Joco Salvatti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Let's suppose an attacker entered the
room where an OpenBSD server is
located in,
Most would argue that at this point you've already lost the security game.
So the attacker could enter in single
user mode, without the need for the root
password,
He
steve szmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Maybe I'm different in that I like change.
Who cares?
Why is this thread still being discussed? Install ViM and bash, and
alias "ifconfig" to "ifconfig -A", and /you/ have /your/ perfect
system.
-mj
I have a new PC (Athlon 64 on a Abit KN8 Ultra mobo
(http://www.abit-usa.com/products/mb/products.php?categories=1&model=285))
that I wanted to test drive OpenBSD on. My first attempt involved a
harddrive with a fresh 3.9 i386 install; however, that failed to
finish booting (hand-copied dmesg belo
Alexey E. Suslikov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Matthew Jenove wrote:
> > [my amd64 machine won't boot i386 kernels]
>
> try to disable pcibios via UKC.
And that did the trick...
thanks for the help,
matt j
David Benfell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Why is this off topic?
Because it is administrivia more suitable for a unix newbies list?
man afterboot, then searching for "network" will point you to
ifconfig, which would be the right way to figure out the IP
address(es) -- where as the "where did tha
Steve Loranz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm confused. The site says 3.7 was released yesterday just like
> Theo's mail says. So, what is the CD claiming to be 3.7 that arrived
> at my door at the end of April?
Pro'ly trojaned. Check the hash for every file on each CD.
--
Maybe Ringo stole y
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