December 2001 Issue of Daemon News
questionlp writes: "The December 2001 issue of the Daemon News E-zine is now live on the Internet. This month's issue contains great articles about generating MRTG graphs of qmail statistics under FreeBSD, coding styles, SNMP agent development and the first of three parts on the csh and tcsh shells. Also launched this month for Daemon News is their hardware certification and driver development services."
The article on System Log verification is good too. I have never felt quite this motivated to keep track of the logs, but it seems a reasonable pursuit for a security expert to write about it, and naturally, for BSD to provide it. I just hope I never feel the need to use it.
No. You are dying, punk.
I seem to recall that Daemon News was supposed to start issuing a print version as well as the online version of their zine. Has anyone seen this in an actual store, or is it a subscribe through the web site only sort of thing?
--saint
it might be a troll but it does sound convincing
:)
/dev/audio
/mnt/cd
/net/tcp/10/data
/bin/services called tcp7 for instance and then it's stdin & stdout are the connection
I'm a sahreholder of an ISP, we've been running for five years or so. Originally we were going for NT but soon discovered what a bad idea that was.
2 days before launch we scrapped the idea and bought a BSD 2.1 Internet Server Ready CD.
Overnight it was installed and working.
Now with around 5000 users our BSD setup happily chugs along on 3 pentium 90 machines (mail, web/ftp & news) [separated for failsafe rather than load].
At home and at my website, FreeBSD was the easy choice. It's rock solid.
Ports & packages are a dream come true.
Still, though, my OS of choice is plan9. Even if it never had another release again I would be perfectly satisfied.
(web browsing aside - a mighty task)
but there is a new release on it's way. We'll finally wave goodbye to 23 char filenames (sigh) and hopefully support another sound card (sigh
want to listen to some music
cat music >
want to burn a cd ?
cp *.jpg
write to a network socket
echo 'hello' >
inetd? nah. we have aux/listen. plonk a script in
echo server - try :
#!/bin/rc
cat
it's such a pleasure
http://plan9.bell-labs.com/plan9
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
Daemonnews comes out almost every month.
Why it news when it arrives. This is more lame than ask slashdot.
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
This is absurd. How in the world can you proclaim an OS's users and death by counting UseNet Posts. I use FreeBSD for both work and home and have in the past setup a few companies to use BSDI. However, i've never actually had to post to a usnet group for *BSD. I also use Linux, AIX, and when somebody forces me, I login to an OS/390 box (I do cross platform Java development). However, I have yet to creat a UseNet posting for any of these OS's much less windows. Why? Because I know how to read, and everything I've wanted to do or desired to do, was already written.
Get a clue!