CougTek
Hairy Aussie
I need to learn how to run a BSD server. It will probably be an OpenBSD installation, but I still don't know, so I chose to try FreeBSD instead as it seems to be more user-friendly.
I made a bootable USB stick with FreeBSD 6.2 64-bit on it, using Universal USB Installer. I installed it on a very modest system (Celeron 420 1.6GHz, 1GB RAM, Intel 945G chipset, old WD400BB hard drive). The installtion went well, but nowhere did I see a place to tell to configure a window environment on bootup. Command line is ok for someone who's familiar with the OS, but for a newbie, it's a lot easier and faster to get the overall picture of where each things are in a window environment. At least that's my view. At the end of the installation, I had to log on and was simply greeted with a flashing cursor and that was it.
I should have tried to type "startx" to begin with, but didn't. I went to FreeBSD's web site and learned what to do to configure Xorg. Maybe it was already configured, but I'll never know. I moved to /usr/ports/x11/xorg and tried to "make install clean" : denied. Loggued as root and then retried and it worked. It's been compiling Xorg for the past three or four hours now. I don't know what I'll do next.
I want to learn how to set it up as a basic web server and also try to make a file share accessible from a remote Windows computer. I've always wanted to learn how to use BSD, but never really tried hard enough. Now I have to for a job. I have maybe two or three days. Solaris is next, even if I don't think it has much of a future.
I made a bootable USB stick with FreeBSD 6.2 64-bit on it, using Universal USB Installer. I installed it on a very modest system (Celeron 420 1.6GHz, 1GB RAM, Intel 945G chipset, old WD400BB hard drive). The installtion went well, but nowhere did I see a place to tell to configure a window environment on bootup. Command line is ok for someone who's familiar with the OS, but for a newbie, it's a lot easier and faster to get the overall picture of where each things are in a window environment. At least that's my view. At the end of the installation, I had to log on and was simply greeted with a flashing cursor and that was it.
I should have tried to type "startx" to begin with, but didn't. I went to FreeBSD's web site and learned what to do to configure Xorg. Maybe it was already configured, but I'll never know. I moved to /usr/ports/x11/xorg and tried to "make install clean" : denied. Loggued as root and then retried and it worked. It's been compiling Xorg for the past three or four hours now. I don't know what I'll do next.
I want to learn how to set it up as a basic web server and also try to make a file share accessible from a remote Windows computer. I've always wanted to learn how to use BSD, but never really tried hard enough. Now I have to for a job. I have maybe two or three days. Solaris is next, even if I don't think it has much of a future.