Anon Loli writes:
> On Fri, Aug 30, 2024 at 07:58:07AM +0200, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 29, 2024 at 05:03:25PM +, Anon Loli wrote:
> > > Hello, OpenBSD friends!
> > > Is there an alternative mailing list, or we can To and CC a bunch of
> > > people at
> > > once, I believe.
>
04-psyche.tot...@icloud.com writes:
> Thanks Stuart for all these thoughts. That's a lot of great ideas.
>
> Let me try to clarify a few things:
>
> - change `do_fsck` to `do_fsck -y`
> -
> I assume you mean Line 410. That seems like a great idea.
> D
Anon Loli writes:
> On Thu, Jul 18, 2024 at 07:15:28PM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > Anon Loli writes:
> > > On Tue, Jul 16, 2024 at 11:04:17PM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > > > I think there is a fundamental misunderstanding here.
> > > >
> > > > Anon Loli writes:
> > > > > Hello list, af
Anon Loli writes:
> On Tue, Jul 16, 2024 at 11:04:17PM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > I think there is a fundamental misunderstanding here.
> >
> > Anon Loli writes:
> > > Hello list, after I compiled ...
> >
> > Once you have crossed this Rubicon you are a developer and On Your Own.
>
> That'
I think there is a fundamental misunderstanding here.
Anon Loli writes:
> Hello list, after I compiled ...
Once you have crossed this Rubicon you are a developer and On Your Own.
Not that OpenBSD was ever going to hold anyone's hand.
Use the source, Luke.
> Does this belong in @tech?
No.
Mat
Anon Loli writes:
> If you were to read all of the emails in the thread for 1st to last, you
> would've seen that I mentioned that I not only read but also followed
> that link as well as release(8).
If you followed the instructions correctly you would not have wiped
your precious imagery by your
Kirill A. Korinsky writes:
> Folks,
>
> I'm looking for a way to migrate to different layout some OpenBSD systems.
>
> So, questions:
> 1. Has anyone done something like this before?
> 2. Do you have any instruction or that to expect?
Yes. What to expect? There is a very good chance data will be l
Luke A. Call writes:
>
> On 2024-03-29 09:01:07-0400, James Huddle wrote:
> > Exfiltrator. There's an 11-letter word that starts with "ex". X11.
>
> After a quick web search, I'm not sure I follow. Is that a reference to
> a program that exfiltrates data after a computer is compromised? Can yo
Files don't randomly disappear.
Downloaders can set the date of downloaded files to the time the
server reports.
OpenBSD then deletes them because they are old.
Don't use /tmp for long term storage. It's temporary. The clue is
in the name.
Matthew
ps. as a general rule if something has been ar
To those who agreed to include xpdf3 alongside the New! Improved!
Slower! Gaudier! version 4, thank you!
That was a horrible 30 seconds.
Matthew
Prasad MN writes:
> Does not work for me either -- I am on the latest snapshot and
> Firefox fails with the same error as reported on the thread.
> Same error for Tor Browser.
It just takes patience. Or make. Surely you have a backup computer?
The problem was noticed and the patch pushed to CVS o
Mark writes:
> "> That will never happen."
>
> And some serious reason?
/usr/sbin/sysupgrade is 218 lines short _with_ comments and I for
one like it that way.
It's difficult to screw up by using it and easy to figure out what
it did if you do.
> It was a great idea indeed. :/
So was dividing t
Peter N. M. Hansteen writes:
> On Wed, Aug 23, 2023 at 01:41:31PM +0200, Peter J. Philipp wrote:
> >
> > If this is a sensitive topic I apologize ahead of time.
> >
> > I'm wondering... can we have a change in the OpenBSD front page (to say):
> >
> > "Only two remote holes in the default install
Nick Holland writes:
> Linux has become Windows Reinvented Badly. You seem to think
> OpenBSD should become Linux Reinvented Badly. That's offensive.
We prefer Unix Reimplemented...
Matthew
(Just kidding; it's great)
Is it something in the water?
Mike Larkin writes:
> On Tue, Jul 18, 2023 at 08:09:11PM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
>
> This is completely unrelated to the question we asked. Please
I mentioned that. Twice.
Beginning with the very first words:
> > Not really. But.
Then summarising with:
> >
Not really. But.
I have an APU2 which runs two VMs that do practically nothing,
although the box itself is used actively. The VMs consistently, and
without warning, hang in a way which matches the description "nothing
new can be execed" although I recall being able to log in on the
console. I noti
Theo de Raadt writes:
> J Doe wrote:
>
> > On 2023-07-04 17:27, Martin Schröder wrote:
> >
> > > Am Di., 4. Juli 2023 um 23:20 Uhr schrieb J Doe
> > > :
> > >> I checked: man ntpd and: man 2 adjfreq, and while: man 2 adjfreq
> > >> mentions the same unit - "ppm" - it doesn't explain what that me
Theo de Raadt writes:
> Yoshihiro Kawamata wrote:
>
> > From: Janne Johansson
> > Subject: Re: Minimum install size
> > Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2023 09:09:49 +0200
> >
> > > Do not assume "desireable" and "possible" are always the same.
> >
> > My point was whether the wording "installable on 512MB o
Greg Thomas writes:
> I just ran through a fresh 7.3 install onto sd0 on an old 6.8 laptop and I
> have no idea what happened to the disklabel on sd1 (during the install I
> only did an automatic disklabel on sd0). This is just a backup of my
> current laptop so not the end of the world (unless my
It makes it easier to know what part of the original message a
response is in reply to.
As a general rule you should reply in-line, quoting only the specific
parts of a message your response is in reference to.
Matthew
Eric Johnson writes:
> --- Original Message ---
> On Tuesday, March 7
I broke my TV.
My TV is a monitor powered by a laptop running OpenBSD and in trying
to diagnose a problem which turned out to be in the NAS I managed to
fry the disklabel.
How?
Well, being unimportant the machine is also the guinea pig for
snapshot builds and other experiments so I thought I mig
Daniele B. writes:
> Thanks for this one, Bodie.
>
> In my little, simple prospective from year 2023 there is the hope that we are
> going to overcome soon
> all these sayings we are telling us about *nix.
The way such shortcomings might be overcome is to produce the code which
replaces or fixes
Nathan Carruth writes:
> permanently and irrevocably destroy all data on your entire disk”.
This is a feature. More so, it's the very point in an encrypted
filesystem. If you haven't planned for this failure scenario then
what are you doing using a device which *by design* can irrevocably
trash it
Justin Muir writes:
> Hello,
>
> Just attempting to compile SDRAngel from source and I'm getting some errors
> in the process.
>
> The latest is: "linux/serial.h" missing. Is there an equivalent I can
> point to on OpenBSD?
>
> I'm also having difficulties with the dab-cmdline library. The compile
nybody wants to help improve the text!) The files
are too big to send out on the mailing list at 85 and 442 KB each
so I pushed them to the interweb.
http://zeus.jtan.com/~chohag/malloc.w
http://zeus.jtan.com/~chohag/malloc.pdf
Although not the main goal, the malloc.w source file can
expansion expects a variable name and modifiers. The
name is scanned for by get_brace_var below and then
modification by ``#'' or ``%'' is detected. ``:#'' and
``:%'' are also accepted for compatibility with ksh88.
This seems like
rsyk...@disroot.org writes:
> Dear list,
>
> ...
>
> but this does not work:
>
> odin:~$ echo 1 | tee $(tty) | sed 's/1/2/'
> 2
> odin:~$
>
> I do not understand why...
The position of the tty command in the pipeline means that its
standard input is not the terminal:
$ echo $(tty)
Theo de Raadt writes:
> > > + for _hn in /etc/hostname.??:??:??:??:??:??; do
> > > + _mac=`echo $_hn | cut -c 15-31`
_mac=${_hn#/etc/hostname.}
> > > + _if=`ifconfig | grep -B 1 $_mac | head -n 1 | awk -F ": "
> > > '{print $1}'`
mac2dev() {
# This got long
ifcon
Luke A. Call writes:
> On 2022-10-26 11:57:23-, Stuart Henderson
> wrote:
> > On 2022-10-24, Peter Fraser wrote:
> > > I make a stupid mistake; I didn't check partition sizes before doing a
> > > sysupgrade.
> > > sysupgrade ran out of space or /usr in the middle of the upgrade.
> > > I kno
Kastus Shchuka writes:
> On Sun, Oct 16, 2022 at 11:48:35AM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > So given $X:
> >
> > $ X=' A : B::D'
> >
> > Parameter substitution:
> >
> > $ ( IFS=' :'; dump $X )
> > $VAR1 = 'A';
> > $VAR2 = 'B';
> > $VAR3 = '';
> > $VAR4 = 'D';
> >
> >
Kastus Shchuka writes:
> On Sat, Oct 15, 2022 at 11:42:17PM -0300, Lucas de Sena wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > After trying to split a string into fields delimited with colons and
> > spaces, I found this bug in how ksh(1) does substitution. The actual
> > behavior contradicts what other shells like bas
It's easier by far not to muck about trying to resize partitions.
If you can mount each drive (old and new) in an operating system
that isn't using them then that's your best bet and that's not so
hard to arrange. Mount the old partition structure in /old, create
new larger partitions on the new d
harrywea...@tutanota.com writes:
>
>
> A few among the myriad:
>
> https://www.tomsguide.com/news/zoom-security-privacy-woes
>
> https://jonathanhays.me/2020/04/04/zoom-insecurity/
>
> https://www.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/ftkb69/zooms_security_and_privacy_problems_are/
>
> But, perhaps you
harrywea...@tutanota.com writes:
>
>
>
> I wouldn't trust Zoom any further than I'd trust Skype.
> Cheers!
Wouldn't trust it to do what? It already doesn't work on OpenBSD
(does the browser version work though? Never tried) so it's being
kept away from your crown jewels in the sort of tightly lo
Oh and it's also worth noting that despite that massive cock-up,
the box is still (now) running just fine on this frankenhybrid and
serving its git repositories and running its crons, all entirely
hands-off and automated:
# uname -a && uptime
OpenBSD smoke.datum 7.0 GENERIC#224 amd64
4:29AM up 1
Stuart Henderson writes:
> On 2021-10-14, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > Turns out, one of my less important boxes was still on 6.8. Whoops.
> >
> > After two sysupgrades, this is the result of pkg_add -u:
> >
> > quirks-4.53 signed on 2021-10-12T20:12:39Z
> > Can't install cairo-1.16.0 because of lib
Turns out, one of my less important boxes was still on 6.8. Whoops.
After two sysupgrades, this is the result of pkg_add -u:
quirks-4.53 signed on 2021-10-12T20:12:39Z
Can't install cairo-1.16.0 because of libraries
|library pixman-1.40.0 not found
| /usr/X11R6/lib/libpixman-1.so.38.4 (system): b
Joe Gidi writes:
> > Picked up a 4K display (LG 27UPS650) and it's gorgeous. Bright colors,
> > crisp, lovely. The console fonts and some application fonts are now
> > dialed in WRT size.
> >
> > But application menu bars have tiny icons and tiny titles, and their
> > man pages don't address that.
Theo de Raadt writes:
> Sonic wrote:
>
> > Having some issues after a sysupgrade to the latest snapshot (of this
> > writing) - OpenBSD 6.9-current (GENERIC.MP) #131.
> >
> > Seems the base change to dhcpleased/resolvd has presented some issues.
>
> This is intentional.
>
> We are moving from a m
he...@ezaquarii.com writes:
> On 2021-04-24 22:50, li...@mailbox.org wrote:
> > Do you have any best / bad practices at hand regarding OpenBSD and
> > optionally the syslogd / tools it ships with?
>
> The main issue with remote logging is that your log messages could be
> lost
> when destination i
cipher-hea...@riseup.net writes:
>
> On Linux you can do the following:
>
> Hard drive:
> { [1MB unencrypted GRUB bootloader partition] [Rest of hard drive entirely
> encrypted] }
>
> Then the only parts of the (x64) computer that are unencrypted are the BIOS
> and GRUB.
This is how it already
Raymond, David writes:
> I am confused about SSIZE_MAX and read(2)/write(2). The POSIX
> SSIZE_MAX is something like 2^15 -1. This seems to be a real
> limitation when writing to a TCP/IP socket, as I learned from
> experience. However, much larger reads and writes seem to be possible
> to files
Jan Stary writes:
> - I can't figure out how to pass the -x option that sets $UU
> (and thus makes the timer reset before each set is installed).
You don't.
http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/distrib/miniroot/dot.profile.diff?r1=1.42&r2=1.43
Matthew
Some people have needs that OpenBSD doesn't meet. Of course the
logical thing to do is to adapt it to meet them or to use something
which does but to some -- in line with the general complexication
that's progressing nowadays -- this simple solution is not enough
and the need to announce one's inad
Hamd writes:
> It's 2020 and it's -still- sad to see OpenBSD -still- has the
> ... lists full of the uninteresting type of wine and that their
> twitterings -still- don't include any code.
Yes. Yes it is.
Can't say much for the performance of a suite of servers which have
all been taken down to h
Stuart Henderson writes:
> On 2020/01/05 00:33, go...@disroot.org wrote:
> > January 5, 2020 2:24 AM, "Roderick" wrote:
> >
> > > On Sun, 5 Jan 2020, go...@disroot.org wrote:
> > >
> > >> so I don't understand what's wrong with FreeBSD and OpenBSD.
> > >
> > > I do not see a problem in CVS.
> >
go...@disroot.org writes:
> Git is the most popular VCS (and most ugly), meanwhile
> there are people who prefer to reimplement it because
> they don't like its license... FreeBSD is working on OpenGit,
> OpenBSD is working on Game of Trees, but why reimplement
> the wheel instead of using a better
Mikolaj Kucharski writes:
> Hi,
>
> Do you generate invoices on OpenBSD? What do you recommend? If you have
I use nmh to compose an email to my accountant saying something
along the lines of "please generate the next invoice for work X at
company Y" and a few hours or days later an invoice -- an o
Stuart Longland writes:
> > 16 partitions:
> > #size offset fstype [fsize bsize cpg]
> > a: 268416 64 4.2BSD 2048 16384 2097 # /
> > b: 373010 268480swap# none
> > c: 16777216
Richard Ulmer writes:
> Hi,
> when there is a single ' in a comment within a subshell, I get this
> error: foo[6]: no closing quote
>
> Here is an example script to reproduce the problem:
>
> foo=$(
> # It's bar:
> echo bar
> )
> echo $foo
This is certainly not the best way to do this
Andrew Kanaber writes:
> Hi,
>
> I'm setting up an embedded machine that won't be able to send mail to
> the internet and it seems excessive to leave smtpd running just so root
> can receive cron job output, but I can't see a way to cut smtpd out of
> the delivery chain because mail.local doesn't i
> You can't seriously be calling "-x* -game*" an unsupported configuration ?
> Seems to me
> like a sensible thing to do on any box that's going to be headless for its
> entire life
> and only ever accessed via SSH (or text console at a push).
Lines 159-160 of /usr/sbin/sysupgrade read as fol
Mathijs Hengst writes:
>
> You can turn off the screen via X:
>
> xset dpms force off
>
> (I found this on google in 2/3 minutes, so you might want to improve
> your google-foo.)
It looks to me like his google-foo is working just fine. Question asked
and answered, no?
Matthew
mabi writes:
> Hi,
>
> - reason why it failed?
It cannot remove /usr/include/machine because it is not empty.
> - what should I do now? retry to upgrade with sysupgrade?
Empty /usr/include/machine.
> - re-install the whole system?
If you like. It will certainly empty out /usr/include/machine.
Thomas Bohl writes:
> Am 17.11.2019 um 19:51 schrieb cho...@jtan.com:
> > Thomas Bohl writes:
> >>
> >> Now I want to go the extra step and automate the modification of the
> >> installXX.iso.
> >
> > I have put an insane amount of work into exactly this, also with
> > an eye to portably directing
Thomas Bohl writes:
>
> Now I want to go the extra step and automate the modification of the
> installXX.iso.
I have put an insane amount of work into exactly this, also with
an eye to portably directing the process to other operating systems
and hosting environments.
I'd be very interested to h
I'd quite like to debug this problem. I'm looking through the code
now to find out where I can inject some sort of printf-like statement
to glean some information about what it's [not] doing and may eventually
even get somewhere.
I'll continue to do this regardless because I'm bored and I just
spe
As per the subject, bsd.rd boots and the installation proceeded as
usual. Another laptop saved from ever booting the mess it came
preinstalled with. Yay.
Subsequently rebooting results in the following (bsd.sp does the
same with different addresses):
probing: pc0 mem[632K 475M 255M 208M 137M 1500
U'll Be King of the Stars writes:
> This has gotten me thinking about whether line-based editing is really
> the best abstraction for simple editors.
Yes. Yes it is. You can prise ed out of my cold dead hands.
I don't get where the desire for an editor in the installer comes
from. If you have ev
Theo de Raadt writes:
> I have some sort of X1rev6 and I don't see the problem.
>
> The situation is you have the hardware, and you also have the sourcecode,
> and the repository to traverse investigate the problem.
>
> That sounds hard, until you give it a try.
To be fair, it *is* hard. You have
dmitry.sensei writes:
> Why offset in disklabel for a partition is different from fdisk output?
> 423202816 and 433358194
Something wrote the MBR and/or disklabel incorrectly. Probably a
repartitioning or other data shuffling process gone wrong.
> When I add label for partition 3 as in fdisk out
adr writes:
> You see, is so easy to be an asshole.
You're telling me?
I know I'm not particularly active on OpenBSD's mailing lists but
I've certainly been around.
For the record, I have a finite amount of neurons with a correspondingly
finite amount of synapses. There is only so much even I ca
Raul Miller writes:
> My mental model of computer security often approximates putting a bank
> vault door on a picket fence (and maybe setting up a sniper to stop
> people from climbing over the door).
But in layers. One of them will work right? It's defense^Wobscurity
in depth.
> Doesn't mean th
Claudio Jeker writes:
> set wl=72 will limit the line lenght to around 72. Additionally you
> can use !fmt with movement chars to reformat sections. I use !{fmt
> or {!}fmt frequently to reformat the paragraph I'm in.
I didn't know [how] ! took movement commands. Thanks. I'll have a play
with that
Raf Czlonka writes:
> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 03:12:37PM BST, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> Is this what you had in mind?
>
> set editor="EXINIT='set wraplen=72' /usr/bin/vi"
I'm not sure that I'm happy with it doing it mid-insert. I'd prefer an
explicit action or insert mode itself being adapted
OK this has started to get on my nerves now.
I use vi to enter emails despite using evil emacs for development and
other general editing. Rather than linking them together (they're on
seperate machines) to enter emails in emacs I'd rather figure out
something interesting about vi.
At the moment I
Frank Beuth writes:
> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 11:54:18AM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> >Virtualisation is not a panacea. I have managed to achieve data loss through
> >destructi
> ve actions taken within a "safe" virtualised sandbox.
>
> How did you manage that feat?
Basically assuming "safe" t
Well it seems I was wrong and this is a common-or-garden bug. Specifically,
from xauth/gethost.c, starting at line 199:
#ifdef HAVE_STRLCPY
strlcpy(path, fulldpyname, sizeof(path));
#else
strncpy(path, fulldpyname, sizeof(path));
path[sizeof(path) - 1] = '\0';
Shane Lazarus writes:
> Heya
>
> My own experience agrees with you with regards to any system in production.
>
> However, it is also my experience that nothing demonstrates the
> difference between what should happen and what actually occurs better
> than running the code and seeing the aftermath.
With regards to recent discussion, here is a little anecdote that came out of
the 6.5 to 6.6 upgrade.
On one machine I run bitlbee, an IRC:IM gateway. After upgrading all the ports
it left suggestions in the form of copy pasta commands to run to complete the
upgrade process, as it does. One of
Klemens Nanni writes:
> On Thu, Oct 17, 2019 at 10:30:54PM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > I don't even know where to begin with this one
> Start with providing a backtrace from the core dump: build xauth with
> debug symbols and reproduce, then inspect with gdb.
>
> Otherwise you're on your own
Chris Bennett writes:
> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 10:56:07AM +1300, Shane Lazarus wrote:
> >
> > So, I just ran sysupgrade with no options to see what would happen.
That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Turn your computer in. You are
incapable of handling one.
> > If someone would be so kind
This is sort of a weird one.
Background is that I have a laptop with a bunch of VMs all running OpenBSD, now
6.6 (thanks!). The host runs X and one of the VMs runs the window manager which
can then log into other VMs (or the host) to do whatever. My development
environment, named void, is one t
taylormlp writes:
> Hello,
> Is there plan to add graphics support to vmm/vmd?
I'm sure there is.
Matthew
Paul de Weerd writes:
> On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 03:14:22PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
> | On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 01:48:19PM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
> | > On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 01:27:23PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
> | > | > By having each set install a specific file in a well-known location.
> |
Marc Espie writes:
> On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 09:01:47AM +0100, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > Marc Espie writes:
> > > I'm a bit surprised nobody looked at instrumenting what sets are actually
> > > installed on a machine during install/manual upgrade and cloning that
> > > into sysupgrade to avoid th
In particular, installing OpenBSD requires the following steps:
1) Partition and format the disc.
2) Untar a bunch of stuff (or in the case of /bsd*, copy).
3) Install the bootloader.
That's _it_. The few other tasks performed by the installer, like
installing /etc/hostname.*, KARL and configu
Marc Espie writes:
> I'm a bit surprised nobody looked at instrumenting what sets are actually
> installed on a machine during install/manual upgrade and cloning that
> into sysupgrade to avoid this kind of surprise...
I mentioned the possibility wrt. syspatch but it was rejected in favour
of exp
Judah Kocher writes:
> My router is headless. I have never run into an issue where I have
> needed anything from the X sets
Apparently you just did.
> Therefore it seems like sound logic to not have those
> bits and bytes present on the system so any
> mis-configurations/bugs/vulnerabilities
Marcus MERIGHI writes:
> please do *not* copy/paste/run this command!
> something along these lines for the sets you did not want:
>
> $ ftp -MVo- $( tzf - | xargs rm
>
> you are aware that it is recommended to run with all sets?
Despite previous posts requesting assistance with not doing so,
Sebastian Benoit writes:
> You dont say, but you are probably using 6.5?
I am and that's a good point that I didn't think to consider, thank-you.
> In current and thus in 6.6 the relevant line reads
>
> newinstall:
> install -F -m 700 bsd /bsd && sha256 -h /var/db/kernel.SHA256 /bsd
Prob
Occasionally after a power loss some computers, especially virtual machines for
obvious reasons, are no longer able to boot. The bootloader reads the kernel,
one of the two spins for a bit and then the computer returns to the bootloader
prompt. In the case of VMs, vmd eventually gives up and tur
Roderick writes:
>
> On Sun, 14 Jul 2019, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
>
> > I also string a cable between their ethernet ports for maximum speed
>
> Was it a crossover cable?
I have no idea how long it's been since I had to care.
I *did* mention that the physical setup already worked and was subseque
U'll Be King of the Stars writes:
> On 14/07/2019 10:35, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> > I also string a cable between their ethernet ports for maximum speed which
> > I bring up
> manually at each and because I'm too lazy to automate it, that's
> 10.100.200.2/24 on li
> nux and 10.200.200.1/24 on op
I have two laptops, both on the same wifi network, one with linux and one with
openbsd.
I also string a cable between their ethernet ports for maximum speed which I
bring up manually at each and because I'm too lazy to automate it, that's
10.100.200.2/24 on linux and 10.200.200.1/24 on openbsd.
Jonathan Drews writes:
> > I am not sure why you want to avoid CUPS.
Not a terrible propsal because it is a bloated piece of crap, but on the other
hand it must interface with the satanc devices we call printers so concessions
must perhaps be made.
> fundamentals. That begs the question as to w
SOUL_OF_ROOT 55 writes:
> weak attempts to bait an argument
Your trolling is both transparent and dull.
The new system is clearly fine. Not only is your environment not in any way
exceptional but it told you so at the end. Past evidence suggests that you're
at least not entirely clueless so the
Perhaps rather than whining that OpenBSD lacks some specific feature, those who
want it could write it? A novel idea, I know, but it IS specifically a
development platform and there are precisely zero restrictions.
Or if you don't wish to start with code, at least try a tack such as "I intend
t
ropers writes:
> Okay, so since nobody else appears to be making any pertinent noise, I
> guess it falls to me:
>
> Index: ed.1
> ===
> RCS file: /cvs/src/bin/ed/ed.1,v
> retrieving revision 1.70
> diff -u -r1.70 ed.1
> --- ed.1 2
ropers writes:
> ::I put on my robe and tinfoil hat.::
> ... Wow. The things you guys come up with ...
I mean yeah, I guess, in theory maybe?
Of course in order to achieve this level of evil you need highly competent
governments and corporations but that's no problem right?
Matthew
This isn't a bug per se, more of an incongruity in how security-centric tools
work wrt root, specifically doas and chroot/su/other:
joe@drogo$ doas -s
drogo# doas -u chohag -s
doas (root@drogo) password:
doas: Authorization failed
drogo# chroot -u chohag /
drogo$ ^D
drogo#
li...@wrant.com writes:
> Tue, 02 Jul 2019 08:40:35 +0300 cho...@jtan.com
> >
> > Also I don't need to fix your email system's inability to classify spam.
>
> YOUR mail server reputation is negative, fix your setup.. STOP spamming.
IWFM
Matthew
ps. Two dots *and* two spaces? Try harder.
li...@wrant.com writes:
> You're misreading something, or talking to yourself, making corrections.
> Your emails ended up in the spam twice so far, do something about that..
Two dots again? We've been over this.
> Your emails came in as spam twice so far, maybe do something about that?
Get it to
li...@wrant.com writes:
> Mon, 01 Jul 2019 07:09:41 +0300 cho...@jtan.com
> >
> > I don't think I'll be relying on software from such confused individuals
> > any time soo
> n.
>
> Since when? Make a note: your long lines will never fit on a punch card.
I haven't used a punch card since ... wel
Ingo Schwarze writes:
> the voice of reason.
Listen to it.
Matthew
Juan Francisco Cantero Hurtado writes:
> Can you show me what missing Wayland part is bigger than DRM+Mesa+LLVM?.
Probably, but that's not my problem.
> After the personal attack, I was hoping a more elaborated answer.
There was no personal attack. That you feel there was reveals little
more tha
li...@wrant.com writes:
> You can't do without YOU understanding basics of X11, do something else..
> Juan, I don't trust your lack of any qualification for even feature bait.
Two dots? This thing should never have more than one dot.
How about:
> You can't do without YOUR understanding X11 basic
Roderick writes:
>
>
> On Sun, 30 Jun 2019, Juan Francisco Cantero Hurtado wrote:
>
> > You can run (local or remote) X11 applications inside of a Wayland
> > compositor.
>
> The following contradicts your above assertion:
>
> https://wayland.freedesktop.org/faq.html#heading_toc_j_8
Wayland. The
Frank Beuth writes:
>
You go ahead and continue to trust your VPS without taking any care to
consider where your software comes from.
It's choices like that which make "hardening" even be a thing. Have you
considered _not_ building a system on a foundation made of cheese?
Have fun with that.
M
at and I (temporarily; I'll get back to it)
lost interest. Nobody is paying me for this, I'm just bored. The
documentation is ... poor. But it works. In my little network there are
currently 6 distinct servers, all built using it with zero manual
interaction.
https://github.com/chohag/stas
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