In message http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=118157353605570w=1
I wrote
# I have a problem with suspend-to-RAM on an IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad T41p
# running OpenBSD 4.1-stable. Basically, suspend-to-RAM works fine if
# I'm not running X, but hangs the system if I'm running X. My basic
# question is,
Hello,
I am running -current and I'm a little confused about expat.
It was removed from the ports tree, with message expat comes with OpenBSD as of
release 4.2. Indeed I see it is in /usr/src/lib/libexpat. However it is not in
/usr/src/lib/Makefile, so it isn't being built.
My direct problem
On 2007/06/12 12:33, Jaap Versteegh wrote:
My direct problem is building /usr/ports/devel/apr-util, which aparently
looks for expat in $X11BASE (/usr/X11R6). Since I don't have X installed
this fails.
you'll need to install xbase. the libraries from xbase are needed
for quite a few things in
Hi,
From the man page it appears that spamd relies on
static information about spam originators.
Why not a more dynamic scheme ?.
Why not run the content of the mail through a spam
detector (like dspam), find the spam score and make
decisions based on that. I know that spam detection
is no
On Tue, 12 Jun 2007 03:04:23 -0700 (PDT), Praveen wrote:
Hi,
From the man page it appears that spamd relies on
static information about spam originators.
Why not a more dynamic scheme ?.
Why not run the content of the mail through a spam
detector (like dspam), find the spam score and make
Praveen wrote:
From the man page it appears that spamd relies on
static information about spam originators.
greylisting is pretty dynamic.
---
Lars Hansson
RW wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jun 2007 03:04:23 -0700 (PDT), Praveen wrote:
Hi,
From the man page it appears that spamd relies on
static information about spam originators.
Why not a more dynamic scheme ?.
Why not run the content of the mail through a spam
detector (like dspam), find the
Thank you for your reponse.
Furthermore, I don't want to install X and surely apr-util doesn't need to
depend on it.
it does, because it uses expat, and that's where expat comes from in
-current.
That explains the need for the 'depend' from the point of view of the apr-util
Makefile
Hello,
I'm using mod_auth_ldap-1.6.0p3 on OpenBSD 4.1
and I'd like to make it authenticate on 2 ldap servers
in case one is down.
I fought with the AuthLDAPURL directive but with no success.
Any help would be appreciated.
Regards,
Thierry.
Jaap Versteegh wrote:
For one: this dependency was never neccessary in the past.
Because in the past there was an expat port.
Shouldn't expat not just go into /usr/lib ?
It's part of Xorg and therefore it belong in /usr/X11R6/lib/.
And you are right about the fact that other ports depend
On Mon, Jun 11, 2007 at 02:10:34PM -0400, Brian A. Seklecki wrote:
On Mon, 11 Jun 2007, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
Please contact krw@, he has been searching testers for RAIDframe root
autoconfig on [EMAIL PROTECTED] There's even a diff posted there, iirc.
I'm your point-man there. A while
Hi,
I'm currenly having troubles running MediaWiki on 4.1, but I assume it's
due to my poor understanding of the chroot'ed httpd and running php.
So is there somewhere an howto or a faq about troubleshooting problems
in this field?
The actual problem: once a user has logged into and
On 6/12/07, Josh Grosse [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Jun 11, 2007 at 06:59:46PM -0400, Nick Holland wrote:
am I missing something, or did you neglect to help him with his question,
which was about how to upgrade with RAIDframe in use?
I had everything except building the kernel, and
You can make a single service host address a highly available
(active-standby, load-balancing) using a number of mechanisms (hardware,
network devices, pf(4) w/ NAT) as opposed to trying to do it for every
protocol in software.
check out bob beck's talk(s) on pf(4)
~BAS
On Tue, 12 Jun 2007,
* Thierry Lacoste [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 14:35]:
Hello,
I'm using mod_auth_ldap-1.6.0p3 on OpenBSD 4.1
and I'd like to make it authenticate on 2 ldap servers
in case one is down.
I fought with the AuthLDAPURL directive but with no success.
AuthName something good
AuthType
stefan hoffmann wrote:
Hi,
I'm currenly having troubles running MediaWiki on 4.1, but I assume
it's due to my poor understanding of the chroot'ed httpd and running php.
So is there somewhere an howto or a faq about troubleshooting problems
in this field?
The actual problem: once a user
On Tuesday 12 June 2007 15:07, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Thierry Lacoste [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 14:35]:
Hello,
I'm using mod_auth_ldap-1.6.0p3 on OpenBSD 4.1
and I'd like to make it authenticate on 2 ldap servers
in case one is down.
I fought with the AuthLDAPURL directive but
On Tue, Jun 12, 2007 at 02:23:06PM +0200, Jaap Versteegh wrote:
Furthermore, I don't want to install X and surely apr-util doesn't need
to depend on it.
it does, because it uses expat, and that's where expat comes from in
-current.
That explains the need for the 'depend' from the point of
* Thierry Lacoste [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 15:27]:
On Tuesday 12 June 2007 15:07, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Thierry Lacoste [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 14:35]:
Hello,
I'm using mod_auth_ldap-1.6.0p3 on OpenBSD 4.1
and I'd like to make it authenticate on 2 ldap servers
in
stefan hoffmann schrieb:
I'm currenly having troubles running MediaWiki on 4.1, but I assume it's
due to my poor understanding of the chroot'ed httpd and running php.
D'oh: I had not changed the rights for /var/www/tmp...
Thanks to all.
mfG
-- stefan --
Lars Hansson wrote:
It's part of Xorg and therefore it belong in /usr/X11R6/lib/.
Really ?
I see it in extra's:
http://xorg.freedesktop.org/releases/X11R7.2/src/extras/
I also see perl in there. So should perl go into /usr/X11R6/bin ?
Jaap
stefan hoffmann wrote:
Hi,
I'm currenly having troubles running MediaWiki on 4.1, but I assume
it's due to my poor understanding of the chroot'ed httpd and running php.
So is there somewhere an howto or a faq about troubleshooting problems
in this field?
The actual problem: once a user
Joachim Schipper wrote:
Well, OpenBSD's dual system for dealing with software ('base' and
'ports') could be criticized, but unless you want to do that, there is
no more sensible way to do this. The alternative would be to require
someone to install a port before installing X, which makes even
Hi all,
I am running 4.1 on a Dell Latitude LS notebook. This machine uses the
Neomagic MagicMedia 256AV audio chip:
...
neo0 at pci1 dev 0 function 1 Neomagic MagicMedia 256AV rev 0x20
audio0 at neo0
...
Now, _sometimes_ the boot gets into an endless loop saying
neo0: unknown int
* Praveen [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 05:14]:
Hi,
From the man page it appears that spamd relies on
static information about spam originators.
Why not a more dynamic scheme ?.
No, it doesn't. please read the man page instead of
trolling.
Why not run the content of the mail
I still don't see how hosts in spamd-white are not sent to spamd.
what if a host is in spamd-white, but not in spamd-exempt..
-Bob
* Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-11 17:21]:
On 2007/06/08 16:02, Bob Beck wrote:
rdr-anchor hoststated/smtp from spamd-white
rdr
On 6/11/07, Karsten McMinn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/10/07, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That's just as stupid as requiring people have a cert. Lots of people have
certs because so many places toss your resume if you don't have MCSE or
CCNA listed on it. Just because they have a cert
We still haven't enabled expat in base/, because it's not audited enough
yet... we `trust' it as an X11 library, but no-one has addressed the multiple
security issues it may have.
Yes, we do know expat is a problem... we finally removed it from ports/
because it makes no sense to build it once.
On 6/12/07, Joachim Schipper [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Jun 12, 2007 at 02:23:06PM +0200, Jaap Versteegh wrote:
Furthermore, I don't want to install X and surely apr-util doesn't need
to depend on it.
it does, because it uses expat, and that's where expat comes from in
-current.
On 6/12/07, Jeff Quast [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/11/07, Karsten McMinn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/10/07, Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That's just as stupid as requiring people have a cert. Lots of people have
certs because so many places toss your resume if you don't have MCSE or
openbsd gurus,
As my saga continues...
I have a newly built server on which I am attempting to install
openbsd 4.0. Problems occurred on install of sets, where comp
set keeps throwing errors. Suggestion was made that it was probably
a bad CD. Try a previous CD of an earlier version. I had 3.9
On Tuesday 12 June 2007 15:49, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Thierry Lacoste [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 15:27]:
On Tuesday 12 June 2007 15:07, Henning Brauer wrote:
* Thierry Lacoste [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-06-12 14:35]:
Hello,
I'm using mod_auth_ldap-1.6.0p3 on OpenBSD 4.1
and
On 2007/06/12 09:04, Bob Beck wrote:
I still don't see how hosts in spamd-white are not sent to spamd.
what if a host is in spamd-white, but not in spamd-exempt..
# pfctl -sn -vv|grep -E '(smtp|hoststated)'
@0 rdr-anchor hoststated/smtp from spamd-white:1440 to any
@1 rdr inet proto tcp
Maxim,
set keeps throwing errors. Suggestion was made that it was probably
a bad CD. Try a previous CD of an earlier version. I had 3.9
available. The logs of the attempts are posted at:
In my case when I had the same problem it was the CD-rom reader that
was bad. Replacing cdrom with
On 6/8/07, Diana Eichert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So where are the other 18 or so folks?
right here.
- USD $100.00 [DON] DONATION to the OpenBSD Project
I've seen this before. On old HP gear. Is your HP? Only FreeBSD would
run on the system. NetBSD/OpenBSD dead in the water. Some obscure bug
when the I/O went up (Symbios SCSI).
One of many reason why I want nothing to do with HP (H-PHUX) ever again.
Anyway, how about underclocking your
John Mendenhall [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
So, based on these logs, from different openbsd cd versions,
my hypothesis is there is some weird sort of hardware problem.
My question is, what tools do you all use to determine where
the hardware problem could be?
google turns up a few references
pfctl -x loud tail -f /var/log/messages
~BAS
On Mon, 11 Jun 2007, Geraerts Andy wrote:
We have an OpenBSD firewall running for a while now. Since a few days we
encounter some sort of selective natting. I try to ping a host, I get reply,
and 2 minutes later I try to ping the same host
Hi,
I am trying to setup a DHCP server on a multi-homed firewall. One of the
interfaces is vr0 and should supply addresses 172.16.255.x/24. The other
is sk0 and should supply 200.232.140.x/24.
My /etc/dhcpd.interfaces looks like
sk0
vr0
My /etc/dhcpd.conf looks like
shared-network LOCAL-NET {
It's good to see I'm not the only one;-) I checked the archives and I
must have missed the memo. Here shows an updated version:
http://www.ualberta.ca/~beck/greyscanner/
Ah, thanks. I've googled for greyscanner and found only beck@'s
presentation...
But now I see it.. thanks ;)
The following:
$ sudo tcpdump -i vr0 port bootpc || port bootps tcpdump -i sk0 port
bootpc || port bootps
$ sudo dhcpd -vf
$ sudo netstat -tan|egrep -i 67|68
~BAS
On Tue, 12 Jun 2007, Jeff Santos wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to setup a DHCP server on a multi-homed firewall. One of the
I use ksh under OpenBSD/arm 4.1 and noticed that command line history feature
(up-arrow) suddenly stopped working. Pressing up-arrow inserts control code, but
command completion (tab-key) works fine.
`kbd -l` doesn't list any map and attempt to do `kbd en` returns error.
I was under impression
On Jun 12, 2007, at 2:28 AM, Jonathan Thornburg wrote:
In message http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=118157353605570w=1
I wrote
# I have a problem with suspend-to-RAM on an IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad T41p
# running OpenBSD 4.1-stable. Basically, suspend-to-RAM works fine if
# I'm not running X, but
Hi,
Not sure if this is a new problem, or specific to 4.1 on powerpc, or all
architecture.
But I setup a few times an old iMac for my sun that really wanted to try
OpenBSD desktop setup and so far loved it! (;
In the process of installing packages on it, I always have the same
issue
#/etc/dhcpd.conf
option domain-name-servers 200.232.140.1;
subnet 200.232.140.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
option routers 200.232.140.1;
range 200.232.140.20 200.232.140.200;
}
subnet 172.16.255.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
option routers 172.16.255.1;
range 172.16.255.20 172.16.255.200;
Hi,
Thank you.
Although I did not understand your recommendation.
My problem is that for some reason, DHCP server is allocating IP
addresses from the subnet 200.232.140.0 for stations in the
172.16.255.0 segment. I would like to control which addresses
should be given to each segment.
Regards,
I am downloading OpenBSD 4.2, I know how to use everything in that but being
young I am not too sure about the checksum format, md5 tends to rule the
world these days.
What is it called exactly?
I'm stuck with a Windows box at the moment, otherwise some thought and
pressing tab a couple of times
Jeff Santos [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Now how can I tell the dhcp server to only allocate 172.16.255
addresses to vr0 and 200.232.140.0 to sk0?
The two ranges are not subnets of a larger net you control. Put them
in separate 'shared-network' definitions and see if that doesn't get
you what you
On 2007/06/12 16:41, Jeff Santos wrote:
My problem is that for some reason, DHCP server is allocating IP
addresses from the subnet 200.232.140.0 for stations in the
172.16.255.0 segment. I would like to control which addresses
should be given to each segment.
Well, describing the problem is a
I have a mail server that has been running fine for a couple years
running 3.7 and has recently started crashing every couple days. I
know that it's well beyond the support window, but if someone can help
me out using gdb/ddb to figure out the problem I'd appreciate it.
I've got the
On 6/12/07, Alex Popov [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I use ksh under OpenBSD/arm 4.1 and noticed that command line history feature
(up-arrow) suddenly stopped working. Pressing up-arrow inserts control code, but
command completion (tab-key) works fine.
`kbd -l` doesn't list any map and attempt to do
John Tate [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am downloading OpenBSD 4.2, I know how to use everything in that
but being young I am not too sure about the checksum format, md5
tends to rule the world these days.
You're a bit early for 4.2, the closest you'll get is 4.1-current
snapshots these days.
Maybe the FTP control connection is timing out before the data connection,
the fetch(1)/ftp(1) cant gracefully send a disconnect command?
Try HTTP instead?
I think that you can set FETCH_COMMAND or FTP_COMMAND or
FETCH_CMD ?= /usr/bin/ftp -V -m
To enable debugging
Use tcpdump(8) if things
On 2007/06/13 07:48, John Tate wrote:
I am downloading OpenBSD 4.2
4.2, that's impressive (-:
I know how to use everything in that but being
young I am not too sure about the checksum format, md5 tends to rule the
world these days.
What is it called exactly?
You mean, in CKSUM? Cyclic
On 6/12/07, John Tate [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am downloading OpenBSD 4.2, I know how to use everything in that but being
young I am not too sure about the checksum format, md5 tends to rule the
world these days.
What is it called exactly?
I'm confused, what exactly are you asking? If its
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007, John Tate wrote:
I am downloading OpenBSD 4.2, I know how to use everything in that but being
young I am not too sure about the checksum format, md5 tends to rule the
world these days.
OpenBSD 4.2? perhaps you meant 4.1?
What is it called exactly?
what is What called
On Tue, Jun 12, 2007 at 08:36:03AM -0400, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
I committed the diff to raidframe to 'fix' raidgetdisklabel() so it
behaves/gets used like other drivers. It should be in snapshots
after today.
Unfortunately, this patch to rf_openbsdkintf.c didn't solve whatever
problem
Hello folks,
After mounting a fat32 partition, the directory listings show
everything in uppercase, except when a filename contains a
combination of uppercase and lowercase characters or the extension is
not 3 characters long, then it shows the names correctly. The uppercases
are very annoying.
Nick Guenther kousue at gmail.com writes:
Have you rebooted?
Yes.
What does `wsconsctl keyboard.map` show?
reiter# wsconsctl keyboard.map
keyboard.map=
keycode 0 = Control_L
keycode 2 = Tab Tab Caps_Lock Caps_Lock
keycode 3 = Cmd_Screen1 f2 F2
keycode 4 = Cmd_Screen0 f1 F1
keycode 5 =
Things to try (in any order you please):
1. check IDE cables
2. check whether Master/Slave/CS settings are correct
3. In case Brian is right, you might want to put CD on the same cable
as hd0, to slow-down IDE.
4. also check where you disks are connected - to IDE bus or to ATA-133
This issue has been resolved. It turned out that I lost 'set -o emacs'
somehow...
I still don't understand why `kbd -l` doesn't list any maps, but can live with
that :)
Thanks to all who replied to my post on and off the list.
Alex
Peter,
google turns up a few references on various BSD mailing list for the
search string OpenBSD ffs_valloc: dup alloc. No clear cut
solutions, but the popular suspicion runs in the direction of buggy
(S)ATA controllers or, of course, possibly subtle, hard to trigger
bugs in the operating
Brian,
I've seen this before. On old HP gear. Is your HP? Only FreeBSD would
run on the system. NetBSD/OpenBSD dead in the water. Some obscure bug
when the I/O went up (Symbios SCSI).
One of many reason why I want nothing to do with HP (H-PHUX) ever again.
Anyway, how about
From what I understand from the post, you are suggesting a scheme
similar to what snort2pf is doing for snort and pf. In layman terms,
when snort issues an alert, snort2pf informs pf about the attacker's IP,
and pf takes an action. AFAIK, this is currently the only way to convert
snort from an IDS
On 6/12/07, Soner Tari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Probably a simple shell script could do the job, which would look at
SpamAssassin logs to find out the spam score and IP address, and insert
into spamd blacklists as necessary. The only caveat is that threshold
spam score for blacklisting should be
On 6/12/07, John Tate [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am downloading OpenBSD 4.2, I know how to use everything in that but being
young I am not too sure about the checksum format, md5 tends to rule the
world these days.
What is it called exactly?
I'm stuck with a Windows box at the moment,
Hi,
Anyone know of any load balancing software for OpenBSD that can do
direct-server return? (our load balancers (openbsd boxes) are co-located
and we pay for all data bandwidth).
Something like BalanceNG (which unfortunately doesnt run on OpenBSD)
woudl be ideal.
It is generally for http
On 6/12/07, Linden Varley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It is generally for http layer requests but I don't think apache
re-directs will suffice.
You may want to look at pound. A lot of people seem to like it.
--
This officer's men seem to follow him merely out of idle curiosity.
-- Sandhurst
Linden Varley wrote:
Anyone know of any load balancing software for OpenBSD that can do
direct-server return? (our load balancers (openbsd boxes) are co-located
and we pay for all data bandwidth).
hoststated?
---
Lars Hansson
Hi Guys,
Its been stable since I sent the msg, and I can't replicate at will :(
I have setup SNMP and am monitoring with MRTG, so will keep an eye on
that. If it happens again, will run a few of the suggested commands,
but until then I sit and wait...
Thanks again for your suggestions...
Karl
Hi,
I have checked the archives and searched online but not quite found
what I'm about to ask, and yet can't believe I'm the first one to
ask this question. I have several domains and look after equipment
(including mail systems) for several clients. All have their own
primary and backup
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 16:19:21 +1200 Stuart Henderson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2007/06/13 15:36, Kevin Nelson wrote:
We see a lot of spam targeting high-pref MX records.
Did you notice -M?
No (well yes, but mis-read low priority MX as low preference
MX), good point, I'll take a look.
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 10:54:58 +0800
Lars Hansson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Linden Varley wrote:
Anyone know of any load balancing software for OpenBSD that can do
direct-server return? (our load balancers (openbsd boxes) are
co-located and we pay for all data bandwidth).
hoststated?
On 6/12/07, Mark Voortman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello folks,
After mounting a fat32 partition, the directory listings show
everything in uppercase, except when a filename contains a
combination of uppercase and lowercase characters or the extension is
not 3 characters long, then it shows the
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