On Fri, Aug 28, 2009 at 8:51 AM, Evgeny Yurchenko<evg.yu...@rogers.com> wrote: >> >> Bill Marquette wrote:On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 7:53 PM, Evgeny >> Yurchenko<evg.yu...@rogers.com> wrote: >> >>> >>> On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 7:53 PM, Evgeny Yurchenko<evg.yu...@rogers.com> >>> wrote: >>> What do you use to develop pfSense? which editor? debugger? >>> >> >> Alternately <your favorite editor> and sshfs via FUSE is a great way >> to edit it live on your test machine. > > This is new to me. Will see. >> >> I might use TextMate or NetBeans on my Mac. > > I see you guys use Macs intensively but how it works? I think you do not > edit on mac then scp to your test box because: >> >> edit local, scp over - but that's usually too much of a pain and I >> always end up forgetting whether I synced the change over and get >> sidetracking debugging something that I fixed. >> > > So, you have your pfSenese dev box, your Mac and ??? how? > Sorry for all these silly questions but just can't get comfortable within my > dev box... > And thanks for hints...
Speaking personally..I use MacFusion (ssfs via FUSE with a gui wrapper) to mount the filesystem via ssh. Then I point my local editor at the locally mounted filesystem. This workflow should work fine on Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, or anything else that supports sshfs/fuse. Some editors also have a concept of a remote project (I believe NetBeans and Eclipse can handle syncing via sftp - although I've never used that feature). --Bill --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: support-unsubscr...@pfsense.com For additional commands, e-mail: support-h...@pfsense.com Commercial support available - https://portal.pfsense.org