On Monday 17 May 2004 18:51, Freddie Cash wrote:
Is it possible to manually run an rcNG-style script with app_enable=NO
in /etc/rc.conf?
For instance, there are a few services that I don't want running all the
time on my laptop (like Apache, Squid, DansGuardian) but that I need
running now
On May 17, 2004 09:56 am, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
On Monday 17 May 2004 18:51, Freddie Cash wrote:
Is it possible to manually run an rcNG-style script with
app_enable=NO in /etc/rc.conf?
For instance, there are a few services that I don't want running
all the time on my laptop (like
There are no knobs in rc.conf for the applications you mentioned.
Rc.conf does not have internal check to verify you have correct
statements. So having apache_enable=YES in rc.conf does nothing
and issues no error message telling you it is invalid. All ports
are started from /usr/local/etc/rc.d/
In the last episode (May 17), Freddie Cash said:
Is it possible to manually run an rcNG-style script with
app_enable=NO in /etc/rc.conf?
For instance, there are a few services that I don't want running all
the time on my laptop (like Apache, Squid, DansGuardian) but that I
need running now
Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (May 17), Freddie Cash said:
Is it possible to manually run an rcNG-style script with
app_enable=NO in /etc/rc.conf?
For instance, there are a few services that I don't want running all
the time on my laptop (like Apache, Squid, DansGuardian) but that I
In the last episode (May 17), Peter Risdon said:
In similar situations, I change
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/whatever.sh
to
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/whatever.sh.notnow
(or any other suffix) so it doesn't start at boot time, then start it
up when I want with
On May 17, 2004 10:16 am, JJB wrote:
There are no knobs in rc.conf for the applications you mentioned.
Rc.conf does not have internal check to verify you have correct
statements. So having apache_enable=YES in rc.conf does nothing
and issues no error message telling you it is invalid. All
On May 17, 2004, at 11:53 AM, Freddie Cash wrote:
RCng scripts require an entry in /etc/rc.conf along the lines of
appname_enable=YES otherwise the script will fail to do anything.
As an aside, you may want to use /etc/rc.conf.local instead.
on a related note:
One problem is that it appears that
On Mon, 17 May 2004 12:30:32 -0600
Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On May 17, 2004, at 11:53 AM, Freddie Cash wrote:
RCng scripts require an entry in /etc/rc.conf along the lines of
appname_enable=YES otherwise the script will fail to do
anything.
As an aside,