Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread tux2bsd
On Sunday, May 12th, 2024 at 12:34 PM, Chris Petrik wrote: > Still amusing regardless Thanks for the inspiration. I made the following they-speak so that it's in the left's lobotomy language. One wonders why T.J. Townsend doesn't simply sell OpenBSD's Twitter credentials to some porn site,

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread Chris Petrik
Yeap a reason why ML suck Sent from Proton Mail Android Original Message On 5/11/24 7:02 PM, tux2bsd wrote: > On Sunday, May 12th, 2024 at 11:25 AM, Stuart Longland > > since you seem to want evidence that it was announced… > > Learn to read: > > > No post about the

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread tux2bsd
On Sunday, May 12th, 2024 at 11:25 AM, Stuart Longland > since you seem to want evidence that it was announced… Learn to read: > No post about the 7.5 release on https://twitter.com/openbsd The rest of what you blathered about is in your head, I only ever mentioned the lack of an (singular)

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread tux2bsd
On Sunday, May 12th, 2024 at 11:04 AM, T.J. Townsend wrote: > On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 10:26:49PM +, tux2bsd wrote: > > > Seemed strange, if deliberate then exceptionally petty. > Wasting everyone's time by complaining on a mailing list that > we didn't post a tweet seems a little petty

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread Stuart Longland
On 12/5/24 09:12, tux2bsd wrote: On 12/5/24 08:26, tux2bsd wrote: No post about the 7.5 release on https://twitter.com/openbsd Seemed strange, if deliberate then exceptionally petty. Twitter is dead. You forgot CC. Here, I'll add Reply-To so you don't get confused next time. That's

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread tux2bsd
> On 12/5/24 08:26, tux2bsd wrote: > > No post about the 7.5 release on https://twitter.com/openbsd > > > > Seemed strange, if deliberate then exceptionally petty. > > > Twitter is dead. That's your leftism talking, not reality.

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread T.J. Townsend
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 10:26:49PM +, tux2bsd wrote: > I'm a bit late remembering to follow this up. > > No post about the 7.5 release on https://twitter.com/openbsd > > Seemed strange, if deliberate then exceptionally petty. > > IIRC I saw it on OSNews on the day. Wasting everyone's time

Re: https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread Stuart Longland
On 12/5/24 08:26, tux2bsd wrote: I'm a bit late remembering to follow this up. No post about the 7.5 release on https://twitter.com/openbsd Seemed strange, if deliberate then exceptionally petty. IIRC I saw it on OSNews on the day. Twitter is dead. OpenBSD has a website you can check,

https://twitter.com/openbsd

2024-05-11 Thread tux2bsd
I'm a bit late remembering to follow this up. No post about the 7.5 release on https://twitter.com/openbsd Seemed strange, if deliberate then exceptionally petty. IIRC I saw it on OSNews on the day.

Re: Kernel debugging

2024-05-11 Thread Kirill A . Korinsky
On Sat, 11 May 2024 21:49:42 +0100, Daniel Hejduk wrote: > > Is there any way to build the kernel on Linux preferably Arch Linux? > It is theoretically possible, but you need to change Makefiles a lot, and probably to hack your toolchain. -- wbr, Kirill

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-11 Thread Страхиња Радић
Дана 24/05/11 10:36PM, Страхиња Радић написа: > cd "$target" && > find "$dirs" | sort | uniq > "$target_list" Lapsus: the variable dirs should not be quoted here if it contains more than one directory to be passed to find. It is vulnerable to directory names containing spaces and weird

Re: Kernel debugging

2024-05-11 Thread Daniel Hejduk
Hello again, Is there any way to build the kernel on Linux preferably Arch Linux? Best regards, Daniel Hejduk 11. května 2024 22:05:50 SELČ, "Kirill A. Korinsky" napsal: >On Sat, 11 May 2024 20:28:08 +0100, >Daniel Hejduk wrote: >> >> I want to enable kernel debugging how can I do it? >> >

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-11 Thread Страхиња Радић
Дана 24/05/11 07:41PM, Walter Alejandro Iglesias написа: > Today I realized that the loop above is not necesary: > > --- > dirs=$(echo "$files" | grep '/$') > > cd && find $dirs | sort | uniq > $source_list > cd $target && find $dirs | sort

Re: Kernel debugging

2024-05-11 Thread Vitaliy Makkoveev
> On 11 May 2024, at 22:28, Daniel Hejduk wrote: > > Hello, > I want to enable kernel debugging how can I do it? > See ddb(4) man page. > Best regards, > Daniel Hejduk

Re: Kernel debugging

2024-05-11 Thread Kirill A . Korinsky
On Sat, 11 May 2024 20:28:08 +0100, Daniel Hejduk wrote: > > I want to enable kernel debugging how can I do it? > See: https://man.openbsd.org/options -- wbr, Kirill

Kernel debugging

2024-05-11 Thread Daniel Hejduk
Hello, I want to enable kernel debugging how can I do it? Best regards, Daniel Hejduk

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-11 Thread Walter Alejandro Iglesias
On Sat May 11 20:20:04 2024 "Robert B. Carleton" wrote: > Another tool you might want to take a look at is rdist(1). It's limited > in some ways, but is a native capability to OpenBSD. It has a long > history. > I've never used rdist(1) either, I will learn about it. Thanks Robert for mention it

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-11 Thread Robert B. Carleton
Walter Alejandro Iglesias writes: > On Fri May 10 08:36:50 2024 Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote >> Then I do something like this (simplified for clartiy): >> >> [...] >> >> dirs=$(echo "$files" | grep '/$') >> >> for i in $dirs ; do >> find $source/$i | sed 's#'$source'##' | sort | uniq >

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread Peter J. Philipp
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 05:55:11PM +, Lucretia wrote: > I would love some used books but don't have 1000???. I will have $750 around > beginning of June if you want to send me a Paypal invoice to my Apple email: > openbsd.g...@icloud.com I was going to buy my second laptop but books are >

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread Lucretia
I would love some used books but don't have 1000€. I will have $750 around beginning of June if you want to send me a Paypal invoice to my Apple email: openbsd.g...@icloud.com I was going to buy my second laptop but books are probably better for me at this point in time. Your other message was

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-11 Thread Walter Alejandro Iglesias
On Fri May 10 08:36:50 2024 Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote > Then I do something like this (simplified for clartiy): > > [...] > > dirs=$(echo "$files" | grep '/$') > > for i in $dirs ; do > find $source/$i | sed 's#'$source'##' | sort | uniq > $source_list > find $target/$i | sed

7.5 stable wsmoused question

2024-05-11 Thread mindfsck
Hello, I am trying to narrow down an issue (and learn along the way) with wsmoused. The issue is: - X (wsfb) is running with xfce4 and xenodm, the mouse works fine in X. - I go to a console and execute wsmoused (as root) with no parameters, so as per sources, /dev/wsmouse is opened. - I have a

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread Peter J. Philipp
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 08:45:45AM +0200, Peter J. Philipp wrote: > If you want some used books, I'm moving across the Atlantic soon and I can't > take my books along. In total the new value of them was 8000 odd EUR. If > I send three books to kyrgystan and it's under 2 kg, I checked with DHL >

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread Kirill A . Korinsky
On Sat, 11 May 2024 03:52:32 +0100, Lucretia wrote: > > I have a laptop and am looking to purchase a second computer. Neither of them > will be connected to The Internet, but will be networked together. > > My goal is to study networking, starting with some of the most basic commands > and

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread Peter J. Philipp
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 08:45:45AM +0200, Peter J. Philipp wrote: > Contact me privately if you would like a batch with what you like. I'll > make note on that webpage of what's given away. Offer ends July 1st of this > year. Three books have already been given away. They went to Finland.

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread zeloff
Familiarise yourself with IPv4: addreses, network segments, netmasks, and private IP ranges. Even a careful reading of wikipedia might be enough to get you started. By the end you shouls have a basic understanding of how packets are routed. You won't be building a router, so no need for complex

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-11 Thread Peter J. Philipp
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 02:52:32AM +, Lucretia wrote: > Book recommendations are most welcome! > > Lux of the Agony > 720077 Bishkek > Altyn Kazyk 31A > KYRGYZSTAN > l...@openbsdgirl.com If you want some used books, I'm moving across the Atlantic soon and I can't take my books along. In

Re: My PC is crashing

2024-05-10 Thread Jadi
I suspect a bad IMG/ISO file. Have you checked its hash? or I suggest a redownload, rewrite / check and new install. Jadi On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 1:04 AM Daniel Hejduk wrote: > Hello again, > I tried memtest and it passed :D > But after some trying to debug it I found something the sudden

Re: Localnet Hacking

2024-05-10 Thread Peter J. Philipp
Hi Lux, In my opinion if you want to study networking load up on every distfile in /usr/ports/net as these tools will help you. ipcalc is valuable even pros use it because doing CIDR and netmasks in your head is possible but not practical in all scenarios. That said you should look into

Localnet Hacking

2024-05-10 Thread Lucretia
I have a laptop and am looking to purchase a second computer. Neither of them will be connected to The Internet, but will be networked together. My goal is to study networking, starting with some of the most basic commands and routines. This will be purely for educational purposes. I may build

Re: My PC is crashing

2024-05-10 Thread Daniel Hejduk
Hello again, I tried memtest and it passed :D But after some trying to debug it I found something the sudden shutdown corrupts disk. One particular file "/share/relink/kernel/GENERIC.MP/gap.o" was always corrupted. So it happens when kernel is relinking. How you told me I tried using i386 but

Re: Fwd: RTL8192EU wifi issue

2024-05-10 Thread Chris Petrik
Hello, Posting and re posting isn't going to get you help any quicker if no one has that card there won't be any interest and wifi is badly supported on any BSD. This looks more of a PR issue rather a ML issue Chris Sent from Proton Mail Android Original Message On 5/10/24

Fwd: RTL8192EU wifi issue

2024-05-10 Thread Mizsei Zoltán
Crossposting on misc aswell 2024. máj. 7. 14:50:33 Mizsei Zoltán : Hi, I have a so called "Tenda 300Mbps Mini Wireless N Adapter" (this is not the terribly small one). It reports itself as: urtwn0 at uhub0 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0 "Realtek 802.11n NIC" rev 2.10/2.00 addr 2 urtwn0:

Re: PHP 8.2.18 problem

2024-05-10 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2024/05/10 14:29, Dan wrote: > > In php.ini a session.save_handler = memcache ^ ... > Looking at phpinfo() I see: > > memcached ^ > Session support: yes Looks like a typo.

Re: unable to startx/xinit on additional virtual terminal

2024-05-10 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2024-05-10, Sandeep Gupta wrote: > I should be able to launch an additional x11 session given one is already > running by default. that's not supported -- Please keep replies on the mailing list.

match rules and relayd rdr

2024-05-10 Thread Kapetanakis Giannis
Hi, I want to convert a pf rule to rdr-to via relayd (add load balancer in the mix to multiple servers). My hesitation is how to pass the extra tcp options I pass in the rule. I believe this should be done via match rules, but I'm not sure if the pass rule should be on the pf or the relayd

unable to startx/xinit on additional virtual terminal

2024-05-10 Thread Sandeep Gupta
I am running OpenBSD on a laptop with X windows starting on f5 vtty via Xenodm login manager. I am unable to start another session of X from a different vtty. xinit or startx fails with Fatal server error: - no console drivers found Supported drivers: wscons I should be able to launch an

Re: gstreamer1 update

2024-05-10 Thread Robert Palm
Quoting Stuart Henderson : On 2024-05-10, Robert Palm wrote: pkg_check is now clean. gstreamer still complaining. Updates are currently broken for gstreamer1-plugins-good, it will need a fix in the port + new set of packages. If you don't want to wait, pkg_delete gstreamer1-plugins-good,

Re: gstreamer1 update

2024-05-10 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2024-05-10, Robert Palm wrote: > pkg_check is now clean. gstreamer still complaining. Updates are currently broken for gstreamer1-plugins-good, it will need a fix in the port + new set of packages. If you don't want to wait, pkg_delete gstreamer1-plugins-good, let it remove any packages

Re: gstreamer1 update

2024-05-10 Thread Ampie Niemand
On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 08:21:57AM +0200, Robert Palm wrote: Hi, any suggestions how to fix this ? tron$ pkg_check Packing-list sanity: ok Direct dependencies: ok Reverse dependencies: ok Files from packages: ok --- consolekit2-1.2.6p4 ---

Re: My PC is crashing

2024-05-10 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2024-05-10, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote: > On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 08:48:56AM +0200, Anders Andersson wrote: >> Missing from the FAQ is IMO step 0: Run memtest over night to rule out >> hard to debug hardware problems. It won't catch everything of course, >> but it usually finds RAM issues

Re: gstreamer1 update

2024-05-10 Thread Robert Palm
I would first run "pkg_info -mz > ~/packages.txt" to bookmark the packages I currently have on my system. Then I would delete all orphaned packages by doing "pkg_delete -a". Do another "pkg_check" and if good, do a "pkg_add -uiv". Then if I lose one of my critical packages I needed, I can

Re: My PC is crashing

2024-05-10 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 08:48:56AM +0200, Anders Andersson wrote: > Missing from the FAQ is IMO step 0: Run memtest over night to rule out > hard to debug hardware problems. It won't catch everything of course, > but it usually finds RAM issues which is its main job. That is a very valid point.

Re: My PC is crashing

2024-05-10 Thread Anders Andersson
On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 8:14 AM Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote: > > Hi Daniel, > > On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 07:57:31AM +0200, Daniel Hejduk wrote: > > Hello, > > I installed OBSD on my IdeaPad. > > Install went fine I installed offline using .iso file. > > But after rebooting it works for ~30 seconds

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-10 Thread Walter Alejandro Iglesias
On Fri May 10 08:16:32 2024 "Robert B. Carleton" wrote: > I'm going to try using pax(1) in copy mode (-rw) as an alternative to > rsync and cpio when it's local filesystems. I hadn't considered that > until recently. This is my dirty solution to add pax a "delete on target" functionality. I

gstreamer1 update

2024-05-10 Thread Robert Palm
Hi, any suggestions how to fix this ? tron$ pkg_check Packing-list sanity: ok Direct dependencies: ok Reverse dependencies: ok Files from packages: ok --- consolekit2-1.2.6p4 --- /usr/local/share/polkit-1/rules.d/10-openbsd-consolekit.rules should exist ---

Re: My PC is crashing

2024-05-10 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
Hi Daniel, On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 07:57:31AM +0200, Daniel Hejduk wrote: > Hello, > I installed OBSD on my IdeaPad. > Install went fine I installed offline using .iso file. > But after rebooting it works for ~30 seconds and after that it shutdowns, > without any errors kernel panics nothing. >

My PC is crashing

2024-05-09 Thread Daniel Hejduk
Hello, I installed OBSD on my IdeaPad. Install went fine I installed offline using .iso file. But after rebooting it works for ~30 seconds and after that it shutdowns, without any errors kernel panics nothing. How can I debug it? I will send you more info if I found something. Best regards,

Re: How to use the tun0 interface (VPN)?

2024-05-09 Thread W.D.T Chathurange
Hi, I think this is because all your traffic is just routing through your current default gateway which is your router. Try adding a route to the vpn server to route through your physical router. Then change your default gateway to the vpn interface. doas route add (doas route add xx.xx.xx.xx

Re: How to use the tun0 interface (VPN)?

2024-05-09 Thread James Colderwood
If you want to route all traffic over the VPN. You need to configure your default gateway to correctly. On 2024-05-09 14:16, Sadeep Madurange wrote: Hello, I am trying to use the openvpn client. I have a .ovpn file I got from my vpn provider. I installed the openvpn package and ran the

openarena crash 7.5

2024-05-09 Thread Divan Santana
Greetings :) Is openarena suppose to work from ports? Or perhaps it's my laptop that's not compatible with it? (apologies sent this to wrong mailing list earlier) ds@swift ~ $ /usr/local/bin/openarena-client ioq3+oa 1.36 openbsd-amd64 Mar 15 2024 - FS_Startup - Current search path:

Re: How to use the tun0 interface (VPN)?

2024-05-09 Thread deich...@placebonol.com
Can you explain what you are trying to accomplish with a VPN? On May 9, 2024 7:16:38 AM MDT, Sadeep Madurange wrote: >Hello, > >I am trying to use the openvpn client. I have a .ovpn file I got from my >vpn provider. I installed the openvpn package and ran the openvpn client >using the following

How to use the tun0 interface (VPN)?

2024-05-09 Thread Sadeep Madurange
Hello, I am trying to use the openvpn client. I have a .ovpn file I got from my vpn provider. I installed the openvpn package and ran the openvpn client using the following command: $ doas openvpn --config client.ovpn --auth-user-pass auth.txt Above command appears to succeed. ifconfig shows:

How to use the tun0 interface (VPN)?

2024-05-09 Thread Sadeep Madurange
Hello, I am trying to use the openvpn client. I have a .ovpn file I got from my vpn provider. I installed the openvpn package and ran the openvpn client using the following command: $ doas openvpn --config client.ovpn --auth-user-pass auth.txt Above command appears to succeed. ifconfig shows:

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-09 Thread James Johnson
Thanks a lot to you all for these recommendations.

Re: AES-256 ist sicher wie AES-128 im brute force

2024-05-09 Thread Peter J. Philipp
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 10:51:05PM +0200, Peter J. Philipp wrote: > The title says "AES-256 is as safe as AES-128" for a translation. Just an update: with this method the key can be recovered with a complexity of 2^96, working on a complexity of 2^64 now. Please help if you have fast equipment,

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-08 Thread Страхиња Радић
Дана 24/05/08 02:37PM, Karsten Pedersen написа: > [...] The C program can be as simple as compiling "Hello World" to exhibit the > issue. Takes about 15 seconds to compile "Hello World". [...] On a Lenovo IdeaPad 3-15IGL05 81WQ[1] laptop: $ time sh -c "printf '#include \\nint main() {

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-08 Thread Benjamin Raskin
> Is it possible to have a sample network diagram or at least a better > description of how you setup your network? Sure. My router is connected to two other routers via mgre0 to 2 other routers (routes should be sent to those 2 routers). The router which is sending routes has 4 NICs sit on a

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-08 Thread Raymond, David
Rsync. I also have a root directory in /home to keep local stuff. This is the same for about 20 machines running obsd and is also distributed by rsync. Since it is in home, it survives upgrades. Various shell scripts in /home/root/etc are used to manage the system. On Wed, May 8, 2024, 11:08

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-08 Thread Willy Manga
Hi, On 06/05/2024 18:14, Benjamin Raskin wrote: Hello, all; I've been having some issues getting bgpd to announce IPv6 routes, apologies for the dumb question in advance. I've setup rad(8) and bgpd(8) on an OpenBSD machine. bgpd(8) is sending routes over to some neighbors (routes such as

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-08 Thread Jan Stary
On May 07 22:15:27, olp...@yahoo.ca wrote: > I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing > environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home > or work) and laptops? git > Do you also maintain installeded/removed packages in some standard

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-08 Thread Fernando Milovich
duplicity On 2024-05-07 9:09 p.m., Matthew Ernisse wrote: On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:25:43AM +0100, Jo MacMahon said: I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base system I've had a set of functions in my .profile for about 15 years that keeps large parts of my home directory

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-08 Thread Karsten Pedersen
> What exactly is "good" with OpenBSD? I summarize the issues in my last email > So again, what is "slow"? The machine running OpenBSD. Compared to similar ThinkCenters I have (m73 Tiny and m92 Tiny). Also a Raspberry Pi 3 (running OpenBSD at lowest freq). It seems not to be the SSD disk

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Nick Holland
On 5/7/24 19:25, Jo MacMahon wrote: I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base system - I would want something like etckeeper or git that was a true version control system, rather than dump(8)/restore(8) which are backup systems. I'm idly considering learning CVS for it, and

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Matthew Ernisse
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:25:43AM +0100, Jo MacMahon said: I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base system I've had a set of functions in my .profile for about 15 years that keeps large parts of my home directory available and in sync across Linux, macOS and OpenBSD

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Jo MacMahon
I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base system - I would want something like etckeeper or git that was a true version control system, rather than dump(8)/restore(8) which are backup systems. I'm idly considering learning CVS for it, and I suppose if I'm going to become a

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Mario Theodoridis
On 07.05.2024 16:08, Martin Kjær Jørgensen wrote: Hello, I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops? Example programs for this could be syncthing, stow, chezmoi,

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Robert B. Carleton
Stefan Moran writes: > dump(8) and restore(8) also worth mentioning; I'm particularly fond of > restore(8)'s interactive mode that lets you cherrypick what you want to > import. I agree. My backups are mostly dump(8) and rsync(1). Out of habit, I've used cpio(1) in copy mode (-p) for copying

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread olp_76
rdist On Wednesday, May 8, 2024 at 12:25:13 a.m. GMT+9, Martin Kjær Jørgensen wrote: Hello, I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops? Example programs

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Ian Darwin
On 5/7/24 1:09 PM, Страхиња Радић wrote: Дана 24/05/07 04:08PM, Martin Kjær Jørgensen написа: I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops? git(1), rsync(1). git push

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Stefan Moran
dump(8) and restore(8) also worth mentioning; I'm particularly fond of restore(8)'s interactive mode that lets you cherrypick what you want to import.

Re: ATB.com

2024-05-07 Thread Страхиња Радић
Дана 24/05/07 04:45PM, Riccardo Mottola написа: > I too... even if I don't like where Firefox is going with their UI and rustc > choices... I feel it is still better than Chromium, where the long arm of > data-sucking of Google is so strong. Some links to check out:

Re: Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Страхиња Радић
Дана 24/05/07 04:08PM, Martin Kjær Jørgensen написа: > I was wondering which programs you use for > replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd > systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops? git(1), rsync(1).

Re: ATB.com

2024-05-07 Thread Riccardo Mottola
Hi Austin, I feel your pain. The world things Chrome, or at least Blink, is the only Browser. It is the new IE!!! Austin Hook wrote: In the past 6 months is has gotten more and more difficult to sign-on to with Firefox and OpenBSD, as they have tried to make their sites more and more bullet

Favorite configuration and system replication tools?

2024-05-07 Thread Martin Kjær Jørgensen
Hello, I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops? Example programs for this could be syncthing, stow, chezmoi, etc. Do you also maintain installeded/removed packages

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-07 Thread Johannes Thyssen Tishman
2024-05-07T09:54:23Z "Karsten Pedersen" : > > Second-hand Lenovo M710q tiny with a wifi-card could also work: > > https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=view=5296 > > A quick note that the slightly older M625q (with an AMD processor) isn't > quite so good with OpenBSD. > It runs overly slow and I

7.5/amd64 acpitz problem with syspatch75-001

2024-05-07 Thread infoomatic
Hi, I just updated my 7.5/amd64 system with syspatch75-001_xserver. Unfortunately now when booting shortly after "starting network" I receive the error: "acpitz0: critical temperature exceeded 60C, shutting down". Disabling acpitz* at the boot-config helps, or, also reverting the syspatch is a

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-07 Thread Mihai Popescu
> A quick note that the slightly older M625q (with an AMD processor) isn't > quite so good with OpenBSD. What exactly is "good" with OpenBSD? > It runs overly slow and I have yet had time to figure out why. So again, what is "slow"? > Interestingly, even on apm -H it takes longer to compile a

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-07 Thread Karsten Pedersen
> Second-hand Lenovo M710q tiny with a wifi-card could also work: > https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=view=5296 A quick note that the slightly older M625q (with an AMD processor) isn't quite so good with OpenBSD. It runs overly slow and I have yet had time to figure out why. Interestingly,

Re: pfstat is having a bad time

2024-05-07 Thread Christer Solskogen
On Mon, May 6, 2024 at 11:06 AM Stuart Henderson wrote: > I've bumped REVISION in the port so pkg_add -u should pick it up after > the next set of packages are built, but if you rorce a reinstall of > pfstat from current packages, that should do the trick too. > That worked. Thanks! -- chs

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-07 Thread Mizsei Zoltán
Second-hand Lenovo M710q tiny with a wifi-card could also work: https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=view=5296 Jan Stary írta 2024. máj.. 7, K-n 08:47 órakor: > On May 06 21:03:17, mytraddr...@gmail.com wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-07 Thread Jan Stary
On May 06 21:03:17, mytraddr...@gmail.com wrote: > Hi all, > > can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the following > requirements: > > - fully supports OpenBSD > - no noise > - good quality wifi > - small form factor preferably > - processor does not need to be fast (no

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-06 Thread Martin
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 09:03:17PM +0100, James Johnson wrote: > Hi all, > > can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the following \ > requirements: > - fully supports OpenBSD > - no noise > - good quality wifi > - small form factor preferably > - processor does not need to

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Benjamin Raskin
Sorry wrong address in my previous email I meant to show this entry in my routing table 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a 56:af:97:0f:66:6e UHL0 12 - 4 vport0 On Mon, May 6, 2024 at 2:03 PM Benjamin Raskin wrote: > > As mentioned in my previous

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-06 Thread Zé Loff
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 09:03:17PM +0100, James Johnson wrote: > Hi all, > > can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the following > requirements: > > - fully supports OpenBSD > - no noise > - good quality wifi > - small form factor preferably > - processor does not need

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-06 Thread Jo MacMahon
I recently switched my RockPro64 over to OpenBSD and so far everything works nicely with it. I had trouble getting it to boot at first, but it was my fault for not fully reading the installation instructions[1], and assuming that I could simply `dd` the provided miniroot75.img to an SD card and

Re: Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-06 Thread Implausibility
For various values of 'fully supports', I have multiple odroid HC4 units, and they all run very well. I've booted them with OpenBSD to play with it, but inevitably switched back to Linux. No built-in WiFi, but it has a single USB socket that you could plug in a WiFi/Bluetooth dongle. -JD. >

AES-256 ist sicher wie AES-128 im brute force

2024-05-06 Thread Peter J. Philipp
The title says "AES-256 is as safe as AES-128" for a translation. Hi, Dear everyone who I contacted and haven't contacted so far. I have run a test program against a practiced attack against AES-256. While trying to restore the key with just 1 guessed t0 value (I have almost given up) But in

Hardware recommendation for small form factor, noiseless, server

2024-05-06 Thread James Johnson
Hi all, can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the following requirements: - fully supports OpenBSD - no noise - good quality wifi - small form factor preferably - processor does not need to be fast (no highly intensive compute load) - low RAM need - needs 1 TB of hard

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Benjamin Raskin
vport0 is a member of veb0, along with em0, em1, em2, and em3, with rad(8) running on vport0 announcing 2620:ba:6000:3:: vport0 only has a link-local address. The premise of not having a dedicated route for 2620:ba:6000:3::/64 is that multiple routers in various locations can advertise a prefix

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Claudio Jeker
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 02:36:07PM -0400, Benjamin Raskin wrote: > Hello, Claudio; > > Sorry about the mistake, I meant to paste the route entry for > 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a > and instead pasted the link local address. I looked at your route output and it makes little sense. How is

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Benjamin Raskin
Hello, Claudio; Sorry about the mistake, I meant to paste the route entry for 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a and instead pasted the link local address. Here is the output of the two commands prod-router-wat-01$ bgpctl show fib 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a flags: B = BGP, C =

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Claudio Jeker
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 02:03:52PM -0400, Benjamin Raskin wrote: > As mentioned in my previous email, I'm looking to advertise global > addresses such as 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a, but then > I took a look at my routing table and noticed that gateway/nexthop > for this global address is a

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Benjamin Raskin
As mentioned in my previous email, I'm looking to advertise global addresses such as 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a, but then I took a look at my routing table and noticed that gateway/nexthop for this global address is a MAC address fe80::58d2:48ff:fee6:270a%vport0

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Benjamin Raskin
Hello, Peter; The addresses I'm trying to announce are global i.e. 2620:ba:6000:3:58d2:48ff:fee6:270a , however bgpd(8) doesn't want to announce them for some reason. When I check my routing table they appear however, when taking a look at bgpctl they are not announced. Ben Raskin On Mon, May

Re: bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Peter Hessler
On 2024 May 06 (Mon) at 10:14:21 -0400 (-0400), Benjamin Raskin wrote: :Hello, all; : :I've been having some issues getting bgpd to announce IPv6 routes, ... : :bgpd(8) is configued to advertise all connected and static routes, :however bgpd(8) only advertises routes that are connected to the

bgpd(8) not announcing IPv6 addresses from local network

2024-05-06 Thread Benjamin Raskin
Hello, all; I've been having some issues getting bgpd to announce IPv6 routes, apologies for the dumb question in advance. I've setup rad(8) and bgpd(8) on an OpenBSD machine. bgpd(8) is sending routes over to some neighbors (routes such as fd80::fce1:baff:fea6:bf3a) while rad(8) is sending

unwind. entry is marked as invalid

2024-05-06 Thread Maksim Rodin
Hello, I often have to deal with unwind refusing to serve dns queries. When it happens I see an entry like this in the daemon log: "May 6 13:15:22 main unwind[42415]: validation failure : key for validation mangolassi.it. is marked as invalid because of a previous no DNSSEC records" Reading

Re: webssh does not install

2024-05-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2024-05-06, Eyüp Hakan Duran wrote: > --9fb6bb0617c0773e > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" > > Hi all, > > I am trying to install webssh, which is a python package, on OpenBSD 7.5. > My goal is to provide a tool for my email server users a means to change > their

Re: pfstat is having a bad time

2024-05-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2024-05-05, Christer Solskogen wrote: > Running pfstat -q gives: > ioctl: DIOCGETSTATUS: Permission denied > pf_query: query_counters() failed > > This is on a newly updated system (current) > OpenBSD tugs.antarctica.no 7.5 GENERIC.MP#50 amd64 > > Packages are also all up to date. The kernel

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