Hi all .
i follow http://brycv.com/blog/2013/notes-on-openbsd-in-qemu-on-openbsd/
openbsd(rental server):vio0 157.7.208.141 internet
and
qemu-run.sh
export ETHER=vether0
export BRIDGE=bridge0
qemu-system-i386 first-image.img -m 512
On August 8, 2015 2:13:02 AM GMT+02:00, Quartz wrote:
>> How about taking some directory that is currently under /var
>(depending
>> on what you're doing with the machine, maybe log or www or mysql or
>> something?) and moving the contents to /usr/obj or /usr/src (or if
>> they're together on disk
On sze, aug 05, 2015 at 06:49:42 +, David Dahlberg wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, den 05.08.2015, 00:31 +0100 schrieb Jason McIntyre:
>
> > if this were the case, i'd say we want:
> > [tls [verify]]
>
> Hmm, I think I have heard this proposal before ;-)
> https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=14019
On 2015-08-07 Fri 10:33 AM |, Quartz wrote:
>
> Is there a good way to use the same disk? Again, the
> issue is not that the disk is full, but that's it half empty and split up in
> a way that we can't really use the space.
>
1) Decide what partition layout & sizes you want (du, df, mount, etc..
> It might be worth buying/reusing a standalone access point (perhaps
> reflashing a linksys router or something) and connecting via ethernet
> cable. That way you have more flexibility in choosing locations: ie, the
> OpenBSD router can be somewhere that's convenient for interfacing with
> you
it is actually not worth buying a new standalone access
point unless you can install specifically OpenBSD on it, and temporary
reuse of an old access point is sub-optimal now matter what you
(re)flash on it, most firmwares including third party are vulnerable
and suffer from the same reliability a
Maybe I missed it, but if you supply the output of disklabel and df,
it would be easier to give advice.
The machine isn't in front of me right now, but the partition setup was
using the 'wizard' defaults. In other words: /, /tmp, /var, /usr,
/usr/X11R6, /usr/local, /usr/src, /usr/obj, and /hom
sorry for top post.
I believe I had the problem with both base and netsnmpd versions.
On 06/08/15 00:33, Steven Surdock wrote:
Thanks Stuart. It is also my understanding that the base snmpd suffers the
same issue.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=143143933919367&w=2
I will try the debug s
When connecting to a serial port with a usb to serial adapter. Unplugging
the usb connection without closing the session causes my system to drop to
ddb.
Can someone else try to verify this ?
No flags, simply 'cu /dev/cuaU0 '
http://1drv.ms/1Dy9w4J
ddb screenie ^
--
--Dan
On Thu, Jul 30, 2015 at 11:26:56AM -0400, XU, YANG (YANG) wrote:
> Adam,
>
> Your comments and links are very helpful, they made some concepts clear
> for me. Many thanks!
>
> What I need essentially is VRF function which converts IPv4 prefix to
> VPNv4 prefix dynamically. I hope experts can h
> ... in that order.
This order could be not identical with the harddisk order. If I'm not
mistaken, watching install operation, I think the / partition is the
first followed by /home. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong.
One man already asked you for disklabel output.
On Saturday, August 8, 2015, Dan Becker wrote:
> When connecting to a serial port with a usb to serial adapter. Unplugging
> the usb connection without closing the session causes my system to drop to
> ddb.
>
> Can someone else try to verify this ?
>
> No flags, simply 'cu /dev/cuaU0 '
>
> http:/
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 2:12 PM, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Saturday, August 8, 2015, Dan Becker wrote:
>
>> When connecting to a serial port with a usb to serial adapter. Unplugging
>> the usb connection without closing the session causes my system to drop to
>> ddb.
>>
>> Can someone else try
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 2:12 PM, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Saturday, August 8, 2015, Dan Becker wrote:
>
>> When connecting to a serial port with a usb to serial adapter. Unplugging
>> the usb connection without closing the session causes my system to drop to
>> ddb.
>>
>> Can someone else try
... in that order.
This order could be not identical with the harddisk order. If I'm not
mistaken, watching install operation, I think the / partition is the
first followed by /home. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong.
I've looked at the layout on this machine a dozen times. Cross reference
wit
On Sat, Aug 08, 2015 at 08:24:53PM -0400, Quartz wrote:
> >One man already asked you for disklabel output.
>
> That WAS the disklabel output (minus sizes and offsets). When I next get a
> chance to ssh into it from somewhere else I'll copy the actual output, but
> the exact blocks shouldn't reall
2015/08/08 22:25 "Quartz" :
>>
>> Maybe I missed it, but if you supply the output of disklabel and df,
>> it would be easier to give advice.
>
>
> The machine isn't in front of me right now, but the partition setup was
using the 'wizard' defaults. In other words: /, /tmp, /var, /usr,
/usr/X11R6, /u
You've stated you have a 10GB disk, and that this is 4.9. The disklabel(8)
man page at 4.9 described the automatic layout at that time:
Yeah, that's what we have.
You have stated that /usr/src and /usr/obj are unused, /var is full, and
/usr/local (used for packages and some infrastructure com
Also, another question: this system keeps nothing in the user's home
directories past a few dot files. /home is using less than 1m of space.
Would it be safe from a security/reliability standpoint to just move the
home folders directly into / ?
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 3:36 PM, Dan Becker wrote:
>> On Saturday, August 8, 2015, Dan Becker wrote:
>>>
>>> When connecting to a serial port with a usb to serial adapter. Unplugging
>>> the usb connection without closing the session causes my system to drop
>>> to ddb.
...
> $ cat /var/run/dmesg.
linux has blkid .
in openbsd , what is its substitute ?
21 matches
Mail list logo