Seems everyone so far uses firewall rules with their NAT rules.
I came across a user who uses NAT rules only. Seems someone (probably me) needs to write a handbook article or wiki page discussing correct NAT setup. Probably a good education...
So, either find out why 192.168.54.71 does not resolve hostnames (you did not specify what lives at that address), or use your gateway IP (which is usually a router/modem with a resolver built in), or change your nameserver to 8.8.8.8 and see if...
Quote from a Mel Brooks movie: "An Ordre du fait? What's an Ordre du fait?" "It's what you oughtn't to do but you do anyway".
I think this is turning into a religious matter. The need to "get rid of C" gets absurd. After all, they need assembler...
We have a similar report in social media. Discussed briefly in IRC. Reported in Bugzilla 28th April, same-day fix committed to latest and quarterly.
Please be patient for packages to be built and served by the FreeBSD Project. Alternatively...
In that case, it still doesn't quite make sense (the article, rather than msplsh), as per the Cargo.toml. They are simply using libwayland-client (also written in C) instead of libSDL or libX11.
Basically, the author of the original article is...
I followed:
https://crunchbang.org/forums/viewtopic.php?id=7830
...and both Alexander88207 and aragats sugestions works too. I do not know about LXDE because I have Openbox.
And I put in my Openbox autostartx.sh the line:
export...
Quote from a Mel Brooks movie: "An Ordre du fait? What's an Ordre du fait?" "It's what you oughtn't to do but you do anyway".
I think this is turning into a religious matter. The need to "get rid of C" gets absurd. After all, they need assembler...
I'm trying to follow the instructions here but don't see any options for colour or size. Obviously doing something wrong...
Should these instructions apply to LXDE?
Hi!
I like to change the mouse pointer size and color. I am using x11-wm/openbox and x11/tint. There are some options for mouse but not size or colour.
Any suggestions how to do it, please?
Thank you.
In that case, it still doesn't quite make sense (the article, rather than msplsh), as per the Cargo.toml. They are simply using libwayland-client (also written in C) instead of libSDL or libX11.
Basically, the author of the original article is...
I am always disappointed when Rust macros are bashed by those who used them for a while. Compile-time computing is such an important part of changeable software.
As per: https://docs.oracle.com/en/virtualization/virtualbox/6.0/user/usb-support.html
Which means you still have OHCI (usb 1.x) support. In some cases that might be good enough?
VirtualBox 7 (not yet in ports) actually pulls the USB...
And using libX11 solves that instead somehow? I doubt it. For one the APIs between SDL and libX11 are actually very similar.
Using libX11 is in no way doing things the Rust and/or memory managed way.
I have a FreeBSD installation (13.1) with around 30 pkgs installed. I'm trying to backup the original install but exclude all the pkgs added in the meantime.
I can't figure out how to do this.
I'd appreciate any suggestions.
I’m still using CORE. Extremely happy with it. One thing lacks, and that is sound support, which I need for some icecast streaming.
I’m using an Ubuntu VM running on TrueNAS CORE for that.
It’s been a solid platform (CORE) for me and I’ve...
It's 100% not caused by Firefox.
At least not the root cause.
As I wrote, a reboot solves the problem. For a while. But it reappears, even if I don't start firefox et al.
Firefox just helps the problem to reoccur faster. But it's not the root...
I respectfully disagree. I believe in using the right tool for the job. My little machine shop in the basement has 80 square feet (8 square meters) of wall covered in pegboard, with tools hanging on it. There isn't one screwdriver, there are a...
I am always disappointed when Rust macros are bashed by those who used them for a while. Compile-time computing is such an important part of changeable software.
Oh no, it is. You need to go straight down to the metal, Mano a Mano with each bit in the CPU status registers. I'd like any high level language to try this. The reason rust links to C and an OS us that otherwise they would need to link to...
OP,
I use the XigmaNAS system which is constructed on FreeBSD.
Lessons learned: you will quickly outgrow your anticipated need. By a whole lot.
My NAS is for movie storage.
I had six WD Red Pro 4tb drives in stock at the time, and decided to...
For FreeBSD users, share your experience of FreeBSD based NAS distributions. In addition, share your experiences using FreeBSD directly for NAS services or for dedicated NAS. Welcome are comparisons of NAS services on FreeBSD to XigmaNAS and past...
For today it's enough to jump start your code from a JTAG. You don't need to (as I did once upon a time) write a converter from binary image to verilog code to be loaded into the bus controller as an EPROM substitute. That machine had no switches...
Oh no, it is. You need to go straight down to the metal, Mano a Mano with each bit in the CPU status registers. I'd like any high level language to try this. The reason rust links to C and an OS us that otherwise they would need to link to...
Because then all discussion will be centered around indent styles and function name schemes. That will create a singularity. We can't have that.
Ok, back on track. Most languages have a binding to C is because C is a pretty portable macro...
If you want to replicate a directory structure, including "everything", mtree is your tool. What you're quoting here doesn't contradict that. Then you really shouldn't care about the format of the specification mtree creates. Just use exactly...
They get access to C libraries almost for free (minus the tedious bindings).
Mainly because most languages are an "illusion". Think of them more like config file parsers. They are basically just C programs that read differently formatted text...
That is surely a pipe dream? They will never do it. For one there is probably a correlation between Rust fans and Wayland fans scared of the X protocol and writing a client from scratch.
So really writing SDL from the bottom up (ontop of a...
Better ask questions in an area that's not strictly moderated.
There is, at least, the problem of overlapping answers, duplication of effort (people can't see each other's contributions in good time).
HTH
A typical program written by a JS/Rust developer will fetch in 100+ micro-dependencies of shite from NPM/crates.io. I am sure a couple will start to be infected with the odd trojan too.
I am always disappointed when Rust macros are bashed by those who used them for a while. Compile-time computing is such an important part of changeable software.
Holy misleading thread title, batman.
The double buffering in the case of mmap seems to be properly implemented and "only" be a problem for some performance situations. It still is that way in FreeBSD and Linux (but not Solaris).
drhowarddrfine
There is no measurement, it's a subjective experience. Take a rich application such as Firefox or any bigger Qt/KDE framework and start resizing the window, hold the handle and move it around, observe the fluidity of redrawing...
I've noticed FreeBSD is less "snappy" in desktop usage than Linux, especially KDE.
I have a CPU that scores high (green area) on the UserBenchmark site for desktop and workstation performance.
When I say snappy I mean GUI responsiveness...
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