George Hartzell wrote:
> Jason Joines writes:
> > I'm a Linux guy who has inherited some apple xserve boxes.
> > Surprisingly I've discovered that I really hate os x. For the intel
> > xserve boxes, Linux isn't an option. The CPUs are amd64 architecture.
>
AMD64on an Intel X-Ser
Jerry McAllister wrote:
> On Thu, May 24, 2007 at 06:07:58AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>> On 24/05/07, kalin mintchev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> so nobody on this list knows anything about raid?
>>> wrong list?
>>>
>>>
hi all..
i have a box in a remote
Jerry McAllister wrote:
> On Fri, May 11, 2007 at 04:51:48PM +0200, Christian Walther wrote:
>
>
>> On 11/05/07, Gabriel Rossetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I have never been able to figure out how to do this, and
Christian Walther wrote:
> On 11/05/07, Gabriel Rossetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have never been able to figure out how to do this, and I usually end
>> up copying the file to be edited to a floppy et be able to edit it from
>> another m
Hello,
I have never been able to figure out how to do this, and I usually end
up copying the file to be edited to a floppy et be able to edit it from
another machine, but there has to ba a way to do it! Everytime I go into
single-user-mode and I have to edit a file, the output to stdout is
messed
Alex Zbyslaw wrote:
> Matthew Seaman wrote:
>
>> Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
>
>>> How can I do that? When I use sysinstall to create my partitions it
>>> automatically create's it as da0s1d.
>> Use:
>>
>> bsdlabel -e da0s1
>>
>>
Frank Wissmann wrote:
> Well, I think if you boot your computer from a cdrom and edit with
> bsdlabel you get into an editor where you can change the d into an a.
> That must be the solution you want.
>
> Regards
>
> Frank
> ___
> freebsd-questions@freebs
Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
> Frank Wissmann wrote:
>
>> FreeBSD boots by default from the a-partition and IMK you can't change
>> this. Try to setup your rootdev as disk0s1a instead of disk0s1d and it
>> will work.
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> Frank
>
Frank Wissmann wrote:
> FreeBSD boots by default from the a-partition and IMK you can't change
> this. Try to setup your rootdev as disk0s1a instead of disk0s1d and it
> will work.
>
> Regards
>
> Frank
>
How can I do that? When I use sysinstall to create my partitions it
automatically create's it
Hello,
I purchased a RocketRaid card + 3 disks, and moved my FreeBSD 6.1 to it
using dump, I then changed my fstab
entry to use da0s1d for /, I made sure that the it is bootable, I told
my raid controller to be bootable, I set it up to boot in my BIOS as the
first device, I added the kernel module
L33T Networks wrote:
Using the SSHD server, how can I lock users SSH'ing into a box into their
home directory, without having access to the /usr/home directory as a whole?
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman
Hello,
I am about to switch to software raid 5 for my personal server. I know
hardware raid 5 is better, but being a student I'd rather not invest in
a raid adapter now, plus my cpu is being used at about 0.0% 24/24 7/7,
so it needs some exercise :-)
I've heard of several software-based raid
Matt Ruzicka wrote:
On Wed, 24 Jan 2007, Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
The user needing to log in is root (I know this is not good and
turned off by default), so I re-enabled root login with ssh but like
I said above, I get a password
prompt when I do : ssh -l root machine2 whoami
Not sure if
Hello,
I tried to setup ssh on a FreeBSD 4.8 (OpenSSH_3.5p1) to use
certificates to log in to a FreeBSD 6.1 (OpenSSH_4.2p1) machine, but it
still asks for a password.
I did the same setup, same steps, to get the FreeBSD 6.1 machine to log
into a Gentoo Linux (OpenSSH_4.5p1) machine without any
controller.
FreeBSD 4.7 worked great on it. Does anyone have an idea?
Thank you,
Gabriel Rossetti
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