Rod Dorman wrote:
The postfix package has in the PERMIT_*_CDROM description
"cannot be sold, see section 4 of license"
Is that the "4. COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTION" in "IBM Public License"
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ibmpl.php ?
That section has a lot of crap about indemnification but I can'
Stephen Marley wrote:
I want to provide a backup for a LES100 link between 2 sites using
dynamic routing over adsl/ipsec.
The proposed solution involves purchasing a couple of expensive cisco
layer 3 switches that are used to run eigrp over a the LES100 and a
ipsec/gre tunnel between a nokia fire
On Thu, 28 Apr 2005, Thorsten Glaser wrote:
> Oliver Fuchs dixit:
>
> [ ppp.linkup trouble ]
>
> $ sudo cat /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup
> MYADDR:
> add! default HISADDR
> !bg /bin/ksh /etc/ppp/ip-up tun0 vtty sync MYADDR HISADDR
>
> ifwatchd(8) [from NetBSD.] does approximately the same;
> I use the
ami(4) supports several LSI cards. Search their site.
On May 3, 2005, at 9:16 PM, Brandon Mercer wrote:
Hello Everyone,
No, this is not a "why isn't my SATA RAID supported." I wanted to
find
out some more information on this subject though. From what I
understand most of the SATA raid setups u
To the developers and *everyone* who has contributed to the various
threads on spamd over the last few months, thank you, thank you, thank
you.
I finally got around to implementing it and it is the most time saving
and effective addition to the OBSD base I have used in a long time (if
not ever)! A
Hello Everyone,
No, this is not a "why isn't my SATA RAID supported." I wanted to find
out some more information on this subject though. From what I
understand most of the SATA raid setups use a bios or software raid
configuration. Does this mean that the OS still has to pass native ATA
or SCSI
Thanks OpenBSD team!!
Sent via wireless
OpenBSD 3.7-current (GENERIC) #109: Sun May 1 13:42:34 MDT 2005
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
cpu0: Intel(R) Pentium(R) M processor 1.60GHz ("GenuineIntel" 686-class) 1.60
GHz
cpu0:
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,MCE,CX8,SEP,MTRR,P
Well said Mike. If people are going to evangelize, then they
must accept the retorts with equanimity.
kevin
Hi,
I have symon running on various remote firewalls with an ipsec connection
to a central stats server, i have symon udp packets traversing the vpns
from hosts behind the firewalls however i am unable to get traffic for
symon running on the actual firewall to travel via enc0.
There does not se
On May 3, 2005, at 3:07 PM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
I know I can properly compile documents because I know how to write.
And I also know how to design. I treat any information coming my way
as delicate, and my unbiased mind will stick to straight facts.
"Trust me; I know what I'm doing." Famous l
> I've been reading that section as meaning "If you sell something with
> with Postfix on it, and what you sell ends up in a lawsuit involving
> part of the Postfix written by others that you changed, YOU carry the
> burden of defending the portion written by others as well as your own
> portion of
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Not to mention the Sharon pdf in his sig... Anyone can certainly have
STRONGLY differing opinions on the issue that he brings up and still
find avenues to get along, but he impels his views on EVERYONE he
emails, that is pretentious and rude.
At the r
> Mr. Fafa also seems to be using multiple names to post from this
> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" address, if one were to do a Google search on this
> e-mail address.
>
> One name is "Fafa Hafiz Krantz", and another is "Fafa Diliha Romanova".
Probably a bad Bill Bilano impersonator.
Miod
If you can be bothered reading all this and even answer just some of my
questions I'd be very pleased!
I want to provide a backup for a LES100 link between 2 sites using
dynamic routing over adsl/ipsec.
The proposed solution involves purchasing a couple of expensive cisco
layer 3 switches that
Mr. Fafa also seems to be using multiple names to post from this
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" address, if one were to do a Google search on this
e-mail address.
One name is "Fafa Hafiz Krantz", and another is "Fafa Diliha Romanova".
PG
Ben Goren wrote:
On 2005 May 3, at 12:23 PM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
On 2005 May 3, at 12:23 PM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
> I came here asking for advice, not having to prove myself by stating
> my knowledge and beliefs.
Sorry, wrong.
At best, you came here asking us to do your homework for you. But...if
you really had the ears of world leaders, you'd have more
This reply has very effectively shown me that you are indeed not
qualified. Thanks for stopping by, I am done with this thread.
Jason
On 5/3/05, Fafa Hafiz Krantz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > But the parties you are asking documents from may want to know if you
> > can accurately depict thei
> if you people forget to read OpenBSD Mailing Lists page,
> here is one interesting thing to you should read:
>
> Respect differences in opinion and philosophy
Use of all caps subject lines is a definite hint that neither the
message nor the poster are respectable.
Grumpy
On 2005 May 3, at 1:06 PM, Rod Dorman wrote:
> The postfix package has in the PERMIT_*_CDROM description
> "cannot be sold, see section 4 of license"
>
> Is that the "4. COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTION" in "IBM Public License"
> http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ibmpl.php ?
>
> That section has a lo
On Tue, May 03, 2005 at 04:06:09PM -0400, Rod Dorman wrote:
> The postfix package has in the PERMIT_*_CDROM description
> "cannot be sold, see section 4 of license"
>
> Is that the "4. COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTION" in "IBM Public License"
> http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ibmpl.php ?
>
> That
Alex de Joode wrote:
We use Linux and Astrisk for VoIP.
While not BSD it is opensource so you can ask the various Astrisk
support companies to solv a problem or settle with one service
provider.
Not a bad solutions, but doesn't really apply or work in a hosted
solutions for multiple virtual PBX.
> But the parties you are asking documents from may want to know if you
> can accurately depict their message, once you try to take many
> documents and compile it into one large document. The problem with
> doing that, is a lot of the details can become lost, and some parties
> messages may not ev
The postfix package has in the PERMIT_*_CDROM description
"cannot be sold, see section 4 of license"
Is that the "4. COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTION" in "IBM Public License"
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ibmpl.php ?
That section has a lot of crap about indemnification but I can't figure
out any
if you people forget to read OpenBSD Mailing Lists page,
here is one interesting thing to you should read:
Respect differences in opinion and philosophy
Intelligent people may look at the same set of facts and come to very
different conclusions. Repeating the same points that didn't convince
s
But the parties you are asking documents from may want to know if you
can accurately depict their message, once you try to take many
documents and compile it into one large document. The problem with
doing that, is a lot of the details can become lost, and some parties
messages may not ever reach t
Dear Chris,
> Start off by factoring cost of ownership / upgrading / life cycle etc.
> Then factor in time lost for training and down time.
> Then factor in time used for upgrading products and also resolve any
> issues that may arise by using OpenSource in the work place / govenrment.
There are
On Tue, 2005-05-03 at 14:23:41 -0500, Fafa Hafiz Krantz proclaimed...
> I came here asking for advice, not having to prove myself by stating
> my knowledge and beliefs. As any other human who can comprehend written
> languages, I can also comprehend the potential of open source technologies
> once
> Well I know I don't speek for Ben, but what I got from his comment is
> that your generalization of Masterplans don't kill people, Masterplans
> help people survive is very flawed, and you shouldn't generalize like
> that. Hitler's masterplan killed millions, even though he did it with
> the inte
On Tuesday, May 3, 2005, 13:36:57, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
> > Please permit me to invoke Godwin's law by citing that greatest of
> > all master plans, Hitler's Final Solution.
>
> ...
> What has Hitler got to do with this?
http://www.jargon.net/jargonfile/g/GodwinsLaw.html
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED
Well I know I don't speek for Ben, but what I got from his comment is
that your generalization of Masterplans don't kill people, Masterplans
help people survive is very flawed, and you shouldn't generalize like
that. Hitler's masterplan killed millions, even though he did it with
the intent of help
Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I am simply asking for examples on plans on how to fully implement
> open source technologies throughout every socio-economic aspect of
> a nation.
Start off by factoring cost of ownership / upgrading / life cycle etc.
Then factor in time lost for training an
At 9:55 AM -0600 5/3/05, Peter Valchev wrote:
> Have you looked at subversion? A colleague of mine is fanatical
> about it, although we don't use it here.
You mean the one that has 23 build dependencies, and only compiles
on i386? Hah.
This sounds odd. I use subversion on FreeBSD/i386, FreeBSD/
Hello.
I am simply asking for examples on plans on how to fully implement
open source technologies throughout every socio-economic aspect of
a nation.
What has Hitler got to do with this?
- Original Message -
From: "Ben Goren" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Fafa Hafiz Krantz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED
> Where can i find information about Memory management in OpenBSD ?
> (Virtual memory, swap, etc)
http://www.netbsd.org/Documentation/kernel/uvm.html
I'm sure many differences exist by now, but this was the starting point for UVM.
- Justin
Check out the !command-line section of the hostname.if manpage. It
lets you execute shell commands while starting up the network, like
!ifconfig \$if lladdr or something to that effect, to change the
mac address of the interface. Obviously if your doing anything that is
mac-dependent, changing the
Jean-Daniel Beaubien wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I just assembled a new pc for my friend and seeing all the little
> stickers (to stick in front of the case) that come in the various
> cpu/mobo/etc... boxes, I started to wonder HOW COME I DON'T HAVE A
> WIREFRAME PUFFY STICKER ON MY CASES?
>
> I th
-f wrote:
> hi there,
>
> now that openbsd supports ethernet address changes,
> what is the proper way of doing it for a particular
> interface? i did not find references to it in
> hostname.if, will there be an option for it?
maybe you should read the hostname.if(5) man page again.
On 2005 May 3, at 10:17 AM, Ben Goren wrote:
> P.S. Don't expect any such thing from the OpenBSD store any time soon.
Eh...I should hasten to add: I misread your original note. I thought
you liked the stickers that came with the CD set but wanted a 1 inch
square one with the raised plastic cove
hi there,
now that openbsd supports ethernet address changes,
what is the proper way of doing it for a particular
interface? i did not find references to it in
hostname.if, will there be an option for it?
--
doubt is the beginning of wisdom
Jean-Daniel Beaubien wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I just assembled a new pc for my friend and seeing all the little
> stickers (to stick in front of the case) that come in the various
> cpu/mobo/etc... boxes, I started to wonder HOW COME I DON'T HAVE A
> WIREFRAME PUFFY STICKER ON MY CASES?
>
> I thi
On 5/4/05, Shane J Pearson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2005-05-04, at 2:05 AM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
> > Masterplans help them survive!
>
> Like religion feeds the hungry?
>
> So *you* are going to write this master plan? If this is the case, why
> are you asking for help from the mere mor
On 2005 May 3, at 9:39 AM, Jean-Daniel Beaubien wrote:
> HOW COME I DON'T HAVE A WIREFRAME PUFFY STICKER ON MY CASES?
Because you've never put one there? Just a wild guess.
You might be interested in this link:
http://www.google.com/search?q=custom+computer+case+logo+sticker+badge
Cheers
LAW (Lawyers Are Wimps)
>>please stop posting this!
>
>
> Get your weak wood out of my wheels!
> I fight poverty to avoid ending up like you.
>
>
>>>I work for poor people through UNDP.
>>
>>one more proof that there i) are wrong people in the wrong places and
>>ii) much money is being wasted.
On 2005 May 3, at 9:05 AM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
> Masterplans don't kill people!
> Masterplans help them survive!
Please permit me to invoke Godwin's law by citing that greatest of all
master plans, Hitler's Final Solution.
Now please go away.
Cheers,
b&
[demime 1.01d removed an attachme
hay nut case. take this bull shut some place else. this is not the
place to be saying lies like that. You are so full of your own shit
I can smell your rotten stink over the internet
You have no idea what you are talking about. grow up and become a
real member of the world
-Original Message
please stop posting this!
Nice ASCII logo.
>
> I work for poor people through UNDP.
one more proof that there i) are wrong people in the wrong places and
ii) much money is being wasted.
> I am not a government nor Microsoft employee.
shouldn't make a difference as money rules the world (*cough
Shane J Pearson a icrit :
On 2005-05-04, at 2:05 AM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
Masterplans help them survive!
Like religion feeds the hungry?
So *you* are going to write this master plan? If this is the case, why
are you asking for help from the mere mortals here?
Perhaps now everybody can stop ?
Fafa Hafiz,
Pardon the top post, but master plans are for totalitarian governments
and bureaucracies. Their sole purpose is to assist in perpetuating
established institutions. (No institution is going to plan it's own
demise. Oh, and how well they serve their purpose is a subject of some
debate
On 2005-05-04, at 2:05 AM, Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
Masterplans help them survive!
Like religion feeds the hungry?
So *you* are going to write this master plan? If this is the case, why
are you asking for help from the mere mortals here?
Hi everyone,
I just assembled a new pc for my friend and seeing all the little
stickers (to stick in front of the case) that come in the various
cpu/mobo/etc... boxes, I started to wonder HOW COME I DON'T HAVE A
WIREFRAME PUFFY STICKER ON MY CASES?
I think it would be awesome to have wireframe
The attachment(our_secret.zip(.pif)) you sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] on Tue May
03 08:39:12 2005 has been removed due to its file type. The recipient has been
notified that the attachment was blocked.
Timo,
> please stop posting this!
Get your weak wood out of my wheels!
I fight poverty to avoid ending up like you.
> > I work for poor people through UNDP.
>
> one more proof that there i) are wrong people in the wrong places and
> ii) much money is being wasted.
There are good people in the
At 09:55 AM 5/3/2005 -0600, Peter Valchev wrote:
> Have you looked at subversion? A colleague of mine is fanatical about it,
> athough we don't use it here.
You mean the one that has 23 build dependencies, and only compiles on
i386? Hah.
Didn't say *I* liked it, just that a colleague of mine preac
> Have you looked at subversion? A colleague of mine is fanatical about it,
> athough we don't use it here.
You mean the one that has 23 build dependencies, and only compiles on
i386? Hah.
Mario,
Nice ASCII logo.
I work for poor people through UNDP.
I am not a government nor Microsoft employee.
(Ask Bill)
> A lot of people in poor and developing countries are already
> aware that they should move towards open source, and they
> themselves keep up with those master plans everyday
On Tue, 03 May 2005 08:24:56 -0500, "Fafa Hafiz Krantz"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hello!
>
>In an effort to balance the awareness and usage of free and open
>source among the world's population, I am trying to obtain as many
>open source masterplans (in PDF) as possible. I plan to have them
>tra
> internet. So, I stopped my dhcpcd client, and restarted it. After, when
> I try to ping www.google.com, it's does'nt work, but I can ping the next
> router, or gateway if you prefer (showed in netstat -nr. If my IP is
> x.x.x.234, the router is x.x.x.1 ). I tried several time to have the
Sou
On Tue, 3 May 2005, Marc Espie wrote:
> To expand on my prior message, CVS is missing some useful features,
> but locks is definitely NOT one of them.
>
Have you looked at subversion? A colleague of mine is fanatical about it,
athough we don't use it here.
I seem to recall that it address some of
On 2005-05-03, at 2:12 PM, Sean Brown wrote:
be more to your liking? OpenOpenWall perhaps? OpenLinux?
^
Careful. A very vomit worthy company has a trademark on that one...
http://ir.sco.com/ReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=70727
Although, maybe not
Hello!
In an effort to balance the awareness and usage of free and open
source among the world's population, I am trying to obtain as many
open source masterplans (in PDF) as possible. I plan to have them
translated, revised and compiled into one masterplan above all
masterplans which I can then d
On Monday, May 2, Sean Brown wrote:
>
> Is that for the stupid Open* suggestion or the fact it was Bash? Would
> OpenKDE be more to your liking? OpenOpenWall perhaps? OpenLinux?
Uuuggghhh!!!
Ok, I just want to drink beer and hack. The rest will take care
of itself.
--Toby.
hey,
For this server the script does use the generic kernel and i believe the
namechange is due to the
-b parameter in the config command
config -b ${HOSTNAME} ...
anyway I am using the default kernel.
The problem however remains with rsh/rcp where concurrent transmissions
acuse some of them to
Hello dear Mailinglist,
Is there a DB wich contaisn the supported HW?
I don't mean the HTML-List.
I thought about a little PHP-Website with a real DB in the background.
So that you could e.g. search for a e.g. Wlan-Card if you don#t know the
chipset.
For now the HTML-Websites getting bigger and b
We use Linux and Astrisk for VoIP.
While not BSD it is opensource so you can ask the various Astrisk
support companies to solv a problem or settle with one service
provider.
Cheers
On Mon, May 02, 2005 at 04:15:11PM -0400, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
> J.C. Roberts wrote:
> >Daniel,
> >
> >The story i
On Mon, 2 May 2005, Teren Sapp wrote:
> Hi, let me think about this a bit but first, if you do 'sh /etc/netstart',
> does that give you back your connectivity? I'm not 100% sure because like I
> said I need to think about this some more, but if the connection between you
> and the ISP is lost, the
beenish zakir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Helo
> Where can i find information about Memory management in OpenBSD ?
> (Virtual memory, swap, etc)
>
> Is for a work of the university so i need information in deep. I havent found
> that specific information in openbsd.org
/usr/src/sys
//
On Tue, 3 May 2005, Rogier Krieger wrote:
> On 5/3/05, Eric LeBlanc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > In fact, whey the problem arise, I lost the connection to the
> > internet. So, I stopped my dhcpcd client, and restarted it.
>
> I hope you mean dhclient(8) and not dhcpd(8). The latter probably
>
On 05/02/05 23:57, Michael Shalayeff wrote:
On Mon, 2 May 2005, chefren wrote:
On OpenBSD 3.6 i386, a mmap() call with offset near/above 4GB on a
regular file succeeds but, at least for writes, silently wraps around at
the 4GB border.
..
This looks like a bug on 32 bit archs, The little program bel
espie:
> The main feature I'm missing is the ability to manipulate patchsets
> as an independent object. I often have several independent changes
> spanning several files, and there's nothing in cvs that allows me
> to select one change independently from the others, and not forget
> any file. Hav
kroty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm going to buy a book about Operating Systems. I've seen two titles
> "Modern Operating Systems" (Tanenbaum) and "Operating Systems
> Concepts" (Silberschatz). I don't know wich one would be better for a
> newbie
> in OSs like me. Any suggestion would be appre
To expand on my prior message, CVS is missing some useful features,
but locks is definitely NOT one of them.
The main feature I'm missing is the ability to manipulate patchsets
as an independent object. I often have several independent changes
spanning several files, and there's nothing in cvs tha
Well since OpenBSD is derived from 4.4BSD the best place to start is
probobly "Design and implementation of the 4.4 BSD Operating System".
You could also check the code and see how OpenBSD handles processes.
Enjoy.
/Dunceor
On 5/3/05, beenish zakir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Helo
> Where
Helo
Where can i find information about Memory management in OpenBSD ?
(Virtual memory, swap, etc)
Is for a work of the university so i need information in deep. I havent found
that specific information in openbsd.org
Thanks.
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
Helo
Where can i find information about Process management in OpenBSD ?
thanks
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
On May 3, 2005, at 1:59 AM, Eugene Hercun wrote:
hah! I have 58740 files...anyway...
I read through the man page, and I don't see any information regarding
the '| wc -l' part.
Funny, I did the same thing for FreeBSD and it gave me 9 (the number
of files should be similar to the OpenBSD (58740))
If
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