Hello Markus,
I cannot reproduce your problem.
As you can see here under I can create a user "test1" on the command line,
and, with the same userid, I can create it with python2 and python3 too.
(I'm running 6.4)
I see 2 possible cause :
- your python script,
- or maybe the userid for which your
On Saturday, November 3, 2018 10:29 AM, Diogo Galvao wrote:
> Em sex, 2 de nov de 2018 às 19:06, li...@wrant.com escreveu:
>
> > I use these bindings and history control options in the $HOME/.profile:
> > bind -m '^L'=^U\ clear'^J^Y'
> > bind -m '^[^L'=^U\ reset\;clear'^J^Y'
> > export HISTCONTROL
Em sex, 2 de nov de 2018 às 19:06, escreveu:
>
> I use these bindings and history control options in the $HOME/.profile:
>
> bind -m '^L'=^U\ clear'^J^Y'
> bind -m '^[^L'=^U\ reset\;clear'^J^Y'
> export HISTCONTROL=ignoredups:ignorespace
>
Since June 18 [1] there's a new clear-screen editing comm
Hi, @Theo
And this message is normal?!
Get/Verify syspatch64-002_syspatch.tgz
Installing patch 002_syspatch
syspatch updated itself, run it again to install missing patches
!!! syspatch failed; please run syspatch manually
???
On 11/2/18 6:18 PM, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Carlos Lopez wrote:
>
>
Fri, 02 Nov 2018 15:38:17 + Tinker
> On Friday, November 2, 2018 9:11 PM, Klemens Nanni wrote:
> > On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 11:03:34AM +, Tinker wrote:
> >
> > > Could some other ^ shortcut be an ignore-this-line-from-history marker?
> >
> > I'm inclined to say no; HISTCONTROL=ignoresp
On Oct 31 10:42, Markus Rosjat wrote:
> at this point you are a bit screwed because you cant edit the doas.conf you
> cant reboot you only way seems to be a switch off. Ok maybe there other was
> but hey I'm no pro Im a simple user and its a vm so switch it off. Boot in
> single user mode, make a f
Thank you for your response,
Following your suggestion I removed IP from enc0 and changed iked.conf as below:
$ cat /etc/iked.conf
dns1 = "8.8.8.8"
dns2 = "8.8.4.4"
ikev2 "roadWarrior" ipcomp esp \
from 0.0.0.0/0 to 0.0.0.0/0 \
local A.B.C.77 peer any \
srcid
"/C=PL/S
Hi
Put it in .tmux.conf including the new-session, and start tmux with
"tmux attach" or "tmux start". Or run a separate config file later with
"tmux source myconfig".
On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 02:44:40PM +, Joseph Mayer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have one single command for starting and (re)attaching
Since some snapshots ledger did not build.
I was able to make it build again with two changes:
1.) Use -std=gnu++11 as flag for clang
2.) Change the include-path for readline
For *me* the compiled port works fine.
Index: patches/patch-CMakeLists_txt
On 2018 Nov 02 (Fri) at 12:03:55 -0400 (-0400), AB wrote:
:I see in ifconfig(8) that setting nwid to an empty string will
:connect to any available AP. When using join, and absent any nwid
:statement at all, is nwid set to an empty string? Or is it null?
:
At boot, nwid is set to empty string ""
On 02/11/2018 18:18, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Carlos Lopez wrote:
>
>> Applying syspatch today, returns me the following warning:
>>
>> root@obsd-fw-per01:~# syspatch
>> ln: /usr/X11R6/bin/X: No such file or directory
>>
>> I guess it's an expected error since I don't have X11 installed. Cor
Carlos Lopez wrote:
> Applying syspatch today, returns me the following warning:
>
> root@obsd-fw-per01:~# syspatch
> ln: /usr/X11R6/bin/X: No such file or directory
>
> I guess it's an expected error since I don't have X11 installed. Correct?
Yes.
The syspatch patch to syspatch (say that
Hi all,
Applying syspatch today, returns me the following warning:
root@obsd-fw-per01:~# syspatch
ln: /usr/X11R6/bin/X: No such file or directory
I guess it's an expected error since I don't have X11 installed. Correct?
--
Regards,
C.L. Martinez
Joseph Mayer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have one single command for starting and (re)attaching to tmux, and
> it's "tmux -u new -t main". It works as it should.
>
> On each fresh tmux start, tmux runs /etc/tmux.conf , and so I put some
> general configuration in there like "set -g status-bg SOMECOLOR".
AB wrote:
> I see in ifconfig(8) that setting nwid to an empty string will
> connect to any available AP. When using join, and absent any nwid
> statement at all, is nwid set to an empty string? Or is it null?
There are a few combinations of join and nwid which don't work corectly
in 6.4, and
I see in ifconfig(8) that setting nwid to an empty string will
connect to any available AP. When using join, and absent any nwid
statement at all, is nwid set to an empty string? Or is it null?
On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 09:43:56AM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
| Evil, as in pure evil? OK, make a promise you will not use ANY open
| networks for the entire next year, or perhaps your entire life forward.
| Say it here, now, and stick to it. Otherwise it is just rhetoric.
That's easy. The firs
Paul de Weerd wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 10:15:47AM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> | On Thu, Nov 01, 2018 at 04:01:51PM -0400, AB wrote:
> | > I've run into a strange problem using ifconfig's new join statements.
> | > I have two join lines in /etc/hostname.iwn0, with no nwid statement.
>
On Friday, November 2, 2018 9:11 PM, Klemens Nanni wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 11:03:34AM +, Tinker wrote:
>
> > Could some other ^ shortcut be an ignore-this-line-from-history marker?
>
> I'm inclined to say no; HISTCONTROL=ignorespace works fine and adding
> yet another way to do achiev
On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 10:15:47AM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
| On Thu, Nov 01, 2018 at 04:01:51PM -0400, AB wrote:
| > I've run into a strange problem using ifconfig's new join statements.
| > I have two join lines in /etc/hostname.iwn0, with no nwid statement.
| > When both of these APs are ou
Hi,
I have one single command for starting and (re)attaching to tmux, and
it's "tmux -u new -t main". It works as it should.
On each fresh tmux start, tmux runs /etc/tmux.conf , and so I put some
general configuration in there like "set -g status-bg SOMECOLOR".
I'd now like tmux to create five w
Hello,
need to get ssh tunnel quickly.
the other side is linux.
running this:
ssh -i /home/MAC_A_120614/.ssh/id_rsa -vvv -o PermitLocalCommand=yes -o
LocalCommand="ifconfig tun1 192.168.100.4 pointtopoint 192.168.100.3
netmask 255.255.255.255" -o ServerAliveInterval=60 -w 1:1 somehost.com
"i
On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 11:03:34AM +, Tinker wrote:
> Could some other ^ shortcut be an ignore-this-line-from-history marker?
I'm inclined to say no; HISTCONTROL=ignorespace works fine and adding
yet another way to do achieve the same only to compensate user errors
is out of scope here.
> ^I a
On Friday, November 2, 2018 7:03 PM, Tinker wrote:
..
> > Try this one: bind -m '^L'=^Uclear'^J^Y'
>
> Thank you so much for coming up with this one.
>
> It does work as advertised - it clears the screen while keeping the
> content and cursor position in the command line.
>
> I just realized that
Hi misc@ and Anton,
This is a continuation of https://marc.info/?t=1522353&r=1&w=2
from April:
On Wednesday, April 4, 2018 2:01 AM, Anton Lindqvist wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 03, 2018 at 01:45:13PM -0400, Tinker wrote:
> > I looked around for advise for how to make ctrl+L get bash's behavior
>
Hi again,
Am 02.11.2018 um 11:26 schrieb Markus Rosjat:
.. but also the match defined in the new defined protocol is still
working. Thats something that shouldn't happen at all.
this seems to be resolved and was more or less browser related
--
Markus Rosjatfon: +49 351 8107224mail:
Hi all,
I have a relayd running that inspects the Host header of incoming
traffic and then makes a decision to which server it should relay the
traffic. so far so good but a few things don't add up after a few changes.
for example I have a protocol definition like so:
http protocol "httpprox
On Thu, Nov 01, 2018 at 04:01:51PM -0400, AB wrote:
> I've run into a strange problem using ifconfig's new join statements.
> I have two join lines in /etc/hostname.iwn0, with no nwid statement.
> When both of these APs are out of range, it connects to a third,
> unmentioned (open) AP. This is a n
28 matches
Mail list logo