On 07/21/17 00:29, Carlos Cardenas wrote:
> Doing a new install from a long hiatus, I've noticed SLAAC is now
> in the kernel.
>
> Looking through the archives:
> https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=14335917638&w=2
>
> seems to indicate that the keyword 'rtsol' and 'inet6 autoconf' are
> "equ
On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 06:14:03PM -0700, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
>
> > On Jul 20, 2017, at 6:35 AM, BARDOU Pierre wrote:
> >
> > Hello,
> >
> > Is there a way to make sysctl re-read its conf file, or even another file,
> > like sysctl -p does on linux systems ?
> > Supporting this option woul
Sending to ports@ to continue this part of the discussion.
Please remove misc@ in any replies.
On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 01:20:41AM +0200, Stefan Wollny wrote:
> >> When it comes to backups one usual advice (among others) is to make use
> >> of different storage types. So I have tar'ed one folder (
> On Jul 20, 2017, at 6:35 AM, BARDOU Pierre wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Is there a way to make sysctl re-read its conf file, or even another file,
> like sysctl -p does on linux systems ?
> Supporting this option would be nice, as it is used by the sysctl module of
> ansible.
Here's the script we
Howdy.
Doing a new install from a long hiatus, I've noticed SLAAC is now
in the kernel.
Looking through the archives:
https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=14335917638&w=2
seems to indicate that the keyword 'rtsol' and 'inet6 autoconf' are
"equivalent" as far as /etc/netstart is concerned.
Wh
On 20/07/17 18:48, Consus wrote:
On 07:08 Thu 20 Jul, Kai Wetlesen wrote:
Because it's a nice way to apply configuration changes made to
/etc/sysctl.conf without restarting the whole server?
Systemctl doesn't offer hot reload unless the controlled daemon offers
the capability in the first place
On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 02:19:29PM +0200, Leo Unglaub wrote:
> Hey,
>
> On 07/20/17 13:05, Mischa Peters wrote:
> > Can you ask them how they route the separate subnet to you?
>
> as far as i understand it they route the subnet on my main ip address.
>
>
> From there documentation:
> > Newly as
> Because it's a nice way to apply configuration changes made to
> /etc/sysctl.conf without restarting the whole server?
Systemctl doesn't offer hot reload unless the
controlled daemon offers the capability in
the first place. The only thing systemd does
is hits the controlling process on the
On 07:08 Thu 20 Jul, Kai Wetlesen wrote:
> > Because it's a nice way to apply configuration changes made to
> > /etc/sysctl.conf without restarting the whole server?
>
> Systemctl doesn't offer hot reload unless the controlled daemon offers
> the capability in the first place. The only thing syste
> What would be the difference to your version where i use vether instead of
> an alias? Or did i missunderstand you?
>
The difference is broadcast trafic won't be sent over your provider network.
Rupert Gallagher writes:
> If you make business in Europe, or with people in Europe, then you
> know about legal compliance with the Commision's standards, and their
> pdf and p7m signed attachments. Similar standards exist in other
> countries, and they use mime parts. If your email client canno
Alex Bihlmaier writes:
> the only issue i had running OpenBSD/Proxmox so far is a constant
> system load of ~1 in the OpenBSD guest. The kvm-qemu process on the VM
> host also has a quite constant load.
In 6.1, load average display changed, typical "at rest" load averages
are now ~1 at least tha
> > > On 07:39 Thu 20 Jul, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > > someone in linux land went off the map here. and then another piece of
> > > > software started un-portably assuming that's the way to do things?
> > >
> > > Because it's a nice way to apply configuration changes made to
> > > /etc/sysctl.co
On 07:45 Thu 20 Jul, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > On 07:39 Thu 20 Jul, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > someone in linux land went off the map here. and then another piece of
> > > software started un-portably assuming that's the way to do things?
> >
> > Because it's a nice way to apply configuration chan
> On 07:39 Thu 20 Jul, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > someone in linux land went off the map here. and then another piece of
> > software started un-portably assuming that's the way to do things?
>
> Because it's a nice way to apply configuration changes made to
> /etc/sysctl.conf without restarting th
On 07:39 Thu 20 Jul, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> someone in linux land went off the map here. and then another piece of
> software started un-portably assuming that's the way to do things?
Because it's a nice way to apply configuration changes made to
/etc/sysctl.conf without restarting the whole serv
Am Tue, 18 Jul 2017 21:14:07 -0400
schrieb "trondd" :
> When you do come back, mention if this is new with Proxmox 5.0 and if
> you've used previous versions succesfully.
>
> I have been running OpenBSD on Proxmox for 2 or 3 years with no
> problems. I think I am still on 4.x, though. I'll check
> Is there a way to make sysctl re-read its conf file, or even another file,
> like sysctl -p does on linux systems ?
> Supporting this option would be nice, as it is used by the sysctl module of=
> ansible.
But sysctl doesn't have a configuration file.
there is a file called sysctl.conf, but it
Hello,
Is there a way to make sysctl re-read its conf file, or even another file, like
sysctl -p does on linux systems ?
Supporting this option would be nice, as it is used by the sysctl module of
ansible.
--
Cordialement,
Pierre BARDOU
If you make business in Europe, or with people in Europe, then you know about
legal compliance with the Commision's standards, and their pdf and p7m signed
attachments. Similar standards exist in other countries, and they use mime
parts. If your email client cannot read mime parts, you are out o
Hey,
On 07/20/17 09:46, Denis Fondras wrote:
Can you people see something that i might missed?
The easy way would be enable forwarding, add a vether(4) on the host, bridge it
with tap0 and configure it with an IP in the 136.243.186.160/29 subnet. Use that
IP as the gateway in your VMs.
i did
Hey,
On 07/20/17 13:05, Mischa Peters wrote:
Can you ask them how they route the separate subnet to you?
as far as i understand it they route the subnet on my main ip address.
From there documentation:
Newly assigned IPv4 subnets are statically routed on the main IP address of the
server,
Hi Leo,
Can you ask them how they route the separate subnet to you?
Mischa
> On 20 Jul 2017, at 12:59, Leo Unglaub wrote:
>
> Hey,
>
>> On 07/20/17 06:25, Mike Larkin wrote:
>> sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 ?
>> I'm not a networking expert but I think your VM's subnet mask is wrong for
>> t
Hey,
On 07/20/17 06:25, Mike Larkin wrote:
sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 ?
I'm not a networking expert but I think your VM's subnet mask is wrong for
the gateway you are trying to use.
thank you for your response. I tryed it with net.inet.ip.forwarding
being 1 and 0. Both don't work. About
Hi Jan,
On Tue, 18 Jul 2017 21:53:03 +0200 Jan Stary wrote:
> ... During the dump, there was some activity on the filesystem ...
Try altering your scripts stop relevant daemons, then umount the
partition before dumping & see if the problem persists.
See sections '5.0 Conclusions' and '2.0 Active
On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 02:46:02AM -0400, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
| Out of curiosity, I just checked what all the fuss is about. It turns out
that someone reads mail with a non-RFC compliant client, and thus fails to read
mime parts. Screw it, update your client.
| The other problem seemed to be
Hello,
> Can you people see something that i might missed?
The easy way would be enable forwarding, add a vether(4) on the host, bridge it
with tap0 and configure it with an IP in the 136.243.186.160/29 subnet. Use that
IP as the gateway in your VMs.
Hi List,
Hetzner has like other dedicated hosting providers an "crazy" looking
network setup for ipv4. Here point to point for the default gw in a
different network segment.
So it's important also to keep that in mind.
Maybe this document helps a bit, need to adapt to Openbsd.
https://wiki.hetz
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