the new i386 snapshot heading out now contains a few uncommited little
pieces which enable a potpourri of i2c goodness. mostly, this will
provide some sensor stuff to people who do not have ipmi(4) or esm(4)
support.
i2c "sensor" devices appear on lots of machines (not just i386). some
might hav
Detectamos que seu e-mail esta enviando mensagems contaminadas com o
vmrus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Uma variante do vmrus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
O worm [EMAIL PROTECTED] i:
* Uma variante do vmrus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* Um worm de distribuigco em massa que tambim se propaga atravis dos
compartilhamento
For my next trick
I can pick the correct lottery numbers moments after the drawing.
--thanks
On 12/24/05, Ray Percival <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 24, 2005, at 3:16 PM, Michael Steinfeld wrote:
>
> > Currently, I do not run X on my openbsd box and really would rather
> > not. I am
On Dec 24, 2005, at 3:16 PM, Michael Steinfeld wrote:
Currently, I do not run X on my openbsd box and really would rather
not. I am thinking of a way to have multiple ttys available for
monitoring without switching back and forth between them. It might
seem silly to some, when you have a dual he
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Hash: SHA1
On Dec 24, 2005, at 3:50 PM, Edd Barrett wrote:
On 24/12/05, Dave Feustel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
One wonders how software that doesn't exist c
On 24/12/05, Dave Feustel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
> but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
> which permits exploits to be committed at least
> with user permissions, if not root permissions.
> Since the problem appears to be in Xwin
Currently, I do not run X on my openbsd box and really would rather
not. I am thinking of a way to have multiple ttys available for
monitoring without switching back and forth between them. It might
seem silly to some, when you have a dual headed vidcard and multiple
displays and prefer not to use
On 24/12/05, Rico <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What kind of post is this?
>
> Dave Feustel wrote:
> > I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
> > but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
> > which permits exploits to be committed at least
> > with user permissions, if not root per
On Saturday 24 December 2005 14:57, Matthew Closson wrote:
> On Sat, 24 Dec 2005, Dave Feustel wrote:
>
> > I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
> > but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
> > which permits exploits to be committed at least
> > with user permissions, if not r
What kind of post is this?
Rico
Dave Feustel wrote:
I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
which permits exploits to be committed at least
with user permissions, if not root permissions.
Since the problem appears to be in Xwindows,
usi
On 24/12/05, Matthew Closson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, 24 Dec 2005, Dave Feustel wrote:
>
> > I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
> > but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
> > which permits exploits to be committed at least
> > with user permissions, if not root
On Sat, 24 Dec 2005, Dave Feustel wrote:
I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
which permits exploits to be committed at least
with user permissions, if not root permissions.
Since the problem appears to be in Xwindows,
using KDE may b
On Sat, Dec 24, 2005 at 07:41:45PM +0100, MK wrote:
> Unfortunately not, because there is no timestamp in the log file and there
> is no easy way how to analyze which user executed particular command on the
> system. I'm looking for something such as logs generated by sudo.
There actual is a times
I hate to send this Christmas present to misc,
but there is definitely a security hole in Xwindows
which permits exploits to be committed at least
with user permissions, if not root permissions.
Since the problem appears to be in Xwindows,
using KDE may be inadviseable. I'm considering
going back t
Steve Shockley wrote:
> Whyzzi wrote:
>> Hi gang. Running a lightweight mail server here (50 users total) on
>> OpenBSD, and being the cheap bastard that I am I am looking forward to
>> scripting a nightly backup onto some DVD-RW media. Can I assume that
>> dump/restore is out of the question becau
Unfortunately not, because there is no timestamp in the log file and there
is no easy way how to analyze which user executed particular command on the
system. I'm looking for something such as logs generated by sudo.
Thanks anyway
MK
- Original Message -
From: "Siju George" <[EMAIL PR
On 12/24/05, MK <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello
>
> I'm trying to log all command which are entered by users but till now still
> without success. I think I was close with "accton" and "lastcomm" commands
> but unfortunetaly it logs only commands without parameters, so for instance
> if I disabl
Thank you for your suggestion. But there is some problem during the source
compile. In fact I have same problem as described here:
http://www.bsdforums.org/forums/showthread.php?t=27287 and of course there
is no answer. :(
Thank you
MK
- Original Message -
From: "Stuart Henderson"
> > I'm trying to log all command which are entered by users but till now
> > still without success.
sudosh, but it's not in ports.
On Saturday 24 December 2005 05:16 am, MK wrote:
> Hello
>
> I'm trying to log all command which are entered by users but till now
> still without success. I think I was close with "accton" and
> "lastcomm" commands but unfortunetaly it logs only commands without
> parameters, so for instance if I
Hello
I'm trying to log all command which are entered by users but till now still
without success. I think I was close with "accton" and "lastcomm" commands
but unfortunetaly it logs only commands without parameters, so for instance
if I disable pf, "pfctl -d" I have in log only pfctl so there
Sorry for the late reply.
Indeed 192.168.8.254 is the IP Address of the internal NIC. In fact I
only have one NIC on my OpenBSD Server (it's a Mac Cube, so I cannot
add another one). It's setup as the default router for the other
systems (through DHCP). Below is the contents of my isakmpd.c
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