Jason Beaudoin wrote:
Cheap USB memory card readers are well recognized as a mass storage
device and probably should be
the last resort for the most stubborn digital cameras.
agreed.
Personally, I use Sony Cybershot DSC-W70. Unfortunately the camera can
not be mounted directly as a
When I install by port a package is first built. When deleting the
package with pkg_delete the package is removed (no longer installed)
but that built package file remains. Is there any way to get rid of it
during the deletion? I'm running the latest snapshot.
/juan
Looking for the perf
My USB drive and camera get automagically mounted by hotplugd attach
script. I was wondering if I need to write a detach script as well.
Bob Beck mentioned in his undeadly post that the detach script is not
really needed.
Could anyone shed some light on this please? Thanks.
> Cheap USB memory card readers are well recognized as a mass storage
> device and probably should be
> the last resort for the most stubborn digital cameras.
agreed.
> Personally, I use Sony Cybershot DSC-W70. Unfortunately the camera can
> not be mounted directly as a file system.
> As with
Richard Daemon wrote:
anyone have a port of cacti?
www.cacti.net
Heres a link to the freebsd port if you want to have a hack at it..
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/net-mgmt/cacti/
Brian
On Feb 2, 2008 3:17 PM, Brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * How do I determine my actual up and down provided to me from my service
> provider?
The way I did it was to find a very popular torrent with lots of
seeders and leechers (a new linux distro would suffice) and leech as
much as possible
anyone have a port of cacti?
www.cacti.net
On Feb 2, 2008 2:49 PM, Stefan Kell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> On Fri, 1 Feb 2008, Jim M wrote:
>
> > Sorry I wasn't clear. What my mind was thinking wasn't coming across.
> I
> > hope this helps.
> >
> > I have a firewall that runs on a Sun Ultra 5. It is a dhcp client on
> the
>
Is there a way to still use this, locally or in a more secure manner or by
some other means with the same results as would be with -w working?
TIA.
On 2/2/08, Brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Basically, I want to attempt to avoid getting watchdog timeouts on my
> bittorrent connections.
altq will not help you with this. This is an IRQ, driver or hardware
problem. I would suggest trying an ACPI kernel (see archives), filing
a bug report or
The C3&7 per-watt performance is outstanding; however, their benchmark
performance, exclusive of crypto and/or multimedia acceleration, is not
on par with like MHz intel or amd processors.
The amd turion is the benchmark *AND* per-watt performance king.
Yes, there are desktop turion-compatible mo
I read the following document:
http://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20061109202501
and I understand the general concepts, but I have a few questions.
* How do I determine my actual up and down provided to me from my service
provider?
* How do I make a decision as to what queue me
On Sun 2008.02.03 at 10:28 +1100, Chris wrote:
> On Feb 3, 2008 10:22 AM, johan beisser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > You may hit space or enter.
>
> I did but looks like it just hangs in there - jammed. Nothing happens.
>
> > Sometimes it just has to wake up. Cisco,
> > by default, uses 9600 8,
On Sun, Feb 03, 2008 at 01:23:08AM +0200, Imre Oolberg wrote:
> But I am surprised people aint using much VIA low-power offerings like
> C3, Eden or C7 in a form of mini-itx motherboard.
I was using during almost 2 years VIA C3-700 - and this one didn't need any
cooler (the stronger ones needed.
On Feb 3, 2008 10:22 AM, johan beisser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You may hit space or enter.
I did but looks like it just hangs in there - jammed. Nothing happens.
> Sometimes it just has to wake up. Cisco,
> by default, uses 9600 8,N,1 if i remember correctly.
Yes. You are right.
> Is there
Hi!
Thank you all for your feedback on my question about noiseless
workstation and providing details of your setups and links to
appropriate places! Idea about connecting keyboard, mouse and monitor
with looong cables is clearly thinking outside a box! :) Once i even
though myself about it but
On Feb 2, 2008, at 3:17 PM, Chris wrote:
On Feb 3, 2008 9:27 AM, johan beisser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
C) to use cu(1) with a USB serial: "cu -l /dev/cuaU0"
I tried "cu -l /dev/cuaU0", "cu -l /dev/cuaU0 -s 9600" - it says
"Connected" after that nothing happens. Should I try changing the ba
On Feb 3, 2008 9:27 AM, johan beisser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> C) to use cu(1) with a USB serial: "cu -l /dev/cuaU0"
I tried "cu -l /dev/cuaU0", "cu -l /dev/cuaU0 -s 9600" - it says
"Connected" after that nothing happens. Should I try changing the baud
rate? This Cisco 3950 switch is usually c
On Sun 2008.02.03 at 08:57 +1100, Chris wrote:
> On Feb 2, 2008 10:29 PM, Marc Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > /dev/ttyU0
> > you should use /dev/cuaU0 for "dial-out".
>
> Thanks. I tried both /dev/ttyU0 and /dev/cuaU0 in minicom. They both
> seem to go to the "initializing modem" phase bu
A) don't bother initializing a modem. Forget minicom. It's nearly
useless for what you're doing.
B) openbsd has a utility built in to do just these kinds of things:
"cu(1)"
C) to use cu(1) with a USB serial: "cu -l /dev/cuaU0"
On Feb 2, 2008, at 1:57 PM, Chris wrote:
On Feb 2, 2008 10
On Feb 2, 2008 10:29 PM, Marc Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > /dev/ttyU0
> you should use /dev/cuaU0 for "dial-out".
Thanks. I tried both /dev/ttyU0 and /dev/cuaU0 in minicom. They both
seem to go to the "initializing modem" phase but when I turn on the
switch with "/dev/cuaU0" configuration
frantisek holop obiit.org> writes:
>
> i had a nother idea today, the eee comes with grub...
> the more knowledgable are already holding their heads :]
>
> because i dont have the boot sector and /boot, i thought
> grub could maybe load bsd.rd
>
> but all i got was the 'boot too old' message
>
On Sat, Feb 02, 2008 at 08:17:01PM +0100, Konrad wrote:
> Hey misc,
>
> so I know there is a better way to posting Bugs. But i not really got
> all information needed to post it to bugs@ or better: i have the
> information in a unpropper way. So I dont really mind if you not
> answer i just though
Hello,
On Fri, 1 Feb 2008, Jim M wrote:
Sorry I wasn't clear. What my mind was thinking wasn't coming across. I
hope this helps.
I have a firewall that runs on a Sun Ultra 5. It is a dhcp client on the
WAN side and a dhcp server inside the house. The firewall connects to a
switch that has
Hey misc,
so I know there is a better way to posting Bugs. But i not really got
all information needed to post it to bugs@ or better: i have the
information in a unpropper way. So I dont really mind if you not
answer i just thought it would be a nice information that my panic
happened.
So I insta
> 2008/2/1, Zbigniew Baniewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> You can use old Pentium II 400 MHz - there are still many of them
>> available,
>> which doesn't need any cooler, its radiator will do. Such way the only
>
> And where do you get a PCI graphics card with DVI capable of doing
> 1920x1200?
Every
On Feb 2, 2008, at 6:32 AM, Wijnand Wiersma wrote:
I don't think bogons are able to complete the TCP handshake since you
don't know how to route back. Filtering those will not make sure there
are less log messages about ssh logins
Not entirely true. Bogons are not supposed to be routed, or
Martin Schrvder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> And where do you get a PCI graphics card with DVI capable of doing 1920x1200?
Matrox Millennium P690 PCI. X.org doesn't have a driver for it, though.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I don't think bogons are able to complete the TCP handshake since you
don't know how to route back. Filtering those will not make sure there
are less log messages about ssh logins
Wijnand
On Sat, 02 Feb 2008 01:24:44 +0100
Peichaer Robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Richard Daemon schrieb:
> > On Feb 1, 2008 5:14 PM, badeguruji <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> From Sun's own mouth:
> >>
> >> ..."Solaris 10 OS, the most secure OS worldwide holding 176
> >> records"...
> >>
> >>
On Sat, Feb 02, 2008 at 12:47:54PM +0100, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> 2008/2/2, elpinguim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 05:28:11PM +0100, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> > > No. This just adds another way for things to go wrong. KISS. :-)
> >
> > Really, what things? Script it, set cron t
On Sat, Feb 02, 2008 at 05:26:59AM -0600, Tony Abernethy wrote:
> elpinguim wrote:
> > On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 05:28:11PM +0100, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> > > 2008/2/1, elpinguim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > > Configuring pf to not even respond to unallocated ip space also
> > > > helps. Search for B
Personally, I would look into industrial-grade i386 SBCs. Old server
systems will suck juice, have non-standard weird bits and odds (old
Macs are a great example for RAM) and although I readily admit to
knowing next to nothing about EM shielding, it would seem easier to
shield properly a small box
I knew this picture would become handy when I took it at SL2008 ...
http://www.evilkittens.org/~gilles/pictures/vrac/secure-solaris.jpg
Gilles
On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 11:44:10PM +, Bryan wrote:
> That's okay, I saw a presentation that had a quote from RMS talking
> about how Sun is helping
2008/2/2, elpinguim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 05:28:11PM +0100, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> > No. This just adds another way for things to go wrong. KISS. :-)
>
> Really, what things? Script it, set cron to call it, done. Simple.
"IP addresses that are bogon today may not be bo
On 2008/02/02 11:55, Christian Rudolph wrote:
> I'm using OpenBSD 4.2 on a soekris 4501.
you have to be careful with PCI cards in 4501, the power supply
is very limited, it's quite possible to damage your soekris with the
wrong card.
http://lists.soekris.com/pipermail/soekris-tech/2003-July/00303
Stuart Henderson wrote:
/dev/ttyU0
you should use /dev/cuaU0 for "dial-out".
On 2008/02/02 20:53, Chris wrote:
I am trying to a access a switch connected to a USB-Serial controller
to my laptop's USB port. When I plug in the USB port to my laptop I
get the following in my /var/log/messages
Chris wrote:
I am trying to a access a switch connected to a USB-Serial controller
to my laptop's USB port. When I plug in the USB port to my laptop I
get the following in my /var/log/messages. But I am not sure which
/dev/ to use in minicom to access the switch. I can see there
is no /dev/uplcom
elpinguim wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 05:28:11PM +0100, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> > 2008/2/1, elpinguim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > Configuring pf to not even respond to unallocated ip space also
> > > helps. Search for Bogon filtering.
> >
> > No. This just adds another way for things to go w
In an article at http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1142 there is an
opinion: "Microsoft is looking at open-source software (OSS) as just
another flavor of independent software vendors (ISV) software.
Microsofts goal is to convince OSS vendors to port their software to
Windows."
Looks like the g
Hi,
I'm using OpenBSD 4.2 on a soekris 4501.
I have attached a USB controller and plugged in a harddrive.
The problem is, the device doesn't get recognized by OpenBSD.
Then I tried another box and plugged in the same harddrive.
result: it works.
But I need to run this disk at my soekris box.
F
On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 05:28:11PM +0100, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> 2008/2/1, elpinguim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > Configuring pf to not even respond to unallocated ip space also
> > helps. Search for Bogon filtering.
>
> No. This just adds another way for things to go wrong. KISS. :-)
Really, what
2008/2/2, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I am trying to a access a switch connected to a USB-Serial controller
> to my laptop's USB port. When I plug in the USB port to my laptop I
> get the following in my /var/log/messages. But I am not sure which
> /dev/ to use in minicom to access the switch. I c
/dev/ttyU0
On 2008/02/02 20:53, Chris wrote:
> I am trying to a access a switch connected to a USB-Serial controller
> to my laptop's USB port. When I plug in the USB port to my laptop I
> get the following in my /var/log/messages. But I am not sure which
> /dev/ to use in minicom to access the sw
I am trying to a access a switch connected to a USB-Serial controller
to my laptop's USB port. When I plug in the USB port to my laptop I
get the following in my /var/log/messages. But I am not sure which
/dev/ to use in minicom to access the switch. I can see there
is no /dev/uplcom0 or /dev/ucom0
Chris wrote:
I am after a software that would allow me to view photos from my
digital camera which I usually mount in /mnt/camera. I tried from the
ports tree: digikam, gphoto, gtkam, kphotoalbum, wmphoto, kamera -
none of them really work well in showing the pictures; some of them
want to detect
Zbigniew Baniewski wrote:
On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 08:16:49PM +0200, Imre Oolberg wrote:
As an operating system my first choice would OpenBSD and second is Linux.
In fact at the moment i run such a kind of setup using Linux but i feel
need to upgrade my hardware, i have old 700 MHz Celeron, 1
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