Next great toy like Zaurus with OpenBSD?

2008-05-21 Thread Tomas Bodzar
http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS2846711250.html

Edition 2009 du Guide des salons en France et a l'international

2008-05-21 Thread Editions Expo News
Pri-commandez jusq'au 30 mai 2008 votre exemplaire de l'idition 2009 (sortie fin septembre 2008) et binificiez de notre tarif promotionnel : 69 € au lieu de 90 € TTC (Pour toute commande regue avant le 20 mai, nous vous offrons en plus un abonnement d'un an au Magazine Evinements

Re: small pc recommendation

2008-05-21 Thread Tobias Walkowiak
On Tue, May 20, 2008 at 02:03:03PM -0700, xSAPPYx wrote: I have a couple jetway mini-itx boxen I like. There are daughter boards for these guys, I put a 3x10/100/1000 card in there for 4 nics total. Boards: http://www.jetwaycomputer.com/VIA.html no one needs DVI and sound on a router board!

Re: Problems with apache vhosts

2008-05-21 Thread Taleon
Thanks for the fast vhost-fix. I rebuilded my system some minutes ago and now it works perfectly without any error-messages. $ sudo apachectl start /usr/sbin/apachectl start: httpd started Greetings Christian Ruesch

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Leo Baltus
Op 21/05/2008 om 01:10:05 +0300, schreef Imre Oolberg : Some time ago i did experiment with dual-booting (actually multi-booting) from one harddisk several OpenBSD instances, for the sake of fun. I settled to using dualboot OpenBSD to make upgrades more suitable for me (just unpacking new

Re: No 4.2 or 4.3 Love

2008-05-21 Thread Steve Shockley
dontek wrote: The last version of OpenBSD I have been able to install on my Compaq Prolient DL360 G2 is 4.1. In all cases I am attempting to boot and install using the i386 cd4x.iso. In both cases of attempting to install 4.2 and 4.3, the installer hard-locks at the end of the dmesg. No

Re: No 4.2 or 4.3 Love

2008-05-21 Thread Mitch Parker
Dontek, You really need to go download, burn, and install the latest Firmware ISO (8.00) from the HP site. There are major updates provided there for multiple system components due to HP _really_ messing up on supplying decent firmware for their server platforms. Thankfully HP puts it all on

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Chris Bennett
You may also want to have a look at GAG. I use it to dualboot OpenBSD and Windows. Not sure if it will work with two OpenBSD's or not but it's very fast and easy to use. Even booting it just off the floppy disk is super fast! I will be looking at having a -current and -stable box when I have

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Richard Daemon
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 7:38 AM, Leo Baltus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Op 21/05/2008 om 01:10:05 +0300, schreef Imre Oolberg : Some time ago i did experiment with dual-booting (actually multi-booting) from one harddisk several OpenBSD instances, for the sake of fun. I settled to using dualboot

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Markus Hennecke
On Wed, 21 May 2008, Chris Bennett wrote: You may also want to have a look at GAG. I use it to dualboot OpenBSD and Windows. Not sure if it will work with two OpenBSD's or not but it's very fast and easy to use. Even booting it just off the floppy disk is super fast! I will be looking at

Re: Lastet supported jdk on OpenBSD

2008-05-21 Thread John Nietzsche
Does it mean web browser plugin availability too? On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 10:34 PM, Matthew Szudzik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 09:03:17PM -0300, John Nietzsche wrote: i would like to add support for java on my 4.3 openbsd desktop. Has anybody already done so? May you

Protection de votre marque

2008-05-21 Thread Marie Th� Robin
Si ce message ne s'affiche pas correctement, vous pouvez le visualiser en suivant ce lien. Bonjour, Suite ` la progression constante des litiges liis aux diptts frauduleux des noms de domaine, il est disormais primordial pour une entreprise de protiger sa marque ou sa raison sociale sur

Next great toy like Zaurus with OpenBSD?

2008-05-21 Thread Mark Mathias
2008/5/21 Tomas Bodzar [EMAIL PROTECTED]: http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS2846711250.html This thing really just sounds like a EEE clone, but with much reduced power, and not that much cheaper for what is in it. -- Mark Mathias

separating normal ssh logins from authpf logins

2008-05-21 Thread Juan Miscaro
Hi, I got 4.2 running as an 3-legged internet gateway/nat system. It provides net access for both a wired subnet and a wireless subnet. Wireless access is secured with authpf. I want to completely separate management for normal logins and for authpf logins. This applies in the context of both

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Lars Noodén
I've been setting up multi-boot (OpenBSD/OSX/Kubuntu) for someone else's Intel MacMini. The place where I needed to pay extra attention was making sure that OpenBSD ended up in a primary partition. That seems a bit difficult to ensure with OS X's diskutility program (which on 10.5 gives you one

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Pau
Hi, interesting, I have been 1ng all day around this... My problem is following: I want to have grub silent. I don't mean hide menu but do not display any kind of message whatsoever When hidding menu, you still get a GRUB loading... message, which I would like to get rid of I have: windows

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Lars Noodén
Pau wrote: ... I want to have grub silent. I don't mean hide menu but do not display any kind of message whatsoever Maybe use --silent ? http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub.html#terminal Regards, -Lars

Unbound: a validating, recursive, and caching DNS resolver

2008-05-21 Thread Andrés
I just read about this project, might be of interest: http://unbound.net/ It's developed by Kirei, NLnet Labs, Nominet, and VeriSign; and released under a permissive free software license: http://unbound.net/svn/trunk/LICENSE I read about it at:

Re: Unbound: a validating, recursive, and caching DNS resolver

2008-05-21 Thread Will Maier
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 02:09:23PM -0300, Andr'es wrote: I just read about this project, might be of interest: http://unbound.net/ It's developed by Kirei, NLnet Labs, Nominet, and VeriSign; and released under a permissive free software license: http://unbound.net/svn/trunk/LICENSE I

Re: Unbound: a validating, recursive, and caching DNS resolver

2008-05-21 Thread Mike Erdely
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 02:09:23PM -0300, Andr?s wrote: I just read about this project, might be of interest: http://unbound.net/ You forgot a link: http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-portsm=121131428431723w=2

Re: Unbound: a validating, recursive, and caching DNS resolver

2008-05-21 Thread Andreas Maus
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 02:09:23PM -0300, Andris wrote: I just read about this project, might be of interest: http://unbound.net/ Hi. Yeah and a port for unbound is just in progress ;) http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-portsm1131428431723w=2 So long, Andreas. -- Windows 95: A 32-bit patch for a

Re: Next great toy like Zaurus with OpenBSD?

2008-05-21 Thread Pollywog
On Wednesday 21 May 2008 14:53:36 Mark Mathias wrote: 2008/5/21 Tomas Bodzar [EMAIL PROTECTED]: http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS2846711250.html This thing really just sounds like a EEE clone, but with much reduced power, and not that much cheaper for what is in it. And it appears they

Re: Next great toy like Zaurus with OpenBSD?

2008-05-21 Thread Chris Kuethe
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 10:08 AM, Pollywog [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Wednesday 21 May 2008 14:53:36 Mark Mathias wrote: 2008/5/21 Tomas Bodzar [EMAIL PROTECTED]: http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS2846711250.html This thing really just sounds like a EEE clone, but with much reduced

more pci ids

2008-05-21 Thread Mitja Muženič
Found in a Dell T300, verified through pciids.sourceforge.net Mitja === RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/dev/pci/pcidevs,v retrieving revision 1.1360 diff -u -r1.1360 pcidevs --- pcidevs 20 May 2008 08:23:18 - 1.1360 +++ pcidevs

Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Kendall Shaw
In the networking section of the OpenBSD FAQ it suggests reading Understanding IP addressing: http://www.3com.com/other/pdfs/infra/corpinfo/en_US/501302.pdf I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2 numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232 (4,294,967,296). Can you understand what they

dhcpd-sync not in /etc/services

2008-05-21 Thread Insan Praja SW
Hi Misc@, Just update the kernel and userland from openbsd.de, and got the following message.. myNiceMachine# dhcpd rl0 dhcpd: Can't find service dhcpd-sync in /etc/services Anybody can point me where to go? Best Regards and Thanks, -- insandotpraja(at)gmaildotcom

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Chris Kuethe
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses available. 232 what? Typesetting error. That should be 2^32 or 2**32 or pow(2, 32) or 2super32/32 23 or 8 what?

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Almir Karic
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 9:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 232 what? 2^32 -- For far too long, power has been concentrated in the hands of root and his wheel oligarchy. We have instituted a dictatorship of the users. All system administration functions will be handled by the

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread L. V. Lammert
At 12:36 PM 5/21/2008 -0700, Kendall Shaw wrote: For example, on page 3: IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses available. 232 what? It should read: 2^32(to the 32rd power) Could be an issue with special characters in

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Paul de Weerd
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 03:07:23PM -0500, L. V. Lammert wrote: 23 or 8 what? Bits? 23 = CIDR notation, .. i.e. 32 bits - 23 bits for the network = 8 for the subnet Written as: n.n.n.n/23 You should work on your mathskills a bit, Lee ;) Cheers, Paul 'WEiRD' de Weerd --

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Dave Anderson
On Wed, 21 May 2008, Kendall Shaw wrote: In the networking section of the OpenBSD FAQ it suggests reading Understanding IP addressing: http://www.3com.com/other/pdfs/infra/corpinfo/en_US/501302.pdf I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2 numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Jose Quinteiro
Looks like the exponentiation operator got eaten up somewhere. 2 to the 32nd power (2^32) is 4,294,967,296. 2^3 == 8. HTH, Jose. Kendall Shaw wrote: In the networking section of the OpenBSD FAQ it suggests reading Understanding IP addressing:

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Paul de Weerd
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36:05PM -0700, Kendall Shaw wrote: | In the networking section of the OpenBSD FAQ it suggests reading | Understanding IP addressing: | | http://www.3com.com/other/pdfs/infra/corpinfo/en_US/501302.pdf | | I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use

Re: dhcpd-sync not in /etc/services

2008-05-21 Thread Insan Praja SW
On Thu, 22 May 2008 03:07:40 +0700, Kenneth R Westerback [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: all righty... On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 02:42:10AM +0700, Insan Praja SW wrote: Hi Misc@, Just update the kernel and userland from openbsd.de, and got the following message.. myNiceMachine# dhcpd rl0 dhcpd:

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Philip Guenther
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ... I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2 numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232 (4,294,967,296). Can you understand what they are saying? Sounds like the superscript notation for exponentiation was lost

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Kendall Shaw
On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 12:46 -0700, Chris Kuethe wrote: On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses available. 232 what? Typesetting error. That should be 2^32

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Paul de Weerd
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 01:10:56PM -0700, Kendall Shaw wrote: | Thanks everyone. | | How about this then from page 4, about class A networks: | | Each Class A network address has an 8-bit network prefix, with the | highest order bit set to 0 (zero) and a 7-bit network number, followed | by a

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Kendall Shaw
On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 13:10 -0700, Kendall Shaw wrote: On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 12:46 -0700, Chris Kuethe wrote: On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses

Re: dhcpd-sync not in /etc/services

2008-05-21 Thread Chris Kuethe
I'd say read the error a couple of times. DHCPD can't find the definition of dhcpd-sync in /etc/services. To see if there's a newer version of this file, you can check cvsweb (http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/etc/services) and patch it in yourself or use the shiny new sysmerge.sh to

Re: openbsd multiboot

2008-05-21 Thread Pau
nope... nor terminal --silent neither terminal --silent console I hate gnu I'll play around with installboot and creating a small partition at the very beginning of the drive and moving grub around and and and... wish me luck 2008/5/21 Lars Noodin [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Pau wrote: ... I want

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread Chris Kuethe
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 1:10 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Thanks everyone. How about this then from page 4, about class A networks: Each Class A network address has an 8-bit network prefix, with the highest order bit set to 0 (zero) and a 7-bit network number, followed by a

Re: dhcpd-sync not in /etc/services

2008-05-21 Thread Insan Praja SW
On Thu, 22 May 2008 03:16:56 +0700, Chris Kuethe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: sysmerge.. shiny... me likey.. Thanks Chris and Misc@ Insan I'd say read the error a couple of times. DHCPD can't find the definition of dhcpd-sync in /etc/services. To see if there's a newer version of this file,

taskjuggler problems

2008-05-21 Thread Vijay Sankar
Can someone please tell me what I am doing wrong or missing here? TaskJugglerUI works properly on stock OpenBSD 4.1 and 4.2 but it fails on OpenBSD 4.3. Thanks very much, the fate of the universe depends on this package working properly :) -- Forwarded Message -- Subject:

Re: dhcpd-sync not in /etc/services

2008-05-21 Thread Mark Pecaut
On 5/21/08, Insan Praja SW [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi Misc@, Just update the kernel and userland from openbsd.de, and got the following message.. myNiceMachine# dhcpd rl0 dhcpd: Can't find service dhcpd-sync in /etc/services Anybody can point me where to go? Best Regards and Thanks,

Re: dhcpd-sync not in /etc/services

2008-05-21 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2008-05-21, Chris Kuethe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'd say read the error a couple of times. DHCPD can't find the definition of dhcpd-sync in /etc/services. To see if there's a newer version of this file, you can check cvsweb (http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/etc/services) and

Re: Problems with apache vhosts

2008-05-21 Thread Marc Balmer
Taleon wrote: Thanks for the fast vhost-fix. I rebuilded my system some minutes ago and now it works perfectly without any error-messages. It is very important that the IPv6 additions do not break existing IPv4 installations. People should really look out for IPv4 breakage. Thanks for your

Re: separating normal ssh logins from authpf logins

2008-05-21 Thread Srikant Tangirala
If I am not misreading your question, Few things which I can think of are: 1. For regular logins, shell in /etc/passwd will be regular shell while for authpf users, /usr/sbin/authpf 2. See login.conf man page. Having a separate login class for authpf and regular users will give good

Re: Lastet supported jdk on OpenBSD

2008-05-21 Thread Leonardo Rodrigues
That too. And the plugin case is somewhat worse, since as far as I know, Sun still hasn't released the proper license for the browser plugin, so, no packages for it even on -current. As others pointed out, if you're running -current, you can already install the jdk or jre packages. On Wed, May

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread ropers
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ... I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2 numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232 (4,294,967,296). Can you understand what they are saying? I am really heartened to see how quickly everybody here has

Re: Decipering Understanding IP addressing

2008-05-21 Thread ropers
2008/5/21 ropers [EMAIL PROTECTED]: On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ... I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2 numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232 (4,294,967,296). Can you understand what they are saying? I am really heartened to see