* Alex Burke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [13.03.2005 00:13]:
> I am just wondering how I can access either BIOS calls, or preferably
> registers under FreeBSD?
>
> I am trying to write a simple system capable of displaying graphics on
> the screen, and I am pretty sure I can mmap the VGA memory to my
> p
On Mon, 2005-01-31 at 13:29 -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Very nice idea!! This greatly improves jail management on FreeBSD. There
> is a possibility for a minor drawback -- if one can change a system binary
> in the host system, them all jails are compromised -- but assuming one
> would need r
On Fri, 2005-Mar-11 15:29:51 +, Christian S.J. Peron wrote:
>I have written a trusted execution module and would appreciate if anyone could
>help in testing. This module provides a functionality similar to NetBSD's
>verified exec mechanism. Once the design details of this security policy has
>b
Christian S.J. Peron wrote:
I have written a trusted execution module and would appreciate if anyone
could
help in testing. This module provides a functionality similar to NetBSD's
verified exec mechanism.
Excellent!
Sounds like something that could provide a
lot of additional protection against
t
Alex Burke wrote this message on Sat, Mar 12, 2005 at 18:12 +:
> I am just wondering how I can access either BIOS calls, or preferably
> registers under FreeBSD?
>
> I am trying to write a simple system capable of displaying graphics on
> the screen, and I am pretty sure I can mmap the VGA mem
>Hi,
>
>I am just wondering how I can access either BIOS calls, or preferably
>registers under FreeBSD?
>
>I am trying to write a simple system capable of displaying graphics on
>the screen, and I am pretty sure I can mmap the VGA memory to my
>programs address space.
>
>However, to be able to out
Hi,
I am just wondering how I can access either BIOS calls, or preferably
registers under FreeBSD?
I am trying to write a simple system capable of displaying graphics on
the screen, and I am pretty sure I can mmap the VGA memory to my
programs address space.
However, to be able to output graphic
On Saturday 12 March 2005 15:03, H. S. wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I've noticed something odd.. I'm using FreeBSD 5.3-STABLE with PF, on a
> dual xeon 2.4 system. I have two jails running for web and mail servers.
> Today I was testing something and needed a tcpdump, so inside a jail I
> started tcpdump as r
Hey,
I've noticed something odd.. I'm using FreeBSD 5.3-STABLE with PF, on a
dual xeon 2.4 system. I have two jails running for web and mail servers.
Today I was testing something and needed a tcpdump, so inside a jail I
started tcpdump as root.
To my amazement, IP packets from the host system (I
I'm still lurking and hoping the new GEOM will be used for such a system.
On Fri, 11 Mar 2005 16:23:01 +0100, Florent Thoumie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Adam Maloney wrote:
> > On Fri, 11 Mar 2005, Eric Anderson wrote:
> >
> >> Speaking of filesytems :), I have a real need for a global file
Historically, I've used FreeBSD machines as NAT routers.
Call me a traitor if you must, but it's getting harder to justify not
simply putting one of those little Linksys/Netgear/SMC/whatever NAT
routers in place and having the FreeBSD machine be a server behind the
box instead.
One of the last
There are OpenAFS and NFSv4 clients for FreeBSD, but unfortunately neither
is really production quality. It wouldn't take much to make at least the
OpenAFS client usable but no one seems to be working on it now.
___
freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing li
Hi,
> On Fri, 11 Mar 2005 23:24:52 -0800
> Nick Sayer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
nsayer> Well, I'm screwed.
nsayer> I set up the Linksys router so that the FreeBSD machine is the "DMZ"
nsayer> host on the inside. Sending 6to4 to the router's outside address
nsayer> results in tcpdump sh
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