Install NBcoin on FreeBSD
The NBcoin digital currency is probably a dead coin at this point, but so long as someone wants it I guess it could still be revived. I've made installing NBcoin on FreeBSD is very easy.
The NBcoin digital currency is probably a dead coin at this point, but so long as someone wants it I guess it could still be revived. I've made installing NBcoin on FreeBSD is very easy.
Zetacoin is a digital currency that is similar to Bitcoin but with faster conformation times and quicker difficulty adjustments. Installing Zetacoin on FreeBSD is very easy.
The Bitcoin and Litecoin ports don't include any rc.d start up and shutdown scripts for FreeBSD. So I went ahead and made some. In order to use these scripts you must do some additional work after installing the respective ports.
This is my customized version of the Eloipool mining pool server (written in Python) for FreeBSD 9.x.
Roundcube has a nice little plugin named "password" that allows your users to change their passwords using the Roundcube Webmail interface. However, the current "drivers" do not work very well in a secure environment. Most drivers need you to have the "sudo" command installed and enabled for the Apache HTTP user. Others require that they be run as root.
There comes a time when your FreeBSD root partition (or slice) is just too small to be of any use. You've already moved /var, /usr, and /tmp to separate disks, you've tried cleaning up some logs, clearing cache, and even run pkg clean. There just isn't anything else you can delete. The problem is it was initially created too small when FreeBSD installed.
Updated: 2020-12-05
Sometimes it's useful to create .tbz packages of all the installed ports on your FreeBSD system. Whether it's for a backup or for use on other similar systems, using the ports that are already built to your liking can save lots of time.
This is similar to the Ubuntu PowerPC version found at http://www.unibia.com/unibianet/developer/procmail-wrapper-ppc-powerpc-v... but for FreeBSD 9.0 i386. If anyone wants a 64-bit version, ask and I will make one.
Download it below.
You have a FreeNAS 7/NAS4Free server setup and you have several USB drives attached to it. Your ongoing issue is that every time you reboot your FreeNAS server the disk mounts get mixed up and the drive numbers are out of order. One day your 120GB Western Digital HDD is da0, then all of a sudden it becomes da2 while your Seagate 500GB HDD is now da0.
If you have more USB drives attached and you use software RAID. All of a sudden, your Western Digital HDD that stores all those vacation pictures becomes a member of a RAID set. Ouch!!
I've recently been experiencing a problem with some MySQL servers, "Host 'host_name' is blocked because of many connection errors.