Which version and GUI will work best on the internet with my AT Pentium II
350MHz x86-based PC? Some web sites require Flash Player 8 or higher, and some
require 128-bit encryption I think, but doesn't 40-bit encryption process data
3 times faster? How many bit encryption is the various versio
On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 2:34 AM, Wojciech Puchar
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> This is one of the main reasons i want to go with ZFS. Another would be
>> the
>> filesystem level compression of the data. I have noticed that 3dmax
>> files (one of
>> the programs the company works with) are very "comp
Mb to ~ 7Mb).
will it be majority of data???
About 40% of it. 50% adobe *.psd and the other 10% all sort of data.
so make sense.
but make sure you do regular backups.
___
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On 1 дек, 05:03, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I was curious about your situation and set up a couple of tests. Noting
> you mentioned iTerm, I thought I might be able to recreate it on a Mac
> (OS-X 10.4 with 1.4.3 (100) version Terminal, I had removed iTerm due
> to unreliability sometim
Hi. Half a year ago I started the following thread:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2008-April/172448.html.
The subject was a documentation issue where a man page mismatched the
actual system behavior.
The issue is still present in 7.0-RELEASE and probably no action was
taken s
On Sun, 30 Nov 2008 23:54:38 -0800, "Harry Veltman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Which version and GUI will work best on the internet with my
> AT Pentium II 350MHz x86-based PC?
Allthough the FreeBSD base system gets better and faster in each
version, the additional software and the GUI toolkits
On Monday 01 December 2008 11:36:58 Polytropon wrote:
> I can't answer your question regarding "Flash" and encryption;
> sadly, I never saw any need for this.
Even if you get the software to work (which is a project in itself),
performance will be very very bad.
My parents have a similar machine
We have a few oldies, just installed KDE 3.5 on a:
CPU: VIA Nehemiah (997.17-MHz 686-class CPU)
Origin = "CentaurHauls" Id = 0x698 Stepping = 8
Oldie @ 1 GHz? You must be joking. I'd bite my hand off for
such hardware. :-)
well most of machines i use are <1Ghz and <512MB RAM.
no need for
We have a few oldies, just installed KDE 3.5 on a:
CPU: VIA Nehemiah (997.17-MHz 686-class CPU)
Origin = "CentaurHauls" Id = 0x698 Stepping = 8
That's pretty much as low as I'd go for normal desktop usage. The machine
you're describing, still makes for a good router or LAN resolver with low
On Monday 01 December 2008 02:11:13 Polytropon wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 11:53:11 +0100, Mel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> > We have a few oldies, just installed KDE 3.5 on a:
> > CPU: VIA Nehemiah (997.17-MHz 686-class CPU)
> > Origin = "CentaurHauls" Id = 0x698 Stepping = 8
>
> Oldie @ 1 GH
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 11:53:11 +0100, Mel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We have a few oldies, just installed KDE 3.5 on a:
> CPU: VIA Nehemiah (997.17-MHz 686-class CPU)
> Origin = "CentaurHauls" Id = 0x698 Stepping = 8
Oldie @ 1 GHz? You must be joking. I'd bite my hand off for
such hardware. :-)
On Monday 01 December 2008 12:19:50 Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> > We have a few oldies, just installed KDE 3.5 on a:
> > CPU: VIA Nehemiah (997.17-MHz 686-class CPU)
> > Origin = "CentaurHauls" Id = 0x698 Stepping = 8
> >
> > That's pretty much as low as I'd go for normal desktop usage. The machine
since OP already stated to want flash 8 with highbit encryption, you will
need firefox and bunch of gstreamer-*/gnome stuff or linux emulation and a
lot of good fortune when going with pluginwrapper.
but not KDE and Gnome desktop running. firefox is quite fast compared to
it
__
On Monday 01 December 2008 12:11:13 Polytropon wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 11:53:11 +0100, Mel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> > We have a few oldies, just installed KDE 3.5 on a:
> > CPU: VIA Nehemiah (997.17-MHz 686-class CPU)
> > Origin = "CentaurHauls" Id = 0x698 Stepping = 8
>
> Oldie @ 1 GH
On 1 дек, 08:31, Mel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday 30 November 2008 17:53:21 Eugene Pimenov wrote:
>
> > 30.11.2008, в 19:36, Mel написал(а):
> > > On Sunday 30 November 2008 06:46:59 Eugene Pimenov wrote:
>
> > > Not sure, but can you copy files via cat? As in:
> > > cat /tmp/foo | ssh
On Mon 2008-12-01 09:51:46 UTC+0100, Viktor ??tujber ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hi. Half a year ago I started the following thread:
> http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2008-April/172448.html.
> The subject was a documentation issue where a man page mismatched the
> actual syst
hi...
> Which version and GUI will work best on the internet with my AT
> Pentium II 350MHz x86-based PC? Some web sites require Flash Player 8
> or higher, and some require 128-bit encryption I think, but doesn't
> 40-bit encryption process data 3 times faster? How many bit
> encryption is the
On Mon, 01 Dec 2008 16:52:12 +1300 Brett Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ifconfig shows the alias addresses correctly bound.
> Creating an ipfw rule and testing it from the command line works
> (connects out from master address, not alias)
>
> From website on alias address, the firew
On Monday 01 December 2008 10:33:17 Eugene Pimenov wrote:
> On 1 дек, 08:31, Mel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Sunday 30 November 2008 17:53:21 Eugene Pimenov wrote:
> > > 30.11.2008, в 19:36, Mel написал(а):
> > > > On Sunday 30 November 2008 06:46:59 Eugene Pimenov wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Not
too... my absolute favorite and it boosted my productivity (after 2
weeks of configuring&customizing) to a level no other GUI in this world
no other you tried.
___
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On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 14:31:04 +0800
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>I will be out of the office starting 12/01/2008 and will not return
>until 12/12/2008.
>
>Please contact helpdesk directly for urgent matters at 043854184.
Cool, I think I will contact them and inform them that your OoO
responder is inc
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
or make a keystroke. Is this a bug, or a strange feature? How do i
bad hardware design - mouse data signals gets through to audio signal.
most of your computer's signal line are in megahertz range so you don't
hear anything, PS/2 mouse has 40kbps data rate.
I've actua
On Sun, 30 Nov 2008, Pongthep Kulkrisada wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> > set log phase chat connect carrier link ipcp ccp ID0 TUN command
> I still can't dial using this configuration...
Yes sorry, that was from a really old system, from backups.
> # ppp -background isp
> Loading /lib/libalias_cuse
Matthew Seaman wrote:
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
Matthew Seaman wrote:
% perl -p -e 's/cn=([^ ,]+) ([^,]+),/cn=$2 $1,/' < foo.txt
I still don't really understand *why* the above works but I'm trying
to pick it apart now.
The RE breaks down like this:
/cn=([^ ,]+) ([^,]+),/
cn=
It seems this always gets me when setting up a new machine and I've
haven't been able to stop it from happening. I install openldap-server
WITH_SASL and after that point, if I try to install any package with
LDAP support, it tries to install openldap-client when
openldap-sasl-client is already ther
Chris wrote:
> a cat >testfile then pasted through an ssh terminal.app connection over
> satellite (very
> bad connection) into a FreeBSD 7.0 box I built in the last month. At
Btw. lousy connections don't come into this as SSH does HMAC checking on
the data - i.e. even if you somehow managed to l
On Monday 01 December 2008 15:01:09 Robert Fitzpatrick wrote:
> It seems this always gets me when setting up a new machine and I've
> haven't been able to stop it from happening. I install openldap-server
> WITH_SASL and after that point, if I try to install any package with
> LDAP support, it trie
On Sun, 30 Nov 2008 23:54:38 -0800
"Harry Veltman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Which version and GUI will work best on the internet with my AT
> Pentium II 350MHz x86-based PC? Some web sites require Flash Player
> 8 or higher,
If flash is important to you then I'd suggest you run windows fire
If flash is important to you then I'd suggest you run windows firefox
under wine. Native Adobe Flash support is apparently working again in
isn't better to run windows ?
___
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On Mon, 01 Dec 2008 09:01:09 -0500
Robert Fitzpatrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>It seems this always gets me when setting up a new machine and I've
>haven't been able to stop it from happening. I install openldap-server
>WITH_SASL and after that point, if I try to install any package with
>LDAP
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 09:51:46 +0100, "Viktor Štujber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi. Half a year ago I started the following thread:
> http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2008-April/172448.html.
> The subject was a documentation issue where a man page mismatched the
> actual syste
On Mon, 01 Dec 2008 17:17:13 +0200,
Giorgos Keramidas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 09:51:46 +0100, "Viktor Štujber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hi. Half a year ago I started the following thread:
>> http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2008-April/172448.html.
>
On Monday 01 December 2008 15:48:13 Jerry wrote:
> >failed packages (-:ignored / *:skipped / !:failed)
> > ! net/openldap24-client (install error)
> > * net/nss_ldap
> > * security/pam_ldap
^ portupgrade
>
> I am assuming that you are attempting to install the port(s) manually.
>
I have ZFS on my 7.1-PRERELEASE system, and while it does some spiffy things,
in general I'm a bit underwhelmed.
PROS:
Adding new filesystems on a whim is really nice.
It has a lot of really cool other features that I will probably never need.
CONS:
I have nearly 3GB of wired RAM, but i
Hi,
Is there any way to determine when upgrades to installed ports have
been done on a system? I did a "portupgrade -arR" recently and want to
know which ports have been upgraded in that process (and no I didn't
run that portupgrade under "script"...)
Couldn't find an option to "pkg_info", "pkgdb
> > # ppp -background isp
> > Loading /lib/libalias_cuseeme.so
> > Loading /lib/libalias_ftp.so
> > Loading /lib/libalias_irc.so
> > Loading /lib/libalias_nbt.so
> > Loading /lib/libalias_pptp.so
> > Loading /lib/libalias_skinny.so
> > Loading /lib/libalias_smedia.so
>
> I'm surprised ppp
Is it vinum or gvinum (geom8) that is the utility to create a RAID5 volume..?
Things like that gvinum lacks the 'stop' command etc.. makes me think
that it's not production ready or that the source code has not matured enough.
/P
___
freebsd-questio
On Mon, 2008-12-01 at 16:34 +0100, Mel wrote:
> On Monday 01 December 2008 15:48:13 Jerry wrote:
>
> > >failed packages (-:ignored / *:skipped / !:failed)
> > > ! net/openldap24-client (install error)
> > > * net/nss_ldap
> > > * security/pam_ldap
>
> ^ portupgrade
> >
> > I am assumin
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 16:12:49 +0100
Ewald Jenisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there any way to determine when upgrades to installed ports have
> been done on a system? I did a "portupgrade -arR" recently and want to
> know which ports have been upgraded in that process (and no I didn't
RW writes:
> > Is there any way to determine when upgrades to installed ports have
> > been done on a system? I did a "portupgrade -arR" recently and want to
> > know which ports have been upgraded in that process (and no I didn't
> > run that portupgrade under "script"...)
>
> pkg_glob(1)
I have ZFS on my 7.1-PRERELEASE system, and while it does some spiffy things,
in general I'm a bit underwhelmed.
UFS is excellent. your problem is that you like to have "lots of
filesystems". why don't just make one or one per disk?
i have one per disk/mirror configuration everywhere except
Hello,
I hope my question isn't too off-topic for this list, but usually
some people come up with good ideas ...
We have got a FreeBSD Samba Server (set up as PDC) and about 100
WinXP desktops and laptops. The WinXP machines can log into the
network, connect to home directories and shares an
On Monday 01 December 2008 18:14:20 Robert Fitzpatrick wrote:
> On Mon, 2008-12-01 at 16:34 +0100, Mel wrote:
> > On Monday 01 December 2008 15:48:13 Jerry wrote:
> > > >failed packages (-:ignored / *:skipped / !:failed)
> > > > ! net/openldap24-client (install error)
> > > > * net/nss_ldap
> > > >
Hey Peter,
> Is it vinum or gvinum (geom8) that is the utility to create a RAID5 volume..?
> Things like that gvinum lacks the 'stop' command etc.. makes me think
> that it's not production ready or that the source code has not matured enough.
actually gvinum is production-ready, it only doesn't
However, as I said, gvinum is slow. I also run graid5 and some say it is pretty
same for me. it works and works fast.
but still - small writes WILL be slow as it's RAID5
because of this i don't have much uses for it, as in most cases today
drive's capacities are much larger than amount of data
Tijl Coosemans wrote:
On Sunday 30 November 2008 06:57:29 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, everyone. This is the problem: our SCSI disk with FreeBSD
4.8 on it has been failing recently, so I copied its root partition
to a fresh IDE disk with cp -pR and
You should use dump and restore to copy the
On Mon, 2008-12-01 at 19:06 +0100, Mel wrote:
> > Thanks for the ideas from everyone. I was doing a portinstall of
> > nss_ldap and pam_ldap. I went ahead and used the -k option and all in
> > and working now. I also received the error when installing samba, I'm
> > sure would for every LDAP depend
On Behalf Of Chad Perrin
> On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 04:53:03PM +,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> Your assertion that "linux is both low end unix and low end windows
>> replacement" is factually wrong: As a high end unix I think it's
>> earned it's stripes, currently dominating the top 500 superco
Oldie @ 1 GHz? You must be joking. I'd bite my hand off for
such hardware. :-)
No need. Get a job at a computer service store, like my fiancee. You will get
orphans donated in the 2-3Ghz range "just as long as my data is transfered to
the new computer". ;)
looks like such services on your area
This
shows more than a marginal increase in "market share". It suggests that
Sun and others have good reason to be nervous about their future
prospects,
and need to find new ways to make money.
there is no sense of buying Sun hardware. they make excellent hardware but
with more than "excellent"
Have a machine, Dell dual CPU/quad core Xeon. Runs FBSD 6.2.
Custom kernel, with IPFW compiled in and using SMP.
FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 23
12:17:29 PST 2008
It runs, Dovecot, Postfix, Mysql, Apache. Standard email stuff. Put into
production in March, ran perfect unt
On Mon, 01 Dec 2008 08:40:57 -0500, Bryant Eadon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've actually had this happen before. Somewhere along the line either :
>1. your audio and mouse/keyboard cables are coming into close proximity
> to
> one another.
>or
>2. Your mouse/kb cable is very clo
On Monday 01 December 2008 11:49:46 Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> UFS is excellent. your problem is that you like to have "lots of
> filesystems". why don't just make one or one per disk?
For all the usual reasons: faster fsck, ability to set attributes on each
filesystem (noexec, noatime, ro), a run
On 1 дек, 15:52, Mel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 01 December 2008 10:33:17 Eugene Pimenov wrote:
>
> inetd:
> $ grep telnet /etc/inetd.conf
> #telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/libexec/telnetd telnetd
> #telnet stream tcp6 nowait root /usr/libexec/telnetd telnet
On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 5:59 PM, Kirk Strauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have ZFS on my 7.1-PRERELEASE system, and while it does some spiffy things,
> in general I'm a bit underwhelmed.
>
> PROS:
>
> Adding new filesystems on a whim is really nice.
yes it is.
>
> It has a lot of really cool
On Monday 01 December 2008 19:32:59 Keith wrote:
> Have a machine, Dell dual CPU/quad core Xeon. Runs FBSD 6.2.
> Custom kernel, with IPFW compiled in and using SMP.
>
> FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 23
> 12:17:29 PST 2008
>
> It runs, Dovecot, Postfix, Mysql, Apache. Standar
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
>> fast, though. See it's page on Wikipedia for more info. I'd use it
>> more if it
>> was part of official FreeBSD release, but for now it is only available
>> as a
>> patch (AFAIK).
>
> which is strange. someone don't like RAID5 to be included in system?
I'd like to see
On Monday 01 December 2008 13:24:48 Valentin Bud wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 5:59 PM, Kirk Strauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > It has a lot of really cool other features that I will probably never
> > need.
> then you don't need ZFS. usually you choose a technology because you need
> it.
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 19:39:39 +0100 (CET)
Wojciech Puchar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> there is no sense of buying Sun hardware. they make excellent
> hardware but with more than "excellent" price
You are right about that. The quality is very high; prices are too.
> and their unix is damn slow com
Kirk Strauser wrote:
> At this point, I'm almost ready to go back to good ol' UFS2, but I'd hate to
> give up that easy addition of new filesystems. I *could* have a single 700GB
> root FS but that just doesn't seem right. Are there any good, tested GEOM-
> based ways of getting that functiona
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008, Mel wrote:
|->On Monday 01 December 2008 19:32:59 Keith wrote:
|->>
|->> ==
|->> kernel trap 12 with interrupts disabled
|->>
|->> Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
|->> cpuid = 2; apic id = 02
|->> fault virtual address = 0x104
|->> fault code =
Hello!
OS: FreeBSD 6.3 R
ifconfig
bge0: flags=8843 mtu 1500
options=1b
inet 192.168.0.70 netmask 0xfe00 broadcast 192.168.0.255
inet 10.10.10.37 netmask 0xfffc broadcast 10.10.10.39
inet 10.10.10.38 netmask 0xfffc broadcast 10.10.10.39
ether 00
inet 127.0.0.1 netmask 0xff00
defaultrouter="192.168.0.1"
All ip work, but by default outgoing system use 192.168.0.70
outgoing IP is chosen so it's on the same network as default router, if
many are - first from list.
___
freebsd-quest
UFS is excellent. your problem is that you like to have "lots of
filesystems". why don't just make one or one per disk?
For all the usual reasons: faster fsck, ability to set attributes on each
filesystem (noexec, noatime, ro), a runaway process writing to /tmp won't cause
problems in /var, et
I am compiling the following program:
#include
main() { printf("0x%x\n", malloc(1)); }
in 32-bit 7.1-PRERELEASE and get 0x28201100 which is ~673MB of 4GB
address space or 16%.
When I run the same program with the google malloc (from
devel/google-perftools)
I get much lower value 0x80aa0e8 w
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 22:26:04 +0100 (CET)
Wojciech Puchar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> it simply wastes RAM and CPU power. same thing takes 10-20 times more
> CPU that with UFS
ZFS does things that UFS is not capable of. These (bloathware) things
cost memory indeed. But that memory is certainly not
Dear mailing list,
7.1-PRERELEASE
isc-dhcp30-server-3.0.7_3
When configuring failover and using FQDN instead of ip address,
isc-dhcpd says failover peer can't find address. It does however start
and will not, of course, work properly.
The behaviour is that the very first client might get add
Ian Smith wrote:
On Mon, 01 Dec 2008 16:52:12 +1300 Brett Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ifconfig shows the alias addresses correctly bound.
> Creating an ipfw rule and testing it from the command line works
> (connects out from master address, not alias)
>
> From website on alias
On Mon, 01 Dec 2008 13:28:48 -0800, Yuri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am compiling the following program:
>
> #include
> main() { printf("0x%x\n", malloc(1)); }
You should probably use printf("%p", ptr) to print pointers :)
> in 32-bit 7.1-PRERELEASE and get 0x28201100 which is ~673MB of 4GB
>
Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
The FreeBSD malloc(3) implementation can use either mmap() or sbrk() to
obtain memory from the system. It does not 'waste a high percentage of
memory' but it simply maps only high addresses (with an unmapped 'hole'
in lower addresses).
But the hole it leaves with MA
Robert Huff wrote:
RW writes:
> Is there any way to determine when upgrades to installed ports have
> been done on a system? I did a "portupgrade -arR" recently and want to
> know which ports have been upgraded in that process (and no I didn't
> run that portupgrade under "script"...)
pk
Guys,
pdftotext fail on the large [32MB] file I've got. Is there any other
way I
can translate this huge textfile to ascii or html or text?
thanks,
gary
--
Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix
http://jot
In the last episode (Dec 01), Yuri said:
> Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> > The FreeBSD malloc(3) implementation can use either mmap() or
> > sbrk() to obtain memory from the system. It does not 'waste a high
> > percentage of memory' but it simply maps only high addresses (with
> > an unmapped 'hole'
In the last episode (Dec 01), Dan Nelson said:
> Here's what I get with a simple test program on a month-old 7.1-PRE
Gah. silly mailing-list attachment stripper.
#include
#include
int main(void)
{
size_t malloced = 0;
size_t chunksize = 1024*1024;
void *first = NULL;
void *last = NULL
Hello,
It seems I've made a mistake using ZFS, and now my /usr/local/ is
empty. I wanted to create a snapshot of a directory inside of it, so I
ran "zfs create tank/usr/local" and "zfs create tank/usr/local/www" as
I had seen in the guides I'd been using. That worked, but the
filesystems created w
On Mon, Dec 01, 2008 at 03:14:43PM -0800, Gary Kline wrote:
> pdftotext fail on the large [32MB] file I've got. Is there any
> other way I can translate this huge textfile to ascii or html or
> text?
Please define "fail" in this context? I've used pdftotxt on documents
exceeding
Roland Smith writes:
> >pdftotext fail on the large [32MB] file I've got. Is there any
> >other way I can translate this huge textfile to ascii or html or
> >text?
>
> Please define "fail" in this context? I've used pdftotxt on
> documents exceeding 40MB. However there are of
In the last episode (Dec 02), Reinis Ivanovs said:
> It seems I've made a mistake using ZFS, and now my /usr/local/ is
> empty. I wanted to create a snapshot of a directory inside of it, so
> I ran "zfs create tank/usr/local" and "zfs create tank/usr/local/www"
> as I had seen in the guides I'd bee
On Mon, 2008-12-01 at 14:22 +, RW wrote:
> On Sun, 30 Nov 2008 23:54:38 -0800
> "Harry Veltman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Which version and GUI will work best on the internet with my AT
> > Pentium II 350MHz x86-based PC? Some web sites require Flash Player
> > 8 or higher,
>
> If f
On Mon, 2008-12-01 at 15:42 +0100, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> > If flash is important to you then I'd suggest you run windows firefox
> > under wine. Native Adobe Flash support is apparently working again in
>
> isn't better to run windows ?
That'd be debatable, wouldn't it?
_
I used a Matrox G450 dual-head card with earlier versions of FreeBSD/Xfree
but have finally had to upgrade the hardware. Getting the G450 to display
both monitors using zinerama took a bit of time, but once set it worked
well.
I purchased an ATI Radeon 9600 All-in-wonder primarily for doing some
> > 1) Some PDFs are just wrappers around JPEG images. In this case
> > there is no text for pdftotext to convert => epic fail.
>
> In this case "convert" from the ImageMagick port will get you a
> series of .jpg/.gif/.. Read the manual carefully before
> attempting; also note this can be
On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 10:53 AM, Peter Ulrich Kruppa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I hope my question isn't too off-topic for this list, but usually some
> people come up with good ideas ...
>
> We have got a FreeBSD Samba Server (set up as PDC) and about 100 WinXP
> desktops and laptops.
On Monday 01 December 2008 21:34:14 Keith wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Dec 2008, Mel wrote:
> |->On Monday 01 December 2008 19:32:59 Keith wrote:
> |->>
> |->> ==
> |->> kernel trap 12 with interrupts disabled
> |->>
> |->> Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
> |->> cpuid = 2; apic id = 02
> |
On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 2:36 AM, Reinis Ivanovs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> It seems I've made a mistake using ZFS, and now my /usr/local/ is
> empty. I wanted to create a snapshot of a directory inside of it, so I
> ran "zfs create tank/usr/local" and "zfs create tank/usr/local/www" as
On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 9:21 PM, Kirk Strauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 01 December 2008 11:49:46 Wojciech Puchar wrote:
>
>> UFS is excellent. your problem is that you like to have "lots of
>> filesystems". why don't just make one or one per disk?
>
> For all the usual reasons: faster
Hi all,
I ran into a weird problem when enabling serial console on the FreeBSD
7.0. Your help is really appreciated.
I installed FreeBSD 7.0 amd64 (from the CD) on a Dell R200, and then
enabled the serial console by adding the following to
/boot/loader.conf
hint.sio.0.flags="0x30"
console="comcon
Hi,
I was reading chapter 4 of the handbook, as well as chapters 24 and
26... If I got it clear, I pretty much might get the base system
updated by using freebsd-update script. Ports collection can get
updated with portsnap, but that doesn't update neither the intalled
ports, nor the installed p
On 12/2/08, Javier Vasquez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was reading chapter 4 of the handbook, as well as chapters 24 and
> 26... If I got it clear, I pretty much might get the base system
> updated by using freebsd-update script. Ports collection can get
> updated with portsnap, but th
On Tuesday 02 December 2008 07:41:17 Ji wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I ran into a weird problem when enabling serial console on the FreeBSD
> 7.0. Your help is really appreciated.
> I installed FreeBSD 7.0 amd64 (from the CD) on a Dell R200, and then
> enabled the serial console by adding the following to
Hi
How would you guys uninstall a meta-port?
I'm considering a move to kde4 but I want a clean install, so I want to
remove the kde3 meta-port first.
Thanks
/Leslie
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Thank you for your reply, Mel.
There must be something wrong. What confused me is why the booting
problem does not appear every time I reboot the computer and the
serial console does work fine if it can boot.
And I will really appreciate if you can specify my problem. Thanks a lot.
Jim
On Mon,
Ivan Voras wrote:
Kirk Strauser wrote:
At this point, I'm almost ready to go back to good ol' UFS2, but I'd hate to
give up that easy addition of new filesystems. I *could* have a single 700GB
root FS but that just doesn't seem right. Are there any good, tested GEOM-
based ways of getting
Hi,
My postfix mail servers shows to messages in the queue saying
(host mx1.FreeBSD.org[69.147.83.52] said: 450 4.7.1 Client host rejected:
cannot find your hostname, [86.58.167.132] (in reply to RCPT TO command))
But when i do a lookup or a reverse lookup, i find my hostname, also
from work and
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