People,
After a cvsup, installworld and portupgrade ... I have installed a new
optimized kernel.
After that I have installed KDE3 in my FreeBSd 5.3 machine.
The problem is now /usr is 4 GB used against 1 G free.
How is possible to clean /usr to dont have any problems in future upgrades ?
Thanks
On Sunday 05 December 2004 09:02 pm, Giuliano Cardozo Medalha wrote:
People,
After a cvsup, installworld and portupgrade ... I have installed a new
optimized kernel.
After that I have installed KDE3 in my FreeBSd 5.3 machine.
The problem is now /usr is 4 GB used against 1 G free.
How is
At 12:02 AM -0200 12/6/04, Giuliano Cardozo Medalha wrote:
People,
After a cvsup, installworld and portupgrade ... I have installed
a new optimized kernel.
After that I have installed KDE3 in my FreeBSd 5.3 machine.
The problem is now /usr is 4 GB used against 1 G free.
How is possible to clean
On Dec 5, 2004, at 8:48 PM, Garance A Drosihn wrote:
See if it looks any better after entering the commands:
cd /usr/src
make cleanworld
Could simply rm -rf /usr/obj/usr
Also portsclean -CD will remove any stray /usr/ports/*/*/work
directories. Will also remove the /usr/ports/distfiles/*
I am trying to zero out all the unused disk space in the FBSD system
Hard Drive.
Using this command
dd if=/dev/zero of=filler bs=1m
but get error message saying file system full and have file named
filler.
I don't think this commands is doing what I want.
How can I check to see if the unused
On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 08:25:27PM -0500, fbsd_user wrote:
I am trying to zero out all the unused disk space in the FBSD system
Hard Drive.
Using this command
dd if=/dev/zero of=filler bs=1m
but get error message saying file system full and have file named
filler.
I don't think this
The 10 GB Hard Disk should have a BIOS Limitation jumper that will make
the BIOS think it is a 508 MB drive. Set that jumper, and the system
should boot.
Once you have that drive in there, you could create the file system
structure on it however you want, but place the / and /boot partitions
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
The 10 GB Hard Disk should have a BIOS Limitation jumper that
will make the BIOS think it is a 508 MB drive. Set that jumper,
and the system should boot.
I thought so too. I tried setting it, but I couldn't get it to boot.
I guess the drive