Yup, thx everyone - I think I'm removed now just took a little longer than I
thought.
- Original Message -
From: Jerry [mailto:je...@seibercom.net]
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 06:53 AM
To: FreeBSD
Subject: Re: unsubscribe
On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 00:19:55 -0600
Gary Gatten articu
Unsubscribe
"This email is intended to be reviewed by only the intended recipient
and may contain information that is privileged and/or confidential.
If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that
any review, use, dissemination, disclosure or copying of this email
Cc: Michael Sierchio; Gary Gatten; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Diagnosing packet loss
On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 4:11 PM, Kees Jan Koster
mailto:kjkos...@gmail.com>> wrote:
[kjkoster@saffron ~]$ ifconfig bge0
bge0: flags=8843 metric 0 mtu 1500
options=8009b
ether
Well, 1% is not good but I've seen worse for sure! Sounds like you tried the
obvious. I would recommend a different IP to rule out a dupe ip; else it must
be NIC related - either hardware or driver. Also, perhaps swap cables and
ports with a working machine and see if the problem follows or s
Is the interface really at 1Gb? Have you tested with iperf, ftp, or anything
other than nfs?
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Vincent Hoffman
Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2011 6:52 PM
To: FreeBSD-Ques
I'm sure you'll get a TON of responses on this. Maybe some script that
combines tar, g[b]zip, and rsync? I wouldn't use NFS just for this, but if
it's already there it may have a place.
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebs
ftp the large files, then tar? I like the rsync idea too.
- Original Message -
From: Chuck Swiger [mailto:cswi...@mac.com]
Sent: Monday, September 12, 2011 06:42 PM
To: Toomas Aas
Cc: questi...@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Crash when copying large files
Hi--
On Sep 12, 2011, at 2:14 PM, To
You're welcome!
FBSD is awesome - LINUX SUX!
-Original Message-
From: Chris Hill [mailto:ch...@monochrome.org]
Sent: Monday, August 22, 2011 5:24 PM
To: Gary Gatten
Cc: 'Daniel Staal'; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: RE: First World (Was: What dialup modem WILL wo
Interesting analogy. Osama - er, I mean Obama could really use people like you
to explain things better to him, 'cause obviously he has NO idea what his
various and numerous Czars and advisors are saying. Or maybe they're all
barely functional and don't know any better
Oh wait, this is a
Zfs isn't a typical daemon/process. That's like saying databased is a memory
hog cause it needs a lot of ram for caching.
Zfs ram requirements will depend on your file system i/o load, types/sizes of
files, types and rates of file system ops, etc. 512MB may be fine, or you may
need 4GB for opt
Well This should spawn some interesting responses. I shall sit back and
enjoy
- Original Message -
From: Evan Busch [mailto:antiequal...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, August 19, 2011 11:47 PM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: A quality operating system
Hi,
I make decision
I don't have any experience with *BSD and OSPF, only on Cisco. But I can't
help but wonder if there are not knobs to tune this? Equal costs routes are
pretty common, and although I have not read the RFC on OSPF, I'd be surprised
if ECR are not mandatory.
- Original Message -
From: Dan
>
> I have a kiosk system I am almost done building and the last snag is
> attempting to make it so idle time (no keyboard or mouse attached) does not
> blank the screen. I have already tried the following:
>
> vidcontrol -S off
> disabling acpi and apmd from the kernel config
> enabling dpms v
I have a kiosk system I am almost done building and the last snag is
attempting to make it so idle time (no keyboard or mouse attached) does not
blank the screen. I have already tried the following:
vidcontrol -S off
disabling acpi and apmd from the kernel config
enabling dpms via the kernel co
Fri, 5 Aug 2011 12:37:30 -0500
Gary Gatten articulated:
> If I find someone with an IQ of 160+ and they ask everyone to play
> nice, will you? Mine is only 140 something so I don't feel qualified
> to take this task on myself. It would be nice though if someone took
> such offen
If I find someone with an IQ of 160+ and they ask everyone to play nice, will
you? Mine is only 140 something so I don't feel qualified to take this task on
myself. It would be nice though if someone took such offense to a post they
would simply ignore it or contact OP offline. Seem 50% of th
Alas, I was wondering when this would pop up again. Seems about every quarter
or so... Notice that I posted Top AND Bottom - is that half as bad or doubly
bad? And seriously, although it (Top posting) is apparently a violation of the
list AUP, does it REALLY matter THAT much? Personally I HA
Regarding drivers / hardware support...
I'm not a huge fan of abstraction layers, in fact I hate them, BUT - does there
exist or could an AL (HAL) be developed to hide the OS from the driver so
hardware manufacturers can more easily write drivers? For example, can a HAL
be developed that run
This may get me flamed (probably will) but I'm wondering what the relationship
is between FreeBSD and PC-BSD? PERHAPS if they were to somehow join forces,
share development load, etc. and "unify" the FreeBSD offerings under one roof;
ie: PC-BSD and SERVER-BSD.
I believe several flavors of Li
I've always been curious why "Linux" seemed to take off so fast when other FOSS
/ non Winblow$ OS's were available for some time with not much traction; OS/2,
BeOS, *nix with X11, etc.
Not just on the desktop, but servers as well. "Supported" versions of Linux
such as RHEL, Suse, etc. seem t
>From my experience tcpdump is misleading re udp fragments and chksums. If the
>packet gets fragmented, udp will report bad chksums at some point.
Check your file names (case), perms, etc. 90% of time I typo a name or forget
to chmod the files; or when using tftp to write I forget to create a
2 "Mega" Bytes? Surely that's a typo, but is it 200MB? 2GB?
Those that know ZFS will want to know the primary use / load of this system.
G
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Dick Hoogendijk
Sent: Wedn
Of course it depends on your apps, but unless you're doing some HUGE number of
connections, or your apps are "not good", this will be MORE than enough
RAM and CPU.
Yes, generally speaking "more" of something is always better, in fact our
government seems to think more debt is better than l
lliot Finley [mailto:efinley.li...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 06:18 PM
To: Jon Radel
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Two Networks on one System
On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 4:58 PM, Jon Radel wrote:
>
> On 6/20/11 6:30 PM, Gary Gatten wrote:
>
>> I was kinda
On 6/20/11 5:07 PM, Martin McCormick wrote:
> We are moving a primary name server from network A to
> network B on one of our branch campuses. If the secondary
> interface was reachable from the world, we can change the whois
> information and not worry about the exact second the change goes
Probably only a single active "default" global ip route, but you can add
network/host routes to prefer a specific interface for said routes.
- Original Message -
From: Martin McCormick [mailto:mar...@x.it.okstate.edu]
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 08:37 AM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
It's quite simple really, it's another hidden tax - "Redistribution of RAM".
You see, even with all the entitlement programs "poor" people can't afford more
than 512MB of RAM. As you are certainly aware that's not enough to watch
YouTube and Hulu on their government funded (tax payer funded) u
Yeah Pete, kinda need that huh. Kurt, If that turns out to be the only issue,
don't feel bad - I've forgotten it myself several times! I'm sure many others
have as well!
G
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Be
$hit happens! Even with PERFECTLY clean power, things fail. Could take a week
or 10 years. That's why "enterprise" nets have redundant everything - and
there are still outages ;)
- Original Message -
From: Gary Kline [mailto:kl...@thought.org]
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2011 07:56 PM
T
Your biggest consumers would be FBSD itself and the routing tables. I *think*
full internet routing tables are still less than 512MB, (google to check), so
unless you have more routes than that - 512MB may work, 1GB most likely will.
Too many unknowns, like; is this ipv4 only or 6 and 4 routes?
FWIW:, you may also try "null routing" the suspicious / bad IP ranges vs.
adding to firewall confs. Typically far less overhead, and perhaps "easier".
YMMV.
G
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Andy
Hi,
So I'm looking for a "simple" way to distribute company info internally, such
as: application availability info, weather updates, etc. Whatever the powers
at be deem appropriate to distribute. I'm thinking maybe something based on
nntp, rss, or whatever.
"I" would personally like to see
I've always "heard" PC-BSD is the way to go on the desktop, so if that's not
going too well then I'm not sure.
I don't think there is a BSD that Paris and Jessica would be able to install.
Then again, that's not really what made them noteworthy.
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd
Maybe try disabling dns lookups within syslog-ng?
- Original Message -
From: Len Conrad [mailto:lcon...@go2france.com]
Sent: Saturday, March 19, 2011 05:40 PM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: tcp/ip failures with fbsd 8.2 386 on ESX 4.1
FreeBSD 8.2 32-bit
ESXi 4.1
em0 driver t
Although all very interesting and entertaining, how much will it cost me to
kill this thread and any concepts mentioned herein for at least 30 days? At
minimum, haven't we strayed quit a bit from the OP and as such this
"worthwhile" discussion should be a new thread? Just sayin'
- Ori
Null (bogus) route that /24 seems the most simple to me: 5 seconds and no
upgrades or add ons.
- Original Message -
From: Jorge Biquez [mailto:jbiq...@intranet.com.mx]
Sent: Friday, March 04, 2011 08:07 PM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Simplest way to deny access to a cl
Be careful of automated responses. What if someone spoofs IP's of legit users
/ customers / whatever and your automated response blocks them? Not good.
I thought about blockingwell, never mind - might pi$$ someone off and
attract unwanted attention...
-Original Message-
From: owne
Adding null routes to the address space in question will prevent comms, but it
won't stop traffic getting to you and then perhaps being logged.
Some sort of firewall with a policy that denies them without logging?
- Original Message -
From: Jorge Biquez [mailto:jbiq...@intranet.com.mx]
S
Camden wrote:
> Quoth Gary Gatten on Thursday, 24 February 2011:
> >
> > Everyone is wrong! "pfmsh" is the best at everything, period. It
> > does everything you can possibly think of today and tomorrow. It
> > doesn't require any upgrades, ever. It
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Polytropon
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 5:13 PM
To: Chad Perrin
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Backtick versus $()
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 15:54:25 -0700
Sysctl -a lists "all" options. This MAY be what you want:
net.inet.ip.rtmaxcache
- Upper limit on dynamically learned routes
http://people.freebsd.org/~hmp/utilities/satbl/sysctl-net.html
HTH
Gary
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-que
OMFG... how much longer are "we" going to keep commenting on this worthless
thread? And now the debian list too? That's great...
Dear Hijacker: You are the superior one, all others are inferior. You are
right, all others are wrong. Please go away. Perhaps preach your "wisdom" to
a more r
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Chad Perrin
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 2:20 PM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Any package for surveys?
On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 12:23:08PM -0700, J
Is this a record for the longest thread ever? I've been ignoring it because I
don't care much about php (relatively speaking), but I'm thinking ill have to
read this thread and see what's so interesting!
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: Gary Kline
Cc:
PS: rsyslog can use standard syslog.conf entries, or it has extensions that
enable more cool stuff.
G
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Aleksandr Miroslav
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2011 3:09 PM
To: fre
After a bit of research I picked rsyslog. Actually, my syslog servers "had" to
be RHEL, so I have all my logs going to 2 servers; one runs rsyslog and the
other the syslogd that shipped with RHEL. They have different retention
policies, one keeps about 30 days of logs online, the other about 9
> Correct me if I'm wrong, but if necessary one could add (and
> activate) a secondary / additional swap file if necessary without
> rebooting. So maybe start with a few gig and add an additional swap
> file if necessary?
Swapping to a file is really slow and should only be done if absolutely
nec
> Correct me if I'm wrong, but if necessary one could add (and
> activate) a secondary / additional swap file if necessary without
> rebooting. So maybe start with a few gig and add an additional swap
> file if necessary?
Swapping to a file is really slow and should only be done if absolutely
ne
> I will be installing 8.1 on a Dell Poweredge 2850, with dual 3 GHz XEON
> processors and 6GB RAM.
>
> What is the recommended swap space?
>
>
> I'm finding conflicting data on this. Some say 0, some say 1 times RAM,
> others say stay with 2 x RAM.
>
Definitely not 0, but 2x would probably be w
There's prolly a 10 line function the developer didn't want to write. I've seen
some case where it takes more code to link to other packages than just write
what's needed. Drives me crazy to have to install apps that have "nothing" to
do with the app I really need...
-Original Message-
It sounds like you're wanting a remote desktop to actually see the active users
GUI session? If it's simply to see the error messages, I would recommend some
sort of centralized logging. There are several tools that take Winblows events
and turn them into syslog events. If you "need" remote d
Sorry, I thought all the servers were *nix.
Ah... I think there is an ssh sevice for winblows - not 100% sure though. Any
errors that are visible in a GUI app "should" be able to be logged to syslog,
event logs, proprietary log file, etc... Guess that depends on the app and the
developer tho
Ssh not possible? That's one of the most basic "requirements" and most easy to
secure - typically
XWindows of course, or numerous variants thereof. I'm not sure but I *think*
most of them use the Xwindows protocol on the network.
VNC may also work now. There are also several versions of
Could there be a ulimit issue as well?
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: Laszlo Nagy
Cc: questi...@freebsd.org ; daniel...@gmail.com
Sent: Thu Dec 09 18:55:26 2010
Subject: Re: What is loading my server so much?
On Fri, 10 Dec 2010 00:15:14 +0100
Laszl
Probably Wikileaks supporters fighting back against the DDoS. Interesting
issue, anyone else seeing similar problems?
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: FreeBSD Questions
Sent: Thu Dec 09 14:40:45 2010
Subject: more dns weirdness
still debugging dns is
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of John Baldwin
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 8:54 AM
To: freebsd-curr...@freebsd.org
Cc: Andrew Moran; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: msk0 interface stops wo
Ditto, pretty much mirrors what I read. I forget the site, perhaps Panasonic?
It was a cell manufacturer and published all sorts of data on different
chemistry cells. Good info for my EV project too! And yes, many people sell
batteries as new who's cells are two years old! Basically junk befo
I just looked into a batt for my daughters dell, her li-on lasted 14 months,
now on "full" charge it only lasts 40 mins... Terrible. If you can get 2
years out of a batt ur lucky. I read some tech docs on li-on cells; if you can
store at 50% charge in the fridge and when in use don't let it r
I ran into a similar situation where the ns was behind a Juniper SRX doing NAT.
Said Juniper had a "smart" DNS piece (ALG) that does special stuff on DNS
packets; max record length, special NAT, etc. I had to disable the DNS ALG to
fix the "problem".
If your ns is behind a NATing device, start
I can't speak directly to your question, but also consider proper "base"
security, so IF someone can get outside your script they're limited. Ie;
proper user/group assignments, perms, etc. - file sysems, ulimit, et al. Maybe
chroot.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@fr
...
Actually I find the basics of its design pretty simple (cow/txg/zil)
and for that reason I think it is going to become very robust in the
near future, if it isn't already.
What is complex is the various journal and soft-updates code that
traditional file systems use.
But yes it has performa
ons@freebsd.org'
Sent: Fri Nov 12 18:22:26 2010
Subject: Re: Why do you use a devil as a mascot?
On Fri 12 Nov 2010 at 16:05:33 PST Gary Gatten wrote:
>Let's start a thread listing dead horses to beat:
>
>M$ vs Novell
>"Unix" vs "Linux"
>Mainframe vs
Bottom posting is a HUGE PITA on mobile devices, which I use a LOT. But, if top
posting is the rule and the accepted way, then I GUESS I'll make more effort to
avoid top posting. Maybe a new years resolution?
From: Chris Brennan
To: Gary Gatten
Cc: c
Let's start a thread listing dead horses to beat:
M$ vs Novell
"Unix" vs "Linux"
Mainframe vs "PC"
DAS vs SAN
Top-posting vs Bottom posting
Blah blah blah vs Yada yada yada
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Fri Nov 12
What exactly isn't working? You don't have two L3 nets, but two ips on the same
net - nothing to route, except the default.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: Free BSD Questions list
Sent: Thu Nov 11 21:41:40 2010
Subject: Routing issue?
I'm trying to ge
Well, if nothing else this thread is proving to at least be good for a laugh!
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: Chip Camden
Cc: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org
Sent: Thu Nov 11 19:09:34 2010
Subject: Re: Why do you use a devil as a mascot?
LMFAO! I wish I
PLEASE let's not rehash this again!!!
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: José Silveira
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Thu Nov 11 18:50:00 2010
Subject: Re: Why do you use a devil as a mascot?
2010/11/11 Neal Hogan :
> 2010/11/11 José Silveira :
Perhaps run it inside gdb?
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of ??? ???
Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2010 1:21 PM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: How to obtain what swi1:net is doing?
Hi,
Seems out of scope to OP, but cool info nonetheless. I'd like to get my web
team to ditch a couple ISA servers for this, but sadly I doubt they will...
-Original Message-
From: bluethundr [mailto:bluethu...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 09, 2010 5:42 PM
To: Gary Gatt
anything about that.
As for "bonding" or aggregating your connections to appear as a single one -
not an option AFAIK.
G
From: Leonardo Santagostini [mailto:lsantagost...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 09, 2010 2:52 PM
To: Gary Gatten
Cc: Chu
Also, may be obvious to point out, but all (3) connections "must" be from the
same provider. In the lab you could MAYBE get a stable/usable connection from
multiple providers (with just ppp or 'x' encap) by splitting the requests on
the egress side - but it's highly unlikely in the real world
A few hrs each day for 50 days? What kind of internet connection do you have?
If you can't find other options I'll get you what you need for "a few bucks",
just enough to cover postage and what not.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-questions@Fr
An ftpd (most any) with proper directory perms and a web browser meet most of
your requirements. Heck, an httpd, like thttpd will address many of your
issues - but perms may get more tricky unless you use a "full featured" httpd
such as Apache.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-
I *think* PVLANs are open standard, other vendors may support. DHCP snooping
and/or ACL's can address rogue issue.
Used Ci$co hardware is "cheap". Check out "Nework Hardware Resale" or just
google. 2960's support PVLANs, but only significant to each switch. If you
want distributed PVLANs, 375
Rename them, copy, then rename them back?
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Gary Kline
Sent: Friday, August 27, 2010 12:08 PM
To: FreeBSD Mailing List
Subject: how do i scp .dotfiles??
guys,
this is th
" My primary concern is overall security of the server (even if that means
inconveniencing the end users),"
Given your above statement, I would say the best option is to NOT connect it to
any network at all - ESPECIALLY the internet! ;-)
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@
nTop plus 100 others I'm sure. I'm sure even with pf, ipfw, iptables, et al:
there's a way to permit "everything" but do accounting. I use ntop daily, but
I'm just a novice at others so am just assuming there.
What type of data you want/need vs. how big of footprint/resource requirements
will
Will someone PLEASE kill this thread! Moderator(s)?
PS: Whomever wrote the comment a few posts back about calling support for
"Agnostix" and they always said "not enough information..." You sir are a
freaking comedic GENIUS!
G
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebs
Agreed with single user or sequential I/O systems, but with highly concurrent
random I/O, more is better. At some point with enough users even sequential I/O
becomes "random".
From: Rich
To: Gary Gatten
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Mon Ju
>From my experience (YMMV), most RAID controllers will NOT redistribute the
>existing data/files onto the newly added drives. So, if you have a (3) drive
>RAID5 your file exists on all three drives, as does the parity data. If you
>add (2) drives, your original files will not be on the new dri
What about an entry in your local DNS (what your hosts use) that gives a bogus
ip (127.0.0.1?) for *.badhost.com? Then users can never connect to
badhost.com.
I don't know too many FW's that allow you to use a URL in a rule. IIRC,
CheckPoint-FW1 did/does, but they recommend against it due to
I don't know how to do it with IPFW, but I like using null / bogus routes to
blackhole bad hosts - assuming of course the host in question isn't using
dynamic IP's.
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Val
Will rsync not work?
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-questions
Sent: Thu May 20 09:12:47 2010
Subject: "real time" files mirroring ?
Hello
I'm searching for a software that could perform some kind of real time
mirroring between two (or more) f
I've heard of data leaks from bad dudes tunnelling data in DNS type traffic, so
I'm sure it can be done. The level of effort is the question...
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Sat May 15 15:26:36 2010
Subject: Can I
"No experience at all implementing shell wrappers,
I tried installing tcltutor and that's bombing out allover the place.
this is getting too complex, I think I'll load just a desktop gui , and put a
clamav icon on the desktop and just have them right click and scan drive"
Then perhaps consid
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Gary Gatten
Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2010 9:12 AM
To: 'Jean-Paul Natola'
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: RE: user friendliest gui
-Origin
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Jean-Paul Natola
Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2010 8:11 AM
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: RE: user friendliest gui
>If one would really want to go with X, Tcl/T
If that's all your doing on that system, maybe some restricted shell with
automagical scan script would be fine? Just a thought. Avoid GUI's if you can!
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Jean-Paul Nato
Yeah; what about thttpd, tftp, etc. Several "easy" ways; just what's the
"easiest" / best method that suites your requirements.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: Timm Wimmers
Cc: Frank Bonnet ; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Mon May 10 14:14:13 2
I think by default it does only log "session" info not the full packet. For
that you'd need to add -vvv and set the packet length to zero to capture the
full packet.
So, just run it without any args and you should be ok.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
T
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Gary Gatten
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 4:07 PM
To: 'Modulok'; FreeBSD Questions
Subject: RE: Outdoor wireless - has anyone used Ubiquiti power stations?
Is it not possible to get xDSL/Cable/BRI/WiMAX/3G/4G/whatever at the &quo
Is it not possible to get xDSL/Cable/BRI/WiMAX/3G/4G/whatever at the "office".
Depending on your wireless gear, antenna, topology, fresnel zone, spectrum
pollution, blah blah blah - this COULD work, but not likely very well. Too
many variables to know for sure. Many WISP's offer "reasonable"
I love the "RTFM" - who came up with that anyway?
That said Jindřich, your English is more than passable!
Have a good weekend!
G
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Alejandro Imass
Sent: Friday, March 2
FBSD has it's own licensing. I'll defer to others as to the details, or visit
www.freebsd.org
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: questi...@freebsd.org
Sent: Tue Mar 23 09:40:15 2010
Subject: Free BSD Licensing
Free BSD representative,
I am inquiring if
Holy $hit! I think someone just admitted they weren't all knowing! This is yet
another sign of the pending apocolypse!
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Mon Mar 22 18:09:15 2010
Subject: Re: Spamassasin, sendmail, Pos
It MAY make a big diff, but make sure during your tests you use unique files or
flush the cache or you'll me testing cache speed and not disk speed.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-...@freebsd.org ;
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org ; FreeBSD-STABL
Thanks for posting the link to GCD. Interesting info is always welcomed!
Gary
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Adam Vande More
Sent: Wednesday, March 17, 2010 2:17 PM
To: Zepeda, Herbey
Cc: freebsd-qu
They make line drivers to sit inline and boost the signals to extend the range,
similar to T1 repeaters I suppose. I had to use some 10'ish years ago. They
weren't "too" expensive then, can't imagine the would be now.
But back to OP ?, I'm sure someone has a program that takes an RS-232 stream
Its ESP, not EPS. And NAT traversal / UDP encapsulation is liklely needed,
that's the 4500 and 1 ports.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: Bill Tillman
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Wed Feb 17 17:17:58 2010
Subject: Re: FreeBSD to Cisco AS
I'm sure there are several ways, but you could always setup NAT so your box
thinks it owns all the IP's and will reply to ARPs for every address.
- Original Message -
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org
To: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org
Sent: Wed Feb 10 15:32:42 2010
Subject: FBSD
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