On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 1:14 PM, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...
>> Now, if a comment line ends with "\", should the next line
>> be also treated as comment? I noticed this behaviour and I do
>> not know whether or not it should work like that.
>
> Well, because you used \ to end the l
I see on undeadly a call for testing uvideo(4) in CURRENT which seems to
require UVC (USB Video Class) compatible webcams.
Would that include the webcam built into last year's models of MacBook Pro?
What options, if any, are there for IEEE 1394? I have one such web cam
lying around.
Regards,
-L
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 5:39 PM, Claudio Jeker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...
> Nope. That is not the problem. The main issues is that a full view will
> need a lot of memory for the sysctl. This memory needs to be available as
> real memory because it is wired into the kernel. If you run bgpd with
S 0 N K A Y I T L A R =
3. Yvnetici Asistanl}p} Zirvesi
Zirve Konu~mac}lar}:
TANJU ARGUN -(Yonetim Danismani), PERIHAN YAZICI -(Northel Telecom -
Ingiltere), SERAP OZAY -(Alsim Alarko Yon. Asst.), KELLY HEVEL -(Yasam
Kocu - ABD), CANAN CETIN -(STM Savunma Teknolojileri Gn. Md. Asst.), Dr.
Freshly checked out -current doesn't build:
===> usr.sbin/rpc.lockd
cc -O2 -pipe -I. -DSYSLOG -c nlm_prot_svc.c
cc -O2 -pipe -I. -DSYSLOG -c /usr/src/usr.sbin/rpc.lockd/procs.c
cc -O2 -pipe -I. -DSYSLOG -c /usr/src/usr.sbin/rpc.lockd/lockd.c
nroff -Tascii -mandoc /usr/src/usr.sbin/rpc.lock
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 04:20:45PM -0700, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 3:47 PM, Toni Mueller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > as of today (I didn't notice it earlier), I see this problem on one of
> > my machines:
> >
> > # netstat -rnf inet
> > netstat: sysctl of routing table: C
On Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 3:47 PM, Toni Mueller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> as of today (I didn't notice it earlier), I see this problem on one of
> my machines:
>
> # netstat -rnf inet
> netstat: sysctl of routing table: Cannot allocate memory
"netstat -r" dumps the routing table by calling sysctl
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 11:24:32PM +0200, misc(at)openbsd.org wrote:
> Hello,
>
> it looks like the in-kernel pppoe causes systems to hang up sometimes. I
> testet with two systems (completly different hardware) and two different
> dsl-modems (I'm from germany - standard tcom modems).
> Did someon
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 12:47:26PM -0700, Lu Vo wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I set up 2 routers running openbgpd. The first one is working well. The
> 2nd one is not.
>
> I am seeing these errors in the syslog
>
> Jun 13 14:18:13 router2 bgpd[9453]: neighbor xxx.191.188.137: write error:
> Operati
Hello,
it looks like the in-kernel pppoe causes systems to hang up sometimes. I
testet with two systems (completly different hardware) and two different
dsl-modems (I'm from germany - standard tcom modems).
Did someone else notice such problems?
Here is my hostname.pppoe0:
#cat /etc/hostname.pppo
On 6/12/08 9:14 PM, Tim Donahue wrote:
Quoting David Newman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Looking for info on seeing near-real-time or real-time info on TCP
connection states using pftop.
A 4.3-release box has pf rules that allow Windows Remote Desktop
connections from a handful of sources.
pftop show
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 04:05:12PM -0400, alexander lind wrote:
> Hi all
>
> Is there currently any known method for detecting information about a
> machine behind a PF firewall?
>
> Specifically, if I have a machine with two IP addresses, is it
> possible for a remote attacker to detect that
Hi all
Is there currently any known method for detecting information about a
machine behind a PF firewall?
Specifically, if I have a machine with two IP addresses, is it
possible for a remote attacker to detect that these two IP addresses
are bound on the same machine (this machine would
Greetings,
I set up 2 routers running openbgpd. The first one is working well. The
2nd one is not.
I am seeing these errors in the syslog
Jun 13 14:18:13 router2 bgpd[9453]: neighbor xxx.191.188.137: write error:
Operation not permitted
Jun 13 14:22:23 router2 bgpd[9453]: neighbor xxx.191.188
Pieter Verberne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 10:08:47AM +, Nicolas Legrand wrote:
>> Igor Zinovik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> I'm moving from dwm to cwm. I think I've never felt so comfortable
>> with a WM, I'm very happy it's in base and I join you to thank the
>>
yes, not only that. reading through the linux
uvc driver i found the following comment.
---
/* Built-in iSight webcams are completely broken. They implement most
* of UVC 1.0, but the Apple engineers decided to use a completely
* different packet format, although the video data is in YUV. Were
*
> The man page for pf.conf says at some point:
>
> "Any lines beginning with a # are treated as comments and ignored."
Yes, pf.conf(5) says that about the table files.
About the main pf.conf(5) file itself, it says:
Comments can be put anywhere in the file using a hash mark (`#'), and ex-
http://linux-uvc.berlios.de/#footnote-4
{"iSight webcams require a proprietary firmware that can't be redistributed.
Tools to extract the firmware from the MacOS X driver and load it into the
device are available at http://bersace03.free.fr/ift/."}
-Nix Fan.
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 08:52:16AM -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> Alexander Polakov wrote:
> >* Predrag Punosevac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080613 18:19]:
> >
> >>Alexander Polakov wrote:
> >>
> >>>* Predrag Punosevac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080613 11:53]:
> >>>
> >>>
> Okan Demirmen w
Hi,
On Fri, 13.06.2008 at 06:52:00 -0600, macintoshzoom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have gnupg-1.4.8, and KDE KGpg, but no LDAP server support.
> It seems that this gnupg has an LDAP flavor, which I miss somehow to
> install.
>
> Should I have to uninstall and reinstall gnupg-1.4.8 from the com
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 10:08:47AM +, Nicolas Legrand wrote:
> Igor Zinovik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm moving from dwm to cwm. I think I've never felt so comfortable
> with a WM, I'm very happy it's in base and I join you to thank the
> devs. Thanks !
Really..? So a tilling window manag
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008, Ross Cameron wrote:
I'd get a replacement and if you can afford it,... submit a hardware sample fo
one of the dev's that like playing with
wireless drivers.
Personally I'm lucky all my hardware works (spend a fair bit of time making
sure of that though) so I haven't come
a
I'd get a replacement and if you can afford it,... submit a hardware sample
fo one of the dev's that like playing with wireless drivers.
Personally I'm lucky all my hardware works (spend a fair bit of time making
sure of that though) so I haven't come across something I need to submit
hardware for
Alexander Polakov wrote:
* Predrag Punosevac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080613 18:19]:
Alexander Polakov wrote:
* Predrag Punosevac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080613 11:53]:
Okan Demirmen wrote:
On Thu 2008.06.12 at 11:28 -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
Darrin Chandler wrote:
> # This \
> Thus \
> that \
> other
Clearly this is the intuitive way that should work, since all
other languages I know of parse like this.
If you want to disable multiple lines you have to comment them all
out. Use a decent editor if you think that is much of
Hi,
I just bought Realtek 8185 which won't work. I found
some mailinglist threads about it not being supported [1].
My question is: will they ever be or shall I just get a
replacement?
[1] http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=121167375211277&w=2
--
Antti Harri
Ooops! Lars answered to my mail. Means, I hadn't replied to misc@ but
the lazy in me just replied.
Louis V. Lambrecht wrote:
Lars NoodC)n wrote:
Jose Fragoso wrote:
Now, if a comment line ends with "\", should the next line
be also treated as comment? I noticed this behaviour and I do
not
On Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 08:44:56PM +0200, Pierre Riteau wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 01:13:05PM -0300, Daniel B. wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I can't get the response desired to some of the default keybindings in
> > cwm.
> >
> > Some of them: M-/, C-/, M-?. With the first and the third, I just hea
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 04:52:45PM +0300, Lars Noodin wrote:
> Louis V. Lambrecht wrote:
> > rem the backslash is used as an escape character in shell world.
>
> Yes, that's quite familiar and I use it a lot, both for long lines and
> for escaping special characters (quotes, etc). What is new use
Alexander Polakov wrote:
* Predrag Punosevac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080613 11:53]:
Okan Demirmen wrote:
On Thu 2008.06.12 at 11:28 -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
Daniel B. wrote:
Hi,
I can't get the response desired to some of the default keybindings in
cwm.
S
Louis V. Lambrecht wrote:
> rem the backslash is used as an escape character in shell world.
Yes, that's quite familiar and I use it a lot, both for long lines and
for escaping special characters (quotes, etc). What is new use to me is
that the comment lines can be affected. I simply hadn't trie
Jose Fragoso wrote:
> Now, if a comment line ends with "\", should the next line
> be also treated as comment? I noticed this behaviour and I do
> not know whether or not it should work like that.
Interesting. Good to know that. In a small rule set it's easy to
notice, though.
I'm able to dupl
I have gnupg-1.4.8, and KDE KGpg, but no LDAP server support.
It seems that this gnupg has an LDAP flavor, which I miss somehow to
install.
Should I have to uninstall and reinstall gnupg-1.4.8 from the command
line to enable this flavor (a bit of a pain as it is binded with KDE
etc), or is there a
Hi,
I am running OpenBSD 4.3 STABLE in an i386 machine.
The man page for pf.conf says at some point:
"Any lines beginning with a # are treated as comments and ignored."
Now, if a comment line ends with "\", should the next line
be also treated as comment? I noticed this behaviour and I do
not k
Paul de Weerd wrote:
> If your ISP doesn't offer IPv6 connectivity, be sure to ask them. And
> don't let them just reply a canned response...
>
> Make sure to at least put it on their radar.
I changed service plans somewhat recently and posed the IPv6 support
question as part of the negotiation.
I'm moving from dwm to cwm. I think I've never felt so comfortable
with a WM, I'm very happy it's in base and I join you to thank the
devs. Thanks !
Igor Zinovik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello.
>
> Yesterday i upgraded my X and now i'm playing with new tool called cwm.
> I like to than
On Jun 12, 2008, at 2:43 AM, Martin Toft wrote:
On Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 02:29:41AM -0700, Sean Kamath wrote:
Why is sendmail in /usr/src/gnu/usr.sbin?
sendmail is patently not a GNU application, and has a modified
Berkeley license?
Just askin'.
Sean
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=101014
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