Hello,
I need to rotate some logs, but instead of getting the PID out of a file and
sending a SIGHUP to that process, like newsyslog does, I need to run a
command.
Is that possible with newsyslog? how should I do it?
Thank you.
--
José Pablo Fernández
[EMAIL PROTECTED
$lans from to any flags S/SA keep state
That is, who is letting those IPv6 packages in, and why do I need to let the
out specifically?
If you need context, my whole rules are below. Any answer and or hint is
appreciated.
--
José Pablo Fernández
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PS: IPs and names have chan
On Wednesday 21 February 2007 15:49, José Pablo Fernández wrote:
> > For keeping state on TCP connections you should only create state on
> > the first packet of the 3 way TCP handshake. Using "flags S/SA" will
> > ensure this. This will prevent problems with TCP win
On Wednesday 21 February 2007 15:38, J65nko wrote:
> On 2/21/07, José Pablo Fernández <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello,
> > I have a FreeBSD 6.2 acting as router between two LANs and the internet.
> > I am using PF on it for filtering and I am allowing all the tra
to see if the
> problem changes?
If I put
pass in quick
pass out quick
just below the nat and rdr rules in pf.conf, then the copy happens ok, at
normal (fast) speed.
--
José Pablo Fernández
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing lis
On Wednesday 21 February 2007 05:39, Nikos Vassiliadis wrote:
> On Wednesday 21 February 2007 01:21, José Pablo Fernández wrote:
> > My problem is that when I copy a file from one network to the other, the
> > first 128KB seems to be copied instantaneously, the second 128KB take
&g
er to the other computer, it
just works. And it seems people copying files with SMB (Window's protocol)
have found the same problem.
Any ideas what might be going on?
Thanks.
--
José Pablo Fernández
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PS: My full firewall configuration:
# My interfaces.
lan0= "re0&