Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )



3 Pages V   1 2 3 >  
Reply to this topicStart new topic
> Freebsd. An Installation Report, An attempt to document live freeBSD installation
aciminsk
post Feb 21 2006, 06:41 PM
Post #1


Newbie [ Level 2 ]
Group Icon

Group: Members
Posts: 18
Joined: 20-February 06
Member No.: 11,431



I need hosting. Well, how to get those golden points? Hope you wouldn’t mind if I tell my FreeBSD story.

A little foreword. I’m working in a pure MS shop, where Open Source is big NO-NO. Nevertheless I have a small test-bed LAN where I can test whatever I think is appropriate. Lately not the latest and greatest but quite decent server has been decommissioned. I had been using Debian Linux workstation already for quite a while, so I’ve decided to setup a Debian Linux server into W2k3 LAN. Honestly, I don’t like to give up, but this time I had to. The machine is HP Netserver LH3000 U3. The older Debian distribution version (Called woody) installs base system but does not recognize NIC, so I could not connect to mirror site to continue installation. The newer stable version completely refuses to recognize NetRAID controller and does not go even as far as the base system. Describing everything what I’ve tried would be way too long, so just the result. I’ve given up. What’s next to try? The criteria was that it should be not as huge as Debian (The whole distro is 14 CDs), and it should be somewhere nearby so that it would not take me forever to download. It turned out to be FreeBSD.

Hope you would not mind if I continue later on….
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
miCRoSCoPiC^eaRt...
post Feb 21 2006, 06:55 PM
Post #2


PsYcheDeLiC dR3aMeR
Group Icon

Group: Admin
Posts: 2,242
Joined: 29-January 05
From: Nakorn Chaisri, Thailand
Member No.: 2,411



Carry on - installation adventures are always fun to read about - and you never know who it might help in similar problems in future. Also do post back any problems that you faced and actually managed to solve it on your own, along with HOW YOU DID IT.

Simply keep posting original stuff and you'd have your golden points in no time. smile.gif
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
Jeigh
post Feb 21 2006, 07:04 PM
Post #3


Whitest Black Mage
Group Icon

Group: [MODERATOR]
Posts: 1,354
Joined: 20-May 05
From: NB, Canada
Member No.: 5,281



OMG YOU STOPPED THE THE MOST CLIFFHANGER MOMENT EVER! AAAH!~

Hehe, I'll assume freeBSD worked wink.gif But yea I know I wanted to try debian out once but I couldn't bring myself to care enough to download/burn all the install media when there were comaprable distro's out there on 1 cd and just download the rest as you need it heh.

Where I work currently I also had toruble getting linux onto my box as it's a temporarily unused Dell Poweredge server and the sata raid was incompatible with the base installers for a couple distro's we tried (we don't have the documentation for the actual type of raid controller so coulnd't even try loading drivers for it) Finally ubuntu managed to handle it on its own so thats where my story ends haha.

Make sure to finish yours so In know if the poor old server ever got to be alive again ohmy.gif
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
xboxrulz
post Feb 21 2006, 10:34 PM
Post #4


Colonel Panic
Group Icon

Group: [MODERATOR]
Posts: 2,794
Joined: 25-March 05
From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Member No.: 3,233



kool, but have you tried other distributions like Fedora, Ubuntu or SuSE? They're stable and usually support all NIC. Also, Debian (older versions) are all 2.4.x based and they may not have the drivers for your NIC.

Usually, if Linux don't have drivers for 'em, I don't think FreeBSD would.

xboxrulz
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
aciminsk
post Feb 22 2006, 10:57 AM
Post #5


Newbie [ Level 2 ]
Group Icon

Group: Members
Posts: 18
Joined: 20-February 06
Member No.: 11,431



OK, show goes on...
I went to http://www.freebsd.org, spent some time looking around, reading to make sure I know what I'm doing. Though quite a few questions, it did not look too scary, so I went to ftp://ftp2.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ and grabbed all three disk images (ISOs ) of FreeBSD6.0, which was the latest at that time. One for basic system and network install, and two for complete distribution (Doesn't it seem, well... a little bit too light-weight comparing to 14 CDs Debian distribution?) just in case network install does not work. Burned CDs on my Debian machine. Then I have opened FreeBSD handbook as a single file from http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1...dbook/book.html, saved it to the local disk and hit Print. (This has been the first rake I've stepped on. For those who wonders how rakes are related to the subject you might wish to check up the thread at http://www.astahost.com/page-2-t10342-s10.html for explanation. The HandBook turned out to be 1300 plus pages, took several hours to print out on an HP DeskJet, has eaten month's supply of paper and cartridges). Everything seems ready to commence the installation. Popped Network Install CD into the retired guy, reboot. Carefully reading prompts, suggestions and handbook and mainly accepting defaults has completed base system installation in about twenty min, another 15 min for initial configuration like creating a user. Another reboot and here you are, welcome, please login. Too good to be true. Nevertheless, I'm logging-in as root. It works. Running some basic commands like ls and ps, works. What about something more complicated? Starting GNOME? Works. KDE? Works, got this beautifull masterpice of GUI design. Unbelievable. Happy end? Well, I'll tell you next time
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
xboxrulz
post Feb 23 2006, 12:31 AM
Post #6


Colonel Panic
Group Icon

Group: [MODERATOR]
Posts: 2,794
Joined: 25-March 05
From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Member No.: 3,233



kool, I was about to suggest you DesktopBSD/PCBSD.

xboxrulz
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
abhiram
post Feb 23 2006, 06:11 AM
Post #7


Hedonist at large
Group Icon

Group: Members
Posts: 610
Joined: 30-July 05
From: another realm
Member No.: 7,524



QUOTE
The HandBook turned out to be 1300 plus pages, took several hours to print out on an HP DeskJet, has eaten month's supply of paper and cartridges).


You actually took such a massive print? blink.gif

Wouldn't it have been cheaper to have referred to it in another computer or maybe a laptop even?

QUOTE
Happy end? Well, I'll tell you next time


I sure hope so. This is turning out to be quite an interesting read. Hehe ... maybe you should call this "The Chronicles of aciminsk" smile.gif.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
aciminsk
post Feb 23 2006, 09:36 AM
Post #8


Newbie [ Level 2 ]
Group Icon

Group: Members
Posts: 18
Joined: 20-February 06
Member No.: 11,431



QUOTE(xboxrulz @ Feb 23 2006, 02:31 AM) *

kool, I was about to suggest you DesktopBSD/PCBSD.

xboxrulz

May be later on. When the saga is over

QUOTE(abhiram @ Feb 23 2006, 08:11 AM) *

You actually took such a massive print? blink.gif

Wouldn't it have been cheaper to have referred to it in another computer or maybe a laptop even?
I sure hope so. This is turning out to be quite an interesting read. Hehe ... maybe you should call this "The Chronicles of aciminsk" smile.gif.

Yeah, know it's foollish. But sometimes could not resist doing foollish things
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
abhiram
post Feb 23 2006, 10:07 AM
Post #9


Hedonist at large
Group Icon

Group: Members
Posts: 610
Joined: 30-July 05
From: another realm
Member No.: 7,524



QUOTE

Yeah, know it's foollish. But sometimes could not resist doing foollish things


Hehe ... I hear ya. Happens to the best of us sometimes smile.gif.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
aciminsk
post Feb 23 2006, 10:36 AM
Post #10


Newbie [ Level 2 ]
Group Icon

Group: Members
Posts: 18
Joined: 20-February 06
Member No.: 11,431



So, where did I leave?
Yeah, about happy end... Not yet. I have to use the server for something. So, let's add some useful stuff and do a test web server. Easy.

#pkg_add -r mc

And you have Midnight commander.
#mc

Works, great...

#pkg_add -r mysql

A little bit of humming, installed.
#cd /user/local/bin
#mysql_safe --user=mysql &

No error messages
#ps -ax | grep mysql
Lists mysql daemon running. Great
#mysqladmin -u root status
Statistics displayed. Cool

Let's do Apache
#pkg_add -r apache2
Brake for a smoke, done
#/usr/local/sbin/httpd -k start
No error messages. Good
#ps -ax | grep httpd
apache daemon running. Go to my Debian machine, open Mozilla, type in URL
192.xxx.xxx.xxx
Get this lovely Apache feather. Think that I'm probably not that bad in BSD
Do PHP. Go back to the server...
#pkg_add -r php
Yees, done
#vi test.php
make this little test file
<?php phpinfo()?>
Save it to the apache document root. Go back to my Mozilla, type in
192.xxx.xxx.xxx/test.php
Here you are. I'm php info page, I'm here....

One might say that it just could not be that easy and fast. Yeah, but who cares about those little shadows during the happy hour?

Well, enough for today.

Still to be continued if you do not mind...
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post

3 Pages V   1 2 3 >
Reply to this topicStart new topic

Collapse

> Similar Topics

Topics Topics
  1. Linux User Needs Help Learning Freebsd(7)
  2. Freebsd Burning & Installation Problems(4)
  3. Freebsd Internet Connection(2)
  4. Help, Attempting To Boot Freebsd-6 <solved>(2)
  5. Pc-bsd(6)
  6. Introduction To Openbsd With A Brief Installation Guide(7)
  7. Freebsd Commands..(1)


 



- Lo-Fi Version Time is now: 16th October 2008 - 04:18 AM