On Fri, 12 Mar 2010, Christopher Ahrens wrote:
You aren't missing anything, these are 2 different webservers:
OpenBSD.org [199.185.137.3, IP registered to Theos Software]
Perhaps Theo swapped it with them for theos.com. Good joke!
Regards,
David
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On 03/11/10 22:49, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2010-03-11, Harald Dunkel ha...@darkharri.de wrote:
I am not talking about the boot partition, but about a data partition
set up at install time.
Not to mention that OpenBSD is so easy to install,
Not quite a solution, I think. What about if /var/www mounts in a
different filesystem than /var?
Hardlinks from chrooted environments don't seem to be a wise solution
anyway... Just IMHO.
Regards,
Dani
El 12/03/2010 12:16, Sunnz escribiC3:
2010/3/11 Janmalepa...@googlemail.com:
I didn't
On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 6:58 PM, Daniel Gracia Garallar
danie...@electronicagracia.com wrote:
Not quite a solution, I think. What about if /var/www mounts in a different
filesystem than /var?
how about
- tell mysql to create sock file in /var/www/var/run/mysql; or
- tell php to connect to
2010/3/12 Daniel Gracia Garallar danie...@electronicagracia.com:
Not quite a solution, I think. What about if /var/www mounts in a different
filesystem than /var?
Hardlinks from chrooted environments don't seem to be a wise solution
anyway... Just IMHO.
In that case you could change the
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Hi,
I dimly remember that it was possible to delete flows by specifying
their SPI index in the SADB, but when I say
# ipsecctl -d 0x12345678
with 0x12345678 being a number obtained by running
# ipsecctl -v -ss
I only get back an error message. If I say ipsecctl -sf
and feed one of these lines
Hi David,
David Vasek wrote on Sat, Mar 13, 2010 at 10:38:48AM +0100:
On Fri, 12 Mar 2010, Christopher Ahrens wrote:
You aren't missing anything, these are 2 different webservers:
OpenBSD.org [199.185.137.3, IP registered to Theos Software]
Yes, and that is cvs.openbsd.org, one of
hello
i founded messages on authlog of a OBSD-4.6, i have not seen it
before, and i was not able to find information at archives and google.
Mar 9 02:20:25 OpenBSD kdeinit: gethostby*.getanswer: asked for
srx.main.ebayrtm.com IN , got type SOA
Mar 9 02:47:32 OpenBSD kdeinit:
- This mail is a HTML mail. Not all elements could be shown in plain text
mode. -
axei vc !!!
Anexo:
Comprovante_Deposito (151,0 Kb)
Segue em anexo o comprovante de deposito feito em Conta Corrente, por favor
pedimos que os dados e valores sejam confirmados atravis do comprovante em
anexo, para
Hi guys,
I was reading the arstechnica article on the internet filtering that's
now in place in New Zealand they mentioned that the appliance they're
using called a Whitebox which uses a BSD-Unix
Anyone know more about the OS used in this system??
Sevan / Venture37
[...]
As for answering requests, how do you know it isn't? Did you trace
the process? Did you use tcpdump to confirm that the packets were
being received? Have you confirmed that your pf config isn't blocking
them?
I did'nt trace the process, but tcpdump show the packets, pflog
On Sat, 13 Mar 2010, Sunnz wrote:
2010/3/12 Daniel Gracia Garallar danie...@electronicagracia.com:
Not quite a solution, I think. What about if /var/www mounts in a different
filesystem than /var?
Hardlinks from chrooted environments don't seem to be a wise solution
anyway... Just
Hi,
technical issues aside,
On Sat, 13.03.2010 at 15:24:30 +, Sevan / Venture37 ventur...@gmail.com
wrote:
I was reading the arstechnica article on the internet filtering
that's now in place in New Zealand they mentioned that the
appliance they're using called a Whitebox which uses a
This has also worked for me in the past.
Bert
On 3/13/10 9:27 AM, L. V. Lammert l...@omnitec.net wrote:
On Sat, 13 Mar 2010, Sunnz wrote:
2010/3/12 Daniel Gracia Garallar danie...@electronicagracia.com:
Not quite a solution, I think. What about if /var/www mounts in a different
filesystem
Sevan / Venture37 ventur...@gmail.com writes:
they're using called a Whitebox which uses a BSD-Unix
Their marketers apparently do not know (or do not care) that term is
15+ years out of date and used to be the focusing point of a legal
dust-up back in the days. Not a good sign in itself, their
All,
As suggested.
Just to confirm that it perfectly works.
I made a NAT on ext_if from int_if
In principle :
- create a bridge, add the int_if to the bridge
- add a rule filtering and tagging based on MAC address ex :
brconfig bridge0 rule pass in on fxp0 src 9:8:7:6:5:4 tag boss
- filter with
Has anyone tested the network throughput on these sweet little things?
On 14/03/2010, at 4:41 AM, P. Souza wrote:
Has anyone tested the network throughput on these sweet little things?
not really. ive always been limited by the speed of wireless, or the speed of
the dsl link im using. i havent got close to high cpu usage on my rb600 unless
i was compiling stuff.
I'm not trying to over throw bypass governments or make money being a thug
I was trying to imply a possibly that the white box is nothing more
then a fancy white box running OpenBSD?
Sevan / Venture37
I'd be quite keen to get OpenBSD running on the RB1000.
I tried writing the miniroot47.fs to a CF card and booting off that, (on the
off chance that it might work), but didn't get very far.
--
RouterBOOT booter 2.20
FreeBSD and Linux
The routing is done on FreeBSD. UI on Linux
It's hardly rocket science either. It could easily be done on OpenBSD,
but we would need to add a strip private or similar to make it
implementable.
On 14/03/2010 2:24 AM, Sevan / Venture37 wrote:
Hi guys,
I was reading the
Jeff Ross wrote:
Henning Brauer wrote:
* Jeff Ross jr...@openvistas.net [2010-03-02 16:59]:
I bought a replacement supermicro motherboard off fleabay that has
dual Opteron 250 @2.4GHz. The cpus have passive heatsinks, it is in
a supermicro 2U chassis with 4 front fans.
do you have the air
On 13-03-10 17:04, Bob Beck wrote:
I call bullshit on audiors all the time. I normally get away with it.
Why? I know something about the field, They actually do not, they are
working from a cookbook. Once you explain coherently why the cookbook
is wrong for your environment you know what
On 2010-03-13, Sunnz sun...@gmail.com wrote:
2010/3/12 Daniel Gracia Garallar danie...@electronicagracia.com:
Not quite a solution, I think. What about if /var/www mounts in a different
filesystem than /var?
Hardlinks from chrooted environments don't seem to be a wise solution
anyway... Just
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:27 AM, Jeff Ross jr...@openvistas.net wrote:
Jeff Ross wrote:
Henning Brauer wrote:
* Jeff Ross jr...@openvistas.net [2010-03-02 16:59]:
I bought a replacement supermicro motherboard off fleabay that has
dual Opteron 250 @2.4GHz. B The cpus have passive
On Sun, 14 Mar 2010, Ross Cameron wrote:
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:27 AM, Jeff Ross jr...@openvistas.net wrote:
Jeff Ross wrote:
Henning Brauer wrote:
* Jeff Ross jr...@openvistas.net [2010-03-02 16:59]:
I bought a replacement supermicro motherboard off fleabay that has
dual Opteron 250
The following URL which is supposed to show the usb(4) man page still
shows the old usb(3) man page:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=usbsektion=4apropos=0manpath=OpenBSD+Currentarch=
I know it is release time and that everybody is extremely busy :)
Adriaan
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 01:07:31AM +0100, Adriaan wrote:
The following URL which is supposed to show the usb(4) man page still
shows the old usb(3) man page:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=usbsektion=4apropos=0manpath=OpenBSD+Currentarch=
I know it is release time and that
Has anyone tested the network throughput on these sweet little things?
Not that relevant but I thought I'd share my findings anyway.
According to some page I found(TM), the RB600 measured about 250 Mbps
on iperf on both debian and routerOS[1].
I was expecting more since the routerboard
Just an update:
I am able to cat /dev/ttyC0 and cat /dev/ttyC0 and send and get text
both ways.
If I run /usr/klibexec/getty std.9600 /dev/ttyC0, I get nothing. the
only way to get out is ^Z and then kill it.
Also, getty is not running when I start up. I check ps ax and its not there.
On 14/03/2010, at 10:36 AM, P. Souza wrote:
Has anyone tested the network throughput on these sweet little things?
Not that relevant but I thought I'd share my findings anyway.
According to some page I found(TM), the RB600 measured about 250 Mbps
on iperf on both debian and routerOS[1].
I
I was hoping that it might work as the RB600A and RB1000 CPU / SOC
seem similar (MPC8343/E and MPC8547/E).
They are not similar. The MPC8547/E is shockingly different.
https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?CD47=1CD47%2b=Add
--
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net/
On Sat, Mar 13, 2010 at 7:42 PM, Jason Dixon ja...@dixongroup.net wrote:
https://https.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/order?CD47=1CD47%2b=Add
--
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net/
You're late!
I already put my order in with the USA distributor as soon as I saw Theo's
post.
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ATCO MARKETING VE DERSIMONLINE ISBIRLIGI ILE UYGULAMALI DIS TICARET
UZMANLIK PROGRAMINI ONLINE OLARAK SIZLERE SUNUYORUZ.
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Sermaye ve mal degisimi |retimi igin |lke genelinde veya uluslar
Hello,
is there any GUI (like pfsense) around which can be installed on a
clean OpenBSD box (or even two CARP-connected boxes) for pf management
?
I've found comixwall, but it seems to be dead already.
Cheers,
Ilya Shipitsin
Hi all,
I know this is extremely vague but I am hoping someone can advise whether this
is known/rectified in the upcoming release so I dont have to interfere with
production equipment to test.
We have a wan configired with pppoe/ipsec/pf configured at each gateway. As
soon as 4.6 is in place the
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 11:02:29AM +0500, ??? wrote:
Hello,
is there any GUI (like pfsense) around which can be installed on a
clean OpenBSD box (or even two CARP-connected boxes) for pf management
?
I've found comixwall, but it seems to be dead already.
None that are worth it,
we have many people who know ISA very well and all they do with ISA is
publishing applications, rdr rules in terms of pf.
they do not need to know all the pf detailed, all they need is
a) something ISA-like
b) syntax-checker, I mean that gui should only allow adding correct
rules (what is not
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 11:48:44AM +0500, ??? wrote:
we have many people who know ISA very well and all they do with ISA is
publishing applications, rdr rules in terms of pf.
they do not need to know all the pf detailed, all they need is
a) something ISA-like
b) syntax-checker, I
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 11:48:44AM +0500, ??? wrote:
we have many people who know ISA very well and all they do with ISA is
publishing applications, rdr rules in terms of pf.
they do not need to know all the pf detailed, all they need is
a) something ISA-like
b) syntax-checker, I
I am probably missing something big time but could somebody enlight me
and explain why would 4.7 be released May 19 2010?
If the schedule is going back to normal it should be May 1st. If 4.7
is to be released six months from 4.6 it should be released April 19th.
Right?
Cheers,
Predrag
a) two CARP-connected OpenBSD boxes
b) many real IP addresses bound to OpenBSD
c) RFC1918 (non routable) network with servers
d1) monkey button for nat rules, so some servers can connect to
certain services (say, smtp to Gmail)
d2) monkey button for rdr rules, so some servers could bepublished
2010/3/14 Jason Dixon ja...@dixongroup.net:
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 11:48:44AM +0500, ??? wrote:
we have many people who know ISA very well and all they do with ISA is
publishing applications, rdr rules in terms of pf.
they do not need to know all the pf detailed, all they need is
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:05:48PM +0500, ??? wrote:
a) two CARP-connected OpenBSD boxes
b) many real IP addresses bound to OpenBSD
c) RFC1918 (non routable) network with servers
d1) monkey button for nat rules, so some servers can connect to
certain services (say, smtp to
I've gone through the steps outlined in release(8) to create a release
set which then i used mkisofs and cdrecord from cdrtools (ports) to
burn a CD image that I use to upgrade my other machines with. The last
two times I had to do this, after an errata update, I notice that
during the set install
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:12:31PM +0500, ??? wrote:
2010/3/14 Jason Dixon ja...@dixongroup.net:
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 11:48:44AM +0500, ??? wrote:
we have many people who know ISA very well and all they do with ISA is
publishing applications, rdr rules in terms of pf.
I just want to make sure there's no wheel already invented ))
2010/3/14 Bret S. Lambert bret.lamb...@gmail.com:
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:05:48PM +0500, ??? wrote:
a) two CARP-connected OpenBSD boxes
b) many real IP addresses bound to OpenBSD
c) RFC1918 (non routable) network with
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:30:58PM +0500, ??? wrote:
I just want to make sure there's no wheel already invented ))
While that's a fair enough thing to do, you didn't really tell
anybody what you were going to use the wheel for.
I could continue the metaphor, but that would quickly
the situation is pretty clear - any web gui for pf, something what
pfsense already is, but installable on clean OpenBSD box. you
probably do not make sense what are mailing lists for.
mailing lists are for asking questions and for answering questions. if
you have nothing to say except read the
the problem was described very precisely pf gui like pfsense, but
installable on clean OpenBSD box, wasn't it ?
State the problem you're trying to solve before try to enlist
the help of others in solving it.
read the letter before answering to it.
2010/3/14 Bret S. Lambert
On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 12:42:21PM +0500, ??? wrote:
the situation is pretty clear - any web gui for pf, something what
pfsense already is, but installable on clean OpenBSD box. you
probably do not make sense what are mailing lists for.
mailing lists are for asking questions and for
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