On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 11:49:05PM -0500, NetNeanderthal wrote:
> On 1/22/06, Scott Francis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > you mean, aside from including man38.tgz? What else are you looking
> > for? There's some docs on their website, but why would you need
> > anything beyond what ships with Open
Hello all,
Perhaps I'm looking for this the wrong way. My local network now (and
hopefully temporarily) includes hostile users. I may need to exercise
controls on their Internet usage by machine.
Now, I can certainly tell dhcpd to give certain machines certain IP
addresses by reference to their
On Sun, 22 Jan 2006 21:08:34 -0800, David Benfell wrote:
>
> Perhaps I'm looking for this the wrong way. My local network now (and
> hopefully temporarily) includes hostile users. I may need to exercise
> controls on their Internet usage by machine.
>
Still what I think I'd like to do -- becaus
On 1/22/06, Scott Francis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> you mean, aside from including man38.tgz? What else are you looking
> for? There's some docs on their website, but why would you need
> anything beyond what ships with OpenBSD? There's a man page for
> everything, and while they don't include a
Robert Jacobs wrote:
>>Try this strategy...
>
>>Remove all but one video card.
>>Get X working on that one card, using an xorg.conf file.
>>Insert a second card, keep X working on the one card (this seems to be
>>an important step...and not quite as trivial as it sounds).
>>Get X working on the tw
Is it possible that I could do something like a better sorting using
Tables and PF?
I mean overload is a great function but if I use it for serval Ports
I've (as far as I know) to use multiple Tables if I wanna know who e.g.
does SSH-Brute-Forces or who does HTTP-CGI-Scanning and such crap.
In fa
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
ramrunner wrote:
> float a;
> int main()
> {
> for(;a<3;a+=0.1)
> printf("%f\n",a);
> return 1;
> }
> output :
> 0.00
> 0.10
>
> 2.70
> 2.79
> 2.89
> 2.99
> why does the add loses a decimal p
Floating point numbers aren't perfectly precise.
See http://c-faq.com/fp/
--david
On 1/22/06, ramrunner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi , i am not sure if the following indicates a prob, if it does i
> will issue a PR.
> *sorry if i miss something here*
> cosider the following: (obsd x86 3.8-cur
Hey,
Try a bridge.
man brconfig(8) says:
he brconfig utility retrieves kernel state of bridge interfaces and al-
lows user control of these bridges. Bridge devices create a
logical link
between two or more Ethernet interfaces or encapsulation
interfaces (see
gif(4)), which wi
Just a thought - why not samba?
With some additions, like
http://www.camden.rutgers.edu/HELP/Documentation/Unix/stunnel/S50-1331_stunnel.php
or otherwise VPN it.
...yeah, i guess it deviates then from the simple setup you had before...
--
viq
Running 3.8.
Chris
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Chris Cameron wrote:
When one interface fails in a carp setup, it is my understanding that
if net.inet.carp.preempt is set to '1', that both interfaces on the
single machine should fail. However I'm not seeing this happening and
I'm hoping this is w
On 2006/01/23 00:57, Joachim Schipper wrote:
> The main problem, right now, is file transfers. The old server serves
> FTP over SSL.
Is passive FTP over SSH-tunnel any good? It's easy enough to use a
win32 build of OpenSSH, or plink from PuTTY, to give an easy-to-click
interface for Windows users,
Hi , i am not sure if the following indicates a prob, if it does i
will issue a PR.
*sorry if i miss something here*
cosider the following: (obsd x86 3.8-current gcc version 3.3.5 (propolice))
float a;
int main()
{
for(;a<3;a+=0.1)
printf("%f\n",a);
return 1;
}
outpu
Hello all,
I am currently migrating a server to a trio of machines using OpenBSD,
and ran into a bit of a design problem. Most of this is not OpenBSD
specific; I'll happily take this question elsewhere if told so, but it
would not exactly be the first non-OpenBSD-specific question here.
To start
On 1/19/06, NetNeanderthal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
> I'm less than impressed with it after mounting the iso and viewing the
> contents. Their documentation is poor, if not void of content
> altogether.
you mean, aside from including man38.tgz? What else are you looking
for? There's some
On Sun, 22 Jan 2006 12:39:15 -0500, Peter Fraser wrote:
>On my windows machines, I use the hosts file
>from "http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm";
>which removes a lot of junk from the internet.
>
>Rather than going to each machine an installing
>this hosts file in \windows\system32\drivers\
On 2006/01/23 00:23, Maxim Vetsalo wrote:
> Greate thanks for your answer, Marco! I had read it, but didn't find solution
> for my problem yet.
You missed the pf.conf(5) section on service curves, then.
On Sunday 22 January 2006 15:29, you wrote:
> http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/queueing.html
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pf.conf&apropos=0&sektion=0&ma
>npath=OpenBSD+Current&arch=i386&format=html
>
> That should get you started.
Greate thanks for your answer, Marco! I had read it,
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
Chris Cameron wrote:
When one interface fails in a carp setup, it is my understanding that
if net.inet.carp.preempt is set to '1', that both interfaces on the
single machine should fail. However I'm not seeing this happening and
I'm hoping this is why I'm dropping connect
Chris Cameron wrote:
When one interface fails in a carp setup, it is my understanding that if
net.inet.carp.preempt is set to '1', that both interfaces on the single
machine should fail. However I'm not seeing this happening and I'm
hoping this is why I'm dropping connections during fail over.
>Try this strategy...
>Remove all but one video card.
>Get X working on that one card, using an xorg.conf file.
>Insert a second card, keep X working on the one card (this seems to be
>an important step...and not quite as trivial as it sounds).
>Get X working on the two cards.
>Insert third card,
Hi,
how could I please compile the in-tree Apache with -ggdb added and -O2 removed?
I've tried setting EXTRA_CFLAGS=-ggdb in src/Configuration, but that file seems
not to be used. Also I've tried looking at src/Makefile.bsd-wrapper
and the .included
/usr/share/mk/bsd.{own,obj,subdir}.mk, but coul
Jonas Lindskog wrote:
> We are running Open BSD 3.8 as a firewall router. The router has two
> internal networks to handle; a DMZ with "real"
> ip adresses and a NAT network to which our workstations are connected.
> The problem I have is that its not possible to
> connect to the server on the DMZ
When one interface fails in a carp setup, it is my understanding that if
net.inet.carp.preempt is set to '1', that both interfaces on the single
machine should fail. However I'm not seeing this happening and I'm
hoping this is why I'm dropping connections during fail over. If I fail
both interf
On Jan 22, 2006, at 1:07 PM, Jonas Lindskog wrote:
Hello,
We are running Open BSD 3.8 as a firewall router. The router has
two internal networks to handle; a DMZ with "real"
ip adresses and a NAT network to which our workstations are
connected. The problem I have is that its not possible to
On 2006/01/22 13:54, Nick Holland wrote:
> > You'll need to use a web proxy for this.
>
> Just set up a "poisoned" DNS
> resolver to mangle resolution of any domain or subdomain you don't want
> people going to, which is what you are doing in a machine-by-m
On 1/21/06, Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 1/21/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Lots of fsck time and an unbootable system if I understand this stuff.
>
> Actually, since fsck is all about metadata (inodes), a big, mostly-empty
> isn't going to take much longer to check
On Sun, 22 Jan 2006, Jose Fragoso wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was given the task to setup an OpenBSD NFS server. The machine allocated
> for the task is fairly well served with RAM memory (2G). I though of using
> MFS for the /tmp filesystem, but I don't know:
Wrap your lines!
>
> 1. How much space w
Hello,
I just want to inform you that the problems are resolved with the current
OpenBSD 3.9 bootfloppy
(ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/i386/floppy39.fs). I just
added to the bootfloppy /etc/boot.conf (for console output via serial
port) and the network works without any problems ;)
Hi,
I use DNS to solve this too. Got my list from http://pgl.yoyo.org/adservers/
which can generate config files in a bunch if different formats. Works great.
Cheers,
/jkm
* Nick Holland ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Stuart Henderson wrote:
> > On 2006/01/22 12:39, Peter Fraser wrote:
> >> Rathe
Hello,
We are running Open BSD 3.8 as a firewall router. The router has two
internal networks to handle; a DMZ with "real"
ip adresses and a NAT network to which our workstations are connected.
The problem I have is that its not possible to
connect to the server on the DMZ (ip 38.87.5.122, netm
Robert Jacobs wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I got a Tyan S2885 motherboard and am trying to get Xorg to work with 3 PCI
> Radeon video cards. I have always had X work with this many or more video
> cards so I'm thinking that there might be something specific to this setup
> that is screwed up. First tri
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2006/01/22 12:39, Peter Fraser wrote:
>> Rather than going to each machine an installing
>> this hosts file in \windows\system32\drivers\etc
>> I would rather have my firewall block these
>> names instead.
>>
>> Please note the blocking has to be done on the name,
>> n
On 2006/01/22 12:39, Peter Fraser wrote:
> Rather than going to each machine an installing
> this hosts file in \windows\system32\drivers\etc
> I would rather have my firewall block these
> names instead.
>
> Please note the blocking has to be done on the name,
> not the ip address.
You'll need t
On Sat, Jan 21, 2006 at 02:32:27PM +0100, Adam PAPAI wrote:
Hi
I've got a problem with pkg_add. I usually install 1-2 OpenBSD system a
week. Some of them has got problem with pkg_add.
For example pkg_add -vv screen-4.0.2.tgz takes 10 minutes.
And it's abnormal. What can I do to speed up this
On my windows machines, I use the hosts file
from "http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm";
which removes a lot of junk from the internet.
Rather than going to each machine an installing
this hosts file in \windows\system32\drivers\etc
I would rather have my firewall block these
names instead.
There is OpenBSD Server Hardware Compatibility List (OSCL). But that
only covers stock hardware from major vendors. But it's constantly
being updated.
http://www.armorlogic.com/openbsd_information_server_compatibility_list.html
Contribute if you have something.
On 1/22/06, Darrin Chandler <[EMAI
Hi,
I was given the task to setup an OpenBSD NFS server. The machine allocated for
the task is fairly well served with RAM memory (2G). I though of using MFS for
the /tmp filesystem, but I don't know:
1. How much space would I need in /tmp for this task. Is NFS/NIS hungry of /tmp
space?
2. If
On 22/01/06 11:41, Matthias Kilian wrote:
> Yes, dmesg below.
On 22/01/06 13:15, Andy Hayward wrote:
> Works perfectly, as long as you either tweak the pcibios(4) flags, or
> disable the audio device in the BIOS.
Thanks a lot!!
I have bought that computer now, and the guy who sold it actually h
Travers Buda wrote:
In light of all the recent activity on misc about "will OpenBSD run on
X?" perhaps someone would like to host a wiki for strange/new hardware?
Travers
Are you volunteering?
It wasn't long ago that the "OpenBSD Metastore" got going, amid some
controversy. I haven't h
--- "Peter N. M. Hansteen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On a system within reach here with full source and a
> ports tree, the
> partition which houses /, /tmp and /usr has about
> 3.8 used, with /usr
> consuming roughly 3.4 gigabytes. Skip X and system
> sources, you'll go a
> lot lighter.
>
>
In light of all the recent activity on misc about "will OpenBSD run on
X?" perhaps someone would like to host a wiki for strange/new hardware?
Travers
On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 12:01:18PM +, Didier Wiroth wrote:
/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC/../../../../dev/pci/trm_pci.c
> /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/trm_pci.c:67: warning: excess elements in struct
> initializer
> /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/trm_pci.c:67: warning: (near initialization for
> `trm_p
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/queueing.html
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pf.conf&apropos=0&sektion=0&manpath=OpenBSD+Current&arch=i386&format=html
That should get you started.
On Sat, Jan 21, 2006 at 11:27:50PM +0200, Maxim Vetsalo wrote:
> Hi
>
> Sorry for my english first :-( I
On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 03:14:50AM +0100, Bc. Radek Krejca wrote:
| Hello,
|
| I very bad in C language and I have following program written for
| Linux. I need to change this source for working on bsd could you
| help me? This programm shlould control LED on lpt port.
|
| file pokus.c
|
On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 12:01:18PM +, Didier Wiroth wrote:
> Hi,
> I've installed (on a newly formated disk) openbsd 3.9-beta (snapshot from
> 19.1) on my laptop
> I've added a few packages from the snapshot/packages/i386 (kdebase etc...)
> Then I've fetched the latest sources:
> cvs -q -
On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 12:01:18PM +, Didier Wiroth wrote:
> /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/trm_pci.c:67: warning: excess elements in struct
> initializer
> /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/trm_pci.c:67: warning: (near initialization for
> `trm_pci_ca')
> *** Error code 1
>
> Stop in /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/co
Hi
I downloaded CD-image for installing OpenBSD 3.8 from one of the mirrors,
listed in openbsd.org . When I started installing obsd, just after I choose
"Yes" to start configuring the network it shows me only the line: "No more
network interfaces found" (without any network interfaces listed
On Sat, Jan 21, 2006 at 02:15:37PM -0600, J Moore wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 21, 2006 at 05:42:08PM +0800, the unit calling itself Lars
> Hansson wrote:
> > On Sat, 21 Jan 2006 03:30:34 -0600
>
> > > Get a bigger H/D... 40 GB is about the smallest you can buy today; 4 GB
> > > drives have not been mad
On 1/22/06, Joakim Roubert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Searching archives for ASUS A7V8X-X, I have found some bug reports from
> 2003-2004, but then nothing. Is anybody using that motherboard with e.g.
> 3.8, and if so, is it working/stable?
Works perfectly, as long as you either tweak the pcibio
Hi,
I've installed (on a newly formated disk) openbsd 3.9-beta (snapshot from 19.1)
on my laptop
I've added a few packages from the snapshot/packages/i386 (kdebase etc...)
Then I've fetched the latest sources:
cvs -q -d [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs get -P src
I tried to build a kernel like usual
"M..." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I want to run a mailsever (20 users),
> (spamassasin/clamav) mailing list server (20 lists),
> ftp and web servers, (maybe 100MB or so of data)
> adding them in and seeing how it handles the load.
>
> I was thinking of doing
>
> / = 500MB
> /tmp - 100MB
> /usr
On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 09:40:32AM +0100, Joakim Roubert wrote:
> Searching archives for ASUS A7V8X-X, I have found some bug reports from
> 2003-2004, but then nothing. Is anybody using that motherboard with e.g.
> 3.8,
Yes.
and if so, is it working/stable?
Yes, dmesg below.
I only have to conf
Hi,
>
> You take it out of context.
>
> "OpenBSD/sgi is a fully featured 64 bit port and will thus only run on
> systems based on 64 bit processors, i.e. R4000 and up."
>
> Currently only O2s are supported which start at r5k. The port could
> be enhanced to support older machines based
SEJA FELIZ, AGORA!
A felicidade i um trajeto, nco um destino.
Trabalhe,
como se vocj precisasse de dinheiro...
Ame,
como se vocj nunca tivesse sido magoado.
E dance,
como se ninguim estivesse vendo vocj!
I que ha coisas que nco podem esperar ...
SER FELIZ I UMA DELAS! VISITE: www.jpmourao
On Sun, Jan 22, 2006 at 09:43:56AM +0100, Lars Weste wrote:
> hi,
>
> reading http://www.openbsd.org/sgi.html, confuses a bit. at the top it is
> stated that the port will run at r4000 and up. at the bottom, in
> supported hardware, the r5000 is the smallest supported processor. Which
> state
hi,
reading http://www.openbsd.org/sgi.html, confuses a bit. at the top it is
stated that the port will run at r4000 and up. at the bottom, in
supported hardware, the r5000 is the smallest supported processor. Which
statement is right?
lars
--
Telefonieren Sie schon oder sparen Sie noch
Hi!
Searching archives for ASUS A7V8X-X, I have found some bug reports from
2003-2004, but then nothing. Is anybody using that motherboard with e.g.
3.8, and if so, is it working/stable?
Best regards,
/Joakim
--
http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/
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