Re: Installer overwrites partition table

2016-08-26 Thread Jay Patel
i won't trust you to feed my dog,if i had one. and i am expert in finding
good dog caretaker.

On Wed, Aug 24, 2016 at 4:45 PM, Bertram Scharpf 
wrote:

> Hi,
>
> first of all, I am an experienced OS installer and I did a
> heck of partitioning in my life. Now I had some unused disk
> space and I found it a good idea to install OpenBSD.
>
> The installers partitioning tool didn't offer me a variant
> that keeps my existing partitions. Therefore I immediately
> stopped it. But yet it was too late. The partition table was
> overwritten.
>
> The damage is not hard for me because I tersely do backups.
> But this behaviour is impudent. This blowfish is not a safe
> operating system, it rather is a poorly prepared fugu.
>
> Bertram
>
>
> --
> Bertram Scharpf
> Stuttgart, Deutschland/Germany
> http://www.bertram-scharpf.de



Re: DigitalOcean and OpenBSD

2016-08-26 Thread Jay Patel
OpenBSD with vultr runs very smooth also it has snapshot option for custom
Operating system which is good.

here is referral link if you wanna use it :
http://www.vultr.com/?ref=6955732

Thanks,
Jay

On Wed, Aug 24, 2016 at 7:10 PM, R0me0 ***  wrote:

> Hello everybody !
>
> Please,
>
> Anyone  already had a disk corruption running OpenBSD @ DigitalOcean with
> disk encryption ?
>
> I had this issue for the third time running OpenBSD 5.9 stable branch and a
> simple "reboot" == No O/S
>
>
> Thanks in advance,



Re: multiple python version

2016-08-16 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks scott. I will look into it. I found john's solution easy though.

On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 7:33 PM, Scott Bonds <sc...@ggr.com> wrote:

> I use pyenv to install multiple versions of python under a user account on
> my OpenBSD boxes.
>
> https://github.com/yyuu/pyenv
>
>
> On 08/16, Jay Patel wrote:
>
>> Oh.. okay.. That was my concern. Thanks.
>>
>> On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 2:11 PM, Stuart Henderson <s...@spacehopper.org>
>> wrote:
>>
>> On 2016-08-16, Jay Patel <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> > On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 12:28 PM, Stuart Henderson <
>>> s...@spacehopper.org>
>>> > wrote:
>>> >
>>> >> On 2016-08-16, Jay Patel <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> >> > is there a way to get two python versions running on OpenBSD system?
>>> and is
>>> >> > it advisable to use it for production system or just follow packaged
>>> python
>>> >> > version for production?
>>> >>
>>> >> You can just "pkg_add python" and choose - things are setup so that
>>> >> different branches (2.7, 3.4, 3.5) can coexist.
>>> >
>>> > I have requirement for my deployment to work with python 2.7.10 while
>>> > pkg_add gives me 2.7.11. and for supervisor-3.2.0 from pkg_add requires
>>> > python2.7.11 which contradicts for my deployment.
>>>
>>> Ah, I don't think we ran into anybody wanting to do that yet.
>>> You could do a local build and install it under a different prefix
>>> (avoiding /usr/local), but this gets a lot more complicated, and
>>> not really something I'd want to do on a production system.



Re: multiple python version

2016-08-16 Thread Jay Patel
Oh.. okay.. That was my concern. Thanks.

On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 2:11 PM, Stuart Henderson <s...@spacehopper.org>
wrote:

> On 2016-08-16, Jay Patel <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 12:28 PM, Stuart Henderson <s...@spacehopper.org>
> > wrote:
> >
> >> On 2016-08-16, Jay Patel <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> > is there a way to get two python versions running on OpenBSD system?
> and is
> >> > it advisable to use it for production system or just follow packaged
> python
> >> > version for production?
> >>
> >> You can just "pkg_add python" and choose - things are setup so that
> >> different branches (2.7, 3.4, 3.5) can coexist.
> >
> > I have requirement for my deployment to work with python 2.7.10 while
> > pkg_add gives me 2.7.11. and for supervisor-3.2.0 from pkg_add requires
> > python2.7.11 which contradicts for my deployment.
>
> Ah, I don't think we ran into anybody wanting to do that yet.
> You could do a local build and install it under a different prefix
> (avoiding /usr/local), but this gets a lot more complicated, and
> not really something I'd want to do on a production system.



Re: multiple python version

2016-08-16 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Stuart,

I have requirement for my deployment to work with python 2.7.10 while
pkg_add gives me 2.7.11. and for supervisor-3.2.0 from pkg_add requires
python2.7.11 which contradicts for my deployment.

Thanks

On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 12:28 PM, Stuart Henderson <s...@spacehopper.org>
wrote:

> On 2016-08-16, Jay Patel <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > greetings.
> >
> > is there a way to get two python versions running on OpenBSD system? and
> is
> > it advisable to use it for production system or just follow packaged
> python
> > version for production?
>
> You can just "pkg_add python" and choose - things are setup so that
> different branches (2.7, 3.4, 3.5) can coexist.



multiple python version

2016-08-16 Thread Jay Patel
Hi all,

greetings.

is there a way to get two python versions running on OpenBSD system? and is
it advisable to use it for production system or just follow packaged python
version for production?


Thanks.



Re: Suggestion: new webpage for openbsd.org

2016-05-17 Thread Jay Patel
I would like to see openbsd.org in http://openbsdfoundation.org/ this style

On Tue, May 17, 2016 at 12:41 PM, Joakim Frostegård <
joakim.frosteg...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I’ve made a responsive new webpage replacement for the
> in my opinion somewhat aged openbsd.org .
>
> It’s available at http://greatest-ape.github.io/openbsd-site/public_html/
> 
> with the repo at https://github.com/greatest-ape/openbsd-site
>  .
>
> The idea is to replace index.html but for all other pages just
> replace the stylesheets. In so far, I’ve included a few other
> pages, including plat.html, goals.html and alpha.html.
>
> I’ve tried to keep the page without bells and whistles, that is:
> * Just static HTML and CSS
> * No frameworks
> * No javascript
> * Minimalist design
>
> though I have included the Apache 2-licensed Open Sans
> from Google Fonts. If you like the page, I guess we could
> build our own font instead of using the google repository.
>
> Is this the right place to post this? Are you (the openbsd devs)
> interested in this at all?
>
> If yes, we would also need to make sure that the creator of
> the nice openbsd logo included is happy with us using it for
> the webpage. Apart from that, I would be happy to license
> my work under BSD, MIT or whatever you want.
>
> Cheers
> Joakim



Re: Python requirements.

2016-04-26 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Giancarlo,

I did upgrade to celery and also django-celery but i am getting this :

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "manage.py", line 9, in 
execute_from_command_line(sys.argv)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/__init__.py",
line 399, in execute_from_command_line
utility.execute()
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/__init__.py",
line 392, in execute
self.fetch_command(subcommand).run_from_argv(self.argv)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/base.py",
line 242, in run_from_argv
self.execute(*args, **options.__dict__)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/base.py",
line 285, in execute
output = self.handle(*args, **options)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/base.py",
line 415, in handle
return self.handle_noargs(**options)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/south/management/commands/syncdb.py",
line 68, in handle_noargs
migrations = migration.Migrations(app_label)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/south/migration/base.py",
line 64, in __call__
self.instances[app_label] = super(MigrationsMetaclass,
self).__call__(app_label_to_app_module(app_label), **kwds)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/south/migration/base.py",
line 90, in __init__
self.set_application(application, force_creation, verbose_creation)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/south/migration/base.py",
line 154, in set_application
module = importlib.import_module(self.migrations_module())
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/utils/importlib.py",
line 40, in import_module
__import__(name)
  File
"/home/jay/biostar-central/lib/python2.7/site-packages/djcelery/migrations/__init__.py",
line 16, in 
raise ImproperlyConfigured(SOUTH_ERROR_MESSAGE)
django.core.exceptions.ImproperlyConfigured:
For South support, customize the SOUTH_MIGRATION_MODULES setting
to point to the correct migrations module:

SOUTH_MIGRATION_MODULES = {
'djcelery': 'djcelery.south_migrations',
    }


On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 6:35 PM, Giancarlo Razzolini <g...@magtab.com>
wrote:

> Em abril 25, 2016 4:12 Jay Patel escreveu:
>
>> Hi Muhammad,
>>
>> I reinstalled everything but still same error.
>>
>> Is it platform error or python one?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Jay
>>
>>
> Jay,
>
> This is an issue with kombu. You need to update your celery
> installation. pip install -U celery should fix that. This happens because
> kombu is using an internal python function that got removed from 2.7.9 to
> 2.7.10, if I recall it correctly. I had this same issue recently.
>
> Cheers,
> Giancarlo Razzolini



Re: Python requirements.

2016-04-25 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks Giancarlo.

I will do that and report back.

Regards,
Jay

On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 6:35 PM, Giancarlo Razzolini <g...@magtab.com>
wrote:

> Em abril 25, 2016 4:12 Jay Patel escreveu:
>
>> Hi Muhammad,
>>
>> I reinstalled everything but still same error.
>>
>> Is it platform error or python one?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Jay
>>
>>
> Jay,
>
> This is an issue with kombu. You need to update your celery
> installation. pip install -U celery should fix that. This happens because
> kombu is using an internal python function that got removed from 2.7.9 to
> 2.7.10, if I recall it correctly. I had this same issue recently.
>
> Cheers,
> Giancarlo Razzolini



Re: Python requirements.

2016-04-25 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Muhammad,

I reinstalled everything but still same error.

Is it platform error or python one?

Thanks,
Jay

On Sun, Apr 24, 2016 at 6:22 AM, Muhammad Muntaza <m.munta...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> On Apr 21, 2016 4:48 PM, "Jay Patel" <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Muhammad,
> Hi,
>
> >
> > I did fresh install of 5.9 amd64 and tried to run it , it shows me this
> error:
> >
>
> > django.core.exceptions.ImproperlyConfigured: ImportError djcelery: cannot
> import name _uuid_generate_random
>
> Chek your djcelery (django celery)  installation.
>
> Muhammad Muntaza bin Hatta



Re: Python requirements.

2016-04-21 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Muhammad,

I did fresh install of 5.9 amd64 and tried to run it , it shows me this
error:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "manage.py", line 9, in 
execute_from_command_line(sys.argv)
  File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/__init__.py",
line 399, in execute_from_command_line
utility.execute()
  File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/__init__.py",
line 392, in execute
self.fetch_command(subcommand).run_from_argv(self.argv)
  File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/__init__.py",
line 272, in fetch_command
klass = load_command_class(app_name, subcommand)
  File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/core/management/__init__.py",
line 75, in load_command_class
module = import_module('%s.management.commands.%s' % (app_name, name))
  File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/utils/importlib.py",
line 40, in import_module
__import__(name)
  File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/south/management/commands/__init__.py",
line 10, in 
import django.template.loaders.app_directories
  File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/template/loaders/app_directories.py",
line 25, in 
raise ImproperlyConfigured('ImportError %s: %s' % (app, e.args[0]))
django.core.exceptions.ImproperlyConfigured: ImportError djcelery: cannot
import name _uuid_generate_random



everything seems to work on 5.8 though.. only problem in 5.8 is getting
gunicorn to work with it


Thanks,
Jay

On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 5:17 PM, Muhammad Muntaza <m.munta...@gmail.com>
wrote:

>
> On Apr 16, 2016 11:45 AM, "Jay Patel" <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> Hi,
> >
> > Greetings! is it better to install Django and gunicorn using pip or via
> > Pkg_add only like py-django ?
> I install Django from tar.gz source with this command:
> $ doas python setup.py install
>
> Because I want to use python 2 and Django 1.8
> >
> > because i am having some trouble with gunicorn installed via pip.
> >
> > I am using 5.8 amd64 bit .
> >
> Upgrade to 5.9
>
> Muhammad Muntaza bin Hatta



Re: Python requirements.

2016-04-19 Thread Jay Patel
ohh. Thanks Muhmmad i will upgrade to 5.9 then do it again..

On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 5:17 PM, Muhammad Muntaza <m.munta...@gmail.com>
wrote:

>
> On Apr 16, 2016 11:45 AM, "Jay Patel" <rockworl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> Hi,
> >
> > Greetings! is it better to install Django and gunicorn using pip or via
> > Pkg_add only like py-django ?
> I install Django from tar.gz source with this command:
> $ doas python setup.py install
>
> Because I want to use python 2 and Django 1.8
> >
> > because i am having some trouble with gunicorn installed via pip.
> >
> > I am using 5.8 amd64 bit .
> >
> Upgrade to 5.9
>
> Muhammad Muntaza bin Hatta



Re: Python requirements.

2016-04-15 Thread Jay Patel
i managed to get deployment working of Django using pip but its not working
with Gunicorn :

showing me this error : http://pastebin.com/s8g3WSBi

thanks.

On Sat, Apr 16, 2016 at 9:45 AM, Aioi Yuuko <yu...@cock.li> wrote:

> Hi Jay,
>
> The designated way of doing things is to install the package if it fits
> your needs in terms of versioning, whereas if you need something newer than
> what the OpenBSD packages offer, you install them via pip. Also keep in
> mind that since you're on the previous release, you may be missing out on a
> newer version in packages until you upgrade to 5.9.
>
> -yuuko
>
> On 04/15/16 20:29, Jay Patel wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Greetings! is it better to install Django and gunicorn using pip or via
>> Pkg_add only like py-django ?
>>
>> because i am having some trouble with gunicorn installed via pip.
>>
>> I am using 5.8 amd64 bit .
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Jay



Python requirements.

2016-04-15 Thread Jay Patel
Hi all,

Greetings! is it better to install Django and gunicorn using pip or via
Pkg_add only like py-django ?

because i am having some trouble with gunicorn installed via pip.

I am using 5.8 amd64 bit .

Regards,

Jay



Re: output of pkg_check(1)

2015-11-26 Thread Jay Patel
http://bsdguru.in/74/pkg_check-errors-openbsd-5-8

I hope this helps.

On Thursday, November 26, 2015, Jan Stary  wrote:
> The output of "pkg_check -x -v -D nosig"
> (full log bellow) on current/amd64 confuses me.
>
> Firstly,
>
>   System libs NOT in locate dbs:
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libEGL.so.0.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.15.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libglapi.so.0.0
>
> but
>
> $ locate /usr/X11R6/lib/libEGL.so.0.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libEGL.so.0.0
> $ locate /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.15.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.15.0
> $ locate /usr/X11R6/lib/libglapi.so.0.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libglapi.so.0.0
>
> and the files themselves exist.
> In fact, /var/db/locate.database is an hour old.
>
> Does "not in locate dbs" mean something else?
> Does pkg_check use the locate db instead of checking the files themselves?
>
> Why does pkg_check care about /usr/X11R6/lib,
> and why exactly these three? Is it because some
> installed package mentioned them as a dependency?
>
>
> Next, there is a section of files "not found":
>
>   Not found:
> /boot
> /bsd
> /bsd.rd
> /bsd.sp
> /dload
> ...
>
> None of these belongs to an installed package, obviously,
> but why would pkg_check even consider them? Manpage says
>
>Other files
>   Checks that there are no other random objects under /usr/local.
>
> but this is not /usr/local. There is /var/spool etc
> - seems like the whole / is traversed.
>
>
> Lastly,
>
>   In dbus-1.10.4v0:x11/dbus,-main:
> /etc/machine-id
>   In libxml-2.9.2p3:textproc/libxml,-main:
> /var/db/xmlcatalog
>
> Yes, these exist, and presumably belong those packages.
> What about them?
>
> Jan
>
>
> full script(1):
>
> # pkg_check -x -v -D nosig
> System libs NOT in locate dbs:
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libEGL.so.0.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.15.0
> /usr/X11R6/lib/libglapi.so.0.0
>
> Not found:
> /boot
> /bsd
> /bsd.rd
> /bsd.sp
> /dload
> /etc/X11/app-defaults/GV
> /etc/X11/app-defaults/Gnuplot
> /etc/X11/xdm/authdir
> /etc/examples/ftpchroot
> /etc/examples/hosts.lpd
> /etc/fonts/conf.d/10-autohint.conf
> /etc/fstab
> /etc/hostname.re0
> /etc/hosts
> /etc/iked/local.pub
> /etc/iked/private/local.key
> /etc/isakmpd/local.pub
> /etc/isakmpd/private/local.key
> /etc/man.conf
> /etc/mixerctl.conf
> /etc/mixerctl.conf.onboard
> /etc/mk.conf
> /etc/mygate
> /etc/myname
> /etc/pkg.conf
> /etc/random.seed
> /etc/rc.conf.local
> /etc/resolv.conf
> /etc/resolv.conf.tail
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key.pub
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key.pub
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
> /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub
> /etc/usermgmt.conf
> /media
> /obsd
> /pflogd.core
> /root/.aucat_cookie
> /root/.config
> /root/.forward
> /root/.ssh
> /root/.viminfo
> /root/.vimrc
> /root/Mail
> /root/OLD
> /root/TODO
> /root/man.conf
> /root/manpages.BekKbaACeqGG
> /root/manpages.Rc8jp6G_lwXv
> /root/manpages.iZk17KSJKAbP
> /root/manpages.qAjqJw7JLGpZ
> /root/manpages.sCWRaNUv_HkX
> /root/manpages.wDzeT7NkP2jH
> /root/typescript
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/config
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/freetype.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftadvanc.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftbbox.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftbdf.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftbitmap.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftbzip2.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftcache.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftcffdrv.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftchapters.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftcid.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/fterrdef.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/fterrors.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftfntfmt.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftgasp.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftglyph.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftgxval.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftgzip.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftimage.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftincrem.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftlcdfil.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftlist.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftlzw.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftmac.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftmm.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftmodapi.h
> /usr/X11R6/include/freetype2/ftmoderr.h
> 

Re: Ethernet not working

2015-11-05 Thread Jay Patel
do we have a compatibility list somewhere ? or can we find via mandocs page?

Thanks,

On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 5:42 PM, Atanas Vladimirov <vl...@bsdbg.net> wrote:

> On 04.11.2015 11:44, Jonathan Gray wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 10:15:11AM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 01:53:33PM +0530, Jay Patel wrote:
>>> > "Attansic Technology AR8172" rev 0x10 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 not
>>> configured
>>>
>>> That's your ethernet device. The 'not configured' message means
>>> there is no driver support in OpenBSD for this device yet.
>>>
>>> It looks like Linux has a driver for it, called alx.
>>>
>>> FreeBSD does not have a driver for this device either.
>>>
>>
>> FreeBSD and NetBSD had sizable patches to alc(4) to support
>> that and related variants.  Anyone interested in making
>> these parts work should look at those patches.
>>
>
> Someone with good skills in programming can make better patch (as Jonathan
> suggested from the following thread [0]).
>
> [0] http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech=142774177502625=2



Re: Ethernet not working

2015-11-04 Thread Jay Patel
rev 0x04

ahci0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 "Intel 7 Series AHCI" rev 0x04: msi, AHCI
1.3

scsibus1 at ahci0: 32 targets

sd0 at scsibus1 targ 0 lun 0: <ATA, ST500LT012-9WS14, 0001> SCSI3 0/direct
fixed naa.5000c5006dfc1397

sd0: 476940MB, 512 bytes/sector, 976773168 sectors

cd0 at scsibus1 targ 2 lun 0: <PLDS, DVD-RW DS8A9SH, EL3A> ATAPI 5/cdrom
removable

ichiic0 at pci0 dev 31 function 3 "Intel 7 Series SMBus" rev 0x04: apic 0
int 19

iic0 at ichiic0

spdmem0 at iic0 addr 0x52: 2GB DDR3 SDRAM PC3-12800 SO-DIMM

isa0 at pcib0

isadma0 at isa0

pckbc0 at isa0 port 0x60/5

pckbd0 at pckbc0 (kbd slot)

pckbc0: using irq 1 for kbd slot

wskbd0 at pckbd0: console keyboard, using wsdisplay0

pms0 at pckbc0 (aux slot)

pckbc0: using irq 12 for aux slot

wsmouse0 at pms0 mux 0

pms0: Elantech Touchpad, version 3, firmware 0x450f03

pcppi0 at isa0 port 0x61

spkr0 at pcppi0

uhub3 at uhub1 port 1 "Intel Rate Matching Hub" rev 2.00/0.00 addr 2

ugen0 at uhub3 port 3 "Intel product 0x07da" rev 2.00/78.69 addr 3

ugen1 at uhub3 port 4 "Generic USB2.0-CRW" rev 2.00/39.60 addr 4

uhub4 at uhub2 port 1 "Intel Rate Matching Hub" rev 2.00/0.00 addr 2

uvideo0 at uhub4 port 4 configuration 1 interface 0 "Generic Lenovo
EasyCamera" rev 2.00/3.27 addr 3

video0 at uvideo0

vscsi0 at root

scsibus2 at vscsi0: 256 targets

softraid0 at root

scsibus3 at softraid0: 256 targets

root on sd0a (e1e4bb01f2e7de6c.a) swap on sd0b dump on sd0b

hw.sensors.cpu0.temp0=45.00 degC

hw.sensors.acpitz0.temp0=50.00 degC (zone temperature)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.volt0=10.80 VDC (voltage)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.volt1=10.91 VDC (current voltage)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.power0=13.17 W (rate)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.watthour0=20.98 Wh (last full capacity)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.watthour1=2.09 Wh (warning capacity)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.watthour2=0.63 Wh (low capacity)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.watthour3=20.98 Wh (remaining capacity), OK

hw.sensors.acpibat0.watthour4=47.52 Wh (design capacity)

hw.sensors.acpibat0.raw0=1 (battery full), OK

hw.sensors.acpiac0.indicator0=Off (power supply)

hw.sensors.acpibtn1.indicator0=On (lid open)



On Tue, Nov 3, 2015 at 9:44 PM, Michael McConville <mm...@mykolab.com>
wrote:

> Jay Patel wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > This is my dmesg :
> >
>
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5ECiq648H2-UUNwZ0FlRzdJdWI0M1A0TURJLUVaS0dL
bTV3/view?usp=sharing
> >
> > i got my wireless working iwn but i am unable to get firmware of my
> > Ethernet.
> >
> > Regards,
> > Jay
>
> Please just share the dmesg at the bottom of your email. Few or no
> people able to help you with this are going to bother opening your Doc.



Re: Ethernet not working

2015-11-04 Thread Jay Patel
Okay.. Thanks ..

On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 2:45 PM, Stefan Sperling <s...@stsp.name> wrote:

> On Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 01:53:33PM +0530, Jay Patel wrote:
> > "Attansic Technology AR8172" rev 0x10 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 not
> configured
>
> That's your ethernet device. The 'not configured' message means
> there is no driver support in OpenBSD for this device yet.
>
> It looks like Linux has a driver for it, called alx.
>
> FreeBSD does not have a driver for this device either.
>
> It's possible that an entirely new driver must be written to make
> this device work with OpenBSD. So this will take time and more
> importantly someone who has the skill and motivation to write it.
>
> For now, you'll be happier using a supported USB ethernet adapter.
> The axen(4) driver supports models currently being sold.
> Some model names are listed here:
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man4/axen.4?query=axen
>
> Or perhaps you can still find an older model supported by axe(4):
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man4/axe.4?query=axe
>
> Another option are devices supported by the generic USB Ethernet device
> driver cdce(4). These devices use a standard USB interface so a custom
> driver is not required. Apart from devices listed at
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man4/cdce.4?query=cdce
> the "Lenovo Thinkpad USB 3.0 Ethernet adapter" will also work with this.



Ethernet not working

2015-11-02 Thread Jay Patel
Hi,

This is my dmesg :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5ECiq648H2-UUNwZ0FlRzdJdWI0M1A0TURJLUVaS0dLbTV3/view?usp=sharing

i got my wireless working iwn but i am unable to get firmware of my
Ethernet.

Regards,
Jay



Re: Firefox Worked Slowly...

2015-11-02 Thread Jay Patel
Hi,


Try seamonkey and chrome see if you are getting same result or they are
working smooth?
also check with ulimit .. otherwise midori is good alternative.

On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 2:17 PM, Mohammad BadieZadegan 
wrote:

> Hi everybody,
> I was installed OpenBSD on many Servers that have more CPU types but on
> every of them while I worked with firefox it handle websites very slowly!
> My Network bandwiths is not bad.
> Is that Firefox needs some special configure on OpenBSD?
> Or The better way is using another browser such as midori?
> What can I do?
> Regards.



Re: [mot] serious about clang/llvm?

2015-10-25 Thread Jay Patel
You can get in touch with Eric Radman http://openports.se/lang/pcc may be
you can help port it to OpenBSD. :)

On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 2:13 PM, Mayuresh Kathe  wrote:

> i have been reading up online news about the core team considering a move
> from 'gcc' to "clang/llvm".
> is it really true? wouldn't that add a whole lot of complexity to the base
> system? isn't clang/llvm written in c++11? wouldn't 'pcc' be a better
> alternative? especially because (i think) openbsd is striving to deliver a
> compact base install with as small a disk footprint as possible!
> i had heard rumours about the openbsd core team having a part of openbsd
> built using 'pcc', is it true? if yes, did that effort not produce
> desirable
> results?
> -mayuresh



lib error

2015-10-20 Thread Jay Patel
Hi,
my package updates stopped because of internet disconnection. after that i
did pkg_check and pkg_add -u but even after that i am getting this error :

--- .libs-partial-gstreamer-0.10.36p7 ---

lib should exist

lib is not a directory

lib/libgstbase-0.10.so.3.0 should exist

lib/libgstbase-0.10.so.3.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstbase-0.10.so.3.0

lib/libgstcheck-0.10.so.2.0 should exist

lib/libgstcheck-0.10.so.2.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstcheck-0.10.so.2.0

lib/libgstcontroller-0.10.so.4.0 should exist

lib/libgstcontroller-0.10.so.4.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstcontroller-0.10.so.4.0

lib/libgstdataprotocol-0.10.so.3.0 should exist

lib/libgstdataprotocol-0.10.so.3.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstdataprotocol-0.10.so.3.0

lib/libgstnet-0.10.so.3.0 should exist

lib/libgstnet-0.10.so.3.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstnet-0.10.so.3.0

--- .libs-partial-seamonkey-2.32.1 ---

lib should exist

lib is not a directory

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1 is not a directory

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components is not a directory

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0

--- .libs-seamonkey-2.32.1 ---

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0

--- binpatch58-amd64-libcrypto-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-007/fake/usr/share/man/man3 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-007/fake/usr/share/man/man3 is not a directory

--- binpatch58-amd64-smtpd-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-004/fake/usr/share/man/man8 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-004/fake/usr/share/man/man8 is not a directory

--- binpatch58-amd64-sshd-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/libexec should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/libexec is not a directory

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/share/man/man1 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/share/man/man1 is not a directory

--- binpatch58-amd64-sslhello-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-002/fake/usr/share/man/man3 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-002/fake/usr/share/man/man3 is not a directory

System libs NOT in locate dbs:

/usr/lib/libpthread.so.18.1



Thanks,

Jay



lib error

2015-10-20 Thread Jay Patel
complete pkg_check :

--- .libs-partial-gstreamer-0.10.36p7 ---

lib should exist

lib is not a directory

lib/libgstbase-0.10.so.3.0 should exist

lib/libgstbase-0.10.so.3.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstbase-0.10.so.3.0

lib/libgstcheck-0.10.so.2.0 should exist

lib/libgstcheck-0.10.so.2.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstcheck-0.10.so.2.0

lib/libgstcontroller-0.10.so.4.0 should exist

lib/libgstcontroller-0.10.so.4.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstcontroller-0.10.so.4.0

lib/libgstdataprotocol-0.10.so.3.0 should exist

lib/libgstdataprotocol-0.10.so.3.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstdataprotocol-0.10.so.3.0

lib/libgstnet-0.10.so.3.0 should exist

lib/libgstnet-0.10.so.3.0 is not a file

can't read lib/libgstnet-0.10.so.3.0

--- .libs-partial-seamonkey-2.32.1 ---

lib should exist

lib is not a directory

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1 is not a directory

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components is not a directory

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 should exist

lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0

--- .libs-seamonkey-2.32.1 ---

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libmozgnome.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/components/libsuite.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldap60.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libldif60.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libmozalloc.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libprldap60.so.41.0

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 should exist

/usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0 is not a file

can't read /usr/local/lib/seamonkey-2.32.1/libxul.so.41.0

--- binpatch58-amd64-libcrypto-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-007/fake/usr/share/man/man3 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-007/fake/usr/share/man/man3 is not a directory

--- binpatch58-amd64-smtpd-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-004/fake/usr/share/man/man8 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-004/fake/usr/share/man/man8 is not a directory

--- binpatch58-amd64-sshd-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/libexec should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/libexec is not a directory

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/share/man/man1 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-001/fake/usr/share/man/man1 is not a directory

--- binpatch58-amd64-sslhello-1.0 ---

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-002/fake/usr/share/man/man3 should exist

/var/db/binpatch/5.8-002/fake/usr/share/man/man3 is not a directory

System libs NOT in locate dbs:

/usr/lib/libpthread.so.18.1

Not found:

/boot

/bsd

/bsd.mp

/bsd.rd

/bsd.rollback

/bsd.sp

/etc/X11/app-defaults/XScreenSaver

/etc/X11/xdm/pixmaps/xorg-bw.xpm

/etc/X11/xdm/pixmaps/xorg.xpm

/etc/adduser.conf

/etc/bash_completion.d/pacat

/etc/bash_completion.d/pacmd

/etc/bash_completion.d/pactl

/etc/bash_completion.d/padsp


Re: It was twenty years ago you see...

2015-10-18 Thread Jay Patel
Happy Birthday. And congratulations. :)

On Sun, Oct 18, 2015 at 12:06 PM, Theo de Raadt  wrote:

> OpenBSD's source tree just turned 20 years old.
>
> I recall the import taking about 3 hours on an EISA-bus 486 with two
> ESDI drives.  There was an import attempt a few days earlier, but it
> failed due to insufficient space.  It took some time to repartition
> the machine.
>
> It wasn't terribly long before David Miller, Chuck Cranor and Niklas
> Hallqvist were commiting... then more people showed up.
>
> The first developments were improvements to 32-bit sparc.
>
> Chuck and I also worked on setting up the first 'anoncvs' to make sure
> noone was ever cut out from 'the language of diffs' again.  I guess
> that was the precursor for the github concept these days :-).  People
> forget, but even FSF was a walled garden at the time -- throwing tar
> files with vague logs over the wall every couple months.
>
> I was lucky to have one of the few 64Kbit ISDN links in town,
> otherwise this would not have happened.  My desktop was a Sparcstation
> 10; the third machine I had was a very slow 386.
>
> The project is now at:
>
> ~322,000 commits
> ~44 commits/day average
> ~356 hackers through the years
>
> --
>
> On this day, is my pleasure to give you a song written for the
> release by Todd Miller.
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#58a
>
> It was twenty years ago you see
> Theo opened a cvs tree
> Made commits to many a file
> Joined by others in a very short while
>
> Take a moment to view
> The source of all this code
> The openbsd cvs repo...
>
> We're the openssh repository
> We hope you will enjoy the code
> The openntpd repository
> But that's not all that's here oh no...
> The mandoc 'pository, smtpd 'tory
> The libressl repo too
>
> It's wonderful to see the code
> Re-used far and wide
> The license is so liberal
> We'd love for you to code with us
> We'd love for you to code...
>
> I don't really want to have to go
> But it's hackathon time and so
> The coder will commit the code
> That he wants all of you to load
>
> So let me introduce to you the one and only Puffy Fish
> And the openbsd cvs repo...
>
> B... S... D...
>
> --
>
> (The 5.8 release will be announced and released in a few hours.)



Re: Does majordomo support 'no mail delivery subscription'?

2015-09-27 Thread Jay Patel
He is troll. using random inbox ...

On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 2:24 PM, Nigel  wrote:

> On 09/27/15 09:32, Adam wrote:
> >
> https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/26849/does-majordomo-support-no-mail-delivery-subscription
> >
> > What's your take, OpenBSD folks?
> >
> >
>
> The mail list details are here
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/mail.html



Re: update/upgrade

2015-09-21 Thread Jay Patel
If you are looking for one liner for snapshots :

http://bsdguru.in/3/any-tutorial-for-installing-snap-on-openbsd-5-8

and for stable m:tier is best.



On Mon, Sep 21, 2015 at 8:56 AM, Quartz  wrote:

> If availability is critical you might consider redundancy with CARP/pfsync.
>>
>
> It's not critical enough to be worth dealing that. Going down for like 15
> minutes is fine, but most of a day is not.
>
> In a perfect world we're looking for an update mechanism similar in speed
> and ease to other OSs where you can run a one liner on the live system
> which automatically downloads and installs a few files and reboots. I'm
> trying to get as close to that as possible without having to create and
> maintain a whole home-grown custom procedure.
>
> It looks like the M:tier thing is pretty close, my only concern is how
> long it'll last before the maintainers lose interest and the project gets
> abandoned.



Re: Phone suggestion.

2015-05-25 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks John for in dept detail... BB seems good. be cause i travel lot and
mail usually using mobile only. keyboard seems better idea.

On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 3:16 PM, John Long codeb...@inbox.lv wrote:

 On Sun, May 24, 2015 at 12:51:39PM +0530, Jay Patel wrote:
  Blackberry for security? or something else.

 BlackBerry has notably fewer exploits than other platforms, especially
 Android-anything. I haven't bought a new one recently but the older ones
 were actually good phones as in they don't drop calls and the people you
 are
 talking to can hear you and vice versa. They work where other phones have
 no
 coverage.  They put good radios in them.

 The platform has been a good platform. It has a lot of nice features and a
 lot of security features. It has user-selectable cipher choices and a
 secure
 messenger. It has a built in VPN and there is at least one good SSH client
 available for it. BB  is certainly not secure in the sense anybody
 believes BlackBerry hasn't been coopted by the NBA like any other major
 carrier. You are posting from gmail so presumably that doesn't bother you.

 As far as the handset goes it offers good encryption options for your phone
 RAM and is contents selectable including the micro SD card. You can set it
 to wipe on excess password tries (you decide how many that is) and with the
 management software for BB Enterprise you can wipe or provision phones
 remotely. You can easily set it up so if your phone is lost or stolen it
 will be wiped and worthless. Every BB has a unique PIN and unless you
 release yours the stolen phone will never get onto the BB network again.

 The email is the best reason to get a BB. It's a true push-email, no
 polling. There is another security hole though since you have to give your
 passwords to the BB software at your carrier to access your email
 accounts. When somebody emails you you get notified right away. I don't
 know
 if they fixed it but the notification only used to be for 10 minutes or
 something like that. An app for 5 bucks fixes that and you'll never miss an
 email or phone call again. It's just superb for business and makes you look
 good when you get back to people promptly and don't bobble emails like some
 teenage kid with an iPhone. Oh sorry man, I never knew you emailed me.

 There was a 3M limit for file attachments. That is a pain in the ass if you
 need to read big manuals etc. but honestly the phone is not a tablet and
 reading doc on it gets old fast.

 The physical keyboards are great and you can compose emails almost
 normally. The browsers suck. There are some third party browsers but
 they're
 still not good compared to what else is available for other platforms. The
 multimedia stuff also is very basic. They are not gamer's phones.

 All in all the BB is a good platform with a lot of nice features, is
 designed with some understanding of security issues and priority given to
 that. I like the sane design and lack of Tokyo-by-night features just to
 say
 they have something. It's basic non-glamorous stuff that just works.

 If you want a reasonbly secure phone that is really a good phone and a
 superb tiny mobile email platform with very few exploits then BB is a
 top choice. As soon as you want to do web stuff, watch movies, or play
 games
 it goes way down the list.

 /jl

 --
 ASCII ribbon campaign ( ) Powered by Lemote Fuloong
  against HTML e-mail   X  Loongson MIPS and OpenBSD
and proprietary/ \http://www.mutt.org
  attachments /   \  Code Blue or Go Home!
  Encrypted email preferred  PGP Key 2048R/DA65BC04



Re: Phone suggestion.

2015-05-25 Thread Jay Patel
Sorry LRDS .. but openbsd-misc. :) I am getting good phone for my b'day
present :) not going to do same mistake as i did with CentOS.

On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 10:12 PM, L.R. D.S. arrowscr...@mail.com wrote:

 I'm sorry, how this is OpenBSD related?
 4chan /g/ love this kind of discussion, you guys should try there.



Re: Phone suggestion.

2015-05-24 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks for detail info. I got your point ...

On Sun, May 24, 2015 at 1:45 PM, Riccardo Mottola 
riccardo.mott...@libero.it wrote:

 Hi,

 Gareth Nelson wrote:

 Why on earth would you say blackberry for security?

 Get an android device with an unlocked bootloader, encrypt the storage


 I don't trust Google, but not that I trust other companies more. I know
 they selll your data to the government without resistance. Choose the phone
 for usability, price, aesthetics... personal company choice.

 At the moment I have an iPhone, just because I really I don't like
 Android, I am not implying it is more secure. It is a very nice phone to
 use, always works. But secure? don't let me think about it.

 I think the phone as something not secure at all.

 Also, what do you worry about, the internal storage? I have just some
 pictures and messages there. The rest are just apps that access services.
 If you access your mail or your facebook account, that's where the data
 lives.

 I just read that iMessage does end-to-end encryption, so theoretically
 Apple shouldn't spy your messages. But mail? icloud vs. gmail? And then
 maybe you enable (or forget to disable, with the new versions) cloud sync
 of your pictures with apple or even Flickr. And then you can stop worrying
 about your phone.

 If you don't want to use anything, browsers, mail, messages, then just get
 a dumb phone.

 If you phone through GSM/3G... those lines have always been tapped and
 conversations spied.

 Riccardo



Re: Phone suggestion.

2015-05-24 Thread Jay Patel
Hmm...  I am not that worried about.. I just need to reduce phone usage i
guess...

On Sun, May 24, 2015 at 1:32 PM, Black Rider black_ri...@esdebian.org
wrote:

 I trust no smartphone these days. If you want portable communications, any
 small laptop/netbook with full disk encryption, message encryption
 abilities and voip encryption abilities is better.

 I suppose that does not help a lot. I guess any phone you can install
 custom firmware on (such as cyanogenmod) is a better and a more
 secureable phone.

 I have an Android phone which is not supported by any interesting
 alternative firmware. I don't trust it and I don't do much with it. When I
 want to communicate securely, I just use a computer.

 Jay Patel wrote:
  Which phone our community suggest?
 
  Blackberry for security? or something else.
 
  Thanks.



Phone suggestion.

2015-05-24 Thread Jay Patel
Which phone our community suggest?

Blackberry for security? or something else.

Thanks.



Re: Update OpenBSD Remotely

2015-05-17 Thread Jay Patel
I think you can setup KVM for remote control ...

On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 7:38 PM, Peter Leber leberpe...@web.de wrote:

 I want to build a test system based on OpenBSD 5.7 which updates
 in an automated fashion.
 The goal is to have a remotely located machine which runs OpenBSD 5.7
 and is constantly updated. While restarting the machine remotely via SSH
 is perfectly fine to me, I do not want to access the machine locally in
 order to interrupt the automatic reboot in order to trigger the manual
 upgrading process. I'm fine with following -stable and -current alike.

 I recognize that there's m:tier's binary patching service
 (https://stable.mtier.org), but the packages are signed
 by m:tier rather than the OpenBSD project. While following m:tier's
 binary patches is a good compromise to me, it's not a perfect solution.
 I'm perfectly fine with running the -current flavour of OpenBSD feature-
 and stability-wise, but I did not have the success of remotely triggering
 a script, rebooting the machine and have an up and running updated
 machine.
 While I did find the autoinstall(8) feature, which, since 5.7, should be
 able to trigger an automatic upgrade if the file /auto_upgrade.conf is
 present, I did not see an effect in the bootup messages on the virtual
 machine I'm using for testing things out.
 Furthermore, I did find a tool named snap, aiming at making running
 -current more enjoyable (see https://github.com/qbit/snap), but it does
 also seem to be relying on the user to manually start the upgrading
 process on system reboot, if I got everything correctly.

 Is there someone aware of a procedure which could help me solving my
 problem?
 I thank you very much in advance.

 Peter



Re: console prompt disappeared after login

2015-05-17 Thread Jay Patel
Yes but try typing commands its working as normal. ..

On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 6:34 PM, Maurits Fennis m...@nulldev.net wrote:

 Hi guys,

 After upgrading to the May 17th snapshot of -current, I am only presented
 with a cursor after logging in. I do have access to the shell. Does
 anybody have the same problem?

 --
 Maurits Fennis

 ()  ascii ribbon campaign
 /\  www.asciiribbon.org



Re: OpenBSD as a Mailserver

2015-04-14 Thread Jay Patel
I would suggest this is best option : step by step
http://guillaumevincent.com/2015/01/31/OpenSMTPD-Dovecot-SpamAssassin.html

On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 6:28 PM, Markus Rosjat ros...@ghweb.de wrote:

 Hi there,

 what's the usual setup these days for mailserver ?
  I have a old machine and like to jump into the future :)

 old setup:

 OpenBSD 4.2
 Courier
 Sendmail
 LDAP

 I would like to keep LDAP because I may want to migrate my mailboxes.

 thanks for the advice

 Regards

 --
 Markus Rosjatfon: +49 351 8107223mail: ros...@ghweb.de

 G+H Webservice GbR Gorzolla, Herrmann
 Königsbrücker Str. 70, 01099 Dresden

 http://www.ghweb.de
 fon: +49 351 8107220   fax: +49 351 8107227

 Bitte prüfen Sie, ob diese Mail wirklich ausgedruckt werden muss! Before
 you print it, think about your responsibility and commitment to the
 ENVIRONMENT



Re: ERP

2015-02-25 Thread Jay Patel
Tryton seems nice ...  Thanks for options. I will try dolibarr too

On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 7:50 PM, Cédric Krier cedric.kr...@b2ck.com wrote:

 On 24 Feb 19:31, Jay Patel wrote:
  Hi,
 
  Anyone know good ERP that works on OpenBSD? or provides solution for it.

 There is Tryton [1] which is in the ports:
 http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/ports/productivity/tryton/

 Disclaimer, I'm one of the developers.

 [1] http://www.tryton.org/
 --
 Cédric Krier - B2CK SPRL
 Email/Jabber: cedric.kr...@b2ck.com
 Tel: +32 472 54 46 59
 Website: http://www.b2ck.com/



ERP

2015-02-24 Thread Jay Patel
Hi,

Anyone know good ERP that works on OpenBSD? or provides solution for it.

Thanks,
Jay



Re: audio in linux emulation, skype friends

2014-10-31 Thread Jay Patel
Try https://jitsi.org/ or tox https://tox.im/

Hope this helps.





On Wed, Oct 29, 2014 at 11:42 PM, Alexandre Ratchov a...@caoua.org wrote:

 I thought that linux emulation has partial oss audio support which
 would allow to run skype on openbsd. While searching for more
 information, it appears that audio doesn't work in skype since at
 least 7 years. See:

 http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=119039040500478

 More recent versions don't even use oss audio. So what linux
 binaries do have working oss audio in linux emulation? Has anyone
 ever managed to use audio in linux emulation?

 I belive there are none and corresponding kernel bits could go to
 the attic.

 Thoughts?

 -- Alexandre



Re: nobody spoke up, about today?

2014-10-18 Thread Jay Patel
Happy Birthday...

On Sun, Oct 19, 2014 at 8:05 AM, STeve Andre' and...@msu.edu wrote:

   Happy birthday, OpenBSD!



Amazing Encryption

2014-10-01 Thread Jay Patel
I found this article its amazing ...

http://mysteriesexplored.wordpress.com/2011/08/24/amazing-encryption-technology-in-ancient-india-the-katapayadi-shankya/

:)



http://www.oshwa.org

2014-09-29 Thread Jay Patel
Anyone following http://www.oshwa.org for blob free hardware?

Thanks.



Re: Android Studio

2014-09-26 Thread Jay Patel
We should have our own Phone OS. :D :) just like Nokia 3310 series. I
 would like that .

just call , sms, and alarm.

I make living making android apps also but i hope SDK don't come to OpenBSD.

On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 2:52 PM, Kevin Chadwick ma1l1i...@yahoo.co.uk
wrote:

 http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=132934643309355w=2

 That thread mentions getting the Android emulator running and creating
 a hello world program on OpenBSD but I think required? linux emulation
 and so i386 and copying from a linux install.

 A recent Intellij is in ports which Android Studio Beta is based on and
 whilst I hope Gnome/KDE requirments for Linux are mis-prints and not on
 the OSX version maybe there's a chance it will work without Linux
 emulation like netbeans does compared to the pain of recompiling
 eclipse.



Re: Why are there no PKG_PATH defaults?

2014-09-24 Thread Jay Patel
I think leave this to devs. to decide what they should and what they
shouldn't provide.  :)
All we can do is remember

echo installpath=ftp://ftp5.usa.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/$(uname
-r)/packages/$(uname -m) | sudo tee /etc/pkg.conf


On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 4:15 PM, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:

  OpenBSD solution is to ask the user to choose a mirror at
 installation time.

 I don't see this preference being remembered after the installation
 though.

 O.D.

 On 23. september 2014 at 1:25 PM, ludovic coues  wrote: why aren't
 there any sane PKG_PATH defaults? Ie.:
 
  release=$(uname -r)
  architecture=$(uname -p)
 
  export
 
 PKG_PATH=
 ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/${release}/packages/${architecture}/

 The point of such default would be to not change the server, resulting
 in a big load on it.

 Such problem prompted archlinux to throttle their main repository
 server to force user to choose a mirror more adapted to geographic
 situation. OpenBSD solution is to ask the user to choose a mirror at
 installation time.

 --

 Cordialement, Coues Ludovic
 +336 148 743 42



Re: httpd(8) questions

2014-09-15 Thread Jay Patel
Also Will this be compatible with Webmin panel?


On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 12:49 AM, Daniel Jakots vigdis+o...@chown.me
wrote:

 Hi,

 I begin to play with httpd, but I found three annoying things:

 I use it on my laptop for two things, have a local mirror of OpenBSD
 website and provide some files to other computers in the network.

 I set up a server:
 server default {
 listen on egress port 80
 directory auto index
 root /var/www/
 }

 But it won't listen on localhost. So is there any easy way to do it?
 I mean the equivalent way of nginx:
 server {
 listen   80;
 listen   [::]:80;
 blah
 and without having to do
 server anotherdefault {
 listen on 127.0.0.1 port 80
 blah
 }

 Another question is, if I put listen on localhost, httpd -dnv tells
 me:
 host_dns: localhost resolves to more than 1 hosts
 and then it listens only on ::1 and not on 127.0.0.1 (the order is
 normal, I guess, because family inet6 inet4 in resolv.conf) and I
 think both should be listened on, no ?


 The other problems I encounter are with auto index.
 First thing:
 /var/www/htdocs$ ls
 adirwith aspace/
 /var/www/htdocs/adirwith aspace$ ls
 foo

 Then I go to http://127.0.0.1/ and I click on adir withaspace it
 leads me to http://127.0.0.1/adirwith%20aspace
 which tells me (with firefox or lynx)
 Not Found
 /adirwith%20aspace


 The second thing:
 /var/www/htdocs/pub$ ls -R
 OpenBSD/

 ./OpenBSD:
 5.5/

 ./OpenBSD/5.5:
 i386/

 ./OpenBSD/5.5/i386:
 INSTALL.i386   base55.tgz cd55.iso   etc55.tgz
 game55.tgz install55.iso  xbase55.tgzxshare55.tgz
 INSTALL.linux  bsdcdboot floppy55.fs
 index.html man55.tgz  xetc55.tgz
 SHA256 bsd.mp cdbr   floppyB55.fs
 index.txt  miniroot55.fs  xfont55.tgz
 SHA256.sig bsd.rd comp55.tgz floppyC55.fs
 install55.fs   pxebootxserv55.tgz

 Then I go to http://127.0.0.1/ and click on the right dir until I'm in
 http://127.0.0.1/pub/OpenBSD/5.5/i386/ and then I click on ../ which
 leads me http://127.0.0.1/pub/OpenBSD/5.5/index.html but as there is no
 index.html, I got:
 Not Found
 /pub/OpenBSD/5.5/index.html

 If I manually remove the index.html from the url, it works, of course.


 I use the snapshot from Thursday (iirc), on amd64.

 Cheers,
 --
 Daniel



BBM Channel

2014-09-15 Thread Jay Patel
Hi all,

All are welcome to check out OpenBSD channel on BBM messenger on all
platform to stay connected. :)

Regards,

Jay.



Re: pkg_mgr: some inconsistencies

2014-08-12 Thread Jay Patel
Any updates on GTK based pkg_mgr?


On Tue, Aug 12, 2014 at 1:22 PM, Alessandro DE LAURENZIS 
just22@gmail.com wrote:

 Dear misc@ readers,

 I've just discovered and started playing with pkg_mgr (which is, IMHO, a
 great tool - thanks to landry for his awesome contribution(s)).

 Testing it on OpenBSD 5.5-STABLE, I'm facing some incosistencies:

 1-
 some entries are reported as installed in the All category (and
 they correctly appear in the Installed category), coherentrly with
 the results from pkg_info, but are unmarked in the specific category;
 for example:

 In All:
 ││[X] vim-7.4.135p0-gtk2   vi clone, many
 additional features  ││
 ││[ ] vim-7.4.135p0-gtk2   vi clone, many
 additional features  ││
 ││[ ] vim-7.4.135p0-gtk2-perl-python-ruby  vi clone, many
 additional features  ││

 but in Editors:
 ││[ ] vim-7.4.135p0-gtk2   vi clone, many
 additional features  ││
 ││[ ] vim-7.4.135p0-gtk2-perl-python-ruby  vi clone, many
 additional features  ││
 ││[ ] vim-7.4.135p0-gtk2-perl-python3-ruby vi clone, many
 additional features  ││

 2-
 some entries are simply duplicated; see e.g. 1st and 2nd vim lines in
 All above, or, still in All:

 ││[ ] emacs-anthy-9100hp0  emacs files for
anthy
  ││
 ││[ ] emacs-el-21.4p7  elisp sources for
those
 who want to read/modify them ││
 ││[ ] emacs-el-21.4p7  elisp sources for
those
 who want to read/modify them ││
 ││[ ] emacs-haskell-2.8.0  Emacs mode for
editing
 Haskell code  ││

 Maybe, related to 2-, duplicated lines appear when a package makes part
 of more than one category?

 Or something weird in my system is happening?

 Thanks in advance for your time

 --
 Alessandro DE LAURENZIS
 [mailto:just22@gmail.com]
 LinkedIn: http://it.linkedin.com/in/delaurenzis



Re: Vision 2020: Making OpenBSD the world's fastest OS

2014-06-11 Thread Jay Patel
Not just fastest OS but The Best OS.


On Wed, Jun 11, 2014 at 3:57 PM, Claudiu Tănăselia clau...@tanaselia.ro
wrote:

 Great tips!

 For a fresh install of OpenBSD, enabling softupdates may also help a bit
 (http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#SoftUpdates). I know it's trivial,
 but
 maybe it's not that obvious for newbies. Also, having a supported video
 card
 would help in some heavy desktop environments, like Xfce (the new radeon
 driver in 5.5 made quite the difference on my machine).

 Claudiu.

  To: str...@cs.indiana.edu
  CC: misc@openbsd.org
  Subject: Re: Vision 2020: Making OpenBSD the world's fastest OS
  From: pe...@bsdly.net
  Date: Mon, 9 Jun 2014 22:28:32 +0200
 
  Allan Streib str...@cs.indiana.edu writes:
 
   Can you share what you changed in login.conf, and what problems were
   resolved as a result?
 
  I mucked around with increasing the shared memory limits, and in fact
  it helped certain browsers go from glacial response times to merely 'a
  tad slow at times, YMMW'.
 
  http://home.nuug.no/~peter/transition/bsdcan2014/desktop.html and the
  following slide has the meat, such as it is.
 
  There's more work to be done for any 'OpenBSD as the ultimate desktop'
  article, though.
 
  - Peter
 
  --
  Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
  http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nuug.no/
  Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic
  delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.



Re: antiviruses executable on OpenBSD

2014-04-12 Thread Jay Patel
Sophos have anti virus too. Also there's clamav and OSSEC
http://www.ossec.net


On Fri, Apr 4, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Stuart Henderson s...@spacehopper.orgwrote:

 On 2014-04-04, Jiri B ji...@devio.us wrote:
  Unfortunatelly both Czech/Slovak antiviruses - Eset,
  AVG, support Linux or FreeBSD.
 
  Maybe m:tier could propose to antivirus companies some kind
  of cooperation (testing, troubleshooting, boxes for development).
  If so, it would be great.
 
  Maybe just OpenBSD mail server admins should just push
  antivirus companies to support OpenBSD as well.
 
  j.
 
 

 It would probably do more good if *large* existing customers of A/V
 vendors would ask them about this. Risk of losing an existing contract
 for a medium/large company's worth of workstations is probably more
 important than a handful of potential sales on a product which would
 probably be seen as a loss leader anyway...



Re: OpenBSD email provider

2014-03-18 Thread Jay Patel
If you are already using your own email server, use it with OpenBSD it will
be best and if you are looking into GUI for openbsd or simple solution
check out http://gayatri-hitech.com/all-products/mailpigeon/

Thanks,
Jay


On Sat, Mar 15, 2014 at 10:24 PM, Jean-Francois Simon jfsimon1...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Hello all,

 I'm looking for a secure mail provider, i fpossible using OpenBSD, also
 wondering if OpenBSD itself provides it for interested people.
 If anybody has informations thanks would be interesting to share.

 Regards

 Jeff



Re: php or nginx chroot?

2014-03-01 Thread Jay Patel
May be this will be helpful : http://www.h-i-r.net/p/openbsd.html




On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 12:25 AM, Aaron offthedee...@comcast.net wrote:

 Hi,

 I've been using openbsd for a while now but just recently decided to use
 nginx to provide http services.  Currently I'm running OBSD 5.4 stable on a
 HP dl360 g6.  I'm new to php-fpm and nginx but trying to work through it.
  Previously I worked through the issues of having apache chrooted and made
 things work but I've been having a bit of difficulty with the new setup.
  This is of course an subjective question but do the guru's here feel it's
 more important to chroot nginx or to use a chroot for php-fpm?

 I've had a difficult time getting quite a few different php applications
 working with a chroot set with php-fpm, and of course since most of them
 (piwigo, modx, coppermine etc) seem to be developed for an apache2/mod_php
 environment, the forums there aren't a ton of help usually.

 Since this isn't a specific issue I haven't provided any configs, but if
 someone would like, I certainly can.

 Thanks,

 Aaron



Re: stop that shit

2014-01-17 Thread Jay Patel
Well one thing what foundation can do for future is start selling hardware
with software like routers and all directly from their website.

don't know how much this is feasible.or something like system76.or do some
consultancy.

Regards,

Jay.


On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 5:23 PM, Marc Espie es...@nerim.net wrote:

 how comes each time the project asks for financial help, there are
 so many many people coming out of the wood to propose non-financial
 advice ?

 Speaking in my own name, I don't think the project needs backseat
 drivers.  You don't like how it's run ? fine, just get out of there.

 You want to support the project ? find some real money. Ideas are cheap,
 especially when you're not going to be tasked to actually implement them.

 If you have some REALLY NIFTY IDEA to find some money to help support the
 project, hey, put some backing behind it. There's NOTHING that actually
 prevents you from going ahead, trying it out, and give us some financial
 support if it turns out to be actually AWESOME.

 Otherwise, you're just passing wind.



Re: Mount CD/DVD and playback DVD as normal user

2013-11-13 Thread Jay Patel
This might help too
http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=articlesid=20131113030229mode=expanded


On Wed, Nov 13, 2013 at 2:04 PM, Tomas Bodzar tomas.bod...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 9:48 PM, Laurence Rochfort 
 laurence.rochf...@gmail.com wrote:

  Thanks Fred,
 
  /cdrom is the mount point, so no I don't think it should be a symlink.
 
  The command is:
 
  $ mount /dev/cd0a /cdrom
  mount_cd9660: /dev/cd0a on /cdrom: Operation not permitted
 


 You're pretty close. Please read this short thread
 http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=121837771306968w=2 which will solve it
 for you for sure. There are some limitations in combination of /etc/fstab
 and kern.usermount

 
  On 12 November 2013 20:27, Fred open...@crowsons.com wrote:
   On 11/12/13 18:56, Laurence Rochfort wrote:
  
   Thanks Tomas,
  
   I have set kern.usermount=1 now and added myself to the operator
   group, but still get operation denied when trying to mount a cdrom.
  
   Does the below look right?
  
   Thank you
  
   $ sysctl kern.usermount
   kern.usermount=1
  
   $ groups
   laurence wheel operator
  
   $ ls -l / | grep cdrom
   drwxrwxr-x   2 root  operator  512 Nov  8 14:29 cdrom
  
   $ ls -l /dev/cd*
   brwxrw  1 root  operator6,   0 Nov  8 14:13 /dev/cd0a
   brw-rw  1 root  operator6,   2 Nov  8 14:13 /dev/cd0c
   brw-r-  1 root  operator6,  16 Nov  8 14:13 /dev/cd1a
   brw-r-  1 root  operator6,  18 Nov  8 14:13 /dev/cd1c
  
  
   Surely /cdrom should be a symbolic link to /dev/cd0a?
  
   ie:
  
   ln -fs /dev/cd0a /cdrom
  
   hth
  
   Fred
  
   PS what command are you running that gives an operation denied?



Re: SSH as root with specific IP

2013-09-30 Thread Jay Patel
ssh -lroot youriphere -p1157

-l ==login
-p == port number


On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 11:59 AM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:

 I want to be able to log in as root by SSH with a specific IP address.
 This is so rsync can log in to the server easily and backup many files
 owned by many different users and groups. Rather than a script on the
 server logging into the server with the backups with many files and
 many different users.

 Can it be done?

 --
 www.johntate.org



Re: Why I abandoned OpenBSD, and why you should too...

2013-07-05 Thread Jay Patel
HEHEHEHE  someone from time to time posts like this without any
references and links  if you can prove there's backdoor. i will remove
OpenBSD. prove it nut head.


On Fri, Jul 5, 2013 at 9:26 AM, Thomas Jennings 
thomas.jennings...@gmail.com wrote:

 Dear OpenBSD developers and users:

 Regretfully, I have decided to abandon OpenBSD and thought I would
 share my reasoning with this list. I thought the 4th of July was a
 good date to do so since my reasons address national security
 implications. As a group of people who take development, security, and
 privacy seriously, I know you will want to know why I made the drastic
 decision to abandon OpenBSD and never look back.

 I'm sure we've all heard of PRISM by now, the user-friendly name of
 the United States Federal Government's massive civilian and resident
 spying program otherwise known as US-984XN. PRISM is certainly bad
 enough of its own accord, but it's how PRISM works, and the pattern of
 behavior found in OpenBSD development, that was the tipping point for
 my use of OpenBSD.

 And we all know Theo de Raadt, OpenBSD generalissimo of much infamy.
 After being fired from the NetBSD team, Theo forked the code and
 started OpenBSD. He's been pretty much solely responsible for
 development of OpenBSD over the years, taking volunteer code as he
 sees fit. He also has final say over security audits in the operating
 system, something that turns out to be very important.

 I was prepping to migrate the whole of our shop, a regional ISP in the
 United States of America, to OpenBSD 5.3 when the news broke: CBS News
 reporter Sharyl Attkisson claimed, during a live radio interview, that
 she had been dealing with suspicious computer and phone issues. Check
 out this snippet from the full transcript of the interview. One line
 in particular trashed my plans for the OpenBSD upgrade:

  Well, I have been, as I said, pursuing an issue for a long time now —
 much longer
  than you’ve been hearing about this in the news — with some compromising
 of my
  computer systems in my house — my personal computer systems as well as my
  work computer systems. I thought they were immune to being compromised —
  because they all ran OpenBSD — but I guess I was wrong. So, we’re
 digging into
  that and just not ready to say much more right now, but I am concerned.

 Since that interview in May, I've watched story after story of direct
 server access, PRISM, and NSA spying and connected some dots. For
 example, consider the accusations that the FBI had been accused of
 planting backdoors in OpenBSD's IPSEC in December of 2012, and that
 the accusations later proved true. The two scandals broke 18 only
 months apart.

 Consider that PRISM allows the United States Federal Government to
 directly access the servers of virtually any company doing online
 business, including tech giants like Apple, Facebook, Google, and
 Microsoft. But those same tech giants deny complicity. I'm sure we all
 agree that personal privacy is beyond the scope of private enterprise,
 but let's assume their denials are true. Then connect more dots:

 OpenBSD has shipped on over half of all network devices, including
 things like routers, switches, gateways, and servers, for the last six
 years. The current estimated number of OpenBSD installations sits at
 over 350 million devices, comprising an almost ubiquitous presence of
 OpenBSD in networks worldwide.

 EVEN IF NO CORPORATION OFFERS THE UNITED STATE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
 DIRECT ACCESS TO ITS SERVERS THROUGH PRISM, OPENBSD OFFERS THAT SAME
 ACCESS THROUGH THE PRESENCE OF ITS BACKDOORS.

 There it is. Let it sink in. Words like Gestapo and Stasi and KGB come
 to mind. OpenBSD is part and parcel to the United States Federal
 Government's program to spy on its own citizens through bodies like
 the NSA and FBI and has been since the FBI paid for backdoors in IPSEC
 about a dozen years ago.

 Yesterday, I told the company that we must migrate all our services
 from OpenBSD to something else because the risk to our customers'
 privacy and security is simply unacceptable. Theo de Raadt may seem
 like some kind of guard dog of security, but he's really just a little
 bitch bought and sold by the United State Federal Government.

 The kicker is that Theo denies anything suggesting that OpenBSD is
 less than perfect at security, as if he's personally offended by the
 mere suggestion. He routinely attacks developers and enthusiasts for
 simply asking questions. WHY SO TOUCHY, THEO? COULD IT BE BECAUSE
 YOU'RE COMPLICIT IN THE BIGGEST CITIZEN SPYING PROGRAM EVER RUN IN THE
 HISTORY OF THE WORLD?!

 Today, be a true patriot to the ideals of personal privacy and public
 liberty: prevent and reject any and all use of OpenBSD.

 Happy 4th of July.



Re: Seeking GUI refuge

2013-05-25 Thread Jay Patel
Then you might also want to look into .. http://etoileos.com/etoile/



Re: for students or your children

2012-12-16 Thread Jay Patel
HI ..hehe ya i know  but its for kids :D  and its not about fame and
glory...


On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 5:52 AM, Tobias Ulmer tobi...@tmux.org wrote:

 On Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 11:03:50AM +0530, Jay Patel wrote:
  Hi all ..
 
  is OpenBSD taking part in google code-in :

 The answer is No, as far as I'm aware. Did you have a specific project in
 mind? You can get fame and glory without participating in Google-sponsored
 events :)

 
  http://www.google-melange.com/gci/homepage/google/gci2012
 
  Thanks,
  Jay.



Re: Skype.

2012-10-16 Thread Jay Patel
Eric I agree with you .. mean while we give them painful death using
some woodoo magic. I will try to get skype working with pidgin using
sane solutions :P

Thanks...



Re: Skype.

2012-10-16 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks pat. i am gonna go with imo.im for a while till i convince my
clients to move on to something else. :P thanks ..



Re: Skype.

2012-10-16 Thread Jay Patel
Tomas .. I just found out PJSIP
http://www.pjsip.org/  i think it has a chance to compete with skype..
lets see how it goes..

Thanks for you input.. i never needed microsoft office..i always used
openoffice now libre.. i dont know other stuff u said never needed
one...



Skype.

2012-10-15 Thread Jay Patel
Hello All,

May i know how can i use Skype in OpenBSD 5.1 and 64 bit dell inspiron
15R ? current wm is e17 and gnome along side. if its possible to use
skype protocol or something using pidgin or empathy.

Thanks,

Jay.



Re: Skype.

2012-10-15 Thread Jay Patel
Hello David,

Ok.. so it can be done in i386.. i will install i386.. let me know if
there's a way to do it. cause most of the clients uses Skype so i need
to use it.

Thanks,
Jay.



Re: Skype.

2012-10-15 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks David. I will try that.

On Mon, Oct 15, 2012 at 7:38 PM, David Coppa dco...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Oct 15, 2012 at 4:03 PM, Jay Patel rockworl...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hello David,

 Ok.. so it can be done in i386.. i will install i386.. let me know if
 there's a way to do it. cause most of the clients uses Skype so i need
 to use it.

 Thanks,
 Jay.

 Install fedora_base from packages and try...
 Of course, it will be without audio support. Text-based chat should work.



Re: Skype.

2012-10-15 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks Predrag Punosevac ... i am trying to get skype in pidgin .. if
it works i will let you know. .also heard that someone working on
compat_linux rh6 from FreeBSD hope to see it work..



Re: misc questions from beginner

2012-07-12 Thread Jay Patel
Well i would go with Test server where i would take a month to go
through OS and setting up running as my requirements..

Then i will make migration plan and make test migrate from FreeBSD to
OpenBSD ...then will make clean Server instal and do migrate my data.
Hope this helps .;)



Re: Help neede for 'pkgin'

2012-07-10 Thread Jay Patel
I think she is in USA ...:P not India ..



Learning C Programming

2012-06-22 Thread Jay Patel
Hey i found this
http://www.wibit.net/curriculum/the_c_lineage/programming_in_c  for
newbie ..after this you can go to KR C.

Regards,

Jay.



Re: OpenBSD forked

2012-06-21 Thread Jay Patel
I am reading Primus C .. i started off with K  R ..lost my way in
some point so someone recommended start with Primus C

Thanks all for help.



Re: OpenBSD forked

2012-06-19 Thread Jay Patel
Hi all users,

I am users too.  Thanks cody. I am learning C too. from C primus
plus any thoughts from devs. which we should read?

Thanks,

Jay.



Re: OpenBSD forked

2012-06-19 Thread Jay Patel
Thanks Steve, Ted, bofh .. will take your advice and will start
reading code. Also doing something with it.

Thanks a lot.



Re: OpenBSD forked

2012-06-18 Thread Jay Patel
Well. From PC-BSD ,FreeBSD gained much benefit. Hope that might happen here
too.

Regards,
Jay.



Re: OpenBSD forked

2012-06-17 Thread Jay Patel
I meant . Theo is right. Truth hurts. :D



Re: OpenBSD forked

2012-06-16 Thread Jay Patel
Hehehe ..

:P



Re: Customizing the install process

2012-06-08 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Stuart,

I read rc.firsttime man page seems nice approach to keep everything updated
with pkg_add.

Thanks,

Jay.



Customizing the install process

2012-06-07 Thread Jay Patel
Hi all,

I want to know how to achieve customizing my iso for installing OpenBSD on
10 workstation with pre configured gnome. I read the FAQ about siteXX.tgz
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#site  but couldn't find more resources
also cant find man pages for that.is it safe to go that way or should i
install gnome separately for all boxes?

Thanks,
Jay.



Re: Customizing the install process

2012-06-07 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Tomasz,

One more question. Do i need to use the generated system.tgz with other
base51.tgz,etc.tgz . etc etc . Or just syste.tgz into .img and install.

Thanks,

Jay.



Re: Customizing the install process

2012-06-07 Thread Jay Patel
Hi Tomasz,

ya i thoght that too. will try excluding /proc and /dev but dont know if
installer will work that way.

Kevin , hmm i can do one thing add PKG_PATH to local /pksgs and put all
.tgz from ftp and can pkg_Add from rc.firstrun.

Thanks,

Jay.



Re: Customizing the install process

2012-06-07 Thread Jay Patel
Yes Tomasz i have to boot all 10 pcs and install on them i dont have any
magic script for that. that's why i was going for siteXX.tgz method so i
can create iso and use if for install.

also thanks kevin and wesley for inputs.

Thanks,

Jay