On Wed, Sep 04, 2013 at 11:46:21AM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
> I installed the 2013/09/03 snapshot first thing this morning and have
> been running all day with it so far. By this point on the previous two
> snapshots I would have at least two to three hard freezes. So far
> e
I installed the 2013/09/03 snapshot first thing this morning and have
been running all day with it so far. By this point on the previous two
snapshots I would have at least two to three hard freezes. So far
everything is good. If that changes I will update this thread.
Bryan
On Sep 2, 2013, at 9:13, Gabriel Guzman wrote:
> I'm seeing the same thing on my desktop (dmesg below). Random freezes,
> no debug output that I've seen in any logs, first time I noticed was
> after updating to aug24 snapshot, behavior is the same with aug29th.
I think this must be the same i
On Sep 2, 2013, at 3:13, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> If your system locks up over night without being used (which I've seen
> happen once, too, but it's hard to reproduce), or you don't have
> wsmoused running in the first place, then it's probably some other issue.
I'm not running xdm or wsmoused
On Sun, Sep 01, 2013 at 12:31:48PM +0200, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
> Guys, you need to post dmesg output. Marketing names of laptops
> don't tell us what hardware you're running.
>
> Are any of you using Synaptics or APLS touchpads, per chance?
Yes, I have a Synaptics touchpad and the freeze has
On Aug 30, 2013, at 12:43, Jean Lucas wrote:
> Yes, on an IdeaPad Yoga 13 I also experience hard freezes throughout the
> day. The timing varies from as little as one hour to several. Started
> happening a few snapshots back (around Aug. 19).
Maybe ThinkPad ACPI related or something like that? A
I'm running OpenBSD/amd64 5.4-current with GENERIC.MP from 2013/08/19
downloaded from the mirrors on a Levovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon. Both
snapshots I have tried (2013/08/25 and 2013/08/29) after the 19th have
resulted in hard system freezes every few hours. I don't have any logs
or anything else that
I am looking at purchasing a Lenovo ThinkPad x230 with built-in Gobi 4000 4G
LTE which is really a Sierra Wireless MC7750 device. Has anyone tried using
this device with OpenBSD? I noticed the thread from July about another 4G LTE
modem.
http://marc.info/?t=13414826001&r=1&w=2
Any ideas if
On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 2:50 AM, FUGU wrote:
> On my G4 I 've had no probles so far with gem(4).
> I have a 1.25GHz one.
> Maybe we can compare logs on this.
> However, my mini is not under any heavy network load.
> I have it as a DMZ host with snort enabled and
> a simple pf config. Nothing much.J
On Thu, Jul 1, 2010 at 4:02 PM, FUGU wrote:
> Also, while we are at it, does anyone know if openbsd supports
> the latest apple usb ethernet adapter?
> I see that the AXE(4) driver supports Apple USB Ethernet Adapter A1277
> but no info on the latest one
> thanks...
I wasn't aware that there was
On Thu, Jul 1, 2010 at 9:15 AM, Fred Snurd wrote:
> "fu...@safe-mail.net" wrote:
>
>> I have one question: Is the any way to put the mini
>> in "server" mode (make it boot automatically after Power Loss)?
>
> While asking about server mode, is it also possible to run a PPC mini
> headless?
If y
I do have one more question. I have the config below. I can ping the
vether0 address from the other side of the tunnel from either host.
Also, all IP addresses mentioned are publicly routable.
On host1:
ifconfig em0 1.1.1.1/24 up
ifconfig gif0 tunnel 1.1.1.1 2.2.2.2 up
ifconfig vether0 1.1.2.1/30
I knew it was something stupid. I added
set skip on { gif0 vether0 }
to pf.conf for testing and everything started working. Sorry for the noise.
Bryan
On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 11:38 AM, Claudio Jeker
wrote:
>> I am having a hard time getting a non-encrypted gif(4) tunnel working.
>> Can anyone share a working config? I think if I can get gif(4) working
>> right then I can get vether(4) working as well. Thanks again!
>>
>
> ifconfig gif0 tunnel 19
On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 5:57 PM, Claudio Jeker wrote:
> This will not work because em0 is having the clonable route for
> 172.16.0/24 and so arp is unable to work on vether0 since you created an
> addressing conflict.
Thank you for your response. I have been testing it further and I
think I under
I recognize that there has been a long time issue with PowerMac G5
SATA support but I was pleasantly surprised to discover that it is
recognized on my Dual 1.8 GHz G5 system. I haven't tried to use
OpenBSD on this system before but I would love to get it running.
Unfortunately, right after the K2 S
I am testing vether(4) and I am wondering if this is a use case that
should work.
ifconfig em0 172.16.0.10/24 up
ifconfig bridge0 create
ifconfig vether0 create
ifconfig bridge0 add em0 add vether0 up
ifconfig vether0 172.16.0.11/24 up
I can't ping the vether0 IP address from other hosts on the s
I don't believe there is any way to do this at this time but I thought
I would ask anyway. I am looking at using smtpd(8) to be a "backup" mx
where it essentially accepts mail for me and then when another machine
is back online it sends the mail on to that machine. I know this can
easily be done wi
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 7:10 AM, Stuart Henderson
wrote:
> On 2010-06-15, LeviaComm Networks NOC wrote:
>> One last thing, Is there a reason that you are doing a router-on-a-stick
>> configuration? I ask only because they tend to cause more headaches
>> then they are worth, as Gigabit NICs are p
I don't know if the 1005PR is generally available yet but I know the 1005PE
is. Has anyone used either netbook with OpenBSD? I am looking to replace my
Lenovo S10-2 and/or Eee PC 901 as my primary OpenBSD system. The 1005PR is
interesting to me because of the 1366x768 display resolution. From what
Has anyone successfully installed 4.7 or -current on a Thecus N1200
using bsd.bin? I have followed the install instructions to boot from
tftp and then load the bsd.bin with 'go 20' and it always hangs
after saying loading. I never actually see the OpenBSD kernel
messages. Any ideas?'
Bryan
On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 12:37 PM, Owain Ainsworth wrote:
> On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 11:02:10AM -0400, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
>> Using your patches as a starting point, I was able to get the device
>> recognized as udl0 and attach to wsdisplay1. Does anyone have a
>> workin
Using your patches as a starting point, I was able to get the device
recognized as udl0 and attach to wsdisplay1. Does anyone have a
working xorg.conf that uses wsudl as a second display? I have tried a
bunch of different options but keep getting errors. I want to verify
that this device can even w
Is it possible to get the StarTech CONV-USB2DVI DisplayLink adapter
supported? If someone could point me in the right direction I might be
able to create a patch myself. Below are my dmesg output as well as
the output of usbdevs -v. I purchased this adapter at least a year ago
and from the specs it
On May 11, 2010, at 17:18, "Rod Whitworth" wrote:
> On Tue, 11 May 2010 12:43:17 -0400, Chris Smith
>
> I have tried to kill a CF for years. For more than a year it was
> running spamd with the most verbose logging possible and lots of other
> read/writes the system could live without.
>
> It is
On Jul 27, 2009, at 12:54 PM, Matthieu Herrb wrote:
You can also write a small C program to do that.
I wish I had the knowledge to do this. I think this would be a
valuable addition to the OpenBSD base system. Thanks to both
suggestions. I just copied pcitweak from 4.3 with the libraries b
As detailed in the following message, it is possible to use a "magic
tweak" to get the Mac mini into "server mode."
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=120631459418290&w=2
This was accomplished with pcitweak which unfortunately no longer
exists in X.Org. The only way to get it at this point i
On Sep 29, 2008, at 1:25 PM, Dominik Meister wrote:
Sorry to interrupt this thread with this question, but ...
Tasmanian Devil [Mon, Sep 29, 2008 at 07:49:45PM +0200]:
- They need a resistor either in a dongle or build-in to make them
start without a monitor attached.
... do you (or anyone
On Sep 26, 2008, at 5:01 PM, Till Neudecker wrote:
I have a pretty normal loadbalancing setup (2 relayd-loadbalancer, 2
backend
hosts). The loadbalancer accepts ssl-encrypted sessions and forwards
them
unencrypted to the backend-hosts. Because all the hosts are on the
same LAN
I set the gl
As you can read from the first lines of the upgrade guides, "Upgrades
are only supported from one release to the release immediately
following it. Do not skip releases." It is very likely that this is
the cause of your problems.
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/upgrade43.html
Bryan
From reading the recent thread about software RAID in OpenBSD and the
recent commit logs for softraid, I gather that everything is in place
to support rebuild for RAID 1 but rebuild is not yet available.
http://marc.info/?t=12182912514&r=1&w=2
I am considering using softraid on a system
On Sep 8, 2008, at 8:04 PM, Jonathan Gray wrote:
On Mon, Sep 08, 2008 at 04:50:37PM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
I am trying to get a SparkLAN WCFM-100 Compact Flash wireless card
working with wpa on a system running -current that is about
equivalent
to 4.4. I tried it on both an i386
I am trying to get a SparkLAN WCFM-100 Compact Flash wireless card
working with wpa on a system running -current that is about equivalent
to 4.4. I tried it on both an i386 laptop and on a zaurus system and I
get the same error on both when I try to enable wpa. The line from my
dmesg is as
On Aug 9, 2007, at 9:32 AM, Paolo Supino wrote:
I want to add SMTP auth to sendmail. Will it be easier for me to try
and add the support to the source shipped by OpenBSD or to the source
that I will download from sendmail.org?
Other suggestions on setting up a mail server with SMTP auth are
we
On Jun 13, 2007, at 11:57 AM, David Newman wrote:
Each physical interface has two IPv4 addresses, one for a shared IP
and
one for the interface address. That would require a /29 or shorter to
accommodate these two addresses, plus at least one address on the
other
side of the link.
Is there
On Jun 10, 2007, at 4:15 PM, Lawrence Horvath wrote:
I am looking for a Data T1 card to put in an OBSD firewall/router
looking for suggestions on a quality card for under 1000 that
OBSD supports reasonably well.
The Sangoma A101 (1 port) and A102 (2 port) T1 cards work fine and
support is al
On Jun 9, 2007, at 9:28 PM, Darren Spruell wrote:
So, not sure about the connections failing. As for your aliases, check
hostname.if(5) and you'll see that IPv4 interface aliases typically
have full /32 subnet masks.
Sorry! I spoke too soon. I find that it works either with the /32 or
the ac
On Jun 9, 2007, at 9:28 PM, Darren Spruell wrote:
So, not sure about the connections failing. As for your aliases, check
hostname.if(5) and you'll see that IPv4 interface aliases typically
have full /32 subnet masks.
Is this true? All of my interfaces with aliases have the same netmask
as th
On Jun 8, 2007, at 1:22 PM, Diana Eichert wrote:
Dunno what the target amount is but if we can get > 20 people
contributing US/E 100 then there should be enough for an Itanium.
So where are the other 18 or so folks?
One more just donated $100.
Bryan
On Jun 5, 2007, at 11:10 AM, Fredrik Carlsson wrote:
A mix of all that ;)
It's in the startup phase so I can't provide that much info yet,
but there will be a lot of machines and we will be routing much
traffic internally and to Internet. The budget is quite important,
so if there is a c
On Jun 4, 2007, at 10:51 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
I wonder if you could just hack a different script into their
redboot.bin,
it's easy enough to unpack:
http://www.cyrius.com/debian/iop/n2100/deinstall.html
I am not sure how you would do that but it sounds like a great idea.
I don't mi
On Jun 4, 2007, at 5:42 PM, Diana Eichert wrote:
I'm interested in using the Thecus N2100 instead of the Plextor
systems because of some sh platform limitations. I'm looking for
feedback from people who use the N2100.
Specifially, I want to verify you can edit the boot script to allow
au
On May 22, 2007, at 7:09 AM, T. Ribbrock wrote:
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 10:16:33PM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
That's too bad. I was hoping I could put larger drives in them. Oh
well, 120 GB it is.
Maybe you can use the same approach I used with my U10 - I've put in a
Promi
On May 20, 2007, at 5:02 PM, Darrin Chandler wrote:
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 01:15:58PM -0600, Jack Woehr wrote:
Theo de Raadt wrote:
A HP XFP SR-optic 10GE module for a HP 3500yl switch which
already has
the 10Gb card installed. If anyone can help us with getting this to
us, we'd love it.
Y
I discovered that arc(4) is support on OpenBSD/sparc64. Having never
used one of these cards, I am assuming that configuration is done in
basically the same way as most BIOS configured RAID cards. Is it
possible to configure a RAID 5 array on an i386 or amd64 box and then
move it to a sparc
Having searched through the archives and found a number of cvs
entries related to FFS2, I was wondering if support is to the point
where it can actually be tested or if it is still very much in
progress. I noticed that options FFS2 has been added to options(4)
which makes me think maybe it
On May 18, 2007, at 2:09 PM, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
One thing I was wondering about the X1. Does it support hard
drives larger than 137 GB or whatever that old limit was? I don't
know if Sun systems are affected by those same kind of issues as
older PC stuff
On May 18, 2007, at 2:15 PM, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
The X1 is great for firewall. Your limits to consider is not the
transfer in Mbps, but always the PPS. That's where you will hit the
wall if to high and that's not only with X1, but any servers. PPS
is really the biggest problem here, unles
On May 18, 2007, at 10:51 AM, Paul D. Ouderkirk wrote:
I'm actually running an X1 off compact flash on a CF-IDE adapter.
Out of curiosity, what is this machine tasked with? I would guess it
is working as a firewall. I do the same with my i386 firewall
machines and some DNS caches and such.
On May 18, 2007, at 10:22 AM, Edd Barrett wrote:
I must say that the LOM (Lights Out Management) on this machine is
absolutely superb. The bad thing with it is that it has no cd drive,
so you have to open it up and balance one on top for the initial
install. From there on i reccommend bsd.rd upg
On May 18, 2007, at 4:56 AM, Edd Barrett wrote:
On 18/05/07, Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Can anyone give any information about the Sun Netra X1 being used as
a pf firewall. I am specifically looking for throughput information.
I am considering using a pair for a theor
Can anyone give any information about the Sun Netra X1 being used as
a pf firewall. I am specifically looking for throughput information.
I am considering using a pair for a theoretical maximum throughput of
about 45 Mbps. Can the Netra X1 comfortably handle this with carp(4)
and some pf fi
I recognize the issues with trust and security and all but if anyone
is interested in 4.1-stable builds, I have them available for armish,
i386, macppc, sparc64, and zaurus. They are available at:
ftp://ftp.bsdjournal.net/pub/OpenBSD/4.1-stable/
If you do an install from the FTP site, make s
On May 10, 2007, at 1:10 PM, Claus Assmann wrote:
On Thu, May 10, 2007, Hannah Schroeter wrote:
same problem with
anoncvs1.usa.openbsd.org
and
anoncvs3.usa.openbsd.org
I think anoncvs3.usa.openbsd.org is working now. I am running a
cvsync operation as we speak and it is recreating every
On May 8, 2007, at 6:44 AM, Aaron Poffenberger wrote:
Raidframe is really easy to use. The man pages for raidctl(8) will
give
you step-by-step instructions. In a nutshell, though:
1) enable raidframe in your kernel (search for RAIDframe in GENERIC to
get find the line),
2) create the raidn.
(No response on arm@ so I am posting this to misc@)
Has there been any progress on going back to an older version of
RedBoot in order to be able to boot the Thecus N2100 from the boot
script? Also, do some Thecus N2100's have a serial header actually on
the SATA backplane instead of just th
On May 8, 2007, at 6:44 AM, Aaron Poffenberger wrote:
Raidframe is really easy to use. The man pages for raidctl(8) will
give
you step-by-step instructions. In a nutshell, though:
1) enable raidframe in your kernel (search for RAIDframe in GENERIC to
get find the line),
2) create the raidn.
On May 8, 2007, at 3:00 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2007/05/08 02:23, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
On May 8, 2007, at 12:36 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
http://onbeat.dk/thecus/index.php/N2100_Hardware
Thanks.
btw, I don't know about the warning from Thecus about timing that
it talks
On May 8, 2007, at 2:54 AM, Joachim Schipper wrote:
On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 08:39:50PM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
So you are saying that ccd(4) has reliability problems? I actually
meant to ask what type of physical memory does the box take. Thanks
for your response.
No no, ccd(4) works
On May 8, 2007, at 12:36 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2007/05/07 20:39, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
I actually meant to ask what type of physical memory does the box
take.
http://onbeat.dk/thecus/index.php/N2100_Hardware
Thanks.
Bryan
On May 7, 2007, at 4:11 PM, Joachim Schipper wrote:
On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 02:02:19PM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
On May 7, 2007, at 11:56 AM, Matthieu Herrb wrote:
I'm using a thecus 2100 with raidframe to do raid 1. A bit slow, but
with 512MB RAM it's acceptable.
Would ccd
On May 7, 2007, at 11:56 AM, Matthieu Herrb wrote:
I'm using a thecus 2100 with raidframe to do raid 1. A bit slow, but
with 512MB RAM it's acceptable.
Would ccd(4) be any faster? Also, what sort of RAM does it take?
Thanks for your response.
Bryan
I was just wondering about whether the Thecus N2100 running OpenBSD/
armish can operate in RAID 1 mode. Maybe this is a stupid question
but I couldn't find anything about it and I am interested to know.
Obviously I would not be running the firmware from Thecus and I am
guessing that this pre
On Apr 18, 2007, at 5:31 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
shared-network LOCAL-NET{
option domain-name "theamericanbray.com";
option domain-name-servers 208.204.224.11, 208.204.224.33
subnet 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
options routers 192.168.0.1;
range 192.168.0.14 192.
On Apr 18, 2007, at 3:57 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
And the default route in my table shows 64.142.102.1 which is also
the gateway address supplied by my isp.
OK. That sounds correct. Can you post your dhcpd.conf again?
Bryan
On Apr 18, 2007, at 3:11 PM, BradenM - Sonoma Computer wrote:
Do you mean the gateway address supplied by my ISP?
Yes.
Bryan
On Apr 18, 2007, at 12:59 PM, BradenM - Sonoma Computer wrote:
I just read an article on dhcp-dns which updates the tinydns data
file each time a new computer comes online using dynamic host
control. I do plan on having my own in house DNS server but it
currently is not implemented. Could t
On Apr 18, 2007, at 10:01 AM, BradenM - Sonoma Computer wrote:
Yes, ip fowarding is enabled in the sysctl.conf file. I did have an
alias on rl0 but removed it to try and simplify my nat process.
I've heard the term binat thrown around, could that possibly aid my
project?
No, binat is not
On Apr 18, 2007, at 8:42 AM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
and post the output of both.
pfctl -sn ---> nat on rl0 inet from 192.168.0.0/24 to any ->
(rl0) round-robin
pfctl -sr ---> scrub in all fragment reassemble
pass out all k
On Apr 18, 2007, at 5:52 AM, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-04-18 10:29]:
Did you stop using them for performance and age reasons or more for
stability and reliability especially as it is related to The Alpha
Bug?
production use was an old AX
On Apr 18, 2007, at 12:53 AM, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-04-17 19:55]:
Do you use any Alpha machines in production?
not any more, and i would not quite recommend doing so, to be honest
Did you stop using them for performance and age reasons o
On Apr 17, 2007, at 2:35 PM, Timo Schoeler wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 00:06:57 -0700
Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks for that tip. Unfortunately, it was with a server that did
not support server-side sorting. The server was EIMS (http://
www.eudora.co.nz), a mail serve
On Apr 17, 2007, at 7:56 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
Do you suppose that I should start checking for hardware problems
or in other network configurations?
Not just yet. Run:
pfctl -sn
and also:
pfctl -sr
and post the output of both.
Bryan
On Apr 17, 2007, at 7:54 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
# macros
ext_if="rl0"
int_if="rl1"
#NAT
nat on $ext_if from $int_if -> ($ext_if:0)
#Pass
pass in all
pass out all keep state
It still isn't working with keep state.
Let's make it this:
ext_if="rl0"
int_if="rl1"
set skip on { lo rl1 }
scrub
On Apr 17, 2007, at 7:39 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
Do you have 'pass out' in your pf.conf?
Yes, "pass out all".
Can you post your pf.conf?
Bryan
On Apr 17, 2007, at 7:20 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
OK, I've tried your nat rule and am using a completely open pass
rule to allow in all traffic but cannot ping the internet. Any
other ideas? What are some trouble shooting techniques I could try?
Actually, the rule should be 'pass out keep st
On Apr 17, 2007, at 7:20 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
OK, I've tried your nat rule and am using a completely open pass
rule to allow in all traffic but cannot ping the internet. Any
other ideas? What are some trouble shooting techniques I could try?
Do you have 'pass out' in your pf.conf?
Bryan
On Apr 17, 2007, at 11:26 AM, christian johansson wrote:
I'm looking for a very small, cheap and low-power machine to use as a
(residential) firewall with openbsd on it.
I've been looking at some geode cards, like this one:
http://www.commell-sys.com/Product/SBC/LE-342.htm (3.5" form factor)
On Apr 17, 2007, at 10:19 AM, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-04-17 18:29]:
This doesn't sound so promising. I guess the basic idea is that I
need to hope that any CS20 machines I get are not affected by the
bug.
they are, every alpha is. they
On Apr 17, 2007, at 8:30 AM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
Shouldn't the internet connection be passed around to other hosts
on the network without the use of nat and pf? Ip forwarding is on,
isn't that enough? I'm just trying to get the internet connection
out to other computers, filtering comes aft
On Apr 17, 2007, at 8:44 AM, Artur Grabowski wrote:
Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
1. There is a potential fix for "the alpha bug" coming up
Very good! I'm glad to hear that.
Hm. I think I've heard that one before.. Hell, I've even said it man
On Apr 16, 2007, at 11:54 PM, Timo Schoeler wrote:
I can just vote for postfix/cyrus, or even better (from a licensing
PoV), sendmail/cyrus.
Speaking of Squirrelmail: Did you enable server-side sorting?
4. General Options
-> 10. Allow server thread sort: true
11. Allow server-side sorti
On Apr 16, 2007, at 10:54 PM, Bray Mailloux wrote:
I have one static ip address which is assigned to one of my
ethernet cards, specifically rl0. Ip fowarding is turned on and
dhcp is active and listening on another ethernet card, specifically
rl1.
Route and routed man pages have offered som
On Apr 16, 2007, at 7:34 PM, Adam wrote:
"Sam Fourman Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
would using postgreSQL for auth with postfix / Dovecot be slow
even if
you used top of the line hardware say a dual core CPU and 4GB memory
w/ RAID 0?I am thinking very strongly about moving our Exchange
On Apr 16, 2007, at 5:05 PM, Kian Mohageri wrote:
Throwing in another vote for Dovecot for IMAP. I'm stuck with
Qmail at the
moment (works fine), but Postfix is nice.
As for webmail, I haven't heard Roundcube mentioned yet. We use
it, and
it's at least pretty enough. Requires a database,
On Apr 16, 2007, at 1:13 PM, Ronnie Garcia wrote:
Kian Mohageri a icrit :
On 4/16/07, Ronnie Garcia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It depends on the rate of the states changes.
Here, we have ~30mbits on pfsync, for ~40mbits of traffic (!)
On our college campus with 50Mbps, we see ~8Mbps pfsync tr
On Apr 16, 2007, at 7:14 PM, Jason Dixon wrote:
On Apr 16, 2007, at 9:49 PM, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
Didn't you post about a router on a stick not too long ago. That's
immediately what I thought of when I posted about this.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=117482540111222
On Apr 16, 2007, at 12:43 PM, Jason Dixon wrote:
Of course. You could do a "3-homed" firewall using a single
physical interface with VLANs. Not that you *should*, but you
*could*.
Didn't you post about a router on a stick not too long ago. That's
immediately what I thought of when I post
On Apr 16, 2007, at 8:24 AM, Ronnie Garcia wrote:
Bryan Vyhmeister a icrit :
This brings up a question I have had for a while. Does pfsync
generate enough traffic that running gigabit cards for your
$ext_if and $int_if and a 100base-TX card for your pfsync
interface cause a major
On Apr 16, 2007, at 10:39 AM, J.C. Roberts wrote:
On Sunday 15 April 2007 15:23, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
Any idea if it surfaces on dual processor CS20 machines? I have the
opportunity to pick up three dual 833 Mhz CS20 machines.
I've been told the "alpha bug" has been wi
On Apr 16, 2007, at 3:51 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2007/04/15 03:41, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
(As an aside, how often do you update your -current systems
varies; main desktop/laptop and any boxes I use when I'm working
on anything to do with ports, fairly often.
other mac
On Apr 16, 2007, at 4:43 AM, Craig Skinner wrote:
At an ISP that I worked for, all user config data was held in
postgres.
When fields were changed, new flat files were generated (passwd,
shell.allow, ftpusers, apache, quota, etc, etc). The files were then
scp'd to the various server farms from
On Apr 15, 2007, at 3:00 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2007/04/15 14:06, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
My staff needs to be able to add accounts easily and unfortunately,
the command line is not that easy for them.
BSD auth, ldap, sql, text files - take your pick... There's also
dovecot-sie
On Apr 16, 2007, at 1:58 AM, Ronnie Garcia wrote:
Clint Pachl a icrit :
Ronnie Garcia wrote:
Do you expect doing more than 100mbits with this hadware (with PF
anabled) ?
I'm maxing a P4 2.4Ghz at 40mbits, with a dual em, and a ~300
lines pf.conf
What is your packets/sec when your pushing 40
On Apr 16, 2007, at 3:17 AM, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Bryan Vyhmeister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-04-16 07:44]:
The CS20 does seem to be a pretty nice machine. I noticed that there
is one obvious CS20 in the newrack.jpg picture. Is power consumption
pretty high on these?
haven'
On Apr 15, 2007, at 4:37 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
Don't lament,
I didn't mean to sound like I was lamenting. OpenBSD/armish is a much
more interesting platform and I plan on add a Thecus N2100 to my
servers soon.
1. There is a potential fix for "the alpha bug" coming up
Very good! I
On Apr 15, 2007, at 3:48 PM, Henning Brauer wrote:
all alphas, but it seems to happen more often on miatas than on cs20s.
my cs20 is pretty stable. the cs20 is probably the nicest alpha we
support.
The CS20 does seem to be a pretty nice machine. I noticed that there
is one obvious CS20 in th
On Apr 15, 2007, at 2:50 PM, Joachim Schipper wrote:
On Sun, Apr 15, 2007 at 02:30:02PM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
That is a good sign. Another reason to keep it around is that alpha
machines were commercially produced which the cats machines were just
evaluation boards. Big difference. I
On Apr 15, 2007, at 3:08 PM, Siegbert Marschall wrote:
Hi,
On the other hand, there seems to be a 'the alpha bug' around. I
don't
think it's solved yet, and it's been around for a long time.
Apparently,
it causes random crashes.
only on some machines.
Any idea if it surfaces on dual proc
On Apr 15, 2007, at 12:27 PM, Joachim Schipper wrote:
On Sun, Apr 15, 2007 at 11:40:48AM -0700, Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
I could have posted this on the alpha list but I thought I might get
a better answer here since that list has very little traffic.
OpenBSD/
cats is no longer around and is
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