On Tue, May 10, 2005 at 04:59:28AM -0700, James Couzens wrote:
Mina-san,
This might be a better post for an alternative more focused mailing list
but I felt this might be the best place to start.
I currently develop entirely in a Linux environment using a combination
of vi and gdb and a
Great torrents you made, like all the songs together and the snapshots.
Jasper
OpenBSD Users:
We have set up an site from which you can get OpenBSD Torrents.
The site is http://openbsd.somedomain.net.
The torrents are generated automatically on a server that is rsynced to
Thank you for your E-Mail. Please note that I'll be out of the office, from
16.05.2005 until Friday the 21.05.2005. My E-Mails will not be transferred.
I'll will answer your E-Mail after my return as soon as possible.
Thank you. Sorry for any inconvenience.
Best regards,
Christiane
andrew fresh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We have set up an site from which you can get OpenBSD Torrents.
The site is http://openbsd.somedomain.net.
Interesting project.
Of course, unless several people are getting the same torrent at
the same time, it degenerates into a simple download from the
What is the reason for smtpd and smtpfwdd disappearance in 3.5 and 3.6 - and
reappearance in 3.7?
What is the recommended solution for a secure OBSD e-mail server serving som
few internal mail clients + some external?
(sorry - but yes, outlook clients).
sendmail (in base)
spamd(in base)
--On 18 May 2005 15:46 +0200, Alexander Hall wrote:
Does BIOS and/or hardware and/or OS limitations on disk size apply
when using a hw RAID card (in my case, the LSI MegaRaid 150-4). If
so, which ones? I assume the root within 504M does, but is there
anything else to think about?
One other
El mii, 18-05-2005 a las 15:58 +0200, Willy Skjfveland escribis:
[...]
Something else?
[...]
You might add a port if you need to get the mail from an insecure
network (such as Internet): stunnel.
In that way the wonderful popa3d becomes a nice pop3s server and your
passwords (and data) keep
On Tue, 2005-05-17 at 10:12 -0600, Whyzzi wrote:
The problem wasn't in the setup at all, the problem was in
Windows Server 2003's TCP/IP Stack,
Okay, show of hands, who was surprised by this?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is there anything on OBSD like nsc on Linux which generates Bind 9
config files?
--
Jack J. Woehr # Please change your address book listing
PO Box 51, Golden, CO 80402 # for me to [EMAIL PROTECTED] for all email.
http://www.well.com/~jax # DELETE LISTING: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
This whole thread has me wondering if I haven't been kidnapped by
aliens.
Hi all,
I followed with no errors the steps described in
http://www.openbsd.org/stable.html. Does it mean that my kernel and program
binaries are all up to date? Does my kernel have the earlier known bugs fixed?
Is my whole system up to date?
Thanks...
--
Joco Salvatti
Stuart Henderson wrote:
--On 18 May 2005 15:46 +0200, Alexander Hall wrote:
Does BIOS and/or hardware and/or OS limitations on disk size apply
when using a hw RAID card (in my case, the LSI MegaRaid 150-4). If
so, which ones? I assume the root within 504M does, but is there
anything else to think
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Joco Salvatti
Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2005 11:29 AM
To: Misc OpenBSD
Subject: Patch Branches!
Hi all,
I followed with no errors the steps described in
http://www.openbsd.org/stable.html. Does it
On Wednesday, May 18, 2005, 07:42:54, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
...
Of course, unless several people are getting the same torrent at
the same time, it degenerates into a simple download from the seed
machine and downloading from an FTP mirror would be faster. ...
This is getting off topic
The LSI BIOS handles all sizes it supports. It usually is an OS limitation if
it doesn't work. I do think that the older cards support up to 1TB or
something (I am talking really old cards though).
On Wed, May 18, 2005 at 05:32:43PM +0200, Alexander Hall wrote:
Stuart Henderson wrote:
--On 18
Nick Holland wrote:
On Wed, May 18, 2005 at 03:46:48PM +0200, Alexander Hall wrote:
Hello,
Does BIOS and/or hardware and/or OS limitations on disk size apply when
using a hw RAID card (in my case, the LSI MegaRaid 150-4). If so, which
ones? I assume the root within 504M does, but is there
On Thu, 19 May 2005 00:12:29 +0900, Joel Rees [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
This whole thread has me wondering if I haven't been kidnapped by
aliens.
No, not recently. Since the accident where you toasted the neural
interface on the Enterprise, we've been just trying to get off this
rock. Of course,
On Wednesday 18 May 2005 11:41 am, Rod Dorman wrote:
On Wednesday, May 18, 2005, 12:16:40, Jack J. Woehr wrote:
Is there anything on OBSD like nsc on Linux which generates Bind 9
config files?
mg works for me :-)
The use of mg is completely optional, for example I prefer to use vi, but any
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED]
so spake Jack J. Woehr (jax):
Is there anything on OBSD like nsc on Linux which generates Bind 9
config files?
The default named.conf that ships with OpenBSD (aka named-simple.conf)
is a good starting point. You can then just plug in your zones.
- todd
Hello
I4m getting this error when i run ospfd ( somewhat current version ) on a
3.6-stable box with bgpd.
It is not that nothing isnt working but the errors is annoying.
Is this something that is solved in 3.7-stable?
What does the error exactly mean?
// Philip
Rod Dorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Of course, unless several people are getting the same torrent at
the same time, it degenerates into a simple download from the seed
machine and downloading from an FTP mirror would be faster. ...
This is getting off topic but I thought that once a
Lars Hansson wrote:
I'm in the process of building a couple
of FastEthernet routers based on OpenBSD that will handle
quite the high number of packets/second, somewhere in the
range 20-30k pps. Currently I'm looking at a couple of
different rack systems based on Intel mobo's
(D865 GBHZ
Hi all:
I've bought a new Dell X1 and I'm having problems configuring iwi on
it. The access point is a post 3.5 machine using wi (11b)
After installing -current from yesterday, dmesg reports:
# dmesg | grep iwi
iwi0 at pci2 dev 3 function 0 Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG rev 0x05:
irq 10, address
All,
This weekend I have finished converting my single NAT router/firewall
to a carp(4)-setup with two machines. It works perfectly, one machine
has my external IPv4 address that is being bridged via RFC1483 with a
ADSL modem to my ISP. I can NAT and RDR all I want, rebooting machines
at random
Received the message - logical block address out of range. I'm totally
stumped.
Any help wound be greatly appreciated.
Ken C
please excuse me if this is sounds asinine, but
i haven't figured out how to make it work and
am about ready to start throwing shit around the room.
192.168.7.17 and 192.168.7.18 are connected via
ethernet to a common switch with no fancy anything,
just a local LAN.
one is
I am having a hard time believing that LBA out of range crashed a
system. Try providing a *real* bug report.
On May 18, 2005, at 7:42 PM, Ken Crook wrote:
Received the message - logical block address out of range. I'm
totally
stumped.
Any help wound be greatly appreciated.
Ken C
Hi there,
I've been playing around with the Intel 2100 and 2200 wireless cards and
have noticed that they don't appear to support WEP shared key
authentication. Is support being planned, or am I just missing
something? Is the prism2 the only chipset that supports this?
Thanks ..
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