Thanks for this one Matthew.
Looking further, I noticed..
- /usr/local/share/gtk-doc (=131MB), html doc completed of some vary
.png files.. I guess this could be not only an endemic problem of my
stick as gtk-doc is not installed here: I'm not in the need of GTK C
code documentation
- /u
Thanks for this one Matthew.
Looking further, I noticed..
- /usr/local/share/gtk-doc (=131MB), html doc completed of some vary
.png files.. I guess this could be not only an endemic problem of my
stick as gtk-doc is not installed here: I'm not in the need of GTK C
code documentation
- /u
On Sun, Aug 13, 2023 at 02:31:44AM +0200, Daniele B. said:
I found instead /usr/share/relink/kernel/GENERIC.MP (636M) that is good
to not have, eventually. Is it safe to move away or erase it?
Leave it alone.
Any other suggestion for my /usr cleaning campaign? ;D
You have sufficient free sp
I failed to come up with reasons for using a preshared key, so I've let
ChatGPT generate reasons for me:
Certainly! WireGuard's use of a preshared key (PSK) adds an additional layer of
symmetric encryption to the standard asymmetric encryption. Here's a brief
explanation of the advantage:
1. **
First off, unless you faked your private and public keys, please change
them as soon as possible.
You've just made yourself volunerable to cyber attacks!
If I understand you correctly, you want to be able to SSH and HTTP only
over WireGuard, right?
In that case, on your WireGuard server:
# Block
Hello,
Do not panic, I do not want to erase you, users of OpenBSD..
In prevision of my next sysupgrade I just found myself in the need to
free up space from /usr where I just remain with 2.1gb free.. Indeed I
feel these gb few although, I know, requirement is 1.1gb of free space
for a successfu
It's the weekend. I will see if anyone has any advice later.
I will spend my time looking at perhaps solving the problem with a
filter and using tcpdump and the debug features of smtpd to follow what
I come up with.
--
Chris Bennett
On Sat, Aug 12, 2023 at 06:23:07PM +0200, Wolfgang Pfeiffer wrote:
>
> On Fri, Aug 11, 2023 at 10:38:46PM -0400, Amelia A Lewis wrote:
> > On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 20:11:02 -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > When did it become an assumption that we would adopt any of these
> > > changes?
> >
> > I don'
Hello.
'Appeared as forceful breaks, ie, there were no seconds without
any activity, but real breaks from now to then.
Just in case anyone feels the desire to look and tune, or
whatever.
-rw-rw 1 ports ports461016 Aug 12 19:05 openssh-9.4p1.tar.gz.partial
$ curl --continue-at - --com
Andrew Cagney writes:
> Ref: https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=168458764424059&w=2
> https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=168071258109433&w=2
I see you found a similar issue and even a fix, good job. I believe
misc@ is a better place for such questions, so I'm cc'ing that.
> Is there a way to
On Fri, Aug 11, 2023 at 10:38:46PM -0400, Amelia A Lewis wrote:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 20:11:02 -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
When did it become an assumption that we would adopt any of these
changes?
I don't think that it did become an assumption, but as a number of
people have responded to the
On 8/11/23 7:06 PM, Tim Baumgard wrote:
On Fri, Aug 11, 2023 at 5:56 PM Stuart Henderson
wrote:
On 2023-08-11, Tim Baumgard wrote:
I'm having an issue with my Protectli FW4B that's become more of a
problem lately. Essentially, it's the same thing that this person [0]
encountered.
IIRC thos
Dear OpenBSD Mailing List Community,
I hope this email finds you well. I am writing to seek your expertise
and guidance regarding a Wireguard VPN configuration and pf rules on my
OpenBSD 7.3 system. I have successfully set up a Wireguard VPN using
the provided interface configuration, and the VPN
On Sat, Aug 12, 2023 at 07:21:24PM +0900, Pontus Stenetorp wrote:
> On Sat 12 Aug 2023, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> >
> > To me, it looks just "different" rather than particularly better
> > (except on mobile browsers, where I find the redesigned one a bit worse
> > by having the links hidden away do
WATANABE Takeo:
> I am using nsd, which runs by default on OpenBSD 7.2 amd64.
> To update the zone file after changes have been made.
>
> As far as I could find, restarting the host seems to be
> the only way to update the zone information.
nsd-control(8)
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
On 2023-08-12, Pontus Stenetorp wrote:
> On Sat 12 Aug 2023, WATANABE Takeo wrote:
>>
>> I am using nsd, which runs by default on OpenBSD 7.2 amd64.
>> To update the zone file after changes have been made.
>>
>> # rcctl reload nsd
>>
>> would result in
>>
>> nsd(failed)
>>
>> and cannot be up
On Sat 12 Aug 2023, WATANABE Takeo wrote:
>
> I am using nsd, which runs by default on OpenBSD 7.2 amd64.
> To update the zone file after changes have been made.
>
> # rcctl reload nsd
>
> would result in
>
> nsd(failed)
>
> and cannot be updated.
>
> As far as I could find, restarting the ho
To Whom It May Concern
I am using nsd, which runs by default on OpenBSD 7.2 amd64.
To update the zone file after changes have been made.
# rcctl reload nsd
would result in
nsd(failed)
and cannot be updated.
As far as I could find, restarting the host seems to be
the only way to update the zon
On Sat 12 Aug 2023, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> To me, it looks just "different" rather than particularly better
> (except on mobile browsers, where I find the redesigned one a bit worse
> by having the links hidden away down the bottom. Scrolling to read the
> text on mobile browsers with the exis
To me, it looks just "different" rather than particularly better
(except on mobile browsers, where I find the redesigned one a bit worse
by having the links hidden away down the bottom. Scrolling to read the
text on mobile browsers with the existing version is a bit of a
nuisance, but so is scrolli
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