*.
The question, of course, is how did you manage to completely break this
since the last go around, where I believe you had the NS records working?
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
professional to set it up for you.
-or-
2) Contract with a knowledgable operator to host your zones on *their*
servers.
or
3) Find a fellow student locally who has figured it out and is willing
to look over your files with you until you get it.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
Etc. You're pretty close and it should work fine after you clean up
your syntax a bit.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
algorithm
attempts to use as much information as it can to distinguish different
traffic flows and balance across the available interfaces.
Has use of Gig ethernet been considered?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
data between a single source
and single destination address pair are you?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
, pfctl is the program for controlling the firewall. The actual
firewall is generally referred to as pf.
So if you just turn PF off for a bit, does e-mail suddenly flow?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
expect to get e-mail from on a regular basis, even if you do
throttling of SMTP connections in general. Much less messy
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
as to what's in pf.conf, I could offer only the
vaguest guesses based in part on my judged competence of the author of
your pf.conf. Since your pf.conf appears to have possibly destroyed
your e-mail infrastructure, the preliminary assessment is a bit shaky.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
) and the e-mail server giving you
an error response rejecting your attempt to transfer mail or just
quietly loosing the mail (look to the e-mail servers).
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
On 12/13/11 8:23 AM, Diljot kor wrote:
---
Diljot kor wants to stay in better touch using some of Google's coolest new
products.
The invite everyone in your address book feature is evil, yes? Be
careful out there.
--Jon
for somebody to remind me of some
obscure attack that uses ICMP for more than information gathering. :-)
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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On 9/16/11 1:37 PM, David Demelier wrote:
For me, I have tested a lot of client mails and I was always able to
write text under the last message. And even microsoft outlook.
Though your current client does appear to keep you from trimming.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
, not your summary of same.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
, which they completely loose track of by they time they send you a
nice sanitized statement way up top. ;-)
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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On 6/21/11 6:41 AM, Damien Fleuriot wrote:
On 6/21/11 2:32 AM, Jerome Herman wrote:
On 21/06/2011 00:13, Jon Radel wrote:
So depending on the client route, packets from a given IP address can
land on either interface. Actually two clients nated behind the same
public address might end up
world to the new address actually
get to you in the first place. Or have you confirmed this from DNS logs
or something else?
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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to the
state table indicating that any reply packets should physically go out
NIC A and should be passed to the next hop at adress $gw_a.
WARNING: I use PF primarily on OpenBSD so sometimes get caught out on
the subtle differences to the FreeBSD version.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
network and are renumbering it. As I
understand it, the OP has 2 networks, which is an entirely different
matter.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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stateful firewalls and/or anti-spoofing
rules upstream from him that keep him from replying to everything out a
single interface. If it weren't for that, I suspect we wouldn't be
having this discussion.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
___
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, registering copyrights, etc., etc., etc. work vary
from country to country, sometimes rather wildly.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
Adding terribly to the noise, once and only once
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. In duplicate no less.
Next time please:
1) tell us what you actually mean by will not reach
2) keep in mind that some mailing lists greylist incoming mail
In other words, be specific and patient.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
___
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assuming the switch works, what if it isn't.
BTW, Gary, Linksys=Cisco is pretty much just a marketing thing and not a
technology thing.
--Jon Radel
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-mail came
from and where it thinks it sent it.
Or you could start by telling us HOW you detected this problem.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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?
BTW, I believe this discussion belongs over in the discussion list, as
it has nothing to do with FreeBSD, so I will sin no more after this.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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better to go. Thank you.
Remember that for the really basic stuff, Unix is Unix is Linux, so any
tutorial you find with a google search or two would apply.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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http
by
SpamAssassin. Maybe because a link in my signature.
We got both on the list.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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that screws up big time, or a back door to the data, than a
successful technical attack against TSL or SSH.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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To unsubscribe, send
a torrent file using HTTP and use a BitTorrent client to get what
you need. Unless, of course, your local firewall/network/ISP/etc blocks
BitTorrent also.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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servers and allow use of their dashboard for
maintaining records as a different option.
Don't top-post in this neighborhood, please.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
something useful.
But, no, you had to move up the heat death of the universe by 3 seconds.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
/summitnjhome-reverse.db
};
to
zone 192.in-addr.arpa { type master; file
master/summitjnhome-reverse.db; };
when your PTR lines only give the last octet? Where do you expect the
168.1 to come from?
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
the reverse zone; give or take how you connect to the rest of the DNS.
What messages about zones loading did you get when you restarted bind?
Where there any crabby comments in the log file about not loading
master/summitnjhome-reverse.db due to error(s)? Was that file mentioned
at all?
--Jon Radel
virtcent19.summitnjhome.com.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
is large enough, I strongly suspect you could
negotiate an exception to that
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--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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/nanae/rulesofspam.shtmld
I would, except all I keep getting are:
404 - Not Found
error messages.
Remove the spurious d from the end of the URL.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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http
have named files in both
/etc/rc.d and /usr/local/etc/rc.d?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
specific question which I
can't discern.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
, such as for off-site backup,
and you trust the physical security for the computer a lot more than you
trust the courier and/or storage site
Of course, I would agree that that's probably not what the OP has in
mind. :-)
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
send it to another
command for processing.
Think T, not Y, and then type
man tee
which I suspect does exactly what you want.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
that of somebody you
discussed that topic with on the mailing list: lie. Date:: lie. All
lies with one goal, to get you to click through on a URL that is *not*
(another lie, get it?) in your self-interest to visit.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
= 3139940352 (2994 MB)
is a stick bad perhaps?
Start by reading
http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/compatibility-memory.html
If that doesn't cover it, come back here and include a little
information about the version of FreeBSD and the hardware you're using.
--
--Jon Radel
j
a name in the domain
in question. (And also some bugs related to nameservers which are
reachable by both ipv4 and ipv6, but that doesn't apply to you.)
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
think
things are completely broken. Actually they're less broken than Gary's
DNS frequently is; it gets discussed on a regular basis for a reason.
So is the last octet of ns1.thought.org's address 209 or 210? ;-)
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.
laptop, all nicely secured
with a passphrase in case somebody steals your laptop.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
a driver is available to any
FreeBSD programmer with permission to use it to write an open source driver.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
that
others have reported. Basically, you don't exist a third of the time.
You need to make sure that all the nameservers you list with your
registrar are actually admitting to your existence and are getting
up-to-date data. I recall having this conversation with you before.
--
--Jon Radel
j
easier to keep track of.
There are many ways to skin this cat
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
description: saying relaying was denied in 17 separate tests.
The above also can be an issue if you do the test from an IP address
that the SMTP server has been configured to treat as trusted.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
will be over by 1/3/2011? Does it still
happen if you use a
statically entered time stamp that's during Daylight Saving?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
blocked part of a
connection? Are you sure the blocked packets are actually a legitimate
first packet, with the appropriate flags set, or is the flags S/SA
portion of your rule not matching?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
in the system I can think of is that I replaced pf with ipfw.
I doubt that has anything to do with it.
Unless the change blocked access to DNS and reverse DNS was being used
to look up the system name.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
a passphrase on it?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
getting more attention from Apple.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
., etc.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
dickhead
gay dipshit douche fag fucktard ignoramus dumbo dimwit dope dodo
blockhead doofus dumbbell dunderhead tool nitwit dullard foolish fat
annoying
Which must be why the X for Dummies series of books sells so well in the
U.S., eh?
--Jon Radel
in your stomach when you realize you've just partitioned
the wrong drive much less ugly. :-)
--Jon Radel
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--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
firewalls to reject the traffic with much
the same end result.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
.
Unless they've moved things around since 7.0, you probably want to make
sure that you've not messed with the ifconfig_lo0 line in
/etc/defaults/rc.conf.
My apologies if that config stuff has changed in the latest; I don't
have access to the latest right now.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
libraries. :-)
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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that this applies in a couple countries where they have
rather draconian laws about selling software that supports any
type of encryption? It's a big world out there, with many
interesting laws.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
On 2/27/10 1:31 PM, Programmer In Training wrote:
On 02/27/10 12:22, Jon Radel wrote:
On 2/27/10 2:58 AM, Matthew Seaman wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 27/02/2010 24:50:54, Citra Cool wrote:
can i selling free bsd for my profit??
is it legal??
In a word, yes
/
See also the distinction between %t and %T at
http://wiki.squid-cache.org/Features/CustomErrors
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
out by telling us how he had plugged
a monitor into the server, so we're several degrees removed from reality
by this point.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
to be one higher than the stratum
of the server you're synchronized against, and you rather have to go out
of your way to override that.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
an error message? Does
it hang? What?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
plug your phone in here and
go away.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
related patches you're missing.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
happens if you restart just your mailserver at this time?
If that doesn't resolve the matter, give us some details about where
your nameserver and mailserver live, and give us the contents of
/etc/resolv.conf on the mailserver, and tell us for which e-mail
addresses e-mail isn't flowing.
--Jon Radel
.
With those two steps, dns as a whole will become a bit more resilient
for you.
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
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--
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smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
.38400 IN NS ns1.localhostservices.net.
thought.org.38400 IN NS ns2.secondary.com.
thought.org.38400 IN NS a.ns.celestial.com.
Fix your DNS!
--Jon Radel
___
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.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
apologies to anyone else who
discussed this earlier; I found it difficult to read every message in
this thread.)
BTW, it's hard for me, personally, to take seriously anyone who quotes
in full, with no trimming, something which he dismisses as worthless to
read.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
minutes off
and a config file that says to never make a step correction larger than
1 second and to panic if you see an offset of over 1 second.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
at least on some level.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
up my
machines to the machine running the ntp server.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
that small anymoreI'd think
that assuming everyone had at least 10 GB disks at this point would be
reasonable.
I'm all for increased defaults.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
by brute force, so these
days many servers don't give you a hint unless you actually send some
mail. Some don't even give you a hint then, simply black holing the
mail if the address is incorrect.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
that states this phrase. These
days the footnote is a bit more firm:
Actual mileage will vary.
See http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=YMMV or Google for more.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
Mark Stapper wrote:
besides.. 0x80!=0200
it's 0200 octal which is 128 decimal...
Might be why it doesn't work for you.
Don't mess with his head. ;-)
0200 = 0x80 = 128
200 octal = 80 hex = 128 decimal
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
something like
rm `grep -l S *`
or am I completely missing the point of what you're trying to do?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
/mail.html
Once you've decided which e-mail server you wish to use and what you
want it to do, feel free to come back with specific questions if things
go wrong or specific steps remain obscure.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
that recursive lookups can find that
one critical address and access the mydomain zone. That's the glue record.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
offers (and makes good on) a $1,000 bug bounty, I'll be happy
to consider its security model the equal of djbdns.
It's nice to see that their marketing efforts work on somebody.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
run a light-weight caching dns server reachable
only on the loopback interface.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
Daniel Underwood wrote:
I'm very interested to see the spread of opinion about Linux
distributions from FreeBSD fans.
Why?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
probably, other things being equal, less likely to
be properly maintained and monitored.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
or comply with any best practices that he thinks are
silly because it's all about him on his network conversation on this
list before. A rehash would be tedious.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
with the
value of the network utilities that you want to share.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
seem to effect everything in the
/root/.bash_profile file?
Thanks,
Daniel
Read the man page on the distinction between
su
and
su -
the latter probably being what you want to use.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
that was the lay of the land the last time I was forced to pay
close attention to Microsoft e-mail clients.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
the FreeBSD Project with FreeBSD Mall in
his mind. The latter, of course, has subscriptions available for their
CD/DVD sets.
Dear OP: They're not the same organization, though to the best of my
knowledge, they're on quite good terms with each other.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
is depreciated and on its way out.
Or you could just run ntpd as a daemon to maintain your time.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
of the printer. Things are relatively easy if you
have a printer which directly accepts PostScript. Unfortunately, this
is not the case with an HP OfficeJet 4110, hence all the extra bits and
fiddling.
But you can actually print from FreeBSD. I've seen it with my very own
eyes. :-)
--
--Jon Radel
j
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
how to change password for account non-interactively from
commandline/shell script?
expect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expect
is a more general purpose solution in that problem space, though
obviously more effort in this specific case.
--
--Jon Radel
j
, if you were to
tell us that your system isn't set to EST (or current equivalent), then
this becomes a more interesting conversation
Or is your question how to reset the time zone for your overall system?
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
the time.
--
--Jon Radel
j...@radel.com
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
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