On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 10:16:21PM +0200, openbsd misc wrote:
| Hi,
| 
| interessting point. How about dumping it to a file or something so you are
| able to check what was loaded last time (e.g. a file with 400 under
| /var/whatever)?

GREAT IDEA !

How about /etc/pf.conf ?

Cheers !

Paul 'WEiRD' de Weerd

| Regards
|   Hagen Volpers
| 
| 
| > -----Urspr|ngliche Nachricht-----
| > Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| > Im Auftrag von Stuart Henderson
| > Gesendet: Freitag, 25. Juli 2008 17:15
| > An: Charlie Clark
| > Cc: misc@openbsd.org
| > Betreff: Re: pfctl
| >
| > On 2008/07/25 14:53, Charlie Clark wrote:
| > > Stuart Henderson wrote:
| > >> On 2008-07-25, Charlie Clark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
| > >>
| > >>> Hi,
| > >>>
| > >>> I have noticed that you are unable to view the currently loaded
| > >>> options for pf using pfctl, even 'pfctl -sa' doesn't show the
| > >>> options eg. set skip on tun0.
| > >>> Is this going to be implemented soon or is it there and
| > I'm missing
| > >>> something?
| > >>>
| > >>> Regards,
| > >>>
| > >>>
| > >>
| > >> Someone asked about this recently.
| > >> http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&w=2&r=1&s=set+skip+pfctl&q=b
| > >>
| > >>
| > >>
| > > Yes sorry I posted this by accident, I still haven't got a valid
| > > solution for this though.
| >
| > "set XX" options are a mix of directives to pf and to pfctl,
| > the pfctl directives don't get stored anywhere so you can't
| > retrieve them later. The ones affecting pf are available but
| > in a different format.
| 

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