On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 20:52:27 -0400, Dieter BSD wrote:
> I would have never guessed to type "about:config" as a URL.
> Very useful to know. Thank you.
Allow me a sidenote: This also works in Opera and provides
access to configuration and functionality that has no usable
GUI equivalent.
--
Poly
>> I have a problem with various parts of web pages stopping
>> before getting completely downloaded. Links has a useful retries
>> setting (setup->network options->retries) which seems to fix
>> this. I need a similar fix for firefox 3.6.2
> Firefox 15
> URL: about:config
> search: retry
> networ
On Thu, Sep 20, 2012 at 2:45 PM, Steve Bertrand
wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I know this is a bit off-topic, but I'm looking for suggestions.
>
> In one of my corporate sites, I've got a Tandberg Magnum 2x24 dual 10-slot
> tape backup device that I feel is on its way out.
>
> The storage amount for this s
Hi all,
I know this is a bit off-topic, but I'm looking for suggestions.
In one of my corporate sites, I've got a Tandberg Magnum 2x24 dual
10-slot tape backup device that I feel is on its way out.
The storage amount for this site is adequate with the existing device
and so is the performanc
Hello,
If I need to recompile pfctl and snmp_pf, would I run 'make clean',
'make', and 'make install' in /usr/src/usr.sbin/bsnmpd/modules/snmp_pf
and /usr/src/sbin/pfctl? Is either of the directories incorrect
or some other combination of make calls required there?
Oh, forgot to mention. T
Hello,
If I need to recompile pfctl and snmp_pf, would I run 'make clean',
'make', and 'make install' in /usr/src/usr.sbin/bsnmpd/modules/snmp_pf
and /usr/src/sbin/pfctl? Is either of the directories incorrect
or some other combination of make calls required there?
Thank you,
Darrel
___
> > I also find portsnap slower than either
> > csup or svn.
>
> That surprises me. Once the initial download and extract is done, I find
> "portsnap fetch update" to be miles faster than csup. However, each to
> his own, I suppose.
+1
___
freebsd-quest
On 2012-09-20 09:42, Vincent Hoffman wrote:
On 19/09/2012 06:53, dweimer wrote:
I was just trying some proof of concept testing to see if I could
get
a system booting with no local disk using iSCSI running from my
FreeNAS box.
I got started, by first booting a 9.1-RC1 CD, into live CD, created
On 20 September 2012 00:59, Polytropon wrote:
> On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 00:22:20 +0200, Fritiof Hedman wrote:
>> On 19 September 2012 23:37, Polytropon wrote:
>> > On Wed, 19 Sep 2012 23:28:30 +0200, Fritiof Hedman wrote:
>> >> Hi list!
>> >>
>> >> I must warn you, I'm quite new to FreeBSD (I'm mostl
Finally. Turns out I had done something really dumb;
the problem had nothing to do with screen blanking or X.
Because I send and receive mail via another server,
I had disabled sending mail in rc.conf.
don't do dat.
I wasn't getting the system messages targeted at root,
and eventually /var/spo
On Thu, Sep 20, 2012 at 11:47 AM, Scott Ballantyne wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using a ZFS mirror, and had a disc fail. I had a spare unused disc
> in the case, and just switched over to that, after partitioning it
> with gpart. ZFS is great, just have to say that.
>
> But I'm not sure about the correct
Hi,
I'm using a ZFS mirror, and had a disc fail. I had a spare unused disc
in the case, and just switched over to that, after partitioning it
with gpart. ZFS is great, just have to say that.
But I'm not sure about the correct way to bring the new swap partition
online. Do I use gmirror label, as
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012 11:16:40 +0200, Jan Henrik Sylvester wrote:
> On 09/20/2012 04:29, Polytropon wrote:
> > Correct. You could use different approaches which may or may
> > not fail due to the directory names you will encounter (like
> > directories with spaces or special characters).
> >
> >
On 19/09/2012 06:53, dweimer wrote:
> I was just trying some proof of concept testing to see if I could get
> a system booting with no local disk using iSCSI running from my
> FreeNAS box.
>
> I got started, by first booting a 9.1-RC1 CD, into live CD, created a
> /tmp/iscsi.conf used kldload to lo
Pcbsd is always an option.
On Sep 20, 2012 2:50 AM, "saeedeh motlagh"
wrote:
> thank you every body for your answers. i understand that my garphic
> card is NVIDIA not intel therefore i installed nvidia driver from
> port. now it seems that everything is ok. there is no error in
> Xorg.log file a
Many thanks! The for loop was what was needed.
Polytropon writes:
> Just a sidenote: If you're not using bash-specific functionality
> and intend to make your script portable, use #!/bin/sh instead.
I always start out that way for that very reason. I needed some
random number functions and arithm
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of saeedeh motlagh
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2012 5:49 AM
To: Bernt Hansson
Cc: Stephan Schindel; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: have desktop on freebsd
th
thank you every body for your answers. i understand that my garphic
card is NVIDIA not intel therefore i installed nvidia driver from
port. now it seems that everything is ok. there is no error in
Xorg.log file and when i run startx command, no errors occurred. but
when i restart my system,i don't
On 09/20/2012 04:29, Polytropon wrote:
Correct. You could use different approaches which may or may
not fail due to the directory names you will encounter (like
directories with spaces or special characters).
#!/bin/sh
for DIR in `ls -LF | grep \/`; do
cd ${DIR}
> * PLEASE RERUN FSCK *
> > Script done on Wed Sep 19 04:17:27 2012
> > Would this indicate a software bug, or is my Western Digital Caviar Green
> > 3 TB hard drive failing?
> Either something was referencing sectors off the end of the disc,
> or the drive is failing. I'd be in
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