00:15:54 pkg versiohttps://files.mastodon.social/media_attachments/files/110/567/496/978/742/583/original/0a1f36bfbe2e75c5.png 00:15:59 eep 00:50:08 what iso do I download if I want to install from a usb mem stick also I tried the dvd iso before i always get no internet access asnd cant find the dvd .iso on the mem stick 00:50:53 FreeBSD-13.2-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img 01:06:18 I've been running linux to support a RAID6 system. I only use it as a very simple file server. I don't even really use any network with it. I'm going for an upgrade. Should I switch to FreeBSD or is that going to be a real pain in the ass for me? :/ 01:07:16 am I going to have to learn a LOT of new things? 01:07:57 * JoeLlama idles for a bit 01:08:04 it's not too bad of a switch 01:08:16 do you have a lot of data you need to preserve? 01:08:32 RhodiumToad about um... say 10TB 01:08:49 and that will pretty much be the only purpose for the box 01:09:30 It's going to be on a Dell server dual xeon 2.9GHz processors 80 GB ram 01:09:42 is the existing data in hardware or software raid? 01:10:02 well it's in hardware raid but I'm gunna switch to software raid 01:10:22 I suspect FreeBSD is not going to support the hardware raid controller 01:10:27 so you're OK with copying the entire content? 01:10:28 which is fine 01:10:32 yes 01:10:55 the only reason I used hardware raid is because it was super easy to set up 01:11:00 you'll probably want to switch to zfs rather than any other kind of software raid 01:11:04 I couldn't get software raid to work 01:11:14 oh ok 01:11:35 I think my question is should I switch or stick with ubuntu? 01:11:38 (lubuntu) 01:11:43 zfs offers various raidz options so you can choose the level of redundancy 01:11:53 oh ok 01:12:17 linux always made me itch a little... I like UNIX 01:12:18 you might want to experiment with freebsd first in a vm or convenient scratch machine if you've not used it before 01:12:38 is it very different than linux? 01:12:50 I'm not a linux expert 01:13:07 also can I run free spreadsheet and wordprocessiong software on FreeBSD? 01:13:12 freebsd treats the kernel and base system userland as a single product, it's not a bunch of separate packages 01:13:36 yeah I don't like how linux is that way 01:13:46 a large collection of applications are available as ports and/or packages 01:13:58 oh ok 01:14:30 I have the LibreOffice suite installed. 01:14:38 oh ok 01:14:44 easy install? 01:15:00 this will also be an air-gapped offline machine 01:15:19 using LTO-7 Tape backup 01:15:31 FreeBSD does LTO-7 okay? 01:16:22 what kind of drive attached how? 01:16:24 when you start talking about tape backup a lot of people don't seem to know 01:16:36 it's an IBM LTO-7 01:17:12 I'm still strongly thinking about staying with linux because that seems to be the easiest path atm 01:17:27 how's the tape drive attached to the host? 01:17:28 but I like FreeBSD because it's real UNiX 01:17:44 tape drive is SAS 01:18:15 as are the hard drive bays (8) 01:18:53 I'd expect it to work via the standard "sa" driver (CAM sequential access device) 01:19:06 It's a large rack mount server (heavy) bought it for 100 USD 01:19:26 oh ok so like no special drivers? it should just work? 01:19:53 should do, yes 01:19:54 You'll need a way to bring the package (precompiled) or port (compile locally) files for your apps in some way if air-gapped, but that's not a lajor hurdle. 01:20:18 s/lajor/major/ 01:20:22 ah ok 01:20:59 well... something to consider... I think if this was a business application I would go FreeBDD 01:21:01 oops 01:21:16 but it's for personal use... 01:21:43 I'll think about it... in the meantime I'll download FreeBSD and try it out. Thanks for your time ;) 01:21:55 You're welcome. 01:21:59 last question 01:22:44 I have literally piles of old PCs that I'm saving from the trash heap... will FreeBSD work on an older 2007 system with 6GB ram? 01:22:59 should do. 01:23:20 and will it support the old Nvidia 8600M graphics? 01:23:23 what CPU? 01:23:41 2.8 GHz Intel X9000 01:24:12 that's a core2 architecture? 01:24:17 yes 01:24:19 no problem with that at all 01:24:25 oh k 01:24:30 and the graphics? 01:24:47 I have some issues with linux support with the NVidia 8600M 01:24:55 have to look the GPU up. sec 01:25:00 no current driver I think 01:25:07 oh ok thanks RhodiumToad :) 01:27:01 yeah the Nvidia 8600M is from around 2007 01:27:15 8600M - is that a laptop one? 01:27:25 yes can be :) in this case yes 01:27:52 it looks like it's on the list for the -304 and -340 driver versions 01:27:56 isuppose I can just install FreeBSD and see what it does 01:28:13 oh ok do I have to load those drivers separately? 01:28:24 you install it from ports or packages, yes 01:28:46 ok and will FreeBSD automatically load them for me? 01:28:52 first install I will do it online 01:29:31 no, the install is all just in text mode. You'll want to add X + gpu drivers + graphical apps after the install 01:29:46 oh ok 01:29:53 X is the gui? 01:29:59 ya 01:30:13 ok well... I think I have enough information thanks again :) 01:30:15 bye for now 04:28:00 is there a new schedule for 14.0? 04:31:05 G'day. Could I get some pointers on a new install that wont boot? 05:23:45 Sorted, all good 05:30:20 Is there a visual explanation for how functions rn_walktree_from and rn_walktree work? 05:32:08 Or some written explanation... I'm struggling to recreate the function on a different backing structure. 07:53:06 Is the CPU(n) timer literally a timer? Should the timervalue keeo increasing with time?= since boot? 08:08:37 Good morning. 08:30:33 Could someone read this script and tell me if this could be used for any GPU, and not just NVIDIA. I got this from https://vermaden.wordpress.com/2018/11/28/the-power-to-serve-freebsd-power-management/, and this link was mentioned at https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/high-temperature-and-fan-speed.88075/post-598902. I went through this but couldn't tell. 08:30:34 Title: The Power to Serve โ€“ FreeBSD Power Management | ๐šŸ๐šŽ๐š›๐š–๐šŠ๐š๐šŽ๐š— 08:31:18 sorry forgot the link to the script -> https://people.freebsd.org/~xmj/turn_off_gpu.sh 08:34:28 sozuba, I am not familiar with ACPI working; so cannot say. To suggest you to try it would be irresponsible of me 08:35:14 parv: i want to try it, but i am also a bit worried.:D 08:35:30 Hehe, right. same 08:35:36 thanks for the response though. 08:59:55 okay I ran the script, one of the calls was sucessful and so far good. 09:13:43 mewt, RhodiumToad: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src/pull/780 09:13:44 Title: geli(8): fix setkey behavior on detached providers by igalic ยท Pull Request #780 ยท freebsd/freebsd-src ยท GitHub 09:34:26 * wikan is testing weechat 09:38:59 * wikan is watching you 09:40:18 ๐Ÿ‘€ 10:47:44 There seems to be a noticable difference in the temperature output with 'sysctl dev.cpu | grep temperature' and 'sysctl -a | grep temperature', despite the output variables being same. What can cause this? Output -> https://termbin.com/ql7xh 11:12:01 sozuba: it always changes? 11:20:40 yuripv: yup it does 11:22:50 sozuba: are you influencing your own test? sysctl -a does more work, which means more work for grep 11:26:20 ridcully: fair point. But i a diference of 4 C is too much for such amount of work right? 11:29:32 i wouldn't say so 11:29:49 sozuba: on my box its the difference between 25 and >14k lines - and i have no clue, how sysctl works (it might just print text with data from within the kernel - or it might have to go to some place ask for a value, which is more expensive) 11:30:59 makes sense, but i don't think it does such amounts of work still. 11:32:48 running the "quick" query here a few times in a row increases the temps by 1โฐC 11:33:43 Context for these questions is that I am trying to figure out why my laptop has high temperature even at idle. PR 271938 11:33:44 271938 โ€“ Excessive heating on Lenovo Thinkpad E450 even with CPU @ 100% idle https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=271938 11:35:07 ridcully: My IRC runs on a diffent machine.But I get your point. If a quick query would cause 1 C then it makes much more sense. 11:35:11 and it does nothing for the "slow" query. so you might be onto something here. i'd have expected it to raise quicker or higher 11:38:19 i've run it a multiple times, and each time, the diference is more or less the same 11:40:13 ridcully: and yes may be, if a quik query would cause 1c then a slow query would cause a difference more than 4V 11:40:21 c* 11:41:52 applying fresh thermal compound is good advice. on my thinkpad w520, grease did not change for 5 years, finally i got annoyed with fan noise and temps, so applied thermal grizzly compound. temps dropped around 15-20 degrees on idle 11:46:07 ridcully: okay, i ran both the commands and with powermon running. The idle power consumption is 4.43-2.27 W, when i run the quick query, ther eis no significiant jump, but when i run sysctl -a ...., the poiwer cosumption jumps 1W and reaches around 5.45 W. So you are right. 11:46:46 sozuba: also have you tried powerd++? powerd at some point stopped working for my older box here; and also, if you suspect the CPU is working-while-idle (vs. just the fans run a different setting than linux), do you see a difference in the power-drain (e.g. measuring on the PSU or checking battery time)? 11:52:23 angry_vincent: Thank you for the response :), As mentined in the PR, this drastic change in temperature doesn't happen with linux. So no, i don'tthink it has anything to do with thermal compound or dist on the vents. No fan noise in my case. 11:53:50 ridcully: that's the confusing nature of this. No process runs and the power consumption remains constant and so i don; think the CPU is working while idle. 11:54:46 ridcully: I read that there isn;t much difference between powerd and powerd++. Guess I am wrong. Is it better? 11:56:26 ummm... happy birthday? :P 11:57:13 sozuba: i am not qualified to answer, other than, than powerd stopped working and powerd++ works since then; i found that out at some point thanks to monitoring. 11:58:05 ridcully: okay, will check it out and see if it makes a difference. 11:58:11 thank you 12:59:33 can you install freebsd headless, in terms of with no keyboard connected at all? 13:00:13 p4x639: sure, 13:00:30 better do my homework first and google it :) 13:00:42 https://people.freebsd.org/~rodrigc/doc/data/doc/handbook/install-advanced.html 13:00:43 Title: Advanced Installation Guide 13:00:56 lovely! 13:00:59 think the handbook has a section too 13:01:27 CmdLnKid: yeah, let's try to link the actual handbook 13:01:32 also didn't know freebsd has standalone html files as handbook format, i would prefer that the same way openbsd has 13:01:47 oh people.... this isn't the handbook i see 13:01:49 :wink: 13:03:11 basically: You can use a serial console, which, technically, isn't an attached keyboard, or you can do other fun things, like create a scripted installation medium 13:04:34 never heard of that null modem thing 13:04:44 i thought i could ssh into it and do the installation 13:04:59 i guess it is just best to not do it headless the first time 13:05:02 scripted custom install 13:05:18 kinda like nixos? 13:10:50 there's so much in a google search im sure youll find your ssh answe 13:10:57 with an r even 13:15:18 personally i like setting up a salt server, install freebsd configure it to connect to the salt server then use clonezilla to create an image and then from there its all just a imaging problem 13:16:23 salt... is that something like ansible? 13:16:29 yes 13:17:20 essentially like running the playbooks but you have client and server daemon communicating 13:17:56 i think it is better to learn the essentials first before i got automation with such tools :) 13:18:19 still remember that puppet talk from someone with a flipchart, that you should never automate stuff you didn't do at least a few times by hand 13:18:22 definately agree 13:30:06 CmdLnKid: do you know if there is a modern version of that null modem cable which relies on usb and plug and plays? 13:32:25 no i don't. haven't had to use that in some odd 10+ years 13:33:29 :) 13:38:43 * wikan really like weechat 13:39:25 how do you think, is weechat the best irc terminal app? Do you know another one? 13:39:40 irssi 13:40:05 there isn't a best other than in the term of what works best for you. 13:40:19 CmdLnKid: checking ;) 13:40:25 i agree 13:40:31 if you like perl and you like a terminal app ... 13:40:35 irssi 13:40:56 wechat havent touched in well since i found irssi 13:41:34 weechat is huge. I prefer much smaller apps to be honest 13:41:50 then irssi may be for you then 13:41:53 i switched from irssi to weechat, but not sure if anything improved. but it was said that weechat is more actively developed and has more features 13:42:21 of course you could always script out ircii yourself and come up with something similiar if you are up for the challenge 13:43:15 bitchx still exists to if you are feeling nostalgic 13:43:29 also using weechat, wish i could add it to my dotfiles but it mixes passwords with config 13:45:40 p4x639: this is why I made my own 'pkg' for dot files 13:46:02 wikan: pkg as in freebsd pkg? 13:46:07 yes 13:46:12 didn't know freebsd has something like ppa's or aur 13:46:12 still working on it 13:46:26 is ports like ppa's or aur? 13:46:29 no, my own app called deskset 13:46:32 user contributed packages? 13:46:35 deskset install vim 13:46:50 and I have my vim installed. Any changes goes directly to repo 13:47:12 now I will impklement encryption for weechat like apps 13:47:32 sounds a little complicated :p 13:47:41 and it is 13:47:45 it is third version 13:47:53 CrtxReavr: he spelt implement wrong, please correct him sir. 13:49:12 otr for irssi works great ! 13:49:52 cpet, that looks like more typo than spelling. 13:50:12 irsii - 2MB 13:50:16 good good 13:50:26 for fucks sake 13:50:34 lol 13:53:45 question 13:53:50 answer 13:54:07 more beer, yes 13:54:35 i set my keyboard language with setxkbmap 13:55:03 but it resets to defaults after monitor wakes up 13:55:27 have no idea why. I havent this issue before 13:56:15 * CmdLnKid cheers cpet 13:56:36 Yeah I dont know 13:57:05 beers for the channel on me! 13:57:26 I'll pass, but thanks for offering. 13:57:36 one 24 bit pint coming your way 13:57:54 so digital beer ? 13:57:59 and one virgin daquri for v_pauamma_v 13:58:16 whats the point ;/ 13:58:26 * V_PauAmma_V , again, declines. 13:58:31 you know what they say cant trust a guy who doesnt drink (TM) 13:58:52 lol 13:59:11 * CmdLnKid passes over the garden hose 13:59:33 * V_PauAmma_V takes a sip from the bottle of water next to his laptop. 13:59:42 i don't drink and never have 14:00:15 never had a home brewed beer that you made and waited 2 weeks to drink at 9am on a non work day ? 14:00:27 aint nothing wrong with that 14:00:38 What in /var is a virgin daquri? 14:00:51 rofl 14:00:59 /var/log 14:02:39 wikan: is this xfce by chance ? 14:05:00 cpet: by workspace? no, I use i3 14:05:39 yeah I would expect that from a tiling wm 14:06:01 why? 14:06:51 think you can add in something that resets it when you resume 14:07:10 I just have the habbit of turnign the monitors off 14:07:21 rather than letting the OS do it 14:07:34 i switch between computers with a hardware switch 14:07:49 this has always been a thing for ever since *nix has horrible suspend and resume 14:07:57 so I just take it off and turn stuff off ;/ 14:08:26 could also be the KVM you are using 14:10:24 back in the day when I did that I boght a cheap ass blackbox KVM would do weird things bought a more expensive one that was network enabled and weirdness stopped 14:10:27 so just a thought 14:17:15 anyone know how to do an egrep for "match this but NOT that" 14:17:24 i can't chain grep -v here 14:19:37 can you give an example? 14:20:14 i want to egrep a log message, and match any error code "ORA-[0-9]+" but i want to exclude one. 14:20:41 issue is, i have a single egrep call to use 14:20:58 so "match X unless X followed by Y" 14:23:34 i noticed jls only lists active jails. looking through the man page, it doesn't seem there's a way to also list inactive. is there an easy way to list both? 14:23:50 what is an "inactive" jail? 14:24:01 not running 14:24:41 service jail stop myjail ... if i type jls, myjail isn't listed 14:24:56 then it doesn't exist, unless possibly as an entry in some configuration file 14:26:28 seems odd, i.e., jail is aware of its existance since it knows how to start it 14:27:12 Demosthenex, maybe something like "ORA-123([^4]|4[^5]|45[^6])", for ORA-123 not followed by 456. 14:27:38 (not tested) 14:32:51 I once wrote code to turn arbitrary inclusion/exclusion pattern lists into regexps, but that required perl regexp constructs 14:33:16 anyone recently build 13.2 Release? my buildworld has been running for 16 hours, and /usr/obj is currently sitting at 9.0G, it's been a long time since I've built world , and yes, this is a craptop with spinning rust, Chromium took 28H to build last year. 14:33:47 (think Usenet groups: comp.*,!comp.binaries.*,comp.binaries.whatever ) 14:34:04 jimmiejaz: did you specify -j at all? 14:34:29 no, it heats up too much and shuts down if I use -j :( 14:34:40 I've built 13.2 stable several times recently, it's not the spinning rust that makes it slow, rather cpu and memory 14:35:20 back in the 4/5/6 days /usr/obj took up 3-4 gigs, that's the last time I had a rough size comparison, no make.conf no src.conf, straight defaults 14:35:31 my /usr/obj/usr/src/amd64.amd64 is about 13.5GB, but that's without zfs and a couple other things 14:35:52 though zfs probably isn't all that big in comparison 14:36:01 it's llvm which really slows stuff down 14:36:14 thanks tons RhodiumToad :) I know what I'm looking at roughly. Not in a rush, but having an idea is a Good Thing :) 14:36:38 should i rewrite this fish script in tcsh or in flua? 14:36:47 flua 14:37:36 the fish in question: https://alpha.pkgbase.live/howto/howdo.html#updating-sets 14:37:37 Title: How did she do it?! 14:37:40 jimmiejaz: turning off the LLVM cross targets in src.conf might save you a little time in future 14:38:19 (it looks easily doable in tcsh, but not so sure about flua, given the amount of shellout) 14:38:19 * RhodiumToad also turns off ATM, ISCSI, OFED, PF, SENDMAIL and ZONEINFO 14:38:52 oh, I used to tear down the builds to almost nothing, but of course over the years, as things changed, problems crept in, so now I run with defaults, make sure everything is good, then look at stripping out unneeded bits. 14:39:59 also IPFILTER, NDIS 14:40:19 Is there still an ATM to turn off? I thought that was no longer supported as a network class-or-whatever. 14:40:37 it's still listed in man src.conf 14:40:55 V_PauAmma_V: yeah, i thought about that, but i may have found a workaround. i just didn't realize egrep can't negate ;] 14:42:07 meena: wanting better ways to invoke commands from lua has led me into a rabbit hole :-( 14:42:40 * RhodiumToad is now several recursion levels deep into said holes, and trapped inside libutil 14:46:46 jimmiejaz: for comparison, my world build takes about 1hr 15min at -j4, on a machine that took ~9hr to build chromium at -j4 a couple years ago 14:50:31 i5, 2.7Ghz, 8gig ram, this craptop was designed for Windows 7, so... 2009-2012-ish, it's ancient and I had to take the bottom cover over to keep the temps below 100c, along wtih powerdxx_flags="-H 65:78 -t hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature" in rc.conf, now hovers around 85c 15:09:11 is it dropping the clock speed to avoid overheating? 15:09:49 mine is an i5-6500 (skylake) @3.2GHz 15:11:27 (but in a desktop with reasonably good cooling) 15:43:29 RhodiumToad: and the only way out of libutil is to scorch and salt the earth it grew on, from what I understand 15:45:17 quite so. though some of the defects extend even into libc 15:47:12 broadly speaking, I wanted a non-invasive way to look up login class info. But: the user can run cap_mkdb on their ~/.login_conf, giving a ~/.login_conf.db which is opened by dbopen in libc, but if the homedir is on NFS, root may not have permission to open it without first swapping userids (which affects the whole process and is therefore maximally invasive) 15:52:54 it's not overly hard to write an open_file_as_user(...) function that doesn't need a full-on fork, but there's no way to tell dbopen to use it 15:55:42 * RhodiumToad is about to bury that entire line of experimentation in a graveyard branch and revert to something less ambitious 16:01:31 could you do the open and then tell dbopen to use /dev/fd/ ? 16:01:56 can't assume /dev/fd/N works for N > 2, because that requires fdescfs to be mounted 16:02:05 bummer 16:11:36 (anyone else use a graveyard branch in git? the idea is to keep otherwise dead work by merging it into an empty branch using -s ours to keep the empty branch empty) 16:12:18 avoids needing tags or branches for dead work while still keeping it in the repo 17:01:39 not related to bsd, but in case someone knows. how can I find out all networks that belong to a certain organization, on Arin ? https://search.arin.net/rdap/?query=45.133.6.60 17:01:39 Title: ARIN Whois/RDAP - American Registry for Internet Numbers 17:01:50 for example, all networks belonging to this Legaco 17:04:35 that's not from arin, that's a referral to RIPE 17:07:11 https://apps.db.ripe.net/db-web-ui/lookup?source=ripe&key=ORG-VA29468-RIPE&type=organisation 17:07:13 Title: Webupdates โ€” RIPE Network Coordination Centre 17:11:36 do you know how to look it up from there ? 17:13:17 there are docs 17:13:31 it's been a while since I needed to do this stuff regularly 17:16:34 k, I found it on another page. weird that arin/ripe no longer shows this easily 17:16:40 must be some gdpr stuff 17:28:50 sozuba: agreed with you, reading this channel is a great source of knowledge. Thanks every body 17:32:32 Lovis_IX: ?? 17:34:59 sorry, I reply on the backlog. 17:35:47 when you said that we learn a lot of things ready this channel (several days ago) 17:46:07 Lovis_IX: ah, got it. And I am still learning :) 18:51:08 when i create a zfs pool with devices, the file system is currently ready, correct? I can start readds and write to the pool name? 18:52:13 looks like i can 18:52:29 uh 18:52:41 what do you mean? 18:53:10 i was under the impression i had to format the actual "pool volume" 18:53:56 no. 18:54:18 as far as I know, creating the pool also creates a root dataset in the pool, which is immediately mountable 18:54:59 can i then unmount the pool, move the disk to another controller, then recreate the pool. will my data be intact? 18:55:06 ok, that makes sense 18:55:07 whether you want it to be mountable is a separate question 18:55:20 right 18:55:44 shouldn't need to recreate the pool, just export/import it around the move? 18:56:22 oh, ok. i can remove the desk from the pool and readd the new device name? 18:56:27 disk 18:56:41 you shouldn't need to as far as I know 18:56:54 i.e. it should just detect it in the new location based on the metadata 19:08:52 understood. that is really cool. the reason i ask is because i have a failing drive i want to copy it's data from to the new pool, then put the drive on the controller of the failing drive 19:10:30 the failing drive is not in zfs? 19:13:30 no, that data was older than when zfs was implemented 19:13:43 damn, i'm getting read errors 19:24:43 kind of a hazard with failing drives :-( 19:28:52 very true! 19:29:15 the cp process won't exit even if i try to kill it 19:30:12 be patient. most likely the code is retrying the read command a lot of times 19:30:30 signals aren't processed while reading from a local filesystem 19:31:03 eventually it should give up and return EIO, and the signal will be handled then 19:39:43 Happy alpaca smugglers day! 19:39:44 Title: motific comments on How does FreeBSD make money? 19:46:07 RhodiumToad: understood. i have to abort it anyway because i should have copied directory/. instead of directory 19:46:50 did it fail yet? 19:47:31 yep, it did 19:47:47 i'll just let it run until it's done 19:47:48 ok, good 19:48:31 for scsi the default retries/timeout seems to be 4 retries and 60 secs, for ada it seems to be 4 retries and 30 secs 19:48:53 that's at the CAM level, there may be retries above that 19:50:14 soon i want to get a used sas hitachi disk shelf. they are 3GB/s throughput but are pretty cheap and work with sata drives, plus are pretty quiet 19:50:26 i think you are right on that. 19:52:39 then i can get redundant drives and implement mirroring 21:01:21 RhodiumToad: it looks like that, on this failing drive, the existing data will read without issues. data that i copied over to it recently after it started failing is what gives read errors 21:03:46 huh, weird 21:03:55 it's a spinny disk, not ssd? 21:13:02 Cheers to 30 years, FreeBSD community! \o/ 21:13:56 Oh, it's that time? Nice. 21:24:20 RhodiumToad: yep, an old 1.5TB WD green from over 12 years ago 21:24:29 devnull: agreed! 21:32:24 30 years? Nice. I'm celebrating about 30 days. Haha. 21:32:56 markmcb: 30 days is something to be proud of too 21:33:37 agreed. better late than never, right?! :) 21:40:15 huh, so it had only been going about 4.5 years when I started using it 21:41:21 before FreeBSD, i used Solaris 21:42:16 before freebsd I used AIX, HP-UX, SCO OpenServer, and a bunch of other random commercial ports 21:42:34 only used solaris after I was already using freebsd 21:42:58 FreeBSD was the first Unix I used. 21:43:11 I mean, other than very quickly distro/OS-hopping to try to find something to really try. 21:49:32 it was the first one I used on my own machine 21:51:10 (installed from floppies, a very tedious procedure) 21:55:25 6.5 years for me. However, my first *NIX was Debian in 1995. Then IRIX and a lot of MacOS X. When Apple killed MacOS X Server (10.6.8 was the last release), I started looking for a non-Linux alternative and settled on FreeBSD. 21:59:12 I've been around since 2010, but became a convert in 2017? aaaaand an irregular contributor, too 21:59:23 more regular, lately 21:59:54 meena, What was your religon before 2017? 22:00:06 s/religon/religion/ 22:01:34 parv: I loved Solaris, but after quitting my job it wasn't a thing any more 22:01:42 So it was mostly debuntu 22:03:35 but, Solaris was a passion, Debian / Ubuntu were just work 22:04:37 meena, Did you buy|hoard Solaris hardware afterword (for nostalgia, whatever)? 22:05:25 parv: no. one constant in my life, no matter how much money i make, I'm always broke 22:05:39 meena, shit! 22:06:19 Also: I'm not allowed near hardware, lest it explode 22:09:00 I started using FreeBSD c 199[67] on personal computer. Used Solaris mostly during BSEE degrees; had rudimentary remote access to HP-UX & perhaps AIX now & then. 22:10:05 Sorry, only one BS was enough 22:18:17 Always wondered that 22:18:26 and I probably make 1/3 oif what you make 22:19:41 you really shouldn't make assumptions about how much other people make, fwiw 22:52:48 meena: used to work for Nortel, we had old sparc workstations. 23:03:38 thumbs: the Unix admins in my job got Sun workstations, but they were amd64 23:04:31 meena: back then, we used to call it slowloris. Now that means something else. 23:05:24 other than a very cute animal? 23:07:27 meena: slowloris is an HTTP attack, nowadays.