Hi guys,
Have a question regarding top PRI and the renice command
extract from top
PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZERES STATETIME WCPU
COMMAND
17269 brahama 1 960 5932K 5300K select 30:55 0.00%
perl5.8.8
Ok...what are the values of PRI? for
k
Hi
I ve got 6.3 stable database server. Can i directly upgrade my server from
6.3 to 7.0
yes.
anyway - if your server works fine - why?
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David Allen wrote:
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 10:12 AM, Matthew Seaman
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Chris Pratt wrote:
Carefully not answering the 'why do these packets come from the
wrong address' question,
Deliberately addressing the question of 'why do these packets come
from the wrong
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 08:38:08AM +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
k
Hi
I ve got 6.3 stable database server. Can i directly upgrade my server from
6.3 to 7.0
yes.
anyway - if your server works fine - why?
Because 7 is demonstrably faster than 6.x? Because local policy requires
the
Hi, list!
I want to upgrade two freebsd machines I have from 6.1-SECURITY and
5.3-RELEASE respectively, to the latest 7.0 release of FreeBSD. I
don't want to cvsup and build, but prefer to use prebuilt binaries.
Also I'd like to avoid wiping the systems, and starting afresh.
I know this might
Hi Yavuz,
It's easy to tell crontab stop sending mail to you by disable sendmail in
/etc/rc.conf
% echo sendmail_enable=\NO\
man rc.conf for more information :-)
or set the variable MAILTO null on corntab
MAILTO=
Regards,
jyuny1
2008/7/26 Yavuz Maslak [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello
On
Hi Rene,
for optimizationm, CPUTYPE is depends on what verison of gcc you use.
you can determine waht CPUTYPE you use by checking gcc's online manul
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
i.e.
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.2.4/gcc/Optimize-Options.html#Optimize-Options
Regards,
jyuny1
2008/7/25
Hi,
Am Donnerstag, 24. Jul 2008, 16:57:40 +0200 schrieb Wojciech Puchar:
I know from some old Linux installations that Less and Vim are able to
switch to an alternate screen buffer. They use the escape sequences
\e[?1047h and \e[?1047l to switch back respectively.
How can I activate this in
Hey,
I have an annoying problem that I'm not sure how to solve. Here's my setup:
PuTTy = My FreeBSD 6.2 box = Production FreeBSD 7.0 box
All via SSH, of course. Now, on my FreeBSD 6.2 box, the backspace key
works fine all the time. However, when I connect from my 6.2 box into
the production 7.0
Schiz0 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have an annoying problem that I'm not sure how to solve. Here's my setup:
PuTTy = My FreeBSD 6.2 box = Production FreeBSD 7.0 box
All via SSH, of course. Now, on my FreeBSD 6.2 box, the backspace key
works fine all the time. However, when I connect from
.vimrc on the 7.0 box:
---
set autoindent
set background=dark
set backspace=indent,eol,start
set cmdheight=2
set ignorecase
set number
set numberwidth=2
set report=0
set restorescreen=on
set ruler
set scrolloff=3
set showbreak=++
set showmatch
set showmode
set showtabline=3
Svein Halvor Halvorsen wrote:
Hi, list!
I want to upgrade two freebsd machines I have from 6.1-SECURITY and
5.3-RELEASE respectively, to the latest 7.0 release of FreeBSD. I
don't want to cvsup and build, but prefer to use prebuilt binaries.
Also I'd like to avoid wiping the systems, and
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 03:03:57PM +0200, Bertram Scharpf wrote:
Hi,
Am Donnerstag, 24. Jul 2008, 16:57:40 +0200 schrieb Wojciech Puchar:
I know from some old Linux installations that Less and Vim are able to
switch to an alternate screen buffer. They use the escape sequences
\e[?1047h
Hi all
FreeBSD 6.2
I would like to put a password when booting/mounting mi Freebsd box.
is it possible? How?
What I want is that if the system is rebooted or shutdown, somebody must
enter a password to boot and/or mounting /
is for protecting the system from unauthorized users
Thanks in
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
DSA - JCR wrote:
Hi all
FreeBSD 6.2
I would like to put a password when booting/mounting mi Freebsd box.
is it possible? How?
What I want is that if the system is rebooted or shutdown, somebody must
enter a password to boot and/or mounting
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 05:31:23PM -, DSA - JCR wrote:
Hi all
FreeBSD 6.2
I would like to put a password when booting/mounting mi Freebsd box.
is it possible? How?
Yes. Use geli(8) encryption.
is for protecting the system from unauthorized users
Disk encryption also protects your
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 01:53:27PM -0400, Chuck Robey wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
DSA - JCR wrote:
Hi all
FreeBSD 6.2
I would like to put a password when booting/mounting mi Freebsd box.
is it possible? How?
What I want is that if the system is
Hi guys,
I have a doubt while planning my network enlargement... I have a router
where i created 3 Virtual ips(alias)...eth0:1, eth0:2, etcso i have 3
subnets with only one eth interface192.168.[0-3].0 subnets...this
connected to a switch, a simple one which doesnt support 802.1q and 4
Hi!
Allthough you already got good answers, I'd like to add the
following:
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 17:31:23 - (GMT), DSA - JCR [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all
FreeBSD 6.2
I would like to put a password when booting/mounting mi Freebsd box.
is it possible? How?
What I want is that if
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 09:58:53PM +0200, Polytropon wrote:
What I want is that if the system is rebooted or shutdown, somebody must
enter a password to boot and/or mounting /
Next to the usual means of access control (no automated login, no
users without password), there would be an
I have a program that has run correctly since FreeBSD 3.7. However,
when upgrading the server to 7.0 I am encountering issues where values
just seem to arbirtrarily change. These values are all located in
memory allocated by malloc. Malloc was significantly changed with 7.0
and reading
The FreeBSD Diary contains a large number of practical
examples and how-to guides. This message is posted weekly
to freebsd-questions@freebsd.org with the aim of letting people
know what's available on the website. Before you post a question
here it might be a good idea to first search the
Doug Hardie wrote:
I have a program that has run correctly since FreeBSD 3.7. However,
when upgrading the server to 7.0 I am encountering issues where values
just seem to arbirtrarily change. These values are all located in
memory allocated by malloc. Malloc was significantly changed with
On Jul 26, 2008, at 17:10, Kris Kennaway wrote:
Doug Hardie wrote:
I have a program that has run correctly since FreeBSD 3.7.
However, when upgrading the server to 7.0 I am encountering issues
where values just seem to arbirtrarily change. These values are
all located in memory
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
i read the graid3 manual and http://www.acnc.com/04_01_03.html to make
sure i know what's RAID3 and i don't understand few things.
1)
The number of components must be equal to 3, 5, 9, 17, etc.
(2^n + 1).
why it can't be say 5 disks+parity?
The reason
Doug Hardie wrote:
If you did recompile it and it is behaving differently then it is
probably because your program contains bugs in how it manages memory
that happened to be working by accident with the old memory allocator.
e.g. because you were making use of memory after it had been freed,
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 17:36:35 -0700, Doug Hardie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jul 26, 2008, at 17:10, Kris Kennaway wrote:
Firstly, if you did not recompile the program under 7.0 then it is not
using the new malloc at all.
It was recompiled. All there is on the system is new stuff. It was
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 08:18:14PM +0800, Jyun-Yi Liou wrote:
Hi Yavuz,
It's easy to tell crontab stop sending mail to you by disable sendmail in
/etc/rc.conf
% echo sendmail_enable=\NO\
man rc.conf for more information :-)
Kind of overkill, don't you think?
Sendmail does more than
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 09:25:12PM -0400, David Gurvich wrote:
You should not do the upgrade,
Whatever would cause you to give such poor advice?
though you can. ZFS is still
experimental on FreeBSD though you can certainly use zfs pools on your
existing system.
It works.
jerry
On Jul 26, 2008, at 18:47, Ivan Voras wrote:
Doug Hardie wrote:
If you did recompile it and it is behaving differently then it is
probably because your program contains bugs in how it manages
memory that happened to be working by accident with the old memory
allocator. e.g. because you
On Jul 26, 2008, at 19:03, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
While that's understandable, the current malloc() has undergone quite
extensive testing by Jason Evans and a lot of people who use it in
FreeBSD 7.X or later. Its ability to expose bugs in this way was
deemed
important enough that it is
My machine, a home-brew running 7.0-RELEASE-p2, has 3 SATA hard drives
all of which were advertised, I believe, as SATA300 drives, but:
vader# dmesg | grep ATA
ata0: ATA channel 0 on atapci0
ata1: ATA channel 1 on atapci0
atapci1: Intel ICH7 SATA300 controller port
My machine, a home-brew running 7.0-RELEASE-p2, has 3 SATA hard drives
all of which were advertised as SATA300 drives, but:
vader# dmesg | grep ATA
ata0: ATA channel 0 on atapci0
ata1: ATA channel 1 on atapci0
atapci1: Intel ICH7 SATA300 controller port
On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 11:22:26PM -0400, Jason Lenthe wrote:
My machine, a home-brew running 7.0-RELEASE-p2, has 3 SATA hard drives
all of which were advertised as SATA300 drives, but:
vader# dmesg | grep ATA
ata0: ATA channel 0 on atapci0
ata1: ATA channel 1 on atapci0
atapci1: Intel
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