On my firewall at home, on occasion, running systat queues leaves me with an
unresponsive system. pings are not returned and the keyboard at the console
is unresponsive. Sometimes the command works fine and sometimes it does
not--though it does system the issue is more likely to occur when the sy
On 06/18/10 18:59, Jeff Ross wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm building the first of a pair of firewalls to do carp and I'm running
> into a little hitch in the gitalong.
>
> These identical Silicon Mechanics iServ R200 servers have 1 72GB SCSI
> disk each (dmesg below) that I intend to use to store loc
On 06/18/10 09:42, Tony Berth wrote:
> when trying to patch a new i386 installation with the first patch I get the
> following:
...
> Patching file kerberosV/src/lib/krb5/crypto.c using Plan A...
> Hunk #1 succeeded at 3463 (offset 12 lines).
> Hunk #2 failed at 3543.
> Hunk #3 succeeded at 3607 (o
Hi,
I was reading ELF headers from different arches when I found that for
Loongson binaries em_machine==EM_MIPS. However, elf(5) and
elf_abi.h->sys/exec_elf.h describe EM_MIPS as "/* MIPS R3000
Big-Endian only */", whereas I think Loongson processors are little
endian(objdump says elf64-littlemips
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 12:06:00AM +, Matthew Szudzik wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 11:12:44PM +, Jacob Meuser wrote:
> > > And yt or youtube-dl from ports. Also, the greasmonkey scripts or
> > > whatever for firefox work great for youtube, vimeo and a few others.
> >
> > yeah, greasemo
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 11:12:44PM +, Jacob Meuser wrote:
> > And yt or youtube-dl from ports. Also, the greasmonkey scripts or
> > whatever for firefox work great for youtube, vimeo and a few others.
>
> yeah, greasemonkey + "youtube without flash auto" is *way* better
> than swfdec or gnash
Video playback is where I've had the most problems. NTFS support is read
only so as long as you're not dual booting I don't see this as a
problem.
Setting it up for the first time was a PITA but a good learning
experience though.
On Fri, 2010-06-18 at 13:59 +0200, Jean-Francois wrote:
> Hello All
>I'm writing a Nagios plugin to verify whether PF is enabled on a
> host, and I'm a bit stumped as to how to do it.
>
>pfctl -d and pfctl -e will tell me if it's already enabled or
> already disabled, but I don't want a setuid or sudo-enabled plugin
> to be manipulating a host's firewall.
Hey folks,
I'm writing a Nagios plugin to verify whether PF is enabled on a
host, and I'm a bit stumped as to how to do it.
pfctl -d and pfctl -e will tell me if it's already enabled or
already disabled, but I don't want a setuid or sudo-enabled plugin
to be manipulating a host's firewall.
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 02:31:52PM -0700, Noah Pugsley wrote:
> VICTOR TARABOLA CORTIANO wrote:
> >>The only thing I've pretty much given up on is flash. No big loss
> >>since removing the flashplayer plugin means firefox will crash
> >>slightly less often and you're spared a lot of the less usefu
Hi all,
I'm building the first of a pair of firewalls to do carp and I'm running
into a little hitch in the gitalong.
These identical Silicon Mechanics iServ R200 servers have 1 72GB SCSI
disk each (dmesg below) that I intend to use to store local copy backup
files for pushing up to our Amaz
Is there a line to be added to dhcpd.conf to tell dhcpd to attempt to update
bind9 with hostnames from dhcp client, BIND is configured to allow updates
from the lan, and dhcpd and BIND are running on the same machine, I've seen
other bind implementations that do this by default, and others still th
VICTOR TARABOLA CORTIANO wrote:
The only thing I've pretty much given up on is flash. No big loss
since removing the flashplayer plugin means firefox will crash
slightly less often and you're spared a lot of the less useful ads.
Well, one can still try Gnash or Swfdec.
If one just wants to s
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 4:04 PM, VICTOR TARABOLA CORTIANO <
vt...@c3sl.ufpr.br> wrote:
> > My question is simple, is OpenBSD convenient enough for a daily usage ?
> > What are the experiences about that ?
>
> I use OpenBSD exclusively as an desktop and I can do everything I want.
>
> Same here. O
> The only thing I've pretty much given up on is flash. No big loss
> since removing the flashplayer plugin means firefox will crash
> slightly less often and you're spared a lot of the less useful ads.
>
Well, one can still try Gnash or Swfdec.
If one just wants to see videos on Youtube, one ca
> Hello All,
>
> I am thinking about changing my OS to OpenBSD on my laptop, which is standard
> x86.
> It would be used as internet browser, mail client, multimedia, pciture &
> video
> , etc ...
>
There is software for multimedia manipulation that run on OpenBSD.
See if they are good for you.
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 2:49 PM, Peter Kay wrote:
> I've had variable experiences with VLC for video - it lost sync on earlier
> releases of OpenBSD and VLC but may have improved.
Best part about VLC issues is that - you can use mplayer! And if you
mplayer issues, you can use... VLC! Heh.
--
2010/6/18, Rioux, Christophe :
> Hi
>
> We tried to implemant a monitoring on a OpenBSD 4.4; I get an error message:
> index not found (monitoring via Cacti, means net-snmp). My Cacti server is
> hosted on another server.
So do we, our cacti is 0.8.7e, from some redhat repository quite some
time a
OpenBSD is absolutely fine for browser, mail and pictures. Once you install
gnome, the GUI will generally be the same as most other gnome desktops.
Flash and NTFS are sticking points. Neither work particularly well.
I've had variable experiences with VLC for video - it lost sync on earlier
releas
Chris Bennett writes:
> OpenBSD will take an older laptop that crawls under Windows and make
> it pleasantly useful.
And it will make even newer laptops more useful to some of us.
The only thing I've pretty much given up on is flash. No big loss
since removing the flashplayer plugin means fire
I saw on internet, there are the same issue on 4.6 and 4.7, but nowhere the
answer "how to"
-Message d'origine-
>From http://www.openbsd.org/security.html :
OpenBSD 4.5 and earlier releases are not supported anymore. The following
paragraphs only list advisories issued while they were mai
On Thu, Jun 17, 2010 at 01:35:29PM +0200, Robert wrote:
> Joachim Schipper wrote:
> >Easy enough, just create a softraid CRYPTO volume on top of a softraid
> >RAID-0 volume. Do keep good backups, including of the key you use.
>
> I remember that I asked something similar a year ago and the answer
Hi there.
There were different errors on the last email. For the first rdr-to I
have lost the direction, and for the second rule host specification, the
same with different host.
But today, reading these mail, I've another question:
the rdr-to rules does not accept only inbound packet?
thank
>From http://www.openbsd.org/security.html :
OpenBSD 4.5 and earlier releases are not supported anymore. The
following paragraphs only list advisories issued while they were
maintained; these releases are likely to be affected by the advisories
for more recent releases.
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 4:
The same issue here - with different hardware - Supermicro X8DTU and
it's built-in dual Intel 82576 nics.
Running 4.7-patch.
Fails to initialize most of the time at boot (always em1), now and
then it works (initializes and gets link after boot). em0 rarely
fails to initialize, but also rarely ne
Hi
We tried to implemant a monitoring on a OpenBSD 4.4; I get an error message:
index not found (monitoring via Cacti, means net-snmp). My Cacti server is
hosted on another server.
I check the OID per snmp: .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.1 (this OID search the interface,
and go down to the values)
* In the 4
when trying to patch a new i386 installation with the first patch I get the
following:
# patch -p0 < 001_kerberos.patch
Hmm... Looks like a unified diff to me...
The text leading up to this was:
--
|Apply by doing:
| cd /usr/src
| patch
On 2010/06/18 05:13, Siju George wrote:
> On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 11:33 PM, Stuart Henderson
> wrote:
> >
> > Are you able to try any different types of NIC? (either a newer realtek
> > card using the re(4) driver, or something like fxp, de, sk, bge, em).
> >
> > Alternatively, connecting the mod
On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 11:33 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> Are you able to try any different types of NIC? (either a newer realtek
> card using the re(4) driver, or something like fxp, de, sk, bge, em).
>
> Alternatively, connecting the modem via a switch might work.
>
>
IT didnt work :-)
But
Jean-Francois wrote:
Hello All,
I am thinking about changing my OS to OpenBSD on my laptop, which is standard
x86.
I thought from your previous postings you already do all this and more.
It would be used as internet browser, mail client, multimedia, pciture & video
, etc ...
It is perfect
Simple answer: it can. I'm using OpenBSD as a desktop OS for my T40 and I'm
able to do anything I need.
2010/6/18 Jussi Peltola
> Search the archives.
See FAQ http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq1.html#Desktop
I've been using OpenBSD (mostly on laptops) as my primary work station
for eight years. I'm a software developer, and I don't do sound or
video as part of my work. Also, I don't have any use for NTFS.
Andreas
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 01:59:22
Jean-Francois wrote:
Hello All,
I am thinking about changing my OS to OpenBSD on my laptop, which is standard
x86.
It would be used as internet browser, mail client, multimedia, pciture & video
, etc ...
My question is simple, is OpenBSD convenient enough for a daily usage ?
What are the exp
Search the archives.
With USB-attached UPS, nut requires correct permissions not only for
/dev/ugen0.* but also for /dev/usb* to perform bus scan.
I do believe that +DISPLAY for nut port should reflect this fact so
one will have a chance to succeed without USB_DEBUG dance.
Here is my results:
battery.charge: 100
bat
There is a nice thing called FAQ. It's MUST READ for everyone on any
OS before start. And you can find things like this one
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq1.html#Desktop inside.
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 1:59 PM, Jean-Francois wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> I am thinking about changing my OS to OpenBSD on
Hello All,
I am thinking about changing my OS to OpenBSD on my laptop, which is standard
x86.
It would be used as internet browser, mail client, multimedia, pciture & video
, etc ...
My question is simple, is OpenBSD convenient enough for a daily usage ?
What are the experiences about that ?
J
There must be two upstream firewalls from our servers that are adding
X-Forwarded-For IP addresses. We curently have
header change "X-Forwarded-For" to "$REMOTE_ADDR"
but this is not giving us the IP that we want so we are trying to figure
out how to get the other IP from the header. Is there
On 2010-06-17, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
> Hi stuart. Thanks for the reply. Can you give me a valid example to
> understand this directive?
> Reading man pages and on the web I understand that with match directive,
> the quick keyword has no durable effect, and the match directive set on
> the fl
On Fri, 18 Jun 2010 07:08:01 -0400, Eric Furman wrote:
>On Fri, 18 Jun 2010 07:05 +0200, "Han Boetes"
>wrote:
>> Joachim Schipper wrote:
>> > The OpenBSD culture is not one of HOWTOs. You'll have to read
>> > the man pages and FAQ to get the information, I'm afraid.
>>
>> The FAQ is just another
On Fri, 18 Jun 2010 07:05 +0200, "Han Boetes"
wrote:
> Joachim Schipper wrote:
> > The OpenBSD culture is not one of HOWTOs. You'll have to read
> > the man pages and FAQ to get the information, I'm afraid.
>
> The FAQ is just another word for HOWTOs.
The FAQ is not a HOWTO.
It is much more than
Sevan / Venture37 gmail.com> writes:
>
> On 4 June 2010 16:57, Joerg Streckfuss dfn-cert.de> wrote:
> > Okey, we tested the newest snapshot but the issue remains.
> >
> > Any other clue?
> >
> > Joerg
>
> fire up sendbug
>
>
Exactly the same problem here on 5 different HP machines with rec
On Fri, 18 Jun 2010 09:17:40 +0800 (SGT)
Kabayan wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm using OpenBSD 4.7 (GENERIC.MP) #9: Mon Mar 15 03:09:48 WIT 2010
> I got problem about ospf traffic, the default traffic is too high,
> almost all traffic got to the default queue.
>
> I have checked using tcpdump for pfl
Why do you need X for your root user?
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 8:44 AM, Tito Mari Francis EscaC1o
wrote:
> Have read portions of that, thanks for pointing it out, but I need the
> WindowMaker-specific command. On that documentation section, it focuses on
> cwm as the replacement window manager. As
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