please, help me on new smtpd.conf

2018-10-19 Thread kasak
Hello. I have just updated to 6.4 and afraid of making mistakes on mail 
server. Please look at my conf:


pki kasakoff.net cert "/etc/ssl/kasakoff.net.fullchain.pem"
pki kasakoff.net key "/etc/ssl/private/kasakoff.net.key"


listen on lo0
listen on lo port 10028 tag DKIM

listen on egress inet4 tls pki kasakoff.net auth-optional
listen on egress inet4 port submission tls pki kasakoff.net auth

table aliases file:/etc/mail/aliases

table domains { kasakoff.net, koskina.ru }

action "mbox" mbox alias 
action "mda" mda "/usr/local/bin/procmail" alias 
action "relay" relay
action "relay_dkim" relay host smtp://127.0.0.1:10027

match for local action "mbox"
match from any for domain  action "mda"
match tag DKIM for any action "relay"
match auth from any for any action "relay_dkim"

smtp max-message-size 100M

This is my logic:

1) I need to put messages from local system to local user mboxes.

2) Next I want all mails to kasakoff.net and koskina.ru be delivered to 
procmail.


3) Last two matches is for dkim. I want to sign unsigned mails before 
they are send to external servers.


My questions are:

I noticed that "from any" in second match is required? without it smtpd 
answer "invalid recipient"


Again, in 4th match, "from any" is required too, without it i can't send 
mail anywhere.


But as I can see, in third match "from any" is not required, dkim signed 
messages are relaying successfully.


Also "from any" is not required in first match rule?

Why is that so?

Second, how can I limit mta to use only ipv4? in 6.3 there was line 
"limit mta inet4"


And third. Is my config composed correctly?

May be this is more secure to change 4th match to

"match auth from domain  for any action "relay_dkim""?

For example, if user be compromised, this will prevent spammer to send 
mails from random sender, am I right? Will this work?



P.S.

Thank you in advance for your response! Also thank's to all developers 
for job you doing! OpenBSD is best system ever created!




Re: Please help me

2012-01-03 Thread Nomen Nescio
 I never mean to disturb you with what is going on in my family but I am
 crying out loud to request your help. My twin sister has been suffering
 from breast cancer for a while and its become worse so we had to conclude
 on her surgery for her to get cured as said by the doctors but the cost is
 high. The doctors said the cost of the surgery is $12,550 and since my dad
 left us alone in 2002, our mom has been the only one taking care of me, my
 twin sister and my younger brother. 

That is TERRIBLE news!

 I am glad that many of our family members and friends did their best and
 we've been able to put together $11,770 but it remains $780 for the
 surgery. I don't want her to die, Sonia is my twin sister and I love her
 so much. The pains she has been going through is hard. 

Call tekmote.nl. They make a bundle on selling Lemote minis for a few
hundred times actual cost. Not sure where the markup is, maybe they are not
to blame. Who knows. One thing's for sure they have the money you need.

 Please, I will be glad if you are able to render any help to my family for
 her to be cured.

Either donating to you or buying a Lemote mini. H decisions decisions!



Please help me

2012-01-02 Thread Judy Lindell
Good Afternoon



I never mean to disturb you with what is going on in my family but I am crying 
out loud to request your help. My twin sister has been suffering from breast 
cancer for a while and its become worse so we had to conclude on her surgery 
for her to get cured as said by the doctors but the cost is high. The doctors 
said the cost of the surgery is $12,550 and since my dad left us alone in 2002, 
our mom has been the only one taking care of me, my twin sister and my younger 
brother.



I am glad that many of our family members and friends did their best and we've 
been able to put together $11,770 but it remains $780 for the surgery. I don't 
want her to die, Sonia is my twin sister and I love her so much. The pains she 
has been going through is hard.



Please, I will be glad if you are able to render any help to my family for her 
to be cured.



Many thanks from Judy




Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-30 Thread Bruce O'Neel
On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 08:42:12AM -0800, S Mathias wrote:
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.
 
 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

Of course.

My main carry around system, ie the one I log the most amount of time on,  is a 
OpenBSD/PPC one.  

On top of that every other system is OpenBSD save for one sparc64 linux system 
(to build a package),
and a MacOS/X system for the kids games.  

Unless you insist on Flash or games, I don't see the point other then OpenBSD 
:-)

cheers

bruce

 
 --- On Thu, 1/20/11, SJP Lists sjp.li...@flashbsd.net wrote:
 
  From: SJP Lists sjp.li...@flashbsd.net
  Subject: Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD
  To: S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com
  Cc: misc@openbsd.org misc@openbsd.org
  Date: Thursday, January 20, 2011, 1:08 AM
  On Thursday, 20 January 2011, S
  Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com
  wrote:
  
   Purpose: Just a home router.
  
   Question:
  
   What is more secure/reliable in this case?
   OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
   Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?
  
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.
  
  In that time, the only time I've seen it crash was due to
  hardware
  failures or spectacular stuff ups on my part.
  
  When you use OpenBSD for long enough and really come to
  appreciate it,
  you won't look back.
  
  
  Shane



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-21 Thread Philip Guenther
On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 10:17 PM, Hugo Osvaldo Barrera
h...@osvaldobarrera.com.ar wrote:
 On 20/01/11 22:47, Andres Perera wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Predrag Punosevac
 punoseva...@gmail.com wrote:
...
 All my desktops and laptops run OpenBSD. As a matter of fact the
 desktops and laptops of all my students also run OpenBSD:-) It is
 mandatory!

 Ignoring that I have a hard time believing that, I've had to deal with
 your type before, and I didn't like it. The teacher wanted me to
 install Windows so that I could learn Excel, all of this being part of
 the introduction to programming class.

 Really need to focus on the content instead of the tools, specially if
 you're supposed to be a respectful person being paid to teach.

 It's actually the same; FORCING people to use an OS, be it freer or not,
 is basically the same idea; if you FORCE them to use it, it's not freedom.

Huh.  Do not confuse freedom with education.

Imagine you're teaching a junior/senior level course about OSes, along
with other courses or duties as part of a normal course and duty load.
 You understand that theory without practice is hollow, so you desire
to require some practice of your students.  As part of your course,
you require your students to demonstrate OS understanding by at least
*attempting* to make a change to an OS.  What range of OSes do *you*
accept as the target of that?

A specific OS used in lecture and discussion for the class?
Any of several OS mentioned in lecture for the class?
Any OS to which you and the student can run and legally view and
modify the source?
Any OS to which you and the student can legally view and modify the source?
Any OS which is still in active development, for some definition of
that phrase?
Any OS to which the student can obtain source during the term
(regardless of whether you can legally view it)?

(Where do the following OSes fall in that list: Linux, OpenBSD,
DragonflyBSD, SunOS, AIX, OS/360, Sprite, V, L4.  At one of the
colleges I worked at, some of the students were officially interns
with IBM for a project that they were not to disclose.  A submission
from them would have been interesting...)

Care to make an estimate for how long it will take you to evaluate the
student submissions, *PER OS*?


Philip Guenther



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-21 Thread Hugo Osvaldo Barrera
On 01/21/2011 04:14 AM, Philip Guenther wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 10:17 PM, Hugo Osvaldo Barrera
 h...@osvaldobarrera.com.ar wrote:
 On 20/01/11 22:47, Andres Perera wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Predrag Punosevac
 punoseva...@gmail.com wrote:
 ...
 All my desktops and laptops run OpenBSD. As a matter of fact the
 desktops and laptops of all my students also run OpenBSD:-) It is
 mandatory!

 Ignoring that I have a hard time believing that, I've had to deal with
 your type before, and I didn't like it. The teacher wanted me to
 install Windows so that I could learn Excel, all of this being part of
 the introduction to programming class.

 Really need to focus on the content instead of the tools, specially if
 you're supposed to be a respectful person being paid to teach.

 It's actually the same; FORCING people to use an OS, be it freer or not,
 is basically the same idea; if you FORCE them to use it, it's not freedom.
 
 Huh.  Do not confuse freedom with education.
 
 Imagine you're teaching a junior/senior level course about OSes, along
 with other courses or duties as part of a normal course and duty load.
  You understand that theory without practice is hollow, so you desire
 to require some practice of your students.  As part of your course,
 you require your students to demonstrate OS understanding by at least
 *attempting* to make a change to an OS.  What range of OSes do *you*
 accept as the target of that?
 
 A specific OS used in lecture and discussion for the class?
 Any of several OS mentioned in lecture for the class?
 Any OS to which you and the student can run and legally view and
 modify the source?
 Any OS to which you and the student can legally view and modify the source?
 Any OS which is still in active development, for some definition of
 that phrase?
 Any OS to which the student can obtain source during the term
 (regardless of whether you can legally view it)?
 
 (Where do the following OSes fall in that list: Linux, OpenBSD,
 DragonflyBSD, SunOS, AIX, OS/360, Sprite, V, L4.  At one of the
 colleges I worked at, some of the students were officially interns
 with IBM for a project that they were not to disclose.  A submission
 from them would have been interesting...)
 
 Care to make an estimate for how long it will take you to evaluate the
 student submissions, *PER OS*?
 

I don't understand why they can't be evaluated in
school/univerity/whatever computers, which such OS already installed,
instead of their own.

Regardless, I must admit, you make a good point, and on this, I must
agree on this particular example :-)


 
 Philip Guenther
 


-- 
Hugo Osvaldo Barrera



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Alexander Schrijver
On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 04:32:21PM -0800, Scott Stanley wrote:
 b. have been on this list for a while and totally disregarded the
 culture you were within.

grepping my mailbox it looks this is the case. Although he might be just a 
troll.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread S Mathias
 I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

--- On Thu, 1/20/11, SJP Lists sjp.li...@flashbsd.net wrote:

 From: SJP Lists sjp.li...@flashbsd.net
 Subject: Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD
 To: S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com
 Cc: misc@openbsd.org misc@openbsd.org
 Date: Thursday, January 20, 2011, 1:08 AM
 On Thursday, 20 January 2011, S
 Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com
 wrote:
 
  Purpose: Just a home router.
 
  Question:
 
  What is more secure/reliable in this case?
  OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
  Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?
 
 I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.
 
 In that time, the only time I've seen it crash was due to
 hardware
 failures or spectacular stuff ups on my part.
 
 When you use OpenBSD for long enough and really come to
 appreciate it,
 you won't look back.
 
 
 Shane



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com writes:

 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

I use OpenBSD for desktop (laptop) as well as other settings, unless
there is a specific reason to drag in something else.  The 'firewall
os' is a lot more capable in desktop/laptop space than most people
tend to realize.

-- 
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: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Joel Wiramu Pauling
On 20 January 2011 11:18, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just 
 can't decide what to put on it:

Use mikrotik - as they manufacture the product, test and integrate it
MikrotikOS (which is linux with a bunch of custom stuff on top) will
work best and be the most secure platform.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread STeve Andre'

On 01/20/11 12:07, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:

S Mathiassmathias1...@yahoo.com  writes:


Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

I use OpenBSD for desktop (laptop) as well as other settings, unless
there is a specific reason to drag in something else.  The 'firewall
os' is a lot more capable in desktop/laptop space than most people
tend to realize.


I've used OpenBSD as my sole OS for my Thinkpads since 2001.
The only thing I'm missing is the lack of Flash, and that hasn't
killed met yet.  There are a lot of useful apps in the ports tree.
I daresay that most of the important things are in OpenBSD now,
except for the latest KDE.  So thats pretty darned good, as I see
it.

--STeve Andre'



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Andres Perera
On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 12:12 PM, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

I used to, for about 2 months. But then I realized that my internet
lifestyle is too accustomed to flash to pretend I don't need it.

Now I use FreeBSD with linux emulation for flash and it's all coo.

Yo, I herd you liked Linux and FreeBSD so we put a LINUX inside your
FreeBS.. etc.

XoXo,
Andres



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2011-01-19, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just 
 can't decide what to put on it:

 OpenWrt or
 OpenBSD

RB450G? OpenBSD, please. Send the diffs you use to tech@.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Aaron Glenn
On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 9:07 PM, Stuart Henderson s...@spacehopper.org wrote:
 On 2011-01-19, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just 
 can't decide what to put on it:

 OpenWrt or
 OpenBSD

 RB450G? OpenBSD, please. Send the diffs you use to tech@.

it took a full 8 replies to get to the correct response?
now I understand why enlightened people find misc@ complete noise with
negligible signal.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Jan Stary
  I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just 
  can't decide what to put on it:
 
  OpenWrt or
  OpenBSD

Depends mainly on whether yo mama so fat.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Fred Crowson
On 20 January 2011 16:42, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

It's been my preferred OS desktop since 2.9, and since I changed jobs
its now my work desktop :~)



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Mehma Sarja

On 1/20/11 1:32 PM, Aaron Glenn wrote:

On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 9:07 PM, Stuart Hendersons...@spacehopper.org  wrote:
   

[stuff]

it took a full 8 replies to get to the correct response?
now I understand why enlightened people find misc@ complete noise with
negligible signal.

   
I find the list very informative. But then sometimes I sits and thinks 
and sometimes I just sits.


Mehma



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Predrag Punosevac
On 20 January 2011 16:42, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

All my desktops and laptops run OpenBSD. As a matter of fact the
desktops and laptops of all my students also run OpenBSD:-) It is
mandatory!



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Paul M

On 21/01/2011, at 10:32 AM, Aaron Glenn wrote:

On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 9:07 PM, Stuart Henderson 
s...@spacehopper.org wrote:

On 2011-01-19, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I 
just can't decide what to put on it:


OpenWrt or
OpenBSD


RB450G? OpenBSD, please. Send the diffs you use to tech@.


it took a full 8 replies to get to the correct response?
now I understand why enlightened people find misc@ complete noise with
negligible signal.


Or, in this case, 12.5% signal.

Tho' between us, we just dropped that to 10%.


paulm
just call me pedant



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Daniel B.
On Wed, 19 Jan 2011, S Mathias wrote:

 What is more secure/reliable in this case? 
 OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
 Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?

OpenBSD. If you ask in OpenWrt mailing list, they will tell you the 
same, for sure.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Andres Perera
On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Predrag Punosevac
punoseva...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 20 January 2011 16:42, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

 All my desktops and laptops run OpenBSD. As a matter of fact the
 desktops and laptops of all my students also run OpenBSD:-) It is
 mandatory!


Ignoring that I have a hard time believing that, I've had to deal with
your type before, and I didn't like it. The teacher wanted me to
install Windows so that I could learn Excel, all of this being part of
the introduction to programming class.

Really need to focus on the content instead of the tools, specially if
you're supposed to be a respectful person being paid to teach.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread SJP Lists
On Friday, 21 January 2011, Aaron Glenn aaron.gl...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 9:07 PM, Stuart Henderson s...@spacehopper.org 
 wrote:
 On 2011-01-19, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just 
 can't decide what to put on it:

 OpenWrt or
 OpenBSD

 RB450G? OpenBSD, please. Send the diffs you use to tech@.

 it took a full 8 replies to get to the correct response?
 now I understand why enlightened people find misc@ complete noise with
 negligible signal.

Wasn't everyone else assuming the OP was going to port?



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-20 Thread Hugo Osvaldo Barrera
On 20/01/11 22:47, Andres Perera wrote:
 On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Predrag Punosevac
 punoseva...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 20 January 2011 16:42, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
  I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

 Does anyone using OpenBSD as a Desktop OS? :O you do? :O wow.

 All my desktops and laptops run OpenBSD. As a matter of fact the
 desktops and laptops of all my students also run OpenBSD:-) It is
 mandatory!

 
 Ignoring that I have a hard time believing that, I've had to deal with
 your type before, and I didn't like it. The teacher wanted me to
 install Windows so that I could learn Excel, all of this being part of
 the introduction to programming class.
 
 Really need to focus on the content instead of the tools, specially if
 you're supposed to be a respectful person being paid to teach.
 

It's actually the same; FORCING people to use an OS, be it freer or not,
is basically the same idea; if you FORCE them to use it, it's not freedom.


-- 
Hugo Osvaldo Barrera



Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-19 Thread S Mathias
I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just can't 
decide what to put on it:

OpenWrt or
OpenBSD

Things needed on it:

Firewall; DHCP, NAT, NTP client; PPPoE; SFTP; DynDNS; VPN [1-2 client]; 
Statistics about traffic; Port Forward.
No WebGUI, only SSH port open on a non-default port.

Purpose: Just a home router.

Question: 

What is more secure/reliable in this case? 
OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-19 Thread Darrin Chandler
On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 02:18:45PM -0800, S Mathias wrote:
 What is more secure/reliable in this case? 
 OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
 Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?

I suggest that you try *both* and give each some time. You will learn
some things, and you will make a more informed decision.



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-19 Thread SJP Lists
On Thursday, 20 January 2011, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Purpose: Just a home router.

 Question:

 What is more secure/reliable in this case?
 OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
 Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?

I've been using OpenBSD since 2.5, '99.

In that time, the only time I've seen it crash was due to hardware
failures or spectacular stuff ups on my part.

When you use OpenBSD for long enough and really come to appreciate it,
you won't look back.


Shane



Re: Please help me decide: OpenWrt vs. OpenBSD

2011-01-19 Thread Scott Stanley
On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 2:18 PM, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I have a RouterBoard 450G [680 Mhz cpu, 256 MB ram, 512 MB flash]. I just 
 can't decide what to put on it:

 OpenWrt or
 OpenBSD

 Things needed on it:

 Firewall; DHCP, NAT, NTP client; PPPoE; SFTP; DynDNS; VPN [1-2 client]; 
 Statistics about traffic; Port Forward.
 No WebGUI, only SSH port open on a non-default port.

 Purpose: Just a home router.

 Question:

 What is more secure/reliable in this case?
 OpenWrt or OpenBSD?
 Anyone got any opinions? What should i choose?


Aw man; either you
a. just joined this mailing list to ask your question and didn't get
any sense of the culture you were stepping into, or
b. have been on this list for a while and totally disregarded the
culture you were within.

Do you do this in other parts of your life?