Здравствуйте, Ian.
Вы писали 10 октября 2010 г., 8:55:58:
IS> In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 331, Issue 13, Message: 8
IS> On Sat, 9 Oct 2010 20:05:48 +0300 ??? ??? wrote:
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1251
IS>
IS> Hi KE
On Saturday 09 October 2010, Arthur Chance wrote:
> Not if running an X desktop, as all sorts of things get stuck in /tmp
> that are needed. In single user mode it should be safe, and it
> probably is when simply running on the console.
>
> As a long term solution, if you wish to clear /tmp every
Hello my friends, look my site web, freebsd 8.1 with kde4:
http://cybernautape.blogspot.com/
:), but i don't kown whith gnome, i am reading handbook, it help me :),
thank Antonio, tell me, where are you from?¿, i am from Perú, Arequipa :)
2010/10/9 Antonio Olivares
> Edgar,
>
> Good that kde4 wo
Gary Kline writes:
> Guys,
>
> A friend spend a few hours taking out my crummy IOGear KVM switch
> that failed to work properly. He dropped in a Belkin; so now I
> *can* button over to my Dell dou server and get X11 working. Plus
> lots of other things.
>
> I want some GUI so I can get my UPS s
Edgar Rodolfo writes:
> [...]
> :), but i don't kown whith gnome, i am reading handbook, it help me :),
> [...]
That is easy. Just add in /etc/rc.conf as following:
gnome_enable="YES"
That's all.
Sincerely,
--
소여물 황병희(黃炳熙) | .. 출항 15분전..
"There's no way of stopping our people from goi
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010, ??? ??? wrote:
> >> #systat -v
> >> 1 usersLoad 0.74 0.71 0.55 Oct 9 19:53
> IS> [..]
> >> Proc:
> Interrupts
> >> r p d s w Csw Trp Sys Int Sof Flt 2
On Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 8:40 AM, Mike Clarke
wrote:
> On Saturday 09 October 2010, Arthur Chance wrote:
>
>> Not if running an X desktop, as all sorts of things get stuck in /tmp
>> that are needed. In single user mode it should be safe, and it
>> probably is when simply running on the console.
>>
On Sat, 9 Oct 2010, Gary Kline wrote:
It has been nearly ten years since I last dealt with getting-X-going.
Right now I have ballpark 530 ports installed. Can anybody give me the
command that I can type from /usr/ports?
Last time I installed X, I used the x11/xorg metaport and pkg_add:
pkg
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010 07:33:50 -0400 (EDT), Chris Hill
wrote:
> On Sat, 9 Oct 2010, Gary Kline wrote:
> > Also, what do I add to ~kline/[*]?
>
> I have the file .xinitrc in ~, but I think that gets created by the xorg
> install process.
No. Install processes usually do not do anything inside a u
On Sat, 09 Oct 2010 12:47:04 -0400, Rob Farmer
wrote:
On Sat, Oct 9, 2010 at 05:30, Henry Olyer wrote:
I'm not sure which writer said it, but whoever it is who started that
paragraph with "Kinda wish you..." you sir are the problem. Not just a
problem for us FreeBSDer's, but also for Ameri
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010 07:34:40 -0400, Eitan Adler
wrote:
On Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 8:40 AM, Mike Clarke
wrote:
On Saturday 09 October 2010, Arthur Chance wrote:
Not if running an X desktop, as all sorts of things get stuck in /tmp
that are needed. In single user mode it should be safe, and it
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010 09:41:16 -0400, bdsf...@att.net wrote:
> While there may be important stuff in /tmp at the moment you are running
> the system for some reason (like X, apparently), there shouldn't be
> anything in there that needs to survive a reboot, if that gives you an
> indication of
> I also understodd the meaning of /tmp in this way - "does not need
> to survive reboot". For things that have a kind of temporary nature,
> but have to survivve a reboot, /var/tmp is usually used.
I did not know that. I aliased /var/tmp to /tmp which is tmpfsed
I'm guessing I should undo that -
On Sat, Oct 9, 2010 at 12:55 PM, Arvid Warnecke
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> On Mon, Oct 04, 2010 at 01:11:30AM -0300, Leandro F Silva wrote:
>> Which OS are you using on your notebook, FreeBSD / Linux or MAC ?
>> Also, can you tell us the hardware, Sony / HP etc..
>>
> Right now I use Mac OSX on my MacBoo
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010 15:00:43 +, Eitan Adler wrote:
> > I also understodd the meaning of /tmp in this way - "does not need
> > to survive reboot". For things that have a kind of temporary nature,
> > but have to survivve a reboot, /var/tmp is usually used.
>
> I did not know that. I aliased /v
Hi, Ian.
IS> On Sun, 10 Oct 2010, ??? ??? wrote:
>> >> #systat -v
>> >> 1 usersLoad 0.74 0.71 0.55 Oct 9 19:53
>> IS> [..]
>> >> Proc:
>> Interrupts
>> >> r p d s w Csw Trp Sys
On Sunday 10 October 2010 15:34:39 Polytropon wrote:
> The "startkde" command should be fully sufficient, as all other things
> are to be configured inside KDE.
That may be "/usr/local/kde4/bin/startkde", since /usr/local/kde4/bin probably
won't be in $PATH.
--
Bruce Cran
_
El día Sunday, October 10, 2010 a las 06:09:32PM +0100, Bruce Cran escribió:
> On Sunday 10 October 2010 15:34:39 Polytropon wrote:
>
> > The "startkde" command should be fully sufficient, as all other things
> > are to be configured inside KDE.
>
> That may be "/usr/local/kde4/bin/startkde", si
I recently upgraded to HEAD on my VIA EPIA C3 box, and had thought about
trying out the new one-shot timer mode. Reading mav@'s email it seems that
since it doesn't have LAPIC or HPET timers it won't work. However I thought I
should still get power savings by using higher Cx levels, but setting
>I recently upgraded to HEAD on my VIA EPIA C3 box, and had thought about
>trying out the new one-shot timer mode. Reading mav@'s email it seems that
>since it doesn't have LAPIC or HPET timers it won't work. However I thought I
>should still get power savings by using higher Cx levels, but setting
> PID USERNAMETHR PRI NICE SIZERES STATETIME WCPU COMMAND
> 11 root 1 171 ki31 0K16K RUN 24.9H 86.47% idle: cpu0
> 14 root 1 -44- 0K16K WAIT 689:52 10.25% swi1: net
>2 root 1 -68- 0K16K sleep 207:35 4.69% ng
On Sunday 10 October 2010 21:49:30 b. f. wrote:
> If it has an i8254, that can also be used in one-shot mode if
> hint.attimer.0.timecounter=0 is used, since r212778.
Thanks, I didn't know about that. After enabling it things are quite
different: kern.eventtimer.periodic is now 1, and setting
Hello all,
Since upgrading from 7.2-p5 to 8.1-p1, I'm unable to mount one
particular external USB hard disk (Seagate FreeAgent 1.5TB disk).
/dev/da0 and /dev/da0a get created, but /dev/da0s1 and /dev/da0s1a do
not get created. The label is on da0s1 and the filesystem is on da0s1a.
Another machi
I'm lost. Aday ago when I rebooted my old Dell, the mouse wouldn't
work. A hour ago I got X booting on my server, but the same thing:
no mouse. I see the cursor, but it is frozen. The only place my
mouse works is on my linux system. The KVM connections seem soild;
the only problem is the mouse
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010 19:27:05 +0300, kes-...@yandex.ru wrote:
> Hi, Ian.
Hi Eugen,
> >> >> 23.1%Sys 50.8%Intr 1.3%User 0.0%Nice 24.8%Idle%ozfod
> 1999 cpu0: time
> >> >> ||||||||||| daefr
> >> >>
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