“Server stopped responding” implies that it did provide some response before
stopping. “Server did not respond” would be more accurate and less confusing.
Dave Anderson
d...@daveanderson.com
> On Dec 23, 2023, at 07:27, hahahahacker2...@airmail.cc wrote:
>
> On 2023-12-22 10:39, Dave
Oops! I did see that message but forgot that it mentioned man.openbsd.org.
Apologies for the noise. (But that Safari error message sucks!)
Dave Anderson
d...@daveanderson.com
> On Dec 21, 2023, at 21:55, Daniel Jakots wrote:
>
> On Thu, 21 Dec 2023 21:22:49 -0500, Dave Anders
Safari isn’t providing much useful information, but starting today I’m
consistently getting a “server stopped responding” error when trying to access
the online man pages at man.openbsd.org. www.openbsd.org is working fine.
Dave Anderson
d...@daveanderson.com
> On Jun 1, 2021, at 16:50, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> On 2021-05-30, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> I’m setting up on 6.9-release a (for now) IPv4-only firewall with multiple
>> public addresses and multiple subnets behind it, and have a couple of
>> quest
will pass through an
interface. And I haven’t found any way of filtering on untagged connections
(something like ‘! tagged any’ would be nice). I’m sure that my setup isn’t
unique, so there must be a good way of dealing with this, but I’ve no idea what
it might be. Suggestions, please!
--
Dave
security and correctness.
--
Dave Anderson
work for a laptop, for desktop systems it might be
sufficient to use an add-in NIC rather than the built-in one -- but the
limited info I've found suggests that the IME may be able to snoop on
all devices and so defeat this tactic. Does anyone here know?
Thanks for any information,
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
se 2 pieces of information plus your name and town
together that makes it secure. Just guessing. Did I overlook anything?
--
Dave Anderson
Canadian X.25
service) PAD -> remote PAD -> remote dial-out service -> another modem ->
another multiplexer -> serial line into, IIRC, ttyA on a Sun system I was
helping someone repurpose. The entire install completed successfully off a
network boot in about an hour at 2400bps (*and* simultaneously 2400baud,
all you pedants out there...).
Wow.
--
Dave Anderson
nightmares yet running it
internally with limited outside connectivity and reliable (static) web
front end site is an option for control of this critical aspect.
At that point you're as good as a personal self sustained service.
--
Dave Anderson
ve overheard quite a bit of discussion on the subject.) I'd strongly
recommend that, before doing anything about this, you carefully
investigate what your responsibilities and liabilities would be.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
update.
As usual, you're doing the right thing -- and we appreciate it.
I hate to think of the likely mess if this sort of error had happened
with some commercial software package.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
at adapting their
>ordering system to the people ordering from all over the world, but
>we'll get there step by step I hope.
I hit a couple of those bumps on my first order from them, and they were
_very_ good about analyzing and fixing them.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
oot, editing the duids in /etc/fstab, and
fixing up /etc/hostname.*, but I'm hoping that there's a better way.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions (or confirmations that there is no
better way).
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Mon, 25 Aug 2014, Adam Thompson wrote:
>On 14-08-25 03:49 PM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> My amd64 notebook (full dmesg below) has started reporting an error
>> which I don't adequately understand. Any explanations or ideas as to
>> how to figure out exactly what
00/0.00 addr 2
ugen0 at uhub2 port 1 "Validity Sensors product 0x0018" rev 1.10/0.78 addr 3
uvideo0 at uhub2 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0 "SuYin
HP TrueVision HD" rev 2.00/1.10 addr 4
video0 at uvideo0
uhub3 at uhub1 port 1 "Intel Rate Matching Hub" rev 2.00/0.00 addr 2
vscsi0 at root
scsibus1 at vscsi0: 256 targets
softraid0 at root
scsibus2 at softraid0: 256 targets
root on sd0a (c3ffcff67dc13a92.a) swap on sd0b dump on sd0b
--
Dave Anderson
at uhub2 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0 "SuYin
HP TrueVision HD" rev 2.00/1.10 addr 4
video0 at uvideo0
uhub3 at uhub1 port 1 "Intel Rate Matching Hub" rev 2.00/0.00 addr 2
vscsi0 at root
scsibus1 at vscsi0: 256 targets
softraid0 at root
scsibus2 at softraid0: 256 targets
root on sd0a (c3ffcff67dc13a92.a) swap on sd0b dump on sd0b
--
Dave Anderson
On Wed, 30 Apr 2014, JJ Jumpercables wrote:
>On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 12:56 PM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> Just got mine, near Boston, Mass.
>>
>
>Jut curious... how long ago did you order?
As soon as I saw the announcement that orders were open -- I don't
remember exactly
Just got mine, near Boston, Mass.
My thanks to everyone involved.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Tue, 4 Dec 2012, Dave Anderson wrote:
Problem solved; PEBCAK. I didn't fully understand what 'cvs update' was
doing, and managed to create a source tree containing a mixture of old
and current files.
Apologies for the noise.
Dave
>I recently upgraded to the 2 D
atest version without any release
>tags, since you mention following -current)
Thanks for the suggestion; I'll give it a try -- and double-check that
the cvs update worked properly.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
conf && config GENERIC.MP && cd
../compile/GENERIC.MP
make clean && make
make install
reboot
cd /usr/obj && touch junk && mkdir -p .old && mv * .old && rm -rf .old &
cd /usr/src && make obj && cd /usr/src/etc && env DESTDIR=/ make distrib-dirs
cd /usr/src && make build
Thanks for any help,
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
--
Dave Anderson
On Sat, 25 Aug 2012, Dave Anderson wrote:
If there's no interest in this info, I won't burn an afternoon
collecting it. If there is interest, answers to my questions would be
useful.
Dave
>A year or so ago, as part of selecting a notebook to buy, I gathered
>dmesg info
www.nycbug.org/?action=dmesgd&add=1
Yes, I know about that site and intend to post the dmesg info there too
(as I did last year). But my question was about what to do with any
non-dmesg info I capture (whatever the developers tell me might be
useful, perhaps acpidump, usbdevs, pcidump, ...).
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
tional info? If there's no suitable place,
I can just keep it around and let anyone who needs it ask me for it.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Sun, 1 Jul 2012, Anthony J. Bentley wrote:
>Dave Anderson writes:
>> >So, in summary, the options are:
>> >
>> >Use HTML escapes everywhere. IMO, highly impractical.
>> >
>> >Use any encoding you wish, and set a meta tag when appropriate. Th
t value in the real headers (by encoding the
appropriate charset info in the file-name extension). This does suffer
from combinatorial explosion if you have have both lots of different
charsets and lots of different types of files to serve, but usually
isn't especially difficult. Done properly, it _always_ works when files
are viewed through the server, though (as someone pointed out) it
doesn't help if files are viewed directly from a browser.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Thu, 28 Jun 2012, frantisek holop wrote:
>hmm, on Thu, Jun 28, 2012 at 09:47:00AM -0400, Dave Anderson said that
>> Using META is _ugly_, especially for specifying a charset (since the
>> page will be read up through the META element using the charset
>> specified in the r
to be way too much pain for the translators.
Using META is _ugly_, especially for specifying a charset (since the
page will be read up through the META element using the charset
specified in the real header or assumed by the browser -- and that
charset could be incompatible with the actual encoding.) Why not just
use the AddDefaultCharset directive to ensure that a charset is
specified in the real header for all pages? Or is this known to break
some browsers that are still in use?
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
of the original
message) he has identified what may be the only place in the install
process where a single wrong keystroke can do major damage. Everyplace
else I can think of there's at least an opportunity to abort the
installation after making a mistake but before the damage is done.
I've no great love for 'are you sure' questions, but they may be
appropriate where they prevent a single easy-to-make mistake from
causing serious damage.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Mon, 27 Feb 2012, Dave Anderson wrote:
>I recently upgraded an HP dv7-6b63us notebook (dmesg below) to amd64/mp
>5.1-current as of about 11:30 EST 25 February 2012 (rebuilt from source
>several times since installing a 7 February snapshot) and have started
>seeing
>
> ah
1 "vendor 0x138a product 0x0018" rev 1.10/0.78 addr 3
uvideo0 at uhub2 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0 "SuYin
HP TrueVision HD" rev 2.00/1.10 addr 4
video0 at uvideo0
uhub3 at uhub1 port 1 "Intel Rate Matching Hub" rev 2.00/0.00 addr 2
vscsi0 at root
scsibus1 at vscsi0: 256 targets
softraid0 at root
scsibus2 at softraid0: 256 targets
root on sd0a (c3ffcff67dc13a92.a) swap on sd0b dump on sd0b
--
Dave Anderson
On Wed, 8 Feb 2012, Dave Anderson wrote:
>On Tue, 7 Feb 2012, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
>
>>On Tue, Feb 07, 2012 at 09:42:07AM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>> I've got a system running amd64/mp -current (latest source update on
>>> February 1st) and have n
On Tue, 7 Feb 2012, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
>On Tue, Feb 07, 2012 at 09:42:07AM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> I've got a system running amd64/mp -current (latest source update on
>> February 1st) and have noticed (for quite a while, actually) that the
>> night
y checking for /dev/whatever in the /altroot fstab entry -- but
I've been using DUIDs (as set up by the installer).
Shouldn't the daily script be updated to handle DUIDs as well as
explicit devices in /etc/fstab?
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
entry for tht dir wil be different than the other's.
>
>The exact cause of the slowdown is not known to me. But when you are
>switch repositories once in a while it's easy to get this case.
>
>I repair this by find . -name Root | xargs rm and using a explicit cvs
>root.
>
> -Otto
Hmmm. That doesn't seem to [fully] explain the slowdowns I've seen,
since I always use an explicit cvs root (following the FAQ) though I
certainly have switched repositories from time to time.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Sat, 28 Jan 2012, Nick Holland wrote:
>On 01/28/12 09:12, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> Thanks for the info. I've been using -Pd because
>> <http://www.openbsd.org/anoncvs.html> says to use them; I haven't yet
>> had a chance to look into how cvs works bey
On Sat, 24 Dec 2011, Dave Anderson wrote:
>On Fri, 23 Dec 2011, Brynet wrote:
>
>>On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 09:30:44PM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>> For the iPhone, yes, but evidently not for the iPad2.
>>
>>Yes, it will be a manual effort for as long as Apple rel
#x27;)
>ioconf.c:224: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
>ioconf.c:224: warning: (near initialization for 'cfdata[3]')
>ioconf.c:226: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
>ioconf.c:226: warning: (near initialization for 'cfdata[4]')
>ioconf.c:228: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
>ioconf.c:228: warning: (near initialization for 'cfdata[5]')
>ioconf.c:230: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
>ioconf.c:230: warning: (near initialization for 'cfdata[6]')
>
>The last ones continue for many more lines for 68 members of the array
>before the make process exits.
>
>Now this has happened twice, on brand new systems, also I've found other
>list posts describing the same errors but no solutions applying to my
>situation. So what do I do to get 5.0 compiled?
>
>--
>Hdlsningar / Greetings
>
>Stefan Midjich
>[De omnibus dubitandum]
>
--
Dave Anderson
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Philip Guenther wrote:
>On Fri, Jan 27, 2012 at 12:10 PM, Dave Anderson
>wrote:
>> I've run into this problem perhaps a dozen times over the past several
>> months while running amd64-current, most recently at 15:53 2012/1/26 EST
>> while runni
by this. Any clues would be greatly appreciated.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
>Hi Dave,
>
>Dave Anderson wrote on Sat, Jan 14, 2012 at 12:14:57PM -0500:
>
>> and then ran 'pkg_add -ui' it was unable to update those files:
>> "Couldn't find updates for uvideo-firmware-1.2p0, iwn-firmware-
s a good reason for leaving this
alone. I haven't looked into the pkg_add source myself because it's
large, complicated and (especially) under active development.
--
Dave Anderson
eventually found a model where everything I cared about worked.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Fri, 23 Dec 2011, Brynet wrote:
>On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 09:30:44PM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> For the iPhone, yes, but evidently not for the iPad2.
>
>Yes, it will be a manual effort for as long as Apple releases new devices.
>
>> >If you want to use libusb por
ere I know of (other than by looking in the
source).
>-Bryan.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
0/0.01 addr 3
Remove iPhone4S:
ugen1 detached
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
s or not.
I've no information as to whether or not it actually works (I was
test-booting a store demo system), but the 17 August 5.0 snapshot
recognized and configured it.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
cycle-into-production older computers
>(another example: the manufacturers who now prevent you from using disks
>they didn't provide in their machines, or prevent you from buying their
>proprietary disk carriers without their over-priced, under-performing
>disks. Value of machine after warranty expiration: Near zero).
>
>Nick.
>
--
Dave Anderson
On Thu, 18 Aug 2011, Dave Anderson wrote:
>I've been looking at a bunch of notebook dmesgs (i386, single processor)
>recently and have noticed that the value reported for 'real mem' is
>almost always much lower than the amount of memory actually installed.
>A typical
I've posted to the www.nycbug.org site (and sent to dm...@openbsd.org) a
bunch more dmesgs from notebooks found in local stores.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Thu, 18 Aug 2011, Dave Anderson wrote:
Oops! I forgot to include the full dmesg; here it is.
>I've been looking at a bunch of notebook dmesgs (i386, single processor)
>recently and have noticed that the value reported for 'real mem' is
>almost always much lower t
much reserved space, or is something
wrong?
Thanks,
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
direct fixed t10.SEAGATE_ST314670LSUN146G3KS73HA9
>sd1: 140009MB, 512 bytes/sector, 286739329 sectors
>sd2 at scsibus1 targ 3 lun 0: SCSI3
>0/direct fixed t10.SEAGATE_ST314670LSUN146G3KS73JGX
>sd2: 140009MB, 512 bytes/sector, 286739329 sectors
>mpi0: target 2 Sync at 160MHz width 16bit offset 63 QAS 1 DT 1 IU 1
>mpi0: target 3 Sync at 160MHz width 16bit offset 63 QAS 1 DT 1 IU 1
>mpi0: phys disk 0 Sync at 160MHz width 16bit offset 63 QAS 1 DT 1 IU 1
>mpi0: phys disk 1 Sync at 160MHz width 16bit offset 63 QAS 1 DT 1 IU 1
>mpi1 at pci4 dev 2 function 1 "Symbios Logic 53c1030" rev 0x07: ivec 0x7e4
>scsibus2 at mpi1: 16 targets, initiator 7
>"i2c" at mainbus0 not configured
>vscsi0 at root
>scsibus3 at vscsi0: 256 targets
>softraid0 at root
>scsibus4 at softraid0: 256 targets
>sd3 at scsibus4 targ 1 lun 0: SCSI2 0/direct fixed
>sd3: 280018MB, 512 bytes/sector, 573477376 sectors
>bootpath: /pci@1f,70/scsi@2,0/disk@0,0
>root on sd0a swap on sd0b dump on sd0b
>
>
>
>
--
Dave Anderson
demo system, how can I
gather enough information so that someone can look into this?
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Sun, 19 Jun 2011, Dave Anderson wrote:
>** Reply to message from "Dave Anderson" on
>Thu, 19 May 2011 20:27:31 -0400
>
>>** Reply to message from Sevan / Venture37 on
>>Fri, 29 Apr 2011 09:55:48 +0100
>>
>>>Stick them up on http://www.nycbug.o
** Reply to message from Dave Anderson on Thu,
2 Jun 2011 20:01:26 -0400 (EDT)
>In my neverending quest for more notebook dmesgs I've come across
>several HP Pavilion systems which hang during boot (using the i386
>snapshot dated 5/24), after a line starting with 'acpimcfg0 a
** Reply to message from "Dave Anderson" on
Thu, 19 May 2011 20:27:31 -0400
>** Reply to message from Sevan / Venture37 on
>Fri, 29 Apr 2011 09:55:48 +0100
>
>>Stick them up on http://www.nycbug.org/index.php?NAV=dmesgd;SQLIMIT=20 as well
>>as sending them to dm
On Fri, 3 Jun 2011, Dave Anderson wrote:
>On Fri, 3 Jun 2011, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
>
>>On Fri, Jun 03, 2011 at 01:09:47PM -0400, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>> While gathering notebook dmesgs I encountered this panic during boot (at
>>> a Best Buy, on a demo sys
On Fri, 3 Jun 2011, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
>On Fri, Jun 03, 2011 at 01:09:47PM -0400, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> While gathering notebook dmesgs I encountered this panic during boot (at
>> a Best Buy, on a demo system labelled Toshiba r835-p50x, booting from
>> a USB stic
swapper
[All of the above was hand-copied from the screen, so there may be
typos.]
I hope that this is enough information to enable someone to track down
the problem. If more is needed, let me know what it is and I'll try to
get it.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
r whatever information is needed to let someone debug this
(remembering that these are store demo systems to which I have only
limited access)? Or is this a known problem for which no more data is
needed?
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Wed, 25 May 2011, Paul M wrote:
>On 25/05/2011, at 4:48 AM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 21 May 2011, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>>
>>> On 2011-05-21, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>>> On Sat, 21 May 2011, Paul M wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
On Sat, 21 May 2011, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>On 2011-05-21, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> On Sat, 21 May 2011, Paul M wrote:
>>
>>>On 20/05/2011, at 12:27 PM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>>
>>>> FWIW I've encountered several ASUS notebooks which panic du
On Sat, 21 May 2011, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>On 2011-05-21, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> On Sat, 21 May 2011, Paul M wrote:
>>
>>>On 20/05/2011, at 12:27 PM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>>
>>>> FWIW I've encountered several ASUS notebooks which panic du
On Sat, 21 May 2011, Paul M wrote:
>On 20/05/2011, at 12:27 PM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>
>> FWIW I've encountered several ASUS notebooks which panic during boot
>> (in aml_parse or parse_aml, I can't remember which is correct); since
>
>aml_xparse
>
>> the
tabase that I can directly upload to, that looks like
a good place for them.
I've uploaded the 43 I've gotten so far, and will put more up soon
(I've still got a couple of stores to hit). You can find them by
filtering on submitter 'Dave Anderson'. I had some uploading pr
On Tue, 3 May 2011, Erik wrote:
>Op 3-5-2011 16:51, Dave Anderson schreef:
>> On Tue, 3 May 2011, Joachim Gwoke wrote:
>>
>>> Ever visit the people at http://www.woodmann.com? They might offer
>>> some more answers.
>
>Alternately you might have a look at t
On Tue, 3 May 2011, Joachim Gwoke wrote:
>Ever visit the people at http://www.woodmann.com? They might offer
>some more answers.
No, I wasn't aware of them. Thanks for the pointer.
Dave
>On 5/3/11, Alexander Hall wrote:
>> On 05/02/11 23:50, Dave Anderson wrote:
On Tue, 3 May 2011, Alexander Hall wrote:
>On 05/02/11 23:50, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> Sorry to bother you all, but I'm failing miserably at searching for a
>> tool to help analyze the structure of arbitrary files (prefereably one
>> which runs on OpenBSD).
>>
&g
ions for effective searches or
for suitable programs would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Thu, 28 Apr 2011 a.velichin...@gmail.com wrote:
>On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 11:25:20AM -0400, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> I'm working on buying a notebook which will run OpenBSD, and have been
>> grabbing the dmesg from whatever I find in stores to look at hardware
>> com
uld be
able to move to a newer snapshot soon.
Dave
>On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 11:25:20AM -0400, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> I'm working on buying a notebook which will run OpenBSD, and have been
>> grabbing the dmesg from whatever I find in stores to look at hardware
>> c
lect to dm...@openbsd.org?
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
My set just showed up (near Boston, Mass.)
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
SD website
(<http://www.openbsd.org/>) and noticed that the final paragraph says
"T-shirts and posters ... do not fund the project." This should be
fixed. [As should the copyright notice, which should be extended to
include 2011.]
FYI,
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
that the sales component has to be
>there too.
>
>I am only a part of the CD sales money. CD sales money keeps the
>electrons flowing through cvs.openbsd.org. Trust me, it is critical.
>
>> Not that I have any particular standing, but FWIW, y'all please order a
>> CD set if you haven't already done so. OpenBSD has served me well for
>> quite a few years, and I'd really like to see it continue -- and
>> continue to improve.
>
>Exactly -- let us continue doing this.
>
--
Dave Anderson
7;ve got some spare cash) I'll see about
also making a donation.
Not that I have any particular standing, but FWIW, y'all please order a
CD set if you haven't already done so. OpenBSD has served me well for
quite a few years, and I'd really like to see it continue -- and
continue to improve.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
or their hard and high-quality work.
Dave
>Only two related messages on undeadly.org
>
>C'mon don't you like your new CDs and swag?
>
>Order up!
>
>The song's pretty good too and it's free to download.
--
Dave Anderson
initialization for
'vop_reallocblks_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c: In function 'VOP_REALLOCBLKS':
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:669: error: 'vop_reallocblks' undeclared (first use
in this function)
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:669: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer
without a cast
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c: At top level:
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:680: error: variable 'vop_strategy_desc' has
initializer but incomplete type
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:681: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:681: warning: (near initialization for
'vop_strategy_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:682: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:682: warning: (near initialization for
'vop_strategy_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:683: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:683: warning: (near initialization for
'vop_strategy_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c: In function 'VOP_STRATEGY':
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:689: error: 'vop_strategy' undeclared (first use in
this function)
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:689: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer
without a cast
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c: At top level:
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:693: error: variable 'vop_bwrite_desc' has
initializer but incomplete type
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:694: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:694: warning: (near initialization for
'vop_bwrite_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:695: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:695: warning: (near initialization for
'vop_bwrite_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:696: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:696: warning: (near initialization for
'vop_bwrite_desc')
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c: In function 'VOP_BWRITE':
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:702: error: 'vop_bwrite' undeclared (first use in
this function)
../../../../kern/vnode_if.c:702: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer
without a cast
*** Error code 1
Stop in /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/TEST (line 92 of /usr/share/mk/sys.mk).
--
Dave Anderson
his
is also popular.
Also, some ISPs block or divert all outgoing traffic from their
customers to port 25.
Running my own mailserver from my home has worked for me for 15+ years.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
c:881: error: for each function it appears in.)
*** Error code 1
Stop in /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/TEST (line 92 of /usr/share/mk/sys.mk).
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Tue, 7 Dec 2010, Jacob Meuser wrote:
>On Tue, Dec 07, 2010 at 05:40:39PM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
>> No doubt I've screwed something up, but I can't figure out what.
>
>> # echo $CVSROOT
>> anoncvs.comstyle.com:/cvs
> ^
>> # cvs -t -d$CVSR
d: keyboard-interactive
debug1: Authentications that can continue:
publickey,password,keyboard-interactive
debug1: Next authentication method: password
r...@anoncvs.comstyle.com's password:
--
Dave Anderson
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
>Dave Anderson wrote:
>> On Fri, 13 Aug 2010,j...@fixedpointgroup.com wrote:
>>
>>> sendmail is fine if you have a few users at a relatively quiet domain,
>>> all of whom you want to have system accounts on the
s for an opinion. I _have_ been
using sendmail (on a light-duty, mostly-home mailserver) for 15 years.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
e how to filter/redirect on the hostname or
>URL...(I'm sure it's there, but I don't get it!).
>
>http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=relayd&sektion=8&arch=&apropos=
>0&manpath=OpenBSD+Current
>http://www.unixtechnics.org/openbsd-relayd.html
>https://calomel.org/relayd.html
>
>Can anyone shed any light on this for me?
>Please tell me if I'm barking up the wrong tree!
>
>Many thanks, Scott
>
--
Dave Anderson
** Reply to message from Dave Anderson on Sun,
4 Apr 2010 20:30:15 -0400 (EDT)
>On Thu, 1 Apr 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>
>>On Thu, 1 Apr 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>
>>>I've inherited an old notebook (Sony Vaio PCG-FX120) whose CardBus slots
>>&g
On Thu, 1 Apr 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>On Thu, 1 Apr 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>
>>I've inherited an old notebook (Sony Vaio PCG-FX120) whose CardBus slots
>>are (presumably) unusable because their interrupts aren't mapped:
>>
>>cbb0 at pci1 dev 2 f
On Thu, 1 Apr 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>I've inherited an old notebook (Sony Vaio PCG-FX120) whose CardBus slots
>are (presumably) unusable because their interrupts aren't mapped:
>
>cbb0 at pci1 dev 2 function 0 "Ricoh 5C476 CardBus" rev 0x80: couldn't
using exception 16
fdc0 at isa0 port 0x3f0/6 irq 6 drq 2
fd0 at fdc0 drive 0: 1.44MB 80 cyl, 2 head, 18 sec
pcic0 at isa0 port 0x3e0/2 iomem 0xd/16384
pcic0 controller 0: has sockets A and B
pcmcia0 at pcic0 controller 0 socket 0
pcmcia1 at pcic0 controller 0 socket 1
pcic0: irq 3, polling enabled
usb0 at uhci1: USB revision 1.0
uhub0 at usb0 "Intel UHCI root hub" rev 1.00/1.00 addr 1
biomask ef65 netmask ef65 ttymask
mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support
vscsi0 at root
scsibus1 at vscsi0: 256 targets
softraid0 at root
root on wd0a swap on wd0b dump on wd0b
--
Dave Anderson
nterface which is not pointed to
by a route to the packet's source address, which is somewhat similar to
what antispoof does.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
s you feel better about
>yourself, you are in a bad place, I can only suggest therapy, it works
>for millions of people.
Please consider the possibility that many people are tired of seeing
quetions that have already been asked and answered posted again by
people who apparently can't b
7;match'.
After that, it's probably just a 'simple' matter of ensuring that
ftp-proxy understands connections originating from the same system it's
running on.
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Tue, 16 Mar 2010, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>On 2010-03-16, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>> On 2010-03-16, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>> I do notice that 4.7 has a new divert-to-userland ability that looks
>>> like it could be used to solve this problem properly
>>
&
In the body of the manpage, the 'divert-packet', 'divert-reply' and
'divert-to' options are mentioned -- but there is no mention of them in
the BNF at the end of the manpage (a search on 'divert' finds nothing).
Dave
--
Dave Anderson
On Tue, 16 Mar 2010, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>On 2010-03-16, J.C. Roberts wrote:
>> On Tue, 16 Mar 2010 12:39:01 -0400 (EDT) Dave Anderson
>> wrote:
>>
>>> >I see two options:
>>> >
>>> >1. pass out
>>>
>>> This can work
On Tue, 16 Mar 2010, Gaby Vanhegan wrote:
>On 16 Mar 2010, at 17:24, Dave Anderson wrote:
>
>> I'm configuring a notebook which will use PF to protect itself from the
>> environments in which I use it, and would like to have FTP 'just work'
>> on it -- wh
On Tue, 16 Mar 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>On Tue, 16 Mar 2010, Simon Perreault wrote:
>
>>On 03/15/2010 11:49 PM, Dave Anderson wrote:
>>> I'm configuring a notebook which will use PF to protect itself from the
>>> environments in which I use it, and would lik
1 - 100 of 189 matches
Mail list logo