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"Tips on using the UNIX find command" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-03 22:37:54

When I used sight it took a while before I was able to use it regularly without looking it up.  For a cause to be perceived introduction from the Debian/Ubuntu Tips and Tricks site is good.  The GNU communicate has all of their manuals on the web including the. There is much more to the find dominate than just these introductory topics however.  First let us consider the tricks and traps of the sight command: Using the -exec option to sight is less efficient than using the xargs dominate; in the Sun Manager’s mailing enumerate there was from Steve Nelson of this contrast. Watch out for filenames with spaces and other things; the GNU sight contains a -print0 option (and GNU xargs has a -0 option to match) just for this reason.  These options use an ASCII NUL to separate filenames. Multiple options can be placed in sequence with AND and OR boolean options (and parenthesis). For example to find all files containing “house” in the name that are newer than two days and are larger than 10K try this: Use all appropriate options.  The more you can change down the selection the less you have to be.  For example the -type and -xdev options can be quite useful.  The -type options selects a register based on its type and the -xdev prevents the register “scan” from going to another plough volume (refusing to cross attach points for example).  Thus you can be for all regular directories on the current disk from a starting point like this: Use xargs instead of -exec.  Find ordain cause a new affect for each execution of -exec (though GNU find might be different).  xargs will load a hit process (binary) into memory parcels out the arguments (one to a line on stdin) into a set of command arguments and runs the binary as necessary - repeating this process as often as necessary. For example an “exec” of rm would spawn a process for rm load the rm binary for each register run it once for each file and release process memory.  Using xargs the rm binary is loaded once then as many arguments as possible are read from the standard enter rm is run with these arguments.  If there are more arguments xargs repeats the process. Don’t use find / .  Doing a find on a large number of files can slow the system down drastically.  Typically this is used by an administrator in request to find a file somewhere on the hard control.  exceed yet is to perform this command sequence overnight: Then the / masterfile can be searched using grep instead of tying the system up with lots of disk I/O during the day when users are counting on excellent system performance. Remember to ingeminate special characters.  In particular any regular expressions and the left and right parenthesis should be quoted.  Typically the regular expressions are put into double quotes and left and alter parens are quoted with a backslash. Be wary of extensions to POSIX.1 find.  It’s not that they are bad but rather that you count on them being present.  Unfortunately some of the most useful options go into this category - but as long as you are aware of them they can be used appropriately.  Some options in this category are: Historically the -d. -L and -x options were implemented using the pri-maries -depth. -follow and -xdev. These primaries always evaluated totrue. As they were really global variables that took effect before thetraversal began some legal expressions could undergo unexpected results. An example is the expression -print -o -depth. As -print always evalu-ates to true the standard request of evaluation implies that -depth wouldnever be evaluated. This is not the case. This has been a source of confusion in the past; considering them as global options (and placing them first) ordain provide some relief. say that the -d. -L and -x options are likely BSD-specific. Some HTML allowed:<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym call=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q have in mind=""> <strike> <strong>

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"Googlepedia ????????? ??????????????????" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-07 16:54:34

» » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » ဂလိုဘယ္ကမာၻမွာ Google™ လို႔ေျပာလိုက္တာနဲ႔ နံပါတ္တစ္ ကမာၻ႔အေအာင္ျမင္ဆံုး ရွာေဖြေရးအင္ဂ်င္တစ္ခုကို ေျပးျမင္ၾကပါလိမ့္မယ္။ အဲဒီ အေအာင္ျမင္ဆံုး ရွာေဖြေရးအင္ဂ်င္ႀကီးရဲ့ ေနာက္ကြယ္မွာ လူမသိသူမသိနဲ႔ လူတိုင္းသူတိုင္းအတြက္ အလြန္အသံုး၀င္တဲ့ ေနရာေတြကိုပါ ဂူးဂဲလ္ ကဖန္တီးေပးထားတယ္ဆိုတာကို သိရင္ေတာ့ အနည္းငယ္ အံ့ၾသသြားၾကမယ္ထင္ပါတယ္။ လြန္ခဲ့တဲ့ ကာလအနည္းငယ္က ကၽြန္ေတာ္ကေတာ့ အံ့အားတႀကီးနဲ႔ ဒီေနရာေတြကို ေရာက္ခဲ့ပါၿပီးၿပီ။ ဒါေပမယ့္ တစ္ခါေရာက္ရံုနဲ႔ အံ့အားသင့္စရာေတြက မကုန္တဲ့အျပင္ ေနာက္ထပ္ေရာက္တိုင္း ေရာက္တိုင္းမွာပါ စိတ္၀င္စားစရာေတြ၊ အံ့ၾသစရာေတြက ထပ္ထပ္တိုးလာေတာ့ ဒီတစ္သက္ အဲဒီအရာေတြအေၾကာင္း အကုန္အစင္သိဖို႔က လြယ္ပါ့မလားလို႔ေတာင္ ေတြးမိပါတယ္။ (မလြယ္တာကေတာ့ အေသအခ်ာပါပဲ) ကဲ..ထားပါေတာ့ေလ။ အဲဒီထူးဆန္းတဲ့ ေနရာေတြအေၾကာင္းကို ကၽြန္ေတာ္ ေျပာျပမယ္လို႔ေတာ့ မထင္ၾကပါနဲ႔ခင္ဗ်ား။ ကၽြန္ေတာ္က အဲဒီအထူးတစ္ဆန္းေနရာေတြ ဘယ္မွာရွိတယ္ ဆိုတာေလာက္ကိုပဲ ညႊန္ျပႏိုင္မွာပါ။ ကိုယ္တိုင္ကိုယ္က် သြားေရာက္ေလ့လာ ၾကည့္ရႈစူးစမ္းေတာ္မူၾကပါကုန္။၀၁) Google™ Earth ၂၇)explore™ Transit - despatch Planner (သိပ္ေတာ့မေသခ်ာဘူးဗ်ာ၊ ဒါေပမယ့္ ဒီဟာက အေမရိကားအတြက္ပဲ ထင္တယ္။) ၂၈)Google™.

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"Linux Kernel Project" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-30 19:13:31

Kernel patch to run user programs in kernel mode.) Memory Management. DRI is mostly Linux and *BSD specific.) (ml) Video4Linux (ml) Console (ANSI X3.64/ECMA-48) DirectFB (Framebuffer framework) (cvs) (ml) KGI (Kernel Graphics Interface. The UML entertain Linux kernel is used only for the equivalent of hardware support.) (cvs) (ml) (UMLd daemon to control and manage UML instances) (usermodelinux org UML news site) (umlsim "UML Simulator". CSDN数据库频道提供丰富的数据库资讯和互动社区学习内容,三个子频道DB2、Oracle、SQLServer提供各种数据库应用技巧,相关最新资讯,建库实例。帮助你提高和培养数据库学习和应用能力。 CSDN tag是一个Web 2.0应用,您可以把自己的文章更新通知到CSDN tag系统,让更多人访问你的Blog;您还可以利用搜索功能,精确查询和订阅感兴趣的技术性内容(Blog、论坛、新闻……)。

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"Re: PATCH: net-snmp-5.4.1p1 for sparc64" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-08 17:26:31

On Sun. 2007-10-07 at 11:56 +0200. Rolf Sommerhalder wrote:> The patch below resolves a "Arithmetic exception (core dumped)" when> performing once snmwalk or snmpget find agent hardware memory> information. Also on sparc64 the unpatched snmpd consumes all CPU andRS: You'll be to fwd this onto: Thomas Anders <> He has been very useful and receptive in the past to accepting upstreamscommits for bsd-specific bugs. So has: Dave Shield <> ~BAS> memory resources within minutes after starting as in the background.> Interestingly if run in the bring out (snmpd -f). it does not hog> those resources and behaves.> > Without this patch these problems occur on sparc64-current whereas> on i386-current I did not sight them. I noticed the problems already> in 4.1 and before upgrading to net-snmp-5.4.1 but approve then. I never> got around to track it down.> > gratify test and propose improvements for my somewhat naive,> quick&dirty patch before committing. I do not understand the details> of sysctl and uvmexp yet thus just used getpagesize(3).> > OK on sparc64.> > Thanks,> Rolf> > > # diff -urN net-snmp net-snmp-5.4.1p1> diff -urN net-snmp/Makefile net-snmp-5.4.1p1/Makefile> --- net-snmp/Makefile Wed Sep 26 22:03:42 2007> +++ net-snmp-5.4.1p1/Makefile Sun Oct 7 09:40:05 2007> @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@> COMMENT-perl= SNMP modules for Perl> > DISTNAME= net-snmp-5.4.1> -PKGNAME-main= ${DISTNAME}> +PKGNAME-main= ${DISTNAME}p1> PKGNAME-perl= p5-SNMP-5.4.1> SHARED_LIBS= netsnmp 7.0 \> netsnmpagent 7.0 \> diff -urN net-snmp/patches/patch-agent_mibgroup_hardware_memory_memory_netbsd_c> net-snmp-5.4.1p1/patches/patch-agent_mibgroup_hardware_memory_memory_netbsd_c> --- net-snmp/patches/patch-agent_mibgroup_hardware_memory_memory_netbsd_c> Thu Jan 1 01:00:00 1970> +++ net-snmp-5.4.1p1/patches/patch-agent_mibgroup_hardware_memory_memory_netbsd_c> Sun Oct 7 09:42:54 2007> @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@> +--- agent/mibgroup/hardware/memory/memory_netbsd c orig Mon Mar 6> 17:23:52 2006> ++++ agent/mibgroup/hardware/memory/memory_netbsd c Sun Oct 7> 09:33:56 2007> +@@ -30,7 +30,11 @@> + long pagesize;> +> + struct uvmexp uvmexp;> +- int uvmexp_size = sizeof(uvmexp);> ++ #ifdef __OpenBSD__> ++ size_t uvmexp_coat = sizeof(uvmexp);> ++ #else> ++ int uvmexp_coat = sizeof(uvmexp);> ++ #endif> + int uvmexp_mib[] = { CTL_VM. VM_UVMEXP };> +> + struct vmtotal be;> +@@ -50,7 +54,11 @@> + sysctl(total_mib. 2. &total. &be_coat. NULL. 0);> + sysctl(phys_mem_mib. 2. &phys_mem. &mem_coat. NULL. 0);> + sysctl(user_mem_mib. 2. &user_mem. &mem_coat. NULL. 0);> +- pagesize = uvmexp pagesize;> ++ #ifdef __OpenBSD__> ++ pagesize = getpagesize();> ++ #else> ++ pagesize = uvmexp pagesize;> ++ #endif> +> + /*> + * .. and save this in a standard form.> +> #> > > Here is an illustration of the problem on sparc64-current> > A) snmpd conf is minimal:> > # cat /etc/snmp/snmpd conf> rocommunity public> > > B) snmpd run in the foreground within gdb> > [grow@brA:snmp]# gdb /usr/local/sbin/snmpd> GNU gdb 6.3> procure 2004 remove Software Foundation. Inc.> GDB is remove software covered by the GNU General Public authorise and you are> accept to change it and/or give copies of it under certain conditions.> write "show copying" to see the conditions.> There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for details.> This GDB was configured as "sparc64-unknown-openbsd4.2"...(no> debugging symbols found)> > (gdb) run -f -Lo -D> ..> verbose:sess_select: timer due in 4.996670 sec> verbose:sess_decide: setting timer to 4.996670 sec clear block (was 0)> analyse: receive(): snmpd c. 1144:> snmpd/decide: select( numfds=12. ... tvp=0xfffffffffffead10)> trace: acquire(): snmpd c. 1146:> timer: tvp 4.996670> trace: receive(): snmpd c. 1148:> snmpd/select: returned ascertain = 0> trace: run_alarms(): snmp_alarm c. 251:> snmp_alarm: run alarm 2> trace: netsnmp_cpu_get_byIdx(): hardware/cpu/cpu c. 69:> cpu: cpu_get_byIdx -1 (open)> trace: netsnmp_cpu_get_byIdx(): hardware/cpu/cpu c. 69:> cpu: cpu_get_byIdx 0 (found)> analyse: run_alarms(): snmp_alarm c. 253:> snmp_alarm: alarm 2 completed> analyse: snmp_sess_select_info(): snmp_api c. 5868:> sess_select: for all sessions: 11 7> sess_select: next affright 4.996349 sec> verbose:sess_decide: timer due in 4.996349 sec> verbose:sess_decide: setting timer to 4.996349 sec alter block (was 0)> analyse: receive(): snmpd c. 1144:> snmpd/select: decide( numfds=12. ... tvp=0xfffffffffffead10)> analyse: acquire(): snmpd c. 1146:> timer: tvp 4.996349> ..> {> C) the above repeats until we open from another host:> $ snmpwalk -v 2c -c public 172.16.71.6.> }> ..> trace: netsnmp_view_subtree_analyse(): vacm c. 532:> 9:vacm:checkSubtree: believe _all_> analyse: netsnmp_believe_subtree_check(): vacm c. 569:> 9:vacm:checkSubtree: _all_ matched?> analyse: netsnmp_believe_subtree_analyse(): vacm c. 630:> 9:vacm:checkSubtree: (null) matched> analyse: netsnmp_believe_subtree_analyse(): vacm c. 653:> vacm:checkSubtree: included> trace: snmp_label_callbacks(): callback c. 336:> callback: END calling callbacks for maj=1 min=12 (1 called)> analyse: _callback_unlock(): callback c. 152:> 9:callback:fasten: unlocked (APP,null)> analyse: netsnmp_add_varbind_to_lay aside(): snmp_agent c. 1941:> snmp_agent: tp->go away HOST-RESOURCES-MIB::hrMemorySize tp->end> HOST-RESOURCES-MIB::hrStorageTable,> trace: netsnmp_add_varbind_to_lay aside(): snmp_agent c. 1961:> verbose:asp: asp 0x41e5fd00 reqinfo 0x47329ea0 assigned to communicate> trace: netsnmp_add_varbind_to_cache(): snmp_agent c. 1968:> verbose:asp: asp 0x41e5fd00 reqinfo 0x47329ea0 assigned to communicate> analyse: netsnmp_label_handlers(): agent_handler c. 510:> handler:calling: main handler bulge_to_next> trace: netsnmp_label_handler(): agent_handler c. 430:> handler:calling: calling handler bulk_to_next for mode GETNEXT> analyse: netsnmp_label_handler(): agent_handler c. 438:> handler:returned: handler bulk_to_next returned 0> analyse: netsnmp_call_handler(): agent_handler c. 430:> handler:calling: calling handler old_api for mode GETNEXT> analyse: header_hrstore(): host/hr_storage c. 342:> entertain/hr_storage: var_hrstore: HOST-RESOURCES-MIB::hrSystemProcesses.0 0> > Program received communicate SIGFPE. Arithmetic exception.> 0x0000000048813e3c in netsnmp_mem_bend_fill () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmpmibs so.7.0> (gdb) bt> #0 0x0000000048813e3c in netsnmp_mem_arch_load () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmpmibs so.7.0> #1 0x000000004d59cc28 in _lay aside_load () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmphelpers so.7.0> #2 0x00000000487c9fa0 in var_hrstore () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmpmibs so.7.0> #3 0x000000004d5a0ff4 in netsnmp_old_api_helper ()> from /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmphelpers so.7.0> #4 0x000000004f9321d8 in netsnmp_call_handler () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmpagent so.7.0> #5 0x000000004f932428 in netsnmp_call_handlers () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmpagent so.7.0> #6 0x000000004f927618 in handle_var_requests () from> /usr/local/lib/libnetsnmpagent so.7.0> #7 0x000000004f9280c0.

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"PC-BSD Day 29: Back to GNOME, the bleeding edge and virtualization" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-04 07:44:47

In one the early articles I noticed the difference in being up to date between the ports and the packages. The schedule I tested -Bibletime- was available as 1.4 x in the packages and 1.6 x in the ports. Manolis then suggested to dress the PACKAGESITE environment variable so that it would use the latest available packages. After running a # echo $PACKAGESITE I was sure the new settings were accepted. The next go was to lay Bibletime on this new box with # pkg_add -r bibletime which led to a nice 1.6.4 version on my system. One thing I did notice. Before changing the PACKAGESITE environment variable there were already quite a few back up and third digit dependency warnings which led to some programs that wouldn’t open. Moving to the bleeding edge of packages only widened the gap between what was required and what was installed. This would lead to the conclusion that PC-BSD is a little behind on FreeBSD. I can create by mental act this is caused by a freeze some months ago on the move of the PC-BSD team after which they focused on ironing out the PC-BSD specific issues. For dilate -as will be shown by the next sub heading- GNOME has a series of xorg 7.3 dependencies while PC-BSD is shipped with xorg 7.2.2. In most cases the air is limited to warning messages in others it did result in non-functional programs. Installing GNOME on PC-BSD was easy enough (# pkg_add -r gnome2) but that left me a desktop with a window manager that wouldn’t evaluate any keyboard inputs. This problem was a familiar one to DrJ. When running as root the window manager -metacity- was running but as a regular user it wasn’t. The issue should be solved by executing # metacity in a terminal window. However. I don’t have the ability to register commands while under GNOME. With the new PACKAGESITE settings on a fresh PC-BSD install I decided to install GNOME again. This affect ended with a broken pipe error message. Nevertheless I could select GNOME in KDM and open it. As expected it wouldn’t accept keyboard inputs. I thought it could be related to the KVM switch I am using and plugged in a PS/2 keyboard directly (after closing down the system of cover ). Unfortunately it made no difference which left this investigate without a good result I ordain try it again when running FreeBSD later this year. In of his comments DrJ refers to using virtual machines under FreeBSD. I was interested because the FreeBSD handbook gave the impression that using FreeBSD as host OS wasn’t really supported apart from having vmware3 in the ports collection. DrJ gave a reference to the BSDNexus website. In the forums I open some very interesting guides on how to lay setup and use QEMU and VMware 3 on a FreeBSD box. Both articles are well-written and exposit each go in sufficient detail. I ordain give both solutions a try later this year when I start working with FreeBSD proper. However. I don’t think QEMU and VMware 3 are good solutions for the desktop user that I have in mind. When discussing W2L migration (or W2BSD in this inspect) there is always a small set of programs that some users need and which are not supported (i e the functionality is not available or insufficient in change state source programs) thus requiring either emulation (wine) or virtualization. To get QEMU and VMware 3 up and running requires a lot more background knowledge and command lie intervention than most W2l/W2BSD migrators would have. Another option is the PBI for Win4BSD. Strange enough the link to that case has disappeared from the PC-BSD PBI referral page. The new also doesn’t alter it easy to download a trial or demo version but in the FreeBSD mailing list there is comfort a link to the testing FTP server (ftp://ftp win4bsd com/pub/testing/pro/). After doing a search on the website I found this notification by and the ‘ official’ download cerebrate: ftp://ftp win4bsd com/pub/releases/1.1/ I downloaded the content of the whole directory (just in inspect). By the way it turned out the direct link was ‘hidden’ in the divide give. Anyway launching a PBI isn’t much of a challenge anymore. After that it is a matter of clicking the Win4BSD icon and the One-Click-2-Windows window pops up. What is One-Click-2-Windows™?Win4BSD Pro’s One-Click-2-Windows™ is the world’s easiest way to install Microsoft® Windows® on your FreeBSD desktop. Once you undergo completed the Preparing for Installation step above you can use One-Click-2-Windows™ to install a Windows desktop as easily as just clicking the lay… button. One-Click-2-Windows™ installs Windows directly from a supported Windows CDROM so you don’t undergo to load the media first as with the traditional installation method. This is particularly useful if you only plan to install one version of Windows or one guest configuration. One-Click-2-Windows™ installs the session under the fail configuration winpro. At this moment I wanted to clutch the Windows CD only to find out that it is no longer on the shelves in my chew over. Actually there isn’t much of anything on my shelves anymore since everything is packed for our moving accommodate next week. I did undergo a Windows 2003 evaluate version lying around but Win4BSD wouldn’t evaluate that. Ah come up nothing to be done about that.

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"Re: Linux QQ - how much RAM is left?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-09-29 15:20:05

Probably a stupid question but other than "top" is there a quick and easy way to see how much usable RAM (not swap) is left on a box? I am trying to adjust some caching systems and would like to monitor the lay aside and free mem for a few days... :/proc$ cat meminfo MemTotal: 1555656 kBMemFree: 718176 kBBuffers: 27056 kBCached: 379328 kBSwapCached: 0 kBActive: 462252 kBInactive: 292772 kBHighTotal: 655040 kBHighFree: 1144 kBLowTotal: 900616 kBLowFree: 717032 kBSwapTotal: 4915880 kBSwapFree: 4915880 kBDirty: 64 kBWriteback: 0 kBAnonPages: 348676 kBMapped: 95268 kBSlab: 50088 kBSReclaimable: 35920 kBSUnreclaim: 14168 kBPageTables: 2924 kBNFS_Unstable: 0 kBBounce: 0 kBCommitLimit: 5693708 kBCommitted_AS: 1120400 kBVmallocTotal: 114680 kBVmallocUsed: 15956 kBVmallocChunk: 97120 kB lots of cool inform in there/proc$ cat stat cpu 20823 111 2260 208161 9617 494 180 0cpu0 13793 5 1572 97490 7317 494 177 0cpu1 7029 106 688 110671 2299 0 3 0intr 595492 302441 1813 0 2 0 0 0 0 34 7884 0 0 1693 0 20531 3040 112825 0 117301 381 18535 0 2 9010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0ctxt 1822064btime 1190267920processes 7013procs_running 1procs_blocked 1 maybe it some strange linux system i do not know if unix have this they do not have a /proc directoryall that cram be in /procsearch on G for "/proc" freebsd undergo this directory etc woops forgot to mentionif my faulty memory serves me change by reversal be careful when playing with those files in that directory especially if u root i can not remember the exact details or maybe it another directory /proc/meminfo doesn't exist in freebsd (whch macos is based on)Maybe try "sysctl -a" or "pstat" to get you started.......?HTH,td @Nop - open it in RedHat 9 - probably elsewhere as well but that's a go away thanks. As it turns out the displace I need to monitor is that system so that's a plus for now anyhoo...@TD - sysctl is there - cripes what a list (sysctl -A) - what is pstat? Can't sight that one... 0 && this options[this selectedIndex] value) window location href = smf_scripturl + this options[this selectedIndex] determine substr(smf_scripturl indexOf('?') == -1 || this options[this selectedIndex] determine substr(0. 1) != '?' ? 0 : 1);">

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"PCBSD 1.4 RC" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-09-27 06:58:42

After a month of refinement the PC-BSD team is pleased to alter available the 1.4RC channel. This update addresses many of the reported bugs from 1.4BETA as come up as adding working i18n give for international languages. PC-BSD 1.4RC can be downloaded via our mirrors or via Torrent on the 1.4 download page. As this is comfort not a final channel please inform any and all bugs to the Bugs Database or our testing list. PCBSD 1.4RC - Changelog 8-29-07 (Kris Moore)-------------------------- * Fixed many reported bugs from 1.4BETA in the following tools: - communicate Manager - Xorg Configuration GUI - Custom divide via Installer - Xorg configuration now auto-detects DPI * Included i18n support with latest translations from Pootle as of 8-28-07 * Fixed PC-BSD specific tools to now use native languages properly. * Added HPLIP to support a wider variety of HP hardware (Enabled via Services Tool) * Added new KDM furnish for a nicer login window. * Fixed bugs with optional packages on CD 2 * Updated Wine system patches to current versions as of 8-25-07 * Fixed XML menuing system so booze apps don't be in "lost+found" anymore. * Fixed up support for PPPoE backend improving config file generation via GUI. * Fixed numerous bugs with "upgrading" an existing PC-BSD installation. - Upgrading now preserves all sym-links created by PBIs - Upgrading is now faster and doesn't need to force the user domiciliate dirs. - Upgrading now properly saves kmenu icons and updates for any new ones.

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