t's not working, regardless if the rule
#pass in quick on $ext_if proto tcp from any to ($ext_if) flags S/SA \
#keep state queue (q_def, q_pri)
is active or not.
TIA,
marc
FWIW, here's the dmesg of this box:
OpenBSD 4.0-stable (GENERIC) #2: Mon Nov 20 16:48:40 CET 2006
[EMAIL PROTECT
On Thu, Dec 21, 2006 at 03:02:11PM -0500, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
> Sorry for this off topic question, but I get more and more requests to
> have WYSIWYG editing on web management servers. I have been resisting
> this for many years so far as I hate this, but look likes more and more
> demands may
* Michael wrote:
> Noone got an idea what I can do about this? Currently the whole system
> crashes when starting hotplugd... please look at the images for error
> messages.
I assume you have an /etc/hotplugd/attach script, can you post that?
On Fri, Dec 22, 2006 at 11:42:44AM -0800, Joe wrote:
>
> Is this for real? I figured if anyone could shed some light on this, an
> OpenBSD developer might be able to comment on this "dylan" language. I'm
> not looking to learn dylan, but am just wondering if this is legit. I
> wouldn't mind run
of any floppy open-bsd based systems that are up to date.
Any tips or tricks are very much appreciated.
Marc
On Thu, Dec 28, 2006 at 11:30:27AM +0100, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
> When I clear the stale lock and re-run it, then it segfaults again. Are you
> familiar with this problem? I will try yet erasing the .spamassassin directory
> (no idea how to erase the db without corrupting the contents of .spamassas
handled
automatically.
I have knocked off "feature" #1 on the list, so I guess I will try the
squid configuration next.
Thanks again,
Marc
On 12/28/06, laurent FANIS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 12/27/06, Marc Ravensbergen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi, I have a litt
* Willy Jacobs wrote:
> OpenBSD 4.0 (amd64), but also the latest current release, failed to
> remap certain PCI interrupts (especially USB) on my ASUS A8N SLI
> Premium (NForce 4) motherboard.
>
> Is this problem caused by the NForce4 chip or APIC related?
>
> I see that FreeBSD 6.1 maps the I
* Christopher Snell wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> I hope you will excuse the commercial nature of this post; I figured
> that this is the best place to find what we are looking for.
looking for people myself, I must admit that I dislike abusing misc for
this a bit, misc@ is for discussind OpenBSD relat
d there are packages.
Probably, there is another (or the right) way of doing all this (Q4:
could somebody give any hint?).
Thanks,
hth,
marc
* Patrick Useldinger wrote:
> Jack J. Woehr wrote:
> >The real problem is that when outsiders stumble into our newsgroups,
> >we shriek, "Ni! Ni!" and
> >demand another shrubbery. Maybe we should just chill out a bit.
>
> True. I'm currently evaluating OpenBSD and I am trying to understand the
For once, I'm going to say this from my position as an OpenBSD
developer who has sunk countless hours into writing code for this OS.
It's obvious a lot of wankers around here have nothing better to do than
start threads based on that job offer.
I am perfectly happy with someone posting a job of
yes henning, the x2100 are nice machines, but the x2200 are slightly
different ;).
@toni: as you might guess, the "hardware raid" of the nforce chipset
doesn't work as hardware raid (except under w2k3 with the driver and
maybe under solaris, which i don't have installed).
Henning Brauer schr
On Tue, Jan 09, 2007 at 05:32:00PM -0500, Andrey Shuvikov wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've installed OBSD 4.0 in qemu and now trying to check out src and
> ports. I don't have any problems with src but when I try to checkout
> ports cvs seems to check out everything, then hangs for a while and
> exits with t
* Francisco Valladolid wrote:
> I have 202 days using OpenBSD 3.6 as router/firewall/ PPPOE.
we bring out a new release every ~180 days, with fixes and new features.
If your uptime is longer than this, it is an indication that you did not
buy any new cd-roms from us, which you really should if y
* Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> i am planning on pulling live rate data from some manufacturing equipment
> using
> a red lion rate meter with RS-232 or 485 interface
>
> http://www.redlion.net/Products/DigitalandAnalog/Counters/CounterRate/CUB5.html
>
> what is the best way to pull this data, usin
* Per-Erik Persson wrote:
> I don't have any webpages to throw at you but converters from rs232 to
> rs485 exists.
> Also plugins cards to soekris that I would assume to be working.
>
> I have a lot of stuff I plan too hook up to OpenBSD, but have not found
> a good way to get the data out without
* Umnada Tyrolla wrote:
> Seems to me like Samurai Chef is providing a service. Just because
> others do things (like program) for free doesn't mean they shouldn't be
> paid for it.
>
> On the other hand, Samurai Chef isn't really creating anything. Maybe a
> profit split between the artwork cre
some time in the (near?) future I will update our port
of the PostgreSQL database to version 8.2.x. We currently
have version 8.1.x in the tree, so the update will require
you to do a database dump prior to the update and a restore
after it.
please make sure to read the release notes at
http://w
Marco Peereboom wrote:
along. The GPL is fatally flawed and hasn't been tested in court. I
wouldn't bet my code or company on it.
the GPL actually has been tested in court in germany.
I lack the details, but using google they surely show up.
- mb
Wed, Jan 17, 2007 at 07:37:00AM -0600, Jeffrey C. Ollie wrote:
On Wed, 2007-01-17 at 08:28 +0100, Marc Balmer wrote:
Marco Peereboom wrote:
along. The GPL is fatally flawed and hasn't been tested in court. I
wouldn't bet my code or company on it.
the GPL actually has been tested i
Vijay Sankar wrote:
On Thursday 18 January 2007 11:46, Marc Balmer wrote:
Claudio Jeker wrote:
On Thu, Jan 18, 2007 at 11:02:12AM -0600, Beavis wrote:
A suggestion would be to enable softdep on your /etc/fstab
softdep is nice but running without it does not make a core 2 duo as slow
as a
On Sun, Jan 28, 2007 at 03:17:14PM +, Jeroen Massar wrote:
> Also note that FT serves the whole country of France, you might not like
> them, but they also have a right to use the Internet ;) Most ISP's get
> only a /32 and there are millions of those. Getting a /19 is really
> something that o
"The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System"
helpful.
Then a close look at the wscons source code in sys/dev/wscons/ will
surely help.
- Marc
applications
like www.otrs.org (a ticketing system)
- Marc
Basically, you're out of luck for now.
Tough problem.
On Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 04:41:06PM +0100, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
> Trying to compile twinkle-0.1 I am getting this ./configure error:
> checking for qt-mt >= 3.3.0 qt-mt < 4.0... Package qt-mt was not found in the
> pkg-config search path. Perhaps you should add the directory containing
> `qt-mt.pc'
On Wednesday 14 February 2007 10:18 am, you wrote:
> On 2/14/07, Jeff Rollin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Nah, RMS doesn't want this. A lot of `GPL people' don't want this
> > > at all.
> > >
> > > This deal is meant to divide.
> >
> > And this discussion isn't? There are already plenty of div
Jules Colding wrote:
Hi,
I've just successfully installed OpenBSD 4.0 on a net4801-60 with a
lan1641 Ethernet PCI board and a SAN Extreme III 2GB CF.
The installation completed flawlessly after I disabled pciide at the UKC
prompt. The problem is now that I'm trying to boot the net4801 but the
_perl/PerlRequire.html
Marc
Phusion wrote:
What are the best supported GPS receivers under 4.0 release and stable
code-base? I would like to find a GPS receiver (serial or USB) that is
supported under OpenBSD that will work for OpenNTPD or NTP.
You should go for a GPS receiver that provides a PPS signal, like e.g.
the Ga
Woodchuck wrote:
On Tue, 20 Feb 2007, Mike Erdely wrote:
Guido Tschakert wrote:
The first and the last entry are both spamd (8), but spamassassin from
ports has overwritten /usr/local/man/man8/spamd.8 from the system (which
I am looking for)
The man page for OpenBSD's spamd is not in /usr/loc
Woodchuck wrote:
As a work-around, you can name the spamassassin spamd's man pages something
else, say Spamd.
I don't know if there is an easy solution for this (I don't want to call
it a problem), but I think this shouldn't happen.
This is probably a matter for the spamassassin port maintai
Cory Albrecht wrote:
I'm trying to get my OpenBSD firewall to authenticate normal user
accounts off of an LDAP server running on a different machine.
On a side note, you are aware that you must create the accounts
locally as well for things to work properly? It is not enough
to have the accou
L. V. Lammert wrote:
On Wed, 21 Feb 2007, Marc Balmer wrote:
Cory Albrecht wrote:
I'm trying to get my OpenBSD firewall to authenticate normal user
accounts off of an LDAP server running on a different machine.
On a side note, you are aware that you must create the accounts
locally as
Cory Albrecht wrote:
Marc Balmer wrote:
Cory Albrecht wrote:
I'm trying to get my OpenBSD firewall to authenticate normal user
accounts off of an LDAP server running on a different machine.
On a side note, you are aware that you must create the accounts
locally as well for things to
t.
>
> The big problems came when i try to print pdf files, printer won't print and
> anyone else can print after that. Any tip?
>
> Does cups package include raster and ghostscript filters? Or can someone
> point me to a web where explain how to set cups on openbsd?
Sorry, this st
The main reason we don't have binary stable updates is that no-one we
trust has the time to build them. It means maintaining an extra machine
that would only track stable, do builds, do the equivalent of releases.
One release every six months is a lot of work already.
If people want to provide sta
long email exchange with keyspan, result: They do now allow us to
redistribute the firmware.
don't buy keyspan products.
- marc
On Sat, Mar 03, 2007 at 10:43:52PM -0500, Peter wrote:
> export PKG_PATH=ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/4.0/packages/i386/
> for i in bash \
>wget
> do
> pkg_add $i
> done
Don't do that. When you can, don't put pkg_add in a loop, but use
the whole list of packages you want to add in
On Sat, Mar 10, 2007 at 11:36:33PM -0500, Peter wrote:
> Le Samedi 10 Mars 2007 03:43, Lars Hansson a icrit :
> > Peter wrote:
> > > Are you serious? I thought that was only for straight packages. It
> > > actually fetches code from third party repositories?
> >
> > What 3rd party repositories? W
Han Boetes wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for your suggestions. Here is what I found. Please let me
know if you need more information.
This error happens only with the /mnt/mp3 filesystem. Just to make
sure it was not a filesystem inconsistency I fsck'ed it. It turned
out to be fine.
This is what mount ret
On Fri, Mar 16, 2007 at 05:50:45PM +0530, Siju George wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I tried today to update my packages with the
>
> $sudo pkg_add -ui
>
> command.
>
> I found that it selected lower versions of the packages automatically :-(
> as senn in the sample below.
>
>
> Candidates for updating vim
On Fri, Mar 16, 2007 at 01:31:33PM -0800, smith wrote:
> OpenBSD developers add code and fix bugs using a program called CVS. CVS has
> the ability to create branches like a tree. The main tree trunk is -current.
> After a certain amount of time, usually a couple of months before the release
>
Sunnz wrote:
Just wondering... if I should order it from the international store:
https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?CD41=1&CD41%2b=Add
I don't live in US Canada nor Europe... but I am worried if I ordered
"From North America to anywhere worldwide", would the CD have the lack
of built-in cr
jared r r spiegel wrote:
On Fri, Mar 16, 2007 at 11:51:15AM +0100, Alexander Hall wrote:
Miod Vallat wrote:
2) Do I have to modify another file?
No.
Very much noted. I have been wondering about this too.
it's the 'i want to create my own style ramdisk kernels
with their own unique "in-
Maybe you built it locally and you are `in advance' compared to the
official snapshot ?
The perl in 4.1 is not 100% stock, and the one in 4.2 will be slightly
farther from that.
We have a few minor fixes and adaptations that are not in 5.8.8:
- handling of E in various pod converters
- path lookup to handle /usr/local along /usr
and possibly a few others I'm not too familiar with...
Sunnz wrote:
Just a quick question, say if you got 3.9-stable can you binary
upgrade it to 4.0-release using the CD? (Or, perhaps, FTP?)
yes, updates from one version to the next are supported. to do so, boot
from the install media and choose the upgrade option. It is not
important if the
On Mon, Mar 19, 2007 at 02:07:25PM +0100, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Mon, 19 Mar 2007, Nick ! wrote:
>
> > On 3/19/07, hiren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > hi all,
> > >
> > > i found it interesting that cat.c compiles after removing these
> > > includes:
> > >
> > > #include
> > > #include
>
Another possibility is perl.
I've been using DBD::Proxy/DBI::Proxyserver across Unix <-> Windows
to get an HTML::Mason app directly talking to an Access database, and
I'm in the process of migrating it to DBIx::Class (often enough Catalyst).
This does just work. The only downside is that you need
On Wed, Mar 21, 2007 at 08:11:17AM +0200, Gareth wrote:
> Is there any chance of a newer version of groff (1.18 or 1.19) being
> imported into the tree?
Yes
On Thu, Mar 22, 2007 at 03:28:29PM -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
> Their challenge is that they need to provide choice so they
> have what they call reasonable defaults.
No, they don't need to provide choice. At least not that many. They decide
to do so. That's most of what's wrong with OS
Luca Corti wrote:
I heard about timedelta sensors. Are these devices supported by openntpd
when running on linux?
No, they use the OpenBSD specific sensors framework and this has not
been ported to any other OS afaik.
- mb
On Tue, Mar 27, 2007 at 09:30:33PM +, Peter Matulis wrote:
> Hi gang.
>
> I tried to install the courier-pop package on my 4.0 system and it
> complains:
>
> $ pkg_add -v courier-pop3-3.0.5p1.tgz
> Error while reading header at /usr/libdata/perl5/OpenBSD/Ustar.pm line 104.
>
So it looks like
Grumpy wrote:
Why don't you guys just use vi like real men?
Real men use ed, you misguided fool.
real men don't use a text editor. they have a secretary to do the dirty
work.
Diana Eichert wrote:
bcw(4) is gone
Marcus Glocker, [EMAIL PROTECTED], knows a big deal about wireless
LANs. He has been involved in many of our wirelesss driver, he has also
written applications for wireless applications like rtunes. He wrote
the nostromo webserver. He is certainly the
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 01:43:56AM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> I have noticed that the OpenBSD team puts a lot of emphasis on using binary
> packets rather than building from ports, which I think IMHO is good, but why
> is it that there is no binary kernel updates, rather than pa
Timo Schoeler wrote:
On Wed, 11 Apr 2007 16:25:14 +0200
Massimo Lusetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, 9 Apr 2007 20:20:33 -0500
Marco Peereboom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
GPL is as free as communism.
Please add this to fortune!
--
Massimo.run();
She's the kind of girl who climbed the l
e cu or tip directly on the serial line, do you see any NMEA
0183 sentences?
- Marc
James Hartley wrote:
On 4/11/07, Marc Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
When you use cu or tip directly on the serial line, do you see any NMEA
0183 sentences?
Thanks to both you Marc & Otto. Your comments have helped with a number of
questions. I'm currently questi
Maurice Janssen wrote:
On Tuesday, April 10, 2007 at 11:36:08 +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
We have stated this numerous times, but maybe it's not easy to find in the
archives because there is no obvious subject: not enough resources.
Binary updates for the whole system would be desireable, b
Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
I just skimmed this whole thread and I am wondering about a couple of
things. It appears that all of you are talking about basically following
the instructions for release(8) and just providing the generated files
for people. Is that correct?
That is not enough. You
mickey wrote:
Maybe it's something with old PCMCIA cardbus?
"pcmcia cardbus" is an oxymoron.
pcmcia is a 16bit isa-like bus w/ 3.3v and 5v power.
cardbus is a pci-like 32bit bus w/ 3.3v power only.
pccard is a form factor for this devices also.
people can't memorize computer industries acro
* Han Boetes wrote:
> Artur Grabowski wrote:
> > You are asking for a software soultion to a hardware problem.
>
> > The system is desperately trying to write out blocks to your
> > busted disk and, yes, it's taking a lot of time because it's
> > patiently retrying and retrying and retrying. How v
* Han Boetes wrote:
> Artur Grabowski wrote:
> > Han Boetes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > I read my logs, I posted this before, I politely asked. I
> > > didn't get an answer.
> > >
> > > Next time I'll remember I first have to piss you off before I
> > > get an answer.
> >
> > You're welcome.
On Tue, Apr 24, 2007 at 02:16:38PM +0200, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> while doing a 'pkg_add -ui -F update -F updatedepends' on a machine
> with the most recent snapshot I could get my hands on, I get the
> message
>
> Not updating .libs-ImageMagick-6.2.6.1, remember to clean it
>
> for
* Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> have been coding touchscreen-driven applications using visual basic
> lately and am sick of VB. i would much rather be using openbsd with
> another programming language that allows me to accomplish the same sort
> of stuff.
>
> i have no "formal" CS background so am
On Thu, May 10, 2007 at 06:11:49AM -0300, John Nietzsche wrote:
> I am not playing with sudoers file! This just a bare install.
>
> $ ls -ld /usr/ports /usr/src
> drwxrwxr-x 46 root wheel 1024 May 10 03:21 /usr/ports
> drwxrwxr-x 18 root wsrc512 Mar 11 16:19 /usr/src
>
> Isn't it strange
On Thu, May 10, 2007 at 05:29:14PM -0700, Darrin Chandler wrote:
> Lately, mostly with ruby/RoR stuff I've manually installed some things
> such as gems. Later, there were ports/packages for these things. Using
> pkg_add then fails because files already exists. I've looked at various
> -F options,
* Edd Barrett wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 17/05/07, Jacek Artymiak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Felix kept on twisting my arm so hard about it that he finally managed
> >to convince me to go. I have always wanted to go there anyway. I'll
> >stock up on my meds and if I'm in good enough shape, I'll join t
* Rolf Sommerhalder wrote:
> so far I have been unsuccessful in locating templates (and fonts?) for
> MagicPoint presentations in "OpenBSD-style", such as used in for
> example:
There is no "OpenBSD-style". Some people use the MS Comic font on a
blue background, but then this is not an "official
* Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> would appreciate some recommendations for project management software
> that runs on openbsd and preferably windows as well.
I like taskjuggler a lot (and use it a lot).
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 12:30:49AM -0700, Bryan Irvine wrote:
> On 6/4/07, David B. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >hi, I'm using 3.8, and I hate to bother, but I have spent two days on the
> >net trying to find the answer to this problem.
> >
> >I am using 'find' to batch file a sed search and repla
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:25:00PM +0200, Hannah Schroeter wrote:
> Hello!
>
> On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 02:01:12PM +0200, Marc Espie wrote:
> >[...]
>
> >Don't use for loops with find results, they do not scale well.
> >Also, beware of spaces in file.
>
>
On Mon, Jun 04, 2007 at 11:45:27PM +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
> >I don't see any -i option documented in the sed manpage.
>
> -i on some seds (gsed, ssed, FBSD sed, maybe others) means ''in
> place'' edit, that feature can be reimplemented with ''sed '' file
> >new_file; mv -g new_file file'' (
* Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2007/06/05 18:10, L. V. Lammert wrote:
> > On Tue, 5 Jun 2007, Robert Franklin wrote:
> >
> > > Why not a qfe card from Sun? I've used a quad port Sun PCI card for at
> > > least a few years in both me Sun AXI servers, and currently I have one
> > > installed in a de
* mgb wrote:
> List,
>
> I am attempting to get pxeboot working on a WRAP board with openbsd 4.1
> generic however the loading of either kernel, bsd or bsd.rd, is stalling.
>
> I've search around the archives and have taken the steps mentioned here:
>
> http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=117978
* Rico Secada wrote:
> What do you think of The BSD Certification Group at bsdcertification.org?
It is as useless as MSCE and all the other vendor certificates. I would
even go so far to claim it's a lot worse than a Microsoft or Cisco
certificate.
This is not backed by any industry, it just re
* Jean-Girard Pailloncy wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have 3 Tyan Trinity GC-SL boxes with OpenBSD 4.1. sensors kernel process
> use 10% of the CPU time and have RES high up to 74 MB.
> I did not have a sensorsd daemon runing.
> I do the same on my soekris, nothing like that.
try to disable iic and ichicc in
We still haven't enabled expat in base/, because it's not audited enough
yet... we `trust' it as an X11 library, but no-one has addressed the multiple
security issues it may have.
Yes, we do know expat is a problem... we finally removed it from ports/
because it makes no sense to build it once.
I
* Bob Beck wrote:
> > > And guess what. Keyboards use a serial protocol. Which means that
> > > there will be slightly different voltage drops in the system varying
> > > with the keys you press. ZOMG! OpenBSD provides a side channel for
> > > attackers through the sensors framework!
> >
> > And
* Raimo Niskanen wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 12:06:37PM +0300, Jussi Peltola wrote:
> > On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 06:49:57PM +1000, Craig Hammond wrote:
> > > A long long time ago in a very distant galaxy, I am pretty sure I got
> > > a Netcomm USB Roadster (AM5055) to work in OpenBSD 3.0 or 3.1
* Raimo Niskanen wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 21, 2007 at 12:05:27PM +0200, Marc Balmer wrote:
> > * Raimo Niskanen wrote:
> > > On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 12:06:37PM +0300, Jussi Peltola wrote:
> > > > On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 06:49:57PM +1000, Craig Hammond wrote:
> >
On Mon, Jun 25, 2007 at 11:36:24AM +0300, Paul Irofti wrote:
> Since the Hackathon every time I update to the latest snapshots and run
> a pkg_add -iuv I get fatal errors with random package updates.
>
> I usually have to remove by hand (pkg_delete fails) and reinstall the
> given package.
>
> Th
C++ is a *big* language. It depends a lot on what you need...
Indeed, the Stroustrup book is a good reference, might not be what you
need...
One very cheap book is `thinking in C++' reasonably good for learning some
OO concepts, and dirt cheap (available on the net for free).
As far as `interest
Hi
If you have any USB CDC devices (especially cdce(4)), could you please
send me the usbctl output?
usbctl -f /dev/usbX -d -a Y
(usbctl is part of sysutils/usbutil)
Marc
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Wed, 11 Jul 2007, Adam PAPAI wrote:
Hello,
I have the following problem with the php and the httpd.
We have a bit-modified kernel:
in /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/conf/GENERIC we changed the
maxusers256
unaame -a
OpenBSD arsenic.digitalinfluence.hu 4.1 GENERIC.MP#1 i38
Joachim Schipper wrote:
On Wed, Jul 11, 2007 at 12:56:27PM +0200, Marc Balmer wrote:
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Wed, 11 Jul 2007, Adam PAPAI wrote:
The system hangs after 1 day. It's a very strongly loaded system. Any idea
why? It seems that the system does not really handle the http req
Allie D. wrote:
I just had to reply with this info because I already had an attempted
brute force in the last hour. All you need to do is make your rule tighter
and add a connection rate ratio to start collecting IP's.
we use pf os fingerprinting to only allow ssh connections from openbsd
hos
On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 04:42:33AM -0500, Will Maier wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 11:48:34AM +0300, Tomas wrote:
> > I'm having some trouble installing clamav-0.90.3.tgz package. I'm using
> > OpenBSD_4_1.
> > My steps:
> > 1. export PKG_PATH=ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/4.1/packages/i386
ut HP-UX, but OpenBSD surely is a stable foundation
for an OpenLDAP server.
- Marc Balmer, micro systems
I ve got a 1.5 GHz MacMini attached to a 17" IBM TFT panel that has a
1280x1024 resolution.
How can I set the MacMini's display resolution to 1280x1024 24 bit
colors in OpenFirmware?
In OFW, 'dev screen show-modes' shows me a list of valid modes, amongst
them the one I want, but when doing a
On Sun, Aug 26, 2007 at 01:10:16PM +0800, Uwe Dippel wrote:
> Wanting to find out which packages needed an update, I referred to FAQ 15:
> "Invoking pkg_add(1) with the -u flag and no package name will just
> examine all installed packages for updated versions."
> This results here in
>
> ># pkg_
Alvaro Mantilla Gimenez wrote:
We run an OpenLDAP installation on OpenBSD that is fully synchronized
on two servers (one master, one slave) for the public schools here.
~15'000 accounts and all important systems (email, fileserver, even
the ~80 firewalls, login, etc.) pull their data from it.
Joachim Schipper wrote:
P.S. One more issue: you *do* realize that getting OpenBSD to
authenticate against LDAP is not entirely trivial, right? This might be
a serious problem if the LDAP system is to handle network-wide logins...
OpenBSD can not authenticat against an LDAP server. Well, stri
Gerardo Santana Gsmez Garrido wrote:
2007/8/29, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Tue, Aug 28, 2007 at 09:45:01PM +0200, Marc Balmer wrote:
Joachim Schipper wrote:
P.S. One more issue: you *do* realize that getting OpenBSD to
authenticate against LDAP is not entirely trivial,
On Thu, Aug 30, 2007 at 10:33:22AM +0200, Karl Sjvdahl - dunceor wrote:
> On 8/30/07, Edd Barrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > On 30/08/2007, Jona Joachim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > You can find it here:
> > > http://hcl-club.lu/svn/development/python/cutleaves
> >
> > This is u
On Sat, Sep 01, 2007 at 08:52:45AM -0400, David H. Lynch Jr. wrote:
>With respect to both you and Eban, I would disagree..
You're entitled to say stupid things.
>The law requires complying with the license not preserving it.
>The license is a part of the copyrighted work.
>It gran
On Tue, Sep 04, 2007 at 04:15:23AM +0200, Adriaan wrote:
> On 9/4/07, John Nietzsche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Dear gentleman,
> >
> > i would like to set a single box in my network to keep syncronized to
> > the ports collection infra structure. My ideia is to export the
> > directory "/usr/p
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