To Theo De Radt, if he is listening.

2007-04-02 Thread Bray Mailloux
The picture on your main website contains a number of servers of various 
models and makes, however, most of them have labels, but the smallest of 
the computers cannot be made out.


What are they?



Sensors problem

2007-04-02 Thread MichaƂ Koc

Hello,

I've a problem with sensors on one of my machines, it seems to be coming 
from ichiic slave detection.

The machine is:
INTEL BLKD865GSAL motherboard hw.product=D865GSA
It contains a Winbond W83627EHG chip, witch is the lead-free version of 
W83627EHF - supported by OpenBSD (google says they are completely 
compatible, even chip id)


But nothing is found.

Could someone please help me with this issue ?

The complete dmesg with ICHIIC_DEBUG enabled:

OpenBSD 4.1 (GENERIC) #10: Sat Mar 31 11:10:52 CEST 2007
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
cpu0: Intel(R) Celeron(R) D CPU 3.06GHz (GenuineIntel 686-class) 3.06 GHz
cpu0: 
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,CNXT-ID,CX16,xTPR
real mem  = 534540288 (522012K)
avail mem = 480038912 (468788K)
using 4278 buffers containing 26849280 bytes (26220K) of memory
mainbus0 (root)
bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+ BIOS, date 05/04/06, BIOS32 rev. 0 @ 0xf0010, SMBIOS 
rev. 2.3 @ 0xfba60 (68 entries)
bios0: Intel Corporation D865GSA
apm0 at bios0: Power Management spec V1.2
apm0: AC on, battery charge unknown
apm0: flags 30102 dobusy 0 doidle 1
pcibios0 at bios0: rev 3.0 @ 0xf/0x1
pcibios0: PCI IRQ Routing Table rev 1.0 @ 0xf3d00/176 (9 entries)
pcibios0: PCI Interrupt Router at 000:31:0 (Intel 82801EB/ER LPC rev 0x00)
pcibios0: PCI bus #1 is the last bus
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0xa400!
acpi at mainbus0 not configured
cpu0 at mainbus0
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0: configuration mode 1 (no bios)
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel 82865G/PE/P CPU-I/0-1 rev 0x02
vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel 82865G Video rev 0x02: aperture at 
0xf000, size 0x800
wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (80x25, vt100 emulation)
uhci0 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 Intel 82801EB/ER USB rev 0x02: irq 11
usb0 at uhci0: USB revision 1.0
uhub0 at usb0
uhub0: Intel UHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub0: 2 ports with 2 removable, self powered
uhci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 1 Intel 82801EB/ER USB rev 0x02: irq 5
usb1 at uhci1: USB revision 1.0
uhub1 at usb1
uhub1: Intel UHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub1: 2 ports with 2 removable, self powered
uhci2 at pci0 dev 29 function 2 Intel 82801EB/ER USB rev 0x02: irq 9
usb2 at uhci2: USB revision 1.0
uhub2 at usb2
uhub2: Intel UHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub2: 2 ports with 2 removable, self powered
uhci3 at pci0 dev 29 function 3 Intel 82801EB/ER USB rev 0x02: irq 11
usb3 at uhci3: USB revision 1.0
uhub3 at usb3
uhub3: Intel UHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub3: 2 ports with 2 removable, self powered
ehci0 at pci0 dev 29 function 7 Intel 82801EB/ER USB2 rev 0x02: irq 10
usb4 at ehci0: USB revision 2.0
uhub4 at usb4
uhub4: Intel EHCI root hub, rev 2.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub4: 8 ports with 8 removable, self powered
ppb0 at pci0 dev 30 function 0 Intel 82801BA AGP rev 0xc2
pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
re0 at pci1 dev 2 function 0 Realtek 8169 rev 0x10: RTL8169S (0x0400), irq 
12, address 00:30:4f:52:35:ff
rgephy0 at re0 phy 7: RTL8169S/8110S PHY, rev. 0
rl0 at pci1 dev 3 function 0 Realtek 8139 rev 0x10: irq 10, address 
00:19:d1:4d:fa:61
rlphy0 at rl0 phy 0: RTL internal PHY
ichpcib0 at pci0 dev 31 function 0 Intel 82801EB/ER LPC rev 0x02
pciide0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 Intel 82801EB SATA rev 0x02: DMA, channel 0 
configured to compatibility, channel 1 configured to compatibility
wd0 at pciide0 channel 1 drive 0: WDC WD1600YS-01SHB1
wd0: 16-sector PIO, LBA48, 157066MB, 321672960 sectors
wd0(pciide0:1:0): using PIO mode 4, Ultra-DMA mode 5
ichiic0 at pci0 dev 31 function 3 Intel 82801EB/ER SMBus rev 0x02: conf 
0x0001: irq 12
iic0 at ichiic0
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x18, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x1a, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x20, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x21, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x22, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x23, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x24, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x25, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x26, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x27, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 0x0
ichiic0: intr st 0x44DEVERR,INUSE
ichiic0: exec: op 1, addr 0x28, cmdlen 1, len 0, flags 0x00
ichiic0: exec: st 

Re: vi keys in mg

2007-04-02 Thread Han Boetes
Hi Kjell,

I just tried your patch and this happened:

m-x vi-mode
i
Too many modes

I don't know much about vi but that looks odd.


# Han



obsd with soekris as On board computer

2007-04-02 Thread Raul Aldaz
Hi misc,

Does any body know of any experience mounting this in a vehicle? I would 
like to use it to provide wireless internet access with something like a 
Merlin or Novatel pcmcia card. 


Regards



Re: [OT] Re: Long WEP key

2007-04-02 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 10:53:50AM +0800, Lars Hansson wrote:
 Joachim Schipper wrote:
 All in all, I might choose OpenVPN if it involved end users (lots of
 NAT, Windows, and other crappy stuff), 
 
 OpenVPN isn't exactly awesome on Windows.

No, but 'not exactly awesome' is pretty much a given if Windows is
involved. And OpenVPN is easier to get working with consumer routers
than IPsec.

-- 
TFMotD: SuidCells (5) - lists AFS cells for which afsd will honor the
setuid bit



Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread carlopmart

Hi all,

 Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this server use SAS 
or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under OpenBSD 4.0?


Many thanks.

--
CL Martinez
carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com



Re: To Theo De Radt, if he is listening.

2007-04-02 Thread Didier Wiroth
Hello,
You probably mean the sharp zaurus:
http://www.openbsd.org/zaurus.html

Kind regards,
Didier

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 On Behalf Of Bray Mailloux
 Sent: 02 April 2007 08:39
 To: misc@openbsd.org
 Subject: To Theo De Radt, if he is listening.
 
 The picture on your main website contains a number of servers 
 of various models and makes, however, most of them have 
 labels, but the smallest of the computers cannot be made out.
 
 What are they?



Re: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread Timo Schoeler
On Mon, 02 Apr 2007 12:36:48 +0200
carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi all,
 
   Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this server use 
 SAS 
 or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under OpenBSD 4.0?
 
 Many thanks.
 
 -- 
 CL Martinez
 carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com

yep,

works for me like a charm; however, i tested with 4.1 snapshots. if you like i 
can verify it with 4.0.

best,

timo



Re: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread Cristiano Deana

2007/4/2, carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED]:


  Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this server use SAS
or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under OpenBSD 4.0?


yes. supported with mfi(4) driver, manageable by bioctl(8) utility

--
Cris, member of G.U.F.I
Italian FreeBSD User Group
http://www.gufi.org/



Re: To Theo De Radt, if he is listening.

2007-04-02 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
Bray Mailloux [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 The picture on your main website contains a number of servers of
 various models and makes, however, most of them have labels, but the
 smallest of the computers cannot be made out.

the tiny ones on the shelf there I think are Zauruses.

-- 
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://www.blug.linux.no/rfc1149/ http://www.datadok.no/ http://www.nuug.no/
First, we kill all the spammers The Usenet Bard, Twice-forwarded tales
delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.



Re: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread carlopmart

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: -


To: openbsd misc misc@openbsd.org
From: carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 02/04/2007 12:36PM
Subject: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

Hi all,

Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this
server use SAS
or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under
OpenBSD 4.0?

Many thanks.

--
CL Martinez
carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com




OpenBSD 4.0 (GENERIC.MP) #936: Sat Sep 16 19:27:28 MDT 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC.MP
cpu0: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU 5110 @ 1.60GHz (GenuineIntel 686-class) 1.60
GHz
cpu0:
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16

real mem  = 1072955392 (1047808K)
avail mem = 970682368 (947932K)
using 4256 buffers containing 53751808 bytes (52492K) of memory
mainbus0 (root)
bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+(00) BIOS, date 10/18/06, BIOS32 rev. 0 @
0xffe90, SMBIOS rev. 2.4 @ 0x3ffbc000 (62 entries)
bios0: Dell Inc. PowerEdge 1950
pcibios0 at bios0: rev 2.1 @ 0xf/0x1
pcibios0: PCI IRQ Routing Table rev 1.0 @ 0xfada0/368 (21 entries)
pcibios0: PCI Interrupt Router at 000:31:0 (Intel 6321ESB LPC rev 0x00)
pcibios0: PCI bus #15 is the last bus
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0x9000! 0xc9000/0x4e00 0xec000/0x4000!
ipmi0 at mainbus0: version 2.0 interface KCS iobase 0xca8/8 spacing 4
mainbus0: Intel MP Specification (Version 1.4) (DELL PE 01B3 )
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: unknown Core FSB_FREQ value 0 (0xc188149f)
cpu0: apic clock running at 266 MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU 5110 @ 1.60GHz (GenuineIntel 686-class) 1.60
GHz
cpu1:
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16

mainbus0: bus 0 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 1 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 2 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 3 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 4 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 5 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 6 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 7 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 8 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 9 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 10 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 11 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 12 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 13 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 14 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 15 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 16 is type ISA
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 2
ioapic1 at mainbus0: apid 3 pa 0xfec81000, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic1: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 3
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0: configuration mode 1 (no bios)
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel 5000X Host rev 0x12
ppb0 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci1 at ppb0 bus 5
ppb1 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci2 at ppb1 bus 6
ppb2 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci3 at ppb2 bus 7
ppb3 at pci3 dev 0 function 0 ServerWorks PCIE-PCIX rev 0xc3
pci4 at ppb3 bus 8
bnx0 at pci4 dev 0 function 0 Broadcom BCM5708 rev 0x12: apic 2 int 16
(irq 5), address 00:15:c5:ef:2a:77
brgphy0 at bnx0 phy 1: BCM5708C 10/100/1000baseT PHY, rev. 6
ppb4 at pci2 dev 1 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci5 at ppb4 bus 9
ppb5 at pci1 dev 0 function 3 Intel 6321ESB PCIE-PCIX rev 0x01
pci6 at ppb5 bus 10
ppb6 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci7 at ppb6 bus 1
ppb7 at pci7 dev 0 function 0 Intel PCIE-PCIE rev 0x09
pci8 at ppb7 bus 2
mpi0 at pci8 dev 8 function 0 Symbios Logic SAS1068 rev 0x01: apic 3 int
0 (irq 5)
scsibus0 at mpi0: 126 targets
sd0 at scsibus0 targ 0 lun 0: SEAGATE, ST336754SS, S411 SCSI3 0/direct
fixed
sd0: 34732MB, 50824 cyl, 2 head, 699 sec, 512 bytes/sec, 71132959 sec total
ses0 at scsibus0 targ 8 lun 0: DP, BACKPLANE, 1.00 SCSI3 13/enclosure
services fixed
ppb8 at pci0 dev 4 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci9 at ppb8 bus 11
ppb9 at pci0 dev 5 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci10 at ppb9 bus 12
ppb10 at pci0 dev 6 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci11 at ppb10 bus 13
ppb11 at pci0 dev 7 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci12 at ppb11 bus 14
pchb1 at pci0 dev 16 function 0 Intel 5000 Error Reporting rev 0x12
pchb2 at pci0 dev 16 function 1 Intel 5000 Error Reporting rev 0x12
pchb3 at pci0 dev 16 function 2 Intel 5000 Error Reporting rev 0x12
pchb4 at pci0 dev 17 function 0 Intel 5000 Reserved rev 0x12
pchb5 at pci0 dev 19 function 0 Intel 5000 Reserved rev 0x12
pchb6 at pci0 dev 21 function 0 Intel 5000 FBD rev 0x12
pchb7 at pci0 dev 22 function 0 Intel 5000 FBD rev 0x12
ppb12 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x09
pci13 at ppb12 bus 3
ppb13 at pci13 dev 0 function 0 ServerWorks PCIE-PCIX rev 0xc3
pci14 at ppb13 bus 4
bnx1 at pci14 dev 0 function 0 Broadcom BCM5708 rev 0x12: apic 2 int 16
(irq 5), address 00:15:c5:ef:2a:75
brgphy1 at bnx1 phy 1: BCM5708C 10/100/1000baseT PHY, rev. 6
uhci0 at pci0 dev 29 

Re: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread Marco Peereboom
use 4.1, several fixes went in for bnx that make it a much nicer NIC.

On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 12:45:12PM +0200, Timo Schoeler wrote:
 On Mon, 02 Apr 2007 12:36:48 +0200
 carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Hi all,
  
Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this server use 
  SAS 
  or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under OpenBSD 4.0?
  
  Many thanks.
  
  -- 
  CL Martinez
  carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com
 
 yep,
 
 works for me like a charm; however, i tested with 4.1 snapshots. if you like 
 i can verify it with 4.0.
 
 best,
 
 timo



Re: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread A . Parazzini
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: -

To: openbsd misc misc@openbsd.org
From: carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 02/04/2007 12:36PM
Subject: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

Hi all,

 Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this
server use SAS
or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under
OpenBSD 4.0?

Many thanks.

--
CL Martinez
carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com



OpenBSD 4.0 (GENERIC.MP) #936: Sat Sep 16 19:27:28 MDT 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC.MP
cpu0: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU 5110 @ 1.60GHz (GenuineIntel 686-class) 1.60
GHz
cpu0:
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUS
H,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16

real mem  = 1072955392 (1047808K)
avail mem = 970682368 (947932K)
using 4256 buffers containing 53751808 bytes (52492K) of memory
mainbus0 (root)
bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+(00) BIOS, date 10/18/06, BIOS32 rev. 0 @
0xffe90, SMBIOS rev. 2.4 @ 0x3ffbc000 (62 entries)
bios0: Dell Inc. PowerEdge 1950
pcibios0 at bios0: rev 2.1 @ 0xf/0x1
pcibios0: PCI IRQ Routing Table rev 1.0 @ 0xfada0/368 (21 entries)
pcibios0: PCI Interrupt Router at 000:31:0 (Intel 6321ESB LPC rev 0x00)
pcibios0: PCI bus #15 is the last bus
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0x9000! 0xc9000/0x4e00 0xec000/0x4000!
ipmi0 at mainbus0: version 2.0 interface KCS iobase 0xca8/8 spacing 4
mainbus0: Intel MP Specification (Version 1.4) (DELL PE 01B3 )
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: unknown Core FSB_FREQ value 0 (0xc188149f)
cpu0: apic clock running at 266 MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU 5110 @ 1.60GHz (GenuineIntel 686-class) 1.60
GHz
cpu1:
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUS
H,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16

mainbus0: bus 0 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 1 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 2 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 3 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 4 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 5 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 6 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 7 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 8 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 9 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 10 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 11 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 12 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 13 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 14 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 15 is type PCI
mainbus0: bus 16 is type ISA
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 2
ioapic1 at mainbus0: apid 3 pa 0xfec81000, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic1: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 3
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0: configuration mode 1 (no bios)
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel 5000X Host rev 0x12
ppb0 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci1 at ppb0 bus 5
ppb1 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci2 at ppb1 bus 6
ppb2 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci3 at ppb2 bus 7
ppb3 at pci3 dev 0 function 0 ServerWorks PCIE-PCIX rev 0xc3
pci4 at ppb3 bus 8
bnx0 at pci4 dev 0 function 0 Broadcom BCM5708 rev 0x12: apic 2 int 16
(irq 5), address 00:15:c5:ef:2a:77
brgphy0 at bnx0 phy 1: BCM5708C 10/100/1000baseT PHY, rev. 6
ppb4 at pci2 dev 1 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci5 at ppb4 bus 9
ppb5 at pci1 dev 0 function 3 Intel 6321ESB PCIE-PCIX rev 0x01
pci6 at ppb5 bus 10
ppb6 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci7 at ppb6 bus 1
ppb7 at pci7 dev 0 function 0 Intel PCIE-PCIE rev 0x09
pci8 at ppb7 bus 2
mpi0 at pci8 dev 8 function 0 Symbios Logic SAS1068 rev 0x01: apic 3 int
0 (irq 5)
scsibus0 at mpi0: 126 targets
sd0 at scsibus0 targ 0 lun 0: SEAGATE, ST336754SS, S411 SCSI3 0/direct
fixed
sd0: 34732MB, 50824 cyl, 2 head, 699 sec, 512 bytes/sec, 71132959 sec total
ses0 at scsibus0 targ 8 lun 0: DP, BACKPLANE, 1.00 SCSI3 13/enclosure
services fixed
ppb8 at pci0 dev 4 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci9 at ppb8 bus 11
ppb9 at pci0 dev 5 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci10 at ppb9 bus 12
ppb10 at pci0 dev 6 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci11 at ppb10 bus 13
ppb11 at pci0 dev 7 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci12 at ppb11 bus 14
pchb1 at pci0 dev 16 function 0 Intel 5000 Error Reporting rev 0x12
pchb2 at pci0 dev 16 function 1 Intel 5000 Error Reporting rev 0x12
pchb3 at pci0 dev 16 function 2 Intel 5000 Error Reporting rev 0x12
pchb4 at pci0 dev 17 function 0 Intel 5000 Reserved rev 0x12
pchb5 at pci0 dev 19 function 0 Intel 5000 Reserved rev 0x12
pchb6 at pci0 dev 21 function 0 Intel 5000 FBD rev 0x12
pchb7 at pci0 dev 22 function 0 Intel 5000 FBD rev 0x12
ppb12 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x09
pci13 at ppb12 bus 3
ppb13 at pci13 dev 0 function 0 ServerWorks PCIE-PCIX rev 0xc3
pci14 at ppb13 bus 4
bnx1 at pci14 dev 0 function 0 Broadcom BCM5708 rev 0x12: apic 2 int 16
(irq 5), address 00:15:c5:ef:2a:75
brgphy1 at bnx1 phy 1: BCM5708C 10/100/1000baseT PHY, rev. 6
uhci0 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 Intel 6321ESB USB 

Re: [OT] Re: Long WEP key

2007-04-02 Thread Chris Black
Joachim Schipper wrote:
 On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 10:53:50AM +0800, Lars Hansson wrote:
   
 Joachim Schipper wrote:
 
 All in all, I might choose OpenVPN if it involved end users (lots of
 NAT, Windows, and other crappy stuff), 
   
 OpenVPN isn't exactly awesome on Windows.
 

 No, but 'not exactly awesome' is pretty much a given if Windows is
 involved. And OpenVPN is easier to get working with consumer routers
 than IPsec.

   
I think it is pretty damn decent myself, if not awesome. We set up our
employee machines with the proper keys and config file, that part
requires some effort. However, you can create an installer for the
windows gui that has your config preloaded (not sure about keys). Once
it is installed it is as simple as right clicking a systray icon and
choosing to activate the VPN. Pretty easy for the end user. We've also
found the installation and operation much less troublesome than any
freely available windows IPSec client we've tried.



Re: obsd with soekris as On board computer

2007-04-02 Thread Jason Beaudoin

On 4/2/07, Raul Aldaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi misc,

Does any body know of any experience mounting this in a vehicle? I would
like to use it to provide wireless internet access with something like a
Merlin or Novatel pcmcia card.


What sort of specifics do you have in mind..physically mounting? Type
of chasis? Where to put it, considerations to make when mounting a
computer inside a car? or something specific to the soekris?

~J



Re: obsd with soekris as On board computer

2007-04-02 Thread Nick !

On 4/2/07, Jason Beaudoin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On 4/2/07, Raul Aldaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi misc,

 Does any body know of any experience mounting this in a vehicle? I would
 like to use it to provide wireless internet access with something like a
 Merlin or Novatel pcmcia card.

What sort of specifics do you have in mind..physically mounting? Type
of chasis? Where to put it, considerations to make when mounting a
computer inside a car? or something specific to the soekris?


Yeah, this isn't really an OpenBSD specific thing. For form-factor
mounting issues you could start by asking the people at
http://www.mini-itx.com/, but as far as OpenBSD goes there should
really be no difference than doing any other embedded install.

This sounds like a fun project. Post pictures when you're done, please.

-Nick



Re: [OT] Re: Long WEP key

2007-04-02 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 08:38:55AM -0500, Chris Black wrote:
 Joachim Schipper wrote:
  On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 10:53:50AM +0800, Lars Hansson wrote:

  Joachim Schipper wrote:
  
  All in all, I might choose OpenVPN if it involved end users (lots of
  NAT, Windows, and other crappy stuff), 
 
  OpenVPN isn't exactly awesome on Windows.
 
  No, but 'not exactly awesome' is pretty much a given if Windows is
  involved. And OpenVPN is easier to get working with consumer routers
  than IPsec.
 
 I think it is pretty damn decent myself, if not awesome. We set up our
 employee machines with the proper keys and config file, that part
 requires some effort. However, you can create an installer for the
 windows gui that has your config preloaded (not sure about keys). Once
 it is installed it is as simple as right clicking a systray icon and
 choosing to activate the VPN. Pretty easy for the end user. We've also
 found the installation and operation much less troublesome than any
 freely available windows IPSec client we've tried.

Yes, but it's still a userland VPN which is severely 'elegance impaired'
(WhyTF does Windows require four IP addresses?).

But yes, it works. Still, it involves Windows - and I'm inclined to
agree with what the signature picker chose this time.

Joachim

-- 
TFMotD: fsck_msdos (8) - DOS/Windows (FAT) file system consistency
checker



Re: possible cracking attempt

2007-04-02 Thread Sean Malloy

Thanks for all of the information it was very informative.


--
Sean Malloy
Registered GNU/Linux User #417855
Happy Hacking! ;-)
www.catgrepsort.com



manual install mrtg

2007-04-02 Thread ejun
guys you have some idea where could i get on how to manully install mrtg?
except from google ;) coz i've been searching that already for several
days but i have no luck. i found that tutorial once at bsdvault but that
site is already not available.



Re: Widescreen flat panel

2007-04-02 Thread Eric Dillenseger
On Sun, Apr 01, 2007 at 10:44:46AM -0700, J.C. Roberts wrote:
 On Sunday 01 April 2007 09:22, Srebrenko Sehic wrote:
  On 3/31/07, Eric Dillenseger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   I tried different ModeLine generators from the net, and tried to do
   it myself using Xorg' logfile. Not helping me out.
 
  I have a Dell 20 inch monitor and it works fine with it's native
  1680x1050. I had to tweak the Modeline manually but eventually got it
  to work. On a oldish S3 card though. But it just might work for you
  too.
 
  Section Monitor
 
  Identifier   Monitor0
  VendorName   DEL
  ModelNameDELL 2007WFP
  #HorizSync30.0 - 83.0
  #VertRefresh  56.0 - 76.0
  Option  DPMS
 
  ModeLine[EMAIL PROTECTED] 119.0 1680 1728 1760 1840 1050
  1053 1059 1080 -HSync +VSync
  EndSection
 
 Monitor timing/sync is hardware specific and in some cases, if you get 
 it wrong, you can do permanent damage to your monitor.
 
 Use gtf(1) to probe your hardware to figure out timings/sync for your 
 desired resolution/refresh, and then do a sanity check of the reported 
 values against the hardware documentation.
 

Hi,

Now I have it working with the right resolution, but I can't go over
16bit colors. My photos don't look very good but at least it works for
most common tasks. Or perhaps it isn't even 16, anyway.
I'm wondering why X doesn't handle 24 bit, even with videoram defined.

-- 
Linux is for Windows(c) haters while BSD is for UNIX lovers.
http://teardrop.free.fr/



Re: manual install mrtg

2007-04-02 Thread Martin Toft
On Tue, Apr 03, 2007 at 12:01:06AM +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 guys you have some idea where could i get on how to manully install
 mrtg?  except from google ;) coz i've been searching that already for
 several days but i have no luck. i found that tutorial once at
 bsdvault but that site is already not available.

pkg_add mrtg

Afterwards, read
http://oss.oetiker.ch/mrtg/doc/mrtg-unix-guide.en.html#configuration

/Martin

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had 
a name of signature.asc]



Re: manual install mrtg

2007-04-02 Thread Dan Farrell
I wrote a really bare-bones installation guide for manual installation
of MRTG here...

http://danno.appliedi.net/drupal/?q=node/13

This is for a Virtual Private Server running Fedora Core2, but oddly
enough, I think the same steps apply.

If it doesn't work for you, complain in silence. If it does work for
you... wonderful!

Danno


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, April 02, 2007 12:01 PM
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: manual install mrtg

guys you have some idea where could i get on how to manully install
mrtg?
except from google ;) coz i've been searching that already for several
days but i have no luck. i found that tutorial once at bsdvault but that
site is already not available.



Re: Dell 1950 under OpenBSD

2007-04-02 Thread John Nietzsche

Dear Schoeler,

Is it possible to attached serially one to other PERC 5/i and have the
server storage capacity extended ?

Thanks in advance.

On 4/2/07, Timo Schoeler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Mon, 02 Apr 2007 12:36:48 +0200
carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi all,

   Somebody have test it this Dell server under OpenBSD 4.0? this server use 
SAS
 or SATA disk with PERC 5/i controller, are they supported under OpenBSD 4.0?

 Many thanks.

 --
 CL Martinez
 carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com

yep,

works for me like a charm; however, i tested with 4.1 snapshots. if you like i 
can verify it with 4.0.

best,

timo




qemu/kqemu

2007-04-02 Thread Albert Hooper Hooper

I tried to install windows 2000 professional on OpenBSD/qemu.
That is slow. :-/
anyone patch/kqemu around ?



Re: qemu/kqemu

2007-04-02 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 05:20:14PM -0300, Albert Hooper Hooper wrote:
 I tried to install windows 2000 professional on OpenBSD/qemu.
 That is slow. :-/
 anyone patch/kqemu around ?

AFAIK, no such patch is available for OpenBSD.

Take heart, though: the installation is the slowest part.

Joachim

-- 
TFMotD: rwho (1) - who is logged in on local machines



Re: ral, ibss and packets larger than 200 bytes

2007-04-02 Thread Stefan Sperling
On Fri, Mar 16, 2007 at 01:27:38PM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
 Hello,
 
 I've recently got a ral-based card and I have a problem in IBSS mode.
 It seems that ral fails to send any kind of packets larger than
 200 bytes (192 bytes + 8 bytes icmp header).

Just for the record, I've found the problem.

First, I was able to reproduce it with an atw(4) card.
This made me take a look at the other end of the connection.

The ibss station I was trying to connect to is a WRT54G running a
modified version of openWRT (not BSD). The wifi driver it's using is
the proprietary wl driver for Broadcom chips in Linux 2.4 (yuck, I know).

The driver has a fragmentation setting (this has apparently nothing
to do with MTU). It was set to 256 (presumably bytes). Since I've told
the driver not to do fragmentation openbsd connects to the node just fine
with ral(4).  No more truncated packets reported by tcpdump :-)
The connection seems to be very stable so far. I'm happy.

Does anyone know more about this fragmentation thingy? Could it be some
broadcom-specific non-standard feature that no-one else supports?
Or is it something that some drivers in OpenBSD simply lack support for?
As mentioned in my original report wi(4) seemed to be able to cope.

atw(4) seems to have other issues, it sometimes seems to simply loose
the ability to send packets in ibss mode. All of a sudden pings get cut
off. Locally, tcpdump still sees them going out on atw0 but they never
reach the other station. I can reliably reproduce this, but I won't bother
sending a bug report since I can use my ral card now, so I'm fine. 
I can provide details on request if someone seriously wants
to fix atw(4). 

-- 
stefan
http://stsp.in-berlin.de PGP Key: 0xF59D25F0



Re: obsd with soekris as On board computer

2007-04-02 Thread Bryan Vyhmeister

On Apr 2, 2007, at 2:37 AM, Raul Aldaz wrote:

Does any body know of any experience mounting this in a vehicle? I  
would
like to use it to provide wireless internet access with something  
like a

Merlin or Novatel pcmcia card.


I have not physically mounted one in a vehicle but I did do this type  
of setup. It worked great. I would definitely suggest you use a  
Compact Flash to boot from. Only the net4801 supports a hard drive  
anyway. You can take a look at flashdist:


http://www.nmedia.net/~chris/soekris/

or flashboot:

http://www.mindrot.org/projects/flashboot/

Both of these projects are based on OpenBSD. They are both good  
options and can give you some pointers on how to setup your system. A  
GENERIC kernel works on a net4801 or net4526 but you need to compile  
a kernel from flashdist for the net45xx series. I think flashboot has  
pre-compiled kernels for that as well.


Bryan



Re: obsd with soekris as On board computer

2007-04-02 Thread C. Bensend
 http://www.nmedia.net/~chris/soekris/

 or flashboot:

 http://www.mindrot.org/projects/flashboot/

 Both of these projects are based on OpenBSD. They are both good
 options and can give you some pointers on how to setup your system. A
 GENERIC kernel works on a net4801 or net4526 but you need to compile
 a kernel from flashdist for the net45xx series. I think flashboot has
 pre-compiled kernels for that as well.

I just installed a plain ole install on my 4501, no custom kernel
needed.  I think the 2GB flash card cost me $50, and is more than
enough space for my firewall.

Benny


-- 
I've said it before and I'll say it again: If I ever catch a spammer,
I will hang him upside down with rusty barbed wire by his nether-regions
over a pit of rabid lawyers who haven't eaten in days...
  -- Benjamin A. Shelton



Re: USB Printer Recommendation

2007-04-02 Thread James Turner
Well, it seems I'm still having issues with apsfilter.  It prints the first 1/4
of the page on one sheet and the other 3/4 on another.  I'm now trying the
foomatic-rip script again, which is yielding the same result as last time.  Some
one emailed me a nice set of instructions off list, but I no longer have them
since I thought apsfilter was working.  Below is my /etc/printcap file, I have
a2ps, hpijs and ghostscript all installed.  Any help would be great, thanks.

lp|DeskJet:\
  :lp=/dev/ulpt0:\
  :if=/usr/local/bin/foomatic-rip:\
  :sd=/var/spool/lpd/lp:\
  :lf=/var/spool/lpd/lp/log:\
  :af=/usr/local/share/ppd/HP/HP-DeskJet_810C-hpijs.ppd.gz:\
  :sh:

 Alright, I was able to get the printer to print using the apsfilter.  Works
 awesome!  Now to buy some ink and remove all traces of windows from my hard
 drive.  Thanks again everyone!

  Alright, well the disposition didn't have any cheap laser printers but I did
  find a HP DeskJet 810C for $15.  I know you guys said stay away from inkjet
  printers, but the price was right and the hpijs driver says it supports it.
  It's connected via usb.  I installed hpijs along with all it's dependencies.
  I
  then edited /etc/printcap with:
  lp|DeskJet:\
:lp=/dev/ulpt0:\
:af=/usr/local/share/ppd/HP/HP-DeskJEt_810C-hpijs.ppd.gz:\
:if=/usr/local/bin/foomatic-rip:\
:sd=/var/spool/output:\
:sh
  
  After starting lpd, I then tried to print with lpr, lpr /etc/printcap.  
  The
  printer starts up and begins to print, but then the paper light comes on and
  after pressing it, a blank sheet comes out.  Anybody have any thoughts?  Is 
  my
  printcap wrong?  Thanks.



Re: ral, ibss and packets larger than 200 bytes

2007-04-02 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.

I can Report the Same type of problem with a edimax EW-7628IG


Sam Fourman Jr.

On 4/2/07, Stefan Sperling [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Fri, Mar 16, 2007 at 01:27:38PM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
 Hello,

 I've recently got a ral-based card and I have a problem in IBSS mode.
 It seems that ral fails to send any kind of packets larger than
 200 bytes (192 bytes + 8 bytes icmp header).

Just for the record, I've found the problem.

First, I was able to reproduce it with an atw(4) card.
This made me take a look at the other end of the connection.

The ibss station I was trying to connect to is a WRT54G running a
modified version of openWRT (not BSD). The wifi driver it's using is
the proprietary wl driver for Broadcom chips in Linux 2.4 (yuck, I know).

The driver has a fragmentation setting (this has apparently nothing
to do with MTU). It was set to 256 (presumably bytes). Since I've told
the driver not to do fragmentation openbsd connects to the node just fine
with ral(4).  No more truncated packets reported by tcpdump :-)
The connection seems to be very stable so far. I'm happy.

Does anyone know more about this fragmentation thingy? Could it be some
broadcom-specific non-standard feature that no-one else supports?
Or is it something that some drivers in OpenBSD simply lack support for?
As mentioned in my original report wi(4) seemed to be able to cope.

atw(4) seems to have other issues, it sometimes seems to simply loose
the ability to send packets in ibss mode. All of a sudden pings get cut
off. Locally, tcpdump still sees them going out on atw0 but they never
reach the other station. I can reliably reproduce this, but I won't bother
sending a bug report since I can use my ral card now, so I'm fine.
I can provide details on request if someone seriously wants
to fix atw(4).

--
stefan
http://stsp.in-berlin.de PGP Key: 0xF59D25F0




Re: Microsoft gets the Most Secure Operating Systems award

2007-04-02 Thread Sunnz

Thought you might be interested in this:

http://www.omninerd.com/2007/03/26/articles/74

More or less a follow up to the Windows award...

This time with FreeBSD in the comparison...

2007/3/24, Dan Farrell [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

On 3/23/07, Darren Spruell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/23/07, chefren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  p.s. Maybe I was too harsh against Karel?

 Survey says:

 No.

 DS



 I agree :)
 Marius

I'll bottom post just this once to add to this list of agreement.

danno





--
Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html



Re: USB Printer Recommendation

2007-04-02 Thread Denny White

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1





Alright, I was able to get the printer to print using the apsfilter.  Works
awesome!  Now to buy some ink and remove all traces of windows from my hard
drive.  Thanks again everyone!


Alright, well the disposition didn't have any cheap laser printers but I did
find a HP DeskJet 810C for $15.  I know you guys said stay away from inkjet
printers, but the price was right and the hpijs driver says it supports it.
It's connected via usb.  I installed hpijs along with all it's dependencies.
I
then edited /etc/printcap with:
lp|DeskJet:\
  :lp=/dev/ulpt0:\
  :af=/usr/local/share/ppd/HP/HP-DeskJEt_810C-hpijs.ppd.gz:\
  :if=/usr/local/bin/foomatic-rip:\
  :sd=/var/spool/output:\
  :sh

After starting lpd, I then tried to print with lpr, lpr /etc/printcap.
The printer starts up and begins to print, but then the paper light comes
on and after pressing it, a blank sheet comes out.  Anybody have any
thoughts?  Is my printcap wrong?  Thanks.





Today James Turner wrote:


Well, it seems I'm still having issues with apsfilter.  It prints the
first 1/4 of the page on one sheet and the other 3/4 on another.  I'm
now trying the foomatic-rip script again, which is yielding the same
result as last time.  Some one emailed me a nice set of instructions off
list, but I no longer have them  since I thought apsfilter was working.
Below is my /etc/printcap file, I have a2ps, hpijs and ghostscript all
installed.  Any help would be great, thanks.

lp|DeskJet:\
 :lp=/dev/ulpt0:\
 :if=/usr/local/bin/foomatic-rip:\
 :sd=/var/spool/lpd/lp:\
 :lf=/var/spool/lpd/lp/log:\
 :af=/usr/local/share/ppd/HP/HP-DeskJet_810C-hpijs.ppd.gz:\
 :sh:


Moved your posting down so it can be followed better. I never
had much luck with apsfilter or hpijs. I have an old HP DeskJet
722C on an xp box. Everytime I do a new install of OpenBSD, I
copy foomatic-rip  the pertinent ppd file to /usr/local/bin 
use the following /etc/printcap entry:


rp|windows line printer:\
:rp=HPDeskJet:\
:rm=remotexpbox:\
:af=/usr/local/bin/pnm2ppa.ppd:\
:if=/usr/local/bin/foomatic-rip:\
:sd=/var/spool/output:\
:mx#0:\
:sh

I noticed your ppd file is either gzipped or the entry in your
printcap is wrong. That may be a capability of apsfilter, foomatic
or hpijs I'm not familiar with. Don't know, but in all probability,
someone on the list may enlighten me. ;) Also, my printer is not usb
so that may be an issue. I just know the procedure I outlined above
works okay here. So, try putting the ungzipped ppd file into
/usr/local/bin, set the path appropriately in printcap, then try

lpr -Plp filetoprint

Hope this helps.

- --Denny White


===
GnuPG key  : 0x1644E79A  |  http://wwwkeys.nl.pgp.net
Fingerprint: D0A9 AD44 1F10 E09E 0E67  EC25 CB44 F2E5 1644 E79A
===
iD8DBQFGEc9oy0Ty5RZE55oRAi+EAJ9eVlnhCg3yNOPNr/Da71qsCZw8twCgiMtu
DX8aoVA2QVqz0CsImN+GDHc=
=Jfhw
-END PGP SIGNATURE-



Printing using a network printer

2007-04-02 Thread Bray Mailloux
With cups installed, I've run the lpadmin command to install a network 
printing but the console returns this error:


Unable to connect to server: connection refused.

I believe its because there is no port open for the printing and 
computer to communicate through. So, my question is how do I open a port 
for cups and get them  to talk?


I'm using an HP laserjet 2200dn with PCL 6.



Re: Printing using a network printer

2007-04-02 Thread Darren Spruell

On 4/2/07, Bray Mailloux [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

With cups installed, I've run the lpadmin command to install a network
printing but the console returns this error:

Unable to connect to server: connection refused.

I believe its because there is no port open for the printing and
computer to communicate through. So, my question is how do I open a port
for cups and get them  to talk?

I'm using an HP laserjet 2200dn with PCL 6.


You probably need to start cupsd. It should open a TCP port on 636.

DS



Re: Printing using a network printer

2007-04-02 Thread Darren Spruell

On 4/2/07, Darren Spruell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On 4/2/07, Bray Mailloux [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 With cups installed, I've run the lpadmin command to install a network
 printing but the console returns this error:

 Unable to connect to server: connection refused.

 I believe its because there is no port open for the printing and
 computer to communicate through. So, my question is how do I open a port
 for cups and get them  to talk?

 I'm using an HP laserjet 2200dn with PCL 6.

You probably need to start cupsd. It should open a TCP port on 636.


Scratch that, cupsd uses port 631. Typo...

DS