On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 16:56:18 +1030
William Brown wrote:
> Are there any recommendations that you can make about compatible
> solutions. My knowledge in this area is limited.
My needs are not so big and I use HP Ultrium 448 (LTO-2) drive, but
I'm sure that buying HP's LTO-2 drive will be nice so
Hello,
It seems printf() always alloc something and does not free it:
#include
#include
int
main(void)
{
printf("Hi\n");
return 0;
}
and valgrind ./a.out:
==67840==
==67840== HEAP SUMMARY:
==67840== in use at exit: 4,096 bytes in 1 blocks
==67840== total heap usage: 1 allocs,
Hi David,
> It seems printf() always alloc something and does not free it:
What compiler and what optimizations? Most compilers will optimize a
printf without any special formatting into a puts call instead of a
printf call.
For example clang -O3 -fomit-frame-pointer (which I use for clarity
here
On 29/03/2011 09:59, Eitan Adler wrote:
Hi David,
It seems printf() always alloc something and does not free it:
What compiler and what optimizations? Most compilers will optimize a
printf without any special formatting into a puts call instead of a
printf call.
I was using clang / gcc with
On 28 March 2011 10:37, Andre Goree wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Ever since I upgraded to 8.2 a few weeks ago, I can't seem to rebuild my
> kernel without it being built with ZFS v14 rather than v15. This is a
> problem because I'm using root on ZFS and my box won't boot after the kernel
> rebuild and re
Thank you for responding.
For two reasons I know it's running zfs v14 after the rebuild:
1) During boot, a message shows:
ZFS Filesystem version 4
ZFS Storage pool version 14
2) After getting to the failed root mount point of the boot (after it
fails to mount my zfs root), I enter:
ufs:/
hey guys,
ok I fixed the reverse zone file and now it's working perfectly!
@ IN SOA ns1.summitnjhome.com. bluethundr.gmail.com. (
2011032901 ;serial
14400 ;refresh
3600 ;retry
604800 ;expire
10800;minimum
)
First off, I'm on 9.0-CURRENT-i386, but I don't think that will make a
difference for purposes of my question. I think the freebsd-current
folks are expecting questions that are much harder than this one.
I'm trying to use /etc/rc.d/netif to bring down and bring back up all
network interfaces, be
On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 10:40:19AM -0700, Nerius Landys thus spake:
First off, I'm on 9.0-CURRENT-i386, but I don't think that will make a
difference for purposes of my question. I think the freebsd-current
folks are expecting questions that are much harder than this one.
I'm trying to use /etc
> In my experience, I've found it best to restart 'routing,' as well.
>
> /etc/rc.d/routing restart
Yes indeed thank you.
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I want to learn BSD. I find that the best way to familiarize myself with a
distro is to adopt it as my main distro (for web browsing, email, word
processing, etc.).
But the challenge of BSD have so far proven too much for me. It would take too
long to configure FreeBSD to my liking. I coul
I've always "heard" PC-BSD is the way to go on the desktop, so if that's not
going too well then I'm not sure.
I don't think there is a BSD that Paris and Jessica would be able to install.
Then again, that's not really what made them noteworthy.
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd
On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 02:45:27PM -0500, Jason Hsu wrote:
> I want to learn BSD. I find that the best way to familiarize myself with a
> distro is to adopt it as my main distro (for web browsing, email, word
> processing, etc.).
>
> But the challenge of BSD have so far proven too much for me
On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 02:45:27PM -0500, Jason Hsu wrote:
> I want to learn BSD. I find that the best way to familiarize myself with a
> distro is to adopt it as my main distro (for web browsing, email, word
> processing, etc.).
>
> But the challenge of BSD have so far proven too much for m
> So what do you recommend as my first desktop BSD distro? What desktop BSD
> distro is so easy to use that even Paris Hilton or Jessica "Chicken of the
> Sea" Simpson can handle it?
To each their own, but I wouldn't want a system that Paris Hilton could
handle any more than I'd want a vehicle
On 30/03/2011, at 07:15, Chip Camden wrote:
>> So what do you recommend as my first desktop BSD distro? What desktop BSD
>> distro is so easy to use that even Paris Hilton or Jessica "Chicken of the
>> Sea" Simpson can handle it?
>
> To each their own, but I wouldn't want a system that Paris
> But the challenge of BSD have so far proven too much for me. It would take
> too long to configure FreeBSD to my liking. I couldn't figure out what to
> enter in GRUB to multi-boot Linux and BSD. I tried PC-BSD, GhostBSD, and
> DragonflyBSD in VirtualBox. I've found PC-BSD agonizingly slow
Quoth William Brown on Wednesday, 30 March 2011:
>
> On 30/03/2011, at 07:15, Chip Camden wrote:
>
> >> So what do you recommend as my first desktop BSD distro? What desktop BSD
> >> distro is so easy to use that even Paris Hilton or Jessica "Chicken of the
> >> Sea" Simpson can handle it?
> >
> ...I find that the best way to familiarize myself with a distro is to adopt
> it as my main distro (for web browsing, email, word processing, etc.).
There is no distro in BSDworld. BSD family is complete operating system.
Linux distros are a combination of a kernel and all the tools necessary
f
On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 02:23:48PM -0700, Chip Camden wrote:
> Quoth William Brown on Wednesday, 30 March 2011:
> >
> > On 30/03/2011, at 07:15, Chip Camden wrote:
> >
> > >> So what do you recommend as my first desktop BSD distro? What desktop
> > >> BSD distro is so easy to use that even Par
On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 14:45:27 -0500, Jason Hsu wrote:
> I want to learn BSD.
I may emphasize the word LEARN. You'll see why later on. :-)
> I find that the best way to familiarize myself with a distro
> is to adopt it as my main distro (for web browsing, email,
> word processing, etc.).
Thi
On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 11:31 PM, Giorgos Keramidas
wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 2:28 PM, Jim wrote:
>> I have an application that opens two .so files with dlopen(3):
>> /usr/local/lib/libag_core.so
>> /usr/local/lib/libag_gui.so
>>
>> Both files exist
>> Running nm(1) against each produces
On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 17:39:36 -0400, Jerry McAllister wrote:
> Just a nit here -- I would think of BSD as less cluttered
> rather than simpler.
The definition of "simple" is individual, it depends on
present knowledge and the ability of thinking (concluding,
deriving, understanding).
Simple t
--On March 29, 2011 2:23:48 PM -0700 Chip Camden
wrote:
Quoth William Brown on Wednesday, 30 March 2011:
On 30/03/2011, at 07:15, Chip Camden wrote:
>> So what do you recommend as my first desktop BSD distro? What
>> desktop BSD distro is so easy to use that even Paris Hilton or
>> Jessica
On Tue 29 Mar 2011 at 13:59:44 PDT Jerry McAllister wrote:
On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 02:45:27PM -0500, Jason Hsu wrote:
I want to learn BSD. I find that the best way to familiarize myself with a distro is to adopt it as my main distro (for web browsing, email, word processing, etc.).
But the
On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 16:43:47 -0500, Paul Schmehl
wrote:
> It might even be useful to have an initial screen that offers options such
> as "Experienced User, Minimal Prompts", "Familiar User, Additional Prompts
> and "First Time User, Walk me through it step by step."
Even GeoWorks Ensemble had
On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 15:16:37 -0700, Charlie Kester
wrote:
> To really learn any operating system, you have to approach it on its own
> terms and be willing to accept that it has its own way of doing things.
> Its own idioms and paradigms. It has its own history of design
> decisions, unforeseen
On Wed, 30 Mar 2011 00:00:07 +0200
Polytropon articulated:
> On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 17:39:36 -0400, Jerry McAllister
> wrote:
> > Just a nit here -- I would think of BSD as less cluttered
> > rather than simpler.
>
> The definition of "simple" is individual, it depends on
> present knowledge a
On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 19:23:19 -0400, Jerry wrote:
> Your approach to the problem neglects to factor in each individual's own
> level of expertise and desires.
I can just speak from my individual point of view. I do NOT
claim that my experiences and knowledge are universal. Therefore,
my view is li
Quoth Polytropon on Wednesday, 30 March 2011:
>
> T: (a deep sigh while rolling his eyes) No, that's not the fuel,
>that's the tachometer. It is supposed to point at zero if the
>car is not started. The fuel indicator is usually to the left
>and smaller that the tachometer, and it shou
> It's the same with computers. No matter what you want to do
> with it, there IS something you need to learn, either BEFORE
> you use it, or WHILE you're using it. With some simple means,
> i. e. using the brain, reading, concluding, understanding,
> THINKING, you're fine in this regards - because
On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 16:56:14 -0700, Chip Camden
wrote:
> Quoth Polytropon on Wednesday, 30 March 2011:
> >
> > T: (a deep sigh while rolling his eyes) No, that's not the fuel,
> >that's the tachometer. It is supposed to point at zero if the
> >car is not started. The fuel indicator is us
Hi,
How can I enforce a user to change his password at first login?
I want to set up ssh access for my friends but I don't want to know
their passwords. And I don't trust they will change it just because I've
asked to do so.
I was thinking I can create account with random password and provid
Hi folks,
Sometimes (really rare), when I boot these messages appears in a
infinite loop :
http://markand.malikania.fr/Photo0393.jpg
These messages are printed so fast that I can't read it, happily Scroll
lock key let me take a picture.
When this appears I have no solution instead rebootin
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 06:10:11AM +0100, Michael wrote:
> Hi,
>
> How can I enforce a user to change his password at first login?
>
> I want to set up ssh access for my friends but I don't want to know
> their passwords. And I don't trust they will change it just because I've
> asked to do so.
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