Hi Jose,
with the freebsd-update method you don't need to pass through the "make
installworld" as it's a binary patch/upgrade system.
Using "freebsd-update upgrade -r 9.1-RELEASE" for example allows you to
get your system patched directly without recompiling the kernel and the
userland but getting
For some reason my email hasn't apparently been delivered so I'm re-sending it.
"From: ASV
To: Jose Garcia Juanino
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Newbie question about freebsd-update: single user mode is
not needed anymore?
Date: Mon, 31 De
Well,
I understand your concern. I've been using the freebsd-update method
since several years now and mostly remotely. I've never encounter a
problem. I haven't recompiled everything many times as I didn't really
found a tangible advantage in this method but I've never thought about
this. I believ
El lunes 31 de diciembre a las 16:27:44 CET, ASV escribió:
> Hi Jose,
>
> with the freebsd-update method you don't need to pass through the "make
> installworld" as it's a binary patch/upgrade system.
> Using "freebsd-update upgrade -r 9.1-RELEASE" for example allows you to
> get your system patch
On 31/12/2012 14:13, Jose Garcia Juanino wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am planning to upgrade from FreeBSD 9.0-RELEASE to
> FreeBSD-9.1-RELEASE. With upgrade source method, it is always needed to
> do the "make installworld" step in single user mode. But it seems to
> be that single user is not required wi
Hi,
I am planning to upgrade from FreeBSD 9.0-RELEASE to
FreeBSD-9.1-RELEASE. With upgrade source method, it is always needed to
do the "make installworld" step in single user mode. But it seems to
be that single user is not required with freebsd-update method, in the
second "freebsd-update instal
On Wed, 13 Jun 2012 19:16:18 -0500, Chris wrote:
> On 6/13/2012 6:23 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
>> On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 12:21:31 -0500, Dan Lists wrote:
>>
>>> The syntax of his crontab file is correct. Vixie cron does care about
>>> leading spaces, tabs, extra spaces, or leading zeros. Earlier
>>>
On 6/13/2012 6:23 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 12:21:31 -0500, Dan Lists wrote:
>
>> The syntax of his crontab file is correct. Vixie cron does care about
>> leading spaces, tabs, extra spaces, or leading zeros. Earlier versions
>> of cron are much pickier about the crontab file
On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 12:21:31 -0500, Dan Lists wrote:
> The syntax of his crontab file is correct. Vixie cron does care about
> leading spaces, tabs, extra spaces, or leading zeros. Earlier versions
> of cron are much pickier about the crontab file. The cron logs show
> that it is starting his
On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 12:06 PM, Polytropon wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 08:29:02 -0500, Mark Felder wrote:
>> On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 00:06:21 -0500, Robert Bonomi
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Comment: using a leading zero on the numeric fields is a BAD IDEA(tm) --
>> > you
>> > are *strongly* encocuraged to
On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 08:29:02 -0500, Mark Felder wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 00:06:21 -0500, Robert Bonomi
> wrote:
>
> > Comment: using a leading zero on the numeric fields is a BAD IDEA(tm) --
> > you
> > are *strongly* encocuraged to remove them. Yes, that means numbers will
> > not
> >
On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 09:36:37 -0500, Lowell Gilbert
wrote:
I don't have ready access to source at the moment, but I would expect
(like the normal C I/O functions) it will be interpreted as octal.
Suppose we could always ask Paul Vixie :-)
___
freeb
Mark Felder writes:
> On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 00:06:21 -0500, Robert Bonomi
> wrote:
>
>> Comment: using a leading zero on the numeric fields is a BAD IDEA(tm) --
>> you
>> are *strongly* encocuraged to remove them. Yes, that means numbers
>> will not
>> be column aligned, but it is a small price
On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 00:06:21 -0500, Robert Bonomi
wrote:
Comment: using a leading zero on the numeric fields is a BAD IDEA(tm) --
you
are *strongly* encocuraged to remove them. Yes, that means numbers will
not
be column aligned, but it is a small price to pay to avoid the
hair-tearing
On 11/06/2012 23:10, Michael Sierchio wrote:
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 7:04 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
As the subject says, this is probably a newbie question (I am new to
FreeBSD but quite experienced at Linux).
FreeBSD9 on x86_64.
Cron is running:
$ ps -ax|grep cron
1513 ?? Is 0:00.01
Walter Hurry wrote:
>
> As the subject says, this is probably a newbie question (I am new to
> FreeBSD but quite experienced at Linux).
>
> FreeBSD9 on x86_64.
>
> Cron is running:
>
> $ ps -ax|grep cron
>
> 1513 ?? Is 0:00.01 /usr/sbin/cron -s
>
&
On 6/11/2012 9:25 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 19:10:21 -0700, Michael Sierchio wrote:
>
>> Have you installed bash? It's not in the system base.
>>
>> What's in your shell scripts?
>
> Thanks for the quick response.
>
> $ pkg_info|grep bash
>
> bash-4.2.28 The GNU Pro
On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 19:36:28 -0700, Michael Sierchio wrote:
> cat /etc/shells
$ cat /etc/shells
# $FreeBSD: release/9.0.0/etc/shells 59717 2000-04-27 21:58:46Z ache $
#
# List of acceptable shells for chpass(1).
# Ftpd will not allow users to connect who are not using
# one of these shells.
/bin/
On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 21:21:12 -0500, Adam Vande More wrote:
> You really have bash in /bin ? Are your scripts executable? What does
> /var/log/cron say?
$ file /bin/bash
/bin/bash: symbolic link to `/usr/local/bin/bash'
$ sudo tail -50 /var/log/cron (result snipped at 02:22:00 for brevity)
Ju
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 7:25 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
cat /etc/shells
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To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 19:10:21 -0700, Michael Sierchio wrote:
> Have you installed bash? It's not in the system base.
>
> What's in your shell scripts?
Thanks for the quick response.
$ pkg_info|grep bash
bash-4.2.28 The GNU Project's Bourne Again SHell
$ which bash
/bin/bash
$
$ le
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 9:04 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
>
> #min hr dom month dow command
>
> SHELL=/bin/bash
>
> PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/home/
> daddy/bin
>
> HOME=/home/walterh
>
> 00 02 * * * /home/walterh/exports.sh
>
> 05 02 * * * /
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 7:04 PM, Walter Hurry wrote:
> As the subject says, this is probably a newbie question (I am new to
> FreeBSD but quite experienced at Linux).
>
> FreeBSD9 on x86_64.
>
> Cron is running:
>
> $ ps -ax|grep cron
>
> 1513 ?? Is 0:00.01 /
As the subject says, this is probably a newbie question (I am new to
FreeBSD but quite experienced at Linux).
FreeBSD9 on x86_64.
Cron is running:
$ ps -ax|grep cron
1513 ?? Is 0:00.01 /usr/sbin/cron -s
2283 0 S+ 0:00.00 grep cron
$
I have a syntactically valid crontab
On 05/26/11 17:29, a.sm...@ukgrid.net wrote:
Hi,
zpool create is a destructive command to data on the disks, ie any
preexisting pool, but it would normally warn you if it found an
existing pool on the disks you are trying to use.
Run:
# zpool import
and it will scan any attached disks for
Hi,
zpool create is a destructive command to data on the disks, ie any
preexisting pool, but it would normally warn you if it found an
existing pool on the disks you are trying to use.
Run:
# zpool import
and it will scan any attached disks for pools that are importable, if
it detects
hi,
i have a new fbsd-8.2 install (dual boot with win7, just desktop general use)
on entirely ufs disk, and am not
sure how to mount a zfs formatted disk from a previous install, without
loosing what is on there. (freebsd-zfs).
in short, the zfs disk was from a previous freebsd install, same v
Hi,
I'm trying to hack the code of tbancontrol, a linux tool used to control
t-balancer fan controllers that use FTDI FT232BL chips. It seems to be
working fine on linux, but when I try to use it on FreeBSD, I noticed
that read calls fail with "Interruted system call". It seems there is
somet
"Gary Hartl" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've been out of the bsd loop for a bit, i'm trying to setup nagios which is
> fine
>
>
>
> There are a couple of settings that I either don't remember or never
> remembered and forgot that I never knew it.
>
>
>
> Ok so nagios is asking me for an rc
On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 5:41 PM, Gary Hartl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all;
>
>
>
> Quick newbie question.
>
>
>
> I've been out of the bsd loop for a bit, i'm trying to setup nagios which
> is
> fine
>
>
>
> There are a couple o
Hi all;
Quick newbie question.
I've been out of the bsd loop for a bit, i'm trying to setup nagios which is
fine
There are a couple of settings that I either don't remember or never
remembered and forgot that I never knew it.
Ok so nagios is asking me for an rc.d p
>
>
> --
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2008 18:12:52 +0800
> From: Canhua <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Newbie question about pkg_add
> To: "Steven Susbauer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: freebsd-questions@
On Wed, 2008-10-29 at 22:41 +0800, Canhua wrote:
> Wonderful place~ thank you
>
> However I could not pkg_add py25-networkx still, being told that
> pkg_add: unable to fetch
> 'ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/i386/packages-7.0-release/Latest/py25-networkx.tbz'
> by URL
Oh, sorry. I
On Wed, Oct 29, 2008 at 9:18 PM, Thiago R. Santos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 2008-10-29 at 11:14 +0800, Canhua wrote:
>> Hi, good day all. I am new to FreeBSD.
>> I tried to pkg_add -r a package (py-networkx), which tell me that:
>> Error: FTP Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/
>> F
On Wed, 2008-10-29 at 11:14 +0800, Canhua wrote:
> Hi, good day all. I am new to FreeBSD.
> I tried to pkg_add -r a package (py-networkx), which tell me that:
> Error: FTP Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/
> FreeBSD/ports/i386/packages-7.0-release/Latest/py-networkx.tbz:
> File unavailable (
On Wed, Oct 29, 2008 at 1:07 PM, Steven Susbauer
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ports-mgmt/portupgrade is a useful tool for easily getting packages and
> ports, it includes the tool portinstall which does what it says it does.
> By running "portinstall -P pkgname", it will install a port and
> depend
Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
On Wed, Oct 29, 2008 at 11:14:34AM +0800, Canhua wrote:
Hi, good day all. I am new to FreeBSD.
I tried to pkg_add -r a package (py-networkx), which tell me that:
Error: FTP Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/
FreeBSD/ports/i386/packages-7.0-release/Latest/py-networkx.
On Wed, Oct 29, 2008 at 11:14:34AM +0800, Canhua wrote:
> Hi, good day all. I am new to FreeBSD.
> I tried to pkg_add -r a package (py-networkx), which tell me that:
> Error: FTP Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/
> FreeBSD/ports/i386/packages-7.0-release/Latest/py-networkx.tbz:
> File unavai
Hi, good day all. I am new to FreeBSD.
I tried to pkg_add -r a package (py-networkx), which tell me that:
Error: FTP Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/
FreeBSD/ports/i386/packages-7.0-release/Latest/py-networkx.tbz:
File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access)
although I know that py-n
Can anybody help my to write i2c drivers for saa7146 ?
I do not good understand how to connect this device to existing iicbus
infrastructure.
I do:
static device_method_t saa7146_i2c_methods[] = {
/* device interface */
DEVMETHOD(device_probe, saa7146_i2c_probe),
> But that may not be the best way. You really don't want to spread
> root accounts around a lot. One alternative might be setting up
> sudo to allow the specific things that this other person needs to do.
>
sudo woul dbe the right way to do: you have fine choice on the various
priviledges you
On Mon, May 28, 2007 at 12:58:51PM -0400, Ian Lord wrote:
> Hi,
>
> A real dumb question today : Ive always been the only administrator of
> servers I installed so I never searched too much on the topic
>
> A new employee has joined the team and he will need to administer the
> servers (compil
Ian Lord wrote:
Hi,
A real dumb question today : I’ve always been the only administrator of
servers I installed so I never searched too much on the topic…
A new employee has joined the team and he will need to administer the
servers (compile ports, etc)
Usually, I do a su when I ne
Hi,
A real dumb question today : Ive always been the only administrator of
servers I installed so I never searched too much on the topic
A new employee has joined the team and he will need to administer the
servers (compile ports, etc)
Usually, I do a su when I need to do these tasks,
Thanks a lot, it works perfectly.
I'm starting to think it was not that much of a newbie question since you
are the first one to give a working answer :)
Thanks again
-Original Message-
From: Giorgos Keramidas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 16 mai 2007 12:22
To: Ian Lord
Cc:
On 2007-05-16 03:21, Ian Lord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -Original Message-
> From: Oliver Peter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 16 mai 2007 03:18
> To: Jerry McAllister
> Cc: Oliver Peter; Ian Lord; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: Newbie Quest
On 5/16/07, Ian Lord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Oliver Peter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 16 mai 2007 03:18
To: Jerry McAllister
Cc: Oliver Peter; Ian Lord; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Newbie Question: Mail from from cron jobs...
On Tu
-Original Message-
From: Oliver Peter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 16 mai 2007 03:18
To: Jerry McAllister
Cc: Oliver Peter; Ian Lord; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Newbie Question: Mail from from cron jobs...
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 05:38:15PM -0400, Jerry McAllister
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 05:38:15PM -0400, Jerry McAllister wrote:
> On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 11:26:03PM +0200, Oliver Peter wrote:
>
> > On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 12:26:36PM -0400, Ian Lord wrote:
> > > ...
> > >
> > > Where can I change the address [EMAIL PROTECTED] to
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] ?
>
On Tue, 15 May 2007 12:26:36 -0400
"Ian Lord" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[]
> The problem, is that the mail is coming from
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> We have a spamfirewall and it rejects the mail saying localhost.mydomain.com
> is invalid.
>
> Where can I change the address [EMAIL PROTECTED
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 11:26:03PM +0200, Oliver Peter wrote:
> On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 12:26:36PM -0400, Ian Lord wrote:
> > ...
> >
> > Where can I change the address [EMAIL PROTECTED] to
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] ?
Look in the file /etc/mail/aliases
You can alias root to go to your favorite add
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 12:26:36PM -0400, Ian Lord wrote:
> ...
>
> Where can I change the address [EMAIL PROTECTED] to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ?
Did you set up your hostname correctly in /etc/rc.conf ?
Furthermore you need to tell your MTA how your hostname is called.
--
Oliver PETER, email: [EMA
Hi,
Everyday, cron is sending me status reports of jobs it ran.
In my /etc/mail/aliases I configured root: [EMAIL PROTECTED] and it works
fine.
The problem, is that the mail is coming from
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
We have a spamfirewall and it rejects the mail saying localhost.mydomain
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 11:33:16AM -0500, Paul Schmehl wrote:
> --On Monday, May 14, 2007 12:05:47 -0400 Jerry McAllister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> >On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 09:58:54AM -0600, Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> >
> >>ls /dev/da0s1
> >>/dev/da0s1
> >
> >Again, please do not top post.
Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> If you will excuse me for now. I'm trying to solve the top-post problem.
>
> I lost environmental power temporarily a few days ago, and when it was
> back (almost immediately), the machine restarted without any input from me.
>
> I had mounted to /home a 30 GB usb 2.0 hdd
If you will excuse me for now. I'm trying to solve the top-post problem.
I lost environmental power temporarily a few days ago, and when it was back
(almost immediately), the machine restarted without any input from me.
I had mounted to /home a 30 GB usb 2.0 hdd.
I tried mounting again since I
--On Monday, May 14, 2007 12:05:47 -0400 Jerry McAllister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 09:58:54AM -0600, Oscar Chavarria wrote:
ls /dev/da0s1
/dev/da0s1
Again, please do not top post. It makes it very hard to have any
idea what you are referring to. The entire co
Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> ls /dev/da0s1
> /dev/da0s1
Oscar, once again, don't top-post[1] please and show us the output of:
# ls /dev/da0*
Regards,
Mikhail.
[1] - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top-post
--
Mikhail Goriachev
Webanoide
Telephone: +61 (0)3 62252501
Mobile Phone: +61 (0)4 382551
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 09:58:54AM -0600, Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> ls /dev/da0s1
> /dev/da0s1
Again, please do not top post. It makes it very hard to have any
idea what you are referring to. The entire context of the
conversation gets lost.
In this case, what do you mean?
You just did an
ls /dev/da0s1
/dev/da0s1
On 5/14/07, Mikhail Goriachev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> fsck /dev/da0s1 /home
> fsck: could not determine filesystem type.
>
> Go figure. Might the hdd be damaged? I guess not since boot recognized
> it, right?
Please don't top-post and keep
Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> fsck /dev/da0s1 /home
> fsck: could not determine filesystem type.
>
> Go figure. Might the hdd be damaged? I guess not since boot recognized
> it, right?
Please don't top-post and keep the conversation on the list.
It seems like you've tried to fsck only the slice (da
Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> I lost environmental power temporarily a few days ago, and when it was back
> (almost immediately), the machine restarted without any input from me.
>
> I had mounted to /home a 30 GB usb 2.0 hdd.
>
> I tried mounting again since I did not find it in df.
>
> The prompt i
On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 09:12:00AM -0600, Oscar Chavarria wrote:
> I lost environmental power temporarily a few days ago, and when it was back
> (almost immediately), the machine restarted without any input from me.
>
> I had mounted to /home a 30 GB usb 2.0 hdd.
>
> I tried mounting again since
I lost environmental power temporarily a few days ago, and when it was back
(almost immediately), the machine restarted without any input from me.
I had mounted to /home a 30 GB usb 2.0 hdd.
I tried mounting again since I did not find it in df.
The prompt is always "WARNING: /home was not prope
I'm trying to repair the damage after some portupgrading. The linux emulation
is all messed up. linux-realplayer won't run because it wants to reinstall
gtk-pixbuff, which is already in there but now conflicts with gdk2, which in
turn seems to have a broken port:
/usr/bin/gtk-query-immodules-2.
On 10/6/06, ograbme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I would like a few recommendations for small "ports" to try to install
on my stand-alone machine.
The stand-alone machine does not have connection to the internet;
however, I do have a set of four (4)CD from the FreeBSD Mall and two
(2) of the CD's
On 10/6/06, John Hoover <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
there's always the shells,
bash for example
asciiquarium is a good start.
*A Must*
--
Tyop?
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there's always the shells,
bash for example
--
-
John F Hoover
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
___
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To unsubscribe, send any
On Fri, Oct 06, 2006 at 12:14:29PM -0400, ograbme wrote:
>
> I would like a few recommendations for small "ports" to try to install
> on my stand-alone machine.
>
> The stand-alone machine does not have connection to the internet;
> however, I do have a set of four (4)CD from the FreeBSD Mall an
I would like a few recommendations for small "ports" to try to install
on my stand-alone machine.
The stand-alone machine does not have connection to the internet;
however, I do have a set of four (4)CD from the FreeBSD Mall and two
(2) of the CD's have 'ports' on them. I would like to select on
In response to ograbme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Hello All.
>
> Thursday, September 14, 2006, 4:24:43 AM, RJ45 wrote in regards to his
> message titled "Memory problem":
>
>
>
> R> I am running FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE-p6 build with buildworld.
>
>
>
> What does the "-p6" nomenclature represent
Hello All.
Thursday, September 14, 2006, 4:24:43 AM, RJ45 wrote in regards to his
message titled "Memory problem":
R> I am running FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE-p6 build with buildworld.
What does the "-p6" nomenclature represent in the above statement?
I've noticed some messages have contained vario
Hi,
With my new widescreen monitor, the console starts up with text bleeding off
the edge of the display. What is the best console video mode for a console on
a 1680x1050 display, and how do I get it to start up with it?
Thanks,
Oliver
___
freebsd-qu
On Sunday 30 July 2006 13:09, Oliver Iberien wrote:
> After running portsnap this morning:
>
> bsd# pkg_version -v > /home/oliver/version.txt
> "Makefile", line 54: Could not
> find /usr/ports/print/cups-lpr/../../print/cups/Makefile.common
> make: fatal errors encountered -- cannot continue
> pkg_
After running portsnap this morning:
bsd# pkg_version -v > /home/oliver/version.txt
"Makefile", line 54: Could not
find /usr/ports/print/cups-lpr/../../print/cups/Makefile.common
make: fatal errors encountered -- cannot continue
pkg_version: Failed to get PKGNAME from /usr/ports/print/cups-lpr/Ma
Thanks for your interest in this.
A large part of the problem was in fact a bad cable.
I went back and forth between the command line and sysinstall. They seem not
to do the same things. It did seem to me that the disklabel in sysinstall and
the disklabel command-line tool did not necessarily p
On Sun, Apr 16, 2006 at 01:40:09PM -0700, Oliver Iberien wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have been trying to add a second IDE hard drive. I can't seem to get it
> mounted, or to get what I put into sysinstall and what comes out when I use
> the command line to agree.
Are you using the command line interface
Oliver Iberien wrote:
I'm running FreeBSD 6.0 on a home machine and backing up to a DVD Burner,
probably using kdar, the dar archiver that comes with KDE.
My question is : which system files to back up, along with my personal stuff?
I'm used to using linux distributions that do your system bac
The short answer is to backup the files you want to save. As a general
rule, I suggest backing up:
/etc
/usr/local/etc
/usr/local/www
The last one assumes you have some website(s).
If you are also worried about email, if you are using the standard
sendmail, also backup:
/var/mail
I would
Oliver Iberien <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> What actually happens when you use "Upgrade an existing system" in
> sysinstall? Do you end up with the X-server, etc., all functioning
> as before, or is there a lot of cleanup to do afterwards?
X doesn't get automatically updated by that path; just
Hi,
I have been trying to add a second IDE hard drive. I can't seem to get it
mounted, or to get what I put into sysinstall and what comes out when I use
the command line to agree.
I can use sysinstall and then run newfs:
bsd# newfs /dev/ad1s1c
/dev/ad1s1c: 39205.5MB (80292804 sectors) block si
What actually happens when you use "Upgrade an existing system" in sysinstall?
Do you end up with the X-server, etc., all functioning as before, or is there
a lot of cleanup to do afterwards?
(In my case, this would be from 6.0 to 6.1, whenever the release version of
6.1 comes out. I am gettin
At 09:08 AM 4/16/2006, Oliver Iberien wrote:
On Sunday 16 April 2006 09:00, Glenn Dawson wrote:
> At 09:58 PM 2/22/2006, Andy Reitz wrote:
> >Hi Oliver,
> >
> >At a minimum, you will probably want to back up the following directories:
> >
> > /etc
> > /usr/local/etc
> > /h
On Sunday 16 April 2006 09:00, Glenn Dawson wrote:
> At 09:58 PM 2/22/2006, Andy Reitz wrote:
> >Hi Oliver,
> >
> >At a minimum, you will probably want to back up the following directories:
> >
> > /etc
> > /usr/local/etc
> > /home
> >
> >That will get all of the configurati
At 09:58 PM 2/22/2006, Andy Reitz wrote:
Hi Oliver,
At a minimum, you will probably want to back up the following directories:
/etc
/usr/local/etc
/home
That will get all of the configuration files for FreeBSD and the
software thar you installed from ports.
Actually,
Hi Oliver,
At a minimum, you will probably want to back up the following directories:
/etc
/usr/local/etc
/home
That will get all of the configuration files for FreeBSD and the software thar
you installed from ports. The last directory will det all of your user's data.
I'm running FreeBSD 6.0 on a home machine and backing up to a DVD Burner,
probably using kdar, the dar archiver that comes with KDE.
My question is : which system files to back up, along with my personal stuff?
I'm used to using linux distributions that do your system backups for you.
The capa
Jim Stapleton wrote:
[ ... ]
When it comes to changing the default compiler a good rule of thumb is
that if you need to ask how to do it, then you should not do it.
That seems to be a general *nix world rule of thumb for just about everything...
The UNIX world is willing to give you a loaded
On Monday 10 April 2006 16:01, Jim Stapleton wrote:
> how do I setup make.conf to automatically use the new compiler?
>
> Is there any way to set this new compiler as the default (such as
> building the OS), without causing issues? Or would that be just a
> royal pain in the posterior that is not w
>
> When it comes to changing the default compiler a good rule of thumb is
> that if you need to ask how to do it, then you should not do it.
>
That seems to be a general *nix world rule of thumb for just about everything...
___
freebsd-questions@freebs
On Mon, Apr 10, 2006 at 11:01:21AM -0400, Jim Stapleton wrote:
> how do I setup make.conf to automatically use the new compiler?
Don't. But if you insist on doing that you could try putting
CC=/usr/local/bin/gcc40
CXX=/usr/local/bin/g++40
into /etc/make.conf. Just be aware that it will probabl
how do I setup make.conf to automatically use the new compiler?
Is there any way to set this new compiler as the default (such as
building the OS), without causing issues? Or would that be just a
royal pain in the posterior that is not worth the effort?
On 4/10/06, Erik Trulsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED
On Mon, Apr 10, 2006 at 10:43:51AM -0400, Jim Stapleton wrote:
> I did a "make install clean" in the lang/gcc40/ directory to get a
> newer version of GCC, and it seems happy, so the next thing I did was
> I replaced my /usr/bin/gcc, /usr/bin/g++, etc. binaries with hard
> links to the /usr/local/b
I did a "make install clean" in the lang/gcc40/ directory to get a
newer version of GCC, and it seems happy, so the next thing I did was
I replaced my /usr/bin/gcc, /usr/bin/g++, etc. binaries with hard
links to the /usr/local/bin/gcc-freebsd-4.0,
/usr/local/bin/g++-freebsd-4.0, etc. binaries.
Now
I'm having problems installing FreeBSD V6.0 on an HP (ne Compaq) desktop PC.
The install appears to go fine from CD, or via FTP, but on rebooting the
installed boot loader halts with a register dump and "BTX halted" error
message. So no rotating curser, no kernel messages just the dump and error
m
It seems that there is some problem with your glib. You might need to
upgrade it. Note that portupgrade isn't working for glib/gtk 2.8.x upgrade.
You need to use gnome_upgrade212.sh instead, check /usr/ports/UPDATING for
details.
cheers,
--ken
On 10/11/05, makisupa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
Been messing with FreeBSD for a week and a half or so now. Getting my
laptop all setup to play DVDs and something wierd happened to Firefox
(probably unrelated I know). As an aside, xine works well but i'm
not a fan of the gui, gxine core dumps a few seconds after going
fullscreen or toggling
At 02:51 PM 9/24/2005, Robert Huff wrote:
Glenn Dawson writes:
> I don't believe I've ever
> seen a port install itself so that it starts at boot time.
As I understand it, up until "recently" (advent of rcNG ??)
that was the default, i.e. ports routinely installed .sh in
/usr/local/e
Glenn Dawson writes:
> I don't believe I've ever
> seen a port install itself so that it starts at boot time.
As I understand it, up until "recently" (advent of rcNG ??)
that was the default, i.e. ports routinely installed .sh in
/usr/local/etc/rc.d instaed of .sh.sample.
At 02:05 PM 9/24/2005, Gerard Seibert wrote:
On Sat, 24 Sep 2005 13:30:43 -0700, Glenn Dawson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Help! Stupid Newbie Question
Wrote these words of wisdom:
>
> If the port you installed was relatively recent, you just need
> mysql_enable="
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