You can also just set client keepalives. Set TCPKeepAlive in ~/.ssh/config.
This has solved a bunch of random timeout problems due to carrier NAT or
similar.
On Sat, Sep 15, 2018 at 15:36 Constantine A. Murenin
wrote:
> On 15 September 2018 at 09:50, Chris Bennett <
> cpb_m...@bennettconstruction
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 3:13 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2013-05-14, Mattias Lindgren wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm using a OpenBSD 5.3 (release) machine as my router connecting
>> to Comcast. Comcast provides native IPv6 access, however it does
>> so a little bit differently than what is proba
On Jul 3, 2013, at 20:23, Brad Smith wrote:
> On 03/07/13 11:07 PM, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
>> Why do we need FUSE anyway?
>
> To be able to utilize FUSE based filesystems.
>
Fuse is a terrible hack.
But, a useful one that solves all kinds of problems.
Sent form my iFoe.
On Jul 6, 2013, at 21:53, Nick Holland wrote:
>
> Feel free to take this off list with me if you prefer.
>
I kind of hope you keep this on list, actually. While I'm not affected by the
problem, I'm interested in the problem and solutions.
read the FAQ, Loic.
http://openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#site
Site*.tgz, install.site and upgrade.site are a good starting point.
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 11:59 AM, Loïc BLOT
wrote:
> Hello @misc.
>
> Today i'm working on automated deploy with PXE. I have successful found
> and made automated PXE in
siteXX.tgz, yes, but this is not
> the main problem here
>
> --
> Best regards,
> Loïc BLOT,
> UNIX systems, security and network expert
> http://www.unix-experience.fr
>
>
> Le lundi 12 août 2013 à 12:09 -0700, Johan Beisser a écrit :
>> read the FAQ,
On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 9:48 AM, Marian Hettwer wrote:
> Hi Loic,
>
>
> Am 13.08.13 15:43, schrieb � Blot:
>
>> Hello Marian,
>> i think you are right, because bsd.rd is required for last chance to
>> repair system, among others.
>>
>
> right. And I'd like to leave it untouched. This hopefully als
DNS proxy uses less bandwidth on your end.
There are a dozen DNS proxy services out there for media, they all
work on the same basic principle.
On Sun, Sep 15, 2013 at 4:55 AM, Monah Baki wrote:
> Hi all,
>
>
> I'm running OpenBSD 5.2 with squid for a friend who owns an ISP outside the
> U.S and
hanism other than ssh.
>
> -Joel
>
>
> Johan Beisser wrote:
>>
>> DNS proxy uses less bandwidth on your end.
>>
>> There are a dozen DNS proxy services out there for media, they all
>> work on the same basic principle.
>>
>> On Sun, Sep 15, 2013
> On Oct 16, 2013, at 8:05, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> This will not be in 5.4, it wil be in 5.5. If you see shortcomings in
> the docs explain in more detail.
I just read the QUEUEING section in the man page. Seems fairly clear to me, and
in some ways more clear.
One thing I'd like to see is a sug
On Wed, Oct 16, 2013 at 11:04 AM, Norman Golisz wrote:
> On Wed Oct 16 2013 08:54, Johan Beisser wrote:
>> Or cam I still just do very basic priority queueing in 5.5?
>
> See pf.conf(5), 'set prio'. This doesn't even require you to define
> queues, etc.
R
> On Oct 21, 2013, at 2:57, Henning Brauer wrote:
>
> * Илья Шипицин [2013-10-11 04:52]:
>> I was just curious why that timestamping is enabled by default.
>
> 'cause there is no reason to disable it.
>
> why is tcp enabled by default?
>
Everyone knows that TCP, like IP, and the Internet is
You need the KDE Samba package.
http://www.openbsd.org/4.4_packages/i386/kdesamba-3.5.9.tgz-long.html
On Dec 21, 2008, at 10:41 PM, Siju George wrote:
Hi,
I am running 4.4 and have both kdebase package and samba package
installed.
$ uname -a
OpenBSD risen.hifxchn2.local 4.4 GENERIC#1021 i
On Dec 22, 2008, at 12:27 PM, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Todd T. Fries [2008-12-05 13:27]:
Ironically, IPv6 cannot solve this scenario either, since by
definition
using ipv6 tends to require a tunnel
a few ISPs here (too many) are stupid enough to deal with v6 to the
extend of handing out v6
On Dec 22, 2008, at 5:25 PM, Henning Brauer wrote:
yurop is different
And one day, the US might stop playing ketchup.
I don't think any are bankrupt due to RT.
On 12/23/08, Ted Unangst wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 6:44 PM, bofh wrote:
>> Here's a vote for RT. I've installed it, and also used it at F100
>> companies.
>
> Faint praise considering how many F100 companies are bankrupt. :)
On Jan 3, 2009, at 7:27 AM, Ed Ahlsen-Girard wrote:
You're right. You're so right, in fact, that I'd already changed the
code; even I noticed that my original was bad practice.
You're doing this in perl, and not using Net::FTP?
But my real problem was getting the download to work inside a s
On Jan 13, 2009, at 6:42 AM, Dan Colish wrote:
On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 8:11 AM, Arno Kumpel
wrote:
I have a new email address!You can now email me at: arkump...@yahoo.com
*- I have the sum of $8.5USD for offshore investment*. I will
appreciate
it so immersely if you could give details an
On Jan 15, 2009, at 9:38 AM, Sevan / Venture37 wrote:
The hammer FS seems promising from the BSDtalk Will & Matthew did.
Outside of a single person who's doing porting (to an unknown OS),
there's not been much in the way of updates on the status. It's a BETA
filesystem at best, and still b
On Jan 16, 2009, at 11:00 AM, Allie Daneman wrote:
I need to run Java on the guest...hence the reason Qemu doesn't work
for me. T need virtualization software that runs java on an XP
guest. The version of OpenBSD doesn't matter ;) I've been running it
since 2.8 and am running current today
On Jan 16, 2009, at 12:05 PM, Allie Daneman wrote:
BingoI don't run this stuff voluntarily...I have to for work.
If work is all SAE, and you have metric and SAE tools, do you bring
your metric tools on the job site? No, because for the most part they
won't fit, and you might strip the b
A little more googling would have introduced you to relayd(8).
On 2/8/09, Xavier Beaudouin wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Just a quick question, what is the status of hoststated ?
>
> I ran into http://www.openbsd.org/papers/eurobsdcon07/pyr-
> loadbalancing/ and I found that a quite exiting projet.
>
> U
I'd gladly trade look(1) for wake(8).
That's almost 8k right there.
On 2/9/09, Emilio Perea wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 09:05:13PM +1300, Richard Toohey wrote:
>> On 9/02/2009, at 6:31 PM, Thomas Pfaff wrote:
>>
>>> I think this could use some explaining for those of us that are not
>>> int
On Feb 13, 2009, at 11:41 AM, Jean-Frangois wrote:
I am mounting network drives. Would you recommand the use of NFS or
SAMBA for home use ?
What would you be serving to? PC Boxen? MacOS X? Linux? Another
OpenBSD box?
Both protocols are appropriate for similar - but not entirely the same
- setu
On Feb 13, 2009, at 12:10 PM, Jean-Frangois wrote:
Hi,
It's for sharing btw Linux / OpenBSD. Last one is server. Probably
other
than Linux client one day. However for Windowd there are ways to
install
NFS client.
And, all of those ways suck. Sadly, to windows Samba is about the best
method th
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 10:48 AM, Dave Wilson
wrote:
> On the contrary, I find OpenBSD remarkably user-friendly. Almost
> everything I want is already in base, most things are set up with
> intelligent and safe defaults, I can't even remember the last time I had
> to even *have* an xorg.conf, let
Comments inline.
On Feb 23, 2009, at 5:58 PM, Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
Hi all,
I've been trying to get a simple firewall system up-and-running in
OpenBSD. I have "The Book of PF" and "Secure Architectures
with OpenBSD" so I thought it would be very simple. Well, we're two
weeks later now and stil
On Feb 23, 2009, at 9:11 PM, patrick keshishian wrote:
why all the "quick" stuff? This is supposed to be a very simple set
up. Granted we don't exactly understand what the OP wants to do, but
from what I gather, he most likely wants to allow all outbound traffic
with NAT and everything else get
On Feb 27, 2009, at 3:36 AM, Mihai Popescu B.S. wrote:
I don't want to be a smart ass, but I was a little bit confused about
some answers on undeadly.org message post by me. Basicaly, I was
saying that even 1 euro matters for the donations. I was thinking that
thousands of OpenBSD users donating
Don’t.
Generally, these things should be used to alert if an internal service has
been compromised (akin to using Canary Tokens), and the key copied. It is,
at best, a way to hear someone knocking.
On Wed, May 8, 2019 at 15:59 Stefan R. Filipek wrote:
> There's a blog post going around that has
no.
Sent form my iFoe.
> On Jan 4, 2015, at 05:34, bofh wrote:
>
> https://medium.com/@shazow/ssh-how-does-it-even-9e43586e4ffc
>
> --
> http://www.glumbert.com/media/shift
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGvHNNOLnCk
> "This officer's men seem to follow him merely out of idle curiosity." -
On Oct 28, 2012, at 8:02, pe...@bsdly.net (Peter N. M. Hansteen) wrote:
> I stumbled across this little gem of a blog post, I think this deserves
> a wider audience, via my twitter feed:
> http://mina.naguib.ca/blog/2012/10/22/the-little-ssh-that-sometimes-couldnt.html
>
> To be filed under "tcpd
On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at 4:12 AM, Dan Shechter wrote:
> Hi All,
>
>
> A windows 2008 server is receiving TCP traffic from a stock exchange
> and sends it, almost as is, using UDP multicast to automated high
> frequancy traders.
>
> StockExchange --TCP---> windows2008 ---MCAST-UDP>
>
> On averag
On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at 9:58 AM, Ariel Burbaickij
wrote:
> If money is not a problem -- go buy high-trading on the chip solutions and
> have sub-microsecond resolution.
>
> http://lmgtfy.com/?q=high+frequency+trading+FPGA
I'd love to see PF offloading on to something like that. Not that I
can just
On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 5:14 PM, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
> - Then DragonflyBSD split from FreeBSD. Mainly personality driven
> AFAICT. Again, this doesn't imply any criticism of the founder of
> the new project.
There were some very valid technical reasons at the time as well, IMHO.
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 2:45 AM, Ignatios Souvatzis
wrote:
> At least a sixth, IIRC. You left out MirBSD from your distribution list.
> Also, you could argue that Minix, with its NetBSD compatibility,
> is a seventh and MacOS-X, with its partially (Free-/Net-)BSD compatible
> userland, an eighth.
On Sat, Dec 22, 2012 at 7:43 PM, Nick Holland
wrote:
> On 12/22/12 07:54, Friedrich Locke wrote:
> ...
>> But for other services i don't have now what i could use. A example: i need
>> a file system that must expand by adding more machine in the network in a
>> simple way.
>
> in plain English: "I
On Dec 30, 2012, at 8:31, pe...@bsdly.net (Peter N. M. Hansteen) wrote:
> A case in point: one of the firewalls I maintain for old friends is a
> Pentium III box with a whopping 512 MB of RAM, 8GB hard drive, you get
> the idea. As in, seriously, you'll get better hardware for free or the
> price
On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 4:41 PM, Aaron Mason wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 5, 2013 at 7:58 AM, Dan Shechter wrote:
>> You have all failed to mention that the ALIX devices come with Swiss
>> chocolates in the package!
>>
>
> I've ordered direct from PCEngines before and never got that.
Perhaps you should a
On Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 6:54 PM, Erling Westenvik
wrote:
> Is it possible to have PF filter on MAC address on a machine with only
> one physical nic? I'm aware that MAC filtering can only be done on a
> machine configured as a bridge, but how to configure such a bridge?
Add the single interface t
I just upgrade in place via bsd.rd on my net4501. Guess I could do the other
methods as well.
Sent form my iFoe.
On Jan 14, 2013, at 10:59, Nick Holland wrote:
> On 01/14/2013 10:15 AM, Sarah Caswell wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I'm having a frustrating problem getting OpenBSD-current (or
>> sna
Are you using just ipsec, or L2TP?
On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 11:48 PM, Jan Lambertz wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Running OpenBSD 5.2 AMD64 release as homeserver.
> Got Andoid 2.3 Samsung Mobile.
> Want to connect via vpn IPSEC.
> Config:
> ike passive esp tunnel from any to any \
> main auth hmac-sha1 enc des
On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 8:56 AM, System Administrator wrote:
> I finally got to deploy a CARP firewall cluster (HA failover for now).
> Using only the official OpenBSD.org documentation, everything went very
> smoothly even though the setup is not quite trivial (14 carp addresses
> on 6 active int
On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 9:44 AM, System Administrator wrote:
> On 30 Jan 2013 at 9:29, Johan Beisser wrote:
>
>> > While testing the failover and trying to ssh to a carp address I got
>> > hit with the server key mismatch; hence this email. What is considered
>> >
On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 2:03 PM, Jiri B wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 09:29:42AM -0800, Johan Beisser wrote:
>> Don't monitor SSH on the CARP address.
>
> Doesn't it depend on the purpose of this SSH service?
> If it is to manage individual boxes, then sshd sh
On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 4:06 PM, Aaron Mason wrote:
> If you can, change to a different type of VPN. Not because of the storm,
> but because PPTP has been broken security-wise. Good results have been
> achieved with OpenVPN.
I'm having remarkable success with npppd(8) and L2TP. I'm using it
wit
I had a problem with tun interfaces and npppd. Try the pppx interface instead.
Sent form my iFoe.
On Mar 5, 2013, at 13:35, Jason Markowitz wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> I'm receiving the following errors when attempting to establish a vpn
> session via l2tp, the ipsec side works fine and phase 1
Back in the day I'd abuse lndir(1) to link to the nfs mounted source
directory.
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=lndir&sektion=1
Sent form my iFoe.
On Mar 31, 2013, at 7:48, David Higgs wrote:
> In trying to avoid multiple copies of OpenBSD source on my VMs, I am
> trying to use NF
On Thu, Jun 5, 2014 at 5:09 PM, Giancarlo Razzolini
wrote:
> Em 05-06-2014 20:45, Eric Furman escreveu:
>> I predict that within a year OpenSSL will go the way of IPF.
>> For much the same reason...
>>
> IPF? Care to elaborate?
Well, in 2001 there was this drama around Darren Reed's IPF, that
cau
Man. Thanks for the reminder.
+1
Sent form my iFoe.
> On Aug 27, 2014, at 16:21, Diana Eichert wrote:
>
> I don't think it's off topic but others might. I'm writing this post to
> remember Chuck Yerkes, a long time contributor to the misc@openbsd list.
> While riding his motorcycle 10 years
I'm not sure what you mean by "too slow to route."
I've a net4501 with 64mb of RAM that's handling all of my IP traffic
at home. Biggest problem is swapping taking out available interrupts.
Modern networks are actually just too fast for the hardware these
days. It works fine for home stuff.
On F
On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 9:00 PM, jordon wrote:
> A few years back I put m0n0wall (FreeBSD-based) on it, hooked it up to 2
> machines (1 WAN, 1 LAN) and pushed a file through it. Its max bandwidth was
> well under my Internet connection speed.
>
> It was replaced with a net5501.
>
It's not belo
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc821.html (1982)
Section 4.2.1.
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2821.txt (2001)
Section 4.2.1 defines the groups, and 4.2.2.x defines specific codes.
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2487.txt (1999)
Secure SMTP over TLS.
On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 3:19 AM, STeve Andre'
I feel like a bit of a jackass for the response.
Check smtpd/smtp_session.c
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/usr.sbin/smtpd/smtp_session.c?rev=1.192
On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 7:41 AM, Johan Beisser wrote:
> http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc821.html (1982)
>
> Section 4.2.1.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=139637003025491&w=2
You did.
On Thu, Apr 17, 2014 at 3:08 PM, Alex Naumov wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I just want to ask about "not English" (translated) pages. I can't find
> these.
> Also translation.html and steelix are not avaliable.
> Did I missed something?
>
>
On Thu, Apr 17, 2014 at 3:18 PM, Alex Naumov wrote:
> Thank you for link, but... why? I mean, we are not going to continue work on
> translation anymore? Reason?
Read this thread on the topic from earlier this month.
http://marc.info/?t=13965139876&r=1&w=2
On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 4:58 AM, Magnus wrote:
> Hello Misc-Users,
>
> I'm looking in to the possibility to do multihoming (more than one isp)
> on a Carp setup.
> To do live failover if one isp goes down, the other takes over.
> Just as carp does if one of the routers goes down.
You can do this
>> On May 13, 2014, at 18:47, Stuart McMurray wrote:
>>
>>
>> And, 163data.com.cn is a large source of shady activity.
I blocked the bulk of China and Asia outright at the router.
Quick solution, if not clean.
On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 10:31 PM, Johan Ryberg wrote:
> Yes, it's related to a SSH brute force attack.
>
> I have just never seen the the "client" IP in the routing table before. My
> IP does not exist in the routing table when I SSH to the host.
The IP shouldn't be there, at all. But, according
On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 11:57 PM, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
>
> Op 14 mei 2014 om 07:48 heeft Johan Beisser het volgende
> geschreven:
>
>
> There are more reasons dynamic route entries are createf. For example to
> record results of mtu path discovery.
That implies a success
On Wed, May 14, 2014 at 12:40 AM, Kevin Lyda wrote:
>
> On 14 May 2014 08:20, "Johan Beisser" wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 11:57 PM, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
>> >
>> > Op 14 mei 2014 om 07:48 heeft Johan Beisser het
>> > volgende ges
On Apr 16, 2009, at 2:08 PM, Fred Crowson wrote:
Plug it in and if /var/log/messages has a line like:
Apr 16 21:57:45 x41 /bsd: ucom0 at umodem0
You might be in luck.
You may want to check that your provider permits tethering as a modem.
Some do, quite a few don't.
If they do, make sur
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 3:54 PM, Dan wrote:
> So it seems like the goal is for it to be as good or better than qmail
> if it's going to be smaller, easier to maintain, secure, etc. Then
> where's the problem?
Saying qmail has good design is a firm hand you've not actually really
worked with it or
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 2:38 PM, Renaud Allard wrote:
> Sounds like you never tried exim, or at least v4. Currently, no other MTA is
> able to do what exim does. Its licence may not be the best one, but it is
> able to do more than any other existing MTA.
Such as?
I please ignorance, I haven't
On Thu, May 14, 2009 at 10:41 AM, Jose Perez Rodriguez
wrote:
> Today i was installing OpenBSD 4.5 and i type:
> export PKG_PATH=ftp://tp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/4.5/packages/i386/
"tp.openbsd.org"?
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 11:04 AM, SJP Lists wrote:
> How do you shape traffic that you have already received? Or to put it
> another way, how do you alter the past?
I've always just assigned inbound traffic to the existing outbound
queues. My assumption is that the responding traffic would use t
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:26 AM, STeve Andre' wrote:
> I've never tried installing OpenBSD on a 600x but I'm a little surprised
that
> it isn't working fine.
You're in for a few surprises when you do then. It should work fine,
but there's some ACPI issues that have never been addressed.
> Sinc
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 12:02 PM, SJP Lists wrote:
> Thanks Lars and Johan,
>
> I was trying to highlight to irix that once traffic is received, it is
> too late to alter the bandwidth it already used coming in.
>
> In other words, doing it on the incoming is pointless. Thus, as in
> your exampl
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:44 PM, SJP Lists wrote:
> I know this is an option, but forcing the resending of traffic doesn't
> seem to be the most efficient method to me, when I could instead just
> shape that same traffic when it leaves another interface.
It's a horrible option, but it's what wa
On Mon, Jun 8, 2009 at 6:43 AM, Anton Parol wrote:
> I still can't believe that I saw mpf@ on my train this morning. I thought I
> remembered his face from hackathon pics, but then he pulls out his thinkpad
> and I see the blue console messages come up. I was like, woah, very cool.
> Thats a good s
2009/6/9 Thanasis :
> They are not static, but they are fixed and they actually get assigned
They're fixed then. Yes, it's normal behavior because they're not
considered a lease, and rather viewed as what they are: assigned and
reserved.
> So in this case is it normal, not having any entries in
On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 2:50 PM, Ted Unangst wrote:
> The short answer is that you can't use more than 1GB of memory.
Out of curiosity, what's the long answer?
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 8:02 AM, Rares Aioanei wrote:
> As a citizen of an English-speaking country AND a guru, John, you should
> at least know how to spell. David's right, you know.
You don't need to know how to spell. People have spell checkers these days.
On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 5:54 PM, Erling Westenvik
wrote:
> After upgrading (re-installing from scratch) my firewall from 4.6 (or
> 4.7) to 5.0, I have not been able to get OpenVPN back working. Please
> forgive me for asking here at misc but I have spent two days Googling,
> reading tons of HOWTO'
On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 2:41 PM, Jannik Pruitt
wrote:
> Hi everyone.
> i am brand new purchased my open bsd 5.0 on 11 Nov 2011.
>
> I booted the CD on another computer installed every thing on a 32GB CF card.
> Placed in my old thin client and it booked.
>
> But the network card does not work.
> I
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 10:09 AM, Dave U. Random
wrote:
> Are the Longson/Godson MIPS boxes available over the counter yet? If so
> where is the best place to order one? Thanks.
A brief search of the archives gives a few resources. Spelling the
architecture right helps, but searching for "lemote"
On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 10:59 AM, ropers wrote:
> On 2 January 2012 18:10, Nomen Nescio wrote:
>> I don't rely on anyone's work.
>
> Ladies and gentlemen: The great American delusion.
Randian delusion. It's not purely American, and never has been.
On Sun, Feb 19, 2012 at 7:14 AM, Luke Tymowski wrote:
> I use iSSH on an iPhone. But only in an emergency when I don't have
> anything else. I wouldn't make regular use of it. (ie, twice in the
> last year)
I've grown to like Panic's Prompt, and found it does really well with
tmux, etc as well.
On Sun, Feb 19, 2012 at 9:14 AM, Anonymous wrote:
> BlackBerry has built in VPN and you can also buy a few different SSH and
> SFTP apps.
If you're cheap, there's also BBSSH. While it's not perfect, it is
under active -if slow- development. As of November 2011, the developer
claims there's an sc
On Sat, Feb 18, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Marcos Ariel Laufer
wrote:
> What newer smartphones do you recommend for using also as a tool for
> managing OpenBSD servers (maybe windogs too) ? What experiences had you had
> with smartphones and OpenBSD managing?
Your experience really depends on a few things
On Feb 20, 2012, at 8:49, Jan Stary wrote:
> On Feb 20 10:19:48, Daniel mora wrote:
>> I've worked with several different OS and phone brands (Nokia/Symbian,
>> iPhone, HTC/Android).
>> The one I feel more comfortable is the Nokia N900 it runs Maemo 5, is
>> a Debian like Linux, you can use it as
Sent form my iFoe.
On Mar 9, 2012, at 10:19, Nick Holland wrote:
>
>
> Hey, if having an OS which takes the quality of its product -- and not much
else! -- seriously is important to you, this would be a good time to make a
donation to the project. Make Theo smile!
>
Theo never smiles. Not onc
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 9:15 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
> With multiple drives, especially for bulky softraid setups, it might get
> overwhelming pretty fast.
>
> The idea is interesting, and especially helpful if the machine was
> previously built and the drives ordered differently in a differ
Dell has an ugly habit of changing components even within the same
model year of hardware. You can't predict how well supported something
is based on "PowerEdge R410" until you have your specific one in front
of you.
On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 1:14 PM, Kostas Zorbadelos wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> we are
On Wed, Apr 11, 2012 at 11:02 AM, Christian Weisgerber
wrote:
> Gilles Chehade wrote:
> This must be satire. Right?
> I mean, "local-echo mode"? What is this? 1975?
In lossy or high latency environments I find a local echo to be really
useful. To the point I occasionally dump stdout through
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 9:00 AM, Laurence Rochfort
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Is there a DynDNS client for OpenBSD?
Rolled my own in Python a while back. There are a few that're utter
overkill for "simple updater."
You could do it in shell with tools in base with a little bit of
scripting effort.
http
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 9:43 AM, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Johan Beisser wrote on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 09:18:22AM -0700:
>> On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 9:00 AM, Laurence Rochfort
>> wrote:
>
>>> Is there a DynDNS client for OpenBSD?
>
>> Rolled my o
On Tue, Apr 24, 2012 at 6:07 AM, Otto Bretz wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 21:20, mxb wrote:
>> I rolled out L2TP/IPSec (npppd) on OpenBSD-current with RADIUS-auth.
>> Used mostly by OSX and Win7. Stable and works without any additional
>> third-party software.
>
> If you could write an article
No.
After searching around, playing with PoPToP, and trying various other
solutions, I settled on OpenVPN.
The advantages are pretty well spelled out. OpenVPN supports just
about ever OS out there. My only complaint is a lack of privsep.
> Hi,
>
> I have been thinking to set up a VPN on
On Dec 22, 2007, at 6:57 PM, Sunnz wrote:
Yes I have tried an OpenVPN client on a Mac before... it feels kind of
hackish to be honest... haven't tried the Windows one yet... but if
that's the only thing that works then I don't have a choice I guess.
I can understand that. What's worked really
On Dec 23, 2007, at 1:42 AM, scott wrote:
RE: tunnelblick
you should look at
ssh -w tun0:tun0 ...
option; it's comparatively new and a tad under documented but works
nicely, albeit on tcp.
My complaint with the "-w" option is not a lack of it working (works
great), but lack of support thr
On Dec 24, 2007, at 12:34 AM, Lord Sporkton wrote:
i could be wrong but here is my 2 cents:
ive seen something like this related to upnp, i would venture to guess
your 2 friends have routers which support upnp and so far as i know
openbsd does not support upnp.
I would suggest either consultin
On Dec 25, 2007, at 12:57 PM, badeguruji wrote:
I want to setup postfix and dovecot. i want to authenticate my users
thru ldap.
for that i have installed openldap server package.
Is there a place where i can find some 'ponited' help on how to
build such an 'email users' database? i do not wa
On Dec 29, 2007, at 10:41 PM, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
What on earth is this?
http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/rhel-centos-debian-ubuntu-jumbo-frames-configuration/
Jumbo frames. Ethernet frames with more than 1500 bytes of payload/
larger MTU than 1500..
I was under the impression that E
On Jan 2, 2008, at 10:17 AM, Nick Golder wrote:
I inherited a system that is attempting (poorly) to QoS traffic going
across a tun interface (which is being used by OpenVPN). Examples,
books, and ML suggest to tag on the internal interface ingress traffic
and QoS on the external interface egres
On Jan 2, 2008, at 4:29 PM, Erik Wikstrvm wrote:
The preferable way to solve this would probably be to use two disks
but
that is not an option for me. So I was wondering if it is possible to
instead split the disk in two parts, the first is used to install
OpenBSD on, and the rest is split in tw
On Jan 5, 2008, at 6:31 AM, Richard Stallman wrote:
I doubt I would have looked at the AROS web site myself. To find out
the status of the BSD systems, recently, I asked the FSF staff to
check for me.
Wait, you have someone else do the research, and this persons opinions
get reflected in wha
[slight legibility edit]
On Jan 5, 2008, at 9:39 AM, Marco Peereboom wrote:
On Sat, Jan 05, 2008 at 07:30:36AM -0800, johan beisser wrote:
On Jan 5, 2008, at 6:31 AM, Richard Stallman wrote:
I doubt I would have looked at the AROS web site myself. To find
out
the status of the BSD systems
On Jan 5, 2008, at 8:06 AM, Shane J Pearson wrote:
I think the first computers I witnessed in a work place, were
actually analog computers (Navy).
Where a mix of humans, transistors, valves, gears and three-phase
motors/sensors, got the job done.;-)
They're still in use as of the lat
On Jan 5, 2008, at 4:56 PM, Rui Miguel Silva Seabra wrote:
Yes. But even if it's legally redistributable, the question remains
wether it's free software or not.
Fortunately OpenBSD is Free Software. Unfortunately it recommends and
distributes proprietary software on it's servers (and it wasn't
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