Moin,
I have been dealing with memory-leaks on a host running an nginx
reverse proxy for some time. The host had been running 7.2 with nginx
1.23.1 (self compiled as i need some features not in the package) until
May, which was fine.
After upgrading to 7.3 and nginx-1.24.0, i started to see heavy
Do the affected programs use the same libraries?
On Sun, 2023-09-24 at 09:32 +0200, Tobias Fiebig wrote:
> After upgrading to 7.3 and nginx-1.24.0, i started to see heavy
> memory
> leakage over time. I initially attributed this to nginx, and solved
> the
> issue by ignoring it/throwing a bit more
They do, but nothing special. The common set between nginx and mysqld
is:
/usr/local/lib/libpcre2-8.so.0.6
/usr/lib/libssl.so.53.2
/usr/lib/libcrypto.so.50.2
/usr/lib/libz.so.7.0
/usr/lib/libc.so.97.0
/usr/libexec/ld.so
However, an affected nginx (1.24.0) does not differ from an unaffected
nginx
This libpcre2 library seems to be the only one, which is not
used all over the place. The library itself may not even be buggy, it
may just return something, which the new versions of the caller can't
handle, or it may be unhappy with something the new callers send.
Still: if you can tie this mem
On Sun, 2023-09-24 at 13:07 +0200, Rudolf Leitgeb wrote:
> This libpcre2 library seems to be the only one, which is not
> used all over the place. The library itself may not even be buggy, it
> may just return something, which the new versions of the caller can't
> handle, or it may be unhappy with
Hello,
Is there any plan for porting Snort3 into OpenBSD? Thanks.
Best,
Valdrin
My dev environment on 7.3 is completely different but a little more standard
I share about my nginx:
wiz$ pkg_info nginx
Information for inst:nginx-1.22.0p0
Comment:
robust and small HTTP server and mail proxy server
Description:
This is the stable branch of nginx, as distributed by nginx.org
Just wanted to drop a note saying that for perhaps the entire length
of the project I've heard how brutal it is to help contribute to the
project of OpenBSD (think I've been using OpenBSD on and off since
~1998ish with obecian@ introducing me to it). But being back on the
mailing lists I see how th
On 9/24/23 15:56, Christoff Humphries wrote:
...
(Theo still has some of the best quotes on the Internet.)
Used this one, for quite some time, as my email signature a few years ago:
“You've been smoking something really mind altering, and I think you
should share it.” (Theo de Raadt)
> But yes, getting a specific commit there will be helpful.
Sadly it turns out that it is the commit i feared it would be:
> commit 7b24b93d67daa9c16d665129fd5d3e7dbc583e4f
> Author: Maxim Dounin
> Date: Fri Mar 24 02:57:43 2023 +0300
>
> SSL: enabled TLSv1.3 by default.
Feared, because
Hi Eric,
You'll find how to install OpenBSD following FAQ pretty easily.
After install, you'll be able to add packages (install software) with a
simple internet connection.
You'd have to install for example XFCE, Thunderbird, Firefox, Chromium.
OpenBSD base install does includes a set of GUI
The FAQ is nice, but there are also folks out there that have written
some additional handy resources, such as:
- https://www.k58.uk/openbsd.html (on installing and getting XFCE
and Firefox working, including changes to staff group to increase
allowed resource limits, etc)
- https://www.open
Neat
On 9/25/23 02:03, Christoff Humphries wrote:
The FAQ is nice, but there are also folks out there that have written
some additional handy resources, such as:
- https://www.k58.uk/openbsd.html (on installing and getting XFCE
and Firefox working, including changes to staff group to increas
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