On Jun 4, 2007, at 10:51 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
I wonder if you could just hack a different script into their
redboot.bin,
it's easy enough to unpack:
http://www.cyrius.com/debian/iop/n2100/deinstall.html
I am not sure how you would do that but it sounds like a great idea.
I don't mi
On 6/5/07, Marc Espie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 11:45:27PM +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
> >I don't see any -i option documented in the sed manpage.
>
> -i on some seds (gsed, ssed, FBSD sed, maybe others) means ''in
> place'' edit, that feature can be reimplemented with ''se
Hi!
Is vendorwatch.org dead permanently or it's just sort of reconstruction?
--
Alexey Vatchenko
http://www.bsdua.org
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
JID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 5 Jun 2007, Markus Lude wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 06:02:59PM -0500, Emilio Perea wrote:
> > I follow -current on an i386 at work and an amd64 at home, and rarely
> > run into any problem which is not self-inflicted. So when I had a weird
> > experience this weekend, I assumed it wa
On 2007/06/04 18:42, Diana Eichert wrote:
> Specifially, I want to verify you can edit the boot script to allow
> automated OpenBSD boot.
I wonder if you could just hack a different script into their redboot.bin,
it's easy enough to unpack:
http://www.cyrius.com/debian/iop/n2100/deinstall.html
IP is static and entered commands/text is the same too. No mistakes, i
was carefully checking all commands and entered text.
And as i found most problematic smtp is windows based MailEnable.
What else i should check?
Rogier Krieger wrote:
On 6/4/07, Edgars Makra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
With
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 06:02:59PM -0500, Emilio Perea wrote:
> I follow -current on an i386 at work and an amd64 at home, and rarely
> run into any problem which is not self-inflicted. So when I had a weird
> experience this weekend, I assumed it was my fault.
>
> What happened was that after th
On Jun 4, 2007, at 5:42 PM, Diana Eichert wrote:
I'm interested in using the Thecus N2100 instead of the Plextor
systems because of some sh platform limitations. I'm looking for
feedback from people who use the N2100.
Specifially, I want to verify you can edit the boot script to allow
au
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 05:44:17PM -0800, Kim and Loretta wrote:
> When installing OpenBSD and using anoncvs for updating, it is necessary
> to have SSHD enabled? I do not need to access this box remotely.
> and don't want any unnecessary services running. Thanks.
No, it's not required unless y
I'm interested in using the Thecus N2100 instead of the Plextor systems
because of some sh platform limitations. I'm looking for feedback from
people who use the N2100.
Specifially, I want to verify you can edit the boot script to allow
automated OpenBSD boot. Also, what kind of throughput c
Timo Schoeler wrote:
although I had a bunch of dual-head (or more) setups in my life, it was
all in the sgi, Sun or Apple universe. I never did this on OpenBSD;
however, as everything I touched during the years on OpenBSD machines
ran out of the box :) I wonder whether a dual (or triple screen) s
When installing OpenBSD and using anoncvs for updating, it is necessary
to have SSHD enabled? I do not need to access this box remotely.
and don't want any unnecessary services running. Thanks.
RW wrote:
On Mon, 04 Jun 2007 08:55:09 -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
uh, pxeboot? you can put the CD contents on your pxeboot server and
there's no need to hook up a CD drive. me thinks that's how you're
supposed to do it for headless machines.
have had the same bad magic errors in the
On Mon, 04 Jun 2007 08:55:09 -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
>uh, pxeboot? you can put the CD contents on your pxeboot server and
>there's no need to hook up a CD drive. me thinks that's how you're
>supposed to do it for headless machines.
>
>have had the same bad magic errors in the past when u
I follow -current on an i386 at work and an amd64 at home, and rarely
run into any problem which is not self-inflicted. So when I had a weird
experience this weekend, I assumed it was my fault.
What happened was that after the usual sequence of [build kernel;
reboot; build userland; reboot] the s
On 6/4/07, Edgars Makra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
With one such non passable smtp server admin we tested it via phone. He
said that promt is very slow (as it should be), then he got 451 Temp
error. After 5, 15, 30 and 60 minutes he retried, nothing :(
If you tried connecting by manually perfor
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 04:37:17PM -0500, terry tyson wrote:
>On 6/4/07, Hannah Schroeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 06:54:20PM +0200, Tom Van Looy wrote:
>> >I think this is also correct:
>> >find . -name '*.htm' -exec cp '{}' '{}'.new \; \
>> >-exec sed -i s/ol
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 11:45:27PM +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
>\> This works indeed. But better use the additional quotes around $1. Just
>>get used to them, because $1 could contain IFS characters.
>true, but in this case it doesn't really matter how shell splits words :)
Proactive secu
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 11:45:27PM +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
> >I don't see any -i option documented in the sed manpage.
>
> -i on some seds (gsed, ssed, FBSD sed, maybe others) means ''in
> place'' edit, that feature can be reimplemented with ''sed '' file
> >new_file; mv -g new_file file'' (
On 03/06/2007, at 7:33 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2007/06/03 14:09, Sam Vaughan wrote:
if anyone has a working PXE bios-flash setup for these and wouldn't
mind sharing how, please drop me a line, when I try the system hangs
after memdisk loads the bios-flash image.
I'd be interested to
\> This works indeed. But better use the additional quotes around $1. Just
get used to them, because $1 could contain IFS characters.
true, but in this case it doesn't really matter how shell splits words :)
>i am cheating tho, and have sh symlinked to bash.
Why?
i learnt to use bash,
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 09:28:03PM +0200, Pete Vickers wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to use OSPFd in a 'high availability' environment, where
> it's next-hop h/a pair (mis)use RFC3623 (Graceful OSPF Restart) to
> provide rapid failover between nodes. However it appears OSPFd
> doesn't support
On 6/4/07, Hannah Schroeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 06:54:20PM +0200, Tom Van Looy wrote:
> >I think this is also correct:
>
> >find . -name '*.htm' -exec cp '{}' '{}'.new \; \
> >-exec sed -i s/old/new/ '{}'.new \;
>
> I don't see any -i option documented in
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:25:00PM +0200, Hannah Schroeter wrote:
> Hello!
>
> On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:01:12PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
> >[...]
>
> >Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
> >Also, beware of spaces in file.
>
> >For this kind of thing, I generally use
Vijay Sankar wrote:
>
> There are different exim packages for OpenBSD. You could do a
>
> pkg_add -v
> ftp://ftp.ca.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/4.1/packages/i386/exim-4.66.tgz
>
> (assuming you are using 4.1 on i386 etc.) or use other exim packages
> that support mysql, postgresql, ldap and so
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, Mark Zimmerman wrote:
Thanks for the example, Diana. This, plus a little time figuring out
how to get genericstable to work properly, have allowed me to get rid of
postfix. postfix is fine, but maximizing use of the base install reduces
the amount of wasted time with each upg
Hi,
I'm trying to use OSPFd in a 'high availability' environment, where
it's next-hop h/a pair (mis)use RFC3623 (Graceful OSPF Restart) to
provide rapid failover between nodes. However it appears OSPFd
doesn't support this ?
Before I dig into this, can norby/claudio/henning cast any light
Hi!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 07:49:08PM +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
>> >...-exec sh -c 'something with $1' {} \; is fully safe as well.
>>sh -c 'echo foo"$1"bar' baz
>>-> foobar
>>Seems not.
>a typo, sorry, it should be sh -c 'echo foo$1bar' -- baz
This works indeed. But better use the additiona
Hi!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 06:54:20PM +0200, Tom Van Looy wrote:
>I think this is also correct:
>find . -name '*.htm' -exec cp '{}' '{}'.new \; \
>-exec sed -i s/old/new/ '{}'.new \;
I don't see any -i option documented in the sed manpage.
Kind regards,
Hannah.
With one such non passable smtp server admin we tested it via phone. He
said that promt is very slow (as it should be), then he got 451 Temp
error. After 5, 15, 30 and 60 minutes he retried, nothing :(
What is a most common options for spamd?
Bob Beck wrote:
Many things. according to t
Dear Colleague,
SAWN 2005 submission is now closed. For further details on the
workshop program please see http://dna.engr.uconn.edu/SAWN2005/
SAWN 2005 Organizers
I purchased the orinoco, well see how that goes, thanks for the comment
On 04/06/07, Lawrence Horvath <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It does not have any built in USB ports, so unless i can find a typeII
or III usb card i got no usb
On 04/06/07, Reyk Floeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, Jun
On 2007/06/04 13:15, Steve Williams wrote:
> Then in /etc/mail, I have the following file (rehash_and_restart):
alternatively, there's /etc/mail/Makefile; no need to restart
just for new .db
It does not have any built in USB ports, so unless i can find a typeII
or III usb card i got no usb
On 04/06/07, Reyk Floeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, Jun 03, 2007 at 09:46:44PM -0700, Lawrence Horvath wrote:
> I am working with a ThinkPad 365X that i am installing obsd
> on and
> woul
Many things. according to the logs you have there it didn't
even talk smtp to you, so it shouldn't pass.
* Edgars Mak??a <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-06-04 12:07]:
> Hi!
>
> I have some problems with spamd. A lot of smtp servers stops at this
> point of cycle:
> Jun 4 20:40:17 firewall spa
On 6/4/07, Douglas Allan Tutty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 03:28:50PM +0200, Timo Schoeler wrote:
> Thus [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Peter N. M. Hansteen) spake on Mon, 04 Jun 2007
> 15:17:26 +0200:
>
> > Douglas Allan Tutty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > > However, sendmail is
Mark Zimmerman wrote:
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 08:02:08AM -0600, Diana Eichert wrote:
Hmmm, actually, I don't believe sendmail has a "steep and tall learning
curve". ;-) It's just that you don't grok it yet.
You're almost there since you know you want to use a smarthost. For example
c
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 08:02:08AM -0600, Diana Eichert wrote:
>
> Hmmm, actually, I don't believe sendmail has a "steep and tall learning
> curve". ;-) It's just that you don't grok it yet.
>
> You're almost there since you know you want to use a smarthost. For example
> copy /usr/share/
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 08:02:08AM -0600, Diana Eichert wrote:
You're almost there since you know you want to use a smarthost. For
example copy /usr/share/sendmail/cf/openbsd-localhost.mc to another
file /usr/share/sendmail/cf/BobFoo-localhost-SM
Hi,
Joel Sing schrieb:
> These appear to be the ASCII output from tcpdump, rather than pcap format
> files (try -w option to tcpdump).
Thanks for telling me, accidently uploaded the wrong files. Replaced the
archive and now the correct files are available.
http://lechtermann.net/pub/OpenBSD/dumps
You should start by reading this: http://openbsd.org/faq/faq15.html#PkgMgmt
Just set your PKG_PATH variable and then it's a simple 'pkg_add' to
install your favorite MTA:
# export PKG_PATH=ftp://your.ftp.mirror/pub/OpenBSD/4.1/packages/`machine -a`/
# pkg_add -i exim
OR
# pkg_add -i postfix
OR
#
> >...-exec sh -c 'something with $1' {} \; is fully safe as well.
sh -c 'echo foo"$1"bar' baz
-> foobar
Seems not.
a typo, sorry, it should be sh -c 'echo foo$1bar' -- baz
i am cheating tho, and have sh symlinked to bash.
--
almir
Hi!
I have some problems with spamd. A lot of smtp servers stops at this
point of cycle:
Jun 4 20:40:17 firewall spamd[7659]: xxx.yyy.zzz.ccc: connected (118/3)
Jun 4 20:44:14 firewall spamd[7659]: xxx.yyy.zzz.ccc: disconnected
after 374 seconds.
After some retries nothing changes, they do
Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Hello,
However, sendmail is a very steep and tall learning curve. I'm coming
from Debian (which no longer installes with 32 MB ram) so I'm used to
exim. I know that exim is GPL. I'm wondering if there are other
BSD-licensed MTAs.
I'm sure to stir up a firestorm o
On 2007/06/04 13:19, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
> It may not be hard at all, but its a lot more work than answering exim's
> config questions.
I think that's probably Debian's packaging, not Exim.
> Yes, I know, everything I need to get sendmail working is alread on my
> system in the form of man
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 08:02:08AM -0600, Diana Eichert wrote:
> On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
> >However, sendmail is a very steep and tall learning curve. I'm coming
> >from Debian (which no longer installes with 32 MB ram) so I'm used to
> >exim. I know that exim is GPL. I'm
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 03:28:50PM +0200, Timo Schoeler wrote:
> Thus [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Peter N. M. Hansteen) spake on Mon, 04 Jun 2007
> 15:17:26 +0200:
>
> > Douglas Allan Tutty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > > However, sendmail is a very steep and tall learning curve. I'm
> > > coming f
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 06:27:41PM +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
>>A completely safe solution would be writing a small script:
>>#! /bin/sh
>>exec sed s/old/new/ < "$1" > "$1".new
>>and using find . -type f -name \*.htm -exec /path/to/script {} \;
>>or find . -type f -name \*.htm -print0 | xa
The National Lottery Committee P O Box 1010 L70 1NL UNITED KINGDOM
(Customer Services) Dear Lucky Beneficiary, We are obliged to inform you
that we have succeeded in resolving all related problems that has made
the transfer impossible. With the help of the International Monetary
Fund(IMF) who have
I think this is also correct:
find . -name '*.htm' -exec cp '{}' '{}'.new \; \
-exec sed -i s/old/new/ '{}'.new \;
Hannah Schroeter wrote:
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:01:12PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
[...]
Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
Also, beware
A completely safe solution would be writing a small script:
#! /bin/sh
exec sed s/old/new/ < "$1" > "$1".new
and using find . -type f -name \*.htm -exec /path/to/script {} \;
or find . -type f -name \*.htm -print0 | xargs -0 -L 1 -r /path/to/script
...-exec sh -c 'something with $1' {} \; is f
Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
Diana Eichert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://www.blug.linux.no/rfc1149/ http://www.datadok.no/ http://www.nuug.no/
I'm concerned about any harm done to the Avian Carriers during RFC
1149 impl
Hello,
Intro:
I am using isakmpd+sasyncd+carp+pf+pfsync to have a redundant firewall setup
(OpenBSD 4.0). I have two firewall that carp-advertise at the same rate, and
not preempt each other. Basically I don't care which firewall is master and
which is backup. This works fine. isak
Exim and postfix are probably your two easiest options.
http://www.postfix.org/
http://www.exim.org/
-Lars
Lars NoodC)n ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Ensure access to your data now and in the future
http://opendocumentfellowship.org/about_us/contribute
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007,
On Monday 04 June 2007 17:19:10 David Newman wrote:
> OK, but how then to get redundancy across the firewalls?
STP - see brconfig(8).
--
Antoine
Hi!
Somewhat old:
On Fri, Apr 27, 2007 at 06:08:13PM +0200, Rafa?? Brodewicz wrote:
>Hannah Schroeter pisze:
>>I've tried to setup an IPSEC client connection. However, I see that it
>>doesn't work because the X509 certificate I've been given by my CA has no
>>subjAltName extension. And I'm not su
Hi!
On Thu, May 10, 2007 at 01:46:10PM -0700, Ted Unangst wrote:
>On 5/10/07, Hannah Schroeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>On Thu, May 10, 2007 at 09:40:58PM +0200, Timo Schoeler wrote:
hostname cvsync.de.openbsd.org
>>>I see anoncvs problems on exactly this machine and the SPLINE m
Diana Eichert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
>> http://www.blug.linux.no/rfc1149/ http://www.datadok.no/ http://www.nuug.no/
>
> I'm concerned about any harm done to the Avian Carriers during RFC
> 1149 implementation. An exce
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 03:26:28PM +0200, Martin Schrvder wrote:
>2007/6/4, Marc Espie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>>Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
>>Also, beware of spaces in file.
>>For this kind of thing, I generally use 'while read'
>Use xargs(1)
For that cas
On 2007/06/04 08:19, David Newman wrote:
> Stuart Henderson wrote:
> > On 2007/06/04 07:11, David Newman wrote:
> >> I could divide the /26 into smaller netblocks and configure pf to route
> >> between them but I'm reluctant to do that given that I'd burn a network
> >> and broadcast address for ea
* David Newman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-06-04 16:27]:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Henning Brauer wrote:
> > * David Newman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-06-04 03:59]:
> >> but it says carp doesn't work with bridging
> >
> > carp alows two hosts to share an IP.
> > now expla
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2007/06/04 07:11, David Newman wrote:
>> I could divide the /26 into smaller netblocks and configure pf to route
>> between them but I'm reluctant to do that given that I'd burn a network
>> and broadcast address for each n
Gentile CLIENTE,
Desideriamo informarti, ai sensi del Decreto Legislativo 30 giugno 2003
n.196 "Codice in materia di protezione dei dati personali", che le
informazioni da te fornite o altrimenti acquisite nell'ambito dei servizi
da noi prestati, saranno oggetto di trattamento nel rispetto delle
d
Juan Miscaro wrote:
> I am running OpenBSD 4.0 and 4.1 systems. On a standalone mail gateway
> I have successfully deployed pdnsd as a local dns caching server.
> However, on a company network I am having difficulty running this
> daemon. Often the thing replies by stating that a domain exists bu
On 6/4/07, Juan Miscaro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am running OpenBSD 4.0 and 4.1 systems. On a standalone mail gateway
I have successfully deployed pdnsd as a local dns caching server.
However, on a company network I am having difficulty running this
daemon. Often the thing replies by stati
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Hello,
I'm totally new to OBSD and have it installed on my 486 which acts
basically like a slim client allowing me to ssh in to my main box.
OBSD comes with sendmail which I have never knowingly used before and
while it works as-is for local mail
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007 15:16:47 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Good Morning,
>
> I still seem to be having problems with PF+VLANs.
>
> It seems that PF does not want to NAT traffic from my internal VLAN to my
> external VLAN IP address.
>
> Can someone advise if they have managed to get PF (NAT)
On 2007/06/04 07:11, David Newman wrote:
> I could divide the /26 into smaller netblocks and configure pf to route
> between them but I'm reluctant to do that given that I'd burn a network
> and broadcast address for each netblock, and a /26 is small enough as it is.
>
> Is there a better way? Tha
take a look at postfix
Sam Fourman Jr.
On 6/4/07, Vijay Sankar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Monday 04 June 2007 08:01, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I'm totally new to OBSD and have it installed on my 486 which acts
> > basically like a slim client allowing me to ssh in to my
I am running OpenBSD 4.0 and 4.1 systems. On a standalone mail gateway
I have successfully deployed pdnsd as a local dns caching server.
However, on a company network I am having difficulty running this
daemon. Often the thing replies by stating that a domain exists but
does not give back A reco
On 2007/06/04 15:16, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Can someone advise if they have managed to get PF (NAT) + VLAN + CARP working
yes. if you want more help, give more information.
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
SNIP
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://www.blug.linux.no/rfc1149/ http://www.datadok.no/ http://www.nuug.no/
I'm concerned about any harm done to the Avian Carriers during RFC 1149
implementation. An e
Good Morning,
I still seem to be having problems with PF+VLANs.
It seems that PF does not want to NAT traffic from my internal VLAN to my
external VLAN IP address.
Can someone advise if they have managed to get PF (NAT) + VLAN + CARP working,
and or if anyone has experienced the same issues as
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Henning Brauer wrote:
> * David Newman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-06-04 03:59]:
>> but it says carp doesn't work with bridging
>
> carp alows two hosts to share an IP.
> now explain me how that is supposed to work with bridges, where the
> forwarding
Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Exim ist GPL, Postfix is 'IBM public license'. Neither is BSD
> compatible.
As long as it's a matter of installing and using (not basing
developement on the code), you really do not risk any infection.
It is possible to use exim on OpenBSD, but it has
Hi,
modulate state isn't working on OpenBSD 4.1-stable amd64 with the bnx
NIC (Dell PowerEdge 2950). Using modulate state for connections on the
enc0 interface works just fine.
You can try it yourself at 87.230.56.80. SSH is reachable on port 22
with keep state (works) and port 8022 with modulate
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Hello,
I'm totally new to OBSD and have it installed on my 486 which acts
basically like a slim client allowing me to ssh in to my main box.
OBSD comes with sendmail which I have never knowingly used before and
while it works as-is for local mail
On Monday 04 June 2007 08:01, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm totally new to OBSD and have it installed on my 486 which acts
> basically like a slim client allowing me to ssh in to my main box.
>
> OBSD comes with sendmail which I have never knowingly used before and
> while it works as
RW wrote:
I have a Commell LE564 which will work happily with a serial console
including doing BIOS stuff.
I then did mkhybrid with all the buttons and knobs and burned the
resulting ISO to a CD.
Mounting it shows the expected directory structure and when it is
booted it announces that it is
2007/6/4, Marc Espie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
Also, beware of spaces in file.
For this kind of thing, I generally use 'while read'
Use xargs(1)
Best
Martin
> > It is the same scam and con artists behind this scheme as in the
> > other cases of amiga vapoware that we've seen over the course of the
> > last ten years or so.
> >
> > So please, don't start foaming at the mouth before you actually hold
> > one of these units in your hand.
>
> IMHO this a
Thus [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Peter N. M. Hansteen) spake on Mon, 04 Jun 2007
15:17:26 +0200:
> Douglas Allan Tutty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > However, sendmail is a very steep and tall learning curve. I'm
> > coming from Debian (which no longer installes with 32 MB ram) so
> > I'm used to exim
Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Hello,
I'm totally new to OBSD and have it installed on my 486 which acts
basically like a slim client allowing me to ssh in to my main box.
OBSD comes with sendmail which I have never knowingly used before and
while it works as-is for local mail delivery, I though
Douglas Allan Tutty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> However, sendmail is a very steep and tall learning curve. I'm coming
> from Debian (which no longer installes with 32 MB ram) so I'm used to
> exim. I know that exim is GPL. I'm wondering if there are other
> BSD-licensed MTAs.
exim is availab
Hello,
I'm totally new to OBSD and have it installed on my 486 which acts
basically like a slim client allowing me to ssh in to my main box.
OBSD comes with sendmail which I have never knowingly used before and
while it works as-is for local mail delivery, I thought I'd set it up to
send non-lo
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 09:52:19PM +1000, RW wrote:
| So I thought it would be cool to modify the CD boot to do the console
| switch that I remembered somebody describing some time back, and did
| the svnd mount of the cdrom41.fs, added /etc/ and put in a boot.conf
| containing "set tty com0". I no
Hello!
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:01:12PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
>[...]
>Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
>Also, beware of spaces in file.
>For this kind of thing, I generally use 'while read'
>find . -type f -name \*.htm -print|while read f; do sed s/old/new <"$
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 12:30:49AM -0700, Bryan Irvine wrote:
> On 6/4/07, David B. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >hi, I'm using 3.8, and I hate to bother, but I have spent two days on the
> >net trying to find the answer to this problem.
> >
> >I am using 'find' to batch file a sed search and repla
I have a Commell LE564 which will work happily with a serial console
including doing BIOS stuff.
The BIOS allows use of a USB CD drive and that works too. Well, it
works perfectly if you can just time it right and blindly type in the
magic string to redirect the console to com0 and then you can do
Hi All,
I have a problem with new installation on my new Intel board server.
However installing the OBSD 4.0 on the same server work. The OBSD 4.1
panic on uhci0, I think.
It said kernel panic and halt.
Dmesg from the same server with OBSD 4.0
OpenBSD 4.0 (GENERIC) #1107: Sat Sep 16 19:15:58 MD
2007/6/4, Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Hi,
>
> although I had a bunch of dual-head (or more) setups in my life, it was
> all in the sgi, Sun or Apple universe. I never did this on OpenBSD;
> however, as everything I touched during the years on OpenBSD machines
> ran out of the box :) I wo
On 2007/06/04 01:04, David B. wrote:
> Find . -name "*.htm" -exec 'sed s/old/new/' > '{}'.new
>
> From what I've read, I should be able to use the '{}' as a global replace;
you pass {} to the shell as part of the filename to redirect the
output from find(1) to, it is not seen by find(1) at all (a
Hi,
although I had a bunch of dual-head (or more) setups in my life, it was
all in the sgi, Sun or Apple universe. I never did this on OpenBSD;
however, as everything I touched during the years on OpenBSD machines
ran out of the box :) I wonder whether a dual (or triple screen) setup
is supported
* David Newman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-06-04 03:59]:
> but it says carp doesn't work with bridging
carp alows two hosts to share an IP.
now explain me how that is supposed to work with bridges, where the
forwarding does not happen at the IP layer.
--
Henning Brauer, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL
On Sun, Jun 03, 2007 at 09:46:44PM -0700, Lawrence Horvath wrote:
> I am working with a ThinkPad 365X that i am installing obsd
> on and
> would like wireless access on. it supports 2 type II or 1
> type III
> PCMCIA, I wanted a ral card however those only appear to
> come at the
> lowest as a C
Find . -name "*.htm" -exec 'sed s/old/new/' > '{}'.new
the above command is probably a sytnax error, due to unterminated
-exec (add \; at the end to fix this), that apart that command should
look for a command 'sed s/old/new/' (note: it should NOT invoke sed
command with s/old/new/ argument).
On 6/4/07, David B. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hi, I'm using 3.8, and I hate to bother, but I have spent two days on the
net trying to find the answer to this problem.
I am using 'find' to batch file a sed search and replace. Sed, of course,
outputs to stdout, the problem I am having is finding
On Mon, 4 Jun 2007, David B. wrote:
I am using 'find' to batch file a sed search and replace. Sed, of course,
outputs to stdout, the problem I am having is finding the correct syntax so
that I can change the extension of the input file to create the new output
file. For example:
Find . -na
Hi!
I noticed that on the EU order page, the XL "Wireframe Blowfish Shirt"
(#23) is on short supply. Anyone can recommend a place where I can get
one of those (I'm really not that beefy to fill in the XXL ;).
Thanks!
Daniel
hi, I'm using 3.8, and I hate to bother, but I have spent two days on the
net trying to find the answer to this problem.
I am using 'find' to batch file a sed search and replace. Sed, of course,
outputs to stdout, the problem I am having is finding the correct syntax so
that I can change the
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