Quoting Ted Unangst ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On 5/14/07, Alex Holst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Quoting Ted Unangst ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> >> On 5/13/07, Alex Holst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> >I set VertRefresh to 60-60, included a modeline generated by gtf and
> >> >disabled DDC, resulting in
i am considering a Dell PE 860 1u rack server for usage as my network
storage server (nfs).
I wonder about reports from the openbsd comunity using it with openbsd
4.0/4.1 on stability and performance. What you guys/girls have to
report? It is worth its price?
I don't run one myself, but got seve
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 12:36:43PM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
> On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 11:33:27AM +0200, Pieter Verberne wrote:
> | Hi there,
> |
> | does SFTP have no TAB-autocompletion for local/remote files? TAB
> | doesn't work. It makes transferring files very clumsy. And does SFTP
> | secu
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 04:36:15PM -0500, Eric Johnson wrote:
> Does anyone know of a method of using skey for scp transfers (apart
> from port forwarding through an ssh tunnel)?
>
> I've tried:
> scp username:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/username/foo.bar .
> and
> scp "username:skey"@host.
Antti Harri wrote:
On Wed, 16 May 2007, Yggdrasill Senecoen wrote:
[snip]
So, do OpenBSD save this information in an another file than /etc/hosts ?
Check resolv.conf(5) and the "lookup" directive.
Forgot to add the lookup directive in my resolv.conf. It's working fine now.
Thanks,
Yani
On Wed, 16 May 2007, Yggdrasill Senecoen wrote:
[snip]
So, do OpenBSD save this information in an another file than /etc/hosts ?
Check resolv.conf(5) and the "lookup" directive.
--
Antti Harri
Linux OS'en (IIRC) use lspci like what pciconf is for FreeBSD.
I don't know if Open would have any of those tools built in. I don't
have a "ready" openbsd box right now.
Google search for "thunderboot ultimate boot cd" doesn't reveal
anything. it suggested a spelling correction, for thunderboom
Hi,
Since a few days I find out a strange stuff.
There is a device on my network which is on 172.16.85.1, associate with
it's own hostname on my /etc/hosts file.
But when I try to reach this device using it's hostname my workstation
try to reach this host with a bad ip address.
Typicaly :
--
On 5/15/07, Frank Brodbeck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Moin,
John Nietzsche has spoken, thus:
> I wonder if some here has already deployed such in openbsd environment
> and knows the site i am talking about.
I think http://www.linux-foundation.org/en/OpenPrinting is what you are
looking for.
.
Does anyone know of a method of using skey for scp transfers (apart from port
forwarding through an ssh tunnel)?
I've tried:
scp username:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/username/foo.bar .
and
scp "username:skey"@host.example.com:/home/username/foo.bar .
Any other suggestions?
Thanks
On 15 May, 2007, at 10:41 PM, Robert Zajda wrote:
But it dont' want to work in chroot.
On 5/15/07, Allie D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Cronolog...no restart needed.
Actually it can, with a little patch [1] that I've "ported" to the
ports system [2]; unpack the tar.gz in /usr/ports/www and
I run it on a chrooted server...works fine.
ErrorLog "|/usr/local/sbin/cronolog /var/www/logs/%Y/%m/%d/error.log"
CustomLog "|/usr/local/sbin/cronolog /var/www/logs/%Y/%m/%d/access.log"
combined
I don't think there's any more configuration than that.
--
~Allie D.
On Tue, May 15, 2007 13:41, Ro
On 5/15/07, Peter Hessler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
:bridging is layer 2 and has nothing to do with net.inet.ip.forwarding=1.
:The problem is more somewhere deep inside the bridging code. One possible
:problem could be a to small interface queue but I could be totaly wrong.
:If nobody beats me I
I've always rotated my logs without ever starting apache. I just do
something like this.
cp access_log $date_access_log
echo > access_log
gzip $date_access_log
It's possible to lose a line or 2 of logging, but if that's ok, this is
what I've done.
Robert Zajda wrote:
It's hosting server so
But it dont' want to work in chroot.
On 5/15/07, Allie D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Cronolog...no restart needed.
--
~Allie D.
On Tue, May 15, 2007 12:11, John Mendenhall wrote:
>> If you don't mind a second or two of down time then you can use
>> something like this in newsyslog.conf as a re
It's hosting server so restarting apache is bad idea.
On 5/15/07, John Mendenhall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you don't mind a second or two of down time then you can use
> something like this in newsyslog.conf as a restart command:
>
> "apachectl stop;sleep 1;apachctl start;sleep 10;apachec
Hi,
does anyone know if this chipset "NVIDIA nForce Professional 3400 MCP" is
completely supported by openBSD?? The hardware support page is not clear about
that, it only shows "NVIDIA
nForce/nForce2/nForce2-400/nForce3/nForce3-250/nForce4,
MCP04/MCP51/MCP55/MCP61/MCP65/MCP67".
Thanks
_
Diana Eichert wrote:
> On Tue, 15 May 2007, Renaud Allard wrote:
>
>> No nothing showed in the logs. And I don't understand why such a
>> performance difference between routing and bridging.
>>
>>
>> Marco Peereboom wrote:
>>> Possibly interrupt issues. Where them dmesg'?
>
> I believe Marco req
Tim,
> John, since you were able to boot the ultimate boot cd and run both
> drives completely, I don't think any hardware is the culprit. Your CD
> drive, Hard Drive(s), memory, etc all work under that OS.
>
> My mindset is now leading to some bug that OpenBSD is doing (probably)
> with the ATA
Cronolog...no restart needed.
--
~Allie D.
On Tue, May 15, 2007 12:11, John Mendenhall wrote:
>> If you don't mind a second or two of down time then you can use
>> something like this in newsyslog.conf as a restart command:
>>
>> "apachectl stop;sleep 1;apachctl start;sleep 10;apachectl start"
>
On 2007 May 15 (Tue) at 20:34:19 +0200 (+0200), Claudio Jeker wrote:
:On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 11:09:03AM -0700, Peter Hessler wrote:
:> you forgot to enable sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 on the first test.
:> Turn that on, then re-measure the speeds of the bridge.
:>
:
:bridging is layer 2 and
> If you don't mind a second or two of down time then you can use
> something like this in newsyslog.conf as a restart command:
>
> "apachectl stop;sleep 1;apachctl start;sleep 10;apachectl start"
>
> The first sleep gives apache a second to finish active requests before
> trying to start again.
On 5/14/07, Alex Holst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Quoting Ted Unangst ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On 5/13/07, Alex Holst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >I set VertRefresh to 60-60, included a modeline generated by gtf and
> >disabled DDC, resulting in X being a smartarse ("Sure, I can do 60Hz"):
>
> can
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 08:21:24PM +0200, Przemyslaw Nowaczyk wrote:
> On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 07:10:28PM +0200, Bambero wrote:
> > Hello
> >
> > I'm wondering how to implement log rotation with chrooted apache.
> >
> > Anyone solved this problem ?
> >
> > Thanks
> > Bambero
>
> same as with an
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 11:09:03AM -0700, Peter Hessler wrote:
> you forgot to enable sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 on the first test.
> Turn that on, then re-measure the speeds of the bridge.
>
bridging is layer 2 and has nothing to do with net.inet.ip.forwarding=1.
The problem is more somew
On Tue, 15 May 2007, Renaud Allard wrote:
No nothing showed in the logs. And I don't understand why such a
performance difference between routing and bridging.
Marco Peereboom wrote:
Possibly interrupt issues. Where them dmesg'?
I believe Marco requested the dmesg info and indicated it mig
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 07:10:28PM +0200, Bambero wrote:
> Hello
>
> I'm wondering how to implement log rotation with chrooted apache.
>
> Anyone solved this problem ?
>
> Thanks
> Bambero
same as with any other log..? (newsyslog(8) && cron(8))
cheers,
--
Przemyslaw Nowaczyk <[EMAIL PROTECTED
you forgot to enable sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 on the first test.
Turn that on, then re-measure the speeds of the bridge.
On 2007 May 15 (Tue) at 19:04:47 +0200 (+0200), Renaud Allard wrote:
:Hello,
:
:I just had the opportunity to test some Fluke network equipment, notably
:one which is a
Dear gentleman,
i am considering a Dell PE 860 1u rack server for usage as my network
storage server (nfs).
I wonder about reports from the openbsd comunity using it with openbsd
4.0/4.1 on stability and performance. What you guys/girls have to
report? It is worth its price?
Another question: I
No nothing showed in the logs. And I don't understand why such a
performance difference between routing and bridging.
Marco Peereboom wrote:
> Possibly interrupt issues. Where them dmesg'?
>
> On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 07:04:47PM +0200, Renaud Allard wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I just had the opportun
I (still) receive the digest, copied message without quoting characters
- QUOTE:
We have done a low level disk format using an ultimate
boot cd. Didn't output any errors. Did this on both
drives in the system. Took a very long time.
Then, tried to install the OS. Received a panic
Possibly interrupt issues. Where them dmesg'?
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 07:04:47PM +0200, Renaud Allard wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I just had the opportunity to test some Fluke network equipment, notably
> one which is able to throughput test gigabit networks.
>
> I installed a Nexcom NSA1086 with OpenB
Hello
I'm wondering how to implement log rotation with chrooted apache.
Anyone solved this problem ?
Thanks
Bambero
Hello,
I just had the opportunity to test some Fluke network equipment, notably
one which is able to throughput test gigabit networks.
I installed a Nexcom NSA1086 with OpenBSD 4.1-stable and did some tests.
The NSA1086 units are equipped with a Pentium IV 3.2Ghz (hyperthreading
disabled), and 1G
Dear all,
I have a bit of a diffcult time with an admittetly nowadays marginal
piece of hardware, a Pentium 233 Mhz Labtop with two PCMCIA/Cardbus
slots. But then, where is the fun/satisfaction coming from using
something more recent? I use a D-Link DE-660 card in one of those
slots, which is dete
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am setting up a new OpenBSD machine in which I want to chroot users. I don't
> want to use any of the patching solutions to OpenSSH but want to implement a
> real system chroot solution so any user, who is chrooted, is jailed even if he
> logs in manually.
>
>
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 12:11:00PM -0300, John Nietzsche wrote:
> i am trying to get my windows boxes access nfs directly by means of
> SFU, too!
> I would like to have a global mount, say drive g: to mount from my
> home directories.
>
> Is it possible? How have you been doing in order to get a
Dear folks,
i am trying to get my windows boxes access nfs directly by means of SFU, too!
I would like to have a global mount, say drive g: to mount from my
home directories.
Is it possible? How have you been doing in order to get a global drive mapping?
Thanks in advance.
On 5/14/07, David Hi
Hi,
Yeah man, that worked
Thanks for all and you patience..
Thanks again.
On 5/14/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Mon, May 14, 2007 at 07:25:34PM +0200, Alberich de megres wrote:
> > On 5/14/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Mon, May 14,
On Sat, May 12, 2007 at 09:01:49PM +0200, Karl Sjvdahl - dunceor wrote:
> On 5/12/07, Edd Barrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Hi,
> >
> >My german housemate has reccommneded the chaos computer camp to me.
> >Looks like a good laugh. A couple of my student buddies and myself are
> >thinking of com
Lawrence Horvath wrote:
> I am trying to set up authpf. I created all the files however i would
> like to be able to login and then start authpf instead of having a
> separate user for authpf. when ever i try to start authpf after loging
> in with ssh i get the below error
>
> May 14 22:03:31 free
On Tue, 15 May 2007 14:29:02 +0200
Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 13:47]:
> > On Tue, 15 May 2007 13:38:10 +0200
> > Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > * Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 00:03]:
> > > > *
* Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 13:47]:
> On Tue, 15 May 2007 13:38:10 +0200
> Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > * Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 00:03]:
> > > * bofh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-14 21:54]:
> > > > I have a question. Some 64 bit cards
On 5/15/07, Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
* Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 00:03]:
> * bofh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-14 21:54]:
> > I have a question. Some 64 bit cards (PCI-X?) seem to work in 32 bit
> > slots (PCI 2.2?). Is this a feature, or am I looking at po
On Tue, 15 May 2007 13:38:10 +0200
Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 00:03]:
> > * bofh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-14 21:54]:
> > > I have a question. Some 64 bit cards (PCI-X?) seem to work in 32
> > > bit slots (PCI 2.2?). Is this a
* Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-15 00:03]:
> * bofh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-05-14 21:54]:
> > I have a question. Some 64 bit cards (PCI-X?) seem to work in 32 bit
> > slots (PCI 2.2?). Is this a feature, or am I looking at possible
> > issues down the road? Specifically, I am try
Tor Houghton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I can get a DHCP address on the interface, and I appear to be able to
> connect to anywhere _from_ the host, but not through it.
Just to eliminate the obvious - you /do/ have the required syctl.conf
magic and relevant pass rules in place?
--
Peter N.
On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 11:33:27AM +0200, Pieter Verberne wrote:
| Hi there,
|
| does SFTP have no TAB-autocompletion for local/remote files? TAB
| doesn't work. It makes transferring files very clumsy. And does SFTP
| secure my username and password or only my file transfers by default?
SFTP use
On Tue, 15 May 2007 11:11:39 +0200, Tor Houghton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to troubleshoot NAT on a VLAN interface (parent interface is
> xl0
> - a 3com 905). With OpenBSD 3.4 I got a 'initialized with non-standard mtu
> 1496' message with the same interface card, but with 4.
Hi there,
does SFTP have no TAB-autocompletion for local/remote files? TAB doesn't work.
It makes transferring files very clumsy. And does SFTP secure my username and
password or only my file transfers by default?
Pieter Verberne
p.s. (my lines are longer than 72 caracters, is that a problem?)
Hi all
I have an OT question for you guys.
Do any of you use flowcharting software, and if so what do you use?
I am just beginning to explore the world of programming and have so far
used Microsoft (spit) Visio. I tried both Kivio and Dia but they fall
short for me.
My code choices are (due to the
Hi,
I'm trying to troubleshoot NAT on a VLAN interface (parent interface is xl0
- a 3com 905). With OpenBSD 3.4 I got a 'initialized with non-standard mtu
1496' message with the same interface card, but with 4.1 this disappeared.
Does this mean "everything is fine, this card supports VLAN trunks"
Moin,
John Nietzsche has spoken, thus:
> I wonder if some here has already deployed such in openbsd environment
> and knows the site i am talking about.
I think http://www.linux-foundation.org/en/OpenPrinting is what you are
looking for.
Regards,
Frank.
--
What can you use used tampons for? T
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