I am trying to use hotplugd(8) to mount my USB flash drive (/dev/sd1i)
automatically in /mn/flash when I plug it it. I enabled hotplugd in
/etc/rc.conf.local and wrote the following script (chmod +x bit set)
#!/bin/sh
DEVCLASS=$1
DEVNAME=$2
case $DEVCLASS in
Denny White wrote:
That's all one line above. I dropped part of it down for the 72
character rule. As the article shows, instead of having to open
a cygwin prompt, then issue the tunneling command, the whole thing
can be automated with a script a windows service started on boot.
When the user
On 2008/01/28 20:05, Richard P. Koett wrote:
The machine is running poptop-1.1.4.b4p1. Someone did an audit and declared
PoPToP servers prior to version 1.1.4-bs are vulnerable to a buffer
overflow.
Nice of PoPToP to warn about this on their web page (not...)
I notice that even the current
Hi,
Had the same problem installing 4.2 on Dell PowerEdge 1950 III, but
that problem was solved when installing with latest snapshot
(23-01-2008), now stuck because Dell Perc 6i is not functioning
properly, which is (hopefully ;) being fixed as we speek.
---
JW
2008/1/26, Juan Miscaro [EMAIL
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Jan 24, 2008 at 05:58:57PM -0500, Daniel Ouellet sez:
Hi,
I need some possible suggestions if I may asked to not setup, or have to
setup WebDav on OpenBSD to allow users to do their web folder stuff. It
can be setup with ftp for
On Jan 29, 2008 12:24 AM, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am trying to use hotplugd(8) to mount my USB flash drive (/dev/sd1i)
automatically in /mn/flash when I plug it it. I enabled hotplugd in
/etc/rc.conf.local and wrote the following script (chmod +x bit set)
#!/bin/sh
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:10:07AM -0500, Daniel Ouellet sez:
Denny White wrote:
That's all one line above. I dropped part of it down for the 72
character rule. As the article shows, instead of having to open
a cygwin prompt, then issue the
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:37:41 +0100
Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Claudio Jeker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We don't believe in pid files. Use pgrep(1) and pkill(1) instead,
you will never have stale info that way.
pgrep on OpenBSD does not support '-o' (Select only the oldest).
Claudio Jeker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We don't believe in pid files. Use pgrep(1) and pkill(1) instead, you will
never have stale info that way.
pgrep on OpenBSD does not support '-o' (Select only the oldest). It is -
well - it could be more useful.
--
No Swen today, my love has gone away
Chris wrote:
On Jan 29, 2008 12:24 AM, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am trying to use hotplugd(8) to mount my USB flash drive (/dev/sd1i)
automatically in /mn/flash when I plug it it. I enabled hotplugd in
/etc/rc.conf.local and wrote the following script (chmod +x bit set)
#!/bin/sh
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 01:50:59AM +0001, Jason McIntyre wrote:
On Sun, Jan 27, 2008 at 02:11:26AM +, Matthew Szudzik wrote:
I recently noticed that the examples in the softraid man page
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=softraid
contain many lines such as
echo d
On Tuesday 29 January 2008, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2008/01/28 20:05, Richard P. Koett wrote:
The machine is running poptop-1.1.4.b4p1. Someone did an audit and
declared PoPToP servers prior to version 1.1.4-bs are vulnerable to a
buffer overflow.
Nice of PoPToP to warn about this on
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 01:47:32 -0600
Denny White [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
AFAIK, there are 3 files it says that need to be updated when
changing hostname. /etc/hosts, /etc/myname /etc/hostname.interface.
The last one on my system is hostname.fxp0 and, since you didn't
mention changing your IP
Marc Balmer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
That has the quality to go into fortune (where we already have
some limericks)
yes, fortune may be more appropriate. it does deserve some sort of
prominent display, though :)
- P
--
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation
hmm, on Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 11:26:29AM +0100, Johan Fredin said that
On 08-01-29 11:01, Chris wrote:
#!/bin/sh
DEVCLASS=$1
DEVNAME=$2
case $DEVCLASS in
2)
# disk devices
* Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2008-01-29 15:02]:
To stop httpd, which pid should I kill, the oldest, or the most recent?
kill 'em all!
--
Henning Brauer, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
BS Web Services, http://bsws.de
Full-Service ISP - Secure Hosting, Mail and DNS Services
2008/1/26, Juan Miscaro [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi. I'm attempting to install 4.2 on a Dell Poweredge R200.
Initially
the blue install screen froze at a USB device (husb4 I think). I
disabled all USB ports in the BIOS and now the freeze occurs at the
following line:
rd0: fixed, 3800
Hi,
we got a printer in our office. Now I'd like to use it. I hate
configurating printers. I don't like cups. 631 is blocked.
Usually I avoid all these problems with a
cat MyVeryInterestingFile.ps | telnet IPaddressOfPrinterHere 9100
since most of the printers have that door open.
It *works*
Joel Sing wrote:
Note that that exploit is for versions earlier than 1.1.4.b3 - the
previous ports version was 1.1.4.b4, which one would presume is
patched for this vulnerability. Obviously this assumes that no other
exploits have been found since version 1.1.4.b4.
The audit I was shown
Henning Brauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2008-01-29 15:02]:
To stop httpd, which pid should I kill, the oldest, or the most recent?
kill 'em all!
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# kill 1%'$carrier lost
--
No Swen today, my love has gone away
My mailbox stands for
joel,
thanks for the comments. was looking for help when sent the initial
email.
On 30.01-02:45, Joel Sing wrote:
[ ... ]
1. Both of these PRs have already been resolved and closed - fix committed in
r1.70 of sys/dev/ic/elink3.c (see
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1
Denny White wrote:
That's all one line above. I dropped part of it down for the 72
character rule. As the article shows, instead of having to open
a cygwin prompt, then issue the tunneling command, the whole thing
can be automated with
On 29/01/2008, Edd Barrett [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi there,
I use zsh on my OpenBSD boxes.
About a week ago ctrl+a and ctrl+e stopped working in zsh. These
combos should skip to the begin and end of the line. These functions
seem to work in zsh on our solaris boxes.
I have just been
Le Tue, 29 Jan 2008 14:35:22 +,
Edd Barrett [EMAIL PROTECTED] a icrit :
Hi there,
I use zsh on my OpenBSD boxes.
About a week ago ctrl+a and ctrl+e stopped working in zsh. These
combos should skip to the begin and end of the line. These functions
seem to work in zsh on our solaris
hmm, on Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 09:45:27AM -0500, Nick Holland said that
(short version: just do a normal install to the flash disk)
how do i boot bsd.rd to make an install to the flash disk?
chicken egg. i dont have an usb cdrom, nor floppy disk.
only usb media. i need to create a bootable usb
frantisek holop wrote:
hi there,
i was wondering if some of the boot sector/fdisk magicians
out there could lend me a hand in booting openbsd on the eee
without access to a cd-rom drive.
what i need is basically advice how to handcraft a boot sector
on an usb media with a snapshot for the boot
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 02:54:14PM +0100, Helmut Schneider wrote:
pierre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:37:41 +0100
Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Claudio Jeker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We don't believe in pid files. Use pgrep(1) and pkill(1) instead,
you will
Hi there,
I use zsh on my OpenBSD boxes.
About a week ago ctrl+a and ctrl+e stopped working in zsh. These
combos should skip to the begin and end of the line. These functions
seem to work in zsh on our solaris boxes.
I have just been chatting to another user who uses zsh and he has the
same
Oops.
My apologies to those who replied off-list. Because of the large amount
of spam I receive, only white-listed e-mail or e-mail that is digitally
signed with the sender's PGP key or encrypted with my PGP public key
make it through. I should have included a pre-whitelisted to address
that is
Clear.
Thanks.
On Jan 29, 2008 4:36 AM, Nick Holland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kyrylo Klimakov wrote:
...[snip the same ol' libexpat stuff]...
I think that such behavior of the installer could be treated like a
bug and package
xbase42 should be moved to required section or at least in the
pierre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:37:41 +0100
Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Claudio Jeker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We don't believe in pid files. Use pgrep(1) and pkill(1) instead,
you will never have stale info that way.
pgrep on OpenBSD does not support
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 01:30:21PM +0100, Marc Balmer wrote:
Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
Darrin Chandler [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
There once was a message to test
Repeated unto being a pest
While marked to ignore
It was seen more and more
Until other begged, Give it a rest!
That
hi there,
i was wondering if some of the boot sector/fdisk magicians
out there could lend me a hand in booting openbsd on the eee
without access to a cd-rom drive.
what i need is basically advice how to handcraft a boot sector
on an usb media with a snapshot for the boot process
to pick it up
Si ce message ne s'affiche pas correctement, vous pouvez le visualiser en
suivant ce lien.
[IMAGE]
[IMAGE]
[IMAGE]
[IMAGE]
[IMAGE]
[IMAGE]
[IMAGE]
Si vous disirez ne plus recevoir de mail de notre part, cliquez ici
Hi!
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 09:18:31AM -0200, pierre wrote:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:37:41 +0100
Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Claudio Jeker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We don't believe in pid files. Use pgrep(1) and pkill(1) instead,
you will never have stale info that way.
pgrep
On 08-01-29 11:01, Chris wrote:
#!/bin/sh
DEVCLASS=$1
DEVNAME=$2
case $DEVCLASS in
2)
# disk devices
disklabel=`/sbin/disklabel $DEVNAME 21 | \
sed -n '/^label: /s/^label:
I found out the sources at http://truffula.com/rlpr/
Now, the Makefile is buggy.
I had to do this to install rlpr properly on OpenBSD. I post it here
just in case
you're interested.
make bsd-symlinks is wrong and ./bin is also wrong. The binaries go
into ./src/bin
spree(p8)| sudo make bsdlinks
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 01:30:21PM +0100, Marc Balmer sez:
Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
Darrin Chandler [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
There once was a message to test
Repeated unto being a pest
While marked to ignore
It was seen more and
frantisek holop wrote:
hmm, on Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 09:45:27AM -0500, Nick Holland said that
(short version: just do a normal install to the flash disk)
how do i boot bsd.rd to make an install to the flash disk?
chicken egg. i dont have an usb cdrom, nor floppy disk.
only usb media. i need
Oh dear,
On Jan 29, 2008 3:03 PM, Andy Hayward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
zsh uses the value of variables like EDITOR to determine which
key-mappings to default to.
Yup this is the problem. I changed EDITOR to vim a while ago.
Wow, vi mode is cool. Didn't know it existed. Many thanks
Thanks
On Jan 29, 2008 10:05 AM, frantisek holop [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hmm, on Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 09:45:27AM -0500, Nick Holland said that
(short version: just do a normal install to the flash disk)
how do i boot bsd.rd to make an install to the flash disk?
chicken egg. i dont have an usb
On 17.01-22:14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
need an education here. created a patchset for this problem and i'm
about to test that against 4.2 GENERIC and have a couple of questions
1. are the results generally intersting? should i post
them somewhere (assuming tests go right)
pierre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:37:41 +0100
Helmut Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Claudio Jeker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We don't believe in pid files. Use pgrep(1) and pkill(1) instead,
you will never have stale info that way.
pgrep on OpenBSD does not support
Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
Darrin Chandler [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
There once was a message to test
Repeated unto being a pest
While marked to ignore
It was seen more and more
Until other begged, Give it a rest!
That one needs to be included in the faq somewhere, urgently.
while this is a way if you _must_ use SMB/CIFS, I'm not too sure if a
combination of samba, cygwin (which users won't bother to update once
it's installed so no security fixes) and MS loopback adapter (for some
client-breaks-their-own-network-and-shouts-at-you fun) is really the
simplest and most
On 1/29/08, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
vi mydomain.mc
divert(0)dnl
VERSIONID(`@(#)mydomain.mc $Revision: 1.11 $')dnl
OSTYPE(openbsd)dnl
DOMAIN(mydomain.com)dnl
FEATURE(`virtusertable', `dbm /etc/mail/virtusertable')dnl
MAILER(local)dnl
MAILER(smtp)dnl
divert(-1)
I didn't change
On 1/29/08, knitti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 1/29/08, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
vi mydomain.mc
divert(0)dnl
VERSIONID(`@(#)mydomain.mc $Revision: 1.11 $')dnl
OSTYPE(openbsd)dnl
DOMAIN(mydomain.com)dnl
FEATURE(`virtusertable', `dbm /etc/mail/virtusertable')dnl
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:44:12PM +0100, Pau Amaro-Seoane wrote:
Now, admin here is taking security a bit too seriously and it's not
possible to telnet the printer over 9100.
I was thinking of using rlpr, like
rlpr -Plp -HIPaddressOfPrinterHere MyVeryInterestingFile.ps
But I don't
Darrin Chandler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you really want to find the parent you can...
$ ps ax -O pgid | grep ntpd
4887 4887 ?? Is 0:00.01 ntpd: [priv] (ntpd)
7164 4887 ?? I 0:00.06 ntpd: ntp engine (ntpd)
The header that gets stripped by grep:
PID PGID TT STAT TIME
On 2008/01/29 09:20, Richard P. Koett wrote:
Joel Sing wrote:
Note that that exploit is for versions earlier than 1.1.4.b3 - the
previous ports version was 1.1.4.b4, which one would presume is
patched for this vulnerability. Obviously this assumes that no other
exploits have been found
see recent thread, Install OpenBSD from USB.
Don't believe all of of what people said. :)
(short version: just do a normal install to the flash disk)
Nick.
Speaking of which, can a default install on USB Flash work and fully boot
a generic bsd kernel ok, or needs to boot bsd.rd or similar?
Hi,
I saw an email on the cvs list about some security fixes for 4.1-stable
and 4.2-stable. It seems that the patches for 4.1-stable didn't make it
all the way to the cvs-servers. For example,
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/XF4/xc/lib/font/bitmap/pcfread.c
still has the old version and
Hi,
i would like to use the ACLs in CUPS to give access to users and groups
from a LDAP directory. I already did this on a linux machine with
pam-ldap and nss-ldap, but on OpenBSD, pam and nss are not supported. So
i wonder if it was possible to do this another way ?
thanks
Comete
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 10:40:06AM -0600, Denny White wrote:
Though warned not to test on the list,
The rascal just couldn't resist.
If you mean me - thanks, Danny; I love you too.
1. Any test messages, which I've sent, reached the list several hours (some
even more than 24) after submission
On Monday 28 January 2008, Rami Sik wrote:
I did a research and found the similar problem already reported for
Linux installations, and Sun released a workaround for it. However, I
cannot find anything about openBSD installations.
At present, I've got two LSI RAID controllers here running
Hi all,
Perhaps a bit daft but:
Somehow I have managed to exclude my swap partition from being mounted
on my Raid0 array.
I have no idea why it isn't in fstab but I can only assume I messed
something up along the way while copying.
The swap partition is present as a slice within the virtual
On Jan 29, 2008 11:38 AM, Zbigniew Baniewski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
4. It's really a pity, that *all* (?) of you prefer to see my difficulties
as some kind of bad will or list abuse; and nowhere could I see a
message like: perhaps he needs some help?. I don't want to believe, this
is usual
Hi,
I have GW1 and GW2 redundant firewalls (isakmpd+pf+carp+sasyncd)
Is there a way to see which security associations are marked as replaced on
the backup GW?
ipsecctl -s all -v -v shows a lot but it does not seem to show that.
On the master (let's say GW1)
echo S
Pau Amaro-Seoane [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does any of you have a workaround to print ps w/o resorting to cups?
1. Enable the two-line rp example entry in /etc/printcap and replace
printhost with the hostname of your printer.
2. Start lpd: sudo lpd
3. Add lpd_flags= to /etc/rc.conf.local, so
Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2008/01/29 09:20, Richard P. Koett wrote:
The audit I was shown stated that vulnerable versions are prior to
1.1.4-bs. These version numbers seem to follow a pattern I don't
understand. Would I be correct in interpreting bs as later than
b3p1?
sure that's bs not
CVS fan-out takes a while. Just keep an eye on it, and I'll try get
the regular patch files and errata entries posted tonight.
CK
On Jan 29, 2008 11:06 AM, Maurice Janssen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I saw an email on the cvs list about some security fixes for 4.1-stable
and 4.2-stable. It
On 2008/01/29 14:15, Richard Daemon wrote:
see recent thread, Install OpenBSD from USB.
Don't believe all of of what people said. :)
(short version: just do a normal install to the flash disk)
Nick.
Speaking of which, can a default install on USB Flash work and fully boot
a generic
Stuart Henderson wrote:
while this is a way if you _must_ use SMB/CIFS, I'm not too sure if a
combination of samba, cygwin (which users won't bother to update once
it's installed so no security fixes) and MS loopback adapter (for some
client-breaks-their-own-network-and-shouts-at-you fun) is
I acquired an old dell laptop a couple of weeks ago which I went ahead
and put OpenBSD on it. I had everything installed and running fine,
and turned to a local available hot-spot with no wep and began
downloading various packages from ftp without issue via a usb 2.0 asus
wl-167g on top of a
Have a look at the following doc from Sun (section D.1.5):
http://docs.sun.com/source/817-5248-20/appd.html
I know what you mean. It sounded strange in the first place, but life is
full of surprises!
Rami Sik
-Original Message-
From: NetOne - Doichin Dokov [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi,
Original-Nachricht
Datum: Tue, 29 Jan 2008 14:15:20 -0500
Von: Richard Daemon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
An: Nick Holland [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: misc@openbsd.org
Betreff: Re: booting openbsd on eee without cd-rom
see recent thread, Install OpenBSD from USB.
Don't believe all
Yes, I first started by setting up the raid and installing openBSD on
top of it. All was fine until one of the disks failed. Then, I replaced
the failed disk, and try to re-initiate the raid (mirroring) where I got
stuck since the raid controller did not like the partitioning.
However, I advanced
Rami Sik ??:
Yes, I first started by setting up the raid and installing openBSD on
top of it. All was fine until one of the disks failed. Then, I replaced
the failed disk, and try to re-initiate the raid (mirroring) where I got
stuck since the raid controller did not like the partitioning.
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 07:38:59PM +0100, Zbigniew Baniewski wrote:
Just out of curiosity: what really a difference can you see between my tests
- and this, for example, thread, whish is just about nothing (limericks)?
I can see at least one: I *had* to make some tests, I was in contact with
On 2008/01/29 23:57, NetOne - Doichin Dokov wrote:
Yes, I first started by setting up the raid and installing openBSD on
top of it. All was fine until one of the disks failed. Then, I replaced
the failed disk, and try to re-initiate the raid (mirroring) where I got
stuck since the raid
Hi folks,
I have installed the OpenBSD 4.2 on imac but i can't configure X.
Everytime i try to run X the monitor goes to black and i can't see the
console either. The system respond commands from ssh and local keyboard
(i can reboot the system with reboot command even if i don't see what
i am
On Tuesday 29 January 2008, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2008/01/29 23:57, NetOne - Doichin Dokov wrote:
Yes, I first started by setting up the raid and installing openBSD
on top of it. All was fine until one of the disks failed. Then, I
replaced the failed disk, and try to re-initiate the
On Tuesday 29 January 2008, Zbigniew Baniewski wrote:
That's the second - and last - explaining from my side. I want to
add, that such (over)reaction of several persons is very
disappointing to me.
there once was a Pole without humor
uptight as if he had tumors
again he sent mail
in spite of
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 03:22:24PM -0800, J.C. Roberts wrote:
Please restart humord(1) before reading this list or you will continue
to be very disappointed. (;
Well, OK - let's get over it... ;)
--
pozdrawiam / regards
On Jan 29, 2008 1:47 PM, Marti Martinez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not everyone flamed you -- most of us (myself included) ignored your
initial email(s) as a minor irritation. But count me among the
arrogant assholes who *were* annoyed by it.
awesome. just discovered that gmail's spam filter is
Yep,
On Jan 29, 2008 2:06 AM, Darrin Chandler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There once was a message to test
Repeated unto being a pest
While marked to ignore
It was seen more and more
Until other begged, Give it a rest!
Someone had to say it.
--
Best Regards
Edd
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 03:22:24PM -0800, J.C. Roberts wrote:
On Tuesday 29 January 2008, Zbigniew Baniewski wrote:
That's the second - and last - explaining from my side. I want to
add, that such (over)reaction of several persons is very
disappointing to me.
there once was a Pole
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 07:38:59PM +0100, Zbigniew Baniewski sez:
On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 10:40:06AM -0600, Denny White wrote:
Though warned not to test on the list,
The rascal just couldn't resist.
If you mean me - thanks, Danny; I love you
I succeeded in stopping httpd daemon with the following command.
% apachectl graceful sleep 2 apachectl stop
Thanks! :)
I use 'apachectl graceful' to stop httpd in combination with cronolog.
It does not restart, but stops all running httpd-processes.
Hans
On 30/01/2008, Ted Unangst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
awesome. just discovered that gmail's spam filter is a fast learner.
by marking the first test emails spam, i haven't seen the other posts.
I've always just clicked Delete instead. I don't acutally know
Gmail's spam filter algorithm, but I've
...
But of course you have boot -a at the boot prompt for selecting the root
device. And I want to try the same the next days :-)
Regards
Stefan Kell
That brings up another question, hopefully there's an answer... rather than
having to do boot -a (even from boot.conf) and be present to
On Jan 29, 2008 11:58 PM, Alvaro Mantilla Gimenez
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi folks,
I have installed the OpenBSD 4.2 on imac but i can't configure X.
Everytime i try to run X the monitor goes to black and i can't see the
console either. The system respond commands from ssh and local
Hi all,
I'm looking to buy a server that supports OpenBSD and I'm looking at either
Dell PowerEdge 1950 III
or Dell PowerEdge R200. I noticed Marco (marco@)'s message about Dell PERC 6i
that exists on
PowerEdge 1950 III and R2000. But, if I'm not going to use RAID and only use
Serial ATA
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