@PeeHaa So how should I set this up? The point of the server is a place I can quickly throw up a server and write something. If it breaks I can just delete it and start again. But it would also be nice to point lamephp.com here too.
the core idea is that an OS has a system, which lets you pick an application and configure your requirements. Then it download the source for said application, compiles with your options, recursively does the same for all the requirements, installs that application and cleans up after itself. And when the next patch/update/release comes out, you can automatically recompile and reinstall all of that software to get the latest version with all your preferred options
basically , in freebsd the action of getting the latest list of software, recompiling and installing it amounts to writing : cd /usr/ports ; svn up ; portupgrade -var
@tereško well, don't know if this is optimal, because this way you could for example accidentally upgrade php with the upgrade-all method when you have code which isn't compatible with the new version. There I'd prefer to just have control what exactly I install.
But really what is the problem of compiling it just yourself. mostly it's just a wget URL, a tar -xzf (or just a git clone or svn checkout), a cd and then ./configure &6 make && make install
@tereško but it is allowed to be able to do login root after having logged in as a non-root user over ssh? (question is: would you recommend this, or is it better via su etc.?)
> PAM is used to set the policy su(1) will use. In particular, by default only users in the admin'' or wheel'' groups can switch to UID 0 (root''). This group requirement may be changed by modifying the pam_group'' section of /etc/pam.d/su. See pam_group(8) for details on how to modify this setting.
@tereško dbus is like an external extension (such as PECL for PHP), would asking how to install dbus on python (eg. how do I install PECL on Windows), be on topic for super user?
You're still thinking about it? I've wasted a few years (okay, not completely waster) on a masters course, but the mental masturbation was getting too much ...
I was 18/19 back then, I probably feel different about it now.
And Haskell was kinda fun :)
Except that you would spend a whole evening proving your code works.