On 8/14/19 9:40 PM, Tito Mari Francis Escano wrote:
Hi Jordan,
Thanks for replying. I apologize I forgot to mention that I was asking
for the web and database spec because this will be an on-premise
deployment, cloud platforms are out of the equation. I hope this will
clarify my concern ask
Hi Jordan,
Thanks for replying. I apologize I forgot to mention that I was asking
for the web and database spec because this will be an on-premise
deployment, cloud platforms are out of the equation. I hope this will
clarify my concern asking for server specification for a web and
database se
On 8/14/19 7:56 PM, Tito Mari Francis Escano wrote:
Hi to everyone at misc,
I'm recently working on an OpenBSD-based PHP7 web application with
PostgreSQL-backend for a local government agency and was wondering
what would you recommend as the acceptable server specification. This
web applica
Hello Aaron,
Thanks for responding. The code for the PHP7 web app along with the
complexity of the database queries like a four table join can be seen
here: https://github.com/titomarifrancis/dap-dbms. I hope you forgive
the simplicity of my code, I tried to use a framework but given the time
Hi Tito
Can you tell us more about the database? How often will its data be
changed, added to, etc? How much data do you have? How complex are
your DB queries? These answers will help determine the RAM and
processor requirements for the database.
As for the web server daemon itself, I think Re
Hi to everyone at misc,
I'm recently working on an OpenBSD-based PHP7 web application with
PostgreSQL-backend for a local government agency and was wondering what
would you recommend as the acceptable server specification. This web
application won't reach the Google or Facebook level of visits
On 8/14/19 4:45 PM, freda_bundc...@nym.hush.com wrote:
Hi, I just thought since the interface was vio that you're running in a virtual
environment. Providers like Vultr say "Important Note: If you add an IPv6
subnet to an existing machine, you must restart the server via the Vultr
control panel b
On 8/14/19 2:36 PM, list wrote:
My hostname.vio0 now looks like this:
inet6 alias /64
!route add -inet6 default fe80::2de:361a:24aa:d7a6%vio
When doing a "ifconfig vio0" I get:
vio0: flags=8843 mtu 1500
[...]
inet6 fe80::2de:361a:24aa:d7a6%vio0 prefixlen 64 scope
Hi, I just thought since the interface was vio that you're running in a virtual
environment. Providers like Vultr say "Important Note: If you add an IPv6
subnet to an existing machine, you must restart the server via the Vultr
control panel before IPv6 will work. Restarting via SSH or similar is
On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 08:36:45PM +0200, list wrote:
> Hello,
>
> thanks alot for your suggestions! I really appreciate it.
>
> Unluckily that didn't work out.
>
> My hostname.vio0 now looks like this:
>
> inet6 alias /64
>
> !route add -inet6 default fe80::2de:361a:24aa:d7a6%
Hi,
what do you mean by "a hard restart" ?
There is nothing else i can do apart from restarting my OpenBSD Box..
I think I am misunderstanding you right there.
Stephan
On 8/14/19 9:17 PM, freda_bundc...@nym.hush.com wrote:
> Hi, since your interface is vio0 your virtual service provider might
Hi, since your interface is vio0 your virtual service provider might
require a hard restart of your server -- separate from rebooting
from your installed OpenBSD.
I know you disabled pf, but once it's working, I think the rules
you need to add would be something like:
# ip6
# man icmp6 has the
On 15:30 Wed 14 Aug, Thomas Bohl wrote:
> https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-announce&m=156577865917831&w=2
>
> > We are pleased to announce that we now also provide selected binary
> > packages for the most recent release. These are built from the -stable
> > ports tree which receives security and a fe
Hello,
thanks alot for your suggestions! I really appreciate it.
Unluckily that didn't work out.
My hostname.vio0 now looks like this:
inet6 alias /64
!route add -inet6 default fe80::2de:361a:24aa:d7a6%vio0
So with this gateway added I now don't get the "no route to host" when
Hi,
lgcmn wrote on Tue, Aug 13, 2019 at 11:05:01AM -0500:
> so my question is, do you feel that openbsd will be negatively
> affected by any bad coding / scripts that have been installed
> on the machine as Linux seems to have been...
If the exploitable bug that got your machine owned is contain
You haven't provided enough information to give a definitive answer.
Installing OpenBSD should get you up and working again. But you'll
need to study the documentation and learn how to pull information from
logs and generally be able to keep an eye on things if you want other
people to be able to
hello, i am having serious issues w/Linux...ubuntu...and my boot sticks seem to
be corrupted now as well - we were actually hacked and it seems that we are
still being attacked...i'm not a professional, so have no way of proving, but i
was running netstat and wireshark and i could see the hits a
https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-announce&m=156577865917831&w=2
> We are pleased to announce that we now also provide selected binary
> packages for the most recent release. These are built from the -stable
> ports tree which receives security and a few other important fixes:
Thank you!
That is real
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