On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 01:43:08PM +0700, Kristaps Dzonsons wrote:
> I know many here are using CVS, and many are also using git, so I wonder
> if anybody can help me. On BSD.lv, I push my CVS repositories (kcgi,
> sblg, etc.) to GitHub from time to time using a cvs2git script. It goes
> as follo
Hello list!
I have some machines behind a squid proxy and have set the http_proxy and
ftp_proxy environment variables both in /etc/profile and in /etc/login.conf
for the default login class. This works well.
But after an upgrade when rc.firsttime calls fw_update and checks for
binary patches the
>
> FWIW, the permission I seek is from my Legal department. They want to ensure
> that 1) we don't use software having unacceptable licenses or in unacceptable
> ways, and 2) that the terms of all the copyrights are adhered to (e.g.,
> reproducing attribution statements, etc.).
>
In my per
We are now Xay Group, and the project is growing, and naysayers here are
ofcourse completely irrelevant.
Hello misc@
I'm currently looking to purchase a scanner that works well with OpenBSD.
I'm aware of the list provided at:
http://www.sane-project.org/sane-mfgs.html
but I recently purchased (and returned) a scanner that was listed as being
fully supported on that list because no matter
Hello,
Emulate3Buttons option is "on" by default. Also there are
many protocols to test. Did you tried another mouse?
Also read man mouse(4). I don't think xorg.conf is not popular
in community but many people simply don't use graphical
interface :)
Ve
19.01.2018, 00:37, "pa...@airmail.cc" :
Hi - rookie question: I have ADSL internet at home, distributed to local
hosts via a cheap modem/router provided by the ISP. And connected as one of
the network nodes is an old laptop running OpenBSD. I want to use that
laptop as a webserver, ftp server, etc. I can connect to the laptop
internally,
On Fri, January 19, 2018 4:29 am, Raimo Niskanen wrote:
> Hello list!
>
> I have some machines behind a squid proxy and have set the http_proxy and
> ftp_proxy environment variables both in /etc/profile and in
> /etc/login.conf
> for the default login class. This works well.
>
> But after an upgra
hi
check: which device does nat for you. On that device configure
portforwarding from external to internal, eg external ip:port to your
internal host:port. test it from outside.
ip forwarding on your OpenBSD laptop isnt necessary here, your laptop
doesnt act as a router in your homesetup.
On 18 January 2018 at 07:00, Scott Bennett wrote:
> On 1/18/2018 9:23 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>> On Thu, Jan 18, 2018 at 09:06:44AM -0500, Sean Murphy wrote:
>>> I performed the steps as indicated n the links above and now have GENERIC.MP
>>> running on my ERL. I did see that KARL failed on th
> 19 jan. 2018 kl. 17:29 skrev Oliver Marugg :
>
> hi
>
> check: which device does nat for you. On that device configure portforwarding
> from external to internal, eg external ip:port to your internal host:port.
> test it from outside.
>
> ip forwarding on your OpenBSD laptop isnt necessary
Bryan Linton writes:
> Hello misc@
>
> I'm currently looking to purchase a scanner that works well with OpenBSD.
>
> I'm aware of the list provided at:
>
> http://www.sane-project.org/sane-mfgs.html
>
> but I recently purchased (and returned) a scanner that was listed as being
> fully suppor
Did you give your userland user/group permissions to use the uhub/ugen
device?
On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 9:59 AM, Anthony J. Bentley
wrote:
> Bryan Linton writes:
> > Hello misc@
> >
> > I'm currently looking to purchase a scanner that works well with OpenBSD.
> >
> > I'm aware of the list provide
Same problem with a Canon LiDE 200.
On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 10:03:53AM -0700, Base Pr1me wrote:
> Did you give your userland user/group permissions to use the uhub/ugen
> device?
I even ran the programs as root.
>
> On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 9:59 AM, Anthony J. Bentley
> wrote:
>
> > Bryan Lint
Am Fri, 19 Jan 2018 12:55:20 -0200 schrieb Michel von Behr
:
> Hi - rookie question: I have ADSL internet at home, distributed to
> local hosts via a cheap modem/router provided by the ISP. And
> connected as one of the network nodes is an old laptop running
> OpenBSD. I want to use that laptop as
Base Pr1me writes:
> Did you give your userland user/group permissions to use the uhub/ugen
> device?
Of course; without that I wasn't able to detect the scanner in the first
place.
> On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 9:59 AM, Anthony J. Bentley
> wrote:
>
> > Bryan Linton writes:
> > > Hello misc@
> > >
0
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I Rolf
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U https://www.metadata.be/
B +32 (0)4 7729 76 04
N Network consulting, installation and maintenance is our core business.
We focus on security and stability in implementing customers' wishes.
Slightly related, I have a CanoScan LiDE 100 that used to work great with
OpenBSD, using either ScanImage or simple-scan. It's detected, but sometime
around OpenBSD-5.6 it stopped working. I use it infrequently enough, and I
have enough computers that I usually just give up and have my wife use her
Hi,
My scanner also stopped working somewhere around 6.0 I think. I didn't need it
since then and therefore didn't bother to file a bug report (I know...).
Don't know if it's the same root cause, but mine looks like a USB stack problem
(?).
Note: This is a Dell Optiplex 3020, that has the XHCI p
Bryan Linton writes:
> Hello misc@
>
> I'm currently looking to purchase a scanner that works well with OpenBSD.
>
> I'm aware of the list provided at:
>
> 0211038.pdf Desktop Documents Downloads Library Movies Music Pictures
> Programs Videos s-nail.corehttp://www.sane-project.org/sane-mfgs.html
I'm guessing the cvs2git version changed in the upgrade and the new version
generates different commit hashes from the old one. You can verify this by
comparing how a known commit shows up on the GitHub UI vs. a git log of a
recent cvs2git conversion: if the "commit XXX" strings differ, that's
On 01/19/18 01:12, Theo de Raadt wrote:
>> FWIW, the permission I seek is from my Legal department.
>
> That maybe your job but it isn't the project's job.
> Enough is enough. That sentence above makes it clear who is getting
> paid for satisfying those requirements: You.
Huh, where did he im
> On 01/19/18 01:12, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >> FWIW, the permission I seek is from my Legal department.
> >
> > That maybe your job but it isn't the project's job.
>
> > Enough is enough. That sentence above makes it clear who is getting
> > paid for satisfying those requirements: You.
>
> Hu
If your customer is not satisfied by simply pointing to the terms that
cover the whole of OpenBSD, and if they insist on some kind of audit of the
whole tree.
Well then, offer it - but charge more.
Point out that what they're asking for would be unreasonably complex and
expensive no matter wh
Hello,
I have just installed the latest snapshot and audio is not configuring,
i.e. the output of mixerctl, audioctl, et al are "device not
configured".
My motherboard is a Supermicro X10DAL-I-O, which has the Intel C610
chipset, and the audio codec is the Realtek ALC888, although the latter
is
I am still learning cgi/web stuff and stumbled upon an issue. I am
trying to popen() a program to catch what it dumps to stdout. To start
simply, I am just trying to run uname. I get nothing. No errors on
popen() or pclose(), but nothing printed. I run the same code from a
regular cpp prog
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