On Thu, Oct 09, 2014 at 02:23:54PM -0400, Nick Holland wrote:
> On 10/09/14 13:21, Nux! wrote:
> >Hello,
> >
> >I'm trying to get some scripts working which would take a password
> >from stdin and set it for root. In Linux "passwd --stdin" is used, in
> >FreeBSD "pw mod user root -h 0". How would I
On 10/09/14 14:24, t...@wynnychenko.com wrote:
...
Now, if there are going to be multiple partitions for the install (e.g.
/home, /var, etc.), my questions is, which is better:
A: Is it better to make "larger" initial partitions for raid assembly,
and then use disklable to create multiple parti
As required for the upgrade I exported all my rrd's and they appear correct,
but when I performed a 'restore' on the upgraded 5.5 system the dates appeared
to become advanced by 136 years.
These are for Cacti and interestingly, cacti shows graphs for the old data, but
not for data collected aft
Hello
It seems I will be moving on up, and replacing an old P4 (that I
pulled out of the trash and have been using with openbsd as a mail
server and such) with a much newer/fancier computer.
I was reading about softraid, and saw the suggestions about using
softraid and altroot. I underst
On 10/09/14 13:21, Nux! wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to get some scripts working which would take a password
from stdin and set it for root. In Linux "passwd --stdin" is used, in
FreeBSD "pw mod user root -h 0". How would I do this in OpenBSD?
Thanks, Lucian
in addition to the already provided t
On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 10:24:44 -0400
Jiri B wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 08:03:14AM -0600, Duncan Patton a Campbell wrote:
> > My purpose here is to allow dynamic dns updates
> > via nsupdate from a dhcp clients where addresses
> > are subject to change. I have a solution that
> > will remai
Hi,
I'm trying to build a Cloudstack OpenBSD template and I need to do a bit of
cleaning up on it before I let people use it.
Besides changing the password, wiping the shell history, ssh keys, random seed
and /var/log stuff, what else should I be doing to trigger a more "unique"
installation?
Thanks, that worked great!
Lucian
--
Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology!
Nux!
www.nux.ro
- Original Message -
> From: "Sébastien Marie"
> To: "Nux!"
> Cc: misc@openbsd.org
> Sent: Thursday, 9 October, 2014 18:48:54
> Subject: Re: Changing root password from stdin value
On Thu, Oct 09, 2014 at 06:22:05PM +0100, Nux! wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm trying to get some scripts working which would take a password from stdin
> and set it for root.
> In Linux "passwd --stdin" is used, in FreeBSD "pw mod user root -h 0". How
> would I do this in OpenBSD?
>
> Thanks,
> Lucian
Hello,
I'm trying to get some scripts working which would take a password from stdin
and set it for root.
In Linux "passwd --stdin" is used, in FreeBSD "pw mod user root -h 0". How
would I do this in OpenBSD?
Thanks,
Lucian
--
Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology!
Nux!
www.nux.r
I have seen this when the allowed number or states is too low and PF
clears the idle states too early..
See http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/options.html;
set optimization/option/
Good luck, Andy.
On 09/10/14 14:58, Paul S. wrote:
> I can confirm that we've seen this with any long running TCP
>
Hi,
Just so I understand what you have done, PRIQ is not the same as queuing.
You can set a simple prio on a rule like;
pass proto tcp from $left to $right set prio (1,4)
But this doesn't manage the situations where you have lots of different
types/profiles of traffic on your network.
For exam
On 09-10-2014 11:23, Justin Mayes wrote:
> In Reyk's presentation he talks about this
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtMxGslqGbM) @ 19:30 and describes the 'link
balancer' functionality of relayd intended to do exactly what I want. It
appears to work as described. In the presentation Reyk says rel
On Thu, 9 Oct 2014 08:15:22 +
"C. L. Martinez" wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 7:21 AM, Duncan Patton a Campbell
> wrote:
> > On Tue, 7 Oct 2014 07:08:54 +
> > "C. L. Martinez" wrote:
> >
> >> On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 11:52 PM, Duncan Patton a Campbell
> >> wrote:
> >> > The most basic c
In Reyk's presentation he talks about this
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtMxGslqGbM) @ 19:30 and describes the 'link
balancer' functionality of relayd intended to do exactly what I want. It
appears to work as described. In the presentation Reyk says relayd will check
for upstream router avai
My understanding of route-to is that if the destination is not on same network
as the 'route-to' interface, you need the second 'next hop' parameter. All
examples I was seeing show pf.conf this way. Is that not right? I will test
with just the interface name.
-Original Message-
From:
I can confirm that we've seen this with any long running TCP connections
in environments where pf was literally only sampling packets for pflow
(not even actually firewalling.)
Removing pf from the equation fixed the problem right up.
5.5 current was what I was running at the time.
On 10/9/20
Hello
We have a somewhat curious issue and run out of ideas ;)
We do not have a trigger to reproduce the issue, but we for example see
some IRC disconnects from users behind our firewall.
What we have:
- two HP Proliant DL360 G5 with Broadcom BCM5708 NICs, 2GB RAM,
Intel Xeon E5335@2.0GHz
- Op
On 09-10-2014 10:16, Justin Mayes wrote:
> I did notice the problem with only detecting a LAN failure and was looking
at a better monitor. If I just used plain PF rules what would I use for the
next-hop parameter to the route-to command? This IP is dynamic.
>
There is no next-hop. Just make your r
I did notice the problem with only detecting a LAN failure and was looking at a
better monitor. If I just used plain PF rules what would I use for the
next-hop parameter to the route-to command? This IP is dynamic.
-Original Message-
From: Giancarlo Razzolini [mailto:grazzol...@gmail.c
On 09-10-2014 02:58, Justin Mayes wrote:
> Ok I got it working. Here is what I did
>
> Enabled multipath routing (sysctl)
> Added the relayd anchor to pf.conf
> Created a relayd.conf with this in it
>
> gw1="fxp0"
> gw2="fxp1"
>
> table { $gw1 ip ttl 1, $gw2 ip ttl 1 }
> router "uplinks" {
>
I have 2 internet connections. One of them is static IP, one is dynamic. I
want to use both of them on my gateway. From the man pages and other docs I
see the use of route-to in the pf.conf including the 'next-hop' that it
requires. This is easy enough. Problem is that the next hop is hard coded IP
On 08-10-2014 18:25, stan wrote:
> Anyone have any sugestions as to how to make this work?
Did you try the suggestion I gave you off list, of making two ssh
connections? Also, you could provide more details of your setup? Both
your e-mails trying to explain it, were confusing. I think I understood
On 08/10/14 04:05 PM, admin wrote:
> Hello
>
> Current Sep 25 i386:
>
> I want to use shawmail.vc.shawcable.net as smarthost, and i tried
> smtp:// tls+auth:// and the others with failing results. What could be
> wrong? Thanks.
> ---
On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 7:21 AM, Duncan Patton a Campbell
wrote:
> On Tue, 7 Oct 2014 07:08:54 +
> "C. L. Martinez" wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 11:52 PM, Duncan Patton a Campbell
>> wrote:
>> > The most basic consideration in computer security has nothing to
>> > do with technology and
On Tue, 7 Oct 2014 07:08:54 +
"C. L. Martinez" wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 11:52 PM, Duncan Patton a Campbell
> wrote:
> > The most basic consideration in computer security has nothing to
> > do with technology and computers. Do the people you need to keep
> > out of the know need to kn
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