Hello,
After patching axen5-63.diff and xhci63.diff axen(4) driver hangs
randomly (LED stopped blinking and down on the Axen device). A system is
hang completely without any related error records present in dmesg.
Why axen(4) 16kB buffer size as in original code affected on system
stability?
I h
On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 13:30:37 +0100
> OpenBSD is the best OS for both tasks (I've worked for an ISP doing
> both roles, on other operating systems).
+1
I much prefer the OpenBSD options including spamd and smtpd to the
Linux options. Linux options seem to focus on filtering and
inspection which
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 11:23:36 +0100
> dropping/prevention especially with Linux tools. Postfix is decent
> wherever it runs, of course.
I guess I meant trapping and timing out not dropping before someone
calls foul.
It is really interesting which disposable addresses receive spam.
Obvious ones b
My main laptop is going south on me and I'm trying to get an alternate thinkpad
working. Adding to my joy is that I'm in the hospital currently.
I have a stock X220. What firmware file do I want for -current? Sorry for the
question but I plead antibiotics! Most frustrating not having access
On 10.09.18 09:08, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
On 09/09/18 07:05, Monah Baki wrote:
Hi All,
I have a OpenBSD 6.3 server in Amazon AWS, and I am trying to install
from
ports letsencrypt. Install was running fine till I got a Fatal message
after it was done with the patching process
...
Thanks
On 2018-09-11, STeve Andre' wrote:
> My main laptop is going south on me and I'm trying to get an alternate
> thinkpad working. Adding to my joy is that I'm in the hospital currently.
>
> I have a stock X220. What firmware file do I want for -current? Sorry for
> the question but I plead anti
Hi,
I wasn't going to ask, but the book I have (alternative dns servers - jpm) is
somewhat outdated on nsd.
If I'm correct, in order to pull the zones to disk on a slave nsd setup, one
has to manually or crontab "nsd-control write example.com". Is this correct?
Is there an automated way to do t
On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 04:12:48PM +0200, Peter J. Philipp wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I wasn't going to ask, but the book I have (alternative dns servers - jpm) is
> somewhat outdated on nsd.
>
> If I'm correct, in order to pull the zones to disk on a slave nsd setup, one
> has to manually or crontab "nsd-
Hi list,
I use an OpenVPN based internet access service (like NordVPN, AirVPN etc).
The issue with these public VPN services, is the VPN servers are always
congested. The most I’ll get is maybe 10Mbits through one server.
Local connection is a few hundred mbps..
So I had the idea of running mu
Hi all,
I've created a downloadable CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing)
network calculator, whose sole dependency is Python3. It runs in any
terminal or terminal emulator on any Linux or presumably BSD machine.
http://troubleshooters.com/linux/cidr_calc.htm
SteveT
Steve Litt
September 2018
On 2018-09-11, Steve Litt wrote:
> I've created a downloadable CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing)
> network calculator, whose sole dependency is Python3. It runs in any
> terminal or terminal emulator on any Linux or presumably BSD machine.
>
> http://troubleshooters.com/linux/cidr_calc.htm
Do
Nice helpful script, thanks. Didn't run off the bat for me as it expects
python3 in /usr/bin/
`#!/usr/bin/env python` is more portable
ols
leaversmith.com/privacy
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 15:28:09 + (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2018-09-11, Steve Litt wrote:
> > I've created a downloadable CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing)
> > network calculator, whose sole dependency is Python3. It runs in any
> > terminal or terminal emulator on any Linux or pre
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 16:57:09 +0100
Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
> Nice helpful script, thanks. Didn't run off the bat for me as it
> expects python3 in /usr/bin/
>
> `#!/usr/bin/env python` is more portable
The preceding might bring up Python 2.7, which wouldn't work. If
there's a similar enviro
Hi,
I am able to send SMS using AT commands and C outside chroot using
code spinet below
---
#include
#include
#include
#define MODEM_PATH "cu -l /dev/cuaU0 -s 115200"
int main()
{
FILE *out;
char s[40];
On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 12:39:03PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> The preceding might bring up Python 2.7, which wouldn't work. If
> there's a similar environment variable that either brings up the
> Python3 executable, or nothing at all, that would be better.
Ah yes, apologies for my oversight there
I'm not sure that I wasn't ambiguous. I want to be able to set up all
necessary unveil promises then from that point on, be able to only reduce
unveil permissions. I don't know the mechanism by which is unveil works,
but perhaps it could be an unveil command similar to unveil(NULL, NULL)
instead of
On 09/11/18 12:32, Steve Litt wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 15:28:09 + (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018-09-11, Steve Litt wrote:
> I've created a downloadable CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing)
> network calculator, whose sole dependency is Python3. It runs in any
> terminal or termi
On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 12:32:26PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
| > $ python3 cidr_calc.py.txt
| > 2a02:8011:7003:1:fab1:56ff:feac:3276/64
| >
| > IP address (2a02:8011:7003:1:fab1:56ff:feac:3276) not numeric.
| > USAGE: subnet_calc ipaddr/maskbits
| > EXAMPLE: subnet_calc 1
On 21:11 Mon 10 Sep, Zbyszek Żółkiewski wrote:
>
> > Wiadomość napisana przez Consus w dniu 25.08.2018, o
> > godz. 17:08:
> >
> > Seems like APU2 board is vulnerable to Spectre:
>
> seems there is microcode update with mitigations but looks like none want to
> claim where that microcode come
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:10:39 +0200
Paul de Weerd wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 12:32:26PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> | > $ python3 cidr_calc.py.txt
> | > 2a02:8011:7003:1:fab1:56ff:feac:3276/64
> | >
> | > IP address (2a02:8011:7003:1:fab1:56ff:feac:3276) not numeric.
>From the link:
IPV6: An Internet addressing protocol using 2128, less some stretches used for
special things. IPV6 is not relevant to this document, nor is this document
relevant to IPV6.
> On 12 Sep 2018, at 1:28 am, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> On 2018-09-11, Steve Litt wrote:
>> I've cr
On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 03:34:40PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
| > Also, sthen, since it is 2018 .. you shouldn't be using eui64
| > addressing anymore ;-)
|
| I'm confused. Was I using eui addressing in the IPV4 version? If I
| shouldn't use eui, what *should* I use instead? My understanding from
|
Maybe rdomains?
> Den 11. sep. 2018 kl. 15.59 skrev Andrew Lemin :
>
> Hi list,
>
> I use an OpenVPN based internet access service (like NordVPN, AirVPN etc).
>
> The issue with these public VPN services, is the VPN servers are always
> congested. The most I’ll get is maybe 10Mbits through one
I've had a quick look through the man pages and am still a bit unclear, perhaps
I'm just overthinking this ?
Let's say I've got two perimeter "firewalls" running OpenBSD, talking BGP to
upstream routers.
On the "LAN" side I'm thinking about CARP, which is active/passive, and the
devices on "LA
Hi to all in OpenBSD-land!
I recently updated my amd-64-current machine to the Sept 7th snapshot (previous
snapshot was July 17th).
Prior to update both firefox and iridium browsers were able to be run using
'ssh -Y' as another user on the same machine. Now they do not run - firefox
never fini
On 09/12/18 02:45, Kihaguru Gathura wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am able to send SMS using AT commands and C outside chroot using
> code spinet below
>
> ---
> #include
> #include
> #include
>
> #define MODEM_PATH "cu -l /dev/cuaU0 -s 1
Thanks very much to Stewart and Josh. My new little beast is on the net now
and everything seems to work. Now the W541 can go to the hospital as I leave
mine. (-;
STeve Andre'
On Sep 11, 2018, 06:16, at 06:16, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>On 2018-09-11, STeve Andre' wrote:
>> My main laptop is
Brett Mahar wrote:
> Hi to all in OpenBSD-land!
>
> I recently updated my amd-64-current machine to the Sept 7th snapshot
> (previous snapshot was July 17th).
>
> Prior to update both firefox and iridium browsers were able to be run using
> 'ssh -Y' as another user on the same machine. Now the
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