I ran a firewall/server for a year on a flash stick with full logging.
No problems.
As an ex-chip-verification-engineer, the BIG caveat is temperature.
Failures will at least double for every 10C above 20C or so.
Heat is electronics most vicious enemy.
geoff steckel
curmudgeon for hire, rent, or
On Sat, 22 May 2010 10:59:10 +0700, patrick keshishian
wrote:
look at "2010/05/09 - system Makefile changes" in the same
current.html document.
Viola, I guess I missed that one. I'll be careful next time.
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 8:12 PM, Insan Praja SW
wrote:
Hi Misc@,
I'm trying to
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 2:04 PM, Henning Brauer
wrote:
>
> I'm talking about common flash types. no specific products.
>
Sorry to confuse you :-( I was also not talking about products but the
two differrent category of stuff both commonly called here as flash
Thanks
--Siju
I've lost 3 due to washing...
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 05:28:06PM -0700, Greg Thomas wrote:
>On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 7:11 AM, Marco Peereboom
>wrote:
>
> USB sticks primary cause of death is the washing machine and/or dryer.
> Second one probably is sitting out in the sun.
>
Hi Misc@,
I'm trying to update one of my machine to latest current, while compiling
mandoc(1) to follow http://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html#20100403
instructions I got the following error.
$ cd /usr/src/usr.bin/mandoc/
$ sudo make obj
Password:
"Makefile", line 9: Malformed conditional (
I've considered migrating my macro-based interface names to interface
groups, but, it appears, altq does not grok interface groups--and pfctl
spits back a pfctl: SIOCGIFMTU: Device not configured when I try. Am I
missing something here? pf.conf's BNF, it appears, says I'm not...
Water by itself is pretty harmless to most electronic components - as
long as
there is no power present. If it is thoroughly and completely dried
before
power is applied, there's unlikely to be any issues.
Even the heat of the drier is unlikely to be a problem. Consumer
electronic
components a
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 7:11 AM, Marco Peereboom wrote:
>
> USB sticks primary cause of death is the washing machine and/or dryer.
> Second one probably is sitting out in the sun.
> I have yet to see the USB stick that dies because it was written to.
>
>
Funny thing is I still haven't killed one
On Fri, 21 May 2010 10:13:33 -0700 Siju George
wrote:
> On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 7:11 AM, Marco Peereboom
> wrote
> >
> > USB sticks primary cause of death is the washing machine and/or
> > dryer. Second one probably is sitting out in the sun.
> > I have yet to see the USB stick that dies because
* Siju George [2010-05-21 19:13]:
> On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 9:53 AM, Henning Brauer wrote:
> >
> > 2) flash never fails, right. fuck redundancy, I have flash!
> >
>
> when you say flash are you talking about
>
> http://www.transcendusa.com/products/ModDetail.asp?ModNo=177
>
> or
>
> http://en
Jan Stary wrote:
On May 21 16:28:32, John Rowe wrote:
On Fri, 2010-05-21 at 11:25 +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
1000 writes.
However, the
On May 21 16:28:32, John Rowe wrote:
> On Fri, 2010-05-21 at 11:25 +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
>
> > If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
> > 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
> > 1000 writes.
>
> However, the root partion is
On Sun, May 16, 2010 at 1:52 PM, Henning Brauer wrote:
> personally I have not run into a cisco broken like that, but I rarely
> use that shit any more.
> and dell/sonicwall, leave me alone.
>
what do you use then?
thanks
--Siju
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 05:05:19PM +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> > > If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
> > > 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
> > > 1000 writes.
> >
> > cut the crap. take a random usb stick and don't mail m
> > However, the root partion is not often written to so presumably I could
> > have / on the USB stick and swap, /var, /usr, /tmp et al. on a mirrored
> > pair?
> >
You probably already have, but it's often a good idea to have a
separate /var/log partition to allow more control over running out
On Fri, 21 May 2010 16:28:32 +0100
John Rowe wrote:
> On Fri, 2010-05-21 at 11:25 +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
>
> > If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
> > 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
> > 1000 writes.
>
> However, the
> > If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
> > 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
> > 1000 writes.
>
> cut the crap. take a random usb stick and don't mail misc until it
> fails due to exceeded write cycles. we'll never again hear
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 7:11 AM, Marco Peereboom wrote
>
> USB sticks primary cause of death is the washing machine and/or dryer.
> Second one probably is sitting out in the sun.
> I have yet to see the USB stick that dies because it was written to.
>
A bit confusing :-(
http://www.mail-archive.
On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 9:53 AM, Henning Brauer wrote:
>
> 2) flash never fails, right. fuck redundancy, I have flash!
>
when you say flash are you talking about
http://www.transcendusa.com/products/ModDetail.asp?ModNo=177
or
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_flash_drive
the first one is said
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 04:28:32PM +0100, John Rowe wrote:
> On Fri, 2010-05-21 at 11:25 +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
>
> > If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
> > 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
> > 1000 writes.
>
> However
En caso de no poder ver correctamente este correo favor de dar haga clic aqum
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On Fri, 2010-05-21 at 11:25 +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
> 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
> 1000 writes.
However, the root partion is not often written to so presumably I could
have / o
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 11:25:00AM +0100, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Thu, 20 May 2010 18:53:38 +0200
> Henning Brauer wrote:
>
> > * Xavier Beaudouin [2010-05-20 17:34]:
> > > And if you don't want to suffer because of a harddisk failure you can
> > > also use
> > > flashrd to make the openbsd
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 09:01, Henning Brauer wrote:
>> If you check usb flash stick packaging, it may say guaranteed for a
>> 1000 writes which is marketing crypto speech for, sectors may fail after
>> 1000 writes.
>
> cut the crap. take a random usb stick and don't mail misc until it
> fails due
* Kevin Chadwick [2010-05-21 11:28]:
> On Thu, 20 May 2010 18:53:38 +0200
> Henning Brauer wrote:
>
> > * Xavier Beaudouin [2010-05-20 17:34]:
> > > And if you don't want to suffer because of a harddisk failure you can
> > > also use
> > > flashrd to make the openbsd stuff on a DOM, a Compact
2010/5/21 Martin Pelikan :
>> What's the preferred method in the day of OpenBSD 4.7?
>
> To search before typing?
+1
Hi
did you actually read any piece of documentation about the topic?
Manual pages like ipsec(4) for overview, ipsec.conf(5) for
configuration and isakmpd(8) + keynote(3,4,5) + openssl(1) + authpf(8)
for possible ways of authenticating your warriors.
> I've found many examples via Google. Some are
Hi all,
As the subject says, I've found a few lines like that in /var/log/messages:
[...]
/bsd: WARNING: mclpools limit reached; increase kern.maxclusters
[...]
The box is a 4.6 -STABLE with PF doing FW functions (moving 300/400Mbps)
and always has worked like a charm.
I've noticed when thes
Found it
thanks everybody
On Fri, 21 May 2010 16:29:11 +0400
Sergey Bronnikov wrote:
> hardware switch is "switch" on front of notebook.
> For example, when I disable WiFI on my W500 following lines appears
> in dmesg:
>
> iwn0: RF switch: radio disabled
> iwn0: Radio transmitter is off
So after turn off of ACPI he was able to boot so here some additional
details. All of this is available here (including acpidump)
http://leteckaposta.cz/141263795
Domain /dev/pci0:
0:0:0: Intel GM45 Host
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 2a40
0x0004: Command: 0006 Status ID: 209
So after turn off of ACPI he was able to boot so here some additional
details. All of this is available here (including acpidump)
http://leteckaposta.cz/141263795
OpenBSD 4.7-current (GENERIC.MP) #567: Thu May 20 19:32:54 MDT 2010
dera...@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERI
hardware switch is "switch" on front of notebook.
For example, when I disable WiFI on my W500 following lines appears in dmesg:
iwn0: RF switch: radio disabled
iwn0: Radio transmitter is off
iwn0: RF switch: radio disabled
iwn0: RF switch: radio enabled
see on image - http://www.notebookcheck.ne
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 02:11:04PM +0200, Joachim Schipper wrote:
> On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 02:53:51PM +0300, Gregory Edigarov wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Where is that 'hardware switch'?
>
> It may be on the left side, a very small switch near the front. I think
> my SL510 has that switch there.
..
Comunicazione di servizio per i clienti Banca Mediolanum.
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alla sicurezza informatica
it is usually an actual switch on the side of your laptop. It may also
be a special [fn] key, with the picture of a radio, or other icons.
Please consult the user manual for your computer.
On 2010 May 21 (Fri) at 14:53:51 +0300 (+0300), Gregory Edigarov wrote:
:Hi,
:
:Where is that 'hardware swi
OpenBSD version? Dmesg? The man of iwn(4) it's pretty clear about that error.
2010/5/21 Gregory Edigarov :
> Hi,
>
> Where is that 'hardware switch'?
>
>
> --
> With best regards,
>Gregory Edigarov
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 02:53:51PM +0300, Gregory Edigarov wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Where is that 'hardware switch'?
It may be on the left side, a very small switch near the front. I think
my SL510 has that switch there.
Joachim
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 6:39 AM, Lars Hecking
wrote:
> Neal Hogan writes:
>> On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 4:37 AM, wrote:
>> > ?I've used the same pf.conf for years with only minimal changes, but 4.7
>> > ?broke it, and I can't seem to fix it.
>> >
>>
>> Reconsider the PF documentation. There have be
Hi,
Where is that 'hardware switch'?
--
With best regards,
Gregory Edigarov
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 4:37 AM, wrote:
> I've used the same pf.conf for years with only minimal changes, but 4.7
> broke it, and I can't seem to fix it.
>
Reconsider the PF documentation. There have been some changes to the
syntax in 4.7.
> The OBSD machine is a firwall between a cable mode
Am 20.05.2010 um 22:07 schrieb Reyk Floeter:
I will try the following with unmanaged switches, no RST:
+---+ +--+
|fw1|+-+ | |
+em1++ sw1 +---+ |
carp0|em2+--+ +-+-+-+em0| |
| | | | |
Meh I'm stupid. I totally forgot about option to disable ACPI.
Especially when he has this bloated laptop. Thanks for point.
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 12:38 PM, Jan Stary wrote:
> On May 21 11:37:40, Tomas Bodzar wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> my friend is trying OpenBSD on his laptop. Installation is goi
On Fri, 21 May 2010 12:02:53 +0200 Christer Solskogen
wrote:
> Just a wild guess, but what about primary (.p) and slave (.s)?
There are at least two build machines for each supported arch, one for
src and the other for ports. If you want to see a new arch supported,
then you donate at least two m
On May 21 11:37:40, Tomas Bodzar wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> my friend is trying OpenBSD on his laptop. Installation is going fine,
> but then whe he wants to boot he gets this :
>
> npx0 at isa0 port 0xf0/16: reported by CPUID; using exception 16
>
> mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support
> copyvalue: efff002
You're best off raising a bug report, use the sendbug(1) tool to
include the baseline required info then add the additional info you've
gathered to the generated PR.
Sevan / Venture37
src and ports
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 11:47:07AM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> On May 21 08:15:18, Keith wrote:
> > http://www.openbsd.org/images/rack2009.jpg
>
> What's the difference between the ".s" machines (left)
> and the ".p" machines (right)?
# dmesg
[ using 477768 bytes of bsd ELF symbol table ]
Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1993
The Regents of the University of California. All rights
reserved. Copyright (c) 1995-2010 OpenBSD. All rights reserved.
http://www.OpenBSD.org
OpenBSD 4.7-current (GENERIC-IP32) #228: Wed May
On Mon, 17 May 2010 23:14:17 -0600 (MDT) David Coppa
> Date: Mon, 17 May 2010 23:14:17 -0600 (MDT)
> From: David Coppa dco...@! cvs.openbsd.org
>
> CVSROOT: /cvs
> Module name: ports
> Changes by: dco...@! cvs.openbsd.org2010/05/17 23:14:17
>
> Modified files:
> x11/mplayer
On Fri, 21 May 2010 03:15:50 -0300
"VICTOR TARABOLA CORTIANO" wrote:
> > > Considering theora's 0% adoption rate,
> >
> > Wikipedia/Wikimedia Commons used to be a 100% Theora shop when it came
> > to video, but I'm no longer up to date, and things might have changed.
> >
>
> It still is.
>
> So
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If you cannot see the image(s), please click here
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On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 11:47 AM, Jan Stary wrote:
> On May 21 08:15:18, Keith wrote:
>> http://www.openbsd.org/images/rack2009.jpg
>
> What's the difference between the ".s" machines (left)
> and the ".p" machines (right)?
>
Just a wild guess, but what about primary (.p) and slave (.s)?
--
ch
On 21/05/2010, at 5:43 PM, Leonardo Lombardo wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> can someone describe me exactly how hfsc service curve works ?
>
> I've tried playing with this parameter but with no success. I think if I
specify something like upperlimit(x, n, y) then tcp connections that are in
that queue will
On 05/21/10 05:37, lheck...@users.sourceforge.net wrote:
rdr on $ext_if proto tcp from $work_hosts to any port ssh -> $ssh_host
pass in quick on $ext_if proto tcp \
from $work_hosts to $ssh_host port ssh flags S/SA modulate state
In 4.7, I changed this to
match in on $ext_if proto tcp
On May 21 08:15:18, Keith wrote:
> http://www.openbsd.org/images/rack2009.jpg
What's the difference between the ".s" machines (left)
and the ".p" machines (right)?
Hi all,
my friend is trying OpenBSD on his laptop. Installation is going fine,
but then whe he wants to boot he gets this :
npx0 at isa0 port 0xf0/16: reported by CPUID; using exception 16
mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support
copyvalue: efff0021Store to default type! efff0021
883d Called: /_SV_.PCI0.
I've used the same pf.conf for years with only minimal changes, but 4.7
broke it, and I can't seem to fix it.
The OBSD machine is a firwall between a cable modem and a private IP LAN.
Previously, I used these rules to allow ssh access from specific Internet
hosts to a machine in the LAN:
rdr
On 5/21/10 3:43 AM, Leonardo Lombardo wrote:
can someone describe me exactly how hfsc service curve works ?
Read this and it should provide a pretty good idea.
https://calomel.org/pf_hfsc.html
And complete your learning with the man page.
Best,
Daniel
On Thu, 20 May 2010 18:53:38 +0200
Henning Brauer wrote:
> * Xavier Beaudouin [2010-05-20 17:34]:
> > And if you don't want to suffer because of a harddisk failure you can also
> > use
> > flashrd to make the openbsd stuff on a DOM, a Compact Flash or even an USB
> > key.
>
> 1) flashrd and fr
Hi all,
can someone describe me exactly how hfsc service curve works ?
I've tried playing with this parameter but with no success. I think if I
specify something like upperlimit(x, n, y) then tcp connections that are
in that queue will get at most x for n milliseconds and then y for the
rest
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 12:22:10AM +0200, Reyk Floeter wrote:
> > Linux's bonding module has an arp monitor which solves some of these
> > problems, but the implementation is so hackish (as usual there...) that
> > I'd rather not use it in production. arping and ifstated might do the
> > same on op
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 12:15 AM, Keith wrote:
> Just spotted a tiny wee picture on the bottom of the home page that I hadn't
> seen before. It appears to be someones server rack from 2009 !
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/images/rack2009.jpg
>
> I see a Mac server (ppc ?) in the photo. We tried to ins
Just spotted a tiny wee picture on the bottom of the home page that I
hadn't seen before. It appears to be someones server rack from 2009 !
http://www.openbsd.org/images/rack2009.jpg
I see a Mac server (ppc ?) in the photo. We tried to install OBSD onto
one a while ago but I couldn't figure ou
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