Is there any gotchas I should be aware of before running freebsd-update to get from 7.2 to 8.0 on my vps? perhaps have some good coffee next to you lol :) i tried it the other day on a 'real' box and something went horribly wrong just make sure you have VNC and/or console server access in case you need out-of-band access up_the_irons: Oh, heh - good you mentioned that. I'll just mail my pubkey to support ;) nerdd: :) up_the_irons: gitosis sure is neat! thanks for writing that article up amdprophet: it's awesome np being able to manage the config file using git itself is just... amazing yeah, it feels so... right anyone tried http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite? heh heh gitoris oh, nevermind. i misread that. never heard of it in Perl, LOL sounds interesting though branch level access,neato yeah, would have probably tried it already if it was written in python nerdd: pub key added, fire away up_the_irons: Thanks! :) np is it possible to 'expand' disk space at a later date? the 20gb i've got will be fine for now but i'm just wondering what happens if i need more in the future :) bob__: yes, it can be expanded. takes about 10 minutes of downtime ah, great :) thanks np:) hi cricket cricket I'm interested in a FreeBSD VPS, thing is I'm in Peru and I think latency might be an issue download the 100mb bin file well, for SSH use mostly bandwidth is not the issue I've pinged arpnetworks.com and I'm getting like... let me see round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 846.781/1020.977/1141.532/74.904 ms 74? yeah, lots of fluctuation i get ~89ms well my question if there's some VPS host I could ssh for a couple minutes and it's fine for me well you're not in Peru :P no. i'm in the US yup shin: want me to create a tmp account on my vps for you? infrared: that'd be awesome one sec shin@174.136.99.66 password123 cool, let's see it's kinda slow, but it's not that bad infrared: you're extremely trusting ;-) toddf: what can he possibly do? infrared: i've logged out shin: yup well thanks! I think I can manage that level of responsiveness infrared: localhost DoS or worse are far more common than remote. *grin*. 'sup to you what you do.. I wouldn't, but that's just me ;-) toddf: :) it's over now anyways. i removed it *grin* <-- uber paranoid CLEARLY! haha im paranoid too, but I'm glad infrared helped me out with this :D *grin* j/k so, are FreeBSD VPS also kvm/qemu guests? or do you run Xen for BSD guests? arpnetworks has some xen for old vps's they're migrating away from from what I have seen here on channel <-- client only kvm is the wave of the future openbsd is! ja, jeev promises to port kvm to openbsd, and we'll all be happy hey, 60 watt L5506 vs 130 watt Core i7 920.. is the power savings really worth it not when you compare to a fit-pc2.com (10W) heh i bet openbsd uses more power than windows 7! apm -L! wonder how many fit pc2's i can stuff into a cabinet lol http://www.apple.com/ site is updated now whoops... wrong channel wonder what this A4 chip is all about ARM processor... not sure what's unique to it though made by apple, ARM, nice looks like a nice device what I'd love to see is iGlasses or any HUD in glasses style device .. of any flavor, even if it was only the display man i set up kvm again on my system and launched fbsd i dont see good performance, it's annoying me I'm sure up_the_irons has some haxxorz that makes us wanna just pay him to take care of things.. no it was fine in my last installation could be as simple as running an older, more reliable, stable, and faster version of kvm/loonix i dunno what is causing this a quirk particle is stuck in your computer's frontal lobe maybe it's openbsd loonix+kvm -> freebsd inside kvm, yeah its openbsd, uh huh it's always openbsd. toddf: for the record, all customers are off Xen. KVM all the way. I still have some Xen VMs on old hardware, for things like backups, nagios, etc... is nagios pretty good? it does the job not exactly the best piece of software but it gets by opsview is handy up_the_irons - it's based on nagios, but with a decent web interface we moved to it in work recently, so far so good - and it supports clustering really easily as well I have yet to use nagios and be satisfied, sure it sends notifications if things are down, but suffers from ETOOMANYBUTTONS and seems to generate tons of nagging down messages as well as frustratingly common false positives bob__: ah cool, good to know yeah, it takes a *lot* of tweaking to stop the false positives I've got zabbix in the queue to test, that it stores its info in a database instead of custom flat file memory dumps makes it seem more plausibly sane i tried that, didn't really get on with it iirc it was too snmp-based to work with the kit we use actually to be fair, we tried zabbix a *long* time ago, it might be a lot better now depending on how big your networks are, netxms was quite nice (though very much based around its own client rather than a www page): http://www.netxms.org/screenshots/ zabbix has one barrier taken down for me netxms doesn't.. zabbix is in openbsd ports ;-) jeev should get an iPad, it will take care of any iPeriod he might have LOL toddf: LOL so whois getting an iPad? ballen: i'll probably be getting one, it'll be neat to show clients their websites on it instead of my macbook pro