2011/1/7 Girish Venkatachalam :
> Many websites these days "Akamize" or do whatever that gives them a
> different IP address
> everytime you access it.
>
> And consequently pf which does not know a thing about domains does not help
> us.
What exactly is the problem you want to solve?
Best
Mar
On Fri, Jan 07 2011 at 59:07, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
> I try to use OpenBSD wherever I can and in the firewall I have
> installed in a big jewel store
> here I have the following problem.
>
> Many websites these days "Akamize" or do whatever that gives them a
> different IP address
> everytim
It seems after I sleep-wake cycle my laptop something screw happens so
that play back of music -- specifically using mpg123 to play mp3 files
-- after that point produces a fair amount of static.
Here is an odd part. If I run aucat as such:
$ aucat -d
the static is almost nonexistent, while
* Chris Cappuccio [2011-01-06 22:06]:
> But, yeah, if you want to maximize your 48 core AMD box in a data center and
> you don't see make -j48 as a practical application, OpenBSD may not be
> "there" yet for you. I don't have anything with more than 4 cores, so it was
> never really a concern
* rancor [2011-01-06 22:09]:
> Please keep in mind that bigmem is unsupported and it may not work as
> expected.
right, i missed the bigmem part. whoever enables it and isn't a
developer fixing issues is plain stupid.
repeating myself: if it was fine it would be on by default.
in fact, there woul
hi there,
with the latest snapshot my dmesg has changed regarding bios0:
(inside vmware player)
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0x8000extent_alloc_region: can't allocate region
descriptor
:12 0xc8000/0x1e00!extent_alloc_region: can't allocate region descriptor
:12 0xca000/0x1000extent_alloc_region: can'
Don't use stupid shit like "Akamize". Problem solved.
Stop making people laugh at you.
On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 10:25 +0100, "Claer" wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 07 2011 at 59:07, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
> > I try to use OpenBSD wherever I can and in the firewall I have
> > installed in a big jewel store
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 2:43 PM, Martin Schrvder wrote:
>>
>> And consequently pf which does not know a thing about domains does not help
us.
>
> What exactly is the problem you want to solve?
>
Sorry for having been abstract.
Here is the detailed explanation.
One domain translates to around 100
On Fri, Jan 07, 2011 at 05:50:25AM -0500, Eric Furman wrote:
> > On Fri, Jan 07 2011 at 59:07, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
> > > Many websites these days "Akamize" or do whatever that gives them a
> > > different IP address
> > > everytime you access it.
> Don't use stupid shit like "Akamize". Pro
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(optimisi pour le rifirencement),
Hi folks,
I will reformulate the question. Sorry for this, but it sleeps off topic.
So, I'm interested about Intel Core 2 Duo family and i3, i5, i7
families. I don't know what SMP is about.
I remember UNIX has no threads, just processes spawn by fork().
Having this in mind, will a processor from
On 1/6/2011 at 10:40 AM Mike. wrote:
|On 1/5/2011 at 2:56 PM Axton wrote:
|
||On Wed, Jan 5, 2011 at 10:14 AM, Mike. wrote:
||
||> On 1/4/2011 at 10:57 PM Josh Smith wrote:
||>
||> |
||> |pass in on $int_if0 # pass all incomming traffic on our internal
||> interface
||> |pass in on $int_if1 # pas
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 9:53 AM, Mihai Popescu B.S. wrote:
> I remember UNIX has no threads, just processes spawn by fork().
A lot has changed since 1995.
> A lot has changed since 1995.
pthreads -- https://computing.llnl.gov/tutorials/pthreads/
rthreads --
http://www.informatik.uni-augsburg.de/~ungerer/rthreads/RThreads.html
and etc.
Yes, it will use all your cores.
I don't understand your question about "blade" servers, but they are
just a different form factor of the essentially the same hardware. If
the hardware is supported SMP should work just fine.
PS: SMP is what lets you use all your cores:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wik
On Fri, 2011-01-07 at 16:26 +0530, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 2:43 PM, Martin Schrvder wrote:
> >>
> >> And consequently pf which does not know a thing about domains does not help
> us.
> >
> > What exactly is the problem you want to solve?
> >
>
> Sorry for having been
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 10:49 AM, Adam M. Dutko wrote:
> rthreads --
> http://www.informatik.uni-augsburg.de/~ungerer/rthreads/RThreads.html
The above paper has nothing to do with what's called being rthreads in OpenBSD.
A more appropriate paper from 1995 would be this one, except OpenBSD
uses a
Henning Brauer wrote:
> you're wrong. my OpenBSD SMP boxes (no, no 48 cores) do very well.
> as long as the load is userland-driven we scale fine.
I guess Landry doesn't read this list, or he could tell you how his
experiment with parallel ports building on a 64-way sparc64 T2 went.
With 32 buil
Thus said Girish Venkatachalam on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 16:26:01 +0530:
> Due to this , whatever IP address pf(4) knows at the time of ruleset
> loading alone works.
Use pfctl and a cronjob to periodically update a table. Kludgey, sure...
Andy
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 1:18 PM, Christian Weisgerber
wrote:
> I guess Landry doesn't read this list, or he could tell you how his
> experiment with parallel ports building on a 64-way sparc64 T2 went.
> With 32 build jobs it looked like this:
>
> 0.8%Int 48.9%Sys 6.0%Usr 0.0%Nic 44.3%Idle
>
On 01/06/2011 05:54 PM, Johan Fredin wrote:
On 2 jan 2011, at 10:42, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
Hi list and happy new year to all. Now, I've solve temporarly this problem
using ifstated, and master and backup work fine. For pfsync nic, in past I had
used a dedicated nic for pfsync but now cau
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(optimisi pour le rifirencement),
On 2011-01-07 19.54, Ted Unangst wrote:
experiment with parallel ports building on a 64-way sparc64 T2 went.
With 32 build jobs it looked like this:
0.8%Int 48.9%Sys 6.0%Usr 0.0%Nic 44.3%Idle
around that all the time
My understanding is that the T2 is closer to an 8-way machine. If we
On 2011-01-07 20.45, Benny LC6fgren wrote:
Also, both tests were run with the MP kernel, so even the single-task
test would probably utilize several kernels at times.
*duh* Meant to say "...utilize several cores...", not kernels.
/B
--
internetlabbet.se / work: +46 8 551 124 80 / "
every thing i do i do it for you!
* Benny Lvfgren [2011-01-07 20:45]:
> On 2011-01-07 19.54, Ted Unangst wrote:
> >>experiment with parallel ports building on a 64-way sparc64 T2 went.
> >>With 32 build jobs it looked like this:
> >> 0.8%Int 48.9%Sys 6.0%Usr 0.0%Nic 44.3%Idle
> >> around that all the time
> >My understandi
Hi,
I have 2 servers that get backed up to tape. I was scping the daily
dump files to the server with the tape attached but now I no longer have
hard disk room to do that.
So I read the man page for rdump/dump and that led me to rmt but I have
been unable to make this work. It fails with
I prefer to tar(1)...
On 1/7/11, Jeff Ross wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have 2 servers that get backed up to tape. I was scping the daily
> dump files to the server with the tape attached but now I no longer have
> hard disk room to do that.
>
> So I read the man page for rdump/dump and that led me to rm
On 01/07/11 14:44, Johan Beisser wrote:
I prefer to tar(1)...
That's all fine and well but doesn't address the question at all.
I have a learning story about how easy it is to type tar "c"zvf instead
of tar "x"zvf and in a split second wipe out a huge tar backup file but
I'll let you make th
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 5:00 PM, Jeff Ross wrote:
> Since I posted I've found rshd and started it through inetd and now I'm just
> getting permission denied errors.
>
> Perhaps the better question is how can I make that work over ssh?
I believe exporting RSH=ssh should work.
On 01/07/11 15:08, Ted Unangst wrote:
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 5:00 PM, Jeff Ross wrote:
Since I posted I've found rshd and started it through inetd and now I'm just
getting permission denied errors.
Perhaps the better question is how can I make that work over ssh?
I believe exporting RSH=ssh
Jeff Ross wrote:
> Since I posted I've found rshd and started it through inetd and now I'm
> just getting permission denied errors.
>
> Perhaps the better question is how can I make that work over ssh?
Set RSH=ssh in the environment.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber n
2011/1/7 Mihai Popescu B.S. :
> families. I don't know what SMP is about.
There's a great site since the beginning of the millenium:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMP
And you should read and follow
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
HTH. HAND
Martin
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