On Mon, 22 Jan 2007, Satadru Pramanik wrote:
> /usr/sbin/ftp-proxy -r -R 192.168.19.4 -p 21 -b externalip1
> /usr/sbin/ftp-proxy -r -R 192.168.19.122 -p 21 -b externalip2
>
> Connections to externalip1 work just fine using ftp.
>
> Am I doing something wrong or is this just an unsupported configu
Le Mardi 23 Janvier 2007 00:04, Greg Thomas a icrit :
> On 1/22/07, Peter Matulis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I am having difficulty finding documentation on how to set up a
> > memory file system from beginning to end. I keep reading about
> > /tmp and swap and docs that presume certain steps
Hello!
I have setup a raid for my system (sd0 and sd1).
Since I only have 2 hdds I set it up initially as a broken mirror.
But I just can't seem to be able to squeeze back my other drive in the
array.
# raidctl -s raid0
raid0 Components:
component0: failed
/dev/sd1d: optimal
Spa
Peter Matulis writes:
> I am having difficulty finding documentation on how to set up a memory
> file system from beginning to end. I keep reading about /tmp and swap
> and docs that presume certain steps have been accomplished (disklabel).
I suspect your difficulty is in expecting it to be
Hi everyone,
Firstly, I know my question is a bit off-topic for this list...but I
don't exactly trust the subversion mailing list to give me an
objective view if subversion is safe or not.
Basically I'd like to know what people think about having a svn
repository on a web host like dreamhost.com
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 21:31:22 -0600
"Sam Fourman Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> hello misc@
>
> I was reading FreeBSD news Groups and I found this link
>
> http://blog.matthewgast.com/2007/01/19/tgn-draft-2-out-for-vote/
>
> My question is about future 802.11n support in OpenBSD, are update
Paul Irofti wrote:
I have changed one of my workstation's IP with:
$ sudo ifconfig vr0 inet 192.168.1.64
Afterwards some applications (trn, rtorrent, gaim) acknowledged the change and
worked on the fly. Others, such as irssi, worked on a random basis (i.e.
restarting it would lead to connecti
Brian Keefer wrote:
There ARE a number of vendors selling OBSD solutions, actually. One I
remember running across is LOK Technologies.
Drivers should NOT be an issue - you're building an appliance, it should
be pretty simple to picl compatible s/w.
Lee
It's not to say there aren't vendors
Yary,
> I have two uses in mind, one is trying out/debugging network scenarios,
> the other is creating a virutal machine where a couple trusted users can
> set up some network services (webserver, svn repository) separate from
> my own. The first pretty much requires some kind of virutalization,
>On 1/22/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Finally, while OpenBSD does not run many virtualization environments, it
>> does run *in* most virtualization environments. At least VMWare should
>> work, and Xen is being developed [1].
>>
>> Joachim
>>
>> [1] Or might be
On 1/22/07, Peter Matulis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am having difficulty finding documentation on how to set up a memory
file system from beginning to end. I keep reading about /tmp and swap
and docs that presume certain steps have been accomplished (disklabel).
I want to set up /var/blah as
On 1/22/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Finally, while OpenBSD does not run many virtualization environments, it
does run *in* most virtualization environments. At least VMWare should
work, and Xen is being developed [1].
Joachim
[1] Or might be ready, or might b
On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 08:57:58PM -0500, Nick Holland wrote:
> Peter Matulis wrote:
> > Hi. I would like to install OpenBSD 4.0 on an IBM eServer (xSeries 220)
> > that contains a ServeRAID SCSI controller. I see that in OpenBSD
> > Current a driver has been added (ips). Does that mean I cann
On Monday 22 January 2007 11:38, Bob Eby wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> > freeze is not available as package, you need to install it from the
>
> ports > tree.
>
> Good to know, but painful to hear. Guess I'll have to work on
> learning ports...
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> >
> > I don't use anti-vi
I've got some basic tuneling working using ipsec, and I'm trying to make it
a bit more robuts. Here's what works:
Machine A:
ike esp from 192.168.1.0/24 to 192.168.9.0/24 peer XX.92.176.37
ike esp from XX.92.176.33 to 192.168.9.0/24 peer XX.92.176.37
ike esp from XX.92.176.33 to XX.92.176.37
Mac
hello misc@
I was reading FreeBSD news Groups and I found this link
http://blog.matthewgast.com/2007/01/19/tgn-draft-2-out-for-vote/
My question is about future 802.11n support in OpenBSD, are updated
drivers the only work that has to be done. or does the whole 802.11
networking need to be ov
Hi
Just trying to ascertain if ipcomp(4) is fully integrated with
ipsecctl(8), if it is can someone detail the ipsec.conf(5) config to
use it, also does it support RFC2394 IP Payload Compression Using
DEFLATE?
Thanks for your time.
Kind Regards
Richard Thornton
I am having difficulty finding documentation on how to set up a memory
file system from beginning to end. I keep reading about /tmp and swap
and docs that presume certain steps have been accomplished (disklabel).
I want to set up /var/blah as mfs. What are the basic steps?
Peter
Wrap your lines, please...
Paul Irofti wrote:
> I have changed one of my workstation's IP with:
>
> $ sudo ifconfig vr0 inet 192.168.1.64
>
> Afterwards some applications (trn, rtorrent, gaim) acknowledged the
> change and worked on the fly. Others, such as irssi, worked on a
> random basis (i.e
Peter Matulis wrote:
> Hi. I would like to install OpenBSD 4.0 on an IBM eServer (xSeries 220)
> that contains a ServeRAID SCSI controller. I see that in OpenBSD
> Current a driver has been added (ips). Does that mean I cannot install
> OpenBSD 4.0 and have access to the controller on this ma
On 22/01/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 12:42:03PM -0800, yary wrote:
For real virtual stuff, qemu works well - although not exactly swiftly.
It's usable for testing, but don't try to run it in production.
If you can handle being a little less virtual, ch
On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 04:03:18PM +, Brian Candler wrote:
> > > >Maybe I'm confused here. Let me explain what I am trying to do. I have to
> > > >locations at location A I have a subnet of 192.168.1.0/24 at location B I
> > > >have a subnet of 192.168.20/24. Presently I am able to ping from
>
On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 12:42:03PM -0800, yary wrote:
> Hello,
>
> wondering what state-of-the-art is for running virtual machines under
> OpenBSD. I don't see anything with particularly good performance (like
> Solairs "zones"), which would be great, but anything resonable would
> work for my pur
Is this possible?
I have ftp-proxy working for the first ftp server in behind the NAT.
The second ftp server can not be connected to from outside the NAT
using the external ip I have assigned for it.
I have added rules to rc.local thus, and also have the ftp-proxy/*
anchors in pf.conf:
/
On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 11:38:06AM -0800, Bob Eby wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > freeze is not available as package, you need to install it from the
> > ports tree.
>
> Good to know, but painful to hear. Guess I'll have to work on learning
> ports...
It's not that difficult; in this case,
cd /u
I have changed one of my workstation's IP with:
$ sudo ifconfig vr0 inet 192.168.1.64
Afterwards some applications (trn, rtorrent, gaim) acknowledged the change and
worked on the fly. Others, such as irssi, worked on a random basis (i.e.
restarting it would lead to connecting or not to the serv
On 22/01/07, Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
qemu is less elegant than, say, dfbsd virtual kernels but it works
pretty well.
Hadn't heard about DragonFly virtual kernels, they do look cool, but
they aren't yet ready for prime time and there isn't anything like it
in OpenBSD! Still t
Hi,
You may be interested in trying milter-greylist.
It's been very effective for me in blocking spam email.
http://hcpnet.free.fr/milter-greylist/
Best regards,
Tiago Marques
On 1/18/07, Tim Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Jan 17, 2007, at 11:41 PM, Mike Spenard wrote:
>
> > Could so
On 22/01/07, Alejandro Lozanoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello list!
We were planning to buy a bunch of Dell SC1435 servers with Opterons
(we have only intel servers right now), it is a pretty new server so i
couldn't find any info on the list archive/google. I was wondering if
anyone has trie
Hello,
I'm struggling to get my raid software working.
I am running OBSD 4.0.
I have 2 hdds sd0 and sd1.
I installed the system on sd0 in a standard way. Compiled a raid kernel and
created a raid0 config file for sd1 and sd2 (fake mirror just here for setup
since I only have 2 hdds).
disklabeled s
Dear misc@openbsd.org,
I wanted to share bandwidth 512Kb between 4 users with guaranted
bandwidth 20Kb for each of them and the maximum bandwidth 256Kb for
the first user, and 128 Kb for any other. Of course if all of them are
connected in the same time I assume that they share existing
bandwidth
Hello list!
We were planning to buy a bunch of Dell SC1435 servers with Opterons
(we have only intel servers right now), it is a pretty new server so i
couldn't find any info on the list archive/google. I was wondering if
anyone has tried one with OpenBSD, if it works, does it work well wit
On 2007/01/22 12:42, yary wrote:
> wondering what state-of-the-art is for running virtual machines under
> OpenBSD. I don't see anything with particularly good performance (like
> Solairs "zones"), which would be great, but anything resonable would
> work for my purposes- I don't really need the bl
* Ronnie Garcia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-01-22 21:10]:
> Ronnie Garcia a icrit :
> >I recently switched one of our firewalls from Linux to oBSD 4.0.
> >Its handling approx 8-9 kpps (in+out) on both interfaces. It has a
> >D-Link DFE-570TX quad ports NIC (dc driver), two ports are used.
> >On Linu
Hello,
wondering what state-of-the-art is for running virtual machines under
OpenBSD. I don't see anything with particularly good performance (like
Solairs "zones"), which would be great, but anything resonable would
work for my purposes- I don't really need the blazing speed. I want to
run a few
On Monday 22 January 2007 13:38, Bob Eby wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> > freeze is not available as package, you need to install it from the
>
> ports > tree.
>
> Good to know, but painful to hear. Guess I'll have to work on learning
> ports...
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> >
> > I don't use anti-vi
2007/1/21, L. V. Lammert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Actually, I talked to Theo about this last year, as we currently operate
a non-profit that is underutilized. The problem is that since OBSD is NOT
a non-profit, a 'regular' corp cannot transfer funds without a TON of
justification paperwork (especiall
You might ask on http://groups.google.com.mx/group/OpenBSD-Mexico/topics
On Jan 22, 2007, at 12:47 PM, Reyk Floeter wrote:
hi,
are there any openbsd users in mexico city?
please respond in private,
reyk
--
Jack J. Woehr
Director of Development
Absolute Performance, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
3
Hi. I would like to install OpenBSD 4.0 on an IBM eServer (xSeries 220)
that contains a ServeRAID SCSI controller. I see that in OpenBSD
Current a driver has been added (ips). Does that mean I cannot install
OpenBSD 4.0 and have access to the controller on this machine? Any
comments welcome
Ronnie Garcia a icrit :
I recently switched one of our firewalls from Linux to oBSD 4.0.
Its handling approx 8-9 kpps (in+out) on both interfaces. It has a
D-Link DFE-570TX quad ports NIC (dc driver), two ports are used.
On Linux, the CPU was loaded at approx 20% when, and on oBSD, its
actually
hi,
are there any openbsd users in mexico city?
please respond in private,
reyk
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> freeze is not available as package, you need to install it from the
ports > tree.
Good to know, but painful to hear. Guess I'll have to work on learning
ports...
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I don't use anti-virus mail scanners.
>
Well, I'm really just interested in a bayes based
Hi crowd,
openbsd.informatik.uni-erlangen.de has locked up and has to be hard
resetted, which I can't do myself from here. I'll have a guy from
University of Erlangen kick the machine tomorrow, that is in about 16
hours.
Thanks for your patience,
--
Alexander "grunk" von Gernler PGP 0
> > >Maybe I'm confused here. Let me explain what I am trying to do. I have to
> > >locations at location A I have a subnet of 192.168.1.0/24 at location B I
> > >have a subnet of 192.168.20/24. Presently I am able to ping from
> > >192.168.1.100 to 192.168.2.100, thus the IP layer is working.
> >
On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 12:19:16PM +0100, Alexander Farber wrote:
> I'm writing a small network daemon program and
> want it to drop priviliges after it opens a listening port.
You might also be interested in looking at the ucspi-tcp and ipsvd
packages. They both include programs to listen on a p
NEWSLETTER N0 4 DAL 22 AL 28 GENNAIO 2007
23/01/2007
Arcobaleni SESTO FIORENTINO
(Sagre e Fiere)
24/01/2007
Vino & Pizza
(Sagre e Fiere)
24/01/2007
Festa della canzonetta e del teatro dialettale pietrasantino
(Teatro)
25/01/2007
Memorie del paradiso PISA
(Mostre)
26/01/2007
Cinematori
* Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-01-22 12:54]:
> Hello,
>
> I'm writing a small network daemon program and
> want it to drop priviliges after it opens a listening port.
>
> I've looked at the several programs in /usr/src/usr.sbin
> and many do it in the similar way:
>
> 1) getpwnam(N
Hello Stuart,
On 1/22/07, Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 2007/01/22 12:19, Alexander Farber wrote:
> 1) Can't a compromised process change back to its saved root uid?
setresuid/setresgid: set real, effective, *and saved* uid/gid
ok!
> 2) Why is setresuid() used and not setuid
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007, Alexander Farber wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm writing a small network daemon program and
> want it to drop priviliges after it opens a listening port.
>
> I've looked at the several programs in /usr/src/usr.sbin
> and many do it in the similar way:
>
> 1) getpwnam(NTPD_USER) to
On 2007/01/22 12:19, Alexander Farber wrote:
> 5) Finally call setresgid(pw->pw_gid, pw->pw_gid, pw->pw_gid)
>and setresuid(pw->pw_uid, pw->pw_uid, pw->pw_uid)
>
> 1) Can't a compromised process change back to its saved root uid?
setresuid/setresgid: set real, effective, *and saved* uid/gid
Oops I meant "Privilege revocation", like here:
http://www.openbsd.org/papers/ven05-deraadt/mgp00033.html
On 1/22/07, Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Also is there maybe a good guide on priv. sep. on OpenBSD?
Hello,
I'm writing a small network daemon program and
want it to drop priviliges after it opens a listening port.
I've looked at the several programs in /usr/src/usr.sbin
and many do it in the similar way:
1) getpwnam(NTPD_USER) to find its home dir
2) check that the home dir belongs to root an
Jeroen Massar wrote:
> Same reason why Windows Servers are a good thing to give to
> organizations that have stupid people, they won't be able to understand
> OpenBSD either, but clicking is something that almost everybody can do.
Going OT but it is interesting how this argument works in IT but as
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