This is my first post to this forum in many years. I used FreeBSD version 2.X many years ago to operate a web and e-mail server for the University of Idaho's College of Mines. I am now revisiting FreeBSD and have run into somewhat of a snag.
I hope this is the correct place in the forum to put this question, so here goes:
I am installing FreeBSD and various ports on two computers: 1) our main computer which I and my wife use very heavily. That is one I built about 7 years ago. It is a Gigbyte mobo with an AMD64 3800 CPU running at about 2 GHz. I have 3 GB of RAM, and two HDs installed: a) a 500 GB Seagate which is our primary Windows drive, and a second 250 GB Seagate which I have dedicated to FreeBSD, and 2) a computer for our oldest son who does music composition, among other things. It turns out that his computer appears to be at least five times faster than ours.
The problem I have run into is that I installed GNOME on our son's box using
However, when attempting the install on our own box, I used
My question is: "Just how many years does it take to complete the install?" and secondly "How can you tell how close you are to being finished?"
I began the install at midnight or so on Saturday. By 9:00 PM on Sunday evening, the box was still churning away with my continuing to stare at the screen constantly from 2:00 PM Sunday until then. My rear-end hurt and I was hungry.
I finally
So, might any of you good folks have an answer to my two questions? Thanks,
BTW, I built our son's box about three years ago. I also installed a second WDC 250 GB drive a few days ago, and dedicated that to FreeBSD. He is quite happy with what FreeBSD is offering him. We boot both machines to the chosen operating system at the BIOS boot screen
One more thing: I upped the swap space on our son's computer to 4GB at the time of install, but left the default on ours. I suppose that might make a big difference?
I hope this is the correct place in the forum to put this question, so here goes:
I am installing FreeBSD and various ports on two computers: 1) our main computer which I and my wife use very heavily. That is one I built about 7 years ago. It is a Gigbyte mobo with an AMD64 3800 CPU running at about 2 GHz. I have 3 GB of RAM, and two HDs installed: a) a 500 GB Seagate which is our primary Windows drive, and a second 250 GB Seagate which I have dedicated to FreeBSD, and 2) a computer for our oldest son who does music composition, among other things. It turns out that his computer appears to be at least five times faster than ours.
The problem I have run into is that I installed GNOME on our son's box using
pkg_add -r gnome. It appeared to install, completely, over night and works well, although I have no audio yet. I began the install about midnight one night, and it was finished before morning. The audio problem is probably related to the fact that he has three sound "cards" in that computer. I'll get that sorted out later.However, when attempting the install on our own box, I used
make install clean from /usr/ports/x11/gnome2.My question is: "Just how many years does it take to complete the install?" and secondly "How can you tell how close you are to being finished?"
I began the install at midnight or so on Saturday. By 9:00 PM on Sunday evening, the box was still churning away with my continuing to stare at the screen constantly from 2:00 PM Sunday until then. My rear-end hurt and I was hungry.
I finally
control -Ced out of it at one of the option screens as my wife was going frantic since she had to get a grant request for our handicapped daughter finished by Monday afternoon.So, might any of you good folks have an answer to my two questions? Thanks,
BTW, I built our son's box about three years ago. I also installed a second WDC 250 GB drive a few days ago, and dedicated that to FreeBSD. He is quite happy with what FreeBSD is offering him. We boot both machines to the chosen operating system at the BIOS boot screen
F-12.One more thing: I upped the swap space on our son's computer to 4GB at the time of install, but left the default on ours. I suppose that might make a big difference?