On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 21:24:15 -0500, Steve Shockley wrote:
> On 1/14/2015 9:47 AM, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> >>and I ran
> >>the chroot enable script from rrdtool.
>
> >As documented in the rrdtool pkg-readme, you must do:
> >/usr/local/share/examples/rrdtool/rrdtool-chroot enable
> >
> >You s
Hi,
as i am always searching for new (low power) hardware, today i found
something new.
It sounds quite nice for running openbsd as a router/firewall.
It is possible that not everything is supported right now in openbsd
but the low power and number of nics made me smile.
It might be availiable aro
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 19:35 +, Fred wrote:
> On 01/14/15 13:13, Evgeny Zhavoronkov wrote:
> >>On 01/14/15 12:37, Evgeny Zhavoronkov wrote:
> >>>Hi, All!
> >>>
> >>>I get these errors when actively use usb wifi adapter
> >>>Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: 0x4f4e5155
> >>>Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: usb_
On 14/01/2015 17:03, mar...@martinbrandenburg.com wrote:
> [...] you trust Theo and OpenBSD because you have no better option.
> Don't pretend you increase your security by proving the software came
> from a source you can't prove is trustworthy. [...]
More than Theo himself, what makes me trust O
On 1/14/2015 9:47 AM, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
and I ran
the chroot enable script from rrdtool.
As documented in the rrdtool pkg-readme, you must do:
/usr/local/share/examples/rrdtool/rrdtool-chroot enable
You should look under /usr/local/share/doc/pkg-readmes/, it comes with a
*lot* of OpenB
See page 159 of the recent second edition of McKusick's book on the BSD
kernel. It's FreeBSD centric, but its the same concepts.
On Jan 14, 2015 6:31 PM, "Theo de Raadt" wrote:
> > at [1], I read something about 'Sigtramp separation' within
> > the W^X transition. I only know that this sigtra
> at [1], I read something about 'Sigtramp separation' within
> the W^X transition. I only know that this sigtramp-page (?) is
> used to jump back into the kernel when a signal arrives.
>
> My question is, what exactly is this signal trampoline?
That is not what the slides say.
> Why do I
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 3:10 PM, Stefan Berger
wrote:
> at [1], I read something about 'Sigtramp separation' within
> the W^X transition. I only know that this sigtramp-page (?) is
> used to jump back into the kernel when a signal arrives.
>
> My question is, what exactly is this signal trampoli
hello,
at [1], I read something about 'Sigtramp separation' within
the W^X transition. I only know that this sigtramp-page (?) is
used to jump back into the kernel when a signal arrives.
My question is, what exactly is this signal trampoline?
Why do I need it?
Why was it on the Stack
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 08:24:02PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-01-14, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
> > 15Mbit/s sounds as if it maxes out at 18Mbit/s (the highest QPSK rate)
> > and never switches to OFDM rates (24 - 54 Mbit/s).
>
> IEEE 802.11 still uses a shared medium and CSMA/CA
2015-01-14 17:41 GMT+01:00 Stefan Sperling
> OpenBSD's implementation of rate adaptation is basic. It's possible
> that you'll see the AP sending data frames at less than 54Mbit/s under
> normal conditions. You'll probably see better results with other OSs
> since they have better tuned wifi stac
On 2015-01-14, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> 15Mbit/s sounds as if it maxes out at 18Mbit/s (the highest QPSK rate)
> and never switches to OFDM rates (24 - 54 Mbit/s).
IEEE 802.11 still uses a shared medium and CSMA/CA, right? (Wikipedia
says so.) So the transfer between two nodes is effectively
h
On 01/14/15 13:13, Evgeny Zhavoronkov wrote:
On 01/14/15 12:37, Evgeny Zhavoronkov wrote:
Hi, All!
I get these errors when actively use usb wifi adapter
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: 0x4f4e5155
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: usb_insert_transfer: xfer=0xfe821cb7c348
not busy 0x4f4e5155
Jan 14 16:08:57
> I bought a can of this paint from a hardware store up in Lake Louise last
> week.
We already knew that.
I bought a can of this paint from a hardware store up in Lake Louise last
week.
On Wed, 14 Jan 2015, Theo de Raadt wrote:
On 2015-01-14, mar...@martinbrandenburg.com
wrote:
"Buying a CD" in my case includes a 5.000 mile trip through multiple
"five-eyes" nations, whose overzealous three
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 3:39 PM, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> I've updated the kernel at
> http://jsg.id.au/openbsd/bsd.IMX.umg
>
And we have lift-off!
## Booting kernel from Legacy Image at 1080 ...
Image Name: boot
Created: 2015-01-14 14:13:27 UTC
Image Type: ARM Linux Kernel
Theo de Raadt wrote:
Finding them inside the global shipping system is easier than you
think
One of the joys of growing old is watching the really bad sci fi you read as a
youth all come true :)
--
Jack Woehr # "There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # lik
> > On 2015-01-14, mar...@martinbrandenburg.com
> > wrote:
> >
> > >> "Buying a CD" in my case includes a 5.000 mile trip through multiple
> > >> "five-eyes" nations, whose overzealous three letter agencies officially
> > >> intercept physical shipments to install backdoors and hardware implants
On 2015-01-14, Ján Kušniar wrote:
> Even though it's running 54Mbit 802.11g, I can't get over ~15Mbit/s.
Uh, what figures do you expect? Those "54 Mbit/s" are raw modem
speed. You'll never get throughput anywhere close to that.
I get ~20 Mbit/s between my OpenBSD laptop with iwn(4) and a D-Li
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 04:40:00PM +0100, Ján Kušniar wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've set up a small wifi AP using alix 3d2 computer board and Mikrotik
> R52nM mini PCI wireless adapter. Works great except for wireless
> throughput. It's running 5.6 stable, usual AP setup (wifi adapter in
> hostap mode,
Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-01-14, mar...@martinbrandenburg.com
> wrote:
>
> >> "Buying a CD" in my case includes a 5.000 mile trip through multiple
> >> "five-eyes" nations, whose overzealous three letter agencies officially
> >> intercept physical shipments to install backdoors and
On 2015-01-14, mar...@martinbrandenburg.com
wrote:
>> "Buying a CD" in my case includes a 5.000 mile trip through multiple
>> "five-eyes" nations, whose overzealous three letter agencies officially
>> intercept physical shipments to install backdoors and hardware implants.
>
> Where have you hea
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 02:32:07PM +0100, Enos D'Andrea wrote:
> "Buying a CD" in my case includes a 5.000 mile trip through multiple
> "five-eyes" nations, whose overzealous three letter agencies officially
> intercept physical shipments to install backdoors and hardware implants.
"Enos D'Andrea" wrote:
> On 14/01/2015 12:24, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
> > Bootstrapping trust is always going to be hard no matter what we do
> > and how hard we try. [...] Now the answer has become "buy a CD
> > and cross-check it with signify" and it's still not enough. [...]
>
>
>
> "Buyi
Hello,
I've set up a small wifi AP using alix 3d2 computer board and Mikrotik
R52nM mini PCI wireless adapter. Works great except for wireless
throughput. It's running 5.6 stable, usual AP setup (wifi adapter in
hostap mode, dhcpd, nat in pf). No sysctls or anything not mentioned in
FAQ was modifi
> >> Please how is one supposed to verify the integrity of an official
> >> OpenBSD 5.6 commercial CD set, bought on the OpenBSD store and
> >> received by physical mail? [...]
> >
> > Each directory on the CD is signed using signify and the 5.6 keys
> > listed at http://www.openbsd.org/56.html
Steve Shockley wrote:
> I've installed Symon/Symux/Syweb on a 5.6 machine for testing.
> Symon+Symux are up and running. I installed apache-httpd-openbsd (at
> least until I'm familiar with httpd), set up the virtual host, and I ran
>
> the chroot enable script from rrdtool.
>
> When I view c
On 01/14/2015 07:19 AM, Indunil Jayasooriya wrote:
Hi misc,
I have /etc/ip_list1 file containing some destinations.
format of /etc/ip_list1 is given below.
1.2.3.4
1.6.3.0/24
I want to route ALL DESTINATIONS listed in /etc/ip_list1 via wan1_gw. The
rest of trafficc , I want to route via w
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 06:52:00PM +0100, Christer Solskogen wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 5:45 PM, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> >
> > Your earlier mail had a different load address than what I'd expect.
> > Try 0x1880
>
> Same. I've tried the following staring adresses: 0x1060 -
> 0x188
On 01/13/15 16:26, Landry Breuil wrote:
[ .. snip .. ]
>> On 1/10/15, Landry Breuil wrote:
[ .. snip .. ]
>>
>> Interesting, your cpu doesnt have SSSE3 nor SSE4.1, while binutils/the
>> configure script detects so.. that might explain why it built here and
>> not on your ma
> On 01/14/15 12:37, Evgeny Zhavoronkov wrote:
> >Hi, All!
> >
> >I get these errors when actively use usb wifi adapter
> >Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: 0x4f4e5155
> >Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: usb_insert_transfer: xfer=0xfe821cb7c348
> >not busy 0x4f4e5155
> >Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 last message repeated
On 01/14/15 12:37, Evgeny Zhavoronkov wrote:
Hi, All!
I get these errors when actively use usb wifi adapter
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: 0x4f4e5155
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: usb_insert_transfer: xfer=0xfe821cb7c348
not busy 0x4f4e5155
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 last message repeated 1006 times
Jan 14 16:
On 14/01/2015 12:24, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> Bootstrapping trust is always going to be hard no matter what we do
> and how hard we try. [...] Now the answer has become "buy a CD
> and cross-check it with signify" and it's still not enough. [...]
"Buying a CD" in my case includes a 5.000 mile t
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 4:41 AM, Craig Skinner wrote:
> On 2015-01-13 Tue 16:26 PM |, sven falempin wrote:
>>
>> I would like to internally and externally solve some domain names
>> differently (so some service are accessible from inside and outside
>> without some fancy NAT or worse), I found out
Hi, All!
I get these errors when actively use usb wifi adapter
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: 0x4f4e5155
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: usb_insert_transfer: xfer=0xfe821cb7c348
not busy 0x4f4e5155
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 last message repeated 1006 times
Jan 14 16:08:57 t4 /bsd: athn0: could not wakeup chip
Jan
> Am 14.01.2015 um 09:43 schrieb Stuart Henderson :
>
> On 2015-01-13, Patrick Wildt wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Yes, it’s kinda possible. I tried that early 2014 or so. You need to have
>> some kind of EFI-Grub2 on an sdcard iirc. Then you exit the in-built grub,
>> open the EFI shell and have it bo
On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 10:49:01AM +0100, Enos D'Andrea wrote:
> Thanks, but I was hoping for a method that would also verify the CD boot
> process, and that would not require downloading and installing a second
> image or trusting the CD to verify itself.
Bootstrapping trust is always going to be
> Thanks, but I was hoping for a method that would also verify the CD boot
> process, and that would not require downloading and installing a second
> image or trusting the CD to verify itself.
Next time, it is better to ask what you hope for. You asked how to
check and you got the answer, then yo
On 12/01/2015 20:34, Theo de Raadt wrote:
>> Please how is one supposed to verify the integrity of an official
>> OpenBSD 5.6 commercial CD set, bought on the OpenBSD store and
>> received by physical mail? [...]
>
> Each directory on the CD is signed using signify and the 5.6 keys
> listed at
On 2015-01-13 Tue 16:26 PM |, sven falempin wrote:
>
> I would like to internally and externally solve some domain names
> differently (so some service are accessible from inside and outside
> without some fancy NAT or worse), I found out 'some' call this setup a
> 'split-dns', often use for inter
On 2015-01-13, Patrick Wildt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Yes, it’s kinda possible. I tried that early 2014 or so. You need to have
> some kind of EFI-Grub2 on an sdcard iirc. Then you exit the in-built grub,
> open the EFI shell and have it boot grub2.
>
> Using kopenbsd you can try to load an OpenBSD ker
On 14/01/15 02:33, Jason Adams wrote:
On 01/13/2015 01:26 PM, sven falempin wrote:
Dear OpenBSD users,
Recently unbound made his way in base, pushing the complex bind/named
out for our own good.
I would like to internally and externally solve some domain names
differently (so some service are
On 2015-01-13, Jeremy Evans wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 12:58 PM, Riccardo Mottola <
> riccardo.mott...@libero.it> wrote:
>
>> do we really need bash to build ruby? and... why ruby for subversion? not
>> counting shells one ends up having perl, python, tcl and ruby! what a mess.
>
>
> You do
On 2015-01-13, sven falempin wrote:
> Dear OpenBSD users,
>
> Recently unbound made his way in base, pushing the complex bind/named
> out for our own good.
>
> I would like to internally and externally solve some domain names
> differently (so some service are accessible from inside and outside
>
44 matches
Mail list logo