On 31/08/2018, Alexis wrote:
>
> Jon Tabor writes:
>
>> Yep, right there with ya. So, ah...what's everyone using for
>> mail
>> filtering these days? Spamassassin? ClamAV? Something else
>> entirely?
>
> i use maildrop:
>
> http://www.courier-mta.org/maildrop/
>
> Alexis.
>
$ pkg_info fdm
Short: is there a way to manage multiple outputs from a single command
with OpenBSD's make(1)?
Longer story. I have a site that generates a few hundred articles using
sblg(1). Each output article is indexNNN.html, which depends upon every
input indexNNN.xml. So a change to any indexNNN.xml must
Tommy Nevtelen wrote on 30-8-2018 23:13:
We use isakmpd to interconnect 30ish routers and I would like to switch
to iked, but since there is no support to run both at the same time it
makes it quite hard to migrate slowly. Will basically need to do it all
at the same time and that is not very g
Am Donnerstag, August 30, 2018 17:39 CEST, Philipp Buehler
schrieb:
> Hi,
>
> Am 30.08.2018 10:27 schrieb Sebastian Reitenbach:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm wondering if it would be possible to add iked to my box already
> > running isakmpd.
> > I found this quite old thread:
> > http://openbsd-archive.7
See this Scott:
http://www.OpenSMTPd.Org/list.html
Cheers,
--
Craig Skinner | http://linkd.in/yGqkv7
Hello,
compli...@risei.net (Scott Seekamp), 2018.08.31 (Fri) 00:55 (CEST):
> Looking at the manpage for smtpd.conf it’s possible to block a domain
> with:
> reject sender
> and put:
> @domain.tld
> Is it possible to block entire tld’s and if so what would the syntax be?
> I’d like to filter out
On 2018-08-31 10:44, Daniel Polak wrote:
Tommy Nevtelen wrote on 30-8-2018 23:13:
We use isakmpd to interconnect 30ish routers and I would like to switch
to iked, but since there is no support to run both at the same time it
makes it quite hard to migrate slowly. Will basically need to do it a
On Fri, 31 Aug 2018 08:16:12 +0100, Maurice McCarthy wrote:
> On 31/08/2018, Alexis wrote:
>>
>> Jon Tabor writes:
>>
>>> Yep, right there with ya. So, ah...what's everyone using for
>>> mail
>>> filtering these days? Spamassassin? ClamAV? Something else
>>> entirely?
>>
>> i use maildrop:
Hello Philipp,
I use to (reliably) run from two to four parallel instances of isakmpd on
same boxes (for years) - first using different ports, then different IPs.
It seems like they've had to (peacefully) share the SADB. Did I just not
have enough tunnels to trigger the problem? If this isn't the
Tommy Nevtelen wrote on 31-8-2018 16:12:
On 2018-08-31 10:44, Daniel Polak wrote:
Tommy Nevtelen wrote on 30-8-2018 23:13:
We use isakmpd to interconnect 30ish routers and I would like to switch
to iked, but since there is no support to run both at the same time it
makes it quite hard to mi
What's the "OpenBSD way" to install Perl modules which don't exist
as packages?
The usual Perl idiom for "install module foo & all of its (recursive)
dependencies" is "cpan install foo", but this fetches all dependencies
from CPAN, ignoring any OpenBSD packages which may exist. What I'd like
is s
I'm afraid that is no such thing. My best would to search something on
ports to do exactly that.
If there is no repository, you might want to take a look in ways to
convert Perl modules from CPAN into OpenBSD packages. I know there is an
effort to build those packages automatically for Linux (
On Fri, Aug 31, 2018 at 10:08:48PM -0300, Alceu Rodrigues de Freitas Junior
wrote:
> Em 31/08/2018 21:52, Jonathan Thornburg escreveu:
> > What's the "OpenBSD way" to install Perl modules which don't exist
> > as packages?
> I'm afraid that is no such thing. My best would to search something on
On Sat, Sep 01, 2018 at 12:52:57AM +, Jonathan Thornburg wrote:
> What's the "OpenBSD way" to install Perl modules which don't exist
> as packages?
>
> The usual Perl idiom for "install module foo & all of its (recursive)
> dependencies" is "cpan install foo", but this fetches all dependencies
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