Hi
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 11:40 PM, Sachidananda Urs wrote:
> On 12/10/2012 04:32 PM, Feng Zhou wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned
>> out that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use
>> either st or urxvt.
>>
>
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 9:40 PM, Sachidananda Urs wrote:
> Try putting them in .kshrc, this the file that is read by terminal
> emulators.
Nope. ~/.kshrc isn't special to the shell or to terminal emulators.
It *is* a traditional value for the ENV environment variable, but for
that to have any ef
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 2:47 AM, Jonathan Gray wrote:
[...]
> Not sure on what causes the display noise when coming back from dpms,
> the xbacklight control part should work with the following diff:
>
> Index: i830_lvds.c
> ===
> RCS
On 12/10/2012 04:32 PM, Feng Zhou wrote:
Hi,
I was trying out st and urxvt as a replacement for xterm, and it turned out
that all the settings I put in ~/.profile are not recognised when I use either
st or urxvt.
Is this a bug or an expected behaviour that I need to do something about to use
Hi Martijn,
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 6:44 PM, Martijn van Duren wrote:
>
> I'm a new to OpenBSD and BSD in general.
>
> On my new install I found that it is possible to set environment
> variables via the login.conf file. When trying I found out that those
> variables aren't honored if I log in vi
Reyk Floeter writes:
> On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 8:36 PM, Dustin Fechner wrote:
> > On 12/06/2012 08:10 PM, Maximo Pech wrote:
> >> that there isn't a single production ready, gnupg-like, BSD licensed
> >> tool out there (I don't have the skills and time to program one
> >> myself).
> >
> > NetBSD ha
as a temporary workaround, you can do sudo -u $SAMEUSER -c - -i in,
e.g., ~/.profile at the logged-in machine
that way you don't duplicate env settings in ssh_config proper
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 6:14 AM, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> Dear misc,
>
> I'm a new to OpenBSD and BSD in general.
>
> On
On Tue (11/12/12), Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 05:39:08PM +0200, Manolis Tzanidakis wrote:
> > Check 'AcceptEnv' and 'PermitUserEnvironment'in sshd_config(5).
> > They're both set to off, by default.
>
> These options apply to different mechanisms than login.conf.
Otto is right.
The Atom E6xx CPUs used in the Soekris net6501 are described by
Intel as having "1 core" and "2 threads". When you boot GENERIC.MP
on them, you get two cpu(4)s:
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: Genuine Intel(R) CPU @ 1.60GHz, 1600.20 MHz
...
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application pr
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 8:36 PM, Dustin Fechner wrote:
> On 12/06/2012 08:10 PM, Maximo Pech wrote:
>> that there isn't a single production ready, gnupg-like, BSD licensed
>> tool out there (I don't have the skills and time to program one
>> myself).
>
> NetBSD has netpgp, which is BSD licensed:
>
Thanks alot for the info Norman.
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 08:26:56PM +0059, Norman Golisz wrote:
> On Sun Dec 9 2012 11:59, John Long wrote:
> > On Sun, Dec 09, 2012 at 12:21:34PM +0100, Paul de Weerd wrote:
> > > Alternatively, you can `make` GENERIC and `make install` GENERIC.MP.
> > > Or just s
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 05:39:08PM +0200, Manolis Tzanidakis wrote:
> Hey there
>
> On Tue (11/12/12), Martijn van Duren wrote:
> >
> > On my new install I found that it is possible to set environment
> > variables via the login.conf file. When trying I found out that those
> > variables aren't
You can use S/MIME with openssl as alternative to PGP.
On Thu, Dec 06, 2012 at 01:10:17PM -0600, Maximo Pech wrote:
> It's incredible for me that OpenBSD, an operating system that claims to
> have integrated cryptography (yes I know that the cryptography is on the
> core OS layers) doesn't have i
Hey there
On Tue (11/12/12), Martijn van Duren wrote:
>
> On my new install I found that it is possible to set environment
> variables via the login.conf file. When trying I found out that those
> variables aren't honored if I log in via ssh. Setting the variables via
> setusercontext in a test-a
I could set it in either /etc/profile (.profile would be even trickier
since those can't be managed in a central manner), but I don't feel like
scripting the user classes into those files. Not when there's a
perfectly fine system implemented to do that for me.
Yusof Khalid - FreeBSD / OpenBSD schr
Hi,
Can those variable set in .profile ?
I'm still new too but just a suggestion :)
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 6:44 PM, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> Dear misc,
>
> I'm a new to OpenBSD and BSD in general.
>
> On my new install I found that it is possible to set environment
> variables via the login.
Jonathan Gray wrote:
> Not sure on what causes the display noise when coming back from dpms,
> the xbacklight control part should work with the following diff:
Yes, that fixes it.
(Previously, xbacklight would only work once you had dimmed the
display at least one step while in the BIOS.)
--
Thank you for sharing this information.
It's clear now
Am 11.12.2012 14:47 schrieb "Jérémie Courrèges-Anglas" :
>
> BTW, this issue has already been discussed before:
> http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=134580856917208&w=2
>
> --
> Jérémie Courrèges-Anglas
> GPG Key fingerprint: 61DB D9A0 00A4 67
network is visible but not working or temporary working after reboot.
# tail /var/log/messages
Dec 11 10:00:01 gw syslogd: restart
Dec 11 12:00:01 gw syslogd: restart
Dec 11 14:00:01 gw syslogd: restart
Dec 11 14:13:38 gw /bsd: rum0: device timeout
Dec 11 14:13:39 gw /bsd: rum0: could not transmi
On 2012 Dec 11 (Tue) at 13:53:55 +0100 (+0100), Jan Lambertz wrote:
:Hello,
:
:i try to set up a openntpd server for a local network. because of security
:i don't have a internet connection. goal is to setup openbsd 5.2 release as
:openntpd server, sharing its local time (without sync of any pool s
Hello,
i try to set up a openntpd server for a local network. because of security
i don't have a internet connection. goal is to setup openbsd 5.2 release as
openntpd server, sharing its local time (without sync of any pool servers
or something) to others.
/etc/ntpd.conf says:
---
listen
> 1: I'm not sure there are no developers that would like to see this in
>base, but they could have other priorities; wanting something not
>necessarily means having (time) to do the work. The important
>difference is that you don't hear them.
I find gpg useful.
I think the main barr
Hello Bryan,
clue bat applied, thanks!
bry...@gmail.com (Brynet), 2012.12.06 (Thu) 16:24 (CET):
> On Thu, Dec 06, 2012 at 02:02:09PM +0100, MERIGHI Marcus wrote:
> > umass0 at uhub7 port 1 configuration 1 interface 0 "Sony USB Floppy
> > Drive" rev 1.10/6.01 addr 3
> > umass0: using UFI
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 10:04:32PM -0800, Amarendra Godbole wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 23, 2012 at 6:34 AM, Anil Madhavapeddy wrote:
> > On 23 Nov 2012, at 03:13, Byron Klippert wrote:
> >
> >> I picked up one recently; went with the following options.
> >>
> >> - Intel Core i5-3360M
> >> - 128GB SSD (
Dear misc,
I'm a new to OpenBSD and BSD in general.
On my new install I found that it is possible to set environment
variables via the login.conf file. When trying I found out that those
variables aren't honored if I log in via ssh. Setting the variables via
setusercontext in a test-application a
Hello,
I want to achieve a Master / Slave replication with OpenBSD's shipped ldapd(8).
Are there any native features to synchronize both instances (like openldap's
syncrepl) or do I have to script a bunch of (ldapsearch/ldapadd)|scp ?
TIA,
Jo
Maximo Pech [mak...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> I already knew an answer (not the only one) could be "write it".
>
What others did you have in mind? "Thank you for bringing the most important
software project of modern time to our attention. We will now begin writing it
for you." ???
> > >
> > > Do
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