Do you have the 4.5ish somewhere for download?

Do you have an automated process to generate these at any given time?
If so can you share that?

On Sun, Apr 19, 2009 at 01:16:48PM -0400, Josh Grosse wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 19, 2009 at 09:59:02AM -0700, new_guy wrote:
> > I'm interested in building a live, bootable OpenBSD CD for forensics, 
> > cloning
> > and data recovery. Basically, boot and try to automatically bring up any
> > existing network interface. I'm not interesated in a GUI or play things...
> > only good, old-fashioned Unix tools like dd, netcat, md5, etc.
> > 
> > I've googled and found some older info about building live CDs from OpenBSD,
> > but I wanted to ask misc to see what folks think... good idea or bad? If it
> > seems a reasonable task and I am able to do it, I'd like to do it so that it
> > is easy to follow -current. So when -current get's new hardware support, I
> > can redo my live CD to take advantage of that.
> > 
> > I think OpenBSD is a good choice for something like this as it is very
> > simple and straight-forward, but again, I wanted to ask here for other's
> > opinions before doing much.
> 
> You can certainly build your own.  
> 
> AFAIK, there are three OpenBSD LiveCD or LiveDVD systems that are both
> kept up-to-date and available publicly.
> 
> 1:  A turn key application for library archives: LOCKSS.  See http://locks.org
> for information.
> 
> 2.  Stephan Rickauer's http://bsdanywhere.org, a general purpose workstation
> built on the E17 window manager.  Nice website, too.
> 
> 3.  Mine.  I have six different ISO configuration available for i386 and 
> amd64:
> basic, firefox, fluxbox, xfce, kde, and gnome.  I update it in-sync with 
> OpenBSD releases; 4.5-release versions have been in beta test for about a 
> month. You may e-mail me if interested in getting access before May 1.
> 4.4-releases are available at www.jggimi.homeip.net.

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