As I say in my second post I have no access and am not on site. The
modems were delivered less than a month ago, they work when
non-bridged, and until they migrated their PPPoE server last night,
the pppoe links from the OpenBSD boxes were running fine for the past
few weeks. I'm somewhat surprised
ul 14 10:25:49 fw-crissier-slave /bsd: pppoe0: Down event (carrier
loss), taking interface down.
On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 7:42 PM, Henry Sieff wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 12:37 AM, michael
> hamerski wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have several systems (4.2) running over bridged mod
Hi,
I have several systems (4.2) running over bridged modems which can no
longer connect to the service provider's PPPOE servers since last
night. They seem to be stuck at the PADI step (1045 retries and
counting. As the version number indicates, the system has been in
place for quite a while alth
Sure, I wasn't really thinking of bktr, which as I understand is a
video capture card and as such has onboard electronics for image
processing. Evidently, this in combo with a normal cam is the best in
terms of resolution/low cpu load.
I was aiming more for the post comparing 40$ usb webcam/100$ i
I guess for security monitoring stuff, having a decent driver for a
decent webcam would be nice. However, with the current trend to
offload all peripheral processing onto the host CPU this can be a
mixed blessing. For example, in '96 with a BW Quickcam my PC hardly
broke sweat for videoconfrencing,
Hi,
I have a three site vpn on 4.2 with a voip enabled PBX on each lan,
linked with SDSL lines. This works as expected. However, I need to
prioritize the PBX to PBX traffic, they have fixed lan IPs, and am
looking for pointers on the best way to accomplish this. After reading
the docs, I am not qu
Personally, I would look into industrial-grade i386 SBCs. Old server
systems will suck juice, have non-standard weird bits and odds (old
Macs are a great example for RAM) and although I readily admit to
knowing next to nothing about EM shielding, it would seem easier to
shield properly a small box
On Dec 14, 2007 5:43 PM, Breen Ouellette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -
> This is a reply to David's email to me. I have left out his original
> message since it was sent privately and without permission to repost to
> the list.
> -
Yeah, I have a bunch of emails from him, which despite my
Richard, you're being cc'ed because people speak in your name.
On Dec 14, 2007 9:35 AM, David H. Lynch Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> michael hamerski wrote:
> I think it's a worthy public debate. Let him expound his
> > theories and ethics and let'
On Dec 14, 2007 9:09 AM, David H. Lynch Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> Do you have turrets or aspergers or some other reason why you are
> compelled to insult virtually everyone ?
Wow, now we're taking potshots at the handicapped. There goes that
fluffy PC do-gooder image then.
>
> >
>
Sorry, back to list, public debate.
On Dec 14, 2007 11:51 AM, David H. Lynch Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> michael hamerski wrote:
> >
> >> In
> >> other words, a society in which non-free software more or less doesn't
> >> exist.
> >>
> > Richard, I may be unfriendly, but you are a lying hypocritical
> > asshole.
>
>
> this pretty much sums up everything. can we all stop now? (-:
>
> aaron.glenn
>
Nah, it's too much fun... seriously though, even though ultimately
pointless, I think it's a worthy public debate. Let him expound h
On Dec 13, 2007 5:52 PM, Richard Stallman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Freedom means having control of your own life; "Freedom of choice" is
> a partly accurate and partly misleading way to describe that, and
> taking that expression too literally leads to mistaken conclusions.
> Thus, I say I adv
Mine is more free than yours is usually a pointless discussion, even
more so when the participants cannot even agree on the definition of
free. Stallman conveniently omits the fact that his definition of free
was, is and will be at odds with that of a significant portion of the
free software commun
Ok, fair enough. I just went through their feature list on the site,
my two cents are it should be on by default. I'm not saying anything
bad about it though, as I haven't used it.
My point still stands though, ultimately the weakest links in any such
app will probably be the username/password tha
> Lars NoodC)n <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > http://forum.skype.com/index.php?showtopic=95261
>
I have no intention of refueling this debate but I found this an
interesting read some time ago:
paper by Garfinkel
http://skypetips.internetvisitation.org/files/VoIP%20and%20Skype.pdf
your
hi,
I'm trying to do wired/wireless failover with dhcp on -current/amd64:
$ cat /etc/hostname.re0
up media 100baseTX
$ cat /etc/hostname.bwi0
up media DS11 nwid nwkey
$ cat /etc/hostname.trunk0
trunkproto failover trunkport re0 trunkport bwi0
dhcp
$ ifconfig
lo0: flags=8049 mtu 3316
> This machine freezes if re0 is NOT forced to 100baseTX.
same here on -current/amd64, forcing to 100baseTX solves it for me
even with an OSX box next to it
mike
OpenBSD 4.2-current (GENERIC) #1239: Mon Nov 12 16:26:56 MST 2007
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC
real m
> "Posted by Reza Behforooz, Software Engineer
>
> In my first month at Google, I complained to a friend on the Gmail
> team about a couple of small things that I disliked about Gmail. I
...
Dear Google,
Could you get Reza to fix contact/label whitelisting in Gmail while he's at it?
thanks,
mik
try a new IDE cable or if you can take the system offline, and
assuming you can boot off cd/floppy I would suggest trying MHDD from
http://hddguru.com/ it does some pretty nice low-level diagnostics.
I've fixed some disks with this {crosses fingers}
docs are very basic but there's more info on the
is it a recent grub? if you're reading grub source I will assume you
know more about it than I do, but am writing this on a box which boots
debian/openbsd/xp without problems, from grub installed circa 6 months
ago. I certainly did not dd any sectors around. I can send you my grub
conf when I reboo
On 10/7/07, stan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a new laptop that I would like to set up to have 4 different OS's
> on. The OS's I would like to install are:
>
I used to favour the ranish partition manager for creating my primary
partitions and assigning ids. the installers should pick up on
> > On 10/9/07, Sean Darby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Does OpenBSD = UNIX? Or, does OpenBSD = Unix? (or unix or unix-like or
> > > etc.)?
my mother recently called it "that Unisex thing you like", though am
not sure of the capitalization :)
mike
On 3/2/07, Chris Cappuccio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> openbsd supposedly runs great under xen 3 with hardware virtualization.
>
> i'll let you know after i get xen 3 installed on a pentium d 920 with
> some piece of shit OS running dom0.
>
> I had -current running under Debian/kvm off a file a
djgoku wrote:
First I would add NUT from packages, then follow:
http://www.networkupstools.org/doc/2.0.0/INSTALL.html This should go
through mostly everything you need to configure NUT to work with your
UPS.
I have this one: APC BACK-UPS 350. Although listed by my supplier as
available both
Steve Fairhead wrote:
... snip...
Summary: with small fans, it should work, but you've introduced a mechanism
whereby a fan failure could destroy the machine.
Aha, I just knew there was more to my attraction to the zalman fan mate
than my instinctive aversion to electricity since staying pl
smith wrote:
Are there any plans for an OpenBSD implementation of sshfs?
Or has someone successfully installed fuse and sshfs on OpenBSD
(preferably 3.8)?
Yea, that would be very useful.
Sadly, I have neither the skills nor the finances to fund someone
possesing them. But I'll offer up a
hw.sensors.9=viaenv0, VSENS4, volts_dc, 12.07 V
the top temp. I have seen for TSENS2 is 60.60 degC.
Does anyone else run a box similar to this?
Does anyone know of any big advantages of Soekris boxes rather than EPIA?
I've got a feeling the little box will just give up or even worse blow up.
Karl Kopp wrote:
Hi Jason,
Like yr idea - LOTS :) We may still use a disk for some logs, but if that
goes, no big deal! Any idea how to mount a CF as a boot device? Quick search
on Google didn't bring much back of interest. Is their a faq / how-to? Also,
what kinds of CF adapters work - anything
Steve Shockley wrote:
Thorsten Glaser wrote:
(How about Microsoft NT and Linux, which also
do software RAID?
I'm 90% sure that NT mirrors can be moved to different hardware, as long
as the disk geometry stays the same. I'm less sure about Raid 5, but in
theory it should work as well.
Of
Trying to test the snapshots but the last two bsd.rd's seem to fail on
rl0 detection at boot.
bsd.rd from 14.08 exits with a dump error 19 at the end of hardware
detection.
bsd.rd from 22.08 comes up but the rl0 is not configured. nor does it
seem possible to do anything to change that.
Th
Nick Holland wrote:
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Hi All,
I just built a OpenBSD 3.7 samba file server for my home lan. It's a P3
500, 128mb RAM, with a 2 gig IDE HDD for the OS and two x Maxtor 200 GB
IDE drives for data.
whoa.
no where near enough RAM.
Trip over the power cord, you will end u
matt lawless wrote:
On 7/17/05, Bruno Delbono <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How does mozilla-firefox perform on OpenBSD? Are there any differences
in performance compared to Linux/Windows?
pkg/DESCR says that extensions don't work. Has anyone had any luck
with changing that?
some do, at least
James Harless wrote:
I know that several firewall vendors use various flavors of Linux as
the basis for their devices. Are there any that use OpenBSD
similarly? If so, which? Any comments on the devices? Links would
be appreciated.
-James
One I can remember is at http://www.air-lok.com/
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