Due to my brain dead ISP which does not support IPv6 for clients in 2K25(!) I cant access my boxyBSD box.
boxyBSD is thus so far away from me 🙁
I have a client connection with fixed IPv4 IP somewhere, but it collapses when I use a free available IPv4 to IPv6 tunnel service.
Instead of sitting and twiddling my fingers on my Bass guitar(s) generating random() notes, I decided to get an image of the latest freeBSD and play with it locally, until I can get my ISP to provide all of us with a (set) of free IPv6 addresses because we pay them for a full service here in my country
>> log
$ wget -c download.freebsd.org/releases/…
--2025-03-23 13:32:46-- download.freebsd.org/releases/…
Resolving download.freebsd.org (download.freebsd.org)... 200.160.6.227, 2001:12ff:0:6224::15:0
Connecting to download.freebsd.org (download.freebsd.org)|200.160.6.227|:443... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 206 Partial Content
Length: 4826406912 (4.5G), 4255655894 (4.0G) remaining [application/octet-stream]
Saving to: ‘FreeBSD-14.2-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso’
-14.2-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1 12%[++++ ] 559.57M 1.01MB/s eta 75m
<< ^Z
Yes they give a puny 1MB speed, you read that correctly
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX
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Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image is a screenshot of the FreeBSD website, featuring a red and black color scheme. At the top, the website's logo, "FreeBSD The Power To Serve," is prominently displayed. The navigation menu includes options such as "Home," "About," "Get FreeBSD," "Documentation," "Community," "Developers," "Support," and "Foundation." A search bar is located in the top right corner, with a "Donate to FreeBSD" button next to it.
The main content area is divided into sections. The left sidebar lists various FreeBSD release information, including "Release Information," "Production," "Release: 13.3," "Release: 13.4," "Release: 14.1," and "Release: 14.2." The right side of the page contains sections titled "Choosing an Architecture" and "Choosing an Image." The "Choosing an Architecture" section explains that most users will have hardware for amd64 or arm64 architectures, with support for modern PCs, embedded devices, and single-board computers like the Raspberry Pi 3 and 4, ESPRESSObin, and Allwinner and Rockchip boards. The "Choosing an Image" section details the formats for the FreeBSD
... mehr anzeigenThe image is a screenshot of the FreeBSD website, featuring a red and black color scheme. At the top, the website's logo, "FreeBSD The Power To Serve," is prominently displayed. The navigation menu includes options such as "Home," "About," "Get FreeBSD," "Documentation," "Community," "Developers," "Support," and "Foundation." A search bar is located in the top right corner, with a "Donate to FreeBSD" button next to it.
The main content area is divided into sections. The left sidebar lists various FreeBSD release information, including "Release Information," "Production," "Release: 13.3," "Release: 13.4," "Release: 14.1," and "Release: 14.2." The right side of the page contains sections titled "Choosing an Architecture" and "Choosing an Image." The "Choosing an Architecture" section explains that most users will have hardware for amd64 or arm64 architectures, with support for modern PCs, embedded devices, and single-board computers like the Raspberry Pi 3 and 4, ESPRESSObin, and Allwinner and Rockchip boards. The "Choosing an Image" section details the formats for the FreeBSD installer, including DVD, network install, and USB memory sticks, as well as virtual machine and embedded platform images.
At the bottom, a table lists the FreeBSD 14.2 RELEASE version, including options for the installer, VM, SD Card, and Documentation. The text emphasizes that RELEASE versions are the result of release engineering and are recommended for most users.
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Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •@altbot
pong!
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image is a screenshot of the FreeBSD website, featuring a red and black color scheme. At the top, the website's logo, "FreeBSD The Power To Serve," is prominently displayed. The navigation menu includes options such as "Home," "About," "Get FreeBSD," "Documentation," "Community," "Developers," "Support," and "Foundation." A search bar is located in the top right corner, with a "Donate to FreeBSD" button next to it.
The main content area is divided into sections. The left sidebar lists various FreeBSD release information, including "Release Information," "Production," "Release: 13.3," "Release: 13.4," "Release: 14.1," and "Release: 14.2." The right side of the page contains sections titled "Choosing an Architecture" and "Choosing an Image." The "Choosing an Architecture" section explains that most users will have hardware for amd64 or arm64 architectures, with support for modern PCs, embedded devices, and single-board computers like the Raspberry Pi 3 and 4, ESPRESSObin, and Allwinner and Rockchip boards. The "Choosing an Image" section details the formats for the FreeBSD
... mehr anzeigenThe image is a screenshot of the FreeBSD website, featuring a red and black color scheme. At the top, the website's logo, "FreeBSD The Power To Serve," is prominently displayed. The navigation menu includes options such as "Home," "About," "Get FreeBSD," "Documentation," "Community," "Developers," "Support," and "Foundation." A search bar is located in the top right corner, with a "Donate to FreeBSD" button next to it.
The main content area is divided into sections. The left sidebar lists various FreeBSD release information, including "Release Information," "Production," "Release: 13.3," "Release: 13.4," "Release: 14.1," and "Release: 14.2." The right side of the page contains sections titled "Choosing an Architecture" and "Choosing an Image." The "Choosing an Architecture" section explains that most users will have hardware for amd64 or arm64 architectures, with support for modern PCs, embedded devices, and single-board computers like the Raspberry Pi 3 and 4, ESPRESSObin, and Allwinner and Rockchip boards. The "Choosing an Image" section details the formats for the FreeBSD installer, including DVD, network install, and USB memory sticks, as well as virtual machine and embedded platform images.
At the bottom, a table lists the FreeBSD 14.2 RELEASE version, including options for the installer, VM, SD Card, and Documentation. The text emphasizes that RELEASE versions are the result of release engineering and are recommended for most users.
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🌱 Energy used: 0.314 Wh
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •As you can see here the first part of my freeBSD installation is going smoothly
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image shows a computer screen displaying the FreeBSD installer interface. The background is a solid blue color, and the text is primarily in white and red. On the right side of the screen, the text "FreeBSD Installer" is visible in white. In the center, there is a white rectangular box with red text that reads "Welcome to FreeBSD. Would you like to install or use the live system?" Below this, there are three options listed vertically: "Install," "Shell," and "Live System." The cursor is positioned next to the "Install" option. The overall layout is simple and straightforward, with a focus on the installation options.
... mehr anzeigen―
The image shows a computer screen with a blue background. In the center, there is a pink rectangular box with a black border containing text and a progress bar. The text reads "Extracting distribution files..." and lists several file types being extracted, including "base.txz," "kernel-dbg.txz," "kernel.tgz," "ports-txz," and "11p32-txz." The progress bar is partially filled with a green section labeled "Done," indicating the extraction process is on
The image shows a computer screen displaying the FreeBSD installer interface. The background is a solid blue color, and the text is primarily in white and red. On the right side of the screen, the text "FreeBSD Installer" is visible in white. In the center, there is a white rectangular box with red text that reads "Welcome to FreeBSD. Would you like to install or use the live system?" Below this, there are three options listed vertically: "Install," "Shell," and "Live System." The cursor is positioned next to the "Install" option. The overall layout is simple and straightforward, with a focus on the installation options.
―
The image shows a computer screen with a blue background. In the center, there is a pink rectangular box with a black border containing text and a progress bar. The text reads "Extracting distribution files..." and lists several file types being extracted, including "base.txz," "kernel-dbg.txz," "kernel.tgz," "ports-txz," and "11p32-txz." The progress bar is partially filled with a green section labeled "Done," indicating the extraction process is ongoing. The screen also displays vertical text on the left side, reading "88830 files read" and "793.1 files/sec." The cursor is visible as a small white arrow in the bottom left corner of the screen.
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🌱 Energy used: 0.671 Wh
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •@altbot
Pong!
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image shows a computer screen displaying the FreeBSD installer interface. The background is a solid blue color, and the text is primarily in white and red. On the right side of the screen, the text "FreeBSD Installer" is visible in white. In the center, there is a white rectangular box with red text that reads "Welcome to FreeBSD. Would you like to install or use the live system?" Below this, there are three options listed vertically: "Install," "Shell," and "Live System." The cursor is positioned next to the "Install" option. The overall layout is simple and straightforward, with a focus on the installation options.
... mehr anzeigen―
The image shows a computer screen with a blue background. In the center, there is a pink rectangular box with a black border containing text and a progress bar. The text reads "Extracting distribution files..." and lists several file types being extracted, including "base.txz," "kernel-dbg.txz," "kernel.tgz," "ports-txz," and "11p32-txz." The progress bar is partially filled with a green section labeled "Done," indicating the extraction process is on
The image shows a computer screen displaying the FreeBSD installer interface. The background is a solid blue color, and the text is primarily in white and red. On the right side of the screen, the text "FreeBSD Installer" is visible in white. In the center, there is a white rectangular box with red text that reads "Welcome to FreeBSD. Would you like to install or use the live system?" Below this, there are three options listed vertically: "Install," "Shell," and "Live System." The cursor is positioned next to the "Install" option. The overall layout is simple and straightforward, with a focus on the installation options.
―
The image shows a computer screen with a blue background. In the center, there is a pink rectangular box with a black border containing text and a progress bar. The text reads "Extracting distribution files..." and lists several file types being extracted, including "base.txz," "kernel-dbg.txz," "kernel.tgz," "ports-txz," and "11p32-txz." The progress bar is partially filled with a green section labeled "Done," indicating the extraction process is ongoing. The screen also displays vertical text on the left side, reading "88830 files read" and "793.1 files/sec." The cursor is visible as a small white arrow in the bottom left corner of the screen.
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🌱 Energy used: 0.668 Wh
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •Finally I've captured some sh photographs of the running minimal freeBSD system
No x.org here. Even mc can't run after the pkg install! It needs proc filesystems installed mounted cfg first
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image shows a computer screen displaying the boot menu of the FreeBSD operating system. The screen is predominantly dark with a red logo in the center, which is the FreeBSD mascot, a stylized cat. On the right side, the text "FreeBSD" is displayed vertically in white. The boot menu is presented in a white box with a black background, listing various boot options such as "boot," "boot kernel," and "boot kernel text." The text is in white, with some options highlighted in green. The screen is framed by a black border, and the background is dark, emphasizing the text and logo.
... mehr anzeigen―
The image features a digital display with a vertical arrangement of white text on a dark background. The text appears to be a sequence of alphanumeric characters, resembling a stream of data or code. The characters are densely packed at the top and gradually become sparser towards the bottom, creating a cascading effect. The text is predominantly in a monospaced font, with some lines containing hexadecimal values and others with ASCII characters. The overall effect is reminiscent of a digital
The image shows a computer screen displaying the boot menu of the FreeBSD operating system. The screen is predominantly dark with a red logo in the center, which is the FreeBSD mascot, a stylized cat. On the right side, the text "FreeBSD" is displayed vertically in white. The boot menu is presented in a white box with a black background, listing various boot options such as "boot," "boot kernel," and "boot kernel text." The text is in white, with some options highlighted in green. The screen is framed by a black border, and the background is dark, emphasizing the text and logo.
―
The image features a digital display with a vertical arrangement of white text on a dark background. The text appears to be a sequence of alphanumeric characters, resembling a stream of data or code. The characters are densely packed at the top and gradually become sparser towards the bottom, creating a cascading effect. The text is predominantly in a monospaced font, with some lines containing hexadecimal values and others with ASCII characters. The overall effect is reminiscent of a digital waterfall or a data stream, with the text appearing to fall downwards. The background is uniformly dark, which contrasts sharply with the bright white text, enhancing the visual impact of the display.
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🌱 Energy used: 0.639 Wh
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •I have found an interesting quirk with my freeBSD installation, running on my SATA SSD, which I mount through an USB tray, directly to the USB port on the computer.
As long as i leave the second port of the USB tray open, everything runs fine and smooth. The moment I mount another drive in the second port, freeBSD only does the initial part of the startup sequence and then complains that it cannot go any further.
No further explanation given
Seeking for log files is not an option because the operating system itself doesn't boot.
Where in the documentation should I look for this type of issue?
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #AskFediverse
izzy (she/her)
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •not a freebsd user, i'm an openbsd user, so take my tips with a grain of salt. it sounds like you are doing something weird that freebsd's devs probably don't test for (booting a ssd via a usb controller). may I ask why you are booting this way? what sort of errors show (if any) when 'it doesn't go any further'? we need more info.
ofc, this goes without saying, but mstdn is *not* official freebsd support. I highly recommend going to ask for support on those channels too.
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf izzy (she/her) • • •@izder456
I am an individual who often does things in many fields, especially computing, in a weird and unexpected way. That's why I'm one of the efficient bèta testers for many different software programs which started in the days of the Waffle BBS's somewhere in the 90s of the last Century and still goes on to these days.
Going to the absolute beginning I even started to bèta test software on the Casio FX-700p; then I moved to the Commodore C64, the C128 where I debugged CPM software, then I moved on to the 286 PS2, the machine was loaded with the 287 Mathematics Co-processor, essential for running CAD software.
The reason for my specific booting of the SSD, the starter SSD, on the USB tray, a dual slot device, is because I currently have not made any specific space free for the operating system.
I miss going to my beautiful boxyBSD system which resides on the boxyBSD Network.
The reasons for that are somewhere in another thread, but it comes down
... mehr anzeigen@izder456
I am an individual who often does things in many fields, especially computing, in a weird and unexpected way. That's why I'm one of the efficient bèta testers for many different software programs which started in the days of the Waffle BBS's somewhere in the 90s of the last Century and still goes on to these days.
Going to the absolute beginning I even started to bèta test software on the Casio FX-700p; then I moved to the Commodore C64, the C128 where I debugged CPM software, then I moved on to the 286 PS2, the machine was loaded with the 287 Mathematics Co-processor, essential for running CAD software.
The reason for my specific booting of the SSD, the starter SSD, on the USB tray, a dual slot device, is because I currently have not made any specific space free for the operating system.
I miss going to my beautiful boxyBSD system which resides on the boxyBSD Network.
The reasons for that are somewhere in another thread, but it comes down to the fact that my brain dead ISP doesn't give us any IPv6 addresses from the get-go, while we pay them through the Nose for a puny 10MBit Connection on a obsolete xDSL router.
So I just went to one of my machines, a AMD MíniPC with 32GB RAM, didn't find any space where the operating system wanted to install on my resident m.2 SSD (no space due to Sound Engineering Audio projects) and my resident SATA SSD, for identical reasons.
In the end space was made on a SATA SSD which floats on my different SATA trays which are dual port.
I shrunk a partition and made 8GB free, which the installer divided in 7.1GB and 407+MB for Swap.
I immediately have to say that the installer teaches you what doesn't work and give you hints on where you can go and look for the reasons why.
I have an MBR SATA HDD, where I wanted to install the operating system.
The installer immediately warned me that I would get a non-bootable situation and it was right it didn't tell why but that's not important.
The SATA SSD was already converted from MBR to GPT, where of course it lost all data but that was unimportant, since it was scratch data. gPartEd warned me about the data loss
The semi-automatic installation liked the fact that the SSD was GPT, partitioned and happily did it's magic creating the file systems.
When after the installation, I powered down the tray and inserted a HDD in the open slot, not moving the SATA SSD, the FreeBSD boot environment told me that it could not find the boot partition.
For me that was a WTF moment since the SSD wasn't moved.
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #AskFediverse
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The following must have occurred.
The installer did not use UUID to identify the boot partition. I assume it is because I use the semi-automatic method. I will repeat the installer to see how it happens when I use the full manual method;
I presume that I can then, tell the system that it needs to use the UUIDs for the identification of the partitions regarding root, home and the partitions regarding swap.
Until I get a dedicated SSD for my BSD installations, I shall not be able to make a separate partition for usr and other important sections of the tree which are better managed on separate partitions
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #AskFediverse #WTF
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •I've obtained a separate HDD for my BSD installations.
This time I've made sure that I did not even turn off the SATA tray, in which the HDD resides
I've been able to repeat the exact error which I had gotten when I installed the freeBSD Operating System on the SSD:
After booting a Fresh installation, the FreeBSD bootloader barfs at the fact that it cannot find the kernel even though the drive was not moved
The fact that I used ghostBSD as a flavour variant doesn't matter since it's the latest version of ghostBSD which resides on the latest version of FreeBSD.
I love it when I find little bugs which are easily repeatable
I'll grind to the depths to detect why the bug occurs, repeat it and when I know why, I'll report it to the freeBSD team.
Just reporting bugs not my thing; I also want to report a fix.
🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #AskFediverse #WTF
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •I've reinstalled the ghost BSD gfx distro; I have manually wiped the partitions before running The installation sequence again.
ghostBSD does something very nice when you have enough memory
It creates a Ram disk with the whole install sequence in there which makes it lightning fast
This time after the reboot I could get into the operating system contrary to the last time
I'm still hunting down why that occurs
Images maybe included later I'm now busy with the PPE for cycling
I've just included three photographic compositions of the installation process for ghostBSD 👻
.🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #AskFediverse #WTF
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •@altbot
Pong!
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image shows a computer desktop screen with a blue background featuring a geometric pattern. On the left side, there is a vertical file directory with various icons, including "Applications," "File Sync," "Touch," "Install," "Linux," "VMware," and others. The desktop also displays a window titled "Installation in progress" with a message thanking the user for choosing Ubuntu and providing information about the installation process. The window features a logo with a stylized "G" and a silhouette of a mouse. The bottom of the screen shows a taskbar with several icons, including a music player labeled "Music." The screen is part of a larger setup, with another monitor visible in the bottom right corner, displaying a blue background with the word "Music."
... mehr anzeigen―
The image shows a computer screen displaying the "Partition Editor" window from the "GHOSTBSD Installer." The window is pink with a black header and contains a table listing various partitions on a disk. The table has columns labeled "Partition," "Size(MB)," "Mount Point," and "System/Type." The partitions listed inc
The image shows a computer desktop screen with a blue background featuring a geometric pattern. On the left side, there is a vertical file directory with various icons, including "Applications," "File Sync," "Touch," "Install," "Linux," "VMware," and others. The desktop also displays a window titled "Installation in progress" with a message thanking the user for choosing Ubuntu and providing information about the installation process. The window features a logo with a stylized "G" and a silhouette of a mouse. The bottom of the screen shows a taskbar with several icons, including a music player labeled "Music." The screen is part of a larger setup, with another monitor visible in the bottom right corner, displaying a blue background with the word "Music."
―
The image shows a computer screen displaying the "Partition Editor" window from the "GHOSTBSD Installer." The window is pink with a black header and contains a table listing various partitions on a disk. The table has columns labeled "Partition," "Size(MB)," "Mount Point," and "System/Type." The partitions listed include "da0," "da0p1," "da0p2," "da0p3," "da0p4," "freespace1," "da1," "da1p1," "da1p2," "da1p3," "da2," "da2s1," "da2s2," and "nda0." The sizes of the partitions range from 2 MB to 488,386 MB. The "System/Type" column shows various file systems such as "CPT," "linux-data," "ms-basic-data," "none," "GPT," "linux," "linux-swap," "mix_cata," "MBR," "ntfs," "efi," and "CPT." The "freespace1" partition is highlighted, indicating it is selected. The window also includes buttons for "Create," "Delete," "Revert," "Auto," "Back," "Cancel," and "Next." The background of the screen is dark with a blue and green geometric pattern, and a cartoonish pink mouse is visible on the right side of the window.
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The image shows a computer screen displaying the Ventoy boot menu. The background of the screen is a light pink color with a subtle mountain landscape. At the top of the screen, the word "Ventoy" is prominently displayed in large blue letters, with a blue icon resembling a USB drive next to the letter "o." Below the title, there is a list of ISO files available for booting, including "AME_2H1_2021-08-09.iso," "atlas_v0.5.2.iso," "FreeBSD-14.2-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso," "GhostBSD-25.01-R14.2p1-XFCE.iso," "GhostBSD-25.01-R14.2p1.iso," "gparted-live-1.7.0.1-amd64.iso," "MX-21.1.July-x64.iso," "MX-21.3.ahs_x64.iso," and "MX-23.3.ahs_x64.iso." The list is contained within a gray box with a blue border. At the bottom of the screen, there are several function keys with their corresponding commands: "F1:Language," "F2:Browse," "F3:TreeView," "F4:Localboot," "F5:Tools," and "F6:ExtMenu." The version of Ventoy shown is "1.0.99 UEFI."
Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B
🌱 Energy used: 2.014 Wh
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •To make sure that everything starts up normally even when regular things are done, which should not influence the procedure, I left my ghostBSD installation alone for about a day
I inserted the external HDD in the tray, at the exact location where I had installed the Operating System, rebooted that MiniPC and fired up ghostBSD. A couple of nice things occur when you install ghostBSD instead of going flat with just freeBSD.
Configuration parameters for my HDMI IPS LED panel Zero was always added flawlessly since that is the display which I look at at boot
My secondary display which is connected to a mini DisplayPort (Zero) and then goes from mini DisplayPort to HDMI with an Active cable with circuitry in it, at the HDMI end, is automatically detected in the freeBSD configuration provided by the ghostBSD team.
That is a tremendously good feature which pleasantly surprised me.
Another BSD user told me here, that in the regular freeBSD installation you have to go and figure that out yourself, which is fine but not something I intended to do at this point.
... mehr anzeigenTo make sure that everything starts up normally even when regular things are done, which should not influence the procedure, I left my ghostBSD installation alone for about a day
I inserted the external HDD in the tray, at the exact location where I had installed the Operating System, rebooted that MiniPC and fired up ghostBSD. A couple of nice things occur when you install ghostBSD instead of going flat with just freeBSD.
Configuration parameters for my HDMI IPS LED panel Zero was always added flawlessly since that is the display which I look at at boot
My secondary display which is connected to a mini DisplayPort (Zero) and then goes from mini DisplayPort to HDMI with an Active cable with circuitry in it, at the HDMI end, is automatically detected in the freeBSD configuration provided by the ghostBSD team.
That is a tremendously good feature which pleasantly surprised me.
Another BSD user told me here, that in the regular freeBSD installation you have to go and figure that out yourself, which is fine but not something I intended to do at this point.
Here are some images I just shot of the login screens with both IPS LED panels enabled
.🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #AskFediverse #WTF
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •@altbot
Pong!
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image features a close-up view of a window with horizontal slats, through which blue light is filtering. The slats are arranged in a diagonal pattern, creating a series of parallel lines that cast shadows and highlights. The light varies in intensity, with some slats appearing brighter and others darker, suggesting a gradient effect. The background is predominantly black, emphasizing the blue light and the slats. The image is vertically oriented, with the slats running from the top left to the bottom right, creating a dynamic visual effect. The overall composition is minimalist, focusing on the interplay of light and shadow through the slats.
...a time traveler from Ancient Rome is just out of frame, taking notes.
... mehr anzeigen―
The image features a close-up view of a structure illuminated with blue and turquoise lighting, creating a striking visual effect. The lighting is arranged in diagonal stripes, with varying shades of blue and turquoise, giving a sense of depth and movement. The background is predominantly dark, which enhances the brightness of the illuminated stri
The image features a close-up view of a window with horizontal slats, through which blue light is filtering. The slats are arranged in a diagonal pattern, creating a series of parallel lines that cast shadows and highlights. The light varies in intensity, with some slats appearing brighter and others darker, suggesting a gradient effect. The background is predominantly black, emphasizing the blue light and the slats. The image is vertically oriented, with the slats running from the top left to the bottom right, creating a dynamic visual effect. The overall composition is minimalist, focusing on the interplay of light and shadow through the slats.
...a time traveler from Ancient Rome is just out of frame, taking notes.
―
The image features a close-up view of a structure illuminated with blue and turquoise lighting, creating a striking visual effect. The lighting is arranged in diagonal stripes, with varying shades of blue and turquoise, giving a sense of depth and movement. The background is predominantly dark, which enhances the brightness of the illuminated stripes. The image is divided into two sections, with the top section showing a slightly different angle of the same structure, and the bottom section providing a closer view of the illuminated stripes. A handle is visible on the left side of the bottom section, suggesting the structure might be a door or a panel. The overall composition emphasizes the interplay of light and shadow, creating a modern and dynamic aesthetic.
...the image is a rare glimpse into the secret world of sentient robots.
Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B
🌱 Energy used: 0.640 Wh
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •Ping!
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •This image already has alt-text
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The image shows two screens displaying a game interface. The larger screen on the right is vertically oriented and shows a blue background with white geometric shapes, including a diamond shape in the center with a white silhouette of a landmass. There is a vertical white arrow pointing downwards, and a list of text on the left side. The smaller screen on the left is horizontally oriented and displays a similar blue background with white geometric shapes, including a diamond shape in the center with a white silhouette of a landmass. At the top of the screen, there is a row of white rectangles, possibly representing a timeline or progress bar. Both screens are set against a dark background, emphasizing the bright colors of the game interface.
...the image is a rare glimpse into the alternate universe where cats rule the world.
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Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •Now I am working on a test installation of freeBSD raw on disk . This installation will have all the bells 🔔 and whistles including the sources and ports
.🖋️ #bash #freeBSD #boxyBSD #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #netBSD #openBSD #POSIX #WTF
Dendrobatus Azureus
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •@altbot
Pong!
Altbot
Als Antwort auf Dendrobatus Azureus • • •The image shows a large blue screen with a smaller white window in the center displaying text. The text in the window reads "Extracting distribution files..." and lists several files being extracted, such as "kernel.tgz," "initrd.img," and "linux-headers-5.10.0-11-generic." The window also shows a progress bar with the status "Done" in green. The screen is set against a black background, and there is a smaller blue screen in the bottom left corner with the word "Music" written on it. The overall color scheme is predominantly blue, with white and green text.
...the image is a snapshot from the annual meeting of the International Society of Invisible People.
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