a journaled file
system to ensure that any bad shutdown
Hi,
I'm following the recipe at the end of man portmaster for deleting and
reinstalling all my ports, which I have done many times in the
past. This time, I am getting errors on the portmaster -Faf step
involving deleted ports, and I'm not sure how to deal with this
easily.
What
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 7:54 PM, Bruce Cran br...@cran.org.uk wrote:
On 10/14/2013 6:16 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
Isn't there Journal to prevent and reverse such damage?
Unlike other journaling filesystems, UFS+J only protects the metadata, not
the data itself - i.e. I think it ensures you won't
On 10/14/2013 7:33 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
Thank you for explaining :-) So it looks that it would be sensible to
force filesystem check every n-th mount..? Or to do a filesystem check
after crash..? Are there any flags like that to mark filesystem
unclean and to force fsck after n-th mount? That
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 1:33 PM, CeDeROM cede...@tlen.pl wrote:
Thank you for explaining :-) So it looks that it would be sensible to
force filesystem check every n-th mount..?
Please explain the logic in which this helps anything.
Or to do a filesystem check
after crash..?
Already
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 1:43 PM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.comwrote:
mount -o sync
should be
mount sync
--
Adam Vande More
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http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To
On Oct 14, 2013, at 11:33 AM, CeDeROM cede...@tlen.pl wrote:
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 7:54 PM, Bruce Cran br...@cran.org.uk wrote:
On 10/14/2013 6:16 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
Isn't there Journal to prevent and reverse such damage?
Unlike other journaling filesystems, UFS+J only protects the
Thank you all for good hints! This will come handy! :-)
--
CeDeROM, SQ7MHZ, http://www.tomek.cedro.info
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To unsubscribe, send any mail to
This is a continuation of 9.1 VM nfs3 locks over VPN - trying a
different angle maybe it'll jostle someones memory.
I now have a FreeBSD 9.2 VM at an offsite hosting company. hostname
nl101vpn
OpenVPN is installed on it, routed not bridged mode.
I have multiple OSs installed on local network.
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Bruce Cran wrote:
On 10/14/2013 6:16 PM, CeDeROM wrote:
Isn't there Journal to prevent and reverse such damage?
Unlike other journaling filesystems, UFS+J only protects the metadata, not
the data itself - i.e. I think it ensures you won't have to run a manual
fsck,
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 11:48:18 -0700
Charles Swiger wrote:
Yes. Without journalling, you'd normally perform the full
timeconsuming fsck in the foreground.
Journalling removes the need for the background fsck which only recovers
lost space.
With journalling, it should be
able to do a
Charles Swiger wrote:
[snip]
Yes. Without journalling, you'd normally perform the full timeconsuming
fsck
in the foreground. With journalling, it should be able to do a journal
replay to restore the filesystem to an OK state, but sometimes that
doesn't restore consistency, in which case
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 11:48:18 -0700
Charles Swiger wrote:
fsck_y_enable=YES
One of the most annoying things about SU+J is that fsck asks if you
want to use the journal. So fsck -y wont do a proper check unless the
journal replay fails.
___
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
I'm following the recipe at the end of man portmaster for deleting and
reinstalling all my ports, which I have done many times in the
past. This time, I am getting errors on the portmaster -Faf step
involving deleted ports, and I'm not sure how to
On 14.10.2013 20:08, RW wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 18:34:36 +0200
David Demelier wrote:
On 14.10.2013 14:39, RW wrote:
If you are having problems with data integrity you might try
gjournal or zfs instead.
Why? SU+J is enabled by default. Isn't the purpose of a journaled file
system to
On 14.10.2013 18:47, Adam Vande More wrote:
There is no *warranty* as explicitly stated in
http://www.freebsd.org/copyright/freebsd-license.html
Aha, please don't play on words ;-). I think you understood I was
speaking about the filesystem state
not a lawyer issue.
On 14.10.2013 20:43, Adam Vande More wrote:
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 1:33 PM, CeDeROM cede...@tlen.pl
mailto:cede...@tlen.pl wrote:
Thank you for explaining :-) So it looks that it would be sensible to
force filesystem check every n-th mount..?
Please explain the logic in which
Hi--
On Oct 14, 2013, at 11:51 AM, Daniel Feenberg feenb...@nber.org wrote:
This discussion skirts the critical issue - are files that are not open for
writing endangered? No description of the uses of journaling can be
considered informative if it doesn't address that explicitly. As a naive
On Oct 14, 2013, at 12:41 PM, RW rwmailli...@googlemail.com wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 11:48:18 -0700 Charles Swiger wrote:
Yes. Without journalling, you'd normally perform the full
timeconsuming fsck in the foreground.
Journalling removes the need for the background fsck which only
On 10/13/13 17:38, Thomas Mueller wrote:
On the question of playing Adobe Flash in FreeBSD, could one use the MS-Windows
32-bit version with (i386-)Wine?
I plan to try that.
Apparently that won't solve much. The primary issue now with watching
flash movies is the drm - on linux it somehow
On Mon, 14 oct 2013, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
What errors, exactly?
Well, for example:
portmaster -Faf
it starts to fetch a bunch of files
it finds a port which has been deleted, such as
linux-base-fc4
and it says,
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 6:35 PM, Scott Ballantyne s...@ssr.com wrote:
I understand why portmaster quits that port.
Because it has no choice.
It does seem like a bit
of over-kill to quit updating ALL ports because one is long
gone. Seems like it could do the others.
So it should
On Oct 12, 2013, at 10:56 AM, Mark Felder wrote:
On Sat, Oct 12, 2013, at 10:53, aurfalien wrote:
Hi,
I would like to first say that by no means is this a hey, why is my Mac
faster then my PC kind of email.
I'm really hoping its an LSI driver issue.
It may very well be an LSI
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
On Mon, 14 oct 2013, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
What errors, exactly?
Well, for example:
portmaster -Faf
it starts to fetch a bunch of files
it finds a port which has been deleted, such
Adam Vande More wrote:
It does seem like a bit
of over-kill to quit updating ALL ports because one is long
gone. Seems like it could do the others.
So it should continue on and potentially build 1000's of ports with broken
linking and dependencies? Portupgrade will do this if you
On Mon 14 Oct 2013 Warren Block wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
On Mon, 14 oct 2013, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
Actually, the last time I updated my ports was when I installed 9.0,
and I used the
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 9:48 PM, Scott Ballantyne s...@ssr.com wrote:
Adam Vande More wrote:
It does seem like a bit
of over-kill to quit updating ALL ports because one is long
gone. Seems like it could do the others.
So it should continue on and potentially build 1000's of
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