On 2/22/2021 5:40 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> Chris Cappuccio [ch...@nmedia.net] wrote:
>>
>> Looks like we have a problem with arc_marvell cards. I had one working
>> but there may be different firmware, etc.
>>
>> Areca sent a newer patch to openbsd-tech in the last year or so which you
>> shou
I'm getting an odd error trying to extract these two tarballs from
6.9-RELEASE on a clean install. I'm probably missing something obvious
but don't know what. Starting with
https://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html, I log in on the console, edit my
non-root user, and create the directory structur
PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
Chris Zakelj [c.zak...@ieee.org] wrote:
Thanks! Now for a mixed-bag result. 5.6 and 5.5 both panic. 5.4 boots
(dmesg attached), but doesn't actually see the 1TB array (installer says
"Available disks are: none." I did get this curiosity after I escaped the
i
On 2/18/2021 1:07 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2021-02-18, Chris Zakelj wrote:
On 2/18/2021 12:26 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
Chris Zakelj [c.zak...@ieee.org] wrote:
Thought I'd try using the Dell and ARC-1200 combination with 6.9-BETA I
mentioned a couple months ago
(https://marc.in
On 2/18/2021 12:26 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
Chris Zakelj [c.zak...@ieee.org] wrote:
Thought I'd try using the Dell and ARC-1200 combination with 6.9-BETA I
mentioned a couple months ago
(https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=158259981320518), but still no luck.
Dmesg of both 6.9
Sorry about taking so long to get back to this... 'tis just a side
project to stave off boredom while sitting in hotel rooms with nothing
"real job" related remaining to get done.
On 12/16/2020 11:34 PM, Bodie wrote:
On 17.12.2020 03:07, Chris Zakelj wrote:
Coming back to my s
Thought I'd try using the Dell and ARC-1200 combination with 6.9-BETA I
mentioned a couple months ago
(https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=158259981320518), but still no
luck. Dmesg of both 6.9-BETA and verbose FreeBSD 12.1-RELEASE attached
in case they might be useful. I've also gone backward
Coming back to my self-teaching on how to (hopefully eventually) be
semi-competent, I'm working on trying to build a git project from
source. Thus far I've been able to figure out things like functions
having slight name differences (e.g. |pthread_set_name_np()| instead of
|pthread_setname_np()) a
Looking to the list for suggestions on becoming at least a
semi-competent admin. Long-time members may remember my trial-by-fire
15+ years ago when the boss ordered a T1 and the carrier's tech
"helpfully" pointed the dmz interface at the (already outdated) NT4 file
server. My current situation is
Been a long time since I've written, but I've been reading (almost) all
along, and it was that troll thread two months ago that keyed me into
the fact that my email preferences were NOT being obeyed, and started
the wheels grinding. In trying to set up a new system to begin knocking
off 15 years o
When I set my 4801 up years and years ago, I did it by using an IDE>CF
adapter on an old Athlon system I had hanging around rather than messing
around with virtual images, PXE booting, or the like. The Geode processor
is roughly equivalent to a Pentium II, so use i386 images. Past that, from
my n
1. Any particular reason your systems have not been updated in at least
three years?
2. Kernel defaults are generally chosen for a reason. Unless you have
evidence of resource exhaustion, turning knobs generally won't make things
better, and could make them worse.
On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 12:31
On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 3:03 PM, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> Chris Zakelj:
>
> > > [SpinRite]
> > > > Takes for ever though but is easy to use and may recover partial
> > > > sectors automatically too ;-)
> > >
> > > I really wonder how
On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 2:20 PM, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> Kevin Chadwick wrote:
>
> [SpinRite]
> > Takes for ever though but is easy to use and may recover partial
> > sectors automatically too ;-)
>
> I really wonder how it's going to do that.
>
It reads the questionable sector(s) a couple
On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 9:48 AM, Chris Zakelj wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 4:50 AM, Stefan Sieg wrote:
>
>> On 2012-03-27 17:00, Chris Zakelj wrote:
>>
>>> Overview... because something between my laptop and home has a nasty
>>> habit
>>&g
On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 4:50 AM, Stefan Sieg wrote:
> On 2012-03-27 17:00, Chris Zakelj wrote:
>
>> Overview... because something between my laptop and home has a nasty habit
>> of eating IM messages, I'm trying to get talkd(8) running so I can use SSH
>> to talk wit
Overview... because something between my laptop and home has a nasty habit
of eating IM messages, I'm trying to get talkd(8) running so I can use SSH
to talk with family while away. However, something's not right. Base info:
$ uname -a
OpenBSD .dyndns.org 4.4 GENERIC#1021 i386
(yes, I know
An even easier solution would be to just buy a new HDD, and stick the
original into a static bag. Why make it harder than it needs to be?
On 11/21/08, Robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 14:14:19 +
> "John ." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Hello misc,
>>
>> I want to inst
Neko wrote:
so there can be an end to this retard "cant write on the file system" bs
http://www.ntfs-3g.org/
so will it be merged in the next obsd release ?
this is the future. people use multiple os on their machine, not just
vm , they will local install too, so action should be taken to have
Having myself a bit of a problem that the man pages haven't helped me
figure out. Running 4.3-RELEASE(amd64) with an Areca 1220 host
controller, I'm trying to bring a 5T RAID-5 array online (nothing but
samba storage, everything OS lives on sd0). In the dmesg, the
card+array show up thus when
Trying to install 4.3 from scratch onto the machine I use as my home
file server, coming against a problem. The previous configuration was
4x160g as a RAID-5 for OS/support/whatever, and 4x300g drives RAID-5 for
samba. I've changed the config so that it's now 2x160 as RAID-1, and
6x300 as RAI
Matthew Weigel wrote:
Chris Zakelj wrote:
... I'm wondering if thought is being given on how to make the
physical size (not filesystem... I totally understand why those
should be kept small) limitation of
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#LargeDrive
http://www.openbsd.org/43.html
Travers Buda wrote:
I can certainly see various drive makers pushing capacity
irrespective of reliability. Germane to this case, some of them
reduce the reserve storage for bad sectors for that extra storage.
Going along with this, on a recent trip to my local computer megastore,
I notice
Richard Toohey wrote:
I usually batch the files into ~ 50Mb at a time, or use a different
copying mechanism/program (or a script to copy n directories across at
a time.)
Not really an option, given that a single DVR recording can be upwards of 8G
My experience is more with Windows 2003 server,
I posted this to the samba list about a week ago and received no
responses, so I'm hoping someone here can tell me what I'm missing. If
I'm forgetting to add some piece of important info, prod as necessary.
I've been struggling with this for a while, and though it worked for
about five mi
Erik WikstrC6m wrote:
Hi
I am setting up a OpenBSD box to act as a router/file-server for my
parents, the box consists mostly of old parts and I try to not spend any
extra money on it. One of my biggest worries is, since it will act as a
file-server which will contain stuff with some emotional v
Nick Holland wrote:
I've got a little project I'm working on here.
It involves stuffing a computer in a donation box with a
money detector, so every time someone tosses money in the box,
it plays an MP3 file.
(no, you can't make a living at this. At least, *I* can't)
The first two of these I d
bofh wrote:
On Dec 15, 2007 11:19 AM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Agreed. But what he has (apparently) said is that doing so sucks, as it
encourages them to continue their proprietary (and hence, bad/unethical)
ways. I'd like to know why paying for a company'
bofh wrote:
On Dec 15, 2007 1:26 AM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
bofh wrote:
On Dec 14, 2007 7:11 PM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How, pray tell, would purchasing and using this software reduce my
freedom, given that not only does it allo
bofh wrote:
On Dec 15, 2007 11:04 AM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
stupid. Shut up." In case you missed it, this discussion revolves just
as much around the concept of what Richard considers freedom as it does
around licenses and source. This is what I'
bofh wrote:
On Dec 14, 2007 7:11 PM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How, pray tell, would purchasing and using this software reduce my
freedom, given that not only does it allow me to make money doing
something I find fun, but also enjoy summer weekends in the sun
watching
Richard Stallman wrote:
When you buy a copy of a non-free program, you pay with your money and
with your freedom. You apparently don't assign much value to the
freedom that you would give up.
I really didn't expect to get involved in this, but if I were to buy a
copy of Hy-Tek's Meet Manager
(
Nick Guenther wrote:
On 12/11/07, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Nick Guenther wrote:
On Dec 11, 2007 12:30 AM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Curious problem here, though I'm probably missing something obvious. I
have apm enabled through /
Nick Guenther wrote:
On Dec 11, 2007 12:30 AM, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Curious problem here, though I'm probably missing something obvious. I
have apm enabled through /etc/rc.conf.local (apmd_flags=""), and when I
issue 'shutdown -h -p now',
Curious problem here, though I'm probably missing something obvious. I
have apm enabled through /etc/rc.conf.local (apmd_flags=""), and when I
issue 'shutdown -h -p now', the system powers off correctly. However,
if I try to use sleep or suspend ('apm -S' or 'apm -z'), the system acts
like it
Greg Thomas wrote:
It does say "single" rule.
Yes, but at that point it becomes a rather useless system. It's likely
to break in curious ways, since anything using the 127.0.0.1 loopback
will, I think, either become unresponsive or start throwing errors.
Social engineering? Usually the w
Clint Pachl wrote:
Is it possible for a cracker to compromise or root a machine on a
network that has pf enabled with the single rule "block all in"?
I suspect you're just fishing, but in the interests of spirited debate
- Is "block in all" the first rule, the last rule, or somewhere in
bet
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
ASC/ASCQ 0x11/0x06 would appear to mean "CIRC Unrecovered Error".
These values are listed in /usr/src/sys/scsi_base.c, line 1207 and
following. The error text is left out of install kernels to save
space.
Some random Googling gave me
"A CIRC unrecovered data error is
Chris Zakelj wrote:
Richard Toohey wrote:
Asking the obvious questions to eliminate them first ...
1. Official CDs?
2. Can you read/copy the CD on *any* machines / *any* OS?
3. Specifically - if you FTP install OpenBSD , can you then mount /
copy / do anything with the CD?
4. dmesg(s
already!) when extracting Xenocara - so I umounted, ejected, took
CD out, waggled it around while saying magic incantation, remounted,
and tried again and it worked (well, no errors reported.)
HTH, YMMV, IANAD, etc.
On 1/11/2007, at 4:55 PM, Chris Zakelj wrote:
Evening... I'm trying insta
Evening... I'm trying install my fresh 4.2 CDs on a system that is
destined to become a samba server and build machine for CF-based
firewalls. Only I'm having a problem (obviously). This is the third
release where I'm having this issue, but previously I just chalked it up
to old, cranky CDROM
Heinrich Rebehn wrote:
> on my Soekris 4801-60 i have a FUJITSU MHV2120AT running as slave. The
>
> 104857600 bytes transferred in 11.980 secs (8752083 bytes/sec)
8MB/sec isn't particularly bad for a notebook drive, and I get very
similar numbers on my own 4801-60 w/ Samsung MP0402H drive:
wd0 at
Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> only today have i tried out hostapd, it is quite neat. while adding a 2nd AP
> to
> my network a thought occurred to me: if you had >3 APs that were sufficiently
> spread out and had tightly synced clocks you could likely triangulate the
> source
> of a wifi signal with
Rod.. Whitworth wrote:
> I have a 4801 with CF installed with 3.9 in exactly the manner I would
> install on a HDD.
>
Rod, tried to email you off-list, but it seems my ISP is relaying
through a Chinese server that's on your blacklist. Anyways, what
special sauce are you using to install to CF?
"Richard P. Koett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:I'm setting up a Soekris
net4801-50 (128 Mb RAM) for use as a firewall. For storage it has a 40Gb IDE
drive rather than compact flash. For my first attempt I used a generic install
of OpenBSD 3.9. The user complained that Internet access seemed sl
Got my pre-order entered a couple days ago, but I still haven't been
able to find what keyserver is being used, and thus, I have no idea what
austin's PGP message block says. Google turned up nothing about austin@
except a message two years ago about a totally different issue. Is
there an oBSD sp
bofh wrote:
> On 9/13/06, Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I never said it was secure. In fact, I distinctly recall saying
>> "hell no" to whether or not I considered phpBB secure. What I
>> *did* say was that it fit my needs, as I laid them
bofh wrote:
> Why is that a troll? He offered an opinion on Phpbb. It is neither good
> nor secure. [see below] Just because he cannot offer an alternative (there
> may not be a secure alternative even!)
>
Because that sentiment had already been echoed by others. No sense
beating dead horse
Adam wrote:
> Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>> He said "good and secure". Phpbb is neither.
>>>
>> Perhaps you would like to offer an alternative
>>
> Nope.
>
Then you are a useless troll. This will be m
Adam wrote:
> "Jack J. Woehr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> http://www.phpbb.com/
>>
> He said "good and secure". Phpbb is neither.
Perhaps you would like to offer an alternative instead of just dissing
the phpBB users? I've also had an acceptable record with phpBB. This
being the resu
Chris 'Xenon' Hanson wrote:
> Chris Zakelj wrote:
>> Why not just a plain old DSL/10BaseT bridge and pppoe(8)? I agree that
>> it'd be great to have hardware plugged comfortably inside the system and
>> one less piece hanging off the power strip, but canacar@
Chris 'Xenon' Hanson wrote:
> Will Hoskins wrote:
>> I was overjoyed when this chipset was supported in 3.8. At last, I
>> thought, consumer level DSL equipment which will show up as an
>> interface instead of some dodgy ppp tun0 nonsense.
>>
>> So then, my obsd sweethearts, do you ever drop suppor
Gustavo Rios wrote:
> Which seagate momentus are you using?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> On 7/15/05, Frank Denis (Jedi/Sector One) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Fri, Jul 15, 2005 at 07:55:59PM +0530, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
>> >*AVOID* 2.5" IDE Laptop drives.
>> >I've had pretty bad experience with
ay, August 01, 2006 10:10 AM
> To: Chris Zakelj
> Cc: misc
> Subject: Re: Using dd(1) to duplicate a hard drive
>
> On 2006/08/01 08:03, Chris Zakelj wrote:
>
>> Question was, is there a faster way? (about ten off-list replies so far all
>> point to 'no')
Nick Holland wrote:
> Chris Zakelj wrote:
>> Went back about two years in the MARC archives with the terms 'copy
>> drive' (oddly enough, 'dd' itself wouldn't work), and got plenty of
>> linux examples on Google (that pretty much say what I propose
Went back about two years in the MARC archives with the terms 'copy
drive' (oddly enough, 'dd' itself wouldn't work), and got plenty of
linux examples on Google (that pretty much say what I propose anyway)
but no luck... I'm hoping to find a faster way to create an image of one
drive (a Samsung MP0
Melameth, Daniel D. wrote:
> If your web server is serving up pages, it's likely the pass in rule
> that's being hit first and creating state--and since you're not
> assigning a queue to that rule, it's being dumped to bulk.
That did it... Assigning queue on the 'pass in...' line has it working
ju
Trying to figure out what's going wrong here, and at this point, I'm
stumped. I'm trying to place traffic being served from apache above
that of bulk transfers (BitTorrent, primarily), yet according to pfctl
-vvsq, they're both ending up in the 'bulk' queue as defined by my
rules. Since the 'user
Gustavo Rios <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: May some one suggest a good quality HD
drive for use with Openbsd 3.9
and Soekris net4801-60 hardware ?
Thanks in advance.
I would suggest just going through the reviews of notebook drives on
www.storagereview.com. Be aware that the little inch long ri
Matthias Kilian wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 16, 2006 at 02:54:35PM -0400, Tim Donahue wrote:
>
>> I swear, spam keeps getting wierder and wierder
>>
> It's not spam, it's modern art. You can use it for poetry.
I thought it might have been one of those "BSD is dying!" trolls on
slashdot, except
STeve Andre' wrote:
> On Monday 03 July 2006 17:37, Jeff Simmons wrote:
>
>> A client is setting up a password policy, and would like to prevent users
>> from reusing a password for a period of time (four changes ninety days
>> apart). Is there a way to do this, either within the OS or via a pro
Clint Pachl wrote:
> So when Theo starts crying when companies don't open source, that is
> very hypocritical behavior.
This statement right here proves you don't know what the hell you're
talking about, and makes the rest of your long-winded rant irrelevant.
Theo did not, and never has, asked for
Michael Lechtermann wrote:
> Guido Tschakert wrote:
>
>> You surely do not want to say no to dozens of network questions (and
>> maybe a lot of other stuff)
>>
> Thats why I suggested to make just one question that asks if you would
> like to to any optional setup. Default answer [n]. If yo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Would it be possible that the installer asks if you may wanna use the NIC
> for pppoe-Connections and then maybe also asks for User/PW for the
> connection-settings? :)
>
> In my oppinion this little change may would maybe bring more "usebillity"
> (or how that`s written.
"Spruell, Darren-Perot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: For sysadmins that want to
know as soon as possible about issues which
are deemed patch-worthy (security vulnerabilities, critical
reliability issues), what is the "best" way to stay on top of these
issues as they are resolved?
The canonical sou
Michael Lechtermann wrote:
> Hi,
>
> anyone can recommend a free PHP board/forums software for use with
> PostgreSQL 8.x?
>
> PgSQL isn't mentioned in the vBulletin homepage.
> PHPBB is supposed to work with 7.x, not sure about 8.x
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Michael
If it hasn't already been said t
TED]>; Fri, 2 Jun 2006 21:20:22 -0400 (EDT)
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H??Message-ID:
I've been using ddclient from packages successfully for the better part of a
year. Before that, it was ipcheck.py (until it started doing abusive updates).
riwanlky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi,
I will like to know if OpenBSD have the capability to update my dynamic ip
to www.dyndns.org.
I
About to build a Soekris box for my firewall, and in the interests of
getting everything as small and compact as possible, I'd like to replace
my current Speedstream 5260 ADSL modem with something along the lines of
Sangoma's S518 (http://www.sangoma.com/datasheets/p_s518adsl-specs).
Nothing is sa
STeve Andre' wrote:
> On Monday 01 May 2006 22:15, John Kintaro Tate wrote:
>
>> I was wondering about installing OpenBSD on a very old laptop (no cdrom)
>> via serial line. I am aware it would take literally ages.
>>
>> I am guessing slip would be the way to go, I have never used it before.
>>
Qwerty wrote:
> Hi All, Could anyone please tell me if the book "Building firewalls with
> OpenBSD and PF" (found at Amazon), would still be applicable today, or is
> it a bit outdated. Thank You Danny
It won't have some of the most current goodness (like the new kernel
pppoe(4) driver) mentioned,
Steven wrote:
> * Jim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [060307 20:36]:
>> The problem is that if the kid is already logged into AOL Instant
>> messenger, the connection is not broken. So even though she is
>> grounded, she can still chat all day on AIM. Why isn't this pf.conf
>> file blocking everything on th
A Rossi wrote:
> Hi,
> I've been hired by a client to perform a number of network services
> for him, most of which are completely unrelated to my topic.
> Now, onto my topic:
> He asked me if I could partition all of his workstation computers
> (running windows XP Professional SP2) with a windows
kyle wrote:
> Im having trouble finding out if(I'm sure it does) the pf.conf supports
> interface ranges and how to implement it. Right now, I have an ugly rule
> that specifies each interface(tun0, tun1, tun2, etc..). If I somehow missed
> this in some documentation, please feel free to tell me to
uv negativa wrote:
> Hi all,
> Well, i need some help!
> what is the best Wireless hardware supported on openbsd?
>
> I think I'll buy one wireless with chipset ath, but in the manual says
>
> Revision A1 of the D-LINK DWL-G520 and DWL-G650 are based on an Intersil
> PrismGT chip and are not
Alexander Farber wrote:
> And there is also ipcheck.py
>
> On 2/6/06, Keith Richardson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> This will handle the pesty case of your IP changing.
>>
>> 1. dyndns.org - get a free subdomain to map to your IP.
>> 2. ddclient package - updates your DNS whenever your IP cha
Joe S wrote:
> Be careful with Soekris. While DSL speed is stuck at 1.5 MB for you,
> many users are getting 6MB and higher is some parts of the world. It
> would not be advantageous to buy something like a soekris and grow out
> of it in 2 years when your ISP gets around to offering REAL speeds.
H
Rob W wrote:
>> From: Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> This is a denial of service, not a security exploit. Crashing a box
>> causes headaches, but the data within is still out of the reach of those
>> who would like to steal it.
>
> It isn't importan
Giancarlo Razzolini wrote:
>Thanks for the prompt reply. I had some luck yesterday with altq. I've
>put 300kb as bandwidht limit in my internal iface and 150Kb in my
>external iface. And assigned traffic to the download queue (300Kb) and
>it worked. The only problem is that i'm using keep state in
Giancarlo Razzolini wrote:
> Hello folks,
>
>I finally did took some time and did my pf.conf firewall from scratch,
>actually learning it (i did my first using fwbuilder. It worked, but i
>wanted to do a "hands on" approach). And know i must say i'm almost
>proficient in pf. I must confess i
Gaby vanhegan wrote:
>There are sites on this machine that we've had since 2000, and that
>were running on various insecure os' from there before we made the
>move to OpenBSD. I suspect that it would be a medium/large sized
>task to make these sites work under chroot, as well as reorganise
Joachim Schipper wrote:
>I'm afraid this'll result in lots of questions on [EMAIL PROTECTED] I, for one,
>would be stumped as to why I'd want OpenNIC.
>
No particular reason. I just needed someone for the sake of example,
and they're the ones who sprang to mind. My use of them was in no way
an i
Justin H Haynes wrote:
> Thanks Nick Holmes and misc for
> http://www.openbsdsupport.org/GalleryInChroot.html. It was very
> helpful in getting Gallery working in OpenBSD in the chrooted Apache
> environment for me. However, I need to use an external smtp server to
> handle registration emails.
Niall O'Higgins wrote:
>On Wed, Dec 14, 2005 at 09:20:06PM -0500, Chris Zakelj wrote:
>
>
>>Here's the problem I've run into... after staring at the dhcpd.conf man
>>page for a while, it didn't seem like you could feed it two interfaces
>>at once.
New project I'm trying to work out since the last was a flame-out.
Trying to get my firewall to double as a secured access point so I can
actually carry my laptop around. I've got a working card:
ral0 at pci0 dev 11 function 0 "Ralink RT2560" rev 0x01: irq 12, address
00:11:50:14:f6:a0
ral0: MAC
John Danks wrote:
>On 12/8/05, Bernd Schoeller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>I had run the current TeamSpeak server in Linux emulation on 3.8 just
>>a couple of weeks ago, although I have to admit that this was just for
>>testing. But it seemed to work fine.
>>
>>
>I managed to get it run
Ricardo Lucas wrote:
>Good night everybody,
>
>i'm starting in openBSD now and I need some help of you if it is possible.
>I've installed a firewall using openBSD, of-course, it's working thank's
>GOD, but I wanna know, when I make a nat in pf.conf like this above:
>
>nat on $ext_if from $int_if:n
Ok, getting a bit frustrated, so asking the list. Has anyone
successfully put a TS server onto an oBSD environment, and if so, what
steps are involved? MARC only turned up one link (non-relevant, they
wanted to run clients behind PF), while the google hits I got were all
woefully out of date and
jared r r spiegel wrote:
> OT, and please don't interpret me as naysaying using spare CPU to
> contribute to distributed computing projects, but i was interested
> to see how much more power my machine ate while running dnetc.
>
> http://www.ice-nine.org/jrrs/meter/
>
> ( taken from a watts-u
Johan P. Lindstrvm wrote:
>I'm sorry if this comes across as flame bait, that's not my intention.
>
>With that out of the way;
>
>How about that BOINC initiative, http://boinc.berkeley.edu is that
>something that interests anyone else?
>
>I can come to think of plenty of reasons why one would not
Giancarlo Razzolini wrote:
>Hi again,
>
> I've managed to make a serial laplink connection with my linux machine,
>so now i'm able to access my OpenBSD machine, using the pppd.
>
> I'm seding my full dmesg, for your apreciation and i hope it will help
>to solve my problem:
>
Just a sh
scorch wrote:
>>>Errare humanum est, perseverare autem diabolicum!
>>>
>>>
>>Stilus email est humanus , tamen caput capitis - stipes est diabolical.
>>
>>and
>>
>>Quid quid latine dictum sit, altum videtur
>>
>>
>usque ad mortem bibendum :-)
>
>
Any hope of getting a translation? Havi
J.C. Roberts wrote:
>On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 17:00:39 +, Michael Quaintance
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>JCR,
>>
>>/Please/ don't loose your verbosity.
>>
>>For newbies like me, your lengthy descriptions of why the OpenBSD
>>community thinks like it does are incredibly useful. Short, pithy
Nick Holland wrote:
>Were I a betting man, I'd bet the 1205SA is supported by the pciide(4)
>driver. It appears to be a very basic SATA controller. If it's not
>supported by pciide, it probably could be. Probably isn't even an
>Adaptec chip on it.
>
>
You're right... pulling back the sticker,
Szechuan Death wrote:
> Speaking of which: Which driver supports the Adaptec 1205SA? Anybody?
> Bueller? Manpages are not forthcoming.
Don't know if any of them do, especially now that Adaptec SCSI has been
removed from the kernel. However, if any dev wants it, I just removed
one from my gami
Jan Izary wrote:
> Recently I and several other people have worked to improve the OpenBSD
> article contained in the Wikipedia, I'm sure I need not explain how it
> works.
>
> Anyways, I've worked to get as much easily accessable information
> regarding OpenBSD in that article as possible and I've
Johan P. Lindstrvm wrote:
This is much appreciated, after reading Nick Holland's post (
http://www.holland-consulting.net/obsd/faq-help.html ) I can't do more
than agree and feel challenged.
How ever, I am missing some details for my FAQ and would really like
to get in touch with the individua
Johan P. Lindstrvm wrote:
I would like to co-write an installation guide for twiki (it's in
packages) for us less seasoned obsd monglers, I am finding it
not-so-straight-forward and would like to help every one else on their
way, does anyone know whom I may contact about this matter or do you
fe
Kevin wrote:
A friend needs to order a basic computer with a good warranty,
to run as a very basic OpenBSD 3.7 firewall for a cablemodem.
I'd put one together from parts, but I don't relish doing "won't boot"
hardware support from 1600 miles away.
Looking at the Dell Dimension line (probably th
Chris Zakelj wrote:
I've done the googling and turned up empty :( I'm trying to get the
included icons to show when someone does a directory view, but
everything I try comes back with:
[Wed Jul 27 01:35:57 2005] [error] [client 192.168.0.3] (13)Permission
denied: access to /icons
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