Hallo,
Zoong PHAM <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb:
> Does anyone know if a Zaurus 3100 can work with any VGA
> monitor/projector?
may this helps you, found here:
http://www.users.on.net/~hluc/myZaurus/
I have found a USB to VGA adaptor which can be used with the Zaurus.
It is made by Sain a
so spake Xavier Santolaria on Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 09:08:55AM CET:
> CVSROOT: /cvs
> Module name: src
> Changes by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2006/01/11 01:08:53
>
> Modified files:
> share/man/man4/man4.macppc: asms.4
>
> Log message:
> add HARDWARE and HISTORY section; ok [EMAIL PR
Zoong PHAM wrote:
Does anyone know if a Zaurus 3100 can work with any VGA
monitor/projector?
And where can I buy a VGA adapter for Zaurus 3100?
Thanks,
Zoong
Hello,
maybe you have a look here
http://www.trisoft.de/zxgacf.htm (sorry it's German)
and here:
http://www.iodata.com/manuals/CFXGA/e
Hi,
I just send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but I got a bounce
back. Has he stopped working for OpenBSD? I haven't seen a commit
from him in month.
Also I don't know any other email-address of him so I can't email
him any other way.
I wanted to request that the ./configure of openntpd-p will
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 10:32:58 +0059, Han Boetes wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I just send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but I got a bounce
>back. Has he stopped working for OpenBSD? I haven't seen a commit
>from him in month.
>
>Also I don't know any other email-address of him so I can't email
>him any other way
Rod.. Whitworth wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 10:32:58 +0059, Han Boetes wrote:
> > I just send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but I got a bounce
> > back. Has he stopped working for OpenBSD? I haven't seen a
> > commit from him in month.
>
> Is this (from misc@) enough?
> On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 01:10:5
On 2006/01/11 09:21, Maik Kuendig wrote:
> However, you will need a
> USB host cable (mini A) and a powered hub.
ah, this reminds me, and it may be useful for someone here:
you can get mini-A (USB OTG) to standard-B cables from Lindy.
They're not as c
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 11:19:09 +0100, Han Boetes wrote:
>Rod.. Whitworth wrote:
>> On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 10:32:58 +0059, Han Boetes wrote:
>> > I just send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but I got a bounce
>> > back. Has he stopped working for OpenBSD? I haven't seen a
>> > commit from him in month.
>>
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 02:11:37PM -0500, Matthew Closson wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Jan 2006, Matthew Closson wrote:
>
> >Hello,
> >
> >I'm trying to get sockd (A SOCKS4/5 proxy from the
> >/usr/ports/security/dante port) working with BSD username/password
> >authentication. Currently it is saying us
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 11:23:21PM +0100, Anders Normann wrote:
> I am a newbie when it comes to OpenBSD, but have already set up my
> web-server with 3.8 and is quite happy with the ease of installation and
> the way it behaves. Have also installed 3.8 on a spare pc which sits in
> a closet and
Hi,
I know it's kind of early, but is OpenBSD/i386 going to run peacefully
on the yesterday-announced Apple MacBook Pro, or for that matter the
iMac with Intel Code Duo processor? :-)
Anyone has any plans on this matter?
Cheers,
Constantine.
Joachim Schipper wrote:
I want some of that spares you have.
:)
Aside from that, I don't see anything obviously wrong outside the error
message itself. Is cd0 working correctly under other OSes? Are all
cables securely in place? Does switching cd0 and cd1 help?
I waste a lot of time one
I think you should donate one to every member of OpenBSD. I'll bet it'll be
supported in no time :-)
On Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 03:52:20PM +, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I know it's kind of early, but is OpenBSD/i386 going to run peacefully
> on the yesterday-announced Apple MacBook
First post here, not sure if this is the right forum. Let me know if not.
>From the article:
"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is extending the scope of
its protection to open-source software."
...
"The list of open-source projects that Stanford and Coverity plan to
check for security bu
Thus Marco Peereboom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake on Wed, 11 Jan 2006
10:24:07 -0600:
> I think you should donate one to every member of OpenBSD. I'll bet
> it'll be supported in no time :-)
>
> On Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 03:52:20PM +, Constantine A. Murenin
> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I know it's k
Here is some more info.
--
dmesg on SOURCE machine
--
OpenBSD 3.8 (GENERIC) #138: Sat Sep 10 15:41:37 MDT 2005
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
cpu0: Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz ("GenuineIntel" 68
> I know it's kind of early, but is OpenBSD/i386 going to run peacefully
> on the yesterday-announced Apple MacBook Pro, or for that matter the
> iMac with Intel Code Duo processor? :-)
Give us one, then we'll be able to tell you.
Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
> I know it's kind of early, but is OpenBSD/i386 going to run peacefully
> on the yesterday-announced Apple MacBook Pro, or for that matter the
> iMac with Intel Code Duo processor? :-)
Probably, once you donate a few of them to the OpenBSD developers. ;)
[demime 1.0
Well, that's easy then.
Your destination machine has no sd0 device, so the kernel can't
find its root filesystem.
Have you plugged the disk into the "Dell PERC 3/Di" which is "not
configured" (i.e. no driver)?
Good luck
Tom
>>> Dede Dascalu 11-Jan-06 16:44 >>>
>
> Here is some more info.
> ---
Axton wrote:
First post here, not sure if this is the right forum. Let me know if not.
From the article:
"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is extending the scope of
its protection to open-source software."
...
"The list of open-source projects that Stanford and Coverity plan to
check
i really like the new stuff here, but i've got a question. in lm(4)'s
manpage, it states:
Some devices can attach to both iic(4) and isa(4); others can
only attach to either one or the other. Devices that can attach
to both will only attach to isa(4) to prevent double atta
Hi,
I just tried to get my brand new iaudio mp3-player to work with OpenBSD-current.
... and failed.
When I plug it in it is properly recognized, fdisk and disklabel look
just fine (see below). The sizes reported make sense too, the thing
should have a little less than 1GB.
But when I try to mou
I have one of the developer transition systems:
Machine Name: Apple Development Platform
Machine Model:ADP2,1
CPU Type: ADP2,1
Number Of CPUs: 1
CPU Speed:3.6 GHz
L2 Cache (per CPU): 2 MB
CPU Features: FPU VME DE PSE TSC MSR PAE MCE CX8 APIC SEP MTRR PGE
MCA C
Thus Nick Bender <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake on Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:40:26
-0500:
> I have one of the developer transition systems:
>
> Machine Name: Apple Development Platform
> Machine Model: ADP2,1
> CPU Type: ADP2,1
> Number Of CPUs: 1
> CPU Speed: 3.6 GHz
> L2 Cache (per C
From: Axton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is extending the scope of
> its protection to open-source software."
> ...
> "The list of open-source projects that Stanford and Coverity plan to
> check for security bugs includes Apache, BIND, Ethereal, KDE, Linux,
"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is extending the scope of
its protection to open-source software."
...
"The list of open-source projects that Stanford and Coverity plan to
check for security bugs includes Apache, BIND, Ethereal, KDE, Linux,
Firefox, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, OpenSSL and MySQL...
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported, just
looking for some preferred cards. I have not used any of the SATA, bu
On Wednesday 11 January 2006 12:36, you wrote:
> >"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is extending the scope of
> >its protection to open-source software."
> >...
> >"The list of open-source projects that Stanford and Coverity plan to
> >check for security bugs includes Apache, BIND, Ethereal
On 1/11/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
> boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
> recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported, just
> looki
On Wednesday 11 January 2006 13:10, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
> boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
> recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported,
> just l
Joachim Schipper skrev:
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 11:23:21PM +0100, Anders Normann wrote:
I am a newbie when it comes to OpenBSD, but have already set up my
web-server with 3.8 and is quite happy with the ease of installation and
the way it behaves. Have also installed 3.8 on a spare pc which
LSI Logic Megaraid cards (SATA/SCSI). work like a champ. If I'm not
mistaken LSI is currently the only cooperative RAID controller vendor.
Read mailing list archives.
-Tico
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer m
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:09:15 -0700
"John R. Shannon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: On Wednesday 11 January 2006 12:36, you wrote:
: > >"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is extending the scope of
: > >its protection to open-source software."
: > >...
: > >"The list of open-source projects th
If I use a 50 character key for my SVND encrypted
filesystems, do all bits get used in the Blowfish key,
or is the key length limited to anything below 448
bits? If I typed in a 56 character (448 bit) key at
the prompt, would the whole thing be used?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam pr
Timo Schoeler wrote:
>
>as phil schiller confirmed, those intel 'Macs' run Windoze (TM) out of
>the box. i bet OpenBSD does, too ;)
>
>
>
Yes, if OpenBSD supports EFI booting. Those new Intel Macs use the
Itanium (and future x86) method, not clunky old bios. But I've been
unable to find out if O
On Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 11:38:56AM -0800, Don Smith wrote:
> If I use a 50 character key for my SVND encrypted
> filesystems, do all bits get used in the Blowfish key,
> or is the key length limited to anything below 448
> bits? If I typed in a 56 character (448 bit) key at
> the prompt, would the
On 1/11/06, John R. Shannon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It's probably worse. Any vulnerabilities found will almost assuredly be
> classified or at least FOUO.
pt!
Peter Hessler wrote:
: It's probably worse. Any vulnerabilities found will almost assuredly
: be classified or at least FOUO.
That is so wrong, I can't even describe it.
(Note: I am an employee of Coverity)
The pass proved it as well. Tedu and Peter did a great job and
definitely should be c
On 1/11/06, Han Boetes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I just send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but I got a bounce
> back. Has he stopped working for OpenBSD? I haven't seen a commit
> from him in month.
>
> Also I don't know any other email-address of him so I can't email
> him any other way.
http:
On Wednesday 11 January 2006 13:18, you wrote:
> :
> : It's probably worse. Any vulnerabilities found will almost assuredly
> : be classified or at least FOUO.
>
> That is so wrong, I can't even describe it.
>
> (Note: I am an employee of Coverity)
Really?
What about NSTISSD 503, "Incident Respo
It looks like the problem is with the 3.8 install. In my first
message I mentioned that I was able to install 3.6 successfully of
the CD. The image I am trying to restore is from a 3.8 system... so I
just tried installing 3.8 from a CD and the installation failed with
the message "No disks
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Ted Unangst
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 3:51 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: DHS Grant to analye OpenBSD (and other OSS) for Bugs
>On 1/11/06, John R. Shannon <[EMAIL PROTECTE
On Wed, 2006-01-11 at 16:06:37 -0500, Daniel Ouellet proclaimed...
> The pass proved it as well. Tedu and Peter did a great job and
> definitely should be commended for that!
>
> I was curious however as if the results of the bugs found would actually
> be public for everyone to see, or if they
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [060111 15:20]:
> I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
> boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
> recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported, just
> lookin
No, the preproduction systems were desktop, not portable systems.
They were basically standard PC guts in a G5 case.
Timo Schoeler wrote:
Thus Nick Bender <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake on Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:40:26
-0500:
I have one of the developer transition systems:
Machine Name: Apple Devel
Question: would Coverity have found the three security holes in
sendmail 8.12 (and earlier versions)? Are there other source code
analysis tools that would have found those bugs? I know of one
company that did a source code inspection of sendmail and they
admitted that their tool would not have fou
I will stick to the LSI cards. This is exactly the info I needed.
Shane
- Original Message -
From: "Thomas Hannan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 5:26 PM
Subject: Re: RAID card recommendations
LSI Logic Megaraid cards (SATA/SCSI). work like a champ. If I'
Tilo Stritzky wrote:
Hi,
I just tried to get my brand new iaudio mp3-player to work with OpenBSD-current.
I just bought one, too! U3, though. 1GB :-)
... and failed.
Not me!
When I plug it in it is properly recognized, fdisk and disklabel look
just fine (see below). The sizes reported m
eric wrote:
On Wed, 2006-01-11 at 16:06:37 -0500, Daniel Ouellet proclaimed...
The pass proved it as well. Tedu and Peter did a great job and
definitely should be commended for that!
I was curious however as if the results of the bugs found would actually
be public for everyone to see, or i
On 2006-01-11 16:18:13 -0500, Peter Landry wrote:
> Maybe I'm misreading the situation -- but won't this just give Open
> projects an even better chance to outpace closed system not subject to
> the same reviews in terms of security and reliability?
These are automated auditings; the closed system
On 1/11/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have not used any of the SATA, but would consider that an option.
I've got a couple of the LSI 300-8X SATA cards. They certainly perform
wonderfully and at a good pricepoint.
I had run into a problem on SMP AMD64 with ccb timeouts locki
On Wednesday, January 11, "Constantine A. Murenin" wrote:
>
> Anyone has any plans on this matter?
Do you have enough money to buy a few (note, more than 2) developers
the required hardware, along with the documentation (if they are not
using a "standard" PC bios) to do the port? Are you willing
> I've got a couple of the LSI 300-8X SATA cards. They certainly perform
> wonderfully and at a good pricepoint.
>
> I had run into a problem on SMP AMD64 with ccb timeouts locking up the
> box, which is doing some heavy NFS and DB. Upgrading the firmware
> seems to have cleared that up (knock on w
> > I've got a couple of the LSI 300-8X SATA cards. They certainly perform
> > wonderfully and at a good pricepoint.
> >
> > I had run into a problem on SMP AMD64 with ccb timeouts locking up the
> > box, which is doing some heavy NFS and DB. Upgrading the firmware
> > seems to have cleared that up
On Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 04:19:12PM -0500, Jim Razmus wrote:
> I have already replaced two Adaptec controllers with LSI Logic
> MEGARAID SATA 150-6 cards. I then added a call to bioctl in
These LSI Megaraid cards are 64-bit PCI, right? Do they have a
PCI Express version?
What motherboards are fo
> Wrong.
>
> When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
> hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically takes that drive
> over and does a rebuild.
>
> Shut down? You don't get it. We wrote all this code because we were
> tired of shutting down and doing the repai
On 12/9/05, Srebrenko Sehic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 5) DL385, SCSI/RAID/SmartArray P600/6i/6400 = showstopper, OpenBSD
> can't see the raiser board and hence the RAID controller seated in it
> (tested on amd64/3.8-STABLE and -current)
I can confirm this is still the case on a snapshot from
> No, I understand that just fine. I should have been more specific -
> if I have a failure, it does its thing, great. But, I'd want to
> replace the failed drive so I'd have a hot spare again.
>
> That's the part I was asking about - you'd have to shutdown to
> replace that failed drive when it
On 1/11/06, C. Bensend <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> That's the part I was asking about - you'd have to shutdown to
> replace that failed drive when it's convenient. Right? I've
> never touched a SATA anything in my life.
This is in a Supermicro 932 chassis, with the 15 slot SATA hotswap
backpla
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006, Ted Unangst wrote:
> On 1/11/06, Han Boetes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I just send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but I got a bounce
> > back. Has he stopped working for OpenBSD? I haven't seen a commit
> > from him in month.
> >
> > Also I don't know any other email-addres
On 1/11/06, C. Bensend <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Wrong.
> >
> > When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
> > hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically takes that drive
> > over and does a rebuild.
> >
> > Shut down? You don't get it. We wrote all this c
On 2006/01/11 16:54, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 04:19:12PM -0500, Jim Razmus wrote:
> > I have already replaced two Adaptec controllers with LSI Logic
> > MEGARAID SATA 150-6 cards. I then added a call to bioctl in
>
> These LSI Megaraid cards are 64-bit PCI, right? Do th
>>> "C. Bensend" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 12/01/2006 10:00:13 am >>>
> Wrong.
>
> When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
> hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically takes that
drive
> over and does a rebuild.
>
> Shut down? You don't get it. We wrote all this c
On Tuesday, January 10, 2006, 20:56:34, veins wrote:
> AndrC)s Delfino wrote:
>>The logo which one can see is the old daemon, shouldn't it be Puffy now?
> should my tatoo be be updated too ? :-)
I'd be interested in seeing the diff for that :-)
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]"In theory, practice and th
Here's a different kind of technical question -- who out there can
recommend a Euro zone bank with Internet banking service which does a good
job with OpenBSD and Mozilla-Firefox?
North American banks generally work fine with Firefox and OpenBSD, but our
current account with Bank of Ireland really
My suggestion to you is to CHANGE banks - urgently, as I did!
And tell them that you are NOT willing to use that `security hole`
to compromise your own systems!
Ioan
>>> Austin Hook <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 12/01/2006 01:29:58 pm >>>
Here's a different kind of technical question -- who out there can
On Thu, Jan 12, 2006 at 01:23:43PM +1100, Ioan Nemes wrote:
My suggestion to you is to CHANGE banks - urgently, as I did!
And tell them that you are NOT willing to use that `security hole`
to compromise your own systems!
Yes, that is right. If you read his email a bit closer, you'll see he
is
LSI Logic Megaraid cards (SATA/SCSI). work like a champ. If I'm not
mistaken LSI is currently the only cooperative RAID controller vendor.
Read mailing list archives.
One thing for sure. Anytime we have to buy hardware, what ever that
might be, when ever possible we should stick with vendor th
Martin Schrvder wrote:
On 2006-01-11 16:18:13 -0500, Peter Landry wrote:
Maybe I'm misreading the situation -- but won't this just give Open
projects an even better chance to outpace closed system not subject to
the same reviews in terms of security and reliability?
These are automated auditin
C. Bensend wrote:
I've heard nothing but good about these cards, but I have heard
hardly anything about recovery and rebuild. I'm assuming you need
to shut down, plug in the new drive, and go... How quick is the
rebuild (subject to drive size of course)?
This was announce, explain and demons
Hi,
in german is a small good bank www.martinbank.de. They have really
no costs per month and per booking. it's the cheapest bank
in german that i know. and they have firewalls with a
very secure operating system. They will also support client
certificates in the next weeks for a much securer inte
Daniel Ouellet([EMAIL PROTECTED])@2006.01.11 23:51:00 -0500:
> Martin Schrvder wrote:
> >On 2006-01-11 16:18:13 -0500, Peter Landry wrote:
> >>Maybe I'm misreading the situation -- but won't this just give Open
> >>projects an even better chance to outpace closed system not subject to
> >>the same
Teemu Schaabl wrote:
Ya.. Try to picture that. You would see Microsoft using tools design for
open source project on what they call their flag ship wonderful OS
I guess you mean "designed for open source project" .. what does that mean?
I don't think coverity designed their products for "open s
On Sun, Jan 08, 2006 at 02:46:51PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
[snip]
>
> The questions is, what *do* people use for updating /etc?
I use a cvs vendor branch.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
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