I like this approach. It would be nice to actually SHOW what you know, instead of having to express it in writing.
"Install Nmap from the Ports collection of OpenBSD." :-)
Exactly. Because what is important is not what we knows, but what we do.
It may be important to automate the verification. For example with Nmap the test program just have to launch it with a well-defined test-file an verify if Nmap wend the expected packets.
As stated before, this is nice too to learn. Because this so-called distro will challenge the user with usefull questions. ah let's see what goal I will have today... [I launch the distro] well okay, it wants a new kernel with ramdisk support... [I search the web to learn how to compile a kernel, how to configure options, etc. I then edit the config, then compile the thing] ... now let's ask if this is correct [I launch the test program --> "success"] Ypeee ! Today I've learned to compile a kernel and tune it's options.
_______________________________________________ BSDCert mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nycbug.org/mailman/listinfo/bsdcert
