On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 9:45 PM, William Boshuck wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 01:18:41PM -0500, Chris Bennett wrote:
>
>> OpenBSD's form of sed requires you to output to a new file and
>> mv that back to original.
>
> .. or one could use ed, or perl, to change a file in place.
What happens if
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Re
google is your friend
http://openbsd.wikia.com/wiki/Creating_a_custom_OpenBSD_RAM_disk
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 2:25 PM, Rodrigo Mosconi
wrote:
> Dears,
>
> I wonder how to create a custom ramdisk. My needs are a RAMDISK with the
> network setup (hostname.if, for example) to setup servers over th
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 12:53:51 +, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
>On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 13:00:09 +1100
>Rod Whitworth wrote:
>
>> Not true. See a follow up mail written by a total expert about the
>> Viking:
>> http://www.mail-archive.com/misc@openbsd.org/msg76549.html
>> ;-)
>>
>Not true, asin not adsl2+
Hi,
I'm testing a new setup of a pair of firewalls (master/backup) using
carp, pfsync etc.
Can I use ifstated to monitor virtual interfaces like pfsync0 and enc0?
I want the master after it reboots (if backup is up) to wait for pfsync0
interface to come up, get the missing states from backup
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 01:18:41PM -0500, Chris Bennett wrote:
> OpenBSD's form of sed requires you to output to a new file and
> mv that back to original.
.. or one could use ed, or perl, to change a file in place.
-wb
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 20:53:19 +
Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 16:25:02 -0300
> Rodrigo Mosconi wrote:
>
> > Dears,
> >
> > I wonder how to create a custom ramdisk. My needs are a RAMDISK
> > with the network setup (hostname.if, for example) to setup servers
> > over the networ
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 16:25:02 -0300
Rodrigo Mosconi wrote:
> Dears,
>
> I wonder how to create a custom ramdisk. My needs are a RAMDISK with the
> network setup (hostname.if, for example) to setup servers over the network.
>
> Thanks,
>
man mfs
Dears,
I wonder how to create a custom ramdisk. My needs are a RAMDISK with the
network setup (hostname.if, for example) to setup servers over the network.
Thanks,
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 13:18:41 -0500
Chris Bennett wrote:
> OpenBSD's form of sed requires you to output to a new file and mv that back
> to original. But that isn't a big deal.
I'm fairly sure that that is what all seds do but just hide it from the
user. Easier to use but raises questions about s
On 2011-03-21, Steve Clarke wrote:
> I have read on the hindernet, that to remove a user from a group,
> you simply run usermod -G, and omit the group that you want the
> user to be removed from. These posts are often associated with
> HPUX and Solaris.
>
> The same does not work with OpenBSD, an
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 05:50:37PM +, Steve Clarke wrote:
> I have read on the hindernet, that to remove a user from a group,
> you simply run usermod -G, and omit the group that you want the
> user to be removed from. These posts are often associated with
> HPUX and Solaris.
>
> The same do
I have read on the hindernet, that to remove a user from a group,
you simply run usermod -G, and omit the group that you want the
user to be removed from. These posts are often associated with
HPUX and Solaris.
The same does not work with OpenBSD, and on looking into the code
(user.c), it is cl
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* Vous devez activer l'affichage des images pour lire ce message !
Hi all,
is some developer interested to see details of my acpi tables? May I
send them as .tgz file to someone?
Thanks a lot
$ sudo acpidump -o dell
acpidump: RSDT entry 7 is corrupt
$
$ cat /var/run/dmesg.boot
OpenBSD 4.9 (GENERIC.MP) #794: Wed Mar 2 07:19:02 MST 2011
dera...@i386.openbs
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 02:45:35PM +0100, Henning Brauer wrote:
> * jirib [2011-03-21 09:55]:
> > On Sat, 19 Mar 2011 21:28:09 +0100
> > Henning Brauer wrote:
> > > > it was working for me - rdr-to outbound to a daemon on the firewall
> > > > itself, but I deleted that virtual machine...
> > > >
* jirib [2011-03-21 09:55]:
> On Sat, 19 Mar 2011 21:28:09 +0100
> Henning Brauer wrote:
> > > it was working for me - rdr-to outbound to a daemon on the firewall
> > > itself, but I deleted that virtual machine...
> > >rdr-to is usually applied inbound. If applied
> > > outbound
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 13:00:09 +1100
Rod Whitworth wrote:
> Not true. See a follow up mail written by a total expert about the
> Viking:
> http://www.mail-archive.com/misc@openbsd.org/msg76549.html
> ;-)
>
Not true, asin not adsl2+ or no onboard os?
Couldn't find that info unless you mean it being
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 03:09:07 +
timothyalegge wrote:
> I've had a good read over what info has been linked so far, and I think I'm
> going to go for the Vigor 120 ADSL Ethernet Modem for the time being, at
> least until I have a little more experiance of working with pf :)
Use the kernel p
On 2011-03-21, timothyale...@gmail.com wrote:
> I've had a good read over what info has been linked so far, and I think I'm
> going to go for the Vigor 120 ADSL Ethernet Modem for the time being, at
> least until I have a little more experiance of working with pf :)
Note that it doesn't have
On Sat, 19 Mar 2011 21:28:09 +0100
Henning Brauer wrote:
> > it was working for me - rdr-to outbound to a daemon on the firewall
> > itself, but I deleted that virtual machine...
> >
> >rdr-to is usually applied inbound. If applied
> > outbound, rdr-to to a local IP address is n
> The queue names in pf.conf do not match the names in your pfstat.conf.
> A collect syntax in your pfstat.conf should look like the following:
>
> collect 11 = queue "tcp_ack" pass bytes diff
>
> yes, U r right. in my case, it should be
collect 11 = queue "tcp_ack_out" pass bytes dif
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