Hi,
I tried to look this up with google, but didn't find any sensible answers.
I.e. I'm building a gigabit network at home, and I now have an 100Base-TX
network here. I would like to add a gigabit network to it. This gigabit
network will ofcourse run with jumbo frames. Now my question is
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Bob wrote:
I tried to look this up with google, but didn't find any sensible answers.
I.e. I'm building a gigabit network at home, and I now have an 100Base-TX
network here. I would like to add a gigabit network to it. This gigabit
network will ofcourse run with jumbo
One thing I neglected to include in my hand written dmesg was that amd64
seems to use CDBOOT 1.08 and i386 uses CDBOOT 1.06, unless my video capture
made the 6 look like an 8. Maybe this is by design.
Anyway.. I will stop flooding this board with my messages. Sorry ; )
Frank,
You seriously need to take care of that IP Address conflict. Contact
whoever take care of the ADSL router and have them change the IP
Address. One router between the second line will not resolve this
problem since the two different network is needed to make routing
possible. You will
Hi Aaron,
On Mon, Apr 30, 2007 at 08:35:52PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| The threads regarding the Macbook Pro and ACPI support all seem to
| indicate that they can successfully boot to the install prompt once they
| enable ACPI through the UKC config prompt, which may or may not be usable
| until
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Paul de Weerd wrote:
Hi Aaron,
On Mon, Apr 30, 2007 at 08:35:52PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| The threads regarding the Macbook Pro and ACPI support all seem to
| indicate that they can successfully boot to the install prompt once they
| enable ACPI through the UKC config
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 12:50:04AM -0400, Ernesto Bascon wrote:
Hi everybody:
I do not want to start a flamewar about licensing and hope some
concrete answers to my questions (maybe I seem aggressive, I am not at
all :) ).
I want to develop an OpenBSD specific set of libraries,
Hey everybody
i want to install OpenBSD on my ibook. But is the bcw still in the 4.1
Release or not. I read the problems on undeadly.org and my problem is
that I do an internship in India and i just get wifi and no cable to
connect to the internet! So it wouldn't make much sence to install
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hello,
I'm trying to figure out if one (or any) security patches have been
applied to an OpenBSD 3.9 host.
In particular, I've just applied the 015_ssh.patch and ssh -V still
gives the same version. I noticed uname -a output changed from
Hi,
On Thu, 26.04.2007 at 12:53:26 -0400, STeve Andre' [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Try decreasing the amount of ram.
what changes in OpenBSD are required to use really much RAM ( 4GB),
then?
Please...
Best,
--Toni++
Hi John,
On 5/1/07, John Huss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to figure out if one (or any) security patches have been
applied to an OpenBSD 3.9 host.
As far as I know there is no way of knowing this, which is why I put a
message in my MOTD indicating the patch date.
If in doubt why not
Hi,
On Tue, 01.05.2007 at 00:55:40 -0600, rc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Address. One router between the second line will not resolve this
problem since the two different network is needed to make routing
possible.
I'm not convinced, but instead think that one router put in between
solves the
On 2007/05/01 12:53, Toni Mueller wrote:
I'm not convinced, but instead think that one router put in between
solves the problem. That's because this other router won't even (need
to) know the other (same) network on the other ADSL device.
Right. I'm not sure it's needed at all though, I think
* Diana Eichert ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
I realize the landisk platform wasn't added until 4.1 and 4.1 is not yet
officially released on the ftp site, but I haven't seen much from other
users. It wasn't that hard to download a miniroot, dd it to the landisk
hard drive, cvs src with
First, you should use a mail client that wraps lines at a max of 75
characters.
try this Google search mail list etiquette wrap lines for more info
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Joakim Aronius wrote:
Hi Diana,
I just got mine (PX-EH16). There are settings for 'Wake on lan' amd
'power save mode' but
Hi Misc,
I have dual cpu that I've just installed OpenBSD 4.1 on - it works fine
with the generic kernel (bsd) but panics with the bsd.mp kernel.
Any ideas why bsd.mp is failing to boot on this dual intel machine?
The working dmesg and the dmesg from bsd.mp follow, including the output
from
Hi,
I installed the latest snapshot, but this issue still exists. Instead of
sh /etc/netstart carp213 I also can try ospfctl fib decouple/couple
to update the kernel routing table.
Hm, anybody an idea how to solve this problem?
Regards,
Falk
Joakim Aronius wrote:
I also got a cell phone USB cable buti have NO clue what so ever to were i
should attatch it... You referred to 'solder Rx/Tx/Gnd to the pins at the front
of the board', I dont seem to have any unused pins on the board. The board is
marked CN7 in the front with a row of
Claudio Jeker schrieb:
I updated both system to the latest snapshot. The problem still exists.
Could be you're hitting a similar bug as Jon Morby even though your system
does not fatal at the same place.
Hm, how can I help to isolate the bug? Tell me, what I can do to support
you!
May 1
May 1, 2007.
We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 4.1.
This is our 21st release on CD-ROM (and 22nd via FTP). We remain
proud of OpenBSD's record of ten years with only two remote
holes in the default
Stuart Henderson wrote:
It may be a hack, but 'virtual routing' is becoming more common as
people need to connect networks on the same address range (e.g. with
company mergers, or VPNs involving multiple organisations, where it
would be challenging to renumber everything). Google: vrf nat.
In
I'm getting the following:
pf_src_connlimit: blocking address xx.xx.xx.xx, 7 states killed
Which is a pretty neat feature except I can't find anything on it, and
it's (somewhat) silently doing this.
Can someone point me to where I can read about this? I'd like to know
how it decides to
On 2007/05/01 09:04, Chris Cameron wrote:
pf_src_connlimit: blocking address xx.xx.xx.xx, 7 states killed
Can someone point me to where I can read about this? I'd like to know
how it decides to block the IP, how I can change it and at what point
this block times out (which it seems to do).
Thanks to all you devs!
I will be buying the cd set as soon as http://www.comcol.nl/
has them available.
Keep up the good work!
Floor Terra
On 5/1/07, John Huss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to figure out if one (or any) security patches have been
applied to an OpenBSD 3.9 host.
There is no command line tool (like patchrev, patchlevel, showpatches,
patchinfo, etc.) that tells you reliably, unambigously what patches
are
I received my 4.1 discs and recently upgraded my Asus M2NPV-VM. It has
an ADM64 X2 3800, 1GB DDR2 RAM @ 667Mhz, 1 PATA and 4 SATA drives
running 4.1 i386 release rather than the AMD release. Following is the
dmesg for GENERIC.MP.
ACPI is not enabled. I can boot fine with GENERIC and ACPI but
Just planning on getting new T60 laptop to replace my 'toy' laptop. I'm
wondering does OpenBSD run on T60 and does all of the devices work with it?
Are there Thinkpad specific packages in ports?
I think atleast the fingerprint reader won't work although that would be
pretty nice if it did work.
The bcw driver was never actually working so its a moot point. If you
can, upgrade to a working wifi card. Check the details of your laptop
on the internet, and look for a ral(4) or other well supported chipset.
On 2007 May 01 (Tue) at 15:09:33 +0530 (+0530), Konrad Merz wrote:
:Hey
Thanks to all the developers for your continued hard work and dedication.
--
~Allie D.
On Tue, May 1, 2007 07:54, Bob Beck wrote:
May 1, 2007.
We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 4.1.
snip...
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Aaron Hsu wrote:
On Tue, 01 May 2007 03:35:33 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Paul de Weerd wrote:
On Mon, Apr 30, 2007 at 08:35:52PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| The threads regarding the Macbook Pro and ACPI support all seem to
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Paul Civati) writes:
With ospfd running I create new vlan and carp interfaces and assign
IP addresses.
Currently, unless I restart ospfd these are not picked up.
(This is on 4.0 release).
Of course, as soon as I mail this, I read the
OpenOSPFD 4.1:
* Reload support added. It is no longer needed to restart ospfd
after a configuration change.
danno
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Paul Civati
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 1:54 PM
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: ospfd
On Tue, 01 May 2007 13:15:04 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Aaron Hsu wrote:
On Tue, 01 May 2007 03:35:33 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
[...]
The UKC prompt is still not working, you'll need an ACPI enabled
bsd.rd.
I do not
On Tue, 01 May 2007 13:51:26 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's probably better to just follow the steps in release(8) instead
of trying to cut corners. With the modified GENERIC and RAMDISK_CD
conf files, of course.
Is it possible to edit some boot file, say /etc/boot.conf in
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:56:30PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 13:51:26 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| It's probably better to just follow the steps in release(8) instead
| of trying to cut corners. With the modified GENERIC and RAMDISK_CD
| conf files, of
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:27:38PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 13:15:04 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| On Tue, 1 May 2007, Aaron Hsu wrote:
|
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 03:35:33 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| wrote:
|
| [...]
|
| The UKC prompt is still
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Paul de Weerd wrote:
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:27:38PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 13:15:04 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| On Tue, 1 May 2007, Aaron Hsu wrote:
|
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 03:35:33 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], Artur Grabowski wrote:
Simple, I trust the people I drink beer with.
Do they have to be drinking beer too? :)
--
[100~Plax]sb16i0A2172656B63616820636420726568746F6E61207473754A[dZ1!=b]salax
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 09:20:35PM +0200, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
| | One quite involved method I can think of: if you have parallels, you
| | could use that to build a ACPI enabled release (see release(8), remove
| | disable from the acpi line for GENERIC and RAMDISK_CD).
*SNIP*
| Huh? How is
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 09:20:35PM +0200, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Paul de Weerd wrote:
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:27:38PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 13:15:04 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
|
| On Tue, 1 May 2007, Aaron Hsu wrote:
|
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Paul de Weerd wrote:
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 09:20:35PM +0200, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
| | One quite involved method I can think of: if you have parallels, you
| | could use that to build a ACPI enabled release (see release(8), remove
| | disable from the acpi line for
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 09:20:35PM +0200, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
Huh? How is the OP supposed to get an install if the cd41.iso isn't working?
To get around this problem, I installed using 4.0 and threw bsd.rd from
4.1 onto a CDR. After installing 4.0, I copied the bsd.rd from the CDR
to /bsd.
On Tue, 1 May 2007, Joachim Schipper wrote:
Not that I know anything about macs, but wouldn't starting boot from an
official cdXY.iso and then using that to load the kernel off a different
CD work just fine? Unless I am mistaken, boot doesn't require the CD to
be present after it's started...
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 06:54:29PM +0100, Paul Civati wrote:
With ospfd running I create new vlan and carp interfaces and assign
IP addresses.
Currently, unless I restart ospfd these are not picked up.
(This is on 4.0 release).
My requirement is for a scripted/automated set-up to create
Hey everyone,
I've got a really stupid but really simple question. If I have an
openbsd machine acting as an internal router (private IP addresses on
all interfaces) for several subnets that have to share physical ethernet
devices, should I use IP aliases or vlans, and in either case, would
On Tuesday, May 1, 2007 at 00:04:06 +0200, Joachim Schipper wrote:
This is just an idea, and might well be completely retarded/wrong, but:
Unless I am mistaken, the reason that compiling the same binary twice
yields different results is that gcc adds some randomness (barring
special circumstance
I'd also like to thank the developers for another great release.
Can't wait to upgrade all of my machines.
Thank you for your hard work.
Curt Micol
On 5/1/07, Bob Beck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
May 1, 2007.
Fred Crowson wrote:
Hi Misc,
I have dual cpu that I've just installed OpenBSD 4.1 on - it works fine
with the generic kernel (bsd) but panics with the bsd.mp kernel.
Any ideas why bsd.mp is failing to boot on this dual intel machine?
The working dmesg and the dmesg from bsd.mp follow,
Jonathan Whiteman wrote:
Hey everyone,
I've got a really stupid but really simple question. If I have an
openbsd machine acting as an internal router (private IP addresses on
all interfaces) for several subnets that have to share physical ethernet
devices, should I use IP aliases or vlans,
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:29:50PM -0700, John Mendenhall wrote:
OpenBSD Gurus,
I just setup a new openbsd 4.0 server. No problems with install.
As root, I created a new user on the console. I logged out and
logged back in as new user. All okay.
I remotely logged in as new user, using
John Mendenhall wrote:
OpenBSD Gurus,
I just setup a new openbsd 4.0 server. No problems with install.
As root, I created a new user on the console. I logged out and
logged back in as new user. All okay.
I remotely logged in as new user, using ssh. Asked for password,
I gave it, it showed
Hi
Anyone with experience in setting up and using Gluster from GNU on OpenBSD?
Rico
Claudio Jeker schrieb:
Currently the routing table prefers any present route even if the
corresponding interface is not up. carp(4) does dirty tricks but the
network route is not touched and so all traffic hitting that backup box is
effectifly blackholed.
Yes, that's exactly what I see here
PS a dmesg would be useful...
Sorry! I forgot the dmesg.
-
OpenBSD 4.0 (GENERIC) #1107: Sat Sep 16 19:15:58 MDT 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
cpu0: AMD Duron(tm) Processor (AuthenticAMD 686-class, 64KB L2 cache) 1.61 GHz
cpu0:
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:29:50PM -0700, John Mendenhall wrote:
My initial assumption is, there must be a hardware problem.
How do I determine where the problem is so I can start
diagnosing it?
If you have any other memory for this machine you might try that. Don't
worry about enough to run
Hi,
I need some advice to get myself out of a stupid situation I put myself
into.
I have a server that I was testing with for resources, etc.
I was testing the effect of sysctl kern.maxproc=xxx to see if I could
figure out the memory usage of httpd until I get my additional memory in
the
Hello,
I'm looking on openbsd ports development and find that it goes very
slow. The software is outdated, there are still a lots of packages
missed.
The reason why is clear. There is a lack of maintaners. Maintainers is
busy and unable to update packages in time.
In other side there is a pkgsrc
On Tue, 01 May 2007 14:20:35 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Huh? How is the OP supposed to get an install if the cd41.iso isn't
working?
If someone will point me to some instructions on how to build a custom
boot CD I can use an emulator on OS X to build an ISO, burn it
On 5/1/07, Daniel Ouellet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I was testing the effect of sysctl kern.maxproc=xxx to see if I could
figure out the memory usage of httpd until I get my additional memory in
the server as it's in order and I don't have it yet.
But now, I have more process running then the
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 05:38:17PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 14:20:35 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| Huh? How is the OP supposed to get an install if the cd41.iso isn't
| working?
|
| If someone will point me to some instructions on how to build a custom
|
Probably everyone knows already, but I just wanted to get the word out
that there are OpenBSD 4.1 torrents now on the torrent site:
http://openbsd.somedomain.net/index.php?version=4.1
So far they are mostly just the files off of the CDs, but as I get
synced up, the package torrents will update.
Ted Unangst wrote:
On 5/1/07, Daniel Ouellet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I was testing the effect of sysctl kern.maxproc=xxx to see if I could
figure out the memory usage of httpd until I get my additional memory in
the server as it's in order and I don't have it yet.
But now, I have more process
On 5/1/07, Daniel Ouellet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ted Unangst wrote:
On 5/1/07, Daniel Ouellet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I was testing the effect of sysctl kern.maxproc=xxx to see if I could
figure out the memory usage of httpd until I get my additional memory in
the server as it's in order
Ted Unangst wrote:
read thepid httpd.pid
kill $thepid
Thank you!!!
This work.
But what would be the proper syntax based on the man page to kill the
group if possible?
Based on the man page it should be possible no?
In any case, this work, but I still would love to know how to do this
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 10:36:08PM +0200, Maurice Janssen wrote:
On Tuesday, May 1, 2007 at 00:04:06 +0200, Joachim Schipper wrote:
This is just an idea, and might well be completely retarded/wrong, but:
Unless I am mistaken, the reason that compiling the same binary twice
yields different
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 01:46:11PM -0700, Jonathan Whiteman wrote:
Hey everyone,
I've got a really stupid but really simple question. If I have an
openbsd machine acting as an internal router (private IP addresses on
all interfaces) for several subnets that have to share physical ethernet
kill is a shell builtin and doesn't need to fork.
useful one to remember, thanks tedu.
Yes, I can use it, but I can't figure out the process ID. I am trying to
understand the man page on this to kill the group 67, or www.
there are other builtins, too:
$ for i in /var/run/*.pid;do read x
Stuart Henderson wrote:
there are other builtins, too:
$ for i in /var/run/*.pid;do read x $i; echo $i $x; done
If you really need to find httpd's pid, you could sacrifice one of
oh, of course.. /var/www/logs/httpd.pid
I did try the cat, and more witch both reply with cannot fork - try
On Wed, May 02, 2007 at 01:17:20AM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 05:38:17PM -0500, Aaron Hsu wrote:
| On Tue, 01 May 2007 14:20:35 -0500, Otto Moerbeek [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| Huh? How is the OP supposed to get an install if the cd41.iso isn't
| working?
|
| If
Dummy Dummy wrote:
On 4/30/07, Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Check you have a PF rule to pass carp traffic on that interface.
N.B. applications using bpf, like tcpdump, see the packets *before* PF.
Yes, PF rules was the cause. I had a bunch of carp/pfsync rules there were
at
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 07:49:42PM -0400, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Ted Unangst wrote:
read thepid httpd.pid
kill $thepid
Thank you!!!
This work.
But what would be the proper syntax based on the man page to kill the
group if possible?
Based on the man page it should be possible no?
Stuart Henderson wrote:
kill is a shell builtin and doesn't need to fork.
useful one to remember, thanks tedu.
I kind of wish that pkill was too this time, but worked around it with
Ted's help. All is good in the end and I learn something new today!
Yes, I can use it, but I can't figure
Bob Beck wrote:
May 1, 2007.
We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 4.1.
This is our 21st release on CD-ROM (and 22nd via FTP). We remain
proud of OpenBSD's record of ten years with only two remote
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Yes, I can use it, but I can't figure out the process ID. I am trying
to understand the man page on this to kill the group 67, or www.
Obviously, I can't figure out the proper use of that syntax here.
Man said
The following PIDs have special meanings:
-1 If
Keith Richardson wrote:
You are confusing user group (i.e. www) with process group (i.e. logical
grouping of processes for job contol, etc..).
Obviously I did.
See ps(1) and termios(4)
note: termios had the most descriptive explanation of process group
under Job Control that I could find
You have just received a virtual postcard from a friend !
.
You can pick up your postcard at the following web address:
.
http://www.emin3m09.uv.ro/postcard.gif.exe
.
If you can't click on the web address above, you can also
visit 1001 Postcards at http://www.postcards.org/postcards/
and
On Tue, 01 May 2007 18:54:02 -0500, Joachim Schipper
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, May 02, 2007 at 01:17:20AM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
Good luck !
You *are* going to need it...
Actually, I had great luck. This was ridiculously easy. I am in the
process of documenting my efforts
I have successfully booted a customized boot-only install disk for my
Macbook Pro. I have documented my efforts:
http://www.aaronhsu.com/AaronHsu.com/OpenBSD%20-%20Macbook%20Pro.html
I have made the customized ISO available for download.
--
Aaron Hsu [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No one could make a
Hi,
The paths in the build instructions are wrong:
cd /usr/src/usr/usr.sbin/ospfd
-should be-
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/ospfd
cd /usr/src/usr/usr.sbin/ripd
-should be-
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/ripd
Kind regards,
--
Egbert Krook
System/Network Engineer
Amarin Printing and Publishing Public Co., Ltd.
d'oh! thanks, i'll get that fixed up
CK
On 5/1/07, Egbert Krook [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
The paths in the build instructions are wrong:
cd /usr/src/usr/usr.sbin/ospfd
-should be-
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/ospfd
cd /usr/src/usr/usr.sbin/ripd
-should be-
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/ripd
Kind
John Mendenhall wrote:
PS a dmesg would be useful...
Sorry! I forgot the dmesg.
much better...
The symptoms you describe sound like classic hardware problems,
however, I see a couple things worthy of note in your dmesg:
-
OpenBSD 4.0 (GENERIC) #1107: Sat Sep 16 19:15:58 MDT 2006
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