Quoting Theo de Raadt :
I would like to say only this: if people to not want big companies
meddling with OpenBSD as it has been happening with Linux better its
users support it.
I said this in 2006:
"I think that contributions should have come first from the vendors,
secondly from the
Quoting Christer Solskogen :
On Wed, Jul 8, 2015 at 4:49 PM, Gleydson Soares wrote:
Great news !
As I said on the OpenBSD facebook page:
"I have to say that I find it quite ironic of all of the vendors in
the world, the foundation gets a huge donation from Microsoft which
yet have implement
Quoting Maurice McCarthy :
On 2015-07-02 18:10, Jorge Gabriel Lopez Paramount wrote:
Hi all,
I know this is not related to OpenBSD directly but hope someone might
help; I ordered a CD set and a rucksack more than one month ago and I
have not received them yet so I'm wondering what happen
ot no
response.
I spent that money mainly as a contribution but would not mind
receiving those goods, if someone have an idea how I could contact the
Store besides calling I would appreciate it.
--
Best regards,
Jorge Lopez.
Quoting Jorge Gabriel Lopez Paramount :
Hi all,
Hope somebody could
Quoting Marko Cupa? :
I am reading 2nd edition of "Absolute OpenBSD 2nd Edition" and can't
but notice paragraph "Confidentiality" on XXX page of Introduction:
---cut-here---
Confidentiality
This means that secret data should remain secret. Your private infor-
mation must not get into the public
Quoting dan mclaughlin :
there seems to be some interest in this, so i thought i would post my notes,
made more presentable.
here i detail ways to use ssh to restrict access to the filesystem as well as
X, mitigating the 'security nightmare' that is X11, not to mention preventing
possible leaki
I want to setup Virtualization server.
Currently I am using xen with Linux + ZFS...
And it uses files instead of ZFS volumes...
Since I'm new to OpenBSD I won't tell you what OpenBSD supports for
virtualization but what works for me, hope this helps. Keep in mind my
lack of experience in Ope
Quoting Ingo Schwarze :
Most of my daemons don't have any flags so it looks a bit strange
(and messy) with all these empty flag specs.
That's a matter of taste and purely aestetical without any functional
consequences, so if it's an argument at all, it carries almost no
weight.
There are wor
Quoting Predrag Punosevac :
I was following this discussion with the great interest but without
intend to participate in it until today.
Namely one of my OpenBSD servers (5.6 sparc64) runs Mollify and last
night I received an e-mail from an angry user who could not upload files
(the upload will
Quoting Christian Weisgerber :
2x e-08 (esxi)
Oooh, interesting. I hadn't considered VMs that actually keep time.
Indeed:
# cat /var/db/ntpd.drift
3.970778e-09
OpenBSD 5.5/i386 with qemu on Linux host, worked fine so far. =)
--
Best regards,
Jorge Lopez.
Quoting Kent Fritz :
Hopefully this is not too bad advice...
I've found the performance with cache=none to be unacceptable as well.
I'm using cache=writeback. Of course you'll get much better
performance if you remove Linux/KVM. :)
It might be the case for OpenBSD/i386, but in general cache
Hi all,
Just for the record, I do not think that OpenBSD/i386 behavior with
virtual disks running on KVM is a bug. Virtio was designed specially
for virtual machines and all modern Linux distros and other modern
operating systems support it, therefore the only good reason for not
using vi
Hi all,
A few months ago I tried to install OpenBSD 5.5 in a KVM virtual
machine running Linux in an amd64 computer. First tried to install the
i386 version since my Linux virtual machines are i686 and was
painfully slow, so much that I almost decided to not use OpenBSD. Then
I tried with
When I started learning OpenBSD half a year ago I checked communities and
mailing lists and there is a list in Mexico, with something like three emails
per month in average. I saw a site of BSD in general as well, with translated
articles.
Rather than having a Spanish mailing list I would like
Quoting Damon Getsman :
Hello everyone.
Regardless, I just wanted to find out... I usually get people willing to
give some advice, or at least willing to laugh and tell me the lesson that
I needed to know on here. I was really kind of surprised that I haven't
heard anything back on this for s
Quoting FRIGN :
It may be a little far-fetched, but I'm sure it would be possible
to have one package-manager for all distributions if there would just
be the motivation to distribute statically linked binaries and not fuck
things up with distribution-specific folder-structures.
I'm not a hack
I think the same, if running a command after installing it will make your
system free enough, what is the need of a fork? I think that if you publish a
web page with that information the OpenBSD community would not take that as an
offense.
I'm in the middle of leaving Debian after almost 15 yea
I started firefox on a remote xhost and it somehow
came up as a local instance (thru X?) with bookmarks
from a local client account... the remote account
was newly instanced and this was the first and
*only* time I've seen it happen. But it did.
That's a feature, not a bug.=)
When you star
Quoting frantisek holop :
Jorge Gabriel Lopez Paramount, 16 Nov 2014 15:55:
>Seems heavy, and probably harder to set up and maintain than (e) and (f).
Sure it's harder to set up, but believe me, after setting up the maintenance
is almost zero. I restart every week that server as read-
first days I did
that frequently, but last time I set something in Firefox was months ago.
Best regards,
Jorge.
Worik Stanton wrote:
>On 17/11/14 10:55, Jorge Gabriel Lopez Paramount wrote:
>[snip]
>> I restart every week that server as read-write to patch it and that's
>>
Quoting Jason Adams :
On 11/16/2014 12:15 PM, Jorge Gabriel Lopez Paramount wrote:
I have other approach that has worked for me so far: I created a
virtual machine with Debian
GNU/kFreeBSD (sorry but I'm new here), and installed Firefox there
and other software I would need
like imag
Quoting Daniel Dickman :
On Sun, Nov 16, 2014 at 2:08 PM, Jonathan Thornburg
wrote:
Are there other practical ways of securing an OpenBSD web browser?
[I'm afraid "just say no" fails the "practical" test. :( ]
one practical thing I'd love to see is for someone to port the Quark
web browser:
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