Namaste Pekka,
> Sent: Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 9:11 PM
> From: "Edgar Pettijohn"
> To: "Pekka Niiranen"
> Cc: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: UNIX crash course
>
> On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 09:17:50PM +0300, Pekka Niiranen wrote:
> > Hello Sirs,
&
On Tue, Apr 28, 2020 at 06:48:37PM -, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> Outside of certain network infrastructure (RIRs and DNS software
> vendors) and TLDs offering incentives (.se and .nl, maybe others) DNSSEC
> is still very rare. Do a lookup of a couple of dozen randomly chosen
> general purpose do
On 2020-04-28, Pierre-Philipp Braun wrote:
>> mail. Since I don't trust Google or pretty much any "free" provider at
>> this point, that means doing it myself. Some steps (registering a
>> domain, ordering business-class service or a static IP, etc) are
>> self-evident. But after that, there's
mail. Since I don't trust Google or pretty much any "free" provider at
this point, that means doing it myself. Some steps (registering a
domain, ordering business-class service or a static IP, etc) are
self-evident. But after that, there's a lot I really need to learn
Running your own inbound
On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 09:17:50PM +0300, Pekka Niiranen wrote:
> Hello Sirs,
>
> That is very comprehensive list of books, but I have
> not found any concise example of "OpenBSD development environment".
> There are KNF settings for vim and emacs in github but not much more.
>
> OpenBSD is in co
I'd start by using OpenBSD as a desktop to download and build the source itself.
There's the wonderful release(8) that leaves you with install media too.
Then you have the source tree inside a human friendly environment that
you have proven "got work done".
Privsep is *all through* OpenBSD stuff, i
Hello Sirs,
That is very comprehensive list of books, but I have
not found any concise example of "OpenBSD development environment".
There are KNF settings for vim and emacs in github but not much more.
OpenBSD is in constant flux so I would like to know which
of its various services controlled
People recommend me these books https://www.openbsd.org/books.html for
programming starting point. Here is a list of admin. related books too. Very
comprehensive and useful books listed.
Martin
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Sunday, April 19, 2020 7:15 PM, Chris Zakelj wrote:
> Looking t
Looking to the list for suggestions on becoming at least a
semi-competent admin. Long-time members may remember my trial-by-fire
15+ years ago when the boss ordered a T1 and the carrier's tech
"helpfully" pointed the dmz interface at the (already outdated) NT4 file
server. My current situation is
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