Why not use a .htaccess redirect?
https://www.sslshopper.com/apache-redirect-http-to-https.html
On Thu, Mar 1, 2018 at 7:18 AM Bryan Harris wrote:
> Alternate?: go back to original config and change
>
> server "default"
>
> to
>
> server "example.com"
>
> And maybe an alias for "www.example.com
I just saw you mentioned you are using the disk inside of virtualbox. Does
this same thing happen if you use the disk natively?
On Mon, Jan 8, 2018 at 8:52 AM Matt M wrote:
> With disks, the blocks can change. There can be any number of reasons for
> this, from the actual physical pl
With disks, the blocks can change. There can be any number of reasons for
this, from the actual physical platters going bad to the read heads not
functioning properly, or the memory on the disk going bad. SSD is a
different story, in my experience when it begins to go the behavior becomes
really er
ETA is a sort of "universally" recognized and used form. To be technical,
ETA and ETE would be synonymous in this case anyway.
The time to wait till arrival (eta) would correspond exactly with the time
it takes to complete the process (enroute).
On Sun, Jan 22, 2017 at 8:30 AM jean-francois wrot
On Sat, May 28, 2016 at 7:31 AM Teng Zhang wrote:
> I can't adjust the time for OpenBSD and my life appropriately. Could you
> please share your experience with me about how you adjust your time between
> OpenBSD and your life.
> thanks for any reply.
>
>
If OpenBSD is consuming so much of your
Sudden power offs are often indicative of heat issues, especially on
laptops. Does it power right back on and stay on for a long time? If not I
would suspect heat. If it does stay on, it may be a power management bug, a
bad power source or possibly a failing power supply in the machine.
If it won'
Your best option would be to backup data and configs, and reinstall fresh.
There are so many releases between 4.1 and 5.4 that you're going to spend a
lot of time just to get to -current or -stable 5.4, while you're still
gonna have to modify config files that have changes since 4.1 that it
probabl
This may not be the most appropriate place to ask, but I figured a lot of
you are using Cisco on your networks.
I am beginning to study for the CCNA and I want to purchase at least one
Cisco router and a switch for a home lab. I don't want to spend a lot of
money unnecessarily, and have been looki
I am using PF on 5.4-stable to NAT and firewall my network, but I can't get
port forwarding to work. All requests end up at the OpenBSD box and go no
further. For instance, I opened port 22 in PF to forward to a Centos box,
but ssh on the openbsd box still takes the request. Port 80 isn't working
a
There isn't any reason all the packages couldn't fit on a cd. Most are just
a few bytes to a few kb, and a small number are into a few MB. Browsing the
package list (for i386), it looks like the largest one might be 4mb.
You should set your pkg path to the cd if you want to install from there,
I personally wouldn't advise using a single bare-metal machine just for
dhcp, a separate one for dns, a separate one for sendmail etc. Seems like a
huge waste of resources to me. My opinion is that you would fare better, as
was suggested earlier, to use some of the other bare-metal machines for
mor
I am trying to get torrenting to work but I can't seem to get any
packets to go through. Tcpdump shows attempted activity and nothing
blocked,but the torrent client itself doesn't seem to be receiving
anything from any torrent I have tried.
The torrent client is using port 58846
From the pf.co
On 10/31/2012 11:05 AM, Rares Aioanei wrote:
On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 10:28:35AM +0400, Sergey Bronnikov wrote:
Yesterday I have found an unpleasent bug in OpenBSD.
I started two virtual machines in qemu with netbsd and building
source inside each virtual machine.
After about 10 min laptop becom
Yesterday I upgraded from 5.1-release to -current. Is there any need to
upgrade to 5.2-release? Could this cause issues since -current is really
newer than what's on the 5.2 media?
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