On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 14:47:59 -0600
"Todd C. Miller" wrote:
> On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 16:38:29 -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
>
> > What happens to OpenBSD when Secure Boot becomes manditory?
>
> Please read those articles again, "Secure Boot" is *not* mandatory
> for Windows 10. The major change is that
On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 23:11:57 -0400 Eric Furman wrote:
> Thanks for the info and I expected someone to suggest this,
> but I didn't really want to go all crazy. :)
> I wanted to know if there was a secure one so I wouldn't have
> to jump through all these kind of hoops.
> Thanks anyway.
>
doing t
Thanks for the info and I expected someone to suggest this,
but I didn't really want to go all crazy. :)
I wanted to know if there was a secure one so I wouldn't have
to jump through all these kind of hoops.
Thanks anyway.
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015, at 04:17 PM, dan mclaughlin wrote:
> On Thu, 2 Apr 201
I thought it had something to do with April fools `-`
On 4/3/2015 午前 03:45, Jeremiah Ford wrote:
On 2015-04-02 12:50, Артур Истомин wrote:
On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 09:13:32PM -0700, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
Dear misc and advocacy,
It has come to my attention that OpenBSD.org has been sanc
On Fri, Apr 03, 2015 at 12:09:51AM +, Yass Amed wrote:
>
> I am having a hard time getting OpenBSD to connect to the internet during
> the installation. No matter what I use (5.5, 5.6, or 5.7) they all report
> "em0: no linksleeping" which indicate that OpenBSD thinks that the
> network ad
Greetings,
I am having a hard time getting OpenBSD to connect to the internet during
the installation. No matter what I use (5.5, 5.6, or 5.7) they all report
"em0: no linksleeping" which indicate that OpenBSD thinks that the
network adapter is not connected to a router/switch.
Arch: AMD64
Ha
Thanks for the comments.
I've been re-reading faq 15 and related stuff, and realized that I thought
I had figured this out before. My memory is not improving with age.
This is how I re-understand it now:
pkg_add -u is for getting packages with issues that are severe enough to
motivate one of the
Hi,
Todd C. Miller wrote:
Since you don't have a console you might want to add the following
to /etc/sysctl.conf if you don't already have them:
ddb.panic=0 # 0=Do not drop into ddb on a kernel panic
ddb.log=1 # 1=Log ddb output in kernel message buffer
On 02-04-2015 17:52, John Merriam wrote:
> I have a feeling that there will be alternatives to secure boot for a
> while if not forever. I for one will never buy anything that is secure
> boot only unless the 'secure boot' is something that I have complete
> control over. I would rather use a
On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 23:57:21 +0200, Riccardo Mottola wrote:
> I checked messages and I see the "dmesg" from one boot then directly the
> other boot, no messages in between.
> Where else could I check?
Since you don't have a console you might want to add the following
to /etc/sysctl.conf if you d
Todd C. Miller wrote:
On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 16:38:29 -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
What happens to OpenBSD when Secure Boot becomes manditory?
Please read those articles again, "Secure Boot" is *not* mandatory
for Windows 10. The major change is that for Windows 8 Microsoft
*required* hardware vend
Hi,
I have my old SparcStation running headless, during compilation it
hangs. I don't have a serial console connected, nor video. I see that it
stops responding to ssh and the power led which usually pulsates remains
either in on or off fixed.
Besides from trying to reproduce the bug with a
On Thu, 2 Apr 2015, Steve Litt wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> What happens to OpenBSD when Secure Boot becomes manditory?
>
>
> http://www.pcworld.com/article/2901262/microsoft-tightens-windows-10s-secure-boot-screws-where-does-that-leave-linux.html
>
> http://www.pcworld.com/article/2900536/windows-10s-
On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 16:38:29 -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> What happens to OpenBSD when Secure Boot becomes manditory?
Please read those articles again, "Secure Boot" is *not* mandatory
for Windows 10. The major change is that for Windows 8 Microsoft
*required* hardware vendors to provide a setting
Hi all,
What happens to OpenBSD when Secure Boot becomes manditory?
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2901262/microsoft-tightens-windows-10s-secure-boot-screws-where-does-that-leave-linux.html
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2900536/windows-10s-secure-boot-requirement-could-make-installing-linux-a-
On Thu, 2 Apr 2015 11:47:04 -0400 Jiri B wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 12:33:25AM -0400, Eric Furman wrote:
> > I sometimes have to deal with PDF files (ugh) and all
> > I need is the ability to view and print them, nothing
> > fancy. With security in mind I would like to get opinions
> > on th
Hi,
John D. Verne wrote on Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 09:33:25AM -0400:
> Somebody wrote:
>> I sometimes have to deal with PDF files (ugh) and all
>> I need is the ability to view and print them, nothing
>> fancy. With security in mind I would like to get opinions
>> on the best one to use.
> There ar
On 2015-04-02 12:50, Артур Истомин wrote:
On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 09:13:32PM -0700, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
Dear misc and advocacy,
It has come to my attention that OpenBSD.org has been sanctioned
today.
It has been sanctioned in the category of best desktop OS.
Some other sites sanct
Hi,
Eric Furman wrote:
I sometimes have to deal with PDF files (ugh) and all
I need is the ability to view and print them, nothing
fancy. With security in mind I would like to get opinions
on the best one to use.
Thanks.
I use GSPdf, which just calls ghostscript, you could ghostscript itself.
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015, at 08:22 PM, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 11:15 AM, Philip Guenther
> wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 10:48 AM, Adam Wolk wrote:
> > ...
> >> My questions is how valuable are dmesgs from snapshots & past releases?
> >> - Should I care to email the dmesg
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 11:15 AM, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 10:48 AM, Adam Wolk wrote:
> ...
>> My questions is how valuable are dmesgs from snapshots & past releases?
>> - Should I care to email the dmesg from the 5.6 installation when 5.7
>> is almost shipped?
>> - Is it
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 10:48 AM, Adam Wolk wrote:
...
> My questions is how valuable are dmesgs from snapshots & past releases?
> - Should I care to email the dmesg from the 5.6 installation when 5.7
> is almost shipped?
> - Is it valuable for the project to upgrade to 5.7 just for the dmesg
>
>Path C:
> - Just directly install a snapshot
> - send dmesg?
Note that this path means staying on -current, if my understanding of
the FAQ is correct.
I only mention this because I've recently had some hardware where I have
to decide to stay on -current (or not boot OBSD), using occasional snap
Hi misc@,
The 'Welcome to OpenBSD 5.x!' email states:
> If you wish to ensure that OpenBSD runs better on your machines, please do us
> a favor (after you have your mail system configured!) and type something like:
> # (dmesg; sysctl hw.sensors) | \
>mail -s "Sony VAIO 505R laptop, apm wor
On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 09:13:32PM -0700, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
> Dear misc and advocacy,
>
> It has come to my attention that OpenBSD.org has been sanctioned today.
>
> It has been sanctioned in the category of best desktop OS.
>
> Some other sites sanctioned together with OpenBSD.org a
Which mailinglist are the correct one for errors with ports BTW?
I had a problem with seamonkey over several snapshots now; it won't
start. I've tried everything I can think of tracking it down. I would
appreciate some pointers. It's seamonkey-2.33.1 on i386 and this is
the error message it throws
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 11:23 AM, Kent R. Spillner wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 08:19:00AM -0400, sven falempin wrote:
> > Sorry, no time to make a decent report ATM, must release.
> > route add XXX -link -iface Y
> > creates problems.
>
> Such a beautiful piece of performance art should b
On Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 12:33:25AM -0400, Eric Furman wrote:
> I sometimes have to deal with PDF files (ugh) and all
> I need is the ability to view and print them, nothing
> fancy. With security in mind I would like to get opinions
> on the best one to use.
> Thanks.
Run it chrooted under non-def
On Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 08:19:00AM -0400, sven falempin wrote:
> Sorry, no time to make a decent report ATM, must release.
> route add XXX -link -iface Y
> creates problems.
Such a beautiful piece of performance art should be preserved:
Index: usr.bin/mg//theo.c
==
On Thu, 2 Apr 2015, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Wed, 01 Apr 2015 22:34:06 -0400
> John Merriam wrote:
>
> > I don't mind using ports instead of packages myself. But, I haven't
> > tried OpenBSD on the desktop yet (routers/firewalls and servers so far).
> > Compiling huge stuff that updates oft
>I sometimes have to deal with PDF files (ugh) and all
>I need is the ability to view and print them, nothing
>fancy. With security in mind I would like to get opinions
>on the best one to use.
>Thanks.
There are PDF-to-mandoc converters out there. Assuming the conversion
tool is sound, I imagine
> Date: Thu, 2 Apr 2015 13:16:12 +0200
> From: Evgeniy Sudyr
>
> Hi all,
>
> On -stable with patches installed on Supermicro server, got Panic:
> malloc: out of space in kmem_map.
>
> This is first time this panic happened.
>
> On this server haproxy and bgpd were running where haproxy was ru
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 4:51 AM, Martin Pieuchot wrote:
> On 01/04/15(Wed) 20:30, sven falempin wrote:
> > ping 8.8.88.
> >
> > (probably fixed by then, it crash here but i am far from current)
>
>
> What crashes? ping? The kernel? Could you provide trace? A bug report
> without information is
On Wed, 01 Apr 2015 16:36:59 +0200
Markus Rosjat wrote:
> so I think I just solved this myself but if someone with experience in
> setting it up likes to give hints
> I'll gladly take tehm :)
Chroot - yes
Virtual Host - Yes
SNI - Not yet, but pound from ports in front of httpd works.
> This is exactly like immutable files until you go back to boot -s.
> Such a pain in the ass to deal as soon as you want to play with
> machines to which you don't have direct physical access.
>
You could set a flag which runs a script before the securelevel is
raised on the next boot but you
On Wed, 01 Apr 2015 22:34:06 -0400
John Merriam wrote:
> I don't mind using ports instead of packages myself. But, I haven't
> tried OpenBSD on the desktop yet (routers/firewalls and servers so far).
> Compiling huge stuff that updates often like Firefox could be kind of
> a pain I would gue
On Thu, 2 Apr 2015 11:50:12 +0200 Marc Espie wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 11:48:16PM -0400, dan mclaughlin wrote:
> > if you want the version that the port build will produce do:
> >
> > $ (cd /usr/ports/lang/gcc/4.8/ && make _print-packagename)
> > gcc-4.8.4p2
> >
> > there are alot of opti
Hi all,
On -stable with patches installed on Supermicro server, got Panic:
malloc: out of space in kmem_map.
This is first time this panic happened.
On this server haproxy and bgpd were running where haproxy was running
under high load ± 3.5 before failure.
Sorry, but I have no access to seri
On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 11:48:16PM -0400, dan mclaughlin wrote:
> if you want the version that the port build will produce do:
>
> $ (cd /usr/ports/lang/gcc/4.8/ && make _print-packagename)
> gcc-4.8.4p2
>
> there are alot of options for make that are in bsd.port.mk(5) (although the
> one i used
On Tue, Mar 31, 2015 at 02:37:53PM +0100, Gareth Nelson wrote:
> For scripts that are set executable, it works exactly the same way - for
> everything else it won't work unless the interpreter is patched, it's still
> an overall massive improvement in security.
^^^
On 31/03/15 21:14, Robert wrote:
On Tue, Mar 31, 2015 at 10:10:31AM -0500, Joe Crivello wrote:
I can't think of any other scenarios right now, but I'd be interested to
hear if there is something I'm not thinking of...
Let's cut this short:
To prevent (in theory) various attack vectors (e.g., ph
On 01/04/15(Wed) 23:33, cray cray wrote:
> hello...
> when i'm trying to run the following command pkg_add -Iv xfce and installing
> the depedencies
> i get an error on xfce-4.10:gnome-icon-theme-3.8.2
>
> vm_fault (0xd5ecc880, 0xa8, 0, 1) -> e
> kernel: page fault trap, code=0
> stopped at uv
On 01/04/15(Wed) 20:30, sven falempin wrote:
> ping 8.8.88.
>
> (probably fixed by then, it crash here but i am far from current)
What crashes? ping? The kernel? Could you provide trace? A bug report
without information is useless, nobody can tell if it is already fixed or
even if it has the
the *VERY NEXT LINE* tells you something important. Follow those directions.
On 2015 Apr 01 (Wed) at 23:33:47 +0300 (+0300), cray cray wrote:
:hello...
:when i'm trying to run the following command pkg_add -Iv xfce and installing
:the depedencies
:i get an error on xfce-4.10:gnome-icon-theme-3.8
I was asleep when I posted this, so I left out the example code.
Don't know why, but I worked out more complete code than the example I
failed to give. To keep chatter off the list, I posted it in my blog,
if anyone is interested. (Probably not?)
http://defining-computers.blogspot.jp/2015/03/spli
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