Hi guys,
How can I get the maximum compression from bzip2 by tar?
I try this but not work [although with linux it works]:
tar cvv file_to_compress | pbzip2 -9 -v > compressed.tbz2
return--> tar: Failed open to write on /dev/rst0: Device not configured
Can anyone give me some tips?
Thanks.
I wrote:
>
> I believe the ancient default for tar(1) is to try to open the 0th
> st(1) device in raw mode, that's what you're seeting. Try:
grah... that's st(4), of course.
--schaafuit.
Hi,
> Hi guys,
> How can I get the maximum compression from bzip2 by tar?
>
> I try this but not work [although with linux it works]:
> tar cvv file_to_compress | pbzip2 -9 -v > compressed.tbz2
> return--> tar: Failed open to write on /dev/rst0: Device not configured
>
I believe the ancient defau
Thank You leo_...@volny.cz!
Hi misc@,
I know there is git-flow-completion for bash. For default ksh on OpenBSD,
is there any out-of-box git-flow-completion? I try to google, but can't
find it.
Thanks very much in advance!
Best Regards
Nan Xiao
Hi,
Nan Xiao wrote on Mon, Oct 09, 2017 at 05:33:17PM +0800:
> I know there is git-flow-completion for bash.
> For default ksh on OpenBSD, is there any out-of-box
> git-flow-completion?
Hell no.
No plugins in the shell, please.
You want a shell that you can trust, right?
If you want an environ
Hi guys.
OpenBSD never ceases to amaze me...!!
Solved the problem about maximum compression with bzip2 by tar, there's
another...
while tar run [tar cvvf - directory | bzip2 -9 -v > directory.tbz2], at a
certain point, return:
tar: file is too long for ustar
The file that creates the proble
On Mon, Oct 09, 2017 at 10:23:08AM +, Max Power wrote:
> Hi guys.
> OpenBSD never ceases to amaze me...!!
>
> Solved the problem about maximum compression with bzip2 by tar, there's
> another...
> while tar run [tar cvvf - directory | bzip2 -9 -v > directory.tbz2], at a
> certain point, retu
I think the limit is 8GB, actually.
On Mon, Oct 9, 2017 at 1:43 PM, Marc Peters wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 09, 2017 at 10:23:08AM +, Max Power wrote:
>> Hi guys.
>> OpenBSD never ceases to amaze me...!!
>>
>> Solved the problem about maximum compression with bzip2 by tar, there's
>> another...
>>
On Mon, Oct 09, 2017 at 05:33:17PM +0800, Nan Xiao wrote:
> Hi misc@,
>
> I know there is git-flow-completion for bash. For default ksh on OpenBSD,
> is there any out-of-box git-flow-completion? I try to google, but can't
> find it.
If you know the completition for bash then you can build a simil
Using the -m flag it still gets warnings from pulseaudio and redis that I
didn't use the -m flag
leo_...@volny.cz wrote:
>% tar cvvf -
On a related note, it would be nice if tar(1)'s man page indicated that the
-v option can be specified more than once to get extra information. Until
seeing this discussion thread I had never realized this was possible.
Philippe
On Mon, Oct 09, 2017 at 11:53:31AM +, Luke Small wrote:
> Using the -m flag it still gets warnings from pulseaudio and redis that I
> didn't use the -m flag
The warning about not using `-m' actually comes from useradd. It is just telling
you that useradd will not create a new home directory fo
> If you love bash and its features, then it is better to use bash than to
> try that ksh will be like bash :-/
I hate when BASH completion hides files for me based on
context, eg. tar -tvf /dir/dir/file_without_good_suffix
won't work.
j.
Hi guys, and wishes for the new release, Thank You Theo.
Installing gtar ask me:
Ambiguos: choose package for gtar
a 0:
1: gtar-1.28p1
2: gtar-1.28p1-static
Your choice:
Ok, but differece between 'normal' and 'static'...?
Thanks.
On Mon, 09 Oct 2017 17:24:53 +0200, Max Power wrote:
> Hi guys, and wishes for the new release, Thank You Theo.
>
> Installing gtar ask me:
> Ambiguos: choose package for gtar
> a 0:
> 1: gtar-1.28p1
> 2: gtar-1.28p1-static
> Your choice:
>
> Ok, but differece between 'nor
We still ship a few packages with a static flavor, for the paranoid
who wants a version that will work even if they manage to fuck up
most of everything else on their system.
I'll admit I find fewer and fewer valid use cases to these, as opposed to
rebooting on bsd.rd and fixing things another way
Hi Philippe,
Philippe Meunier wrote on Mon, Oct 09, 2017 at 08:03:12AM -0400:
> leo_...@volny.cz wrote:
>> % tar cvvf -
> On a related note, it would be nice if tar(1)'s man page indicated that the
> -v option can be specified more than once to get extra information. Until
> seeing this discuss
On 2017-10-09, "Todd C. Miller" wrote:
>> a 0:
>> 1: gtar-1.28p1
>> 2: gtar-1.28p1-static
>
> Packages with the -static suffix are statically linked and do not
> depend on shared libraries. This means that the binary is not
> affected by changes in the shared libraries, wh
Hello all -
I don't feel this warrants a bug report, but nevertheless feel that this
behavior is inconsistent with the way dhclient works. I have a vultr
server running nsd/OpenBSD 6.2, and I suspect that the move to slaacd
from kernel code in 6.1 is what has broken my nsd config (it fails to
sta
I’ve just started a job where I will be working from home a bunch, so I would
like to configure my home router as an ipsec/l2tp client and to push the routes
from my work network to all computers on my home network. i.e. a site-to-site
VPN.
I have found a bunch of documentation for configuring
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