_disconnect_port(d0d91f30,d0d7c600,10) at usb_disconnect_port+0x65
uhub_explore(d0d7db00,d0626744,d82b9f8c,d06267f9,0) at uhub_explore+0x205
usb_discover(d0d7db80,d06267cc,8,246,d61e5560) at usb_discover+0x36
usb_event_thread(d0d7db80) at usb_event_thread+0x91
Bad frame pointer: 0xd092ce78
ddb>
ps: I won't pull out the cable again ;-)
Kind regards,
Tom Van Looy
>>Why would you assume that? That seems a bit hostile. Perhaps the
>>developers are a bit busy at the moment.
>
>True. I generally post on the Linux lists and I believe I am spoiled by
getting quick responses from my postings. In future, I will remember to keep
more patience.
I would like to respo
Stephan A. Rickauer wrote:
One can use 'carppeer' to not send multicast but unicast. However, I was
under the impression one still needs to do peering on the same link as
the carp interfaces sit.
Yes, because if you send carp messages on an other (dedicated) link and
the link to the external/in
Dorian B|ttner wrote:
rizzo0917 schrieb:
and usb devices.
keyword is hotplugd(8), includes example.
I think he's looking for amd(8).
>Nick Guenther wrote:
>>> Does anybody provide a commercial shell scripting???
>>
>> for i in "Don't wait" "Buy Things Now" "Save Now" "$0.99" "Get your
>> instant trial account now" "Double Your Sales Calls, Free Script
>> Demo"; do
>> echo $i
>> done
>>
>> Like that?
>
>Hey man, that wasn't j
Will (when) the results and the paper be published publicly?
Claudio Jeker wrote:
For an IPv6 related paper we are currently working on, Claudio and I are
doing a small online survey on the use of IPv6 among OpenBSD developers
and users.
It would be nice if you could spare 10-15 minutes of your
>I can start gnome by just typing "gdm", and then log in as a user.
>But I dont think this is a right or secure way to use gnome.
add the following line to the end of /etc/rc.local
/usr/local/bin/gdm -nodaemon &
This starts gdm at system startup. If you want to log in from the commandline
you ca
Ordered mine too.
And here's the artwork in a wallpaper format:
http://users.telenet.be/assarix/pub/wallpaper/45.png
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
The new puffy looks nice too. Look to me that may be we have a new disco
puffy with the improvements on the audio in the system, but I could be
wrong.
ropers wrote:
I've just noticed that the web-based openbsd.org man pages are
case-sensitive. Observe:
Is this intended behaviour or a bug?
So is the command line. I think it should stay case sensitive. E.g. "man
Carp" and "man carp" point to different manpages.
Hi
My laptop (HP ProBook 6560b) has a Broadcom BCM4313 wifi card. Seems like
it's not supported (there is also a thread on misc@ about this card).
I want to buy a new card. What mini PCI express card is the best card you
can buy?
For example, there are a lot of cards in the iwn driver. I can buy
I think the cheapest (Wireless-N 2230) is ok because they all are 300
Mbit/s and OpenBSD doesn't support bluetooth.
And you would recommend iwn and not something else?
On Mon, Jan 5, 2015 at 8:00 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 04, 2015 at 11:27:54PM +0100, Tom Van Looy wrote
Thank you for warning me about the BIOS! I just tried with an Intel card
from an old machine (Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABG) and the BIOS indeed
disables the card.
I also had a USB device lying around which came with my TV :-) it's an
Atheros AR9271 rev 1. It works and allows me to go sit in the couc
Seems that HP has an driver for Intel cards that should work with my
laptop. Maybe there is some hope for it to work after all.
ftp://ftp.hp.com/pub/softpaq/sp56501-57000/sp56752.html
On Mon, Jan 5, 2015 at 10:04 PM, Tom Van Looy wrote:
> Thank you for warning me about the BIOS! I just tr
background". When the sessions are closed they both print that
data was transfered (send/receive) etc.
Is this something that can work and if so, what am I doing wrong of how do
I debug this any further? I'm stuck. :-)
Thanks,
Tom Van Looy
Yes. That is what the manpage says. I'm not sure what you are trying to say
with it. I think I am not using it as a shell ... Can you explain?
On Sun, Aug 16, 2015 at 9:39 PM, laudarch wrote:
> authpf is not a shell
>
> On 2015-08-16 19:13, Tom Van Looy wrote:
>
>> Hi
&g
Original Message
Subject: [HAR2009] Finall call for papers: submit before may 15th
Date: Fri, 1 May 2009 21:09:50 +0200
From: HAR2009
Reply-To: har-annou...@har2009.org
To: annou...@har2009.org
Finall call for papers: submit before may 15th
A significant number of interesti
I tried the new installer today with the last snapshot. Nice job! Still
pretty clean. Who's going to do the first < 2 minute OpenBSD install
with the new installer? ;-)
Theo de Raadt wrote:
> So OpenBSD 4.5 will be available soon, next weekend.
>
> I feel that I should urge people to avoid the ne
frantisek holop wrote:
> hmm, on Thu, May 07, 2009 at 03:13:53PM +0200, frantisek holop said that
>> http://www.osnews.com/story/21441/Debian_Switching_to_EGLIBC
>
> http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=4980
>
> hillarious. good fun.
> who does this remind me? let's see...
>
> and as
07, Aaron W. Hsu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > From: "Tom Van Looy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> > Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 20:21:56 +
>> > Subject: Re: cp(1) bug ?
>> >
>> > it shall do nothing more with source_file and shall go on
I think you forgot to count power savings here?
Theo de Raadt wrote:
And when physical servers cost less than some vmware licenses
Then it is even more dumb to defend such stupid practices.
network A and
10.10.2.1 is actually 10.10.1.1 on remote network B. But is that possible for
an entire network?
Or is there an other way?
Kind regards,
Tom Van Looy
And I can't just change the IP range of network A and B because these
are customer networks (and they for sure don't want to change it).
Tom Van Looy wrote:
Hi
I have 2 ipsec VPN endpoints on a firewall. The remote networks both use the
same address range (10.10.1/24). The question
Hi
About the ports tree, maybe you are right and OpenBSD should go kick out
the possibly 50 ports that you have a problem with.
Now, about BSD/GPL that's an other story. But that doesn't mean we can't
learn from each other and help each other.
I hope it has to do Richards efforts on the GNU
I think you mean Hungry Hippo. :p
>Don't make me install Frosty Warthog!!
I advise you to read "The Art of Unix Programming" by Eric Steven Raymond
http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/taoup/html/ch14s04.html#cc_language
In this book you can find more about the Unix philosophy, and arguments on why
C++ is wrong.
>- Oorspronkelijk bericht -
>Van: Brian Hansen [mai
The current implementation of dhcpd in base was a reworked version of
ISC dhcpd 2.0pl5-OpenBSD (port). The rework was done by Henning Brauer.
If you look at cvsweb you can find this information.
Kind regards,
Tom
Tim Stewart wrote:
Hello all,
Does anyone know which version of ISC DHCP tha
I also have this nic in my Lenovo R60:
bge0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Broadcom BCM5751M" rev 0x21, BCM5750 C1
(0x4201): irq 11, address 00:16:d3:b8:d6:4c
experiencing the same problems
Joe Warren-Meeks wrote:
On Thu, Feb 07, 2008 at 03:04:13PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
Hey there,
re
Actually, it's the Netherlands that speak a slightly modified version of dutch.
Only Flemish Belgium speaks true Dutch.
The term "Flemish" covers the Belgian Dutch dialects.
It's a bit confusing because of the naming and translations to English, I think
this is caused by the fact that Belgium i
l acroread from ports.
The same error when compiling /usr/ports/archivers/gcpio as dependency.
I guess it must be my fault because I searched the list and didn't find
anything. But I don't see what I'm doing wrong ...
Kind regards,
Tom Van Looy
='ranlib'
SA=''
SET_MAKE=''
SHELL='/bin/sh'
STD_CDEFINES=''
STD_CINCLUDES=''
STD_CWARNINGS=''
STRIP=''
USE_GSSAPI=''
USE_OPENSSL=''
XMLLINT=''
XSLTPROC=''
XSLT_DB2LATEX_ADMONITIONS
Yesterday I sent my 4.3 dmesg (to dmesg@).
Today I was comparing dmesgs to see what changed and noticed "critical
temperature warnings". See dmesg below, I would say that's not normal.
But with acpi I am able to turn off my machine now without rebooting :-)
Very nice, thank you!
OpenBSD 4.3 (GEN
The manual page of sendmail(8) contains the following link:
http://www.sendmail.org/tips/DontBlameSendmail.html
It seems sendmail replaced the link by the following:
http://www.sendmail.org/tips/DontBlameSendmail.php
Can someone please fix this?
Some people thought the current 4.0 artwork was to childish for a
corporate environment. I created a more simple and clean looking dvd
case. You can download it at http://puffy.ctors.net/
If you have some comments about this, please let me know.
No T-shirts this time?
Darrin Chandler wrote:
> Have you got yours yet?!
>
> http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20070312181549
What about: "Release Mode: FORCED RELEASE"?
This is about the exploit, right? And not the advisory.
Theo de Raadt wrote:
> This means everyone should have our latest patches installed.
>
>
> Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 19:40:15 -0300
> From: CORE Security Technologies Advisories <[EMAIL PROTECTE
great man, thanks :-)
the echo \a etc. never worked with me
I replaced "echo '.'" in /etc/rc.local with "echo 'C' > /dev/speaker"
so now I know when my headless server is ready booting up
Reyk Floeter wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 07:53:23AM -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
>> Hello list.
>>
>>
This (acx) is a wireless minipci card I got out of a broken D-Link DI-624+
acx0 at pci0 dev 16 function 0 "TI ACX111" rev 0x00: irq 10
acx0: ACX111, radio Radia (0x16), EEPROM ver 5, address 00:0f:3d:0e:28:75
Also I use the ath driver for a D-Link DWL-G650 rev C.
(but it seems unstable, after eg.
$ systat -w 1 iostat
Federico Giannici wrote:
I'd like to know how much of the disk activity is for reads and how much
is for writes.
It seems that there are a few system commands that show statistics about
disks activity (iostat, vmstat, systat) but none of them separate reads
and writes.
Then read man systat and find the section about display iostat, it has a
command:
split Toggle the display of separate read/write statis-
tics (the default is combined statistics).
Federico Giannici wrote:
Tom Van Looy wrote:
$ systat -w 1 iostat
Unfortunately under 3.9
Hi, I wanted to let my ntp client use the servers it receives from the
dhcp server (3.0 from packages). I made it working like this:
I added ntp-servers to /etc/dhclient.conf, and the following function to
the /sbin/dhclient-script script:
add_new_ntp() {
if [ -n "$new_ntp_servers" ]; then
Maurice Janssen wrote:
On Thursday, May 3, 2007 at 00:23:00 +0200, Tom Van Looy wrote:
Hi, I wanted to let my ntp client use the servers it receives from the
dhcp server (3.0 from packages). I made it working like this:
I added ntp-servers to /etc/dhclient.conf, and the following function to
I have a 5250 telnet session open to an iSeries. When I do this from the
LAN (to the DMZ), I can keep the connection idle for hours without it
being reset by the iSeries.
When I connect to the iSeries (5250) from a remote site over the VPN
(IPSec) the iSeries resets the connection after less tha
I think this is also correct:
find . -name '*.htm' -exec cp '{}' '{}'.new \; \
-exec sed -i s/old/new/ '{}'.new \;
Hannah Schroeter wrote:
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:01:12PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
[...]
Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
Also, beware
http://lifewithdjbdns.org (henning@ wrote this ;-)
It's not about bind but it has stuff about mysql and ISP-Environments.
So it may be of your interest.
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
well here is a question, I was wondering if there would be anyway to make
OpenBSD based DNS
servers have a PostgreSQL
expected behaviour. Normally I ssh from an Ubuntu box to the firewall,
but to be sure, I ssh-ed to localhost on the openbsd box and I got the
same result. What's wrong?
Kind regards,
Tom Van Looy
Oke, problem solved. But, why doesn't this flag get set implicitly when
using a command with ssh?
Chris Cohen wrote:
On Saturday 30 June 2007 19:31, Tom Van Looy wrote:
Hi
Today I used sudo as command to ssh and it echoed my sudo password.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]
$ ssh soekris sudo pfc
g for information on this.
Or, is nobody using dynamic DNS for some reason?
Thanks for any advise about this.
Tom Van Looy
I think it should have been 101 instead of 11. But if it's not
than it's a good easter egg :-p (and I don't get it).
ropers wrote:
On 08/10/2007, Craig Skinner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Theo de Raadt wrote:
And there's a few easter eggs hidden in the song as well.
Okay, I can't be
I read that single unix specification thing again because the OpenBSD cp
manpage says it is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible.
For each source_file, the following steps shall be taken:
1) If source_file references the same file as dest_file, cp may write a
diagnostic mess
ps: it was a ;-p
Nick Guenther wrote:
On 10/19/07, Tom Van Looy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Richard Toohey wrote:
On 19/10/2007, at 8:12 PM, Raimo Niskanen wrote:
Looks like OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and Mac OS X BSD bits have the same
sort of outcome.
Copy foo to foo only once and quit, I
cp on linux is part of gnu coreutils (http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/)
the error can be found in /coreutils-6.9/tests/cp/into-self
So it is not a part of bash or ksh (also on OpenBSD it is not part of the
shell, the code is in /usr/src/bin/cp/).
>> I beat you to trying it on Linux
>
>No
, Ericsson AB
I might try a Linux install (got some Slackware 12.0 CDs) and look at
what it does (and its source code) - sure someone will beat me to it.
Looks like OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and Mac OS X BSD bits have the same
sort of outcome.
I got this from Tom Van Looy (thanks, Tom):
Copy foo to foo
> just fire a crontab entry and move on
actually, that's a great idea, I just scheduled the following script
this mails the diff of errata.html, but only if something changed
#!/bin/sh
rel="44" # OpenBSD version
ftp http://www.openbsd.org/errata"$rel".html > /dev/null 2>&1
if [ "$?" != "0" ]; t
Hi
I use the dump script of openbsdsupport.org to backup the internal SATA disk of
my soekris to an external USB disk.
DUMP: 197357941 tape blocks
DUMP: Date of this level 0 dump: Thu Nov 13 23:03:31 2008
DUMP: Volume 1 completed at: Fri Nov 14 09:25:20 2008
DUMP: Volume 1 took 10:14:48
>Is it slower than the USB is *supposed* to be? USB is not fast.
The external disk is a:
http://www.wdc.com/en/products/products.asp?driveid=333
It has:
Serial Bus Transfer Rate (USB 2.0) 480 Mbits/s (Max)
The soekris port is 2.0 capable "usb0 at ehci0: USB revision 2.0".
I'm getting an ave
Thanks for all the responses :-)
I did a "dump 0af /dev/null /usr":
DUMP: Average transfer rate: 10618 KB/s
Next I did a "dump 0af /backup/test1 /usr":
DUMP: Average transfer rate: 5352 KB/s
I also compared the speed of cp with dump and they seem equally fast.
Anyway, it seems like the speed is
>No, check the ksh man page.
Or, you could use the /usr/bin/time command to just avoid the ksh builtin.
/usr/bin/time java helloWorld >time.report 2>&1
Which works as expected.
I just wanted to let the list know that it's "only" a year before HAR2009.
But, they are already looking for volunteers and villages.
More info at http://har2009.org, you can subscribe at their mailing list.
I hope lots of OpenBSD people will be there again just like WTH2005.
Kind regards,
Tom
it was a layer 3 protocol. I realize OSI is academic,
but there must me some reason
to state icmp is a layer 3 protocol.
Can this be explaind by the fact ICMP gets carried by IP and sits
between IP and layer 4?
The ICMP header does not contain an address field.
Tom Van Looy
(ps: I might be
Hi
Most of you have probably seen this getting posted on slashdot:
http://kingofgng.com/eng/2009/07/26/tron-legacy-exposed/
That's cool :-)
Kind regards,
tvl
You can also capture the packets with tcpdump and open the pcap file in
wireshark on another platform. That's how I do it if I want to use
wireshark.
Kind regards,
Tom
merlyn wrote:
> On Monday 17 August 2009 00:51:28 stan wrote:
>> I realize that there is histroy here but I really need to make
"Starting from 1.7 OpenBSD has a fully GPLv2 licensed port, that can be
installed as a package. Users looking for the browser plugin will still
need to build 1.5 or 1.6 from ports until Sun releases the plugin code."
-- openbsd faq
eagir...@cox.net wrote:
> Well, I built and installed the JDK
Henning Brauer wrote:
> so, otto, tedu, matthieu, oga and myself went to eurobsdcon in
> cambridge. to take the summary ahead, it was a very nice event.
Thanks you all for doing the presentations and sharing the
papers/slides. Awesome :-)
Who knows if there is also video material available that w
Ross Cameron wrote:
> Actually no it was turned on.
This is from the commit to the Linux kernel:
"The amount of space protected is indicated by the new proc tunable
proc/sys/vm/mmap_min_addr and defaults to 0, preserving existing behavior."
It was turned off, 0 means no protection.
Matthias Kilian wrote:
> And if you install something like wine, the knob is set back to 0,
> probably without any notice (at least in ubuntu-8.10).
That can explain why it's off on my system (karmic koala).
By the way, this is from the debian wiki:
Debian 5.0.3 ships with a default mmap_min_add
Didier Wiroth wrote:
> I was wondering if some of you are using this type of low power
> hardware at home?
> Can you recommend such a rack-mount device?
> Can you recommend a european online reseller?
This seems nice too:
http://www.descom.be/configurator_server.php?mode=&type=17
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