Re: But there is Fossil...

2020-01-06 Thread Sean Kamath
> On Jan 6, 2020, at 16:18, Constantine A. Murenin wrote: > > GitHub is so successful because it is non-trivial to get Git working. I found gitea trivial to install. Having said that, I use whatever repo projects provide. I’m not here to say VCS “A” is better than VCS “B”, just saying

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Sean Kamath
> On Jan 6, 2020, at 04:24, Anders Andersson wrote: > Right now I'm considering something that monitors dhcpd.leases for > changes and updates a running unbound using unbound-control(8) but I > don't feel confident enough writing such a tool that does not miss a > lot of corner cases and handle

Re: Readv and writev failing across ethernet

2020-01-06 Thread Raymond, David
Well, I figured out how to suppress the readv/writev problems in openmpi -- run it under ktrace! I gave up after the ktrace file reached 46 GB. This suggests that the "not permitted" failure on writev is a timing problem that appears sporadically. From what I have read about openmpi, a new

Re: But there is Fossil...

2020-01-06 Thread Constantine A. Murenin
The problem with Fossil is lack of a driving force. GitHub is so successful because it is non-trivial to get Git working. Now that Git is a standard, there's a lot of copycats for GitHub itself, because every developer knows Git.* Fossil seems to be pretty easy to use all by itself, hence

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Andrew Daugherity
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 9:26 AM Sonic wrote: > > You have it backwards, let dhcp use the information in unbound to > assign the reserved address: > === > host alice { > hardware ethernet 20:9e:02:f5:93:60; > fixed-address alice.home.lan; > option host-name

Re: But there is Fossil...

2020-01-06 Thread Marc Espie
On Mon, Jan 06, 2020 at 09:34:55PM +0100, Anders Andersson wrote: > One good thing with this trainwreck of a discussion is that it pointed > me to GoT. I've been looking for an alternative to CVS on my Amiga, > but git is too convoluted to even start trying to build on a > mostly-C89-semi-POSIX

Re: But there is Fossil...

2020-01-06 Thread Anders Andersson
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 8:03 PM Stefan Sperling wrote: > > On Mon, Jan 06, 2020 at 06:28:48PM +, go...@disroot.org wrote: > > done reading that entire document, however, this is a topic about > > OpenBSD choosing Git over Fossil, but the actual problem is > > reimplementing Git (Game of Trees

Re: But there is Fossil...

2020-01-06 Thread Stefan Sperling
On Mon, Jan 06, 2020 at 06:28:48PM +, go...@disroot.org wrote: > done reading that entire document, however, this is a topic about > OpenBSD choosing Git over Fossil, but the actual problem is > reimplementing Git (Game of Trees is a Git implementation just > like OpenGit) and that's

Re: But there is Fossil...

2020-01-06 Thread goleo
January 5, 2020 5:50 PM, "Diana Eichert" wrote: > On Sat, Jan 4, 2020 at 8:48 PM Theo de Raadt wrote: > >> > > SNIP > >> wow this is going downhill. random solo-repo people telling us what to do >> when Chuck Cranor and I started this whole export-the-repo model. >> >> get some perspective

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2020-01-06, Raymond, David wrote: > I found unbound hard to use so I went back to dnsmasq (a package on > OpenBSD), which I had used previously on linux. Trivial configuration > and it works like a charm in providing DNS service for local and > remote systems behind a NAT firewall. (It gets

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Steve Litt
On Mon, 6 Jan 2020 09:51:55 -0500 Sonic wrote: > On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 9:35 AM Steve Litt > wrote: > > I need something like that for my situation. Two questions: > > > > 1) Does the preceding setup prevent anyone with a different mac > > address from getting 192.168.0.68? > > Via dhcp,

oops (was: unsubscription from misc@)

2020-01-06 Thread zeurkous
Fsck, me sleepy head typed 'isc' instead of the intended 'ajordomo'... Suffice is to say that mehad enough of the bickering for a while. --zeur. -- Friggin' Machines!

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Paul de Weerd
On Mon, Jan 06, 2020 at 09:33:44AM -0500, Steve Litt wrote: | On Mon, 06 Jan 2020 14:03:20 +0100 | "Boudewijn Dijkstra" wrote: | | | > Another way is to configure the DHCP server to give alice the same | > address every time. | > | > host alice { | > hardware ethernet

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Sonic
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 9:35 AM Steve Litt wrote: > I need something like that for my situation. Two questions: > > 1) Does the preceding setup prevent anyone with a different mac address > from getting 192.168.0.68? Via dhcp, yes, it would. Unless they change their MAC address to match. They

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Sonic
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 7:27 AM Anders Andersson wrote: > ... > Every time information has to be entered twice there is room for error > and inconsistencies, so preferably this list should be automatically > generated from a simpler file, maybe /etc/hosts. No need for dual entry or messing with

Re: openssl / did something change?

2020-01-06 Thread Dieter Rauschenberger
Try openssl aes-256-cbc -d -a -salt -md md5 < encrypted-file.encrypted ^^^ -Dieter On Mon, Jan 06, 2020 at 02:17:20PM +, Roderick wrote: > > I cannot decrypt files with > > openssl aes-256-cbc -d -a -salt < encrypted-file.encrypted > > That I encrypted

Re: openssl / did something change?

2020-01-06 Thread Roderick
On Mon, 6 Jan 2020, Zé Loff wrote: > Someone had the same issue some weeks ago. See: > https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc=157548338310097=2 > and the following discussion. Solution: add -md md5 Thank you very much for the fast answer. I was a litle in panic. Rodrigo

Re: openssl / did something change?

2020-01-06 Thread Zé Loff
On Mon, Jan 06, 2020 at 02:17:20PM +, Roderick wrote: > > I cannot decrypt files with > > openssl aes-256-cbc -d -a -salt < encrypted-file.encrypted > > That I encrypted with > > openssl aes-256-cbc -e -a -salt < file > file.encrypted > > I get the error: > > bad decrypt >

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Steve Litt
On Mon, 06 Jan 2020 14:03:20 +0100 "Boudewijn Dijkstra" wrote: > Another way is to configure the DHCP server to give alice the same > address every time. > > host alice { > hardware ethernet 00:19:b9:e0:2f:de; > fixed-address 192.168.0.68; > } I need something like that for

openssl / did something change?

2020-01-06 Thread Roderick
I cannot decrypt files with openssl aes-256-cbc -d -a -salt < encrypted-file.encrypted That I encrypted with openssl aes-256-cbc -e -a -salt < file > file.encrypted I get the error: bad decrypt 616640944:error:06FFF064:digital envelope routines:CRYPTO_internal:bad

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Raymond, David
I found unbound hard to use so I went back to dnsmasq (a package on OpenBSD), which I had used previously on linux. Trivial configuration and it works like a charm in providing DNS service for local and remote systems behind a NAT firewall. (It gets local information from the host file on the NAT

Re: dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Boudewijn Dijkstra
Op Mon, 06 Jan 2020 13:24:50 +0100 schreef Anders Andersson : I'm in the process of replacing an aging OpenWRT device on my home LAN with an apu4d4 running OpenBSD as my personal router. I would like to use unbound as a caching DNS server for my local hosts, but I'm trying to figure out how to

Re: Blank/black screen for 6.6 - any general debugging hints?

2020-01-06 Thread Boudewijn Dijkstra
Op Mon, 30 Dec 2019 19:07:10 +0100 schreef lu hu : Hello, I was using 6.5 on a desktop PC. I did a sysupgrade, but after the blue boot text, I only get black/blank screen. I don't think it is just the screen, since I cannot reach it via network. I booted the 6.6 bsd.rd then did a clean

Re: sysupgrade fails

2020-01-06 Thread Christer Solskogen
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 1:30 PM Christer Solskogen < christer.solsko...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 12:27 PM Stuart Henderson > wrote: > >> >> Are you able to ^Z at that point and run "mount"? (I can't remember if >> sysupgrade lets you do this). >> >> > I can. My root disk is

Re: OpenBSD VM on ESXi: uvn_flush: obj=0xfffffd813ee78298, offset=0x33f000. error during pageout.

2020-01-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2020-01-05, Jurjen Oskam wrote: > On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 08:01:25AM -, Stuart Henderson wrote: > >> On 2019-10-30, Jurjen Oskam wrote: >> > >> > All snapshots I tried up to and including this point did not show the >> > problem: >> > OpenBSD 6.6-beta (GENERIC.MP) #202: Mon Aug 12

Re: sysupgrade fails

2020-01-06 Thread Christer Solskogen
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 12:27 PM Stuart Henderson wrote: > > Are you able to ^Z at that point and run "mount"? (I can't remember if > sysupgrade lets you do this). > > I can. My root disk is not mounted. Can you show your /etc/fstab? > 89100ad7b8b8d77a.b none swap sw 89100ad7b8b8d77a.a / ffs

Re: LCP keepalive timeout for PPPOE

2020-01-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2020-01-05, Tom Murphy wrote: > On 2020-01-03, jrmu wrote: >> inet 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 NONE \ >> pppoedev cpsw0 authproto pap \ >> authname '12345...@isp.net' authkey 'abcd1234' up >> dest 0.0.0.1 >> #inet6 eui64 >> !/sbin/route add default -ifp pppoe0 0.0.0.1 >> #!/sbin/route add -inet6

dhcpd and unbound on a small LAN

2020-01-06 Thread Anders Andersson
I'm in the process of replacing an aging OpenWRT device on my home LAN with an apu4d4 running OpenBSD as my personal router. I would like to use unbound as a caching DNS server for my local hosts, but I'm trying to figure out how to handle local hostnames. It seems like a common scenario but I

Iked site-to-site source ip is wrong

2020-01-06 Thread List
Hi *, I have the following setup: A: ikev2 '2router' active esp \ from A.A.A.A/32 to C.C.C.C/32 port 9001 \ local A.A.A.A peer 188.194.145.145 \ srcid a.home.arpa dstid b.home.arpa \ rsa \ config address 10.0.5.100 B: ikev2 '2router' passive esp \

Re: sysupgrade fails

2020-01-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2020-01-05, Christer Solskogen wrote: > Hi! > > On one(out of two!) of my APUs sysupgrade fails, and I'm having trouble > understanding why. > This is what happens: > > Available disks are: sd0. > Which disk is the root disk? ('?' for details) [sd0] sd0 > Checking root filesystem (fsck -fp

Re: Automated OS builds?

2020-01-06 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2020-01-05, Marc Espie wrote: > On Sun, Jan 05, 2020 at 06:08:55PM +, Paul Suh wrote: >> On Jan 5, 2020, at 12:43 PM, Morten Gade Liebach wrote: >> > >> > Read release(8), then write a script runs through the described process. >> >> I can do that, and will if I have to, but if someone