On 9/19/06, Girish Venkatachalam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 12:45:10AM +0530, Viswas Nair wrote:
|yes I am building from ports. I loaded it as a package and got it to work
|without any issues. I would like to fix the problem anyway.
Dear Viswas,
Already someone in th
Kris Kennaway wrote:
No critical pending issues, no show stoppers left, no required or
desired features. Only some stress tests problems.
So, does this mean that the page has not been updated? Usually I would
expect a "problem - solved" list. Or does this mean that the path
through betas and
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 05:41:08AM +0200, P.U.Kruppa wrote:
>
> On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, Edward and Nancy Powers wrote:
>
> >
> > I am new to UNIX, and want to download a basic UNIX system, just to
> > run commands and become familiar with the system. I wish to use this
> > system as a companion piec
On Tuesday 19 September 2006 03:40, Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote:
> Hi,
G'day
> Say you are working in a place where all workstations
> are mixtures of Unixes..Now you have your bestfriend
> somewhere far away. And he was complaining of severe
> boredom in his current work. What *nix network game
> w
On Sat, Sep 16, 2006 at 03:20:00PM +0530, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I want a simple tool that can be used for preparing block diagrams and
> arrows, that is all. I want to be able to use few colors, that is all.
>
> Please don't suggest openoffice or kde. I want som
On 18 Sep 2006, at 19:41, Bob Johnson wrote:
You might need to make sure AD support got enabled. In the samba3 port
at least, it is off by default (although winbind support is enabled by
default).
Bob,
I think that's done, judging by the output of "make config".
Unfortunately all the fee
On Mon, Sep 18, 2006 at 04:54:14PM -0400, Edward and Nancy Powers wrote:
> I am new to UNIX, and want to download a basic UNIX system, just to
> run commands and become familiar with the system. I wish to use this
> system as a companion piece to a UNIX tutorial which I have on DVD. I
> do not wan
Hi All,
Is it possible to boot FreeBSD from a floppy disk or a CD. I dont want the
other users to know the OS is on the computer.
Thanks
Stan
-
Talk is cheap. Use Yahoo! Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. Great rates
starting at
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 01:52:07 -0700 (PDT)
Stanley Wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is it possible to boot FreeBSD from a floppy disk or a CD. I dont
> want the other users to know the OS is on the computer.
there are a few FreeBSD live-cds :
http://www.freesbie.org
http://livecd.sourceforg
On Tue, 2006-09-19 at 10:13 +0100, Ashley Moran wrote:
> On 18 Sep 2006, at 19:41, Bob Johnson wrote:
> > You might need to make sure AD support got enabled. In the samba3 port
> > at least, it is off by default (although winbind support is enabled by
> > default).
>
>
> Bob,
>
> I think that's
On Tue, 2006-09-19 at 11:55 +0800, musashi miyamoto wrote:
> is there a way to fix this? i searched google, but i cant find any
> solution. thanks
>
> Starting Nmap 4.11 ( http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) at 2006-09-18 20:53 PHT
> WARNING: Unable to find appropriate interface for system route to 21
On Tuesday 19 September 2006 09:52, Stanley Wright wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Is it possible to boot FreeBSD from a floppy disk or a CD. I dont want
> the other users to know the OS is on the computer.
I would suggest running the Gag bootmanager from a floppy.
__
On 19 Sep 2006, at 12:51, Bob M. wrote:
It's absolutely possible Ashley. We have samba 2.x running on a few
solaris 8 through 10 servers, one might be 3.x. One of our solaris
admins made the mistake of making one of them a domain controller
and it
was authenticating users in an AD domain.
Ashley Moran wrote:
Our network admin said winbindd is broken on FreeBSD so he tried
compiling the Solaris version(!) but couldn't make that work.
Unfortunately he's beeyessdeephobic, but I want to avoid looking into it
myself because, well, it's not my job :) If I have no choice, do you
th
Adam Martin wrote:
>
> On 2006 Sep 18 , at 17:54, Adam Martin wrote:
>
>>
>> On 2006 Sep 18 , at 17:39, Jeff Cross wrote:
>>
>>> Adam Martin wrote:
On 2006 Sep 18 , at 16:25, Jeff Cross wrote:
> I am trying to run FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 850 with
> some
On 17/09/06 Javier Henderson said:
> I don't know exactly when the default behavior was changed, but the
> Apache module isn't being built by default anymore. I discovered this
> yesterday, when I upgraded PHP and a bunch of scripts stopped working.
>
> make -DWITH_APACHE will get you going..
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 02:45:03 -0400
Paul Chvostek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> QEMU can read and write vmdk files, so you may have an easy migration
> path.
Well, i tried loading a pre-existing vmdk from Windows Vmware Wkstation 4.5 and
it just didnt work (it'd stall). I have to admit I couldn't s
Ashley Moran wrote:
> On 19 Sep 2006, at 12:51, Bob M. wrote:
>
>> It's absolutely possible Ashley. We have samba 2.x running on a few
>> solaris 8 through 10 servers, one might be 3.x. One of our solaris
>> admins made the mistake of making one of them a domain controller and
>> it was authenti
Duane Hill wrote:
> On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 3:54:50 AM, Jeff confabulated:
>
>> I'm not trying to kick any dead horses here but there are times when I
>> try to run some applications that I get some messages like the following:
>
>> /libexec/ld-elf.so.1: Shared object "libc.so.5" not fo
On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 1:47:25 PM, Jeff confabulated:
> Duane Hill wrote:
>> On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 3:54:50 AM, Jeff confabulated:
>>
>>> I'm not trying to kick any dead horses here but there are times when I
>>> try to run some applications that I get some messages like the
On Saturday 16 September 2006 12:38, Bill-Schoolcraft wrote:
> At Sat, 16 Sep 2006 it looks like Viswas Nair composed:
> > I use linux-opera and I have managed to get flash working like a charm.
> > Just go to any website using flash and opera will ask you to download the
> > plugin and automatical
Oops! Addendum below:
On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 1:53:31 PM, Duane confabulated:
> On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 1:47:25 PM, Jeff confabulated:
>> Duane Hill wrote:
>>> On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 3:54:50 AM, Jeff confabulated:
>>>
I'm not trying to kick any dead horses he
I just wanted to sanity check that it is possible. I think he just
doesn't want to work on our server because it isn't Linux :)
Have you looked into "Windows Services for UNIX" from Microsoft ?
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/interopmigration/unix/sfu/default.mspx
I've tried version 2.0 whil
Duane Hill wrote:
> Oops! Addendum below:
>
> On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 1:53:31 PM, Duane confabulated:
>
>> On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 1:47:25 PM, Jeff confabulated:
>
>>> Duane Hill wrote:
On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 at 3:54:50 AM, Jeff confabulated:
> I'm not t
Hi,
games/netris will keep you busy for hours.
--
jedrek
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To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
On Monday 18 September 2006 16:53, you wrote:
> From: Jonathan Horne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> [...]
>
> the update for today is, that it is still going, but there has been quite a
> bit of delay while the ports stops on the knobs screen. each time i see
> one, i hit the 'ok', but this is causing th
Adam Martin wrote:
>
> On 2006 Sep 18 , at 17:39, Jeff Cross wrote:
>
>> Adam Martin wrote:
>>>
>>> On 2006 Sep 18 , at 16:25, Jeff Cross wrote:
>>>
I am trying to run FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 850 with
some
booting issues. I have searched the archives and found some
Stanley Wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is it possible to boot FreeBSD from a floppy disk or a CD.
Sure. You just configure the loader(8) to find its kernel and root
filesystem on the appropriate disk.
If that's too tricky for you, there are lots of other boot loaders.
Surely one of the
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 01:52:07AM -0700, Stanley Wright wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Is it possible to boot FreeBSD from a floppy disk or a CD. I dont want
> the other users to know the OS is on the computer.
Wow, stealth FreeBSD.
I haven't done it, but I think you can make a live CD and boot an
Joel Adamson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I took the plunge last night and installed FreeBSD6.1-STABLE. I found the
> experience rather exciting and I'm happy with the results, excep for one
> major challenge to overcome: no video support. I'm trying to set up X and
> it's failing.
>
> P
I was very interested to read the following written by Matthew Seaman in
2004.
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2004-January/033754.html
The parameters given to newfs(8) don't depend on the size of the
filesystem, so much as the size of the files you intend to s
Hello
I'm trying to bootstrap the system using boot2 directly as described
in the Admin Guide (3rd edition, 2004, section 2.3) and in the man
page for boot(8), FreeBSD 6.0, dated 18/08/2005. However, no matter
which kernel I choose at the boot prompt, I always get "BTX halted"
error message with s
If you want a freebsd firewall that works well with comcast, try m0n0wall
http://m0n0.ch/wall/
It is well supported worldwide, from home users to corporate environments.
It's small enough to run from compact flash, hard drive, even a live
ISO with floppy.
AND it's as easy to setup as any linkysy
You don't need anything beyond a regular account. If you can login to the
box, you can get mail from it.
The error looks like you don't have the right auth method setup in
sendmail. So the password is coming in looking "garbled". Check with the
client software you are using for the way the
On 09/18/2006 22:40, Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote:
Hi,
Say you are working in a place where all workstations
are mixtures of Unixes..Now you have your bestfriend
somewhere far away. And he was complaining of severe
boredom in his current work. What *nix network game
would you two play?
hi there :)
I was planning to migrate a 4.11 firewall using a combo of ipf/ipnat and ipfw
pipe/dummynets to pf + ALTQ.
One thing I haven't figured out how to do with pf is the plr option to the
dummynet configuration - we use it to simulate modem connections or just simply
bad links.
Also, is i
Hi,
To me cups 1.2.2 doesn't work at all with my USB printer (HP Laserjet
1010 on /dev/ulpt0). I followed the instructions to make /dev/ulpt0
accessible to cups.
When I try to print something just nothing happens and after a
while I get the error message "/dev/ulpt0: device busy". Installing the
On Wed, Sep 20, 2006 at 02:01:23AM +0930, Wayne Sierke wrote:
> I was very interested to read the following written by Matthew Seaman in
> 2004.
> http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2004-January/033754.html
>
> The parameters given to newfs(8) don't depend on the size of
In response to Jerry McAllister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Wed, Sep 20, 2006 at 02:01:23AM +0930, Wayne Sierke wrote:
>
> > I was very interested to read the following written by Matthew Seaman in
> > 2004.
> > http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2004-January/033754.html
> >
[sn
I'm setting up a new server (Dell 1950) that has a DRAC card. My home
network (where I'm working on it in my spare time) is behind a wireless
router, and the internal network is 192.168.2.0/24. The DRAC card's IP
address is 192.168.2.120 (gateway is 192.168.2.1. Mask is 255.255.255.0.)
I can
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 09:42:41AM +0200, Erik Norgaard wrote:
> Kris Kennaway wrote:
>
> >>No critical pending issues, no show stoppers left, no required or
> >>desired features. Only some stress tests problems.
> >>
> >>So, does this mean that the page has not been updated? Usually I would
> >
Hello:
I installed FreeBSD 6.1 Release on my Asus A6Q Laptop.
There is no built-in driver for Realtek High Definition Audio.
OSS (Open Sound System) can drive it,
but there were some problems.
Gnome's default media player Totem cannot play (device problem).
mp3blaster cannot find device.
XMM
Hi there!
My name is Nicole Nguyen and I'm the Membership Coordinator at EFF. We
have been fans of your sticker sheet and are in the process of producing
one of our own. I'd be happy to send some to your team once they're
finished since you were our inspiration! I just wanted to check to se
In response to Paul Schmehl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I'm setting up a new server (Dell 1950) that has a DRAC card. My home
> network (where I'm working on it in my spare time) is behind a wireless
> router, and the internal network is 192.168.2.0/24. The DRAC card's IP
> address is 192.168.2.12
--On Tuesday, September 19, 2006 13:54:45 -0400 Bill Moran
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This makes no sense to me. If anyone has a bright ideas what I'm
missing, I'm all ears.
These sound like network routing problems.
Of course, but it makes no sense. All the hosts are having no problems
Bubbles Bug wrote:
> Hello:
>
> I installed FreeBSD 6.1 Release on my Asus A6Q Laptop.
>
> There is no built-in driver for Realtek High Definition Audio.
>
> OSS (Open Sound System) can drive it,
>
> but there were some problems.
>
> Gnome's default media player Totem cannot play (device probl
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, Gerard Seibert wrote:
David Robillard wrote:
[...]
What I suggest you do is have one of the sales rep set you up with a
test machine. The easiest way to do so is to go at their offices with
a FreeBSD install disk and try to boot/install it on the hardware
you're intereste
Jonathan Horne wrote:
> well, i have eventually come to an error, at the 89% mark.
> from /var/log/portmanager.log:
> Tue Sep 19 09:32:28 2006
> bsd.port.mk /usr/ports/Mk
> corrupt unable to restored from back up
> cd /usr/ports/sysut
Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I was going to attempt an in-place upgrade of a light load server
> running 5.3 to bring it to 6.1 RELEASE P6 (RELENG_6_1). I read in
> UPDATING that going between 5.x and 6.x requires single user mode
> which isn't an option on a remote machine (though I can st
On Tue, 2006-09-19 at 10:49 -0400, Jerry McAllister wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 01:52:07AM -0700, Stanley Wright wrote:
>
> > Hi All,
> >
> > Is it possible to boot FreeBSD from a floppy disk or a CD. I dont want
> > the other users to know the OS is on the computer.
>
> Wow, stealth
Hey all,
I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed to
block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of something a bit
more BSD savvy?
My best attempt will be to get this:
http://www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~greg/sshdfilter/index_15.html
running and adapt it.
I've f
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 09:54:06PM +0200, MR JAMES EDWARD wrote:
[.. spam ...]
How exactly does this spam-scam work? Does the spammer require a
proof-o-faith `donation' to initiate further communication or
something?
--
Jonathan Chen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--
On 9/19/06, Dan Mahoney, System Admin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hey all,
I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed to
block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of something a bit
more BSD savvy?
My best attempt will be to get this:
http://www.csc.liv.ac.u
--- "Dan Mahoney, System Admin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I've looked around and found several linux-centric
> things designed to
> block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there
> know of something a bit
> more BSD savvy?
>
> My best attempt will be to get this:
>
>
http
"Joao Barros" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 9/19/06, Dan Mahoney, System Admin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hey all,
>>
>> I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed to
>> block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of something a bit
>> more BSD savvy?
>>
>>
In response to Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > One other thing. Using the console redirection through the web interface
> > (which forces you to use IE and an ActiveX control!), I can see the console
> > fine, but the keyboard and mouse (on the Windows box) don't do anything. I
> > can st
On Tuesday 19 September 2006 17:12, Joao Barros wrote:
> On 9/19/06, Dan Mahoney, System Admin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hey all,
> >
> > I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed to
> > block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of something a bit
> > more
I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed
to block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of
something a bit more BSD savvy?
I'm a fan of security/sshit
My best attempt will be to get this:
http://www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~greg/sshdfilter/index_15.html
runni
Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote:
Hey all,
I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed to
block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of something a bit
more BSD savvy?
My best attempt will be to get this:
http://www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~greg/sshdfilter/index_15.h
I've looked around and found several linux-centric things designed
to
block brute-force SSH attempts. Anyone out there know of
something a bit
more BSD savvy?
I've found a few things based on openBSD's pf, but that doesn't
seem to be
the default in BSD either.
Any response appreciated.
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Erik Norgaard wrote:
Along with some good advice. First of all: ssh is not a public service like
http or smtp where you need anyone to be able to connect. So don't let them
in the first place.
It is in this case. It's a web server that allows shell usage (and
encourages
Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
I was going to attempt an in-place upgrade of a light load server
running 5.3 to bring it to 6.1 RELEASE P6 (RELENG_6_1). I read in
UPDATING that going between 5.x and 6.x requires single user mode
which isn't an option on a remote machine
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, backyard wrote:
In reality using passwords with SSH kinda defeats the
purpose of SSH.
Keeping passwords from being sent across the network as cleartext?
-Dan
--
"Of course she's gonna be upset! You're dealing with a woman here Dan,
what the hell's wrong with you?"
-S.
On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 02:22:41PM -0700, backyard wrote:
>
> well you could pretty much eliminate the problem by
> disabling password logins to sshd and only accepting
> keyed logins. Then only a key will work.
This is probably the best thing you can do to keep the bad guys out.
This is what I'm
The problem is over and the machines in question have been rebuilt
from scratch, but I am still curious as to how it could have happened.
Many weeks ago I noticed that I my mail server was dealing with about
4x the amount of mail it normally does. After much digging I was able
to trace it back t
Hi :
Hi:
We come across to your website for search some products. We are the
Manufacturer of the Rackmount LCD and many other products.
We are wondering if you can add our webpage on your Hardward vendor list
for adding more resources to your viewer.
Country: USA
Company name : i-Tech Compa
On Sep 19, 2006, at 3:38 PM, Darrin Chandler wrote:
I think this isn't needed, and is somewhat silly. Like all (decent)
implementations of pubkey, the key is only used to authenticate and
exchange a symetric session key. So the pubkey sees little actual use,
compared with the session key.
Anyone
So I got up and walked away from my computer this afternoon, and came
back to find it in the middle of shutting down. No good reason, no crash
dump (yes, they're configured) no nothing, just this:
Sep 19 18:14:53 colossus syslogd: exiting on signal 15
At this point, everything sync'd up and th
> So I got up and walked away from my computer this afternoon, and
> came back to find it in the middle of shutting down. No good
> reason, no crash dump (yes, they're configured) no nothing, just
> this:
>
> Sep 19 18:14:53 colossus syslogd: exiting on signal 15
>
> At this point, everything sync
On Tuesday 19 September 2006 22:01, Jonathan Chen wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 19, 2006 at 09:54:06PM +0200, MR JAMES EDWARD wrote:
>
> [.. spam ...]
>
> How exactly does this spam-scam work? Does the spammer require a
> proof-o-faith `donation' to initiate further communication or
> something?
The sucke
On Sep 20, 2006, at 2:40 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, Gerard Seibert wrote:
David Robillard wrote:
[...]
What I suggest you do is have one of the sales rep set you up with a
test machine. The easiest way to do so is to go at their offices
with
a FreeBSD install disk
> - Original Message -
> From: "Mike Jeays" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Jerry McAllister" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Booting FreeBSD from floppy or CD
> Date: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 16:49:27 -0400
>
>
> On Tue, 2006-09-19 at 10:49 -0400, Jerry McAllister wrote:
> > On Tue, Sep 19, 2006
Perry Hutchison wrote:
So I got up and walked away from my computer this afternoon, and
came back to find it in the middle of shutting down. No good
reason, no crash dump (yes, they're configured) no nothing, just
this:
Sep 19 18:14:53 colossus syslogd: exiting on signal 15
At this point, ever
Jonathan Chen wrote:
How exactly does this spam-scam work? Does the spammer require a
proof-o-faith `donation' to initiate further communication or
something?
Nigeria 4-1-9
They send you a counterfeit money order/ cheque, you deposit it, your
bank makes the funds available, you send the bad
> They send you a counterfeit money order/ cheque, you deposit it, your
> bank makes the funds available, you send the bad guy the the money, and
If you are naive enough to send them money before you ever get it...
Olivier
___
freebsd-questions@freebs
Dear Problem Solver,
Greetings from Singapore J
I have had a strange problem with my dial up modem. It is connected to a
unix server, and I was able to dial in and connect to the server for 2 days.
Now suddenly, when I dial in, I get some junk characters , instead of a login
prompt
On Wed, 20 Sep 2006, ke han wrote:
On Sep 20, 2006, at 2:40 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, Gerard Seibert wrote:
David Robillard wrote:
[...]
What I suggest you do is have one of the sales rep set you up with a
test machine. The easiest way to do so is to go at their of
Hmmm...
>> How exactly does this spam-scam work? Does the spammer require a
>> proof-o-faith `donation' to initiate further communication or
>> something?
>
> Nigeria 4-1-9
>
> They send you a counterfeit money order/ cheque, you deposit it, your
> bank makes the funds available, you send the b
On Sun, 17 Sep 2006, P.U.Kruppa wrote:
Now Cups doesn't work anymore, i.e.
# lpstat -a
lpstat: Kann Server nicht erreichen
("Cannot reach server")
When I try to start Cups manually
# cupsd
cupsd: Child exited on signal 15!
Just for the records: thi
On Tuesday 19 September 2006 18:57, Derrick Ryalls wrote:
> Any thoughts on this?
>
Have you checked the MX records on the secondary DNS server?
Bob
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freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
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Hello again;
I have a question about how mail from the system is generated for root.
This question was prompted when I edited the Postfix aliases file and
ran newaliases, then did postfix reload, assuming the mail system was
running. I was informed that Postfix was not running. So the question,
ho
--On September 19, 2006 9:50:18 PM -0700 jekillen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Hello again;
I have a question about how mail from the system is generated for root.
This question was prompted when I edited the Postfix aliases file and
ran newaliases, then did postfix reload, assuming the mail syst
> running. I was informed that Postfix was not running. So the question,
> how does mail generated by the system get delivered to the root account?
Local mail delivery can be specific: mail could be delivered even is
no smtp server is running. This is highly dependant of your
environment and of wh
"Dan Mahoney, System Admin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've found a few things based on openBSD's pf, but that doesn't seem to be
> the default in BSD either.
Recent BSDs (all of them, FreeBSD 5.n/6.n included) have PF in the base system.
'overload' rules are fairly easy to set up, eg
table
Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> "Dan Mahoney, System Admin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> I've found a few things based on openBSD's pf, but that doesn't seem to be
>> the default in BSD either.
>
> Recent BSDs (all of them, FreeBSD 5.n/6.n included) have PF in the base
> system.
> 'overload'
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