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Today Otto Moerbeek contributed the following:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Denny White wrote:
Had originally posted a message "Tuning NFS File Transfer Speed"
and had eventually posted a "Solved" reply to it on the list.
That turned out to be erroneous.
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 07:49:07PM +0200, Bogdan Hojda wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> I'm not sure if this the right place to post this question, but I
> couldn't find any other better list.
>
> My problem is that I recently changed my OS on a i386 router from Linux
> to OpenBSD (3.8). On that router I
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Denny White wrote:
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>
>
> Had originally posted a message "Tuning NFS File Transfer Speed"
> and had eventually posted a "Solved" reply to it on the list.
> That turned out to be erroneous. It did turn out to be a hardware
> i
* Bogdan Hojda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-01-27 19:59]:
> I tried the following configuration in OpenBGP's /etc/bgpd.conf, with no
> success:
>
> ># macros
> >MyISP="82.xxx.xxx.yyy"
> >
> ># global configuration
> >AS xxx66
> >router-id 82.xxx.xxx.xxx
you probably don't want this, bgpd picks one
* Matthew S Elmore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-01-27 20:55]:
> Though I have been successfully running dhcpd myself for a few years
> now, it has come to my attention when writing some scripts to help
> maintain systems that there is no /var/run/dhcpd.pid file.
> Is this by design?
yes. pid files
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Had originally posted a message "Tuning NFS File Transfer Speed"
and had eventually posted a "Solved" reply to it on the list.
That turned out to be erroneous. It did turn out to be a hardware
issue. Had some leaking capacitors on the old VIA Abit mo
Greetings misc@,
Though I have been successfully running dhcpd myself for a few years
now, it has come to my attention when writing some scripts to help
maintain systems that there is no /var/run/dhcpd.pid file.
Is this by design? If so, is it possible to have it generate the pid
file on sta
Hello list,
I'm not sure if this the right place to post this question, but I
couldn't find any other better list.
My problem is that I recently changed my OS on a i386 router from Linux
to OpenBSD (3.8). On that router I run Quagga and now I want to switch
to OpenBGPD, but I have problems "trans
On Friday, January 27, Toni Mueller wrote:
>
> - /etc/boot.conf ---
> set timeout 30
> boot /bsd.mpr
> - /etc/boot.conf ---
>
> This should give me a 30 second pause before the machine boots the
> named kernel, but instead, it boots _immediately_, so I have
On 2006/01/27 17:30, John Wright wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 06:05:16PM +0100, Toni Mueller wrote:
> > - /etc/boot.conf ---
> > set timeout 30
> > boot /bsd.mpr
> > - /etc/boot.conf ---
>
> The "boot" commands instructs it to boot there and then.
'set
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 06:05:16PM +0100, Toni Mueller wrote:
> - /etc/boot.conf ---
> set timeout 30
> boot /bsd.mpr
> - /etc/boot.conf ---
The "boot" commands instructs it to boot there and then.
yes, see here its only for pf i think
http://www.allard.nu/pfw/
-Thomas
On Fri, 2006-01-27 at 22:46 +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> guys do you have any idea if their's another package like webmin for openbsd?
>
> what is your comment also about webmin.. is it safe to use?
>
> thanks guys..
Dear Customer,
At First Usa Bank the greatest responsability to our customer is the
safekeeping of confidential information you have entrusted to us and
using it in a responsable manner. A fundamental element of safeguarding
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unauthoriz
Hi,
I'm working on an amd64 box (Opteron 146) with a soft raid with
autoconfig in place. The soft raid works fine, but boot.conf is
somewhat weird. Some experimenting revealed that I have three
partitions which are recognized as boot partitions:
/dev/wd0a, /dev/wd1a, and /dev/raid0a.
On /dev/wd0
Hi,
I use squid in a similar environment too and have
learnt in comp.protocols.dns.bind that forwarders are evil.
Remove that line from your named.conf.
I also used adzap (and before - squeezeball) to
filter out ads for my home network hanging on ADSL
But then I stopped doing that and just ins
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> guys do you have any idea if their's another package like webmin for openbsd?
>
> what is your comment also about webmin.. is it safe to use?
>
> thanks guys.. ;)
>
Been using it for years, .. of course, the first thing you do is restrict
all clients
On Jan 27, 2006, at 8:46 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
guys do you have any idea if their's another package like webmin
for openbsd?
No.
what is your comment also about webmin.. is it safe to use?
No.
thanks guys.. ;)
NP.
guys do you have any idea if their's another package like webmin for openbsd?
what is your comment also about webmin.. is it safe to use?
thanks guys.. ;)
Marco Pfatschbacher wrote:
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 02:18:10PM +0100, Alexander Hall wrote:
Hi!
I just noticed (the hard way) a strange behaviour of ifconfig. In short,
if I supply a netmask when removing an alias with ``-alias '',
it is not, as one would expect, ignored, but rather used as th
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Alexander Hall wrote:
I just noticed (the hard way) a strange behaviour of ifconfig. In short, if I
supply a netmask when removing an alias with ``-alias '', it is not,
as one would expect, ignored, but rather used as the netmask for the primary
addres
For the archives:
On 1/22/06, Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 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.
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/httpd
m
On Thu, Jan 26, 2006 at 10:30:08PM -0500, Nick Holland wrote:
> AndrC)s Delfino wrote:
> > What I'm trying to ask is this: if a user turns on the computer, and
> > can't log in, is it safe to power off the computer without using halt,
> > or shutdown, (ie. pressing the power off button)?
>
> SHOUL
Rob W wrote:
>> From: Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> This is a denial of service, not a security exploit. Crashing a box
>> causes headaches, but the data within is still out of the reach of those
>> who would like to steal it.
>
> It isn't important that people can crash your box remotely a
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 02:18:10PM +0100, Alexander Hall wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I just noticed (the hard way) a strange behaviour of ifconfig. In short,
> if I supply a netmask when removing an alias with ``-alias '',
> it is not, as one would expect, ignored, but rather used as the netmask
> for the
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Alexander Hall wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I just noticed (the hard way) a strange behaviour of ifconfig. In short, if I
> supply a netmask when removing an alias with ``-alias '', it is not,
> as one would expect, ignored, but rather used as the netmask for the primary
> address of the
Hi;
I am not sure what you are saying here, but if you think you are
having a DNS isse, then try adding this to your squid.conf:
dns_testnames localhost
Have you disabled caching? If this does not work, then you should
probably bring this up in the squid-users list,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
G
Hi!
I just noticed (the hard way) a strange behaviour of ifconfig. In short,
if I supply a netmask when removing an alias with ``-alias '',
it is not, as one would expect, ignored, but rather used as the netmask
for the primary address of the interface.
While it would not be necessary to sup
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Hi,
...on Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 12:10:22PM +0200, Kiraly Zoltan wrote:
> I use Squid to filter web content like ad and pop-up (adzaper), I don't
> use Squid for cache.
> The problem is, when i use Squid many webpage open slow, for example
> sometimes i wait much in Firefox at "Waiting for www
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006 06:43:35 -0500
Nick Holland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nick Holland wrote:
> > ...much bigger, if we get the 1G physical disk limit overcome in
> > OpenBSD).
>
> er... 1T physical disk limit...
>
> (hey, some of us old timers were really wowed by the first 1G drives.
> Or
Nick Holland wrote:
> ...much bigger, if we get the 1G physical disk limit overcome in
> OpenBSD).
er... 1T physical disk limit...
(hey, some of us old timers were really wowed by the first 1G drives.
Or the first 20M drives... We get our staggering amount of storage
units confused easily. :)
From: Chris Zakelj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
This is a denial of service, not a security exploit. Crashing a box
causes headaches, but the data within is still out of the reach of those
who would like to steal it.
It isn't important that people can crash your box remotely and make the
services provide
I have an OpenBSD gateway which share the Internet and use Squid.
Squid proxy work transparent, OpenBSD PF allow this thing :
rdr pass on fxp0 proto tcp to port www -> 127.0.0.1 port 3128
I use Squid to filter web content like ad and pop-up (adzaper), I don't
use Squid for cache.
The problem is,
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 10:07:33AM +0100, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Thu, 26 Jan 2006, Rob W wrote:
>
> > http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/16375 is minor but important enough to
> > report?
> >
> > A way to remotly crash a OpenBSD box is minor?
>
> If the number of systems affected is low, the an
On Thu, 26 Jan 2006, Rob W wrote:
> http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/16375 is minor but important enough to
> report?
>
> A way to remotly crash a OpenBSD box is minor?
If the number of systems affected is low, the answer may be yes. This
problem only exists if you enable specific scrubbing opti
* Will H. Backman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-01-26 23:15]:
> "By sending carefully crafted sequence of IP packet fragments, a remote
> attacker can cause a system running pf with a ruleset containing a
> 'scrub fragment crop' or 'scrub fragment drop-ovl' rule to crash."
>
> 1: Has this been verifie
Hello all,
I have two questions:
1) What is the state of sasyncd in 3.8? (I'm currently running stable
without any patches). The only hint that there would be known bugs or
that sasyncd would be incomplete is this email:
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2005-10/1804.html.
2) I
On 2006-01-27 01:42:13 +1100, Shane J Pearson wrote:
> What an incredible load of tripe!...
This belongs on advocacy.
Armand Chen wrote:
Hi all :-)
After I switched to OpenBSD, there are still some data in my old NTFS
partition. I've made the NTFS support into kernel, and successfully
mounted the NTFS partision.
The problem is, some filename of the data is encoded other than
ISO8859-1. In other UNIX-like syste
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