Re: ftp-proxy

2006-09-14 Thread Otto Moerbeek
On Thu, 14 Sep 2006, Gustavo Rios wrote: Hey folks, i am playing with ftp-proxy and could not understand the benefits of the new one compared to the previous up to 3.8. Could some one enlight me? One thing i realized is the number of rules the new version creates on run time. Whether this

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Otto Moerbeek
On Wed, 13 Sep 2006, steve szmidt wrote: Over the years one gets used to some small things that makes life easier but is only slowly catching up on OBSD. I'm curious as why this is. Is it that real coders don't need some of them, or is it just something like a matter of being a lower

Re: ftp-proxy

2006-09-14 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2006/09/14 02:12, Gustavo Rios wrote: i am playing with ftp-proxy and could not understand the benefits of the new one compared to the previous up to 3.8. Could some one enlight me? One thing i realized is the number of rules the new version creates on run time. Whether this feature is a

Re: NAT Question

2006-09-14 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 10:45:18AM -0400, Monah Baki wrote: Hi all, Yesterday I just received 8 public IP addresses from my ISP. I'm running ppp on my OpenBSD 3.9 server (DSL). My xl0 has the public IP address (67.100.x.x) provided to me by my ISP, my xl1 interface is my 192.168.3.1 Once I

Re: /bsd asking for nonexistent nfs server?

2006-09-14 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 07:10:27PM -0500, Doug Carter wrote: On Sep 12, 2006, at 3:49 AM, Joachim Schipper wrote: On Mon, Sep 11, 2006 at 06:08:22PM -0500, Doug Carter wrote: I really doubt that this is a system problem; I just can't figure out what stupid thing I have done. Using: OpenBSD

Re: /bsd asking for nonexistent nfs server?

2006-09-14 Thread Stuart Henderson
One entry every day: Sep 10 02:16:58 tma0 /bsd: nfs server amd:16867: not responding As far as I know I don't have NFS running... amd(8): amd operates by attaching itself as an NFS server to each of the specified directories. mount(8) would probably tell you something like amd:16867

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Andreas Bihlmaier
Well, here it goes again: Issue with my onboard mskc0: Marvell Yukon 88E8053 Marvell Yukon-2 With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use msk0 without any troubles UNTIL I start X on the machine. As soon as I do that interrupts go to 99% and everything starts to crawl until I

Interface Alias Trouble.

2006-09-14 Thread Stefan Sczekalla-Waldschmidt
Hi, I have a interface on my default gateway defined as follows: hostname.dc1: inet 192.168.110.254 255.255.255.0 192.168.110.255 inet alias 172.22.125.243 255.255.255.240 172.22.125.255 192.168.110.254 is default gw-address in my network. pinging to somewhere ( how to get there is known by

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2006/09/14 11:03, Andreas Bihlmaier wrote: With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use msk0 without any troubles UNTIL I start X on the machine. As soon as I do that interrupts go to 99% and everything starts to crawl until I reboot. Pretty much same issue I had before with

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Henning Brauer
* Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006-09-14 11:27]: On 2006/09/14 11:03, Andreas Bihlmaier wrote: With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use msk0 without any troubles UNTIL I start X on the machine. As soon as I do that interrupts go to 99% and everything starts to crawl

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Jonathan Gray
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 11:03:59AM +0200, Andreas Bihlmaier wrote: Well, here it goes again: Issue with my onboard mskc0: Marvell Yukon 88E8053 Marvell Yukon-2 With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use msk0 without any troubles UNTIL I start X on the machine. As soon as I

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Andreas Bihlmaier
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 10:22:03AM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote: On 2006/09/14 11:03, Andreas Bihlmaier wrote: With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use msk0 without any troubles UNTIL I start X on the machine. As soon as I do that interrupts go to 99% and everything starts

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Andreas Bihlmaier
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 11:03:59AM +0200, Andreas Bihlmaier wrote: Well, here it goes again: Issue with my onboard mskc0: Marvell Yukon 88E8053 Marvell Yukon-2 With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use msk0 without any troubles UNTIL I start X on the machine. As soon as I

Upgrading through several versions via anoncvs

2006-09-14 Thread Igor Zinovik
Hello, OpenBSD-misc readers. I have old box which runs OpenBSD 3.6 and i want to upgrade it to last release. So my question is can go directly to OPENBSD_3_9 or i have to go through all further versions (3.6-3.7-3.8-3.9)? I'm worry about that further versions switched to new compiler (this box

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Adriaan
On 9/14/06, steve szmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: * Out of date vi, harder to navigate and use, poor visual feedback. Use an .exrc file set number set ruler set verbose set showmode set showmatch set shiftwidth=4

Re: New Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit driver

2006-09-14 Thread Andreas Bihlmaier
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 07:44:44PM +1000, Jonathan Gray wrote: On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 11:03:59AM +0200, Andreas Bihlmaier wrote: Well, here it goes again: Issue with my onboard mskc0: Marvell Yukon 88E8053 Marvell Yukon-2 With the newest i386 (quite old btw.) snapshot, I can use

Re: Upgrading through several versions via anoncvs

2006-09-14 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2006/09/14 15:12, Igor Zinovik wrote: I have old box which runs OpenBSD 3.6 and i want to upgrade it to last release. Don't upgrade by anoncvs, use binary upgrades to get you as close as possible to the version you want and follow the steps to upgrade /etc and so on from the FAQ;

Re: Upgrading through several versions via anoncvs

2006-09-14 Thread Nico Meijer
Hi Igor, I have old box which runs OpenBSD 3.6 and i want to upgrade it to last release. So my question is can go directly to OPENBSD_3_9 or i have to go through all further versions (3.6-3.7-3.8-3.9)? I'm worry about that further versions switched to new compiler (this box has gcc-2.95), so

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Terry
On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 11:49:29PM -0400, steve szmidt wrote: snip I'm curious to see how many not equally hard core users prefer vi over vim when having a choice. I'm definately not a hard core user but I prefer vi over vim in most cases. I do install vim and use it with mutt for my emails.

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Girish Venkatachalam
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 07:16:24AM -0400, Nick Holland wrote: |Unix machine...it's like notepad in windows or edlin in MSDOS, you need to |know the core system, and if you really need something else, fine, but |you have to learn what is on the system. Learn vim, you have learned |what is in

how to run netpipe via cross-over cable tests?

2006-09-14 Thread vladas
Hi all, Andreas wrote that: I tested throughput with netpipe via cross-over cable and my X40 with an em0 NIC on the other end: 0.000126 0.060570 8 1 0.00 0.00 0.15 0.00 0.00 0.000126 0.121240 16 2 0.00 0.01 0.17 0.00 0.00 snap Could anybody possibly

Re: [spam] Re: Forum-Software, good and secure, on OpenBSD systems?

2006-09-14 Thread bofh
On 9/13/06, Chris Zakelj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: bofh wrote: On 9/13/06, Chris Zakelj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I never said it was secure. In fact, I distinctly recall saying hell no to whether or not I considered phpBB secure. What I *did* say was that it fit my needs, as I laid them

Re: Upgrading through several versions via anoncvs

2006-09-14 Thread Luca Corti
On Thu, 2006-09-14 at 15:12 +0400, Igor Zinovik wrote: I have old box which runs OpenBSD 3.6 and i want to upgrade it to last release. So my question is can go directly to OPENBSD_3_9 or i have to go through all further versions (3.6-3.7-3.8-3.9)? I'm worry about that further versions You

Re: Upgrading through several versions via anoncvs

2006-09-14 Thread Henning Brauer
* Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006-09-14 14:11]: Unless you remove and re-add all your packages, the pkg_* tools won't work as smoothly as they should. this is untrue. pkg_add -u does a wonderful job, even on ancient installed packages. I just had such an upgrade, and only ran into

Re: Secure file storage.

2006-09-14 Thread viq
Hmm, I found something that could be interesting... Apparently QEMU images support encryption when the image is in qcow format. From the man page it seems it's 128 bit AES encryption based on password. So, install some very basic system on it, and have it export some folder with nfs or samba...

Hopefully EOT, yet OT: Re: [spam] Re: Forum-Software, good and secure, on OpenBSD systems?

2006-09-14 Thread Nico Meijer
Hi bofh, You about Chris: Then I profess I do not understand why you get so pissed off when Adam pointed out that phpbb is not good, since apparently you don't consider it to be good by your own standards. I think what Chris was getting all worked up about, was the fact that Adam chose to

Re: Upgrading through several versions via anoncvs

2006-09-14 Thread Bob Beck
* Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006-09-14 14:11]: Unless you remove and re-add all your packages, the pkg_* tools won't work as smoothly as they should. this is untrue. pkg_add -u does a wonderful job, even on ancient installed packages. I just had such an upgrade, and only

Votre cadeau de fin d'année

2006-09-14 Thread Frédérique
[IMAGE] Offre riservie exclusivement aux entreprises. Conformiment ` la Loi Informatique et Libertis parue au Journal Officiel du 6 janvier 1978, vous disposez d'un droit d'acchs, de rectification, et d'opposition aux donnies personnelles vous concernant. Pour ne plus recevoir d'informations de

USB 2.0 network link cables

2006-09-14 Thread Diana Eichert
I'm working with a university on a cluster using USB 2.0 network bridge cables, cdce(4), for node interconnects. The current cables are Acer Labs USB 2.0 Data Link based. Throughput tests indicates a bottleneck at ~74Mbps even with only one cable connected. I'm interested in knowing if anyone

Re: /bsd asking for nonexistent nfs server?

2006-09-14 Thread Doug Carter
On Sep 14, 2006, at 3:57 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote: One entry every day: Sep 10 02:16:58 tma0 /bsd: nfs server amd:16867: not responding As far as I know I don't have NFS running... amd(8): amd operates by attaching itself as an NFS server to each of the specified directories. mount(8)

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Gilles Chehade
Marco Peereboom wrote: Bash should be bashed. Its horrible garbage and should be banned from the face of this earth. We all know that real men use ksh. what you really meant was `real men use csh/tcsh' right ? :-)

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread mickey
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 04:02:53PM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote: Marco Peereboom wrote: Bash should be bashed. Its horrible garbage and should be banned from the face of this earth. We all know that real men use ksh. what you really meant was `real men use csh/tcsh' right ? :-) what

Re: [spam] Re: Forum-Software, good and secure, on OpenBSD systems?

2006-09-14 Thread Craig Skinner
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 03:04:09AM +0200, Robert Urban wrote: if you want to be taken seriously, Who is going to pay any attention to a top poster maybe you should change your e-mail address to something that isn't offensive to everyone who receives your e-mails, in this case,

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Han Boetes
mickey wrote: On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 04:02:53PM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote: Marco Peereboom wrote: Bash should be bashed. Its horrible garbage and should be banned from the face of this earth. We all know that real men use ksh. what you really meant was `real men use

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 04:28, Stuart Henderson wrote: On 2006/09/13 23:49, steve szmidt wrote: My reference to coding with vi/vim means usually working on scripts, and config files. If you use it more, you'll find the differences get pretty annoying when you have to switch between

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 08:18, Terry wrote: On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 11:49:29PM -0400, steve szmidt wrote: snip I'm curious to see how many not equally hard core users prefer vi over vim when having a choice. I'm definately not a hard core user but I prefer vi over vim in most

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 02:11, Otto Moerbeek wrote: On Wed, 13 Sep 2006, steve szmidt wrote: Over the years one gets used to some small things that makes life easier but is only slowly catching up on OBSD. I'm curious as why this is. Is it that real coders don't need some of them, or

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Wednesday 13 September 2006 23:38, you wrote: steve szmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: * Not showing all I/F's by default in ifconfig, requiring -A. This is a good thing. Do you really want every command to just list any possible information in a huge mess? Personally, I like to just get

mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Karle, Chris
Is anyone using a Realtek 8139 card with OpenBSD 3.9? I noticed that mbufs will slowly leak when using it. I noticed this after switching to 3.9. I don't know if something happened to the card or not... maybe there is a hardware error now that is making it behave funky. If you're using a rl*

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Matthew Jenove
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

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 00:10, you wrote: On Wed, 13 Sep 2006 22:53:04 -0400, steve szmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: * Defaulting to bash, easier to use - Implemented. OMG, not this again If you like bash install it. It was simply a perception. I have not even checked but was

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 07:48, Adriaan wrote: On 9/14/06, steve szmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: * Out of date vi, harder to navigate and use, poor visual feedback. Use an .exrc file set number set ruler set verbose set showmode set showmatch set shiftwidth=4 Thanks for the tip!

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 07:16, you wrote: * Defaulting to bash, easier to use - Implemented. that one shows the research you did, which would usually save me from feeling any reason to respond... True, it was just a silly assumption when I all of a sudden had keyboard scroll buffer

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Will Maier
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 11:29:49AM -0400, steve szmidt wrote: (Say what you will about Linux being inferior in ways, it managed to do what no other Unice did for all that time -- captured a mainstream. A lot of development is being done benefitting most if not all Open Source platforms because

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread viq
On Thursday 14 September 2006 17:38, Karle, Chris wrote: Is anyone using a Realtek 8139 card with OpenBSD 3.9? I noticed that mbufs will slowly leak when using it. I noticed this after switching to 3.9. I don't know if something happened to the card or not... maybe there is a hardware error

Re: Secure file storage.

2006-09-14 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 03:40:59PM +0200, viq wrote: Hmm, I found something that could be interesting... Apparently QEMU images support encryption when the image is in qcow format. From the man page it seems it's 128 bit AES encryption based on password. So, install some very basic system on

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Abel Talaverón Estevez
El Jueves, 14 de Septiembre de 2006 17:38, escribiC3: Is anyone using a Realtek 8139 card with OpenBSD 3.9? I noticed that mbufs will slowly leak when using it. I noticed this after switching to 3.9. I don't know if something happened to the card or not... maybe there is a hardware error

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Hans van Leeuwen
On Thursday 14 September 2006 17:38, you wrote: Is anyone using a Realtek 8139 card with OpenBSD 3.9? I noticed that mbufs will slowly leak when using it. I noticed this after switching to 3.9. I don't know if something happened to the card or not... maybe there is a hardware error now that

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Emilio Perea
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 10:38:35AM -0500, Karle, Chris wrote: If you're using a rl* can you take a look at your mbuf usage (netstat -m)? Me and another person both see something similar. OpenBSD 3.9-stable (i386 GENERIC) % dmesg | grep rl rl0 at pci0 dev 14 function 0 Realtek 8139 rev 0x10:

Re: Interface Alias Trouble.

2006-09-14 Thread Adam
Stefan Sczekalla-Waldschmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: pinging to somewhere ( how to get there is known by the gateway ) from within 192.168.110.x leads sometimes to a unreachable from the _alias_ Why do you think this is trouble? What can cause such a behaviour ? That's normal behaviour.

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Karle, Chris
I mentioned this in a different post too; I should have included it in my original message. My rl interface is on a cable modem, which tend to be very chatty with ARP traffic. The output of netstat -m ever increases; I ran a cronjob which captured it. After about 10-12 days the network would

Re: Secure file storage.

2006-09-14 Thread viq
On 9/14/06, Joachim Schipper [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 03:40:59PM +0200, viq wrote: Hmm, I found something that could be interesting... Apparently QEMU images support encryption when the image is in qcow format. From the man page it seems it's 128 bit AES encryption

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread dreamwvr
On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 10:53:04PM -0400, steve szmidt wrote: Over the years one gets used to some small things that makes life easier but is only slowly catching up on OBSD. I'm curious as why this is. Is it that real coders don't need some of them, or is it just something like a matter of

SSE instructions on OpenBSD

2006-09-14 Thread Piotrek Kapczuk
Hello Does anything in OpenBSD use SSE instructions by default ? I mean kernel, userland, ports. Particularly I need to know if SSE3 instructions are/may be used and by what part of the system. Anyone ? -- Regards Piotr Kapczuk

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Jurjen Oskam
On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 10:38:35AM -0500, Karle, Chris wrote: Is anyone using a Realtek 8139 card with OpenBSD 3.9? I noticed that mbufs will slowly leak when using it. I noticed this after switching to 3.9. I I have 2 rl and 1 sk interface in my AMD64 machine, and this works fine. Home

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread smith
When I first got into linux and openbsd, I thought vi sucked. Then by reading linuxtoday.com I ran into some articles about vi. One was from the creator of vi and he explained why vi is the way it is (it was written in the days when you didn't have a monitor, just a telepromptor). Then another

Re: Forum-Software, good and secure, on OpenBSD systems?

2006-09-14 Thread marrandy
On Tuesday 12 September 2006 21:49, Don Koch wrote: On Tue, 12 Sep 2006 23:39:53 + Deanna Phillips wrote: Michael Schmidt writes: which experiences or what knowledge are/is available concerning good and secure forum-software known to run under OpenBSD? I am interested in

Re: ftp-proxy

2006-09-14 Thread Gustavo Rios
One thing i could not understand, the ftp-proxy.c file has the following lines: int server_parse(struct session *s) { struct sockaddr *client_sa, *orig_sa, *proxy_sa, *server_sa; int prepared = 0; if (s-cmd == CMD_NONE || linelen 4 || linebuf[0] != '2') goto

Re: SSE instructions on OpenBSD

2006-09-14 Thread Ted Unangst
On 9/14/06, Piotrek Kapczuk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello Does anything in OpenBSD use SSE instructions by default ? I mean kernel, userland, ports. Particularly I need to know if SSE3 instructions are/may be used and by what part of the system. you can use them in userland.

Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Sebastian Arvidsson Liem
I use vim reluctanctly, but only because nvi lacks utf-8 support which is a must have for me. -- Sebastian A. Liem

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Bryan Irvine
On 9/13/06, Andrew Dalgleish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 11:49:29PM -0400, steve szmidt wrote: I don't get very emotional about either one and try to keep things simple. I'm curious to see how many not equally hard core users prefer vi over vim when having a choice.

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread Constantine A. Murenin
On 14/09/06, Gilles Chehade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Marco Peereboom wrote: Bash should be bashed. Its horrible garbage and should be banned from the face of this earth. We all know that real men use ksh. what you really meant was `real men use csh/tcsh' right ? :-) Yep, I don't get what

Re: Low priority or real coders

2006-09-14 Thread steve szmidt
On Thursday 14 September 2006 16:54, Paul Irofti wrote: I use both on a daily basis, but I'll use vim every time I get the chance because it's simply faster than vi when it comes to editing. Well it's certanly been that for me too. Of course, I even still remember some of the control keys for

Re: mbuf leak with rl

2006-09-14 Thread Stefan
I posted about my mbuf leak problem earlier, but I thought I'd chime in again. For those without uptimes, the mbuf usage depends on the uptime of the system and is pretty meaningless if you just restarted. Uptime: 1:30AM up 8 days, 5:12, 0 users, load averages: 0.13, 0.11, 0.08 Netstat -m:

Re: ftp-proxy

2006-09-14 Thread Steve Welham
In the passive modes session, i counted 4 pf rules being added, as also in the active modes. But reading ftp-proxy(8) i can see the following reference: snip excerpt from man page I.e., two rules for active mode and three for passive mode. I could not understand what happened to the others

Necessary Files?

2006-09-14 Thread Ray
I plan to configure a device to boot from a CF card, but to reduce writes to the CF, run /tmp /var and /dev from a memory (mfs) drive. When preping the device, I copy the contents of the /var directory to another directory path. When 'swap mfs' in the fstab file mounts the mfs drive, the

3 gateways...

2006-09-14 Thread Josh
Gidday... Here is a rangi network topology: __INTERNET__ | | | GW1 GW2 GW3 | | | |___SWITCH__| | | SERVER Ok, so GW2 is SERVERS default gateway. I need to port forward incoming port 80 internet traffic to SERVER an ALL gateways, eg, from 3

ISAKMPD dies during phase 1

2006-09-14 Thread Craig Shue
Greetings, I am attempting to have two OpenBSD boxes communicate via IPSec. I have configured them to use ISAKMPD to negotiate the connection, using PSK. Unfortunately, isakmpd on one of the boxes dies in phase 1's negotiation. For both machines, I am using OpenBSD 3.8 on an i386 architecture. I

bioctl(8) and ami(4)

2006-09-14 Thread Darrin Chandler
I've been breaking and rebuilding my RAID so I know what to do later... I popped out a disk and booted, and the hot spare kicked in. Bioctl nicely showed the status, etc. After everything was good again I rebooted. The drive I'd popped was back in and marked unused. Cool. I used bioctl -H to make