On 10/19/07, Gregg Reynolds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 10/19/07, Ted Unangst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > no, because that section is talking about files, not directories.
>
> A directory is a kind of file:
>
> "file
> "An object that can be written to, or read from, or both. A file has
> ce
On 10/18/07, Richard Toohey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> # diff -u /tmp/cp.c cp.c
> --- /tmp/cp.c Thu Oct 18 21:50:07 2007
> +++ cp.cThu Oct 18 22:48:37 2007
> @@ -237,6 +237,10 @@
> */
> type = FILE_TO_DIR;
> + if (type == FILE_TO_DIR)
> +
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Thus "Tony Sarendal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake on Sat, 20 Oct 2007
18:16:21 +0100:
> On 10/20/07, Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Hi list,
> >
> > on a customers' site I have a problem connecting from within their
> > LAN (OpenBSD m
On 10/20/07, Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi list,
>
> on a customers' site I have a problem connecting from within their
> LAN (OpenBSD machine) crossing their router (Linksys BEFSX41, doing
> NAT) to a machine on the internet via SSH: Sessions die after some time
> due to 'timeout
Hi list,
on a customers' site I have a problem connecting from within their
LAN (OpenBSD machine) crossing their router (Linksys BEFSX41, doing
NAT) to a machine on the internet via SSH: Sessions die after some time
due to 'timeouts'.
If the connection is not used heavily (e.g. showing top(1)) it
On 10/20/07, Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> * Tony Sarendal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 13:24]:
> > Once I have a few moments free I'll check the impact of pf with urpf and
> > basic stateless filters
> > filters enabled. Time to go look for a light sabre for my son.
>
> stateles
I run -current i386, and am having trouble with kernels built after 5 October.
They hang during boot, and I cannot break into ddb, even with db_console set
to 1 in advance via DDB_SAFE_CONSOLE or setting the field manually after
boot -d.
The symptom: hang after normal kernel message: "Kernelized
Out of curiosity what are these two extremely rare cases?
Thanks,
-Josh
On 10/20/07, Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * Joshua Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 13:05]:
> > Slightly OT, so feel free to move this to a new thread, but exactly
> > what would you use ifbound states to
> The last time I set an Apple base station up for someone the Apple setup
> program was necessary and they only had Mac and Windows versions.
There is a Java-base AirPort Base Station Configurator at
http://gicl.cs.drexel.edu/people/sevy/airport/
I have not tested it on OpenBSD.
* Tony Sarendal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 13:24]:
> Once I have a few moments free I'll check the impact of pf with urpf and
> basic stateless filters
> filters enabled. Time to go look for a light sabre for my son.
stateless filters? why oh why? they're SLOWER than stateful. far.
--
Henni
* Joshua Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 13:05]:
> Slightly OT, so feel free to move this to a new thread, but exactly
> what would you use ifbound states to achieve?
there are two extremely rare cases I am aware of, so the general rule
is: YOU DON'T.
--
Henning Brauer, [EMAIL PROTECTED],
On Saturday 20 October 2007, Chris wrote:
> If anyone knows any known issues and would like to share
The last time I set an Apple base station up for someone the Apple setup
program was necessary and they only had Mac and Windows versions. There was
no CLI or web based front-end. Unless that cha
I have an Airport Extreme Base Station, and after experimenting with CUPS
and consulting several Linux-related websites, I was unable to figure out
how to share an HP LaserJet 1200 with my T60 under OpenBSD.
In the end, I decided that it's best not to share a printer over a
wireless network, si
Hi!
Better to use login_radius authentication, you don't need to install any
ports,
it's in the base system. And in order to encrypt LDAP connections
you need to setup an Enterprise CA in the Windows domain, which
you might or might not want to do. Radius support is builtin and supports
point-2-po
I do believe so, yes.
a.padilla
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Oct 20, 2007, at 5:59 AM, Tom Van Looy wrote:
> on unix everything is a file?
>
>
>> - Oorspronkelijk bericht -
>> Van: Ted Unangst [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Verzonden: zaterdag, oktober 20, 2007 01:18 AM
>> Aan: 'Aaron W. Hsu'
>>
Hi!
I have a box with two external ISDN modems attached to it that acts as an
outgoing modem pool to a number of remote located ISDN routers (zyxel P-202H
Plus v2).
Recently I was given the go-ahead to upgrade this 3.6 box so I swapped the
disk with a new one with a fresh install of 4.1 (4.2 cds
Marc Balmer wrote:
Hello
I am currently in Istanbul attending the 1st International BSD
Conference in Turkey (see www.opencon.tr for details).
This, of course, should read www.bsdcontr.org. Sorry for any
confusion.
This conference is very well organized and on the first day
about 200 peop
On 10/20/07, Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> * Tony Sarendal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 09:49]:
> > I performed some quick additional tests with OpenBSD and vlan's just
> > for the fun of it, although I belive these tests were more about
> OpenBSD's
> > performance with lots of i
On Sat, Oct 20, 2007 at 09:59:26AM +, Tom Van Looy wrote:
| on unix everything is a file?
Almost everything.
However, within 'files' you can make a distinction between directories
and regular files (and other types). When making this distinction,
people often tend to skip the 'regular' part,
Slightly OT, so feel free to move this to a new thread, but exactly
what would you use ifbound states to achieve?
Thanks,
Josh
On 10/20/07, Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * Joe Gibbens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 02:03]:
> > As Sebastian pointed out, you will need to do some sta
On Sat, 20 Oct 2007 09:59:26 +, Tom Van Looy wrote:
>on unix everything is a file?
Always has been.
At least as far back as I can remember - about early 1978.
Probably always will.
And, given the thread running here, my second edition of the Unix
Programmers Manual vol 1 from those days stat
* Joe Gibbens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 02:03]:
> As Sebastian pointed out, you will need to do some state manipulation to
> apply your traffic flows to an up and down queue. You can also do this by
> setting your state-policy to be if-bound.
it is 'advice' like this that makes me wanna rem
* Tony Sarendal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-10-20 09:49]:
> I performed some quick additional tests with OpenBSD and vlan's just
> for the fun of it, although I belive these tests were more about OpenBSD's
> performance with lots of interfaces.
>
> If you want a openbsd router/firewall with 4000 int
on unix everything is a file?
>- Oorspronkelijk bericht -
>Van: Ted Unangst [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Verzonden: zaterdag, oktober 20, 2007 01:18 AM
>Aan: 'Aaron W. Hsu'
>CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], misc@openbsd.org
>Onderwerp: Re: cp(1) bug ?
>
>On 10/19/07, Aaron W. Hsu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
2007/10/19, Vadim Jukov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> After digging in Linux HUD driver and checking again usbhidctl output, I
> realized that sometimes (and looks like in my case too) the wheel is
> represented by HID consumer "AC Pan" device. But when I just simply add
> test for this device in attach f
On 20/10/2007, Aaron W. Hsu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > From: "Tom Van Looy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 20:21:56 +
> > Subject: Re: cp(1) bug ?
> >
> > it shall do nothing more with source_file and shall go on to any
> > remaining files.
>
> Doesn't this mean that cp shou
Lars NoodC)n wrote:
...
> Excellent. There appear to be some flyers ready as well:
> http://www.fosdem.org/2008/support/promote
Except that my eyes must have crossed when posting. The fliers linked
to on the 2008 page are one promoting the 2007 conference.
-Lars
nicodache wrote:
> Website is up, date are announced.
Excellent. There appear to be some flyers ready as well:
http://www.fosdem.org/2008/support/promote
> The Free and Opensource Sofware Developer's European Meeting will, as
> usual, take place at the Universiti Libre de Bruxelles, Camp
I performed some quick additional tests with OpenBSD and vlan's just
for the fun of it, although I belive these tests were more about OpenBSD's
performance with lots of interfaces.
If you want a openbsd router/firewall with 4000 interfaces don't go for a
low-end CPU =)
http://www.layer17.net/open
I want to buy one of these to share a Brother MFC-215C printer. My
wireless (wpi) is detected on my T60 laptop and it's on 802.11g.
If anyone knows any known issues and would like to share, that would
be appreciated. Thanks.
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