I don't understand the persistent desire of it being in the base system. It makes me suspect corporate involvement. What exactly is it supposed to do, that apparently isn't possible while it's an external program? Are we sure that no other...
The updates and patches are downloaded and stored in /var/db/freebsd-update/. The install phase loads them from there.
Saying 'no' to the proposed changes stops the entire upgrade process. Your freebsd-update .... upgrade never "finished", so...
Given that you've already identified it as an untrustworthy machine, I don't really think it matters. Just properly isolate/firewall it, so that it cannot be used as a spearhead for further incursions.
I don't understand the persistent desire of it being in the base system. It makes me suspect corporate involvement. What exactly is it supposed to do, that apparently isn't possible while it's an external program? Are we sure that no other...
They probably are thinking comparatively to Rails or Node.js, as many on-premise webapps in the self-hosting circles are written with those. Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based software, for which the big dominant big brother, Mastodon, is a Rails app...
They probably are thinking comparatively to Rails or Node.js, as many on-premise webapps in the self-hosting circles are written with those. Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based software, for which the big dominant big brother, Mastodon, is a Rails app...
They probably are thinking comparatively to Rails or Node.js, as many on-premise webapps in the self-hosting circles are written with those. Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based software, for which the big dominant big brother, Mastodon, is a Rails app...
FreeBSD actually works fine with readonly filesystems, Things like logging will fail. It can't write a new /etc/resolv.conf etc but it will still run fine.
With my NFS boot readonly would be easy to implement. But I don't want to cripple the...
CPU time is pretty low although not as low as a good C or C++ program.
The way that linking works makes the binaries bigger than C. C++ of course can be bloaty. Off-hand I don't know whether a modern C++ program or a Rust program come out bigger.
CPU time is pretty low although not as low as a good C or C++ program.
The way that linking works makes the binaries bigger than C. C++ of course can be bloaty. Off-hand I don't know whether a modern C++ program or a Rust program come out bigger.
FreeBSD actually works fine with readonly filesystems, Things like logging will fail. It can't write a new /etc/resolv.conf etc but it will still run fine.
With my NFS boot readonly would be easy to implement. But I don't want to cripple the...
Looking at the mailing list, I think they are deciding what "shot" is the correct one. So far two things:
Overly modularise and reduce things. Typical developer mindset which creates DIY Linux-like platforms rather than operating systems...
Oh they did that, big time, in the railcars carrying mail between BRD/DDR and back, so you could have letters which were opened twice in transit.
And of course you can depend on telephones being listened to. I always joke that the internet...
Our local TelCo is floating plans to have AI agents in all calls which you can summon by saying "Hello Magenta" which is supposed to help you with matters. I just hope we are not so far up idiocracy creek that people can't vote with their wallet...
That may be the goal for some companies involved. Because parents are the administrators, and administrators must be trusted to do "the right thing". So, with great sadness, it will be decided that nobody can be the admin on their own system...
If it's remote you need IPMI or some other remote KVM solution. What about typos in /etc/fstab? Or a botched upgrade? There are many reasons why a system could fail to boot.
Status update
I noticed the usual warnings of geli in the log regarding "Failed to authenticate ... bytes of data at offset ..." but noticed that some of them had pretty small offsets. Therefore I started to fill the geli device with random data...
I lean toward the later because I am not developer, not distribution architect or such.
I just use the computer, I like UNIX with BSD flavor.
And if one wants, can also dismember FreeBSD and mix it with other software.
Looking at the mailing list, I think they are deciding what "shot" is the correct one. So far two things:
Overly modularise and reduce things. Typical developer mindset which creates DIY Linux-like platforms rather than operating systems...
Fix pkg first; pkg bootstrap -f (This runs pkg, not pkg)
Then force an update of the cached catalog; pkg update -f
Then upgrade/reinstall everything; pkg upgrade -f
But your /var/db/pkg/local.sqlite might be corrupted somehow. There's a backup...
Looking at the mailing list, I think they are deciding what "shot" is the correct one. So far two things:
Overly modularise and reduce things. Typical developer mindset which creates DIY Linux-like platforms rather than operating systems...
You don't create a pool if you only want to replace a broken drive from an existing pool; zpool-replace.
Or was this a single drive pool? That's now dead? Make sure to remove that pool before creating a new one with the same name.
According to ChatGPT:
Here is a simple and clean setup for Nextcloud on FreeBSD using Caddy + PostgreSQL + PHP-FPM.
This stack is simpler than using Apache HTTP Server and works very well for home servers.
1. Install required packages
pkg...
No recordings of yesterday's talks. Maybe youtube has something on agents chatting on discord.
Might not be too common, yesterday's presenters were top notch.
Not much. If it is a dedicated machine, it can be thrashed. Isolate it on the network and you should be good to go. If you need mgmt after you boot the agents, login to root on physical console.
I feel a compromise can be had. Doing nothing at all, could well be that ;)
No need to FREEZE. Of course I am happy for them to fix lpd if they had time. Or as cracauer@ mentioned, prove how a disabled by default program can be a security...
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