Hello !
It would be desirable to learn from experienced users OS - why FreeBSD does
not concern the category serious systems at the overwhelming majority of
manufacturers of hardware. More recently there were times when anybody from
manufacturers did not notice Linux. However now it is possible to
manufacturers of hardware. More recently there were times when anybody from
because managers/bosses concentrate on majority, not minority of users.
manufacturers did not notice Linux. However now it is possible to find a few
given out put normal OS - their list is at us on a site and then
I am having issues configuring and using my external floppy drive on
FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE. It's a parallel port floppy drive. /dev/fd0 is not
present and dmesg shows
fdc0: floppy drive controller (FDE) port 0x3f2-0x3f5,0x3f7 irq 6 drq 2 on
acpi0
fdc0: [FILTER]
when using dmesg | grep fd
Hello list,
I have a situation where I am connecting two sites using mpd. mpd5 is
running at site A on server mode while mpd5 is also running on site B but on
initiator mode. Site B establishes a connection to site B to complete the
tunnel. This works so far, and users on the LAN on site B are
As it has been mentioned before, it's questionable if there is
any support for parallel floppy disk drives in FreeBSD. But there
is support for USB driven external floppies, this is done via
the ufd driver.
On Sun, 07 Dec 2008 02:32:36 -0500, Cynical Nihilist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
On this dedicated box here I made the mistake of adding a comment to
root's entry in my password file:
root:*:0:0::/root:/bin/sh # What I thought would be a harmless comment.
Now I can't su to root. And my ISP is closed on Sundays. Is there any
way I can fix this on my own?
Thanks y'all!
--
On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 12:04 PM, Redd Vinylene [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
On this dedicated box here I made the mistake of adding a comment to
root's entry in my password file:
root:*:0:0::/root:/bin/sh # What I thought would be a harmless comment.
Now I can't su to root. And my ISP is closed
Thanks guys. But I guess I'm all outta luck:
$ sudo -s
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1: Shared object libutil.so.5 not found, required by sudo
On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 11:07 AM, Glen Barber [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 5:04 AM, Redd Vinylene [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On this dedicated box
Redd Vinylene wrote:
Thanks guys. But I guess I'm all outta luck:
$ sudo -s
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1: Shared object libutil.so.5 not found, required by
sudo
[snip]
Don't know if this would help but you might try creating a file called
libmap.conf in /etc and place in it:
libutil.so.5
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 06:02:26AM -0500, Michael Powell typed:
Redd Vinylene wrote:
Thanks guys. But I guess I'm all outta luck:
$ sudo -s
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1: Shared object libutil.so.5 not found, required by
sudo
[snip]
Don't know if this would help but you might try
Ruben de Groot wrote:
[snip]
This advise is only helpful if you have root allready =)
I've never figured out why people seem to always want to play with the
root account the way they do, such as the favorite I wanna use bash
for root's shell...
Since the OP seems to want to keep playing with
On Sun, December 7, 2008 11:04, Redd Vinylene wrote:
On this dedicated box here I made the mistake of adding a comment to
root's entry in my password file:
root:*:0:0::/root:/bin/sh # What I thought would be a harmless comment.
Now I can't su to root. And my ISP is closed on Sundays. Is
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 12:08:12PM +0100, Federico Cicciarella wrote:
My Machine i: ASUS P5N-E, Celeron D 440, 1 slot PCI 10\100 Realtek
Configure Kenrel:
machinei386
cpu I686_CPU
ident ArrakisKernel
makeoptions DEBUG=-g# Build
On Saturday 06 December 2008 22:19:32 matt donovan wrote:
On Sat, Dec 6, 2008 at 3:10 AM, Warren Liddell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You can find many packages for several releases under
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/i386
___
Yeah
On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 5:04 AM, Redd Vinylene [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On this dedicated box here I made the mistake of adding a comment to
root's entry in my password file:
root:*:0:0::/root:/bin/sh # What I thought would be a harmless comment.
This is why you shouldn't edit password files
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 08:02:33AM +0100, Federico Cicciarella wrote:
linking kernel.debug
if.o(.text+0x1027): In function `if_setlladdr':
/usr/src/sys/net/if.c:2646: undefined reference to `arp_ifinit'
igmp.o(.text+0x45): In function `igmp_sendpkt':
/usr/src/sys/netinet/igmp.c:472:
On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 09:40:46 +0100 (CET)
Wojciech Puchar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
manufacturers of hardware. More recently there were times when
anybody from
because managers/bosses concentrate on majority, not minority of users.
That is plain good business sense. As Willy Sutton once remarked
I may be missing something here but Qt 4.5 has not been released yet. It
has
not even reached beta yet (and there are still lots of regression with
regards to KDE but the regressions should be fixed by the beta).
Qt 4.4.2 is in area51, you can use the following command to get a working copy
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 11:04:00AM +0100, Redd Vinylene wrote:
On this dedicated box here I made the mistake of adding a comment to
root's entry in my password file:
root:*:0:0::/root:/bin/sh # What I thought would be a harmless comment.
Now I can't su to root. And my ISP is closed on
Im trying to run last ports version of eclipse in
FreeBSD 7.1-PRERELEASE-p1 #0: Mon Nov 24 11:49:24 UTC 2008
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
It starts and ask for env place, i select /usr/home/myaccount then
start loading all the modules, and when getting to the last step
crashes
Hi All,
What mechanism should I use for making my netwrok driver call a
function every half a second, for instnace?
I am already using task queues but I haven't found a way to make it
work with a timer.
Thanks
Yony
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 17:56:47 +0200, Yony Yossef [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi All,
What mechanism should I use for making my netwrok driver call a
function every half a second, for instnace?
I am already using task queues but I haven't found a way to make it
work with a timer.
callout_xxx()
NVidia, for one, has expressed
a desire to support FreeBSD; however, it needs the FreeBSD organization
to improve its basic product, especially in the 64-bit systems, which
are the future of computing.
Does anyone know of any recent progress on a 64bit Nvidia Driver?
there is mention of
versions. The packages for a particular branch tend to lag the updates by up
to a couple of weeks although they are built continually. If you want to stay
really up to date you need to keep your tree updated with portsnap or csup
(part of the base system) and compile them yourself. Another
Does anyone know of any recent progress on a 64bit Nvidia Driver?
there is mention of progress on this page
http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=41545page=24
most freebsd users don't need 3D at all, or don't need super-high-speed
3D.
so simply don't use nvidia/ati
If so, force it to reboot - maybe by pulling the plug if you have to
then bring it up in single user mode.
CTRL-ALT-DEL shutdowns the system unless it was configured not to.
Remount root mount -u /
Then use vipw to edit the file and remove that comment and any trailing
blanks on that
If only 3D or super-high-speed has been affected by this driver. Regrettably
most application simple is not usable, like video-players, google-earth,
KDE4 - all of that on my desktop station with 4Gb of RAM is looksworks
like nightmare in vesa (xorg nv)-driver. And me too a very long time
On 12/7/08, Ole Vole [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If only 3D or super-high-speed has been affected by this driver.
Regrettably
most application simple is not usable, like video-players, google-earth,
KDE4 - all of that on my desktop station with 4Gb of RAM is
looksworks
like nightmare in
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 08:29:32AM -0500, Jerry wrote:
IMHO, before FreeBSD can make a significant market share improvement,
it has to improve its hardware support. NVidia, for one, has expressed
a desire to support FreeBSD; however, it needs the FreeBSD organization
to improve its basic
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 07:18:08PM +0100, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
most freebsd users don't need 3D at all, or don't need super-high-speed
3D.
Who is most freebsd users? I agree that there are more important
things to worry about than nvidia/amd64 support, but: if you want to buy
a computer
On Sun, Dec 07, 2008 at 07:18:08PM +0100, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
Does anyone know of any recent progress on a 64bit Nvidia Driver?
there is mention of progress on this page
http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=41545page=24
most freebsd users don't need 3D at all, or don't need
Vinny wrote:
Hello Everyone,
I've been reading up on geli and decided I wanted to
use data authentication. This involves the -a switch
on the geli init command. Here's what I've found:
= No authentication (the disk size is correct @ 152G):
the/root{143}~# geli init da1
Enter new
On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 20:35:17 +0100
Uwe Laverenz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Who is most freebsd users?
i would think most are interested in running servers or routers or
possible scientific applications or engaged in os study and appreciate
its simplicity and consistency.
i don't think it can
Paul B. Mahol writes:
Simple solution:
Pay them or someone to do it for you, or hack it yourself, or
wait for it little longer.
Given nVidia has offered to write and maintain a driver ... if
we're going this route, the correct solution is to pay someone to
make the changes nVidia
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Michael Powell wrote:
I've never figured out why people seem to always want to play with the
root account the way they do, such as the favorite I wanna use bash
for root's shell...
Probably because most users are unaware of the harm that it
Chad Perrin wrote:
On Fri, Dec 05, 2008 at 12:20:49PM +0100, Ivan Voras wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I don't even know if this has been done before, nor do I know for sure
if it's a sound comparison. Never the less, someone posted, in response
to someone else here just a few days
Hello to you all,
I have a question about sharing a directory over my subnet. I have
users downloading up to 3-4 G per session and obviously speed is
crucial. I am thinking of going with UDP (accuracy is not an issue
here). What is the best way to go about this? Is NFS the right pick?
If
Win2003 R2 NTFSRAID10-15 87 25 113 6425
11990
Ubuntu Server 7.10 ext3RAID10-15 129 60 167 36114
72562
Ubuntu Server 7.10 JFS RAID10-15 131 64 167 6638
4855
Ubuntu Server 7.10 Reiser3
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
Win2003 R2NTFSRAID10-158725113642511990
Ubuntu Server 7.10ext3RAID10-1512960167
3611472562
Ubuntu Server 7.10JFSRAID10-15131641676638
4855
Ubuntu Server 7.10Reiser3RAID10-15
Hi,
I recently installed FreeBSD 7.1-Beta2 on my IBM thinkpad X40. Everything
works fine while the system is connected to the dock, but when I boot with
the dock disconnected the system hangs. With verbose logging enabled it
appears to hang at either acpi_cmbat or acpi_acad (they appear to run
ZFS was very good, but not so much when compared to Linux file systems,
ZFS in your benchmart is similar to UFS.
Look at the read speed.
it's faster on that benchmark. but i think low MAXPHYS may be a problem.
i changed it to 1MB everywhere.
___
Wojciech Puchar schrieb:
it's faster on that benchmark. but i think low MAXPHYS may be a problem.
i changed it to 1MB everywhere.
I've found that increasing vfs.read_max increases read performance quite
a bit in bonnie++ benchmarks.
sysctl vfs.read_max=32
Uwe
Hi list.
Someone know if the driver iwn will be included officially in FreeBSD 7.1 ?
--
Linux is for people who hate Windows, BSD is for people who love UNIX.
Social Engineer - Because there is no patch for human stupidity
The Unix Guru's View of Sex unzip ; strip ; touch ; grep ; finger ;
Hello everyone.
I need help with documentation concerning how to send a udp or tcp
packet from a kernel module. I have found this information for Linux but
not for FreeBSD.
Please help me.
Thank you :)
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 6:30 PM, Ferner Cilloniz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone.
I need help with documentation concerning how to send a udp or tcp
packet from a kernel module. I have found this information for Linux but
not for FreeBSD.
Please help me.
Thank you :)
I think that
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