On Friday 24 October 2008 23:59, Jos Chrispijn wrote:
[Jeremy Chadwick said]
You're trying to solve a social (possibly personal?) problem with
technology. Simply put, this is a bad idea.
Yep, I think that is .true.
I would highly recommend you either talk to the idiot and explain to
On Sunday 02 November 2008 03:21:55 David Allen wrote:
My apologies for asking on this list, but I'm stuck without Perl and need
to use awk to generate a report.
I'm working with a large data set spread across multiple files, but to
keep things simple, say I have A Very Long String that
On Monday 03 November 2008 08:38:07 joeb wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
FBSD1 wrote:
What port names need to be installed to create a XFCE4 desktop
environment?
I was looking for a mega port like kde3 has but could not identify one.
Thanks in advance.
I'm going
On Monday 03 November 2008 16:17:20 Bob McConnell wrote:
[Jonathan to joeb via freebsd-questions]
I don't know whether it's you or your email client, but your quoting
is hideously broken. Please fix it.
It's his email client. Microsoft Lookout will no longer do standard
quoting and forces
On Friday 07 November 2008 21:19, Polytropon wrote:
On Fri, 07 Nov 2008 13:36:51 +0100, Laszlo Nagy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
A batch solution is simple:
#!/bin/sh
for f in *eps; do
convert ${f} `basename ${f} .eps`.jpg
done
You can also save yourself
On Saturday 08 November 2008 13:55, Jerry wrote:
On Fri, 7 Nov 2008 16:28:00 -0700
Chad Perrin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
. . . or, as someone else pointed out, one could just learn to scroll
to the end before typing. It's not that difficult -- even in Outlook.
CTRLEND works like a charm
On Sunday 09 November 2008 00:02:11 Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On Sat, 8 Nov 2008 19:43:52 +0100, bsd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a file containing a list of items like that:
line1item1 line1item2 line1item3
line2item1 line2item2 line2item3
…400 times
I need to insert this into
I've been biting my tongue about this because I'm not sure that I can offer
any help or useful suggestions, but here goes...
What on earth is going on with release scheduling?
FreeBSD 7.1-RELEASE, according to the scheduling page at www.freebsd.org,
should have had a Release Candidate
On Wednesday 12 November 2008 14:01:47 Roland Smith wrote:
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 12:59:24PM +0200, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
I've been biting my tongue about this because I'm not sure that I can
offer any help or useful suggestions, but here goes...
What on earth is going on with release
On Friday 14 November 2008 14:32, O. Hartmann wrote:
Hello,
I have a OT question and maybe some of the FreeBSD server admins here
can help me out.
[snip]
Having nss_ldap and pam_ldap installed on every single FreeBSD
server/box which is capable of being accessed I found in etc/ldap.conf
the
On Friday 14 November 2008 19:36, Martin McCormick wrote:
I inherited a mrtg application thatnow is running on a
FreeBSD6.3 system. Clients report that one can see the php pages
when using Internet Explorer but not other browsers that should
display the pages. Those customers see raw
On Friday 21 November 2008 12:49:16 pwn wrote:
algouth this is not a freebsd specific text, i need to format some texts
under freebsd for they appear in the center of the page when opened in a
browser, but i dont want to use HTML for format them, i just want to add
tabulation to my *.txt.
On Thursday 27 November 2008 15:46:58 Dominik Meister wrote:
Hi
Gian Paolo Buono [Thu, Nov 27, 2008 at 02:05:44PM +0100]:
there is a method in freebsd for restart process whenever it terminates
? I use in linux respawn in inittab...
One possibility that comes to mind is using daemontools
On Friday 12 December 2008 19:26, Sean Cavanaugh wrote:
--
From: Joe S js.li...@gmail.com
Sent: Friday, December 12, 2008 12:20 PM
To: Roland Smith rsm...@xs4all.nl
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org; Jonathan McKeown
jonathan+freebsd-questi
On Monday 22 December 2008 00:27:44 Gary Kline wrote:
anyway, this is one for giiorgos, or another perl wiz. i've
been using the perl subsitution cmd one-liner for years with
unfailing success. is there a way of deleting lines with perl
using the same idea as:
On Friday 16 January 2009 12:48:38 O. Hartmann wrote:
Hello,
I have the following situation:
Users are stored in OpenLDAP. I need to create homes directories on new
machine memebers in the pool of workstations and do not want the usage
of an automated creation of loggin in user via
On Monday 26 January 2009 17:02:05 n j wrote:
Linus Torvalds on KDE4...
[quote]
A: I used to be a KDE user. I thought KDE 4.0 was such a disaster I
switched to GNOME. I hate the fact that my right button doesn't do
what I want it to do. But the whole break everything model is
painful for
On Monday 26 January 2009 09:17:05 Andrew Robinson wrote:
Message: 2
Date: Sun, 25 Jan 2009 20:20:51 -0500
From: Chuck Robey chu...@telenix.org
Subject: Re: can i split a pdf file?
To: FreeBSD Mailing List freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Message-ID: 497d0ff3.6090...@telenix.org
On Friday 06 February 2009 02:55, Chris Whitehouse wrote:
I think you should be able to do it with a combination of -prune and
-delete (or -exec rm -rf {} \; ) on a find command. Substitute your
other commands for rm -rf in the -exec above.
I would give you a working example except I can't
On Wednesday 11 February 2009 12:47:17 Ian Smith wrote:
I'm getting nowhere trying to parse out IP addresses from strings of
this form in /bin/sh, which have been awk'd out of 'tail named.run':
addr='195.68.176.4#1440:'
addr='195.68.176.4#16811:'
addr='195.68.176.4#276:'
sh(1) in hand,
On Thursday 12 February 2009 03:07:42 Paul Schmehl wrote:
Sorry if I wasn't clear.
I wasn't suggesting that the *users* chgrp the files. Keith would do that
as root. Then he sets the setgid bit to www (or whatever the web user is),
and from that point going forward any files created by the
On Thursday 12 February 2009 19:15:21 Paul Schmehl wrote:
If you set the world readable bit, you break the entire schema. To make it
work, world must have no access - not even directory search access. So you
set u=rwx,g=srx,o-rwx (or 2750), for homedirs and u=rw,g=sr,o-rwx (or 2640)
for
On Tuesday 07 April 2009 23:35:03 Bob Johnson wrote:
On 4/4/09, Chris Whitehouse cwhi...@onetel.com wrote:
Hi all
[...]
My suggestion is to start with a ports tree that is fixed in time. Make
that ports tree available as part of this package system and compile a
typical desktop set of
On Wednesday 08 April 2009 21:24:00 Bob Johnson wrote:
PC-BSD seems to already keep up-to-date binary packages of their
applications. Do they accomplish that by only offering a small subset
of the full ports collection?
Yes - have a look at http://www.pbidir.com/. I installed PC-BSD on a spare
On Tuesday 14 April 2009 21:02:08 Mel Flynn wrote:
On Monday 13 April 2009 03:56:15 Tim Judd wrote:
make all-depends-list
Two things:
1) It surpresses config target and if a port has OPTIONS set, then you may
get surprised once you've configured the port and ticked/unticked an option
I'm
On Wednesday 15 April 2009 03:58:08 Ruel Luchavez wrote:
Hi..
I know someoene here can help fix my biggest problem so far.
I can't log-in any more in my FreebSD box
the serverver always complain
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1:shared object lib.so.7 not found, required by sh
Enter full pathname of
On Thursday 16 April 2009 12:27:04 Mel Flynn wrote:
But yes, all-depends-list is exactly that, with the provision
that it does not take changed OPTIONS into account.
That's what I suspected you were saying yesterday, and it seems to be wrong.
Try this (assuming you haven't already
On Sunday 17 January 2010 10:24:43 Matthew Seaman wrote:
Ion-Mihai Tetcu wrote:
I'd be very happy if I could:
- fetch the distfiles, even if I have a conflicting port installed
- be able to use portmaster -o to switch from one port to an other one
that conflicts with it.
- be able to
On Monday 18 January 2010 17:48:37 b. f. wrote:
Argh! Stop! I wish that people who felt the need to add to this
thread would read the prior posts beforehand, and consider their
comments before posting.
I don't know why you assume people didn't. I read the whole thread. I saw
people who had
On Thursday 04 March 2010 19:13:36 Matthew Seaman wrote:
You got bitten by an ill-considered change introduced after the UPDATING
instructions were written. To work around it, you need to set
DISABLE_CONFLICTS when rebuilding the port, eg like this:
# portupgrade -m DISABLE_CONFLICTS=yes
On Friday 05 March 2010 16:20:36 Aaron Lewis wrote:
Hi,
I installed some software from ports today , and it outputs some
useful information when finished.
e.g where its config file is
Due to some mistakes , i lost these important information , how do i
see it again ? Is there any
On Saturday 06 March 2010 15:02:20 Martin McCormick wrote:
Fbsd1 writes:
just dd the image to what ever drive you want
That is the goal. The challenge is to launch a script
that detects when the boot device has been unmounted as dd will
not work on an active file system.
Martin
it
On Tuesday 30 March 2010 09:31:00 Matthew Seaman wrote:
On 30/03/2010 03:01:27, Tim Judd wrote:
I've never heard of either, but when I configure my IMAP server and
put any mail client to it, as soon as a mail is delivered, the mail
client is notified.
That's the IDLE extension to IMAPv4
On Wednesday 07 April 2010 11:13:13 Fbsd1 wrote:
Polytropon wrote:
On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 15:24:51 +0800, Fbsd1 fb...@a1poweruser.com wrote:
Why are there RELEASE base files in /usr/bin. I thought /usr was to only
contain binaries installed from ports or packages.
No. The /usr/local
On Wednesday 07 April 2010 13:34:07 Jerry wrote:
I noticed that someone in another thread mentioned:
quote
(2010-03-22) added option to install Postfix into the base
/quote
I have not been able to locate that item. Could someone list the URL
for that notice or tell me where to look for it?
On Wednesday 11 May 2011 04:19:29 Devin Teske wrote:
The reason that the suid bit doesn't work on scripts (shell, perl, or
otherwise) is because these are essentially text files that are interpreted
by their associated interpreter. It is the interpreter itself that must be
suid.
I'm pretty
On Thursday 12 May 2011 16:13:50 Chris Telting wrote:
On 05/11/2011 07:14, Jerry McAllister wrote:
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 05:54:04PM -0700, Chris Telting wrote:
I've googled for over an hour.
I'm not looking to get into a discussion on security or previous bugs
that are currently
On Thursday 12 May 2011 17:26:49 Chris Telting wrote:
On 05/12/2011 07:57, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
I'll say that again. It is inherently insecure to run an interpreted
program set-uid, because the filename is opened twice and there's no
guarantee that someone hasn't changed the contents
On Tuesday 16 August 2011 12:13:24 Amanda Lynn wrote:
Hi!
[snip]
Regards,
Amanda Lynn
+(360) 488-0303
Google the phone number. This has cropped up here before iirc - I'm not sure
exactly what the scam is, but scam it is.
Jonathan
___
On Friday 01 May 2009 22:43:51 Jerry McAllister wrote:
On Fri, May 01, 2009 at 12:07:22PM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
Let's say we have a system that is backed up regularly and it
vanishes in a puff of smoke one day. One can get FreeBSD
installed on a new drive in maybe half an hour or
On Monday 04 May 2009 15:59:14 Jerry McAllister wrote:
On Mon, May 04, 2009 at 10:31:16AM +0200, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
If you have kept the right information beforehand, you can actually
restore your dumps onto ``bare metal'' without doing a partial install
first, and with the same newfs
On Monday 11 May 2009 21:38:50 Saifi Khan wrote:
Hi all:
The system has just one SATA disk and yet bootloader process
identified it as 'ad4'. Ideally, it should be ad1.
[snip]
How does the labelling logic work ?
FreeBSD reserves numbers for devices that aren't currently connected, so that
On Thursday 28 May 2009 22:52:47 Jerry wrote:
Did you ever bother to consider that if the printer manufacturers
actually formed a consensus on a printer language, some third world
county or the EU would probably sue them. Nothing I have seen in 20
years equals the audacity of the EU. As long
[Sorry for the excessive quoting - I couldn't decide which bits to take out]
On Friday 29 May 2009 12:48:00 Jerry wrote:
On Fri, 29 May 2009 09:34:36 +0200
Jonathan McKeown j.mcke...@ru.ac.za wrote:
On Thursday 28 May 2009 22:52:47 Jerry wrote:
Did you ever bother to consider
On Thursday 04 June 2009 15:46:11 John . wrote:
Hello list,
Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/install-advanced.html ?
(the machine has no floppy drive (yet)
It's possible -
Hi Martin
On Thursday 04 June 2009 16:23:29 Martin McCormick wrote:
I have been asked to enable the following kernel option:
SetUID/SetGID - Allow directories to inherit their owner from the
parent directory.
The generic kernel under FreeBSD6.3 is what we presently use on
the
On Thursday 04 June 2009 17:28:56 Tim Judd wrote:
On 6/4/09, Wojciech Puchar woj...@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl wrote:
Hello list,
Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
make your own CD
add file boot.config containing
On Saturday 06 June 2009 05:43:15 Charlie Kester wrote:
On Fri 05 Jun 2009 at 15:06:40 PDT Paul Chvostek wrote:
If you elect to filter this person's traffic, and are concerned that
you'll continue to be inundated with replies, I'd like to suggest a
small procmail script I wrote years ago.
On Monday 08 June 2009 17:37:14 Jerry McAllister wrote:
On Mon, Jun 08, 2009 at 06:31:57PM +0400, Peter Andreev wrote:
may be this solution will help you:
[snip]
* * 31 1/2 *
* * 30 4/2 *
* * 28 2 *
This isn't right, surely? It goes wrong in August and stays wrong for the rest
of the
On Wednesday 10 June 2009 21:06:06 Karl Vogel wrote:
Create 256 folders named 00-ff:
#!/bin/sh
hex='0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f'
for x in $hex ; do
for y in $hex ; do
mkdir ${x}${y}
done
done
exit 0
Or use
On Friday 12 June 2009 12:54:19 Polytropon wrote:
On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 04:45:59 +0200, Bernt Hansson be...@bah.homeip.net
wrote:
Mel Flynn said the following on 2009-06-12 01:23:
FreeBSD 7.2-STABLE #0: Thu Jun 11 21:56:24 CEST 2009
r...@fqdn:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
On Tuesday 23 June 2009 15:41:48 Manish Jain wrote:
I hope the next release will address these problems, as well as a pretty
reasonable request from me much earlier to move vi from /usr/bin to
/bin. Even in single-user mode, you almost always need an editor.
Which is why you have ed(1) - both
On Wednesday 24 June 2009 12:59:13 Manish Jain wrote:
About ed first. I might annoy a few people (which would gladden me in
this particular case), but ed was just one of Ken Thompson's nightmares
which he managed to reproduce in Unix with great precision. By no
stretch of imagination would it
This whole thread only really got started because I questioned Manish Jain's
assertion that there was no editor available in /bin.
To summarise:
There are several editors available ranging from ed (49604 bytes) and ee
(60920 bytes) (both with two library dependencies) to emacs (in ports;
On Thursday 02 July 2009 07:21:25 Polytropon wrote:
On Wed, 1 Jul 2009 18:58:15 -0400, Daniel Underwood djuatde...@gmail.com
wrote:
QUESTION: Of the various modern Linux distributions, which do you
prefer? and why?
Actually, I'm not a Linux user. But Linux was my first step into
using
On Friday 10 July 2009 16:10:24 RS Wood wrote:
I run a small engineering company* that exchanges large files (CAD,
etc.) with clients, and I want to keep the docs off my email server by
setting up a stand alone FTP server where each client can upload and
download its relevant files. As such,
On Wednesday 15 July 2009 12:45:02 Matthew Seaman wrote:
I used to be a NeXTie, and the Screensaver.app there had a really nifty
little feature. I'm surprised it's not been copied into other screensaver
applications since, as it's pretty simple. They just had a facility where
moving the
On Thursday 30 July 2009 23:14:39 PJ wrote:
But isn't it strange that it used to be pretty simple to upgrade and
update. But recently, I notice that communication between the developers
and users (or is it the manual page writers) are getting far away from
the realities of user/operational
On Wednesday 05 August 2009 15:14:49 David Southwell wrote:
Hi every one
My understanding is that one uses the amd64 for building a kernel for
systems with Intel Quad Core processors.
It is helpful when naming conventions follow a logical strand. I mean why
does freebsd use a single
On Wednesday 05 August 2009 15:49:38 PJ wrote:
Polytropon wrote:
On Mon, 03 Aug 2009 10:58:58 -0400, PJ af.gour...@videotron.ca wrote:
Could somone explain to me why an upgrade from sysinstall would
overwrite partitions; especially when the instructions indicate that
files will not be
On Thursday 06 August 2009 09:43:47 Mark Stapper wrote:
In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a Ubuntu like movement
in the FreeBSD corner.
What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
FreeBSD.
[snip]
To achieve this, there are two things that should be made
On Monday 03 October 2011 14:05:42 Anton Shterenlikht wrote:
I tried sorting a file with a column of floating
point numbers (below) with sort(1) -n. However,
the numbers seem to have been sorted by the first
digit only.
sort -g
Due to the GNU project's obsession with info
On Wednesday 20 June 2012 12:59:51 Stephen Cook wrote:
On 6/19/2012 4:06 PM, Anonymous Remailer (austria) wrote:
[snip childish invective]
I'm a relative newcomer. Are the FreeBSD mailing lists always this
flame-y? I realize that this particular post might be trolling / satire
No, they
On Friday 22 June 2012 07:04:35 Bernt Hansson wrote:
I want to whish all a very mery Midsummer's Eve and Midsummer's Day
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midsummer#Sweden
I appreciate the sentiment but it's midwinter here ;)
Jonathan
___
On Wednesday 22 August 2012 15:41:05 David Jackson wrote:
So this is clearly not about portability, FreeBSD is free to implement
these software interfaces to assure that software is portable to FreeBSD.
Really? You make software portable by writing it to one environment and then
changing every
On Saturday 05 August 2006 19:16, cpghost wrote:
How do I get portmanager to upgrade ports, using
1. pre-built packages from /usr/ports/packages (ONLY),
and only if there's no binary package there,
2. build from source as usual?
Additional limit (preventing use of portupgrade -P) is
On Saturday 26 August 2006 22:15, stan wrote:
I'm in the process of seting up to build a fair number of machines behind a
very restrictive firewall (and besides that the outbound link is very
slow).
What I have in mind is setting up a machine using mirror software to create
a local mirror of
On Wednesday 30 August 2006 09:40, Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote:
Hey all,
Are there any supported formats for INCLUDES in /etc/rc.conf such that I
can drop default configs into /etc/rc.conf and then have files in a
certain directory (ala includerc) override them? Basically, I'd like to
I'm setting up a remote server with two identical hard drives, running
FreeBSD-6.1. I want to set the drives up as a mirror for data redundancy. I
also want to be able to break the mirror when I need to update the OS or
installed software, so that if anything goes wrong with the update on one
On Monday 04 September 2006 08:25, Dave wrote:
Hello,
I have a machine that i want to upgrade from 5.x to 6.1. I've got a 6.1
world built on a much faster system and would like to just install it on
this machine. I thought about nfs, but i have to drop to single user mode
to do the make
On Monday 11 September 2006 15:56, Jud wrote:
everyone who uses FreeBSD knows that a better (meaning,
at least to many folks, more simplified and graphical)
installer would be nice
Perhaps as an option. The problem is that you need to install a graphical
environment to run a graphical
On Tuesday 12 September 2006 15:05, Jeff Rollin wrote:
That was my point, that BSD was rewritten from the ground up to avoid ATT
patents. So whilst some might consider BSD real unix, it's really only
emulating V7 with Berkeley extensions.
My understanding was that it was copyright rather than
I'm using my laptop and tip(1) as a serial terminal. This is working well when
a machine is booted with the laptop connected to its serial port. However, I
need to be able to connect the laptop to a machine which was booted without a
serial console.
I've set the ttyd0 line in /etc/ttys and
On Thursday 14 September 2006 01:21, Kevin Brunelle wrote:
As for the GNU tools, yes most sysadmins use some of them (although not
always). I know that BSD tar handles gzip and bzip2 just fine ( -z and -j
respectively). So I know I wouldn't download gtar just for that feature.
In fact, as I
On Thursday 14 September 2006 08:40, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC wrote:
On Sep 14, 2006, at 12:29 AM, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
In fact, as I discovered a few days ago (after all, how often does
one read tar(1)'s manpage?), you only need to use -z and -j when
creating a tar archive. bsdtar
On Wednesday 13 September 2006 14:59, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
I'm using my laptop and tip(1) as a serial terminal. This is working well
when a machine is booted with the laptop connected to its serial port.
However, I need to be able to connect the laptop to a machine which was
booted without
On Saturday 30 September 2006 13:58, Luchezar Petkov wrote:
I really need your help. I've just brought my first USB IrDA
adapter to conncect my phone (Sony Ericsson K300i) to my computer.
It is recognized by FreeBSD (6.2 beta 1) ::
ugen0: Prolific Technology Inc. USB-Serial Controller, rev
On Wednesday 04 October 2006 23:46, Noah wrote:
Hi there,
I am unable to find the dhcpd port in /usr/ports
where should I be looking?
# find /usr/ports -name dhcp\*
I find the easiest way to search for ports is
# cd /usr/ports
# make search name=dhcp | grep -A2 '^Port:'
This finds every
I recently bought a drive caddy for an ATA hard drive. The unit is in two
parts: a cassette, into which can be fitted a standard ATA hard drive, and a
carrier permanently fitted into a standard drive bay. The carrier includes a
power keyswitch for the drive bay.
I installed it, brought the box
On Thursday 05 October 2006 10:38, Olivier Nicole wrote:
Hi,
I'm reluctant to experiment any more than I have done: the server
the drive bay has been fitted to is our live fileserver, with 120GB
of user data on two drives on the other ATA channel.
I know I would take time to install the
On Thursday 05 October 2006 11:00, Olivier Nicole wrote:
[Power down a drive bay using its built-in keyswitch and pull the disk without
dropping the whole box]
Unless you need to move that disk from one machine to another, fix it
in your server, keep the tray for future testing when you will
On Thursday 05 October 2006 10:34, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
I recently bought a drive caddy for an ATA hard drive. The unit is in two
parts: a cassette, into which can be fitted a standard ATA hard drive, and
a carrier permanently fitted into a standard drive bay. The carrier
includes a power
The Subject: header has gradually grown to:
Subject: Re: RE : Re: RE : Re: RE : Re: RE : Re: cheapskate webmail
interface
Please, please, edit it or use an email client that does. It's in danger of
getting silly now.
Jonathan
___
This is, I guess, a philosophical question.
Twice in the last couple of weeks I have been bitten by ports adding users or
groups. In setting up my laptop, I created my user account in sysinstall
without creating my group. My ~ was created with the GID corresponding to my
UID, but in building
On Friday 13 October 2006 21:54, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
The convention is, indeed, that users get UIDs from 1000 up. This
doesn't seem to be explicitly described anywhere I can find at the
moment, but it is implemented in adduser(8) -- and the porter's
handbook requires hard-coded UIDs and
I'm hoping someone can point me in the right direction. I'm running 6.1 (the
security branch) with a recently-updated ports tree (1 September).
I have modified /etc/make.conf to change the options for the system sendmail,
by adding these lines:
SENDMAIL_CFLAGS = -I/usr/local/include -DSASL=2
On Sunday 15 October 2006 22:19, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
sendmail -d0.1 -bt /dev/null gives me
Version 8.13.6
Compiled with: DNSMAP LDAPMAP LOG MAP_REGEX MATCHGECOS MILTER MIME7TO8
MIME8TO7 NAMED_BIND NETINET NETINET6 NETUNIX NEWDB NIS
PIPELINING SASLv2 SCANF
On Tuesday 05 October 2010 13:31:08 Carmel wrote:
I have been tooling around with FreeBSD for a year or so now and I find
it incredible that there is virtually no support for modern hardware;
i.e., drivers for 'N' protocol devices. That one factor alone, and there
are others, precludes me
On Tuesday 05 October 2010 15:47:36 Pierre-Luc Drouin wrote:
On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 9:31 AM, Jonathan McKeown j.mcke...@ru.ac.za wrote:
On Tuesday 05 October 2010 13:31:08 Carmel wrote:
I have been tooling around with FreeBSD for a year or so now and I find
it incredible
On Friday 05 November 2010 09:28:27 Ian Smith wrote:
But you don't always have any control of what parent nameservers do;
eg we do DNS for a .com but both NS are in .au so DNS reports always
whinge about lack of glue
They should be whingeing about lack of clue (their own) unless I'm horribly
On Friday 05 November 2010 22:51:01 Robert Bonomi wrote:
From owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org Fri Nov 5 02:26:31 2010
From: Jonathan McKeown j.mcke...@ru.ac.za
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Date: Fri, 5 Nov 2010 10:27:38 +0200
Subject: Glue records (was Re: ATTN GARY KLINE
On Thursday 09 December 2010 01:07:38 Kevin Kinsey wrote:
Chuck Swiger wrote:
You don't magically get immunity from SQL injection by using
JDBC or EOF or whatever, but using bound variables in queries rather
than feeding user input into raw SQL, or invoking stored procedures
or
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 12:32:00 S Mathias wrote:
cat asdf.txt
bla-bla
bla-bla
bla[XYZ]
importantthing
another important thing
[/XYZ]
bla-bla
bla-bla
[XYZ]
yet another thing
hello!
[/XYZ]
bla-bla
etc.
$ SOMEPERLMAGIC asdf.txt output.txt
$ cat output.txt
importantthing
On Monday 10 January 2011 15:02:35 Ed Smith wrote:
This seems bizarre. Logically, it would seem better to do a split like
vim (bare vim - what you would expect) and xvim (vim with X11) similar
to how emacs does emacs/xemacs.
Er, no. xemacs is a fork of emacs. emacs has X-related dependencies
On Wednesday 12 January 2011 17:58:33 David Scheidt wrote:
ps ax | grep [s]lapd | wc -l
The [] creates a one-character class that doesn't match the regex. Easier
to type and grep should be a bit faster.
And you can save another process by using
ps ax | grep -c '[s]lapd'
Although as
On Tuesday 06 February 2007 22:24, Don O'Neil wrote:
I've got a perl script that just refuses to run on my new 6.1 box with Perl
5.8.8... Whenever I run it from the command line I get this:
Can't modify single ref constructor in lock at ./caldisp.pl line 84, near
*LOCKF)
Execution of
I remember seeing some weeks ago that people had run into difficulties when
portupgrade moved from sysutils into ports-mgmt, and one recommendation was
to deinstall portupgrade and then
cd /usr/ports/ports-mgmt/portupgrade
make install
Possibly silly question: will I be able to avoid problems
On Tuesday 06 March 2007 15:32, Kevin Kinsey wrote:
Jonathan McKeown wrote:
[can I upgrade portupgrade by]
portupgrade -NR --origin ports-mgmt/portupgrade portupgrade
?
I'm fairly certain that /usr/ports/UPGRADING said what to do.
I checked UPDATING before I posted: it doesn't, just
On Wednesday 07 March 2007 07:28, kk kumar wrote:
Hi all,
Do you need to include specific commands to periodically process the queue
with sendmail? With sendmail I would explicitly (via cron) rerun queue
processing every 30 minutes or so. Is there any better method to do this in
sendmail
On Tuesday 13 March 2007 09:16, Gerhard Schmidt wrote:
On Tue, Mar 13, 2007 at 12:07:15AM +0100, Pietro Cerutti wrote:
On 3/12/07, Gerhard Schmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Hello,
As I see it, nss asks all sources even if the frist one allready knows
the answer. Is there a way
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