* David O'Brien <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [020622 19:28] wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 21, 2002 at 09:57:55AM -0400, Matt Simerson wrote:
> > FreeBSD has very solid NFS code in addition to being a very robust,
> > versatile, and downright fun operating system. It's very easy to do
> > everything I want to
On Thu, 20 Jun 2002 19:59:20 -0700
Terry Lambert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Patrick Thomas wrote:
> > Is it possible to patch/recompile FreeBSD 4.5 in such a way that your
> > system is no longer vulnerable to the "chunking" attack, even if you are
> > still running a vulnerable apache ?
>
> N
At 7:28 PM -0700 6/22/02, David O'Brien wrote:
>Actually Matt Jacob has some NFS testsuites that makes
>FreeBSD servers blow chunks.
Is that still true, after the fixes to the bugs found
by the NFS-exerciser program we picked up from Apple?
--
Garance Alistair Drosehn= [EMAIL PROT
David O'Brien wrote:
>
> On Sat, Jun 22, 2002 at 02:52:19PM -0700, Doug Barton wrote:
> > > version in the tree appears to be 8.3.2-T1B (which I just installed
> > > a second ago).
> >
> > I just updated the bind8 port to 8.3.2-RELEASE, which I recommend that
> > you run instead. I
Anyone get the Broadcom BCM5701 gigibit ethernet working on new Dell 2650?
I noted it has been fixed in latest STABLE branch from freebsd-hacker list.
http://www.geocrawler.com/mail/thread.php3?subject=Broadcom+BCM5701+GigE+Ethernet+problems%3F%3F&list=159
I grabed the latest -STABLE branch but
On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, David O'Brien wrote:
>Actually Matt Jacob has some NFS testsuites that makes FreeBSD servers
>blow chunks. Solaris still is the most robust NFS server of the general
>purpose UNIXes.
I'm quite happy with the performance of my SGI machines as NFS servers.
They're quite robus
On Fri, Jun 21, 2002 at 09:57:55AM -0400, Matt Simerson wrote:
> FreeBSD has very solid NFS code in addition to being a very robust,
> versatile, and downright fun operating system. It's very easy to do
> everything I want to with FreeBSD. It's NFS is missing locking support
> but it's very
On Sat, Jun 22, 2002 at 02:52:19PM -0700, Doug Barton wrote:
> > version in the tree appears to be 8.3.2-T1B (which I just installed
> > a second ago).
>
> I just updated the bind8 port to 8.3.2-RELEASE, which I recommend that
> you run instead. I saw some weird problems with the pr
I think I'll just decrease my swap size from 2 gigs to 1 gig - is that a
reasonable alternative that provides the same benefit and possible
solution to this problem ?
...since bsically 0 swap has ever been used on the machine anyway...
--PT
On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Patrick
Patrick Thomas wrote:
> How do you increase KVA space these days ? I see that in earlier releases
> you had to edit /sys/conf/ldscript.i386 and /sys/i386/include/pmap.h and
> do all sorts of crazy stuff.
>
> What is the procedure in 4.5-RELEASE (please say "just change
> KVA_PAGES=260 to KVA_PAG
Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
> Terry> Personally, I think SASL should have specified that you
> Terry> crypt(3) the passwords, and then use the resulting hash as
> Terry> the password value for the shared secret on both ends. At
> Terry> least that way, you would not have to pass clear
Jonathan Lemon wrote:
> I have an IBM box that has a dual LSI 53c1030 controller on the
> motherboard. Our SYM driver doesn't appear to have support for
> this device; under Linux it is supported by a Fusion/MPT driver
> from LSI.
>
> Any chance of getting a driver for this chip?
I have an IA64
Matthew Dillon wrote:
>
> I am having weird problems with BIND. It started happening about a month
> and a half ago. named would start returning immediate host name lookup
> failures for just about everything and never recover.
That's not good. :) I assume you're using it
I am having some trouble reading data from a Handspring Visor Platinum. What
I am trying to do is make the necessary modifications to pilot-link so that
it will work with the usb on FreeBSD. My problem is that I can open a
connection to the /dev/ugen0.2 endpoint, but whenever I try to call a
On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Dan Nelson wrote:
>In the last episode (Jun 22), Mike Silbersack said:
>> On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Lucky Green wrote:
>> > Let me turn my original inquiry into an offer: I volunteer to write
>> > the section for the Handbook or other documentation detailing the
>> > various CPU o
Under FreeBSD-RELEASE, I'm messing with a USB mouse. I've compiled
into the kernel the lot of USB devices, and the USB debug options.
(More specifcally, the device is a Twiddler2, which acts as a
keyboard and a mouse, and a keyboard/mouse -> USB converter the
vendor sold me.)
I get as far as:
On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Neil Blakey-Milner wrote:
> On Sat 2002-06-22 (00:06), Chris Dillon wrote:
> > Yes, but this is the case with any IMAP server and doesn't really
> > have anything to do with Cyrus in particular. Unlike other IMAP
> > servers, however, Cyrus supports SASL which offers plenty
How do you increase KVA space these days ? I see that in earlier releases
you had to edit /sys/conf/ldscript.i386 and /sys/i386/include/pmap.h and
do all sorts of crazy stuff.
What is the procedure in 4.5-RELEASE (please say "just change
KVA_PAGES=260 to KVA_PAGES=512)
That's what you want me
I am having weird problems with BIND. It started happening about a month
and a half ago. named would start returning immediate host name lookup
failures for just about everything and never recover.
I dumped named in one of these instances. The dump file (500K) is
temporaril
In the last episode (Jun 22), Mike Silbersack said:
> On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Lucky Green wrote:
> > Let me turn my original inquiry into an offer: I volunteer to write
> > the section for the Handbook or other documentation detailing the
> > various CPU options in LINT if somebody who fully understa
> "Terry" == Terry Lambert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Terry> Personally, I think SASL should have specified that you
Terry> crypt(3) the passwords, and then use the resulting hash as
Terry> the password value for the shared secret on both ends. At
Terry> least that way, you
On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Lucky Green wrote:
> Let me turn my original inquiry into an offer: I volunteer to write the
> section for the Handbook or other documentation detailing the various
> CPU options in LINT if somebody who fully understands what these options
> do is willing to spend 30 minutes
If memory serves me right, "Lucky Green" wrote:
> Let me turn my original inquiry into an offer: I volunteer to write the
> section for the Handbook or other documentation detailing the various
> CPU options in LINT if somebody who fully understands what these options
> do is willing to spend 30 m
> 1) do you allow them write access to their /dev/mem, /dev/kmem, /dev/io ?
Actually haven't yet let anyone else inside a jail with root capabilities.
Will soon though. So, no probably not, unless there's a daemon which does
just that.
> 2) does this sound like what you see? Can you still ping
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On Sat 2002-06-22 (00:06), Chris Dillon wrote:
> Yes, but this is the case with any IMAP server and doesn't really have
> anything to do with Cyrus in particular. Unlike other IMAP servers,
> however, Cyrus supports SASL which offers plenty of non-plain-text
> authentication options, unfortunatel
Patrick Thomas wrote:
> Since all of the things you spoke of basically revolved around "you're
> running out of memory", is it possible or reasonable to think that within
> the space of 1 second, I ran through 1404 megs inactive and 28 megs free
> memory ?
>
> machine is 4.5-RELEASE with 3gigs ra
Terry,
Thanks for that informative email - just a quick reality check though (for
myself) - the last time this type of crash happened, I was running and
watching `top` on the machine - and when it froze, the `top` output froze
as well, and this was the last display on the screen:
last pid: 66
Patrick Thomas wrote:
> What it does is the userland hangs, but the kernel keeps running.
>
> When the system is crashed, I can still ping it successfully, and I can
> still open sockets (like I can open a connection to a jails httpd or sshd,
> or the sshd of the underlying server itself) but not
* Patrick Thomas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [020622 01:56] wrote:
>
> What it does is the userland hangs, but the kernel keeps running.
>
...
> I'm mostly just curious if this kind of crash (userland hung but kernel
> running) is a possible outcome of someone in a jail fiddling with those
> /dev nodes,
What it does is the userland hangs, but the kernel keeps running.
When the system is crashed, I can still ping it successfully, and I can
still open sockets (like I can open a connection to a jails httpd or sshd,
or the sshd of the underlying server itself) but nothing answers on the
sockets - t
Chris Dillon wrote:
> > While I appreciate the positive support of Cyrus, I guess I need to
> > point out that this approach only works if you are willing to send
> > passwords over the wire in plaintext.
>
> Yes, but this is the case with any IMAP server and doesn't really have
> anything to do
Let me turn my original inquiry into an offer: I volunteer to write the
section for the Handbook or other documentation detailing the various
CPU options in LINT if somebody who fully understands what these options
do is willing to spend 30 minutes on the phone with me answering
questions about th
On Sat, Jun 22, 2002 at 12:31:35AM -0700, John Franz wrote:
>
> Im currently attemting to build a embeded type Digital Audio
> Recorder running PicoBSD booting off a zip disk. its a pretty
> strait forward project. unfortunatly none of the default scripts
> to make PicoBSD seem to work out of the
Im currently attemting to build a embeded type Digital Audio
Recorder running PicoBSD booting off a zip disk. its a pretty
strait forward project. unfortunatly none of the default scripts
to make PicoBSD seem to work out of the box, let alone after
adding the features i need, or writing a differe
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