Bryan Cassidy wrote:
Sounds good to me but I'm still confused about how I need to set this up hardware wise. The link at freebsddiary sounds good to start with I guess. I don't know if I need any extra hardware either. I have at the moment 2 NICs and 2 crossover cables. Do I need more? Do I keep
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How do I find the different websites and e-mails sent and recieved from my
computer?
One way is to set up your firewall (vis a vis ipfw) to log all incoming
and outgoing connections on ports 25, 80, 110, 143 and/or any others you
want to monitor. It will be
Jeffrey P. Toth wrote:
Thank you for your response Ion-Mihai,
On the router question, no, the router is a separate device, a D-Link
504H but is a loaner while my D-Link 804HV is in the shop. After
changing them out is when I discovered I had problems. Apparently the
DL804 handled whatever the
Travis Troyer wrote:
I have a FreeBSD system that acts as a NAT Gateway, currently
providing on LAN with access to the Internet. I have added a third
NIC, connected to a second LAN. The second LAN does not need internet
access, but I would like it to be able to communicate with the first
Scott I. Remick wrote:
I'm thinking about setting up a FreeBSD-based CMS/intranet and wanted to
know what other people were doing.
I have a tiny bit of experience with PHP-Nuke because my webhost uses it.
Although I have no real complaints about it, I am not wedded to it.
snip
Most promising
Sorry to cross-post this question, but I wanted to make sure my thinking
is on track regarding a FreeBSD box I am going to use for
routing/firewalling.
A wireless project I am working on is getting 2 T1's from Global
Crossing that I want to bring into a Sangoma dual CSU/DSU card (using
their
I have two workstations I use (one at home and one at work) connected
via a private DSL link that each have the directories /home/me. I want
to run a cron job to sync the directories (bi-directionally). Rsync
seems to work only in one direction (I know I could set up the script on
both
Sorry for posting an off-topic question to the list, but this is
somethin that has been driving me nuts for weeks now and I can't figure
it out. I want to pass a text file through sed that replaces all
whitespaces with a carriage return. I.e., if I have the file
my_test_text_document.txt
Bill Campbell wrote:
snip
I would do this with two rsync runs from one machine
cd $directory
rsync -e ssh -vaurP ./ $remote:$directory
rsync -e ssh -vaurP $remote:$directory/ .
Better yet, set up the directories in the rsyncd.conf files on
each machine:
cd $directory
rsync -vaurP ./
-P appears to allow you to show progress graphically with the -v switch
also chosen.
I think his example:
cd $directory
rsync -e ssh -vaurP ./ $remote:$directory
rsync -e ssh -vaurP $remote:$directory/ .
was meant to look like:
cd $directory
rsync -e ssh -vaurP ./ $remote:$directory
rsync -e
Hi all,
I searched the archives and documents on bash, but I can't figure out
how to put the hostname of the workstation I am on before the $ of the
shell/command line. Does anyone know how to add the hostname
(preferably the first part - i.e. www, db1, etc) to the command line for
bash 2.x?
Hi all,
Is there a setting somewhere sets a timeout period for USB inactivity.
Better stated: I have an IOGear USB KVM that I use with the FreeBSD
system I am writing this on (4.9) and every 2 hrs., the KVM stops
functioning and I have to cycle its power. The USB port, however, that
the KVM
Greg,
I have the following cvsup file for my ports-upgrade:
*default host=cvsup15.us.freebsd.org
*default base=/usr
*default prefix=/usr
*default release=cvs tag=.
*default delete use-rel-suffix
*default compress
ports-all
This works like a charm every time. The only differences I see are
Gareth Bailey wrote:
I'm new to email on FreeBSD. Could someone please advise at what MTA i should use. I thought courier might be a good choice since it has integrated POP3 and IMAP servers (bearing in mind i have to serve Outlook clients). I want simple install.
Thank you
Gareth
I think there are better ways per se, but that is usually personal
opinion... That being said, there are a few questions: 1) how big of an
installation are you trying to back up? 2) is it necessary to back up
all of the information? 3) do you have access to a faster drive (this
one may not be
Eric,
I think what you are looking for is drive mirroring (which I think is
known as RAID 1). Although I have never done this myself, the Handbook
seems to give good pointers at:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/raid.html
For more information on mirroring control,
Stephen Liu wrote:
**
Hi all folks,
Version 5.2
new installation
On rebooting it hangs on
.
syncing disks, buffers remaining ... 5 5
done
Uptime: 45m45s
Shutting down ACPI
Rebooting...
Keyboard reset did not work, attempting CPU shutdown.
It hanged here and I have to make a 'hard reboot'
I know this question doesn't relate directly to FreeBSD, but because I
use both sftp and scp on FreeBSD systems constantly, I thought someone
here might know.
If I sftp into a server and get a file, it usually transfers at about
1.2 KBps - regardless of interface, machine speed and connection
Martin Hudec (www.webcom.sk) wrote:
Did you try to burn it using slower speed? This is maybe a long shot..
Cheers,
Martin
Martin actually has a point. I have had problems with the FreeBSD 5.1.2
ISO's - which made me think that for some reason the ISO's I was
downloading were corrupted
I have a Sony FileVault USB 2.0 Flash Drive that I use to store working
documents on (I don't use the security portion of the drive - if anyone
has had one themselves - I was simply able to get it for a steal) that I
cannot get working under 4.9 on an HP D530 machine (2.5 GHz P IV w/
Eric (and list),
I finally got it working this morning under the following conditions:
Fresh install of FreeBSD 4.9 from the mini-ISO cd.
Install X from the sysinstall via FTP
Install Gnome from the sysinstall via FTP
cd /usr/ports/distfiles (as root)
make sure openoffice-1.1.0_1.tgz is in the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Anyone have any experience installing FreeBSD on a Dell PowerEdge server?
2500 or any other? I'm looking at having to do so and, having not done it
before, I'm just wondering if there are any gotchas I should be aware of
or if I have to use their OpenManage CDs or
Eric,
Have you considered installing the pre-compiled packages? If you aren't
aware, they are available at:
http://projects.imp.ch/openoffice/
I have installed the 1.1 version on both fbsd 4.9 and 5.2.1 - they work
fine for me although I haven't done extensive work with oo on either sys.
HtH,
The network settings are usually in the rc.conf file in /etc/. For
DHCP, you should have the line
ifconfig_interface=DHCP
where *interface* is the given nic you are using - in other words, it is
*not* the word interface.
If you are trying to set a static IP addy and gateway, then your rc.conf
I originally had problems with that error, too. I ran 'pkg_add -r
openoffice-1.1' making sure that the openoffice-1.10_1.tgz was in the
/usr/ports/distfiles directory. I can't remember having any issues
after that. (Oh, I also made sure that /usr/ports/java/jdk14 was
installed before going
Eric F Crist wrote:
On Sunday 15 February 2004 10:51 pm, Steven N. Fettig wrote:
I originally had problems with that error, too. I ran 'pkg_add -r
openoffice-1.1' making sure that the openoffice-1.10_1.tgz was in the
/usr/ports/distfiles directory. I can't remember having any issues
after
26 matches
Mail list logo