Cheers guys,
insert is great!
Looking forward to upgrading my v215 Gateway over the weekend.
https://plus.google.com/u/0/111096521876100491635/posts/ANUtieu3nho
-JoelW
On 1 November 2011 18:21, "K. AndrC) Braselmann" wrote:
> Am 01.11.2011 um 01:08 schrieb Mikolaj Kucharski:
>
Linux accepts up to 4 levels of #! nesting according to the references - as
of 2008 ( http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/9/6/66 )
Modify your scripts to do 5-10-15 and see what happens?
On 31 October 2011 10:41, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
> On 30 October 2011 02:39, Dmitry Tigrov wrote:
> > Russia has cancelled the move to DST for 2011.
> > Is cancellation DST for Russia added to 5.0 version? Is any patch to
> > cancellation for 4.9 version?
>
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-
Hi Leonard - have you considered openmesh ... you will probably find you
will get cost savings and that whole - re-inventing the wheel thing.
http://www.open-mesh.com/
-JoelW
On 19 October 2011 14:08, wrote:
> I have volunteered to implement a wireless network in a school. I have
> about 2
> m
On 20 September 2011 14:08, Corey wrote:
> On 09/19/2011 08:04 PM, Joel Wiramu Pauling wrote:
>
>> If you are Going to use linux as your dom0 I STRONGLY recommend against
>> virtual box. Vb is the retarded stillborn twin of kvm. Kvm is twice as
>> fast
>> in mainlin
If you are Going to use linux as your dom0 I STRONGLY recommend against
virtual box. Vb is the retarded stillborn twin of kvm. Kvm is twice as fast
in mainline and not controlled by oracle
sent from android handset. Please mind the brevity.
On Sep 20, 2011 12:44 AM, "Nico Kadel-Garcia" wrote:
> O
Hi all,
I am having some problems with the following setup and could use some pointers;
OpenBSD router/FW
- 3 Interfaces
em0 - Public/Internet - Single IP to openbsd
em1 - Intranet - 3 IP's on routable range
- c - OpenBSD Itself, b - Forward to Internal Host a), c) Forward ot
Internal Host b)
b
Load is generally a measure of a single processor core utilization over an
kernel dependent time range.
Generally as others have pointed out being a very broad (not as in meadow,
as in continent). Different OS's report load very differently from each
other today.
Traditionally you would see a loa
Sparc64 is probably the best support non x86 architecture for openbsd at
this time.
On 30 May 2011 21:41, Daniel Gracia wrote:
> Kinda naive question: either could be more than enough; depends on your
> hard/soft/bandwith combination.
>
> Stick to i386/amd64; usually the best buck for performan
stacking (802.11ah/QinQ) is ok for most situations, however it would be nice
to have a SAP style construct (service access port), which essentially is a
logical customer interface - most switch/router vendors have such as thing.
On 24 May 2011 11:56, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2011-05-23, Oes
On 30 March 2011 20:22, Alexander Schrijver
wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 10:06:14AM +0300, Gregory Edigarov wrote:
>> IMHO it is absolutelly useless, objections are:
>> 1. You can limit connections using firewall.
>> 2. You already have the feature by name "limiting the number of
>> retries"
>
On 14 March 2011 13:53, Andres Perera wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 13, 2011 at 6:43 PM, Joel Wiramu Pauling
> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> in order to fix a hardware problem with 4.8 release I need to move to
>> the current or 4.9 kernel.
...
>
> just after 4.8 was relea
Hi all,
in order to fix a hardware problem with 4.8 release I need to move to
the current or 4.9 kernel.
Having not played around with openbsd's dev trunk before; what is
expected to work/not to work if I just dump in a new bsd kernel and
reboot?
I quite happily run git built linux kernels willy
After around 3-4 days of uptime I start getting watchdog timeouts in
my logs - and eventually dhcpd stops responding to requests coming
into the interface, and then connectivity drops.
I see this dying behaviour on my uplink (bge0) connection as well.
Went to report this via sendbug while it was
Does the PS3 support ipv6? Are Sony's servers IPv6 compliant. The
better option is to acquire IPv6 transit someway (either by
terminating a tunnel broker pipe and advertising RA from your openbsd
box) or better still switching to an ISP that support native v6
service.
Kind regards
-JoelW
On 1 Fe
On 20 January 2011 11:18, S Mathias wrote:
> I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just
> can't decide what to put on it:
>
Use mikrotik - as they manufacture the product, test and integrate it
MikrotikOS (which is linux with a bunch of custom stuff on top) will
wor
yes in exactly the same fashion as you chroot any other application.
Find the shared librarys using ldd on the browser binary, copy them to
chroot-root/sub directories.
Execute from within the chroot.
On 17 January 2011 08:43, Jean-Francois wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Is there a way to chroot the web
On 13 December 2010 22:23, Joachim Schipper
wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 09:11:16PM -0700, Travis King wrote:
>> Joel Wiramu Pauling wrote:
>> > Marti Martinez wrote:
>> > > Ted Unangst wrote:
>> > >> At some point you're going to realize t
On 13 December 2010 16:13, Marti Martinez wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 11:32 AM, Ted Unangst wrote:
>> On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 1:16 PM, Alexander Shulgin
>> wrote:
>>> I know it might sound funny, but what do you guys think about
>>> feasibility of massively automatic PGP web mail with all
>
Hrm, do you have model number of the drives?
I have some WD drives in a raid 10 array (LVM2 + EXT4 + linux) for my
media PC and it would be useful to figure out if some of the issues I
have seen over the last year have been related to the use of drive.
On 10 December 2010 08:48, Aaron Suen wrote
I would be surprised if okular didn't open it. (okular being the KDE viewer)
On 7 December 2010 10:42, Clint Pachl wrote:
> Joachim Schipper wrote:
>>
>> On Sat, Dec 04, 2010 at 06:28:04PM -0700, Clint Pachl wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> When I open [the UPS developer's guide] with xpdf(1) I get a [message]
, Joel Wiramu Pauling wrote:
> Kia ora,
>
> I am having a similar problem as discussed here:
>
> http://kerneltrap.org/mailarchive/openbsd-misc/2010/8/24/6489
>
> However I am running latest stable on sunfire v215
>
> OpenBSD ufb-fw.ufb.net.nz 4.8 GENERIC#86 sparc64
>
Kia ora,
I am having a similar problem as discussed here:
http://kerneltrap.org/mailarchive/openbsd-misc/2010/8/24/6489
However I am running latest stable on sunfire v215
OpenBSD ufb-fw.ufb.net.nz 4.8 GENERIC#86 sparc64
I am running double NAT but unfortunately at this point it is the only
opt
Have you tried it under wine?
http://wiki.winehq.org/OpenBSD
On 12 September 2010 16:51, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> Elmar Bschorer wrote:
>>hi list,
>
>>i tried to get skype up and running with linux emulation on openbsd 4.7.
>>skype starts up and i can log in but i can't see any contacts or ch
lightty does however. So you may want to look into it over apache.
On 23/08/2010, Benny LC6fgren wrote:
> Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>> Benny L??fgren [bl-li...@lofgren.biz] wrote:
>>> (I've long wished for a privsep apache with separate chroot():s for
>>> every virtual domain... one of these days I'
Any reason why you can't just use https and webserver?
On 17 August 2010 22:27, Matt wrote:
> Quite possibly more of a 'which software' question:
>
> I am looking for a way to have two parties share documents securely through
> an OpenBSD server.
> User A can not look into directory B but is allo
I recommend http://dimdim.com
for something platform agnostic and running on a FOSS platform.
Openignite server if you are wanting to put something installable in
place (xmpp colab suite)
-Joel Pauling
On 31 March 2010 10:51, patrick keshishian wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 2:44 PM, David V
I am not saying that it is in the spirit of the project.
Just saying that there is nothing wrong nor preventing you from doing
so under the BSD licence. Don't like it? fine. Take your time to a
project using a different licence.
Let me clear on this.
Yes you can.
Follow the BSD licence terms (none of which say anything about for
profit) and you are fine.
There is absolutely zero legal reason you cannot put together a cd of
OpenBSD and sell it. The official CD has some further licencing
restrictions, so if you were to co
> here's a quick little seminar on professors and academia. it is very
> advanced and you may not understand it at first:
>
One important point you forgot to mention. The influence on IT
syllabus of the various arcane politics involved with Campus IT
infrastructure.
Alcatel-Lucent do a AA-ISA card plugin module for their 7750 range of
routers. Which enables you to do filtering at 50GB (and scale it up to
800GB) per 12U router.
Having recently investigated this segment for work. Allot,
Sonicwall(which is a Linux Variant) and a few others are running FOSS
firew
Just use USB to RS323 convert cables and have as many heads as you like off
of dumb terminals. Or old laptops.
;-)
2009/5/22 Need Coffee
> Hi, I have kind of a weird question.
>
> I have two video cards in an amd64/-current machine.
>
> Both cards have dual-head capability.
>
> At the text con
Make sure you are plugging directly into the MOBO connectors.
Many cases include crappy USB one hubs which causes degraded performance.
2009/2/9 frantisek holop :
> hmm, on Thu, Feb 05, 2009 at 06:44:25PM +0100, Jesus Sanchez said that
>> On windows, formated as FAT32, the copy of 1,2 GB took
>>
Well short of building yourself into a faraday cage there is not much you
can do to avoid van Eck sniffing. Also while LCD's are immune, I hear that a
similar technique can be applied to LCD's. I am guessing sniffing LCD's is
probably an order of magnatude more difficult than CRT tho.
On 21/01/200
Dude, you want a proxy with different user ACLs. This is not a browser thing
at all.
2 firefox profiles will do the same thing, each having a different proxy
user set. Hell have 2 user accounts on your entertainment box, and ssh -X
[EMAIL PROTECTED] when you want to bring up your secure account.
K
On 19/01/2008, Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On 2008/01/19 08:47, Joel Wiramu Pauling wrote:
> > One other note, if your planning on doing any internet banking, your
> pretty
> > much stuck with Firefox or Opera (using binary emulation).
>
> lyn
One other note, if your planning on doing any internet banking, your pretty
much stuck with Firefox or Opera (using binary emulation). Haven't tried ie
under wine on openbsd, it may work also.
Why? Because a lot of the internet banking sites are useless and while
things like konqueror load them, b
dude, from what your saying, then run a browser, in chroot via ssh. To your
remote X server. You may also want to rub a scrubbing proxy in that environ,
(i.e dans guardian or somesuch). While a chroot is not ideal, it is a step
up from running just plain ol unprivileged. And it's not like chroots a
chroot ;-).
It is a pity that the is nothing like linux vservers for openbsd as yet ;-)
On 18/01/2008, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Jan 17, 2008 at 06:17:54PM -0500, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
> > On Thu, Jan 17, 2008 at 05:11:53PM -0500, STeve Andre' wrote:
> > > On Thurs
You could also just use a test suite designed to do lots of different things.
i.e
bonnie
http://www.textuality.com/bonnie/
The main annoyance I have had with bittorrent/p2p apps on openbsd is
the relatively low file open limits. Pumping this is easy enough tho.
On 06/01/2008, Leonardo Rodrigues <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Maybe those watchdog timeouts have nothing to do with bittorrent, and
> are probably more relat
Actually probably the sata to usb|ide to usb converter chip. Not all are
made equal.
On 31/12/2007, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Sat, Dec 29, 2007 at 09:03:49PM -0500, Dave Sorg wrote:
> > I have a 1TB hard drive in an external box. When I use USB 2.0 to write
> to it,
> > I
Tip.
Don't allow password challenge. Problem solved. Just use key'd ssh and this
problem disappears.
On 11/12/2007, Raimo Niskanen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have a related problem, but I am not sure if the source
> IPs are nasty computers or just...
>
> # lsof -ni:www
> shows me lots of c
err Linux / Alsa support 5.1 fine on a number of cards, have done for a long
time.
On 23/11/2007, Paul Irofti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 09:23:52PM +0300, Nickolay A. Burkov wrote:
> > Hello everyone!
> >
> > Do somebody have success with 5.1 sound ?
> > If so, please
**cough** OpenAL ( http://www.openal.org )
On 23/11/2007, Jacob Meuser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 22, 2007 at 12:36:51PM -0800, J.C. Roberts wrote:
> > On Wednesday 21 November 2007, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> > > On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 01:12:38PM -0800, J.C. Roberts wrote:
> > >
On 16/04/07, Shane Harbour <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'm running Postfix/Dovecot with PostgreSQL (for authorization and mail
> routing) all from the ports. I've got it setup so that in the near
> future I can do virtual hosting of my wife's domains. It's pretty
> simple to setup and there is
On Tuesday 11 July 2006 23:12, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 11, 2006 at 08:43:05PM +1200, Joel Wiramu Pauling wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I really need to know if the zd1211 and zd1211(b) code has been
> > intergrated into OpenBSD yet and good and workable.
>
Hi all,
I really need to know if the zd1211 and zd1211(b) code has been intergrated
into OpenBSD yet and good and workable.
I need to run one in a server.
I saw some traffic about prelim driver a while ago...
Kind regards
JoelW
On Wed, 2005-06-08 at 02:44 -0700, Richard P. Koett wrote:
> Alexey E. Suslikov wrote:
> > original article were in portuguese...
> >
> >
> http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.myfreebsd.com.b
> r%2Fmodules.php%3Fname%3DNews%26file%3Darticle%26sid%3D1262&langpair=pt%
> 7Cen&hl=
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