liases are not
resolved.
Other combinations involving expand-only, forward-only, and virtual
are mentioned by name, without being actually documented in any obvious
place. So, is there any way to make this work again?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
to answer queries for your domain comming from the
Internet, you don't need a separate authoritative server.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 29 June 2017, Liviu Daia <liviu.d...@gmail.com> wrote:
[...]
> On the server:
>
> # iked -d
> ikev2_recv: IKE_SA_INIT request from initiator 89.136.163.27:500 to
> x.y.z.t:500 policy 'sb1' id 0, 510 bytes
> ikev2_msg_send: IKE_SA_INIT response from x.y.z.t:
this, which doesn't look normal:
ikev2_ike_auth_recv: unexpected auth method RSA_SIG, was expecting SIG
I'm using 6.1 release on the server, and the current snapshot on the
home router:
OpenBSD sb1.x.net 6.1 GENERIC#10 amd64
OpenBSD router.x.net 6.1 GENERIC.MP#44 amd64
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 28 June 2017, Philipp Buehler <e1c1bac6253dc54a1e89ddc046585...@posteo.net>
wrote:
> Am 28.06.2017 11:18 schrieb Liviu Daia:
> >
> > set skip on { lo, enc }
> > pass in quick on egress inet proto udp to any port { isakmp,
> > ipsec-nat-t }
&
a clue stick please?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 12 October 2016, Liviu Daia <liviu.d...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 11 October 2016, physkets <physk...@tutanota.com> wrote:
> > Hello!
> >
> > I'd asked a related question on the OpenBSD subreddit, and someone
> > pointed me here. Hope this is appropriat
been great. For whatever reasons the rate
of packet loss increased steadily over time. I've since re-purposed an
old Netgear WNDR 3800 as a bridged AP, and I'm much happier with it.
805.11n, full power management, and no dropped connections ever, despite
it being located in the exact same spot as the
re separate
systems like this, and make sure your family know about them, and know
how to restore your files from them. Only when you have that sorted out
spend time optimizing your local bakup system.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
esolve the name and update the table when the IP
changes. Obviously this only works with rules that can take tables to
begin with, but that's good enough in many situations.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
0x81 EP 1 IN
bmAttributes3
Transfer TypeInterrupt
Synch Type None
Usage Type Data
wMaxPacketSize 0x0008 1x 8 bytes
bInterval 232
Any idea?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 12 October 2015, Sebastien Marie <sema...@openbsd.org> wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 08:02:11AM +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
> >
> > I get something similar without nagios:
> >
> > $ grep syscall /var/log/messages
> > Oct 10 07:50:26 router /bsd: tt
:06:23 router /bsd: tty(9186): syscall 54
Oct 10 08:06:23 router /bsd: tty(9710): syscall 54
Oct 11 01:30:01 router /bsd: tty(6080): syscall 54
Oct 12 01:30:01 router /bsd: tty(15518): syscall 54
$ uname -a
OpenBSD router.lcd047.linkpc.net 5.8 GENERIC.MP#1449 amd64
I'd tentatively correlate most of them with login(1) run in a serial
console. But the last two entries seem to be triggered by /etc/daily.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
it gently with isopropyl
alcohol or similar.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
can't make these things up, I'm
telling ya.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
wasn't amused.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
names.
Really, dump / restore is the only viable choice for this kind of task.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
choices:
APU1D4
soekris net6801-xx
Regards,
Liviu Daia
,
Liviu Daia
DON'T RUN SNAPSHOTS.
[...]
Oh, I wasn't accusing anybody, or pointing fingers, or anything like
that. I was just saying it's currently broken, that's all. Sorry if it
came accross any other way.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 29 November 2014, Liviu Daia liviu.d...@gmail.com wrote:
[...]
Not sure about Postfix being right, but it does solve the
initial problem: you fix the relay, you run postfix -r ALL, and the
messages go on their way.
[...]
s/postfix -r ALL/postsuper -r ALL/
Regards,
Liviu
On 29 November 2014, Gilles Chehade gil...@poolp.org wrote:
On Sat, Nov 29, 2014 at 02:13:46AM +0200, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 28 November 2014, Gilles Chehade gil...@poolp.org wrote:
On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 10:00:19PM -0500, Hugo Villeneuve wrote:
[...]
No, it is not proper behavior
envelope is resolved again from
scratch, according to the current config: problem solved. This is
essentially what Postfix does, and I have yet to hear anybody arguing it
should do something else. :)
Regards,
Liviu Daia
,
Liviu Daia
the new sysmerge looks at /etc/examples?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
to
have around anyway. You can take it with you, and turn (almost) any
Windows PC into an useful terminal in less than a minute. :)
Regards,
Liviu Daia
-dsnz-xh8290
Yes, but you also need to make sure it's supported by the OS on your
laptop. Something based on Prolific PL-2303 is probably a good choice,
on OpenBSD it's supported by uplcom(4).
Regards,
Liviu Daia
(that is, most 2.5 external disks these days). Also make sure to
upgrade to the latest firmware if you want to run OpenBSD.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
/php.sock
}
What about redirect, say from http://mumble to https://mumble?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
Commander mostly working out of the box have kept
people from fixing it sooner.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
air circulation
below it. Room temperature makes a big difference too.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
problems, not the firmware. A quick search reveals that many
other people had to replace it with something else. Just make sure to
search before you buy.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
do with puttygen).
Regards,
Liviu Daia
by privileged process
debug1: Enabling compression at level 6. [preauth]
debug1: monitor_read_log: child log fd closed
User child is on pid 11401
debug1: Entering interactive session for SSH2.
debug1: server_init_dispatch_20
debug1: do_cleanup
At this point, sshd exits.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 2 May 2014, Jeremy Evans jeremyeva...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 8:42 AM, Liviu Daia liviu.d...@gmail.com wrote:
Unless I'm doing something stupid, sshd seems to be broken in
today's snapshot.
From a Linux machine:
$ ssh testing
Connection to testing closed
away under their feet. :) I haven't checked in a
long while if this is still the case, but it's something you might want
to keep in mind.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
. Supported
(badly) on Linux as mt7601, not supported on OpenBSD.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
partitions:
# df -h /root
Filesystem SizeUsed Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/wd0a 129M110M 12.9M89%/
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 16 April 2014, Kenneth Westerback kwesterb...@gmail.com wrote:
On 16 April 2014 19:20, Liviu Daia liviu.d...@gmail.com wrote:
On 15 April 2014, ohh, whyyy ohhwh...@postafiok.hu wrote:
Hey, Thanks! yes, it looks like the sys.tar.gz was missing.. I created a
small howto
).
[...]
Check for the bug that was supposedly fixed by the patch. In this
particular case: run a SSL server with openssl s_server, and use one
of the many many heartbleed checkers out there to see if the problem is
still there.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
like to make available for ssh loggin.
[...]
You can do that with ssh alone:
Host internal_machine
ProxyCommandssh -A -q -l %r -W %h:%p firewall
Regards,
Liviu Daia
that is to disablei uhidev* in the kernel. The cleaner way is
to patch usb_quirks.c, as pointed out by somebody else.
You also need r/w permissions for group _ups to /dev/usb* and
/dev/ugen0*, and possibly other things (use ktrace to find out).
Regards,
Liviu Daia
these are the important ones. In my
case, I cut database creation time from more than an hour to 80 seconds,
on a relatively slow machine. FWIW.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
On 22 August 2013, patrick keshishian pkesh...@gmail.com wrote:
On 8/22/13, Liviu Daia liviu.d...@romednet.com wrote:
On 22 August 2013, patrick keshishian pkesh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Anyone else notice that sqlite3 in base got slower somewhat
recently?
I have a fairly large
://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html#rc
Regards,
Liviu Daia
/my.cnf, then copy /etc/my.cnf to /var/www/etc/my.cnf, and
set
socket = /run/mysql.sock
in the client section in /var/www/etc/my.cnf. There is no advantage in
doing things like this though, you'd be just looking for future trouble.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
until
you restart the server manually, since mysqld removes the socket before
re-creating it.
The real solution is either to use TCP connections, or move the
socket inside the jail and make /etc/my.cnf and /var/www/etc/my.cnf
point to it accordingly.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
/Comparison_of_open_source_configuration_management_software
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5983918
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5932608
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3090800
Regards,
Liviu Daia
down during transfers. Use stunnel and relayd to wrap it in SSL, and
you're done.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
save you a lot of time when switching equipment.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
/my.cnf:
socket = /var/run/mysql/mysql.sock
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 2 June 2010, Eugene Yunak e.yu...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2 June 2010 20:48, Liviu Daia liviu.d...@imar.ro wrote:
On 2 June 2010, Eugene Yunak e.yu...@gmail.com wrote:
On 1 June 2010 16:30, What you get is Not what you see
wygin...@gmail.com wrote:
Freshly installed on openbsd 4.6 mysql
all of its competitors I'm aware of (most of
them written in C). :)
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
a file etc/boot.conf in your TFTP root directory, with the
contents
boot tftp:/bsd.rd
If that still doesn't help, enable logging to see what the TFTP
server is trying to do and where it's looking the files, and move bsd.rd
accordingly.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia
to any conceivable test will be a statistic,
not a definitive true / false. The difference between memtest and a
hardware tester is how accurate this statistic really is...
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 12 March 2008, Lars NoodC)n [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[...]
And, is there a generic way to prevent them? The cause is a perl CGI
called by apache2
Depending on what you're doing, make the parent wait(2) for the
processes or setsid(3).
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia
On 12 March 2008, Hannah Schroeter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 12:05:29PM +0200, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 12 March 2008, Lars NoodC)n [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[...]
And, is there a generic way to prevent them? The cause is a perl
CGI called by apache2
Depending
Any experiences with Intel S5000VSA motherboards?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
been backward compatible;
many applications don't support 2.6 yet.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 26 December 2007, Hannah Schroeter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
On Wed, Dec 26, 2007 at 09:28:33AM +0200, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 25 December 2007, Girish Venkatachalam
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[...]
I just checked out the 'wl=72' stuff in vi. Works exactly like 'tw'
in vim. I then did
it with little more care I guess.
[...]
Or use Par instead of fmt; textproc/par in ports.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 3 December 2007, Amarendra Godbole [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Nov 30, 2007 4:32 PM, Liviu Daia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 30 November 2007, Amarendra Godbole [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Please note that postfix does not undergo the rigorous code scrub
that sendmail goes through
On 30 November 2007, Geoff Steckel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Liviu Daia wrote:
On 30 November 2007, Amarendra Godbole [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Please note that postfix does not undergo the rigorous code scrub
that sendmail goes through.
[...]
Will you please cut the crap? Thank
are related to its license, not the
code quality.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
apart?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 26 September 2007, Damien Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 26 Sep 2007, Liviu Daia wrote:
Greylisting is trivial to bypass, with or without a queue: just
send the same messages twice. Some spammers have figured that out
long ago. Ever wondered why sometimes you receive 2
On 26 September 2007, Craig Skinner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Liviu Daia wrote:
How does spamd distinguish between a legitimate retry and a
re-injection of the same message with the same Message-Id, sender
etc.?
It doesn't.
Just what you described would probably be within
On 26 September 2007, Luca Corti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 2007-09-26 at 17:02 +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
Another delivery attempt would be needed after this time to pass
spamd.
Moral: randomize the greylisting time...
Between which min/max valuse? Keep in mind
On 26 September 2007, Liviu Daia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 26 September 2007, Luca Corti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 2007-09-26 at 17:02 +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
Another delivery attempt would be needed after this time to pass
spamd.
Moral: randomize the greylisting time
On 26 September 2007, Peter N. M. Hansteen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Liviu Daia [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Why should it? The second copy is sent in a separate run,
that's the whole point. The only thing the bot has to figure out
is how long to wait until the second run. A smart one
On 26 September 2007, Jeremy C. Reed [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 26 Sep 2007, Liviu Daia wrote:
Same, 28 minutes later:
Sep 25 18:42:52 ns1 postfix-localhost/smtpd[13055]: 72BCD142A7:
client=unknown[212.239.40.101]
Sep 25 18:42:53 ns1 postfix/cleanup[21622]: 72BCD142A7
are in violent agreement here...
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
) to control concurrency.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 26 September 2007, RW [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 14:14:46 +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 25 September 2007, RW [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[...]
My defence was to write a couple of scripts. One parsed the output
of spamdb looking for GREY with sender and then tested
reason that OpenBSD wouldn't be my best choice for this
box?
I've run OpenBSD on a 486DX2 with 20 megs of ram. When you're
talking about the 486es, you're going to want a FPU with openbsd.
[...]
The DX series did have FPU. The SX didn't.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia
rootdev=0x0 rrootdev=0x300 rawdev=0x302
FWIW, the unconfigured device at pci0 dev 14 is a Quicknet PhoneJACK
(FXS phone card).
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
some of the blocks are
contiguous, but that's just about all you can hope for.
You can try lazarus from Wietse Venema's Coroner Toolkit:
http://www.porcupine.org/forensics/tct.html
However, like I said, I doubt you'll get very far without FAT.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr
it.
If OTOH you want to extend this model to the entire system, you'll
need a lot more than a new kind of filesystem. Also, as somebody else
pointed out, UNIX is probably not the right place to start. Perhaps you
should look at plan9 / inferno first.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr
likely to have with it. Some time ago I used mb2md to convert
some 300 GB of mailboxes to Maildir, and I was happy with thne result:
http://batleth.sapienti-sat.org/projects/mb2md/
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 20 May 2006, Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, May 20, 2006 at 10:09:15AM +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
I have a simpler question: is there any plan to make installing
xbase a requirement in the foreseeable future?
no. nothing in {base,comp,man,misc,game,etc}XX.tgz depends
On 22 May 2006, Lars Hansson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 22 May 2006 17:27, Liviu Daia wrote:
Ok, let me rephrase this. How realistic will be to run an
OpenBSD firewall or router without xbase a few years from now?
Very, in my opinion.
With the release of 3.9, there seems
On 22 May 2006, Marc Balmer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* Liviu Daia wrote:
The consistent answer I got on ports@ was that it has been
decided that installing X is not a showstopper, and a number of
personal attacks for suggesting otherwise. :-) Which is why I'm now
asking
On 22 May 2006, Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, May 22, 2006 at 12:27:18PM +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 20 May 2006, Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, May 20, 2006 at 10:09:15AM +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
I have a simpler question: is there any plan to make
On 22 May 2006, steven mestdagh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Liviu Daia [2006-05-22, 12:27:18]:
Ok, let me rephrase this. How realistic will be to run an
OpenBSD firewall or router without xbase a few years from now?
Huh? You do not and will not need xbase to run a firewall/router
On 22 May 2006, Can Erkin Acar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 22 May 2006 Liviu Daia wrote:
On 22 May 2006, Lars Hansson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 22 May 2006 17:27, Liviu Daia wrote:
Ok, let me rephrase this. How realistic will be to run an
OpenBSD firewall
energy.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
On 22 May 2006, Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, May 22, 2006 at 02:52:59PM +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 22 May 2006, Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, May 22, 2006 at 12:27:18PM +0300, Liviu Daia wrote:
On 20 May 2006, Jacob Meuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
. The once popular Borland Pascal
implemented that as an option. Don't know about gpc.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
, it and would add more bytes of text
to the installation scripts :(
So what you're saying here is that installing 30MB of xbase without
the user requesting it is acceptable, but making an install script some
30 bytes larger isn't, right?
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia
), read-write has never worked properly. I also doubt
there is much interest in fixing it.
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
has USB ports. Mine doesn't. :-)
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia http://www.imar.ro/~daia
for
it too.
See also the classical articles by Elizabeth Zwicky:
http://berdmann.dyndns.org/doc/dump/zwicky/testdump.doc.html
http://www.usenix.org/events/lisa03/tech/full_papers/zwicky/zwicky_html/
Regards,
Liviu Daia
--
Dr. Liviu Daia e-mail: [EMAIL
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