Sigh... I wanted to be sending this with the bsd laptop, bug havnt gotten it doing ppp yet... Ethernet was easy... dialup is not as easy... Ill read the ppp or pppd man pages... there are scripts in /etc/ppp, but none that im used to. Ive used ppp-on (and variants), and kppp (kppp is easy...) and a long time ago I used several files hacked together... I even used minicom to establish the dialup part, then run pppd from a script... but that was a long time ago, and not helpful now... so... where do I find this bsdi navigator? sounds good... memory and disk space are tighg...
I also noticed an odd thing, It now boots and sees the 24 megs ram (although the number is an odd one...) it says that only 17 megs are usable? what is that about? is the kernel taking up 6 megs? I also got x in 16 bit color now (was 256), and xdaliclock is sucking a lot of cycles hard! Ive been trying to run it with less color and stuff... but its still a hog. When I run it in 256, its much less of a hog (spikes upto about 15%sometimes...) but in 16 bit its using over 1/2 of the cpu. I tried pseudocolor, and 256 values... no great results yet... hmmm x has a lot of libs... but which to delete :( Jamie >On Mon, Jan 28, 2002 at 05:52:11PM -0800, Linux Rocks ! wrote: > >> Im looking at trimming some fat if I can. > >Well, the port/pkg system doesn't split packages down into, say, >foo and foo-dev, which means that static libs and header files are >installed with almost every pkg. You can delete them without >ill effect (pkg_delete will complain - "perhaps the packing list >was incorrect?" - but will still function properly). > >> I would like to get a decent webbrowser... I like konqueror, netscape, >> mozilla, are big pigs... I cant deal with them. > >I did some unscientific testing of browser speed today. Of the >major GUI browsers, Opera was the quickest, by far. Of course, >on OBSD, this means you'll have to install the redhat_base pkg, which >is rather large. Also, the BSDi Navigator was faster than konqueror, >but ever so slightly. > >> I would also like to >> configure ppp ( i rigged up a modem...) I found the /etc/ppp directory... >> maybe I can hack about untill I get it right.. > >I found the userland *BSD ppp pretty easy to set up as compared to >pppd on Linux, as well as more featureful than pppd + several packages >to add to pppd (it even has it's own packet filtering and NAT engine!). >The ppp manpage is rather extensive, but a lot of it is for setting up >incoming connections also. You can probably skip down to the "MANUAL >DIALING" section to get started; it shouldn't take long from there :) > >> minicom would be good to have >> too.... > >See the 'term' command in ppp. minicom is also a port/pkg. > >> If you havnt done so before, try running xdaliclock in the root window, wtih >> the -cycle option... I kinda like the xosview -cycle -root , but its a bit >> busy... maybe xosview -root -cycle -noseconds is better. I used to run it not >> in the root, but in a window, and without the boarder, titlebar, and resize >> bar.... just the display, same with xosview, but with 24 megs ram xosview >> doest stay up, just when in question or testing.... > >It's not quite as cool-looking as xosview (and that's not saying a whole >lot), but if you just want some stats and stuff, look for a pkg of >xuvmstat; it's really small. > >> So.... what else do I need? I guess some networking tools... > >ngrep (grep packet data payloads) and ntop (might be boring on a ppp link) >seem to be pretty useful, but I haven't played with either much yet. > >If you installed the ports tree, you could 'cd /usr/ports/net && make >show=COMMENT | less', and then read /usr/ports/net/$port/pkg/DESCR >if a COMMENT catches your eye. Unpacking the ports tree will eat up a lot >of inodes (it unpacks to ~50MB, but needed more inodes than I had in a >125MB slice; now I know about newfs -i ;). Since you probably won't >be able to unpack ports.tar.gz, you can find out more about the ports/ >pkgs at http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/ports/. There's >also http://www.openbsd.org/2.9_packages/ (no 3.0 version, sorry). > >-- ><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ------------------- -
