Hello !
Look at 6in4(8) sources, it uses ipmux to get packets.
This will be the first step to NAT.
P.S.: I'm using hardware NAT (by Cisco)
2008/11/16 erik quanstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Obviously, a linux server is going to have a hard time importing /net
> > (in a useful way, at least unti
8c! http://gsoc.cat-v.org/hg/kenc
(Anant, did you have another port as part of Glendix, or am I getting
mixed up?)
Yes, 8c & 8l now work on Glendix.
Regards,
Anant
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 3:06 PM, Enrico Weigelt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * erik quanstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
>> this is just stupifying:
>>
>> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1029797&cid=25761431
>
> gcc is a mess, right. But is there an usable alternative ?
8c! htt
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 4:18 AM, Robert Raschke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 15, 2008 at 4:11 AM, Andrew Simmons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On the one hand, "Too many cooks spoil the broth." On the other hand,
>> "Many hands make light work."
>
> Cooks don't work, they give orders.
> I believe your are a little late with your remark. The issue
> has been resolved.
Oops! Hopefully as list moderator you will accept my apologies
for having drawn out a discussion beyond its useful time!!
Dave Eckhardt
thanks a lot eric..
what do you mean with "match"?
>
> > Hi Eric, (sic)
> > I did what you told me, and i got the same as you wrote below.
> > if you still have any idea, it will be helpful.
> > thanks again,
>
> you need to verify the keys also match.
>
> - erik
On Mon Nov 17 09:17:49 EST 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi Eric, (sic)
> I did what you told me, and i got the same as you wrote below.
> if you still have any idea, it will be helpful.
> thanks again,
you need to verify the keys also match.
- erik
Hi Eric,
I did what you told me, and i got the same as you wrote below.
if you still have any idea, it will be helpful.
thanks again,
Armando.
> looking in /mnt/factotum/ctl on the console, you should see
> keys like these at a minimum
>
> terminal:
> key proto=p9sk1 dom=quanstro.net user=quanstr
Hi All,
When i do:
% ls /sys/src/cmd
i have this error:
ls: /sys/src/cmd: venti i/o error block
Furthermore, when i do the system update from bell labs, i get the
same error.
any suggestions,
thanks in advance to everybody for responses.
Armando.
* Rogelio Serrano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
> im a linux developer but i hate it...
in which apps do you hate it most ?
cu
--
--
Enrico Weigelt, metux IT service -- http://www.metux.de/
cellphone: +49 174 7066481 e
Are there any NAT solutions which handle millions of hosts? Are
we having a discussion about unicorns?
No. Which is why "not that existing ones have been." And "wreak of havoc
occurs _long_ before" refers to the hypothetical gateway being brought down
with far fewer connections, irrespective
* Uriel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> D-bus is yet one more example of how the linux community has learned
> nothing from Plan 9 (or even unix itself). And sadly, together with
> fuse yet another lost opportunity for 9P which will be likely
> impossible to undo.
Although I'm a linux guy, that's exa
if i were you, i'd start with something simple first, to
find my way round the system. it's probably also not a bad
idea, as someone else suggested, to write a few small programs
for plan 9 itself, just to see the differences. write a silly
concurrent program using thread(2), for instance, and pe
if you look at /dev/kmesg you might find many messages about "checked N page
table entries".
i think smtpd is getting a trap (probably a null pointer) and because the value
returned
from catchalarm is the wrong way round, it continues to retry using the bad
pointer until
the alarm goes off (afte
> its not a good idea to call syslog() in a note handler, because it
> aquires locks
> and calls into the memory allocator by strdup() (that too aquires locks).
>
> if the note interrupts the program while in syslog() or the allocator,
> it will deadlock.
excellent point. in this case, i think
erik quanstrom wrote:
d'oh! the return value from catchalarm looks reversed. from notify(2)
[...] A handler must
return a non-zero number if the note was recognized (and
resolved); otherwise it must return zero. When the system
i think you're getting into some
it would be nice to take the existing usb code -- which is all user
mode code -- and get hot plug working,such that I could pop
mice,keyboards, disks, etc in at will and have the right bits all
start/stop when such events happen.
I think this is a good project as it is self-contained, a good intro
d'oh! the return value from catchalarm looks reversed. from notify(2)
[...] A handler must
return a non-zero number if the note was recognized (and
resolved); otherwise it must return zero. When the system
i think you're getting into some sort of note loop. i t
D-bus is yet one more example of how the linux community has learned
nothing from Plan 9 (or even unix itself). And sadly, together with
fuse yet another lost opportunity for 9P which will be likely
impossible to undo.
Peace
uriel
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 7:52 AM, Rogelio Serrano
<[EMAIL PROTECTE
> my /lib/ndb/auth is:
>hostid=bootes
>uid=!sys uid=!adm uid=*
> but i just remember that "armando"(user name) is also sys and adm,
> could it be the problem for "speaks for"?
> because, as i explained above i have "no speaks for" in /sys/log/auth
> when i try cpu(1) command from termin
Hello,
Today, I observed smtpd that was in endless loop and then broken.
ar% ps
...
none 203920:01 28:27 264K Running smtpd
...
ar% ACID 20392
/proc/20392/text:386 plan 9 executable
/sys/lib/acid/port
/sys/lib/acid/386
acid: lstk()
receiver(path=0x41f58)+0x1c5 /sys/src/c
I suggest you to invent something new instead of porting.
Really, do you read your messages?
http://9fans.net/archive/2008/11/35
> Hi all,
>
> I want to port some program or driver to Plan9 which is challenging as
> well as important for Plan9. Please suggest me .
>
> Is any JVM ported to Plan9? or Firefox? or any other suggestions
>
> Anticipati
> Every sensible NAT solution must be implemented with that in
> mind--not that existing ones have been. Even imagining persistent
> connections from an entire Class A network makes one shudder.
> Needless to say, the wreak of havoc occurs _long_ before over 16
> million hosts need persistent conne
Hi All,
my /lib/ndb/auth is:
hostid=bootes
uid=!sys uid=!adm uid=*
but i just remember that "armando"(user name) is also sys and adm,
could it be the problem for "speaks for"?
because, as i explained above i have "no speaks for" in /sys/log/auth
when i try cpu(1) command from terminal, i
Hi all,
I want to port some program or driver to Plan9 which is challenging as
well as important for Plan9. Please suggest me .
Is any JVM ported to Plan9? or Firefox? or any other suggestions
Anticipating replies.
Regards
Siddharth
On Sat, Nov 15, 2008 at 4:11 AM, Andrew Simmons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On the one hand, "Too many cooks spoil the broth." On the other hand,
> "Many hands make light work."
Cooks don't work, they give orders.
It was a pleasure and quite educational to read your posting, Micah Stetson.
The Plan 9 kernel doesn't do load balancing like that. (Why should
it?) To do it in Plan 9, you'd write a small program that listened on
a particular address and multiplexed connections to a list of other
addresses.
> * erik quanstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> > this is just stupifying:
> >
> > http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1029797&cid=25761431
>
> gcc is a mess, right. But is there an usable alternative ?
pcc, http://pcc.ludd.ltu.se/
>
>
> cu
--
Der GMX SmartSurfer hilft bi
This explanation isn't immediately comprehensible to me--I guess I'll have
to read the man pages and some other documentation and then come back to
understand this.
Thanks anyway.
--On Sunday, November 16, 2008 4:52 PM -0500 erik quanstrom
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
the same time. I though
30 matches
Mail list logo