That is not what I am finding. …
Upgrade, or a new installation?
That is not what I am finding. …
For reference, here is the man page.Looks like a way to save a process to a file and restart it from that later, maybe even on a different host.
cy@ Please share the make/model of that thing as a warning to keep in mind. What changes the mind of a merchant the fastest is the sound of money walking by.
I'm not even finding that model when I try to do a quick Google search... I get hits for a Revo M1 (which is a desktop mini-cube) or Apple M1 or more recent Acer Nitro models...It's an Acer M1. It was delivered with Windows 8.1 at the time. M.2 SSD and WiFi card are soldered to the MB.
Are you sure it is an Acer M1 and not the Acre Mi which is sold from the trucks in the back alley of the chinese strip mall?It's an Acer M1. It was delivered with Windows 8.1 at the time. M.2 SSD and WiFi card are soldered to the MB.
It's not a currently available laptop anymore. But my comments remind us to be wary and make sure to test before we buy. I always do.I'm not even finding that model when I try to do a quick Google search... I get hits for a Revo M1 (which is a desktop mini-cube) or Apple M1 or more recent Acer Nitro models...
Testing 14-RC4 Fresh Install.Upgrade, or a new installation?
… to 14.0-RC4 from 13.2-RELEASE, I have found a very useful feature - SSL 3.0. …
There was a great amount of work done to Suspend States in FreeBSD-14.
I would think that counts somewhat.
What's your favourite new feature?
+1S4 suspend and resume
S4 suspend and resume.
… should tell something …
So it either was removed, indicating defeat -or- it never was there, in which case not waking up after sleep is "implemented as specified". If only Mr Ledger or Mr Jackson had known.Now, the word wake does not exist in the FreeBSD Handbook.
… suspend to RAM (and resume) should be close to perfect. Please post details to a separate topic, ping me from there and I'll help you. Thanks.
This is hilarious. 30 years of scolding people for even mentioning telnet has resulted in the bold decision to remove it from the base OS (just making it more difficult for users to install it). There's nothing antiquated about it;. Is FTP antiquated? TFTP? Does anyone under 50 know what finger is?Increased boot speed. And the
removal of outdated features (old drivers, telnetd).
For Telnet, it's cannon fodder for script kiddies. These days, anyone can google for instructions on how to take advantage of security holes in Telnet and FTP.This is hilarious. 30 years of scolding people for even mentioning telnet has resulted in the bold decision to remove it from the base OS (just making it more difficult for users to install it). There's nothing antiquated about it;. Is FTP antiquated? TFTP? Does anyone under 50 know what finger is?
For Telnet, it's cannon fodder for script kiddies. These days, anyone can google for instructions on how to take advantage of security holes in Telnet and FTP.
For tFTP, it's still used for consumer grade router firmwares - the proprietary ones that come with brand-new devices by default, but not DD-WRT.
I'm under 50, but yes I know what finger(1) is...learned it in college, it was used to mess with some of my classmates who had no idea what it is
Do you have any IoT devices on your home network? Do you trust a 3rd party "router" (really, a bridge) + wifi device?You don't need encryption on a local network. Your wireless data is encrypted. nobody is breaking into a wire between my desk and my server across the room.
With 14.0-RELEASE being so close to release, what are some of the new features that you are looking forward to use/have?
remove
Yeah, that does keep things simple, but that's not a Best Practice. Your own LAN is the best place to practice firewall rules, encryption, etc, just to get a handle on how these things even work, and where to look when network packets get stuck.You don't need encryption on a local network
Do you use WPA2? 256 bits is a pretty standard thing in the realm of 802.11, but no, it's not the strongest encryption available.Your wireless data is encrypted
Read your modem's manual. Your modem does have a web-based interface with a default password (which you should change, BTW). If you consider exactly what it means to 'break into a network', what specific actions need to be taken, you'll realize that bakul 's comment is definitely not conflation. Barney , have you ever tried to unbrick a router? Exact same methods can be used to 'break into a network' - and once successful, yeah, that's what it takes to read the traffic that passes on a given interface on a given device that you broke into.My modem is a NAT. You're conflating breaking into a network and being able to read traffic on the wire. If you telnet over the internet, someone *could* sniff the packets and see plain text passwords.
Now that's just not true...On a local network nobody can do that. It has nothing to do with security on the system itself.
In, as well. On a UNIX (or UNIX-like) system like FreeBSD, firewalls are built to filter ports and specific IP addresses. If you want application-specific (or anything but ports/IPv4/IPv6 addresses) filtering, use that application's .conf file, don't ask the firewall to deal with that.Ports are firewall out
I use DD-WRT on my Asus 1900 RT AC68U router, and I consciously avoid the 'modem + wifi router' devices.Do you have any IoT devices on your home network? Do you trust a 3rd party "router" (really, a bridge) + wifi device?
+1 to wishful thinking
For a verylong time, the most commonplace requirement was not properly documented.
Now, the word wake does not exist in the FreeBSD Handbook.