On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 09:05:13PM -0600, Nicolai wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 11:55:30PM +, Heptas Torres wrote:
> > On 2/11/13, Jiri B wrote:
> > > Install OpenBSD on your usb stick on this "Windows" machine,
> >
> > How to do that exactly from windows when I cannot boot OpenBSD on tha
Hi,
I often used the virtualbox way. Extension pack may not be needed. The way
is ( vbox faqs-vbox raw disk access-hd file pointing to usb stick- and
ready to go). I also used this setup for creating an openbsd mfs usb
livestick.works perfect
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 11:55:30PM +, Heptas Torres wrote:
> On 2/11/13, Jiri B wrote:
> > Install OpenBSD on your usb stick on this "Windows" machine,
>
> How to do that exactly from windows when I cannot boot OpenBSD on that
> machine?
If the laptop has a floppy drive, you can rawrite flo
Apparently Someone has written one
http://www.chrysocome.net/dd
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 08:02:13PM -0500, brian wrote:
> On 2/11/2013 5:51 PM, Heptas Torres wrote:
> > Hello
> > I have an old laptop with no CD-ROM but can boot from USB. Given that
> > I only have access to a windows machine to bur
On 2/11/2013 5:51 PM, Heptas Torres wrote:
> Hello
> I have an old laptop with no CD-ROM but can boot from USB. Given that
> I only have access to a windows machine to burn an iso image, do you
> know of an easy way (e.g. some windows programa) to create a bootable
> OpenBSD USB stick which I can t
Crookedmaze wrote:
On 02/10/2013 06:47 PM, Rod Whitworth wrote:
On Sun, 10 Feb 2013 18:09:56 -0600, Maximo Pech wrote:
Well, installing openbsd is not what I'd call easy for people with few
technical skills.
Crap! It is well documented and very little data needs to be typed in
as most input ca
For Windows, VirtualBox is free and should do the trick.
You'll probably need the extension pack.
https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads
-Stuart
On Tue, Feb 12, 2013 at 01:53:46PM +1300, m...@extensibl.com wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 10:51:29PM +, Heptas Torres wrote:
> > Hello
> > I
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 10:51:29PM +, Heptas Torres wrote:
> Hello
> I have an old laptop with no CD-ROM but can boot from USB. Given that
> I only have access to a windows machine to burn an iso image, do you
> know of an easy way (e.g. some windows programa) to create a bootable
> OpenBSD USB
On 2013-02-11, Pawel wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I would like to ask, if it's possible to filter incoming and outgoing
> announcements from neighbors in the same area (in the same way as in bgpd)?
> If it isn't implemented, maybe somebody knows, if it will be possible in
> future releases ospfd?
> I'm
> I only have access to a windows machine to burn an iso image, do you
> know of an easy way (e.g. some windows programa) to create a bootable
> OpenBSD USB stick
>
I think you should ask this on a windows-centric place.
On 2013-02-11, Jeremie Le Hen wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> What is the advised way to assign an IP address to a bridge(4)
> interface?
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=128268726102239&w=2
> Last thing: if it was documented, where should it be? I might spare
> some time to submit a documentation patc
On 2/11/13, Jiri B wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 10:51:29PM +, Heptas Torres wrote:
>> Hello
>> I have an old laptop with no CD-ROM but can boot from USB. Given that
>> I only have access to a windows machine to burn an iso image, do you
>> know of an easy way (e.g. some windows programa) t
> I am really starting to like it!
I love it too but maybe one day long after we have KMS we may get to
install it on anyones laptop and know that it is highly likely to keep
itself upto date with current packages as a desktop all by itself. Of
course you can't always do that even with debian due
On 2/11/13, christopher sasarak wrote:
> I had a similar situation with my laptop and found a solution in the FAQ:
> http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#flashmemLive
>
> Essentially what I had to do was boot from CD on the desktop system (using
> an ISO for the desktop system's architecture)
Th
On Tue, 2013-02-12 at 00:16 +0100, Jeremie Le Hen wrote:
> What is the advised way to assign an IP address to a bridge(4)
> interface?
The one time I had to do this, I assigned the IP to one member interface
of the bridge, and left the other one without an IP, and it worked for
my purposes.
--
S
Hi list,
What is the advised way to assign an IP address to a bridge(4)
interface? I have the following:
% # ifconfig bridge0
% bridge0: flags=41
% groups: bridge
% priority 32768 hellotime 2 fwddelay 15 maxage 20 holdcnt 6 proto rstp
% designated: id 00:00:00:00:00:00 pr
I had a similar situation with my laptop and found a solution in the FAQ:
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#flashmemLive
Essentially what I had to do was boot from CD on the desktop system (using
an ISO for the desktop system's architecture) and then do an install of
OpenBSD onto the flash dri
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 10:51:29PM +, Heptas Torres wrote:
> Hello
> I have an old laptop with no CD-ROM but can boot from USB. Given that
> I only have access to a windows machine to burn an iso image, do you
> know of an easy way (e.g. some windows programa) to create a bootable
> OpenBSD USB
Hello all,
I would like to ask, if it's possible to filter incoming and outgoing
announcements from neighbors in the same area (in the same way as in bgpd)?
If it isn't implemented, maybe somebody knows, if it will be possible in
future releases ospfd?
I'm using ospfd from OpenBSD 5.1.
Hello
I have an old laptop with no CD-ROM but can boot from USB. Given that
I only have access to a windows machine to burn an iso image, do you
know of an easy way (e.g. some windows programa) to create a bootable
OpenBSD USB stick which I can then use to install OpenBSD on my old
laptop?
-heptas
On 02/11/2013 05:52 AM, Christer Solskogen wrote:
On Sun, Feb 10, 2013 at 3:23 AM, Crookedmaze wrote:
Dear OpenBSD Community,
Hello I am wondering if there is a tool similar to FreeBSD-update on
OpenBSD?
Yes, there is. But it is not official.
http://www.openbsd-stable.org/
Th
On 02/10/2013 06:47 PM, Rod Whitworth wrote:
On Sun, 10 Feb 2013 18:09:56 -0600, Maximo Pech wrote:
Well, installing openbsd is not what I'd call easy for people with few
technical skills.
Crap! It is well documented and very little data needs to be typed in
as most input can be done
On 11 February 2013 13:22, Dan Shechter wrote:
> Thanks.
>
> If interrupt mitigation disabling won't be enough I will have do
> decide: freebs with netmap or openbsd with if_ethersubr.c
> modification.
>
> netmap looks much easier to code. No need to do the mbuf dance (or I
> hope that with netmap
Thanks.
If interrupt mitigation disabling won't be enough I will have do
decide: freebs with netmap or openbsd with if_ethersubr.c
modification.
netmap looks much easier to code. No need to do the mbuf dance (or I
hope that with netmap there would be no such need).
BTW, would HW TX IP/UDP checks
On 11 February 2013 12:53, Dan Shechter wrote:
> Thanks,
>
> Are there any other tips to reduce latency?
>
Using pcap means copying packets, so I'd say you want to
put your code into the kernel to avoid copying and maybe
queueing as well, but this is not something that can be
trivially explained
Am 11.02.2013 12:12, schrieb Stefan Sperling:
> I believe the code path you're hitting is this one in netinet6/nd6_nbr.c,
> in nd6_ns_input():
>
> } else {
> /*
>* Make sure the source address is from a neighbor's address.
>*/
> if
Thanks,
Are there any other tips to reduce latency?
Best regards,
Dan
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 1:43 PM, Mike Belopuhov wrote:
> On 11 February 2013 12:19, Dan Shechter wrote:
>> Hi All,
>>
>> I have a very latency sensitive application. I need to move packets
>> from one interface to another
On Sun, Feb 10, 2013 at 3:23 AM, Crookedmaze wrote:
> Dear OpenBSD Community,
>
> Hello I am wondering if there is a tool similar to FreeBSD-update on
> OpenBSD?
Yes, there is. But it is not official.
http://www.openbsd-stable.org/
--
chs,
On 11 February 2013 12:19, Dan Shechter wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I have a very latency sensitive application. I need to move packets
> from one interface to another
>
> I am using a quad 1000/pro Intel NIC. pcidump shows 82571EB
>
> My latency sensitive application reads packets from one em interface
- Crookedmaze [2013-02-10 07:33:34 -0600] - :
> This makes me a little nervous and I think I would rather just follow
> release with errata patches or just follow stable. OK, System
> Administrator I see what you mean by overhead now, now that I think about
> it I am starting to see what
Hi All,
I have a very latency sensitive application. I need to move packets
from one interface to another
I am using a quad 1000/pro Intel NIC. pcidump shows 82571EB
My latency sensitive application reads packets from one em interface
using libpcap and sends packet to another em interface using
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 11:09:00AM +0100, Martin Schmitt wrote:
> All,
>
> I got my first non-tunneled IPv6 uplink a while ago, and now I have
> issues with NDP.
>
> Over the same shared LAN, the ISP apparently serves several (more than
> one, but as far as I can see not neccessarily more than tw
Hi Kent,
On 14/01/13(Mon) 10:05, Kent Fritz wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 11, 2013 at 5:29 PM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> > I see. So this is happening during pms_probe() which runs before the
> > protocol is selected. Maybe fix it like this? I think the code should
> > cope with hardware that returns unrec
All,
I got my first non-tunneled IPv6 uplink a while ago, and now I have
issues with NDP.
Over the same shared LAN, the ISP apparently serves several (more than
one, but as far as I can see not neccessarily more than two) customer
routers, with a logical /125 transfer network for each customer. W
I setup a pair of OBSD box's with carp & pfsync last week, They appeared
to working when I left them although the number of states on each was
out by about 20%. I had the leave them like they were, but when I
checked on them this morning I noticed that the backup box only has
about 15 states an
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