It's the time between snapshots and release.
pkg_add -ui -Dsnap
Is what you need.
On 2020-10-05 22:09, Why 42? The lists account. wrote:
...
> 2. Figure out how to tell sysupgrade the right answers in advance i.e.
> via the auto_upgrade.conf mechanism
This is fairly easy:
sysupgrade -
t;",
also causes Radicale to mistakenly redirect /path/to/app/ to
/path/to/app/app/.web [2], because
it thinks that means it's being called as /path/to/app/. I don't know if httpd
or Radicale is at fault here.
I suspect this is an off-by-one in httpd [3] but I
I'm on 5.9-stable, got XFCE on here and just wondering about getting the power
and shutdown buttons working as they are greyed out for root and non-root.
Here's the old instructions for when 'sudo' was the standard:
%users ALL = NOPASSWD:/usr/local/lib/xfce4/session/xfsm-shutdown-helper
Then add
Right enough, meant to say 5.8 stable!
Thanks a lot for your advice, I now have everything set up the way I want it -
thanks! ..really gotta remember to read the pkg_readme's next time! ha
Regards
Hi.
On 02/20/16 16:20, Nick wrote:
> I'm on 5.9-stable,
>
5.
enumerating all Google Apps for Business accounts I know of
and adding a line for each.
= Nick
c/mail/aliases
[...]
# RFC 2142: NETWORK OPERATIONS MAILBOX NAMES
abuse: root
# noc: root
security: root
[...]
but table(5) doesn't show any colons. smtpd seems to be able to handle either
with or without colons; is one supposed to be more canonical than the other?
For reference, I'm on:
# uname -a
OpenBSD comms3.kousu.ca 7.1 GENERIC#3 amd64
Thanks in advance! Hope you're having a chill day
(and please CC me, I'm not subscribed)
-Nick
http://www.openbsd.org/opensmtpd/faq/example1.html
Original Message
Subject: how to send email via Mail
Local Time: February 25, 2016 10:02 pm
UTC Time: February 25, 2016 10:02 PM
From: j...@xs4all.nl
To: misc@openbsd.org
Hallo, I would like to use mail(1) for email client.
In
Hello,
I used the default partition layout when I set up this system (5.8 - CD
release) a few weeks ago..
Just realised after a 'du -h' that the root partition is at 105%.. Now, I know
that OpenBSD has a safeguard in place of 5% of partition capacity for scenarios
like these and I of course ha
System working fine.
Original Message
Subject: Re: root partition is 105%, what will happen if I just leave it?
Local Time: March 6, 2016 11:47 AM
UTC Time: March 6, 2016 11:47 AM
From: es...@nerim.net
To: s...@protonmail.com
CC: misc@openbsd.org
On Sat, Mar 05, 2016 at 11:49:37AM -0500,
Hello,
I have tried both firefox and firefox-esr in both OpenBSD 5.8 and 5.9 and can
say that there are issues with the mouse not picking up 10-15% of my clicks,
sometimes having to click a good 3 times or more for it to actually work
correctly! When I select and drag text, it can randomly un-s
## I think this error can be safely ignored, is that correct? OpenBSD changed
the way environment variables are handled.. (?)
1. php does not seem to be setup properly to query system environment
variables. The test with getenv("PATH") only returns an empty response.
## This I'm not sure of, is
Hello, new issue I haven't ever had and no idea how to fix it either -
rebooting does not help. What the $%%! is going on, anyone help?
Here it is:
# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(wheel) groups=0(wheel), 2(kmem), 3(sys), 4(tty), 5(operator),
20(staff), 31(guest)
# adduser Derek
Use option ``-silent'' if
I have been having these issues with owncloud on 5.9 Stable where I will go to
log in and says password is wrong, I have two set ups - one in the cloud and
one at home, both are randomly doing this. My partner had to change password 8
times last night before it would actually work on next log ba
The owncloudclient refuses to work and core dumps on non-root user
Works but throws out warnings on root.. although I feel a little edgy running
this client as root.
Application: owncloudclient
System: 5.9 Stable
###
$ owncloud
(owncloud:30815): GLib-ERROR **: Creating pipes for
ay 03, 2016 at 04:20:37PM -0400, Nick wrote:
> The owncloudclient refuses to work and core dumps on non-root user
> Works but throws out warnings on root.. although I feel a little edgy running
> this client as root.
>
> Application: owncloudclient
> System: 5.9 Stable
>
>
too, thanks)
I checked my login class:
login nick
passwd *
uid 1000
groups nick wheel operator staff
change NEVER
class staff
gecos nick
dir /home/nick
shell /bin/ksh
expire NEVER
And my ulimit -a:
time(cpu-seconds) unlimited
file(blocks) unlimited
coredump(blocks) unlimited
data(kbytes) 1572864
sta
Wesley, I think once you've logged in with a user, you're stuck
with whatever was in the config file as has been previously said as it's
created the roundcube entries in the database.
What you'll need to do
now for that user is to log into roundcube, click Personal Settings at
the top, then click
;s a joke when it says "use electron microscope" at
<http://www.openbsd.org/papers/opencon06-drivers/mgp00020.html> right?
-Nick
g the GENERIC kernel
(which you should be), COMPAT_LINUX is already enabled, and you will
just need to do:"
-Nick
scalability and self-descriptive properties will mean you
never lose your information.
-Nick
to try this at home. But who could I call?
-Nick
don't care. That code might
actually be readable!
--then again it might not. We'll see.
Also, please educate me: couldn't a BSD driver be created by using the
cleanroom approach? One person reads the GPL code, writes specs,
another implements them? Or is this covered when people say "reverse
engineer"?
-Nick
is has come up before lots. Trying searching the archives at
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com?l=openbsd-misc
and good luck
-Nick
t; engineer"?
[...]
Thanks for clearing that up Hannah, Neil, Rod, Darren, and Marco.
I always see the bitching on here (usually leading to a license war)
and never was entirely sure what the big deal was.
-Nick
however why are you doing this? Mucking
with kernel #defines is sort of priviliged, because everyone has to be
kept in sync on them.
-Nick
On 3/1/07, Jacob Yocom-Piatt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Nick Holland wrote:
> exactly.
> This idea of using VMware (or similar) to host a firewall that
> protects the host operating system is something I find somewhere
> between amusing (because its silly) and scary (be
(or, marc balmer said it better: "why are
people so proud of their uptimes when it only show they
don't care for their systems?")
See http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2007-01/0669.html
(by the way, I can't find that patch, anyone know where it is?)
-Nick
ould just be able to install the new
fvwm--which presumably means compiling and that means manually copying
the new fvwm over the old, and moving any man pages and stuff to their
proper places--and it won't conflict (this isn't Windows).
-Nick
On 3/2/07, Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 2007/03/02 09:34, Nick ! wrote:
> However, I *think* you should just be able to install the new
> fvwm--which presumably means compiling and that means manually copying
> the new fvwm over the old
ugh. install the new
rial, rev 1.00/80.01, addr 2
ugen means "usb generic". It looks like your adaptor is not supported
on OpenBSD. If it was, you would have seen a line after this listing
the ucom0 port as available.
-Nick
On 3/5/07, BradenM - Sonoma Computer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I've been looking into finding some news groups for openbsd but have not found
any that resolve, have they all died?
Welcome to the 21st century:
http://undeadly.org
misc@openbsd.org
-Nick
AN_FTP/OpenBSD/$OS_V0/packages/ and report what
happens.
But my server contains postfix-2.3.2.tgz:
$ lftp 192.168.3.11
Don't test with lftp, test with the built in ftp that pkg_add is using.
Thanks for any pointers.
PM
-Nick
n't been specific enough: there's
more than one possible package.
Use the -i flag (I always run `pkg_add -iv ...`) to make it prompt you
for which.
-Nick
lly, and exactly
what is the optimal cases is probably highly non-linear and based on
what other processes are running at the time, the size of your RAM,
the quality of your hardware, and so on.
-Nick
aterloo too?
-Nick
out OpenBSD
snapshosts or independent-project snapshots?) and the usual
you're-on-your-own warning applies.
-Nick
o you don't even have a system installed yet?
Go read http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html, twice.
Once you're set up, run `man pkg_add` and read it.
Also, there is no gaim2 port for OpenBSD, as far as I know. You're
stuck with gaim1.5 like the rest of us.
-Nick
p directory
> for 4.0.
So you don't even have a system installed yet?
Go read http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html, twice.
Once you're set up, run `man pkg_add` and read it.
Also, there is no gaim2 port for OpenBSD, as far as I know. You're
stuck with gaim1.5 like the rest of
ernel in which you hardcode wd1 to be
at pciide1 before the wd* at pciide* part?
Or you could try switching the connectors around.
-Nick
2 has OO installed but it is not convenient to run it for
editing text.
There's vi(1) and mg(1).
I don't think OpenBSD is for you. You have to want OpenBSD, OpenBSD
doesn't have to want you.
-Nick
implicitly included by
some other include files. However, it is more correct to keep them all
here explicitly because cat.c uses them directly; you should want
someone reading the code to have a list of 'libraries' it relies on.
Good question.
-Nick
will update themselves with your new
domain name. Once that is done you will be able to access your site at
its permanent address."
...what? What does this have to do with OpenBSD?
-Nick
eans "I don't want vendors to require us to use a blob and I refuse
to use them even when no other way".
This is a very good summary of the situation Karel.
With this summary in mind: is it worth it for either side to get as
worked up as they have been?
-Nick
FUD. Come on, be scientific now. Stop
trolling.
-Nick
On 3/19/07, Karel Kulhavy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Mar 19, 2007 at 09:26:56AM -0400, Nick ! wrote:
> On 3/19/07, Karel Kulhavy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >On Sat, Feb 17, 2007 at 10:06:43PM +0100, Joachim Schipper wrote:
> >>
> >> Aggressive com
the firmware as specified in the man-page, but I
don't know where to go from here..
I have a feeling I'm SOL with this card
If it's from a dlink, probably. Get a ral(4), they are from a nice
taiwanese company that is friendly to open source.
[snip dmesg]
-Nick
ust be being sarcastic in some of these posts
but I can't tell which.
-Nick
y by chance that you're
not segfaulting.
fprintf(stdout, "x:%llu\n", x);
fprintf(stdout, "0,1:%u,%u\n", p[0], p[1]);
fprintf(stdout, "c:%llu\n", c);
return 0;
}
-Nick
ted.
Is GCC the culprit of this problem, or should I keep on looking somewhere else?
"with -O0, however, things work as expected." I think you've answered
your own question.
I compliment you on your very detailed bug hunting.
-Nick
On 3/19/07, Gustavo Rios <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 3/19/07, Nick ! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 3/19/07, Gustavo Rios <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I am writing a very simple program but the output change for the c
> > variable value change every t
to capture performance data."
Now tell me. Are they really interested in making sure my systems are
working properly??? Draw your own conclusions?
My gosh, what company is this? There's no reason to protect them, tell us.
-Nick
d load it. On the other hand, it
might not work like that at all and doing so could equally (actually,
more) likely brick the box.
-Nick
on't get scared off if your first few are
rejected in flames). Eventually you'll just be known.
Have you got an OpenBSD system installed yet? You should do that. Go
check out the install guide: http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html
-Nick
7;ve heard rumours on the internets that sometimes it creeps out from
under beds and eats children. I don't know if you can trust it...
-Nick
On 3/22/07, Jay Jesus Amorin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
how do i know if im using openbsd current?
If you have to ask you aren't.
Current is installed by installing snapshots and compiling from CVS.
The learning curve is very steep.
-Nick
gs and
time it takes to patch is silly. Every OS, even OpenBSD as we just
saw, is probably full of undetected exploits that are constantly
getting fixed indirectly as overall code quality is improved.
-Nick
On 3/22/07, STeve Andre' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thursday 22 March 2007 10:01:23 Nick ! wrote:
> On 3/22/07, Jay Jesus Amorin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > how do i know if im using openbsd current?
>
> If you have to ask you aren't.
>
> Curre
card but does the ramdisk kernel have support for that compiled
in?
-How do you people with zaurii trade data from them with other
computers? Purely over the network? With SD cards? USB hubs +
thumbdrives?
Thanks in advance,
~Nick (so excited)
s are close, but not quite there yet
Thank you and Theo for your quick replies.
-Nick
control the backlight? I don't see in the manpages
any reference to it, but maybe I'm looking in the wrong places.
What's the upgrading procedure? Is it something like: put bsd.rd on
the / filesystem somewhere and the filesets somewhere (else), reboot,
at boot> type the path to the upgrade kernel?
-Nick
On 3/23/07, Kyle George <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, 22 Mar 2007, Nick ! wrote:
> On 3/22/07, Chris Kuethe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> think long and hard before you trash the partition table. hint: you
>> don't want to use the whole disk for open
86?
It would be helpful to add a mention of this to INSTALL.zaurus, "if
you don't want to have linux, you can just ..."
This amuses me:
"In these cases below we avoid using vi because Linux quality is of
such high caliber that vi locks up the console."
-Nick
lity, and I
have no problem using them if they actually are.
-Nick
On 3/24/07, Ted Unangst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 3/21/07, Paul Irofti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> - the fact that ftp can handle http makes me ponder what happened to
> the KISS principle?
ftp is very simple. there are files on the internet. i want them on
my computer. ftp puts them
insults. Just go back to asking
and helping people like everyone else and you'll be fine.
-Nick
it is powered, the whole reason I have a USB hub is
for the power. This device is the only thing plugged in to it to, so
it's definitely got enough power".
-Nick
ding: http://mobileink.com/mesh/, you should take a
look at http://www.well.com/~doctorow/metacrap.htm. That's also an
issue of care vs. automation.
The world should not be saved by tech!
-Nick
and patience, exactly where they are positioned). If
you've left unused space at the end, and /var is the lastmost
partition, it will be possible to grow it. See growfs(8) and read it
very carefully.
But you would probably be better off doing a clean install.
Good luck,
-Nick
ng in those command lines directly. See if you can reproduce
the problem.
You could also grep ifconfig's source code for "strings too long" and
look for what condition that indicates.
If you find a bug in netstart then tell about it!
-Nick
Theo has claimed somewhere that I can never find the link to
that WPA gives a false sense of security anyway.
-Nick
rying to make the point that unsecured access is
better than WEP. I'm making the point that WEP is half-assed and
hasn't kept anyone out of wireless networks for years now. Not even
the idiots.
Um, yes, yes it has.
Who are "the idiots" to you? Do they include my roommates?
-Nick
On 3/29/07, Sunnz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
2007/3/29, Nick ! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On 3/29/07, Lars Hansson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Maxime DERCHE wrote:
> > > IMHO you should think to configure your AP to provide a WAP-based
> > > encryption
t the
start of a line actually joins the lines.
-Nick
ad idea
because of all the endusers on DHCP.
Just ignore it. So long as your system is actually secure you have
nothing to worry about (except DDoS but there's no way to prevent that
either).
-Nick
w could you automate ID'ing these? If you used some sort of
heuristic method you risk blacklisting innocent users.
Anyway, "/htdocs/thisdoesnotexistahaha.php" and
'/w00tw00t.at.ISC.SANS.DFind:)" show that it's just some kid learning
the ropes. I wouldn't want to report him.
-Nick
On 02 Apr 2007 03:16:20 +0200, Artur Grabowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
"Nick !" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Anyway, "/htdocs/thisdoesnotexistahaha.php" and
> '/w00tw00t.at.ISC.SANS.DFind:)" show that it's just some kid learning
>
factor
mounting issues you could start by asking the people at
http://www.mini-itx.com/, but as far as OpenBSD goes there should
really be no difference than doing any other embedded install.
This sounds like a fun project. Post pictures when you're done, please.
-Nick
On 4/3/07, Nick Holland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
jared r r spiegel wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 01, 2007 at 12:58:38PM -0600, Kjell Wooding wrote:
>> mg is a fine little editor, but it just seems so emacs-centric.
>> This little diff fixes that. Please test and get back to me.
&g
(4). I have ath(4) because I got it from a big box store, but I'm
ashamed. Don't support stupid vendors, give your money elsewhere.
-Nick
he way they dealt with it was
really poor form, but licenses are licenses. This has been blown all
our of proportion, and this thread isn't even to 15 replies yet.
-Nick
nal, but you can probably just use the ASCII
bel character. That is, add a command like:
echo -n "\007"
(note: untested, not near a unix).
-Nick
inated_Universal_Time]]
-Nick
The great thing about it is that people perusing the archives will see
the trollfest and probably not get this far to see us cluing in and
being calm and civil.
-Nick
On 4/11/07, Dan Farrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Seriously... this is a troll.
This is like electronic insurgency de
think, right?); you're not really
planning on security by obscurity are you?
-Nick
reak as well?
I'm sure you'll give some really good reason why the files have to be
named that way...
I agree, spaces in filenames should be avoided. But spaces in
filenames are legal, so programs need to support that; this seems like
a case scp was never tested against because no one uses files with
those names.
-Nick
On 4/11/07, Nick ! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 4/11/07, Dan Farrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
> > Of Karel Kulhavy
> > Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2007 3:47 PM
> > To: OpenBSD
> &
On 4/11/07, Joshua Gimer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 4/11/07, Nick ! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > you're not really
> > planning on security by obscurity are you?
>
The wrapper will work because the users that are doing this are doing it out
of ignorance a
ble onboard wireless adapters. The client systems will be running
Ubuntu Linux (Feisty). Thank you very much.
Pedro
The usual recommendation is ral(4) (that is, the chips that correspond
to the driver documented in `man 4 ral').
Have you seen https://kd85.com/soekris.html ?
-Nick
I forgot to say:
You'll need to configure your wife's PC to have a default gateway of
192.169.1.9 and use a dns server of 192.168.0.1
Cheers.
Original Message
Subject:Re: ntpd could not parse "pool.ntp.org"
Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2005 13:36:09 +0100
#x27;ve the internet working properly on your openbsd box we'll then
work on getting machines behind it to access through it properly.
Ta - Nick
Mike Henker wrote:
Hi Nick & Greg I was testing all the steps but the problem (and
remember I m a newbie and perhaps I m wrong) I think
s, but for testing the pass all command will be ok.
end of nat'ing section -
Your internal PC's will need to be configured with a 192.168.1.x address
(255.255.255.0 subnet) and a gateway of 192.168.1.3, and dns server IP's
of 194.224.52.6 and 194.225.52.4
They should then
On Tue, March 7, 2006 06:18, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> On Mon, 6 Mar 2006, poncenby smythe wrote:
>
>
>> Does anyone else run a box similar to this?
>>
>
> Yes, I have pretty much 3 of those running 24/7.
>
I've only got the one, but it's been on 24/7 for 3yrs with no probs.
>
> $ dmesg | grep cp
- This mail is a HTML mail. Not all elements could be shown in plain text
mode. -
to see how to get a free video ipod check this out! it works just search on
google and you will se what other people think
http://www.YourFreeVideoiPods.com/index.php?ref=1659363
* Nick Holland [090915 07:57]:
> Don't get me wrong, pure cash donations work nicely to keep the lights on.
> Well...briefly. Based on some numbers Theo showed me after my earlier note,
> cash donations from the US and Europe are..uhmm... how do I put
> this...PATHETIC!
>
Google 802.1x port authentication & then see if your switch is capable of
doing it. (ebay might get you a switch that can)
It'd block the rogue machine at the switch connection.
NB. it's possible to change mac addresses on machines so it's not really
very secure. It's more of a inconvenience.
O
LOG_MAKEPRI have any status in terms of standards?
Would it be better for it to be removed or redefined to issue a
preprocessor error?
--
Nick
normal","green","--high","red"] 10,
Run Date "%Y-%m-%d %a %H:%M:%S" "date" 10,
Run StdinReader
],
sepChar = "%",
alignSep = "}{",
template = "%cpu% } %StdinReader% { %date% "
On 2010-11-13 23:39, Jona Joachim wrote:
> Hi,
> the CPU module is disabled on OpenBSD since the implementation is Linux
> specific. Actually among the Monitor modules only Battery works at the
> moment.
OK - thanks.
--
Nick
g
a hw replacement/upgrade in a routine hw maintenance window vs. spending
a very long weekend down.
* When something bad happens, you may spend a lot less time recreating
your data.
Nick.
ething else?) of whatever device was just plugged in and create an
entry in /etc/pf/interfaces.inc something like
ext=run0
or
int=run1
as appropriate. Have an 'include "/etc/pf/interfaces.inc" ' in your
pf.conf, and reload pf.conf when a hotplug event takes place.
Nick.
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