On Wed, Sep 30, 2015 at 01:40:44PM +0200, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 30, 2015 at 12:30:52PM +0200, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> > ping
>
> I am still pondering the pros and cons...
I'll probably commit your diff tomorrow, thanks.
--
Antoine
On Wed, Sep 30, 2015 at 12:30:52PM +0200, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> ping
I am still pondering the pros and cons...
> On 09/25/15 14:44, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> >On 09/25/15 14:03, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> >>On 2015/09/25 13:17, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> >>>I don't always want all daemons ru
ping
On 09/25/15 14:44, Martijn van Duren wrote:
On 09/25/15 14:03, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2015/09/25 13:17, Martijn van Duren wrote:
I don't always want all daemons running all the time on my desktop,
but when
I want to start multiple daemons (for instance when doing some webdev) I
have t
On 09/25/15 14:03, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2015/09/25 13:17, Martijn van Duren wrote:
I don't always want all daemons running all the time on my desktop, but when
I want to start multiple daemons (for instance when doing some webdev) I
have to call rcctl multiple times, which results in multi
On 2015/09/25 13:17, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> I don't always want all daemons running all the time on my desktop, but when
> I want to start multiple daemons (for instance when doing some webdev) I
> have to call rcctl multiple times, which results in multiple password
> questions and long comman
Hello tech@,
I don't always want all daemons running all the time on my desktop, but
when I want to start multiple daemons (for instance when doing some
webdev) I have to call rcctl multiple times, which results in multiple
password questions and long commands (I know I could set up doas.conf