oth installations, the PADO is sent from the same MAC.
Service-Name, AC-Cookie and Host-Uniq do match.
Interestingly, the PADR to the unknown MAC includes the same AC-Cookie.
I do not know how to proceed from here on, so I would be glad to get
some advice.
Best Regards,
Thorsten Bonck
> maybe you could try to put pppoe0 on rl0, untag vlan10 on switch port
> where rl0 is connected and tag other vlans on the same port ...
Sadly, that is not possible for me.
rl0 is directly connected to a Ubiquiti NanoStation M, which is setup as
a blackbox transparent bridge by my ISP.
vlan id 10
On Wed, 8 May 2002, J.D. Bronson wrote:
> What is the correct permissions for /var/mail?
$ sudo chown root:wheel /var/mail; sudo chmod 1777 /var/mail
In this order. Not 1. And not g+s, that is only required on SYSV UNIXB..
> I am concerned about this as some POP3 daemons make the file rw-rw
Hi all,
imagine you have an address like "junk@" added to
the list of traps. Now, someone sends mails to you (or, via
spamlogd, vice versa) then spams the trap address. Sendmail
will let him pass, and either reject junk@ or have it alia-
sed to /dev/null. Not with me b:
Diffs slightly hand-edite
Alexander Hall beard.se> writes:
>Editing commands sometimes don't (seem to) work on the first shell
>prompt in newly opened xterm window:
>
> $ bar^A^E^Afoo
Interesting. I sometimes have that after exiting a curses application
(e.g. lynx) or less.
ge(4) and no VLAN, it has to be caused by something
else.
Like others suggested, capture the PPPoE negotiation using tcpdump and look for
oddities like wrong MACs.
Best Regards,
Thorsten
gt; My question is after mirroring, Will OpenBSD work or again will have to
> change BIOS settings ?
Have a look at softraid(4), which explains how to set up and install
OpenBSD on a RAID 1 like device.
Best Regards,
Thorsten
Alessandro DE LAURENZIS gmail.com> writes:
(line-wrapped because of GMane)
> #define SUDOCMD "-fn 7x14 -geometry 60x4 -e sudo su -c 'nohup \
> xfe >& /dev/null & sleep 1'"
^^
Note that this will not work on OpenBSD anyway; even mksh, which
does implement this bashism, will not parse this
f C and basically no
understanding of the OpenBSD kernel.
The PADR should be assembled around line 703 in src/sys/net/if_pppoe.c
but I could not find any clues where this mix up happens.
Best Regards,
Thorsten
On Wed, May 07, 2014 at 02:11:09AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2014-05-02, Thorsten Bonck wrote:
> > On Fri, May 02, 2014 at 08:14:40PM +, Peter J. Philipp wrote:
> >> On Fri, May 02, 2014 at 09:14:16PM +0200, thors...@bonck.net wrote:
> >> > > maybe y
Sebastian Rother jpberlin.de> writes:
> vnconfig -cK 52527 -S saltfile /dev/sd0k /dev/svnd1c
I think that does synchronous writes, even if you mount
the svnd device async or softdep, which is why it is so
slow.
After losing a hard disc image _file_ to fsck on the filesy-
stem containing the ima
Han Boetes dixit:
>Thorsten Glaser already made a portable version of the OpenBSD
>version of ksh, which compiles on lots of platforms and works
>great.
>
> http://www.mirbsd.org/?mksh
The canonical URI is http://mirbsd.de/mksh which redirects to
the correct page, btw. See
Marc Balmer dixit:
>what's next?
The MirPorts Framework already runs on OpenBSD and Mac OSX, in addition
to being the native package source for MirOS BSD. (It also works on In-
terix aka MS Services for Unix 3.5, but that's currently not supported.
It will come when time permits, though.)
bye,
/
Benny Siegert dixit:
> A very pessimistic article but well worth a read:
>
> http://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-users/2006/08/30/0016.html
You could've just replied to it so that the References: header
can be perused. I've changed this mail to reply to it for threading.
Charles M. Hannum dixit
Marc G. Fournier dixit:
(Please don't keep individual persons in the Cc, only the lists,
otherwise people will get the mails several times.)
> Put together a *BSD "core" ... representative from each camp and try and steer
> the *kernel* itself towards a more common BSD ...
BSD is about an operat
Please don't Cc: people when you respond to mailing lists *sigh*
Marc G. Fournier dixit:
> for us, they need to write
1. Companies don't write drivers for BSD
2. Companies don't even release specs so that people
can write drivers for BSD
//mirabile
--
I believe no one can invent an algorit
Marc G. Fournier dixit:
> If the vendor is
bought up, bankrupt, out of business, dead (like that person
who ported g++ to Plan 9, whose window managers' copyright
is now set in stone), etc... you're SOL9.
//mirabile
9) wtf knows it
--
I believe no one can invent an algorithm. One just happens t
Marc G. Fournier dixit:
> I'm curious here, but why did the *kernel* diverge for each project?
Because kernel, userland, ports and attitude come as a package,
they cannot be separated, for together they are the operating system.
//mirabile
--
I believe no one can invent an algorithm. One just h
(When do you stop putting people into Cc instead of just the lists?)
Marc G. Fournier dixit:
> source code drivers provided by a
> vendor, and supported by them
Yeah, and what if the vendor goes out of business, is bought
or simply bankrupt? You're pretty much SOL then.
//mirabile
--
I believe
Marc G. Fournier dixit:
> And what I'm learning with bsdstats.org is that there are more then just those
> four ... GNU/kFreeBSD is reporting
Now _that_'s funny ;)
> are there any others?
DragonFly
DesktopBSD
PC-BSD
4.3BSD-Quasijarus
ekkoBSD (dead)
MidnightBSD (nascent)
MicroBSD (once dead, but
Nick Holmes dixit:
> found it in the Linux-based "Auditor" LiveCD) and that can generate a random
> MAC for the interface. Does anyone here have a script (Perl or otherwise)
> which
> can achieve the same in OpenBSD and they'd be willing to share?
Yuck, Perl, you are evil.
#!/bin/ksh
function a
Frank Denis (Jedi/Sector One) dixit:
> While running Linux, try
ports/sysutils/e2fsprogs
//mirabile
--
I believe no one can invent an algorithm. One just happens to hit upon it
when God enlightens him. Or only God invents algorithms, we merely copy them.
If you don't believe in God, just consi
Frank Denis (Jedi/Sector One) dixit:
>On Mon, May 30, 2005 at 03:25:02PM +0000, Thorsten Glaser wrote:
>> ports/sysutils/e2fsprogs
>
> Sure, but to be fair, if he cares about his data, it's probably a bad idea
>to try a 3-years old version of e2fsprogs
I don't know
Wijnand Wiersma dixit:
>Funny, I was trying to install Net::Jabber too. But all modules will
>fail in the exact same way.
I remember something about HASHFile() being broken some time ago;
maybe that was the case?
//mirabile
--
I believe no one can invent an algorithm. One just happens to hit up
Jason Crawford dixit:
>Yes, it is possible to have /dev on mfs, however that would mean you'd
>have to run MAKEDEV on every boot after mounting the /dev memory file
>system.
Cannot -P do this?
//mirabile
--
I believe no one can invent an algorithm. One just happens to hit upon it
when God enlig
Hello list,
i think of buying a mac mini, but i don't know if a mac mini is fast
enough. So i ask you: does anyone use an mac mini with gnome/kde or so?
At the moment i have an dual-P3 and he's fast enough.
Any coments, suggestions?
Bye
Thorsten
indowmaker. That's all.
Bye
Thorsten
LiteStar numnums wrote:
G'day,
A friend of mine uses the mini for all of his foto processing with
Photoshop and the like, whilst Illustrator and Safari are running. It
seems fast enough. I've no idea what you want to really do with it (if
it ha
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, 18 Jun 2005 11:50:27 +0200
From: Thorsten Johannvorderbrueggen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2 (X11/20050317)
X-Accept-Language: en-us, en
MIME-Version: 1.0
To: Sparc Urani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Theo
@@ -111,4 +111,8 @@ daemon.c, sys-queue.h: The Regents of th
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
+The leap second support is an extension by Thorsten Glaser and
+is covered by the MirOS licence, but available under the ISC
+licence for use by the OpenBSD project in rdate(8) as well.
+
$Id: openntpd-3.7p1-leapsec
(keeping cross-post of original poster because I
don't have a better idea)
Todd T. Fries dixit:
>The problem is that 1and1 hosting choses to have any root servers
>setup with `ip subnet zero'. That's a fancy way of stating that they
>expect systems to setup IP's with netmasks of 255.255.255.255
Ray cyth.net> writes:
> Oct 11 09:29:24 sparky ntpd[30592]: dispatch_imsg in main: pipe closed
I've encountered this on several GNU/Linux boxen and tracked it down to
| listen on *
When I replace this by
| listen on ::
everything works fine.
On BSD systems, you have to use
| listen on ::
| lis
Can Erkin Acar dixit:
>There should be no need for this in -current
Thanks, will try.
//mirabile
--
> Hi, does anyone sell openbsd stickers by themselves and not packaged
> with other products?
No, the only way I've seen them sold is for $40 with a free OpenBSD CD.
-- Haroon Khalid and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] dixit:
>Yes you're right but a "OpenHTTPD" with "OpenMOD_GZIP" and maybe IPv6 is
>still missing. And maybe a OpenSQUID... :-)))
>Just jokingoO(But httpD improvements would be realy cool. :) )
$ uname -a
OpenBSD jiyu.gnook.org 3.7 GENERIC#97 i386
Doing a $ cvs -qz1 -d [EMAIL
Hi,
any csh guru out here who wants to help rewriting
src/usr.bin/vgrind/vgrind.sh in ksh?
bye,
//mirabile
--
Hey, I just realized that OpenBSD CDs are $45. Any chance I could get
you to update your sig?
-- Steve Shockley after reading my previous signature
Gaby vanhegan dixit:
> What IMAP servers do people use for email access?
uw-imapd's imapd for imaps (port 993) access; sendmail with
uw-imapd's dmail/tmail instead of mail.local(8) for delivery
to MBX format mailboxes. Allows concurrent access.
uw-imaps allows reading arbitrary files on the serv
Gaby vanhegan dixit:
> we still have a lot of legacy mbox accounts.
uw-imapd can read (and write) a plethora of formats using
libc-client. Except Maildir, which they consider unsafe to
access and insane to implement.
In my ~/mail/ on the server, there are some mbox/unix
and some MBX folders in p
Rod.. Whitworth dixit:
>You really believe those UW people really can consider something unsafe
It was considered so by the OpenBSD porter. UTSL.
>before they clean up their own exploit history? Insane? The sky is
>falling! I don't know about many IMAP servers but I know that UW-IMAP
>is conside
Rod.. Whitworth dixit:
>I just wondered how somebody who has a string of alerts of his own can
>regard anything else as unsafe.
Eh, you are reading things I did not write, I think.
>The Cheez Wizz 1998 alert.
>The several buffer overflows detected in June 2001
I patched some of these; besides,
Abel Abraham Camarillo Ojeda verlet.org> writes:
> Some of our shell scripts that work with dates and do something like:
>
> month=`date +%m`
> something && month=$((month-1))
month=10#$(date +%m)
bye,
//mirabilos
Abel Abraham Camarillo Ojeda dixit:
>I meant portable among other shells, or bourne shell...
They donbt have $((b&)) either, sob&
bye,
//mirabilos
--
Yay for having to rewrite other people's Bash scripts because bash
suddenly stopped supporting the bash extensions they make use of
-- To
Abel Abraham Camarillo Ojeda dixit:
>On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 4:19 PM, Pascal Stumpf wrote:
>>> month=10#$(date +%m)
>>
>> Is that a mkshism?
No, that's proper Korn shell.
>> The easiest solution here is:
>>
>> typeset -Z2 month
That can break as soon as month is made an integer someplace down
Followup-to: poster
Marco Peereboom peereboom.us> writes:
> All lies. Nothing to see there. Just someone who took some code and
> pretends it's theirs.
$ man mksh | fgrep -C3 recognises
AUTHORS
The MirBSD Korn Shell is developed by Thorsten Glaser and
currently main
ain either.
Shure, no relevant data on it, just testing stuff, this was a big
shame for me spending one day of my life :)
Regards,
Thorsten
Haluk Durmus wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# /sbin/fsck.ext2 -y /dev/sda1
e2fsck 1.35 (28-Feb-2004)
/dev/sda1: clean, 379761/9781248 files, 18008327/19537040 blocks
No errors war found !
after that I did a fsck on OpenBSD
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# fsck_ext2fs /dev/sd0i
** /dev/rsd0i
** File syst
later time in my opinion.
Regards,
Thorsten
imes I neeed just a raw installation
with an anonymous ftp for backup up some machine in trouble or for
fileserving some data for a temporary issue, for that cases I love
OpenBSD (as for some other reasons).
Regards,
Thorsten
ixed in version 7, a friend of mine
will test this soon.
Googeling around brought no enligthenment to me. So any suggestions by
your person?
Thanks and some special weekend regards,
Thorsten
Sevan / Venture37 wrote:
brief info on issues with M$ VPC are mentioned here
http://slagheap.net/openbsd/
best option is to use qemu or boches
there are some qemu images here:
http://www.freeoszoo.org/
Thanks for that!
rk... at least that would be a
start. (Oh, I've tried it on some G5's I have, too, with no luck.)
I4ll try that tomorow with my cd-sets of 3.4-3.6, maybe with good luck
and will report the "sucess" here, if there would be one :)
Regards,
Thorsten
Sevan / Venture37 wrote:
brief info on issues with M$ VPC are mentioned here
http://slagheap.net/openbsd/
best option is to use qemu or boches
there are some qemu images here:
http://www.freeoszoo.org/
Took that one and it runs famous for me. Thank you :)
Hello,
openbsd.org is just updated, the other language-sites are on the run,
I think, but the el(greek)-site is just at 3.5.
Maybe someone of the hellenic geeks is reading this one.
Regards,
Thorsten
andrew fresh wrote:
You can get OpenBSD 3.7 from the torrent site here:
i386:
http://openbsd.somedomain.net/torrents/OpenBSD_3_7_i386-2005-05-19-2115.torrent
Great speed, great service, thank you Andrew!
Regards,
Thorsten
52 matches
Mail list logo