Two points:
1. Please don't post private email. (Apologies if you obtained his
permission to post).
2. Who really cares? I'd much rather see contibutions from companies who
ship OpenSSH in their products and list "SSH support" as a feature on
their glossy brochures than shaking down othe
I recently wrote Linus Torvalds asking why I don't see his name listed
on the OpenBSD donations page (http://www.openbsd.org/donations.html),
since I figured he uses OpenSSH.
This was the reply I got back:
From: Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Tue, 10 Apr 2007 14:29:56 -0700 (PDT)
I suspect
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 06:17:58PM -0400, Nick ! wrote:
> On 4/10/07, Markus Bergkvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Hi,
> >
> >'date -u' on a 4.0 -stable will give something like
> >Tue Apr 10 22:03:24 GMT 2007
> >but shouldn't it be
> >Tue Apr 10 22:03:24 UTC 2007
>
> UTC = GMT for all that we c
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 01:43:56 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks to all for the kind and enlightening answers. When I read that it was
mainly due to lack of people and so, and not because that it was a bad idea, I
then hope OpenBSD will keep expanding, and one day have all the resources which
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 06:33:12PM +0200, Xavier Beaudouin wrote:
>
> The problem I have is if I have a subnet removed from bgp (eg my AS35189
> neighbor) it is not removed from pf table bgp.
>
> Do you have an little idea to do this automaticaly ?
does it work how you want to if you change fr
On 4/10/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 03:55:48PM -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> there is a pervasive sql v8 database on windows 2003 server that i would
> like to "clone" to a pgsql database on openbsd. i've not done this
> before and am not familiar w
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 11:29:17 -0700
Bryan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am exceedingly sorry. I realize now that it was not Rico's fault.
> My venom was uncalled for...
>
> Again, sorry Rico, et al...
Apology accepted :-)
> back to the shadows...
>
> On 4/10/07, Jeremy Huiskamp <[EMAIL PROTEC
On 4/10/07, Markus Bergkvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
'date -u' on a 4.0 -stable will give something like
Tue Apr 10 22:03:24 GMT 2007
but shouldn't it be
Tue Apr 10 22:03:24 UTC 2007
UTC = GMT for all that we care about.
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordinated_Universal_Time]]
-Nick
Hi,
'date -u' on a 4.0 -stable will give something like
Tue Apr 10 22:03:24 GMT 2007
but shouldn't it be
Tue Apr 10 22:03:24 UTC 2007
Cheers,
Markus
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 13:34:57 -0400
Jeremy Huiskamp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you'd bothered to inspect the headers you would have noticed that
> the below message was sent before the one that has many replies but
> it didn't arrive until about 20 hours after it was sent. Probably
> stu
On 4/10/07, Daniel Ouellet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On january, 27, Reiner Jung wrote:
> In the next 2 weeks, a free NX client will be released which is runs on
> OpenBSD without Linux emulation. All closed source parts from Nomachine
> client are rewritten. As there are some parts from origina
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 03:55:48PM -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> there is a pervasive sql v8 database on windows 2003 server that i would
> like to "clone" to a pgsql database on openbsd. i've not done this
> before and am not familiar with the proper technique(s) to do such a thing.
>
> the
On january, 27, Reiner Jung wrote:
In the next 2 weeks, a free NX client will be released which is runs on
OpenBSD without Linux emulation. All closed source parts from Nomachine
client are rewritten. As there are some parts from original Nomachine
client was used, it will be released under the G
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 07:09:17PM +0200, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> cat /bsd > /dev/speaker is fun, too, especially if you're
> into weird electronic music ;-)
In this case, you should also try madplay (from ports) on kernels
for different platforms, but be sure to use a rate between 1 a 4
kHz.
Ci
Chris Jones wrote:
Hey all,
I know that it's possible to run GRE over and IPsec tunnel but I am
wondering if anyone here has seen some good documentation (besides the man
pages) or a howto on setting this up. I'm trying to config my OpenBSD
4.0firewall to interop with a route-based VPN network w
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 07:33:31PM +0800, Doug Brewer wrote:
> Reyk Floeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 12:19:29PM +0200, frantisek holop wrote:
> >> if someone is still reading the thread...
> >>
> >
> >lalalala
>
> Is it funny? Fuck off!!! lalalala
>
it is not funny b
Great!
Thank you all!
Manuel
>
> man speaker(4)
>
> for example,
> # echo 'CDEFGAHO>C' > /dev/speaker
Get your own web address.
Have a HUGE year through Yahoo! Small Business.
http://smallbusiness.
there is a pervasive sql v8 database on windows 2003 server that i would
like to "clone" to a pgsql database on openbsd. i've not done this
before and am not familiar with the proper technique(s) to do such a thing.
the goal is to have any changes made to the pervasive DB be piped over
to the
I'm not sure where to ask this; so, I thought I'd start here in "misc"
first.
I think I have convinced myself that I want to sponsor an architecture port
effort. Specifically, I would like to see OpenBSD ported to the Routerboard
532 (IDT MIPS32 4Kc processor). After STFW, I see that a few other
On 2007/04/10 19:09, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 06:16:55PM +0200, Reyk Floeter wrote:
> > man speaker(4)
> >
> > for example,
> > # echo 'CDEFGAHO>C' > /dev/speaker
>
> cat /bsd > /dev/speaker is fun, too, especially if you're
> into weird electronic music ;-)
likewise 'tcpd
On january, 27, Reiner Jung wrote:
> In the next 2 weeks, a free NX client will be released which is runs on
> OpenBSD without Linux emulation. All closed source parts from Nomachine
> client are rewritten. As there are some parts from original Nomachine
> client was used, it will be released under
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:03:09AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Mon, 9 Apr 2007 22:17:23 +0200, "Joachim Schipper"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> > On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 02:46:32PM -0500, Lawal, Banji wrote:
> > > I was wondering if anyone out there has used OpenBSD with RBAC. From
> > >
Son of a
Thanks Camiel. I changed $proxy_addr to $lan_if and it started working.
-- Steve
Camiel Dobbelaar wrote:
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007, Steve Mertz wrote:
I'm trying to setup a firewall that allows FTP in to a server that is NATd on
the other side. But that only allows access from one
rc wrote:
On 4/5/07, Dag Richards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Matiss Miglans wrote:
> Hi good people !
> I need to make connection from server witch is in LAN1 to server witch
> is in LAN3.
> And I need to make another connection from that same server witch
is in
> LAN3 to that same server witc
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 04:41:04PM +0200, Sebastian Reitenbach wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an OpenBSD 4.0 firewall between two networks. The traffic between
> these two is routed. when I take a look at the manual pages, then it looks
> like the tftp-proxy only useful for connections that do NAT, where
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007, Steve Mertz wrote:
> I'm trying to setup a firewall that allows FTP in to a server that is NATd on
> the other side. But that only allows access from one address outside the
> firewall.
>
> Something like:
>
> Machine -> Internet -> Firewall/NAT -> FTP server
>
> I realize
I am exceedingly sorry. I realize now that it was not Rico's fault.
My venom was uncalled for...
Again, sorry Rico, et al...
back to the shadows...
On 4/10/07, Jeremy Huiskamp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If you'd bothered to inspect the headers you would have noticed that
the below message was
Dag Richards wrote:
Matiss Miglans wrote:
Hi good people !
I need to make connection from server witch is in LAN1 to server
witch is in LAN3.
And I need to make another connection from that same server witch is
in LAN3 to that same server witch is in LAN1.
There is 3 different company Ethernet
Hio.
I'm trying to setup a firewall that allows FTP in to a server that is
NATd on the other side. But that only allows access from one address
outside the firewall.
Something like:
Machine -> Internet -> Firewall/NAT -> FTP server
I realize I need to use ftp-proxy to get through the NAT p
Thank-you very much!
danno
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Claudio Jeker
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2007 12:32 PM
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: how to view Ethernet frame CRC errors
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:39:18AM -0400, Dan Farrell
If you'd bothered to inspect the headers you would have noticed that
the below message was sent before the one that has many replies but
it didn't arrive until about 20 hours after it was sent. Probably
stuck in the pipes somewhere, that seems to happen with misc@ alot.
Rico probably figur
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 18:52 +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
> isn't \b a backspace?
oh yeah, oops. meant to say \a I guess
--
Ryan Corder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Systems Engineer, NovaSys Health LLC.
501-219- ext. 646
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had
a
Hey Rico,
Last week management decided to go back to using Debian on some of our
servers due to them being easy to upgrade including kernel and
basesystem upgrades.
I guess management is the one maintaining the servers were you work
then, or you told them it was to hard, so you get what you
great man, thanks :-)
the echo \a etc. never worked with me
I replaced "echo '.'" in /etc/rc.local with "echo 'C' > /dev/speaker"
so now I know when my headless server is ready booting up
Reyk Floeter wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 07:53:23AM -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
>> Hello list.
>>
>>
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 06:16:55PM +0200, Reyk Floeter wrote:
> man speaker(4)
>
> for example,
> # echo 'CDEFGAHO>C' > /dev/speaker
cat /bsd > /dev/speaker is fun, too, especially if you're
into weird electronic music ;-)
--
stefan
http://stsp.name PGP Key:
Hey Rico,
> Last week management decided to go back to using Debian on some of our
> servers due to them being easy to upgrade including kernel and
> basesystem upgrades.
You must be joking.
> OpenBSD has really made a cool solution with pkg_add -u, but why not
> kernel and basesystem binary up
Why post twice? Sending it as different person within 24 hours of one
another is not going to get what you want... A couple of people gave
you solutions, choose one, or move to Linux...
Remember this???
--
On 4/10/07, Ryan Corder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 07:53 -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
> I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and
I'd
> really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
> the pc speaker BEEP when the s
Manuel Ravasio wrote:
> Hello list.
>
>
> I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
> really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
> the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
>
I usually use:
echo -ne '\a'
Best,
Chris
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:39:18AM -0400, Dan Farrell wrote:
> Another shot--- Anyone know how to see L2 CRC errors on an Ethernet
> interface?
>
The best thing you get is Ierrs and Colls from netstat -i output. This
should include the CRC errors. OpenBSD does not account L2 CRC errors in a
sepra
Hello,
I receive several subnet with OpenBGPd and I add them into a pf table like
this :
pf.conf (extract)
table { 172.31.0.0/24, 10.0.1.1 }
bgpd.conf (extract)
AS 65530
holdtime 180
holdtime min 3
fib-update no
listen on xxx.xxx.xxx.150
neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx {
descr "routeurs
Hi all.
I have noticed that the OpenBSD team puts a lot of emphasis on using binary
packets rather than building from ports, which I think IMHO is good, but why is
it that there is no binary kernel updates, rather than patching the kernel from
source?
I am asking this not from a point that we
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 07:53:23AM -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
> Hello list.
>
> I have a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
> help me in a second.
> I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
> really like to add some kind of comman
On 4/10/07, Manuel Ravasio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
It depends on your terminal, but you can pr
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 07:53 -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
> I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and
I'd
> really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
> the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
\b
--
Ryan Corder <[EMAIL PROTECTED
Print a bell character, e.g. "print \\a" in ksh. Use "xset b on" if
the bell has been turned off via "xset b off".
Regards,
Andreas
On 10/04/07, Manuel Ravasio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello list.
I have a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
help me in a second.
If I'm not mistaken ethtool is not written for OBSD.
danno
-Original Message-
From: Alex Thurlow [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2007 11:59 AM
To: Dan Farrell
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: how to view Ethernet frame CRC errors
I haven't used it on OpenBSD, but on l
printf "\a"
For more info man printf
Tim
On Tuesday 10 April 2007 8:53 am, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
> Hello list.
>
> I have a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
> help me in a second.
> I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and
> I'd rea
I haven't used it on OpenBSD, but on linux, ethtool can give you a good
bit of information on an ethernet connection.
-Alex
Dan Farrell wrote:
Another shot--- Anyone know how to see L2 CRC errors on an Ethernet
interface?
Thanks,
danno
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello list.
I have a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
help me in a second.
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is
Another shot--- Anyone know how to see L2 CRC errors on an Ethernet
interface?
Thanks,
danno
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Dan Farrell
Sent: Monday, April 09, 2007 11:02 AM
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: how to view Ethernet frame CRC er
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:19:50AM +0200, giovanni wrote:
> my laptop has a core 2 processor (T5500) but because my acpi dsdt
> lacks of PCT, PSS and PPC I can't use acpicpu for playing w/ setperf
The setperf mechanism is not MP safe hence why it was disabled, the case
of core duo 2 this might wor
On Mon, 9 Apr 2007 22:17:23 +0200, "Joachim Schipper"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 02:46:32PM -0500, Lawal, Banji wrote:
> > I was wondering if anyone out there has used OpenBSD with RBAC. From
> > what I have found out so far RBAC is only deployed with FreeBSD. If
> > an
Marcus Watts escreveu:
> Don Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> I have 2 older desktop computers (old Pentium 1 processors), ...
>
I played with this some time ago. I managed to make communication beetwen:
linux(ppp server) <-> windows(client)
linux(server) <-> linux(client)
openbsd(client) <-> l
Hi,
I have an OpenBSD 4.0 firewall between two networks. The traffic between
these two is routed. when I take a look at the manual pages, then it looks
like the tftp-proxy only useful for connections that do NAT, where the
client is in a private network, and the server has a public IP.
Without
I agree with Marcus's comments... unless there's some reason you haven't
mentioned yet that's preventing you, you should likely get some 10Mbps
nic's.
The file xfer rate for anything of 'today's size' would take forever
over the serial connection... but remote management via the serial
connection
Hi!
OpenBSD ... 4.0 GENERIC.MP#0 i386 (2x Xeon P4 ) is located after Cisco
(7206VXR) .
Netflows from the Cisco and the Openbsd are collected on a collector
(flow-tools).
I've got for the same hour for the same networks, from OpenBSD:
Total Flows : 59671
Total Octets
Hi all,
Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2007/04/10 12:23, Sebastian Reitenbach wrote:
> > does there exist any ISDN PRI card that is supported by OpenBSD and can
be
> > used with Asterisk?
>
> No, you'll need something else to support physical lines -
> maybe * on another OS, o
On 4/9/07, Soner Tari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
My physical interfaces are already configured and have their own IP
addresses. I need to assign different IPs to all 3 cards (LAN, WAN1,
WAN2). And here is what I run on the command line to create a bridge
interface (to use as a pseudo interface o
On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 02:03:21PM -0400, Frangois Rousseau wrote:
> Hi Claudio,
>
> I have double check on my lab and everything work fine for the OSPF
> part, sorry for my mistake.
>
> But at the end, I'm still having the same problem: the server didn't
> know the right route.
>
> OSPF see all
Reyk Floeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 12:19:29PM +0200, frantisek holop wrote:
> if someone is still reading the thread...
>
lalalala
Is it funny? Fuck off!!! lalalala
On 2007/04/10 12:23, Sebastian Reitenbach wrote:
> does there exist any ISDN PRI card that is supported by OpenBSD and can be
> used with Asterisk?
No, you'll need something else to support physical lines -
maybe * on another OS, or some other type of gateway device
(e.g. vegastream, cisco, quintu
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 12:23:02PM +0200, Sebastian Reitenbach wrote:
> Hi,
>
> does there exist any ISDN PRI card that is supported by OpenBSD and can be
> used with Asterisk? As far as I can read here:
> http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/index.php?page=Asterisk+OpenBSD , none is
> supported up to Op
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 12:19:29PM +0200, frantisek holop wrote:
> if someone is still reading the thread...
>
lalalala
Hi,
does there exist any ISDN PRI card that is supported by OpenBSD and can be
used with Asterisk? As far as I can read here:
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/index.php?page=Asterisk+OpenBSD , none is
supported up to OpenBSD 3.8. I have seen, that there are zaptel drivers
available on FreeBSD, but
if someone is still reading the thread...
1. marcus makes mistake
2. michael tells the world
3. theo plays theater
1. it's not rocket science not to commit gpl licensed code into
the public cvs tree under a bsd license and let it sit there for
months. esp. with the openbsd kind of draconian lice
On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 03:42:50PM -0600, Philip Guenther wrote:
> However, OpenBSD 4.0 doesn't actually comply with that: after
> waitpid() there will be no SIGCHLD pending, even if there are
> additional children to reap.
>
> So, if you're going to have multiple children, you need to call
> wait
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 01:43:56AM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> I have noticed that the OpenBSD team puts a lot of emphasis on using binary
> packets rather than building from ports, which I think IMHO is good, but why
> is it that there is no binary kernel updates, rather than pa
Ce message est au format HTML. Si vous ne parvenez pas ` le lire, cliquez
ici.
www.guidedesprestataires.com
Gagnez un GPS TomTom tous les jours du 31 Mars 2007 au 15 Avril 2007 . Si
votre demande de devis est la 126eme de l
my laptop has a core 2 processor (T5500) but because my acpi dsdt
lacks of PCT, PSS and PPC I can't use acpicpu for playing w/ setperf
I've made these tiny changes
Index: machdep.c
===
RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/arch/i386/i386/machdep.c
RedShift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Have you tried submitting patches to them? You are just being
> prejudist. Please don't say things you "think", say things that are
> proven fact.
Is that a fact? Or just your opinion? I think it's a discussion that
doesn't belong on this mailing list.
//ar
Phew, what a load of animosity. I really hope humanity still has a chance.
Now, regarding the bcw issue, let's leave this thread to die. Mistakes
are meant to be forgiven, and life to be lived forwards =)
--
An OpenBSD user... and that's all you need to know =)
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