It looks like EtherPad will be gone after tomorrow, too. Google is killing
it and moving the functionality into Google Wave:
http://etherpad.com/ep/blog/posts/google-acquires-appjet
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 3:15 PM, Marco Peereboom wrote:
> Drawing shit with the mouse. Not typing stuff with th
Ricardo Augusto de Souza wrote:
Last tests:
# tcpdump -i xl1 'port 8101'
tcpdump: listening on xl1, link-type EN10MB
18:20:52.383277 200217182188.user.veloxzone.com.br.49793 >
smtp.cmtsp.com.br.8101: S 2769173131:2769173131(0) win 8192 (DF)
WHAT IS WRONG WITH MY RDR NOW?
Dumb quest
Jordi Beltran Creix wrote:
Well, according to previous answers, the 25 years old comment was
actually justified, but if it weren't, style(9) would come to mind.
Been eating your own dog food lately?
If we understand that custom kernels are unsupported, that some
kernel options can be modified wit
Tobias Walkowiak wrote:
On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 11:51:04PM -0500, Andrew Konkol wrote:
If you're looking for a single board computer using compact
flash...I've had good luck with my ALIX 2c3
http://pcengines.ch/alix2c3.htm
would be my recommendation, too. just bought one as my home rou
Hi there,
I'll start off by saying that these hosts are all vmware instances that
I loaded up to do some testing, so if there's some known stability
problem running OpenBSD on vmware, let me know and I'll drop this. :)
In playing around with relayd on OpenBSD 4.3, I'm finding that it
crashe
Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2008-04-11, Manuel Heckel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
2) the hardware is an alix2c3 board. it works good so far, but the
compact flash card is terribly slow. i know cf are slow, but i get max
400kb/s read/write (dd if=/dev/zero of=/local/file).
it's quite poss
Karel Galuska wrote:
p1 and p2 are always the same.
58453 always to 80
K.
...
It is not easy to explain. On PCs are special custom based
aplications which
changes destination port of outcoming traffic and I need put it back
to port
80.
As a casual reader of this thread, I'm wondering if so
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Reliably? I been running it for 3 years already without single incident that
those damn
e-mails I'd sent reached their destinations at all.
Indeed it comes down to this for the OP... do you want to listen to one
person telling you (very incorrectly) that it can't b
L. V. Lammert wrote:
Please stop spreading misinformation. Unless you have reverse DNS
setup, ANY email server that adhering to standards should (and
probably will) block your incoming email.
It's also rather incorrect to simply state, "You _must_ have reverse DNS
to run a mail server at
Lars NoodC)n wrote:
bofh wrote:
http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms818754.aspx
Read the page topic and search for the word "PAC "
Several links in it appears to confirm that a broken version of
Kerberos is still used:
"The Kerberos Authentication Group Membership
Extensions
Diana Eichert wrote:
You can locate data from formatted and "wiped" hard drive, if you have
the resources behind you.
Can you point to an actual instance you know of where this has
happened? I don't mean that in an aggressive or challenging way, I'm
sincerely interested after reading that re
Steven Surdock wrote:
To perform integrated NTLM auth I believe you'll need winbind from samba
and windbind support for Squid. I'm not sure I understand the authpf
requirement.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-ports&m=119081356508513&w=2
-Steve S.
I have to agree with Steven here, I don't under
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does this point to a problem with "set skip on { lo, tun0 }"? I
will try your suggestion to see if it works (pass quick on { tun0
tun1 }), but I dislike using "quick" in my rules.
I added "up" to my /etc/hostname.tun0 to see if that worked based
on one of the suggest
I had the same symptom, where I'd have to manually reload my pf rules
after a reboot to get OpenVPN traffic to flow. Using tcpdump showed
that pf was blocking all the traffic on my tun interfaces although I had
a "set skip" rule for them.
I may not be completely right here, but I believe pf g
chefren wrote:
http://www.securityfocus.com/brief/271
..
..
Systems running OpenBSD are unlikely to be affected based on that
open-source group's refusal to use "binary blobs" in their device
drivers, and their subsequent reverse engineering of numerous WiFi
chipsets to provide open-source
Luke Bakken wrote:
>> cmd1 2>&1 >$WHERE
>
> This doesn't do what you think it does, which I'm assuming is redirect
> stderr and stdout to $WHERE.
>
What does it do? I was of the belief that it is indeed doing the above,
and the log/scratch files I redirect to have always seemed to back that
up,
Here are the pieces of my pf.conf that allowed me to play AoM and such,
I haven't played AoE3 yet, but the concept is probably similar w/
different ports (or maybe the same, who knows?)
from pf.conf:
> mark="192.168.10.10"
...
> tcp_games="6073 34987 37456" \
># AoM (6073), RoN (3
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