On 26-03-2013, Tue [10:10:46], Oblitey, Edmund wrote:
> I am trying to install FreeBSD on a E7520/6300ESB chipset. Program
> freezes during probing devices. It always restart when it gets to the
> atkbd0. Want to know if u can help me on it.
>
Sometimes it helps to disable ACPI support in the loa
On 26/03/2013 14:10, Oblitey, Edmund wrote:
> I am trying to install FreeBSD on a E7520/6300ESB chipset. Program
> freezes during probing devices. It always restart when it gets to the
> atkbd0. Want to know if u can help me on it.
Sounds like there's something on-board that either isn't supported
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
Also, not being able to boot if first disk has some error in boot
section or just strangly dead is not an option too. However, i was
just thinking, if i use gmirror then bios does not know anything about
it. I may set both harddisk as boot disk, but if
30.01.2013 19:28, Paul Kraus:
On Jan 30, 2013, at 10:22 AM, Warren Block wrote:
If you want to use the same drive for booting, it's possible. Create all three
partitions on both drives manually. Then mirror the freebsd-ufs partition
only. The contents of the freebsd-boot partition don't c
On Jan 30, 2013, at 10:22 AM, Warren Block wrote:
> If you want to use the same drive for booting, it's possible. Create all
> three partitions on both drives manually. Then mirror the freebsd-ufs
> partition only. The contents of the freebsd-boot partition don't change
> often, and swap doe
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
30.01.2013 18:06, Warren Block:
GPT partitions should work, just limit it to one mirrored partition per
drive.
Please, clarify what you mean here.
If only one GPT partition on a drive is mirrored with another GPT partition
on another drive, head c
There seems to be one more advantage to gmirror
If i understood correctly
gmirror label -v -b split -s 2048 data da0 da1 da2
will create a tripple mirror raid 1, that is
triple redundancy, which is hardly available on any hardware raid.
Am i correct here?
Also, does anyone know how to choose s
On Jan 30, 2013, at 8:10 AM, Andrea Venturoli wrote:
> You can spend the extra money you spare on the controller buying good disks;
> as someone else pointed out don't get "desktop-class" ones, but "24x7" ones.
Server Class drives buy you some improvement, but my recent experience with
Seagate
30.01.2013 18:06, Warren Block:
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
30.01.2013 1:01, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
29.01.2013 18:57, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
The Handbook chapter on gmirror talks about the problems with GPT
an
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
30.01.2013 1:01, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
29.01.2013 18:57, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
The Handbook chapter on gmirror talks about the problems with GPT and
GEOM metadata. In short: right
On 01/28/13 21:43, Artem Kuchin wrote:
I am planning to use mirror configuration of two SATA 7200rpm 2TB disks.
I personally vote for gmirror in this case; I've used it a lot and found
it very good wrt to both performance and robustness.
You can spend the extra money you spare on the contro
30.01.2013 1:01, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
29.01.2013 18:57, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
The Handbook chapter on gmirror talks about the problems with GPT
and GEOM metadata. In short: right now, they conflict. It's
possible to mirro
> My other concern is what happens when one drive goes down if we use
> gmirror? Is it completelly transparent
> and bad drive can be hot swapped while server is running and rebuild
> started?
> I am thinking now about gpt+gmirror (including boot and swap)
>
> Artem
>
Yes. In fact, you can test th
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
29.01.2013 18:57, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
The Handbook chapter on gmirror talks about the problems with GPT and GEOM
metadata. In short: right now, they conflict. It's possible to mirror GPT
partitions, but be aware t
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013 08:57:31 -0600, Warren Block
wrote:
As far a gmirror is concerned, yes, drives can be removed and new drives
inserted while the mirror is running. Hot swap is more of an issue with
the hardware. I have not tried it with SATA drives, although I think it
should work.
29.01.2013 18:57, Warren Block:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
The Handbook chapter on gmirror talks about the problems with GPT and
GEOM metadata. In short: right now, they conflict. It's possible to
mirror GPT partitions, but be aware that if you mirror more than one
partition
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013, Artem Kuchin wrote:
My other concern is what happens when one drive goes down if we use gmirror?
Is it completelly transparent
and bad drive can be hot swapped while server is running and rebuild started?
I am thinking now about gpt+gmirror (including boot and swap)
As fa
Artem Kuchin wrote:
[snip]
> The server is going to be a web server with many sites and with mysql
> running on it. Nothing really really
> heavy. Currently with run all this on our own server with 8 cores and
> 16GB ram and 3ware raid1
> and cpu load is about 5% :) Everything is quick and respons
29.01.2013 11:54, Michael Powell:
Artem Kuchin wrote:
I guess what I'm trying to point out is that low performance wrt software
RAID will stem from other things besides just simply consuming a few CPU
cycles. Today's CPUs have the cycles to spare. I've been using gmirror for
RAID 1 mirrors fo
Artem Kuchin wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I have to made a decision on choosing a dedicated server.
> The problem i see is that while i can find very affordable and good
> options they do not
> provide hardware raid or even if they do it is not the best hardware for
> freebsd.
> The server base conf is 8c
On Jan 28, 2013, at 3:43 PM, Artem Kuchin wrote:
> I have to made a decision on choosing a dedicated server.
> The problem i see is that while i can find very affordable and good options
> they do not
> provide hardware raid or even if they do it is not the best hardware for
> freebsd.
I prefer
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013, Per olof Ljungmark wrote:
On 01/28/13 21:43, Artem Kuchin wrote:
Hello!
I have to made a decision on choosing a dedicated server.
The problem i see is that while i can find very affordable and good
options they do not
provide hardware raid or even if they do it is not th
On 01/28/13 21:43, Artem Kuchin wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I have to made a decision on choosing a dedicated server.
> The problem i see is that while i can find very affordable and good
> options they do not
> provide hardware raid or even if they do it is not the best hardware for
> freebsd.
> The serv
On Sat, 15 Dec 2012 21:43:34 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> Thank you :)
>
> I've got some thoughts, before I continue.
>
> What version of FreeBSD does include the snd_hdspe driver? Do I have to
> download and burn a version > 9.0?
Yes, I think you should use 9-STABLE for that.
> Since the iss
Thank you :)
I've got some thoughts, before I continue.
What version of FreeBSD does include the snd_hdspe driver? Do I have to
download and burn a version > 9.0?
Since the issue to get the needed slice/partition with the needed file
system is solved by installing PC-BSD 8.2 instead of FreeBSD 9
On Sat, 15 Dec 2012 17:25:17 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Sat, 2012-12-15 at 13:11 +0100, Polytropon wrote:
> > Mixing PBI and ports/packages is possible, but discouraged.
>
> I read about it, but don't understand the issue.
>
> If I never ever would use PBI again but ports/packages only in th
On Sat, 2012-12-15 at 13:11 +0100, Polytropon wrote:
> Mixing PBI and ports/packages is possible, but discouraged.
I read about it, but don't understand the issue.
If I never ever would use PBI again but ports/packages only in the
future, it still would cause issues? The port directory isn't empt
On Fri, 14 Dec 2012 22:38:08 + (GMT), Mardorf Ralf wrote:
> Hi :)
>
>
> Software Manager (PC-BSD 8.2) can't install software.
> Removing and updating software does work, but if I try to install software, I
> get
> "Download failed! Please try again later." and I tried again for several days.
Hello all.
I have been reading in detail all your comments and advice.
Thank you very much for your time. I have clear vision now of what do
I need to do.
I comment today to my students the help we were getting and all of
them send you a BIG "THANK YOU VERY MUCH" comment. I hope that wieth
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 5:34 PM, Waitman Gobble wrote:
>
> On Feb 6, 2012 6:13 PM, "C. P. Ghost" wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 11:37 PM, Jorge Biquez
>> wrote:
>> > Now we will try to have a graphical mode in Freebsd. With that we would
>> > like
>> > to be able to develop graphical applica
On Tue, 7 Feb 2012, Jim Pazarena wrote:
Does FreeBSD support any type of software raid?
I have an old rack mount server which has 8 bays, but all SATA,
and NO raid. Sure would be nice to have a software raid
to create a NAS device.
Sure, multiple ways, in fact:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US
Le Mon, 06 Feb 2012 16:37:37 -0600,
Jorge Biquez a écrit :
> Hello all.
Hi,
> Maybe I am wrong but until now I think my only option is to use
> Phyton. Is that correct? For what I have searched Python will let me
> create executables and will let me create Graphical solutions even
> for othe
On Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 09:06:49PM -0700, Chad Perrin wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 07:36:46PM -0800, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
> >
> > However, from personal experience, I know that Larry Wall understands
> > Object Oriented Programming, and Guido definitely doesn't get it.
> > Obviously, othe
> Does FreeBSD support any type of software raid?
> I have an old rack mount server which has 8 bays, but all SATA,
> and NO raid. Sure would be nice to have a software raid
> to create a NAS device.
Yes!
An example of setting up a 3 disk raidz might look like this:
zpool create myfancyraid
On Feb 6, 2012 6:13 PM, "C. P. Ghost" wrote:
>
> On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 11:37 PM, Jorge Biquez
wrote:
> > Now we will try to have a graphical mode in Freebsd. With that we would
like
> > to be able to develop graphical applications for Windows (we all know
that's
> > the market and here some comp
On Mon, 06 Feb 2012 19:36:46 -0800
mer...@stonehenge.com (Randal L. Schwartz) wrote:
> > "DDa" == Da Rock
> > writes:
>
> >> Would you do that with Python or something else?
>
> DDa> Depending on what you really need to solve decides your
> DDa> language. Others have offered advice here
On 02/07/12 14:06, Chad Perrin wrote:
On Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 07:36:46PM -0800, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
"DDa" == Da Rock writes:
Would you do that with Python or something else?
DDa> Depending on what you really need to solve decides your
DDa> language. Others have offered advice here, but
On Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 07:36:46PM -0800, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
> > "DDa" == Da Rock writes:
>
> >> Would you do that with Python or something else?
>
> DDa> Depending on what you really need to solve decides your
> DDa> language. Others have offered advice here, but may I suggest Perl?
>
> "DDa" == Da Rock writes:
>> Would you do that with Python or something else?
DDa> Depending on what you really need to solve decides your
DDa> language. Others have offered advice here, but may I suggest Perl?
DDa> For most data and its proven ability to handle/match string data it
DDa> is
On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 11:37 PM, Jorge Biquez wrote:
> Now we will try to have a graphical mode in Freebsd. With that we would like
> to be able to develop graphical applications for Windows (we all know that's
> the market and here some companies is what they are looking), so maybe sound
> crazy
On 02/07/12 08:37, Jorge Biquez wrote:
Hello all.
This is kind of off topic. My apologies in advance.
I am helping a non profit organization and giving some classes to
prepare students so they can be prepared and try to get a job (they
are students also and have the basics concepts already)
>
> From: Mehmet Erol Sanliturk
>To: Rod Person
>Cc: Jorge Biquez ; FreeBSD Questions
>
>Sent: Monday, February 6, 2012 9:22 PM
>Subject: Re: Software Development using Freebsd.
>
>On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 6:40 PM, Rod Person wrote:
On Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 04:37:37PM -0600, Jorge Biquez wrote:
>
> Hello all.
>
> This is kind of off topic. My apologies in advance.
>
> I am helping a non profit organization and giving some classes to
> prepare students so they can be prepared and try to get a job (they
> are students also an
On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 6:40 PM, Rod Person wrote:
> On Mon, 06 Feb 2012 16:37:37 -0600
> Jorge Biquez wrote:
>
> > Now we will try to have a graphical mode in Freebsd. With that we
> > would like to be able to develop graphical applications for Windows
> > (we all know that's the market and here
On Mon, 06 Feb 2012 16:37:37 -0600
Jorge Biquez wrote:
> Now we will try to have a graphical mode in Freebsd. With that we
> would like to be able to develop graphical applications for Windows
> (we all know that's the market and here some companies is what they
> are looking), so maybe sound cra
On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 4:37 PM, Jorge Biquez wrote:
> Would you do that with Python or something else?
>
http://qt.nokia.com/
--
Adam Vande More
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
On Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 04:37:37PM -0600, Jorge Biquez wrote:
>
> I am helping a non profit organization and giving some classes to
> prepare students so they can be prepared and try to get a job (they
> are students also and have the basics concepts already)
That's admirable. I hope that works
>
> Maybe I am wrong but until now I think my only option is to use Phyton. Is
> that correct? For what I have searched Python will let me create executables
> and will let me create Graphical solutions even for other platforms (Mac or
> LInux or whatever runs Python).
>
I think that python i
Not an expert by any means, but what about Mono, the open source and
cross platform version of the .NET framework?
If you take a look at http://www.mono-project.com/Compatibility , you'll
see that it's mostly compatible with .NET 4.0, and claims to be 100%
compatible with .NET 3.5.
Java is a
On Sat, Nov 27, 2010 at 8:50 PM, Steven Susbauer wrote:
> On 11/27/2010 07:01 PM, RW wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 27 Nov 2010 19:36:09 -0500
>> Chris Brennan wrote:
>>
>> My fbsd desktop is popping up with Software Update. My question is
>>> weather this pulls updates from packages or ports.
>>>
>>
>> T
On 11/27/2010 07:01 PM, RW wrote:
On Sat, 27 Nov 2010 19:36:09 -0500
Chris Brennan wrote:
My fbsd desktop is popping up with Software Update. My question is
weather this pulls updates from packages or ports.
There are a few applications, such as opera, that can "phone home" and
check for new
On Sat, 27 Nov 2010 19:36:09 -0500
Chris Brennan wrote:
> My fbsd desktop is popping up with Software Update. My question is
> weather this pulls updates from packages or ports.
There are a few applications, such as opera, that can "phone home" and
check for newer versions. Typically they can't
On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 06:33:20 +0100, Bruce Cran wrote:
> Most mail servers will block sendmail's connections from a dynamic IP:
> the advantage to ssmtp is that it forwards mail to the ISP's server.
That's sadly true (mostly because of the amounts of spam produced
by ordinary PCs on dynamic IPs).
> From owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org Wed Sep 22 00:32:52 2010
> Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 06:33:20 +0100
> From: Bruce Cran
> To: Adam Vande More
> Cc: Ed Flecko , freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: Software to SEND log files only?
>
> On Tue, 21 Sep 20
On 09/21/2010 10:17 PM, Len Conrad wrote:
> -- Original Message --
> From: Ed Flecko
> Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 12:56:13 -0700
>
>
>> According to the FreeBSD website
>> (http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/outgoing-only.html), the easiest
>> way to send m
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 12:33 AM, Bruce Cran wrote:
> Most mail servers will block sendmail's connections from a dynamic IP:
> the advantage to ssmtp is that it forwards mail to the ISP's server.
>
A small few, not most will do this IME. The larger issue is/was that some
providers blocked port
On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:16:35 -0500
Adam Vande More wrote:
> That's pretty silly article if you ask me, sendmail is setup to that
> by default.
>
> just add something like this to cron:
>
> uuencode /path/to/logfile logfile | mail -s "logfile"
> yourem...@example.com
Most mail servers will bloc
> Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 12:56:13 -0700
> From: Ed Flecko
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Software to SEND log files only?
>
> According to the FreeBSD website
> (http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/outgoing-only.html), the easiest
> way to send mail only is to install the mail/ssmt
-- Original Message --
From: Ed Flecko
Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 12:56:13 -0700
>According to the FreeBSD website
>(http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/outgoing-only.html), the easiest
>way to send mail only is to install the mail/ssmtp port.
>
>Does anyone h
On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 2:56 PM, Ed Flecko wrote:
> According to the FreeBSD website
> (http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/outgoing-only.html), the easiest
> way to send mail only is to install the mail/ssmtp port.
>
> Does anyone have an example of a script or other method (maybe a cron
> scrip
On Saturday 30 January 2010, Danny Edge wrote:
> Thanks, Glen, I should have mentioned that I did see gmirror
> mentioned in the HB. Pending further suggestions, I will try gmirror
> for software RAID 1 (yes, as large as the smallest disk).
It's also possible to mirror individual slices rather th
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 11:18 PM, Glen Barber wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Danny Edge wrote:
> > What works for you and can you suggest a guide? I haven't setup a BSD
> server
> > in 8 years, but my environment will be:
>
> I've been using gmirror for some time, without problems.
>
> http://www.freebsd.org/do
Hi,
Danny Edge wrote:
> What works for you and can you suggest a guide? I haven't setup a BSD server
> in 8 years, but my environment will be:
I've been using gmirror for some time, without problems.
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/geom-mirror.html
>
> FreeBSD 7.2 Re
Been unable to purchase karaoke of rock and roll greats like "AC/DC, THE
ROLLING STONES, THE DOORS, LED ZEPPELIN". Looking for advice on software that
AFAIK nobody yet invented so good voice analyzer that could separate out
music and speech.
But there are programs that ROUGHLY removes speec
On Sat, Apr 25, 2009 at 6:02 PM, Wojciech Puchar
wrote:
>> thinking that a software raid5 solution may not be such a bad idea.
>
> software raid5 isn't any more bad than hardware raid5 most cases.
>
> just raid5 is bad if you use it in ANY type of load except:
>
> a) mostly reads - then set LARGE
thinking that a software raid5 solution may not be such a bad idea.
software raid5 isn't any more bad than hardware raid5 most cases.
just raid5 is bad if you use it in ANY type of load except:
a) mostly reads - then set LARGE RAID stripe size
b) mostly huge files - then set small RAID stripe
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 2:58 PM, Wojciech Puchar <
woj...@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> wrote:
> just another man that wants to get everything not just for free, but not
> even without much knowledge.
>
> learn and MAKE IT YOURSELF, that it will fit exactly to your needs.
>
>
> Or - provide services fo
Hi,
Dnia 15-04-2009 o 13:58:04 Wojciech Puchar
napisał(a):
just another man that wants to get everything not just for free, but not
even without much knowledge.
Hmm... who says I want to get everyting for free (without trying and
learning)? Have you read my post? I did make a note about
ISPCP, sysCP, DTC
GNUPanelhttp://gnupanel.org/
OpenPanel http://www.openpanel.com/
ispCP Omega http://isp-control.net/
RavenCore http://www.ravencore.com/
2009/4/15 Zbigniew Szalbot
> Hello,
>
> Do you know any decent provider-like software which would handle adding new
> domains, ftp a
just another man that wants to get everything not just for free, but not
even without much knowledge.
learn and MAKE IT YOURSELF, that it will fit exactly to your needs.
Or - provide services for 1$/year like there are lots of today. crappy and
all the same - but cheap. Maybe you will earn 10
On Sun, 29 Mar 2009, Barnaby Scott wrote:
Thanks for all the ideas about where to download/install custom apps -
the one that appeals most at this stage is a jail, partly because I have
never played with them, and I think I should progress my learning in
that direction. However I find the other a
--On March 29, 2009 11:03:03 AM -0500 Barnaby Scott
wrote:
Many thanks to all who have helped on this one.
I managed to get wine installed without X and it works :) However my
application doesn't :(
Most of the errors are concerned with MS Visual C++ libraries, which I
have unconfirmed indica
Mel Flynn wrote:
On Saturday 28 March 2009 13:06:44 Robert Huff wrote:
Mel Flynn writes:
> Can I ask one more possibly really dumb question, to which I
> can find no answer: Is there a 'conventional', or sensible
> for one reason oranother, place to download application source to?
Most s
Matt Proud wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have used FreeBSD for a long time very casually but have never explored
> any of its software RAID or volume management features---at least to a
> degree to which I feel comfortable with them. What I would like to know with
> this post is 1.) whether there exists
On Fri, 2008-01-04 at 10:56 -0500, Brian A. Seklecki wrote:
> Google: nagios + seklecki + check_raid_gmirror
>
> Also check out sysutils/smartmontools/
Also, I recently updated the plugin code to r270 with some patches from
Scott Swanson. You can see a small screenshot of it in action here:
ht
Google: nagios + seklecki + check_raid_gmirror
Also check out sysutils/smartmontools/
Cheers!
~BAS (Dealing with a fucked up gmirror raid 1 this morning)
On Fri, 2008-01-04 at 15:32 +, Robin Becker wrote:
> I set this system up using Dru Lavigne's recipe, but I don't really
> understand
-
Frank Bonnet wrote:
> I'm searching for some "good" software that runs with FreeBSD to manage
> a primary DNS server with several domains.
We use Men & Mice at work for the last 2 years to manage our Linux
(BIND9) and MS DNS servers. The product also works with FreeBSD.
See http://www.menandmice.co
webmin is a good bind manager.
roberto
--
Ing. Roberto Pereyra
ContenidosOnline
http://www.contenidosonline.com.ar
Get secure managed email for your own domain with Hushmail Business -
http://www.hushmail.com/business?l=503&a=3211
___
freebsd-questio
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 14:29:40 +0330
"Bahman M." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm starting my career as a security analyst and I'd like to know if
> there are any vulnerability scanners -Blackbox or Whitebox- available for
> FreeBSD, in
> particular for Java applications.
>
> There ar
Bill Campbell wrote:
On Mon, Oct 22, 2007, simon butsana wrote:
I am looking for a software that will read repetitive data from a text file
and send it to a preformated fanfold paper (impact printer). The software
must be customizable as to be told on which area of the paper to print a
given
On Mon, Oct 22, 2007, simon butsana wrote:
>Hi,
>I am looking for a software that will read repetitive data from a text file
>and send it to a preformated fanfold paper (impact printer). The software
>must be customizable as to be told on which area of the paper to print a
>given field from the so
or try audacity.
TFC
On 10/8/07, Eriam Schaffter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Zbigniew Szalbot wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > Sorry for an unusual request - does anyone know of software that is
> > able to split an mp3 file into multiple chunks at specified locations
> > (doesn't have to have gui, a
Zbigniew Szalbot wrote:
Hello,
Sorry for an unusual request - does anyone know of software that is
able to split an mp3 file into multiple chunks at specified locations
(doesn't have to have gui, actually best if it didn't), one that works
under FreeBSD?
I have files with a few songs in them an
Hi,
If you really want non-gui (though, also with gui-support),
audio/mp3splt, as it almost spells, is the exact one for you.
You should have found it by something like:
make seach key='mp3.*split'
in /usr/ports directory.
--
R. Hara
At Mon, 8 Oct 2007 23:18:31 +0200,
Zbigniew Szalbot wro
Hi,
If you really want non-gui (though, also with gui-support),
audio/mp3splt, as it almost spells, is the exact one for you.
You should have found it by something like:
make seach key='mp3.*split'
in /usr/ports directory.
--
R. Hara
At Mon, 8 Oct 2007 23:18:31 +0200,
Zbigniew Szalbot wr
Hi,
If you really want non-gui (though, also with gui-support),
audio/mp3splt, as it almost spells, is the exact one for you.
You should have found it by something like:
make seach key='mp3.*split'
in /usr/ports directory.
--
R. Hara
At Mon, 8 Oct 2007 23:18:31 +0200,
Zbigniew Szalbot wro
Hi,
If you really want non-gui (though, also with gui-support),
audio/mp3splt, as it almost spells, is the exact one for you.
You should have found it by something like:
make seach key='mp3.*split'
in /usr/ports directory.
--
R. Hara
At Mon, 8 Oct 2007 23:18:31 +0200,
Zbigniew Szalbot wr
Hi,
> Sorry for an unusual request - does anyone know of software that is
> able to split an mp3 file into multiple chunks at specified locations
> (doesn't have to have gui, actually best if it didn't), one that works
> under FreeBSD?
Not sure what you call "specified location", is that at certa
2007/10/8, D Hill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I don't know of any non-gui. However, I've been using Audacity
> (/usr/ports/audio/audacity) doing just what you are looking to do. The
> /usr/ports/audio/audacity port is a little dated as the latest stable
> version at http://audacity.sourceforge.net is 1
At 03:49 PM 10/8/2007, Zbigniew Szalbot wrote:
Hello,
Sorry for an unusual request - does anyone know of software that is
able to split an mp3 file into multiple chunks at specified locations
(doesn't have to have gui, actually best if it didn't), one that works
under FreeBSD?
I have files with
On Mon, 8 Oct 2007 at 22:49 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] confabulated:
Hello,
Sorry for an unusual request - does anyone know of software that is
able to split an mp3 file into multiple chunks at specified locations
(doesn't have to have gui, actually best if it didn't), one that works
under FreeBS
On Wed, 26 Sep 2007 12:34:15 -0400
Jerry McAllister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 06:12:56PM +0200, Roland Smith wrote:
>
>
> I know all about various precautions to be taken.
>
> I also know I could write something. I just wanted
> to know if something like that is a
--On Wednesday, September 26, 2007 12:34:15 -0400 Jerry McAllister
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 06:12:56PM +0200, Roland Smith wrote:
I know all about various precautions to be taken.
I also know I could write something. I just wanted
to know if something like that is
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 06:12:56PM +0200, Roland Smith wrote:
I know all about various precautions to be taken.
I also know I could write something. I just wanted
to know if something like that is already written.
jerry
> On Mon, Sep 24, 2007 at 06:33:30PM -0400, Jerry wrote:
> > Hi
On Mon, Sep 24, 2007 at 06:33:30PM -0400, Jerry wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I am wondering if there is already written (in the ports) some utility
> that would either periodically and/or on boot up, take note of if the
> machine is connected to the net and if so, send some information to a
> configured
On 23 Sep 2007, at 19:30, Matthew Seaman wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Roland Smith wrote:
The things that you should encrypt are /home and maybe /var.
and swap. Encrypting the swap is really quite important.
Cheers,
Matthew
Oh you know what?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Roland Smith wrote:
> The things that you should encrypt are /home and maybe /var.
and swap. Encrypting the swap is really quite important.
Cheers,
Matthew
- --
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 7 Priory Courty
On 9/23/07, Roland Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 23, 2007 at 05:59:01PM +0100, Gabriel Dragffy wrote:
> > This sounds good. How exactly did you manage to encrypt discs and then
> > install freebsd there? I can just about setup software raid once freebsd is
> > installed, but by the
On Sun, Sep 23, 2007 at 05:59:01PM +0100, Gabriel Dragffy wrote:
> This sounds good. How exactly did you manage to encrypt discs and then
> install freebsd there? I can just about setup software raid once freebsd is
> installed, but by then I am unable to use a hard drive because it already
> ha
On 22 Sep 2007, at 01:13, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
On 9/21/07, Gabriel Dragffy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all
Hoping to get some help setting up software RAID5. Guides on the
internet seem to be few and far between, and official documentation
is a little too technical. Basically I have 3 x 500
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