trying to get postgres to start up at boot. found this at postgresql's site
On OpenBSD, add the following lines to the file /etc/rc.local:
if [ -x /usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -a -x /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postmaster ];
then
su - -c '/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl start -l /var/postgresql/log -s'
On Thu, 19 Oct 2006 21:37:03 -0500
"Sam Fourman Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone have one of these?
> http://www.latestbuy.com.au/usb_missile_launcher.html
really fun :)
--
Does anyone know of a OpenBSD port (gtk maybe) for Kismet
Thank you
Sam Fourman Jr.
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 03:43:50PM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2006/10/19 21:28, sonjaya wrote:
> > i have script for update automaticly here:
> > #!/bin/csh
>
> c-shell for scripting? are you mad? :-)
IMAO csh should be banished from earth! :-)
You will be amazed how brain dead its desi
On 10/19/06, Darrin Chandler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 11:34:49AM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > 2006/10/18, ICMan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > > I have read this thread, and I don't get it. Doesn't it benefit
> card
> > > > companies to have open source communities ma
I have had a problem with a new OpenVPN server on an OpenBSD box. I
have solved the problem (I think) but was looking for some insight as
to why this solved it.
The problem was with the "ping" that happens between OpenVPN endpoints
not being returned and the connection resetting every minute or s
I write once again for the same old things I was writing
at the opwnbsd 3.4. If you search the emails to the list are there.
Same old same old.
The pppoe dial error (userland) "cant assign requsted address" after
4 major OpenBsd releases didnt go away. Noone cared to address the situation
and of
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I was wondering if this would work in OpenBSD
Maybe.
http://scott.weston.id.au/software/pymissile-20060126/
Does anyone have one of these?
http://www.latestbuy.com.au/usb_missile_launcher.html
I was wondering if this would work in OpenBSD
Sam Fourman Jr.
On 10/19/06, Martin Gignac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hey man, great idea! I'll try it out.
Yup, tried a restore(8) via HTTP and it worked fine!
Thanks again for the tip.
-Martin
--
"Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names
the streets after them."
On 10/19/06, Steve Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
I have been running spamdb greylisting only for several years as my only
line of defense at home. At work I have managed to sneak in a Sparc64
Sunfire 120 (OpenBSD 3.9) as a caching web proxy & default gateway.
Today, we had a fairly
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 06:23:20PM -0600, Steve Williams wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have been running spamdb greylisting only for several years as my only
> line of defense at home. At work I have managed to sneak in a Sparc64
> Sunfire 120 (OpenBSD 3.9) as a caching web proxy & default gateway.
>
> T
On 10/19/06, Steve Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am 99% sure that I have seen on the internet SOMEWHERE a "whitelist"
of servers that are like this. I thought Bob Beck had forwarded one at
one point in time, but I can only find his post regarding the tarfile he
maintains for the "zombie
Hi,
I have been running spamdb greylisting only for several years as my only
line of defense at home. At work I have managed to sneak in a Sparc64
Sunfire 120 (OpenBSD 3.9) as a caching web proxy & default gateway.
Today, we had a fairly agressive attack on our email system, 6000+
emails i
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 01:09:57PM -0600, Breen Ouellette wrote:
> > From: Daniel Hartmeier (danielbenzedrine.cx)
> > pf uses a binary search tree instead of a hash table, which doesn't
> > require pre-defining a maximum size. The tree will just grow until
> > memory allocation fails. With 64MB RAM
(Feeling rather stupid after the blank email, apologies)
I grabbed an older GPS from that Microsoft Streets and Trips software
and plugged it into my laptop to try the nmea sensor stuff. The
sticker says it's a GPS-360, mfg by Pharos USA with a SiRF chipset.
There looks to be a small bug in the
On 2006/10/19 at 12:50:47AM -0200, Gustavo Rios wrote:
> Dear list members,
>
> i am setting a personal NIS server. At the momment; the output for the
> command line is the following:
>
> # ypinit -m mojave
> Server Type: MASTER Domain: mojave
[ ... ]
> At this point, we have to constr
--
Jon
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 11:34:49AM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > 2006/10/18, ICMan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > I have read this thread, and I don't get it. Doesn't it benefit card
> > > companies to have open source communities making their drivers better?
> >
> > One theory is that the cards ar
2006/10/19, Dustin Lundquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
I know that IRIX uses it for static binaries like sash and other
programs that can be run for directly from the prom before booting the
kernel.
But this is OpenBSD, not IRIX.
Best
Martin
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 11:14:20AM +1000, Jonathan Gray wrote:
[snip]
> For the longest time it was quite hard to get documentation out
> of the networking side of Intel, but it recent years they
> publish reasonably detailed manuals for 10/100 (fxp) and
> 10/100/1000 (em) controllers and some PH
sonjaya wrote:
i have script for update automaticly here:
# cat /root/update_part1.sh
#!/bin/csh
cd /usr/src
setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
date > /root/update_part1.log
when i try run that script get error such like this :
Found a solution of sort - downgrade the phase 2 transform from AES to 3DES.
Even if offically SEF 7.0.4 supports AES for phase 2 and it accepts it
during IKE negotiation, the tunnel fails immediately with a misleading error
message on SEF.
Given the age of Symantec Enterprise Firewall 7.0.4 (rele
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=116079153502388&w=2
On 10/19/06, Didier Wiroth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I've installed the latest snapshots from the 18.10.2006.
> I updated my rather old sources via cvs and had lots of the following
> output:
> bdwrite: force async wr
Didier Wiroth wrote:
I updated my rather old sources via cvs and had lots of the following output:
bdwrite: force async write on the buffer 0xd8003f20
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&s=bdwrite
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 08:08:02PM +, Didier Wiroth wrote:
> bdwrite: force async write on the buffer 0xd8003f20
That's just a diff's debug message. Nothing to be concerned about.
-p.
Hello,
I've installed the latest snapshots from the 18.10.2006.
I updated my rather old sources via cvs and had lots of the following output:
bdwrite: force async write on the buffer 0xd8003f20
bdwrite: force async write on the buffer 0xd8003f20
bdwrite: force async write on the buffer 0xd801f0a4
b
On 10/19/06, Bob Beck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
My typical way to do his is find my latest dump(s) on tape
or elsewhere - chuck them on an nfs server accesible to the machine
to be restored, boot from bsd.rd, mount the nfs location with the
dump files and proceed.
That's why I'd *like
My typical way to do his is find my latest dump(s) on tape
or elsewhere - chuck them on an nfs server accesible to the machine
to be restored, boot from bsd.rd, mount the nfs location with the
dump files and proceed.
-Bob
* Michal Soltys <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-10-19 09:19]:
>
I've got three 120's and six 330's all running OBSD not a problem with
any of them.
In each case I removed checkpoint and moved to OpenBSD. Saved a shed
load of money, got better performance, security and features.
'Checkpoint Rocks', only if your selling the damn thing and taking your cut!
> From: Daniel Hartmeier (danielbenzedrine.cx)
> Date: Wed Dec 12 2001 - 08:31:08 CST
>
> On Wed, Dec 12, 2001 at 03:08:37PM +0100, Nicolas Prochazka wrote:
>
> > With OpenBSD 2.9 and ipf , our internet connexion was down due to a
ip state
> > overflow. (the default IPSTATE_SIZE was near 4000) an
On Thu, 19 Oct 2006 10:18:40 +0400
"Bruno Carnazzi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is my code broken or man page not accurate ?
It would appear the manual page is inaccurate.
libevent/evbuffer.c:
/*
* Returns 0 on success;
*-1 on failure.
*/
int
bufferevent_write(struct bufferevent *b
Theo de Raadt wrote:
Why do some people feel the need to make up utter bullshit defences
for the vendors, when there is not one ounce of fact to back it up?
Why?
I think that might be my fault. When I ASKED earlier this month if it
was a possible excuse, it might have been picked up and run wi
Hi Denis,
First off an IP120 and OBSD combination is a beauty, there are a couple
of gotcha's. The first and recently discussed being the reboot, or lack
off. The second being the non standard rom location for the on-board
nic's resulting in the fxp driver not being able to read the actual
On 2006/10/19 17:57, X Y wrote:
> I can't override this with nexthop
are you sure? this should work. you are setting it on the _sending_ machine
and not the _receiving_ machine aren't you? looking at `bgpd -nv' may help
rtr2$ bgpctl sh ip bgp x.x.0.0
flags: * = Valid, > = Selected, I = via IBGP,
> 2006/10/18, ICMan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > I have read this thread, and I don't get it. Doesn't it benefit card
> > companies to have open source communities making their drivers better?
>
> One theory is that the cards are so full of patent violations that
> opening up the docs would lead to a
On Wed, 18 Oct 2006 23:40:16 +0100
"Niall O'Higgins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you want to help get marco a Thinkpad, please donate via PayPal to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
i feel fortunate that we get so much from this openbsd group.
money paypalled.
--
In friendship,
prad
On 10/19/06, Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 2006-10-17 at 10:39 -0700, Ted Unangst wrote:
> On 10/17/06, Otto Moerbeek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > There is no uniform way to ask the max file size of a given
> > file system. ffs filestems do have that info in therir superbloc
X Y wrote :
I'm having a bit of trouble with the finer details of my OpenBGPD
config, and would appreciate some tips on getting it right and advice
on the right way of doing things.
I have two routers, two independent BGP connections, and a block of
provider independent address space. The router
Martin Schrvder wrote:
> 2006/10/19, Nick Guenther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> So getting back on topic, what is /stand for then? It's a tricky thing
>> to google for, but the hints I've seen make it sound as just a
>> secondary /bin. Is that about right?
>
> That's what the man page suggests. But whe
Clint M. Sand wrote:
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 12:04:45AM -0600, Breen Ouellette wrote:
The reality is probably somewhere in the middle, but it is no different
than cheering for a sports team. Whether or not the stats are accurate,
some people seem to feel a need to cheer on the work of others
On 10/19/06, Michal Soltys <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You can pipe ftp's output to restore.
Hey man, great idea! I'll try it out.
Thanks!
-Martin
--
"Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names
the streets after them."
Just received 3 sets here in Winnipeg (only two provinces away) Not
early enough for a "me first" video but... ;)
The nice cases are icing on the cake, well done!
gg
Hi misc@,
We're currently moving some of our routers from linux/quagga to
OpenBSD/OpenOSFPD.
In our topology, we have border routers connected to 2 areas, each
announcing routes from one area into another.
Basically in Quagga/IOS speak this gives (with imaginary networks):
network 10.0.1.0 area
Hi Steve
My company/Me (Venture 37) offers dedicated OpenBSD hosting Colo aswell.
Depending on your needs we can colo/host in a DC Brighton or in
Telehouse in London.
You can get my details from http://www.openbsd.org/support.html#United
You might want to check out Henning Brauer's hosting com
On 9/16/06, Gilles Chehade <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi misc@,
I am looking for companies that provide OpenBSD-powered dedicated hosting.
Currently, I am being hosted by a french company which turned out to be as
incompetent as can be, and I am willing to switch as soon as possible
(preferably
Nous avons une information ` vous faire parvenir.
Voici avant tout, les informations ligales: Fichier diclari ` la CNIL sous le
numiro 78523.
L'article 27 de la loi n0 78-17 du 6 Janvier 1978 relative ` l'informatique,
aux fichiers et aux libertis, s'applique aux donnies nominatives.
Elle garanti
* Bill Traynor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-10-18 16:25:08 -0400]:
> Check out Geekisp as well. It's one guy who offers many different
> OpenBSD options.
>
> http://www.geekisp.com
I'll second the recomendation for GeekISP. I've been with them for a
couple of years now and I have only good things t
On 18/10/06, Constantine A. Murenin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 18/10/06, Sam Fourman Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Check out OpenBSD :)
>
> http://www.bsdstats.org/
For historical reference, info taken from bsdstats.org:
If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please sen
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 09:28:23PM +0700, sonjaya wrote:
> i have script for update automaticly here:
> # cat /root/update_part1.sh
> #!/bin/csh
> cd /usr/src
> setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
> setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
> cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
> date > /root/update_part1.lo
So my question is this: is doing a remote network restore using
'bsd.rd' at all possible (or even suggested/recommended) or are
directly attached devices (IDE/SCSI/USB drives & tapes drives) the
only supported restore(8) sources with 'bsd.rd'?
You can pipe ftp's output to restore.
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 09:28:23PM +0700, sonjaya wrote:
> i have script for update automaticly here:
> # cat /root/update_part1.sh
> #!/bin/csh
> cd /usr/src
> setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
> setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
> cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
> date > /root/u
sonjaya wrote:
i have script for update automaticly here:
# cat /root/update_part1.sh
#!/bin/csh
cd /usr/src
setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
date > /root/update_part1.log
when i try run that script get error such like this :
On 2006/10/19 21:28, sonjaya wrote:
> i have script for update automaticly here:
> #!/bin/csh
c-shell for scripting? are you mad? :-)
> cd /usr/src
> setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
> setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
> cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
> date > /root/update_part1.log
>
> wh
On 2006-10-19T21:28, sonjaya wrote:
> i have script for update automaticly here:
> # cat /root/update_part1.sh
> #!/bin/csh
> cd /usr/src
> setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
> setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
> cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
> date > /root/update_part1.log
>
> when i try run
i have script for update automaticly here:
# cat /root/update_part1.sh
#!/bin/csh
cd /usr/src
setenv CVS_CLIENT_PORT -1
setenv CVSROOT [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
cvs -d $CVSROOT -q up -rOPENBSD_3_9 -Pd
date > /root/update_part1.log
when i try run that script get error such like this :
# sh /root/upda
Darrin Chandler wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 11:30:23AM +0200, Didier Wiroth wrote:
>> Hello,
>> I'll donated too.
>>
>> Come on guys don't let this thread die until the guys have their thinkpad.
>>
>> ACPI support in openbsd is a must have, it will benefit to anyone!!!
>>
>> Show your love to
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 08:52:14AM -0400, MikeM wrote:
> On 10/18/2006 at 7:37 PM Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
>
> |Check out OpenBSD :)
> |
> |http://www.bsdstats.org/
>
> =
>
> OK, I see a table full of numbers, but no explanation of what is being
> measured or how. Yes, OpenBSD is on
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 11:30:23AM +0200, Didier Wiroth wrote:
> Hello,
> I'll donated too.
>
> Come on guys don't let this thread die until the guys have their thinkpad.
>
> ACPI support in openbsd is a must have, it will benefit to anyone!!!
>
> Show your love to openbsd and "please" donate mo
On 10/18/2006 at 7:37 PM Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
|Check out OpenBSD :)
|
|http://www.bsdstats.org/
=
OK, I see a table full of numbers, but no explanation of what is being
measured or how. Yes, OpenBSD is on the top, but on the top of what?
> I'll donated too.
Shit , I need sleep ...
I meant: "I donated too"
;-)
Didier
Hi,
I've been playing with dump(8) recently and have tried two different
ways of using it: backing up to a file on a USB drive, and backing up
to a remote box by specifying a remote file and using SSH in lieu of
RSH. I was also planning to try to write to a file on a remote machine
via NFS but I
$Docs < $Damage < $Sales
This is always true. See the following:
while (runAround)
{
$sales = getSales();
if ($docs){
$costToDevelop = false;
}else{
$costToDevelop = true;
}
if ($costToDevelop){
$costToFix = ($costToDevelop * 2);
$p0wned = true;
On Tue, 2006-10-17 at 10:39 -0700, Ted Unangst wrote:
> On 10/17/06, Otto Moerbeek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > There is no uniform way to ask the max file size of a given
> > file system. ffs filestems do have that info in therir superblock,
> > though, you can see it with dumpfs(8).
>
> it har
2006/10/18, Damian Wiest <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Wed, Oct 18, 2006 at 01:40:19PM +0200, Martin Schr?der > > 1280x1024. And
ATI is as closed as NVIDIA, but the drivers are even
> more broken.
Do you have more details regarding ATI versus NVIDIA video cards? From
I just can report tests from m
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 12:04:45AM -0600, Breen Ouellette wrote:
> Miod Vallat wrote:
> >>For historical reference, info taken from bsdstats.org:
> >>
> >[...]
> >
> >What is the point discussing completely bogus so-called statistics?
>
> At best, I would suggest that some are proud to be Open
2006/10/18, ICMan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
I have read this thread, and I don't get it. Doesn't it benefit card
companies to have open source communities making their drivers better?
One theory is that the cards are so full of patent violations that
opening up the docs would lead to a lot of court
2006/10/19, Nick Guenther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
So getting back on topic, what is /stand for then? It's a tricky thing
to google for, but the hints I've seen make it sound as just a
secondary /bin. Is that about right?
That's what the man page suggests. But when is it actually used? A
typical in
I've had some experience with the IP120. They're all bad.
The IP330 however, had no problems at all. In my opinion, the IP120 has
bad hardware. Nokia replaced our IP120's with other IP120's. That didn't
solve anything. It kept locking up randomly.
I don't know how their IP130 are, but the 120's su
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 10:03:37AM +0530, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 18, 2006 at 08:42:45PM +0200, Joachim Schipper wrote:
> > I'm not sure about KDE, but rxvt loads pretty fast (<10ms?) on ion. And
> > this is not exactly new hardware (neomagic driver, Thinkpad 390X).
> >
> > aterm
On Wed, Oct 18, 2006 at 11:29:11PM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2006/10/19 00:57, Denis Doroshenko wrote:
> > i saw, the mails recently WRT software reboot, but that's the
> > least problem with mine. the poor beast locks solid after random
> > period of time (that's why it came to me). have
> I saw the original plea and filed it away without thinking. Darrin's
> reminder got me to send in 10CAD. It's not much, it's not even in
> euros, but it helps. And now I am trying to propagandize some more, so
> come on, chip in!
>
> -Nick
Hello,
I'll donated too.
Come on guys don't let this t
On 2006/10/19 10:03, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
> dillo is fast but useless. You can get the same thing with any of the
> console browsers like w3m,lynx,elinks etc...
anyone who hasn't tried w3m might have a surprise if they run
w3m-*-image in an xterm.
When looking at the snapshot tgz files on the second level mirror in
Erlangen and compared the dates to those from ftp.openbsd.org I also
noticed that the files base40.tgz and comp40.tgz have a slightly
different size and md5sum.
So I downloaded the files from ftp.openbsd.org and updated the syste
On Wed, 18 Oct 2006, Derick Siddoway wrote:
> This is what I see:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ df
> > Filesystem512-blocks Used Avail Capacity Mounted
> > on
> > /dev/wd0a 74826724 27903788 4318160039%/
> > se-nas01:/fs04/prodstfs01 4181818080 165
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 01:12:59AM -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> # encrypt each dump and remove the original
> if [ -n "$ADMIN" ]; then
> echo "encrypting $FN"
> if [ -f $ROOT/$HOST/$FN.gpg ]; then
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Behalf Of Gilles Chehade
> Sent: Thursday, October 19, 2006 12:02 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: OpenBSD dedicated hosting
>
[...]
> I have then tried LayeredTech as suggested b
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