In my crontab I define script 'do_daily.run':
30 23 * * * root
/root/cronjobs/do_daily.run
The content of this script (amongst others) is:
rsync -avpog /etc /backup/$DATE/
Funny thing now is that in the output of the script, the follow
the problem is that what i found is not this.
all description i found is that deleting .openoffice* from $HOME fixes it.
it doesn't. i even created new user with no leftover any config files and
still same.
On Sat, 19 May 2012, lokada...@gmx.de wrote:
On 05/19/12 13:24, User Wojtek
I used 'hardware RAID' because that is -precisely- how the OP described
their equipment.
unfortunately this is true - it is DESCRIBED as such. lie is standard tool
in todays IT marketing.
What are facts:
- very few controllers actually have some RAID support. those usually have
onboard RAM i
FreeBSD will use a hardware RAID device -only- if the particular type of
RAID chip/chipset/controller is known to the included device drivers.
do not use "hardware RAID" for such things as this is nothing else
than normal controller and BIOS/driver support.
__
the system setup menu, the boot menu shows that "freebsd90" is the first (and
only) bootable hard drive.
Yet when I try to install FreeBSD 9.0-R, FreeBSD ignores the hardware RAID
and sees the two separate drives, instead of seeing a single logical drive.
good lesson to NEVER use this pseudo-
[wojtek@wojtek ~/robod]$ openoffice-3.4.0
[Java framework] Error in function createSettingsDocument
(elements.cxx).javaldx failed!
terminate called after throwing an instance of
'com::sun::star::uno::RuntimeException'
compiled fine, installed without problems jdk 1.6 too.
any ideas? thanks
_
no at installation if you use standard installer.
as i don't use standard installer at all, i don't have such a problem.
i use any bootable FreeBSD media (actualy my own made pendrive), and then make
labels, do newfs, mount, unpack files etc.
if you can't do that then you may follow my advice
anyone knows how to:
- make it's touchpad usable? without any special software and used as
mouse emulator it is very bad. The problem is that it quite often produces
false clicks when you type on keyboard. Tried xf86-input-synaptics but it
doesn't recognize the device (protocol psm, device psm
May I ask how that works? Everything I've read about scsi is that the
throughput determines the standard: so 320MB has a throughput of ~320MB.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scsi)
there is a bit (exactly 8 times) difference between megabit and megabyte