On 2009-04-10, Neal Hogan nealho...@gmail.com wrote:
As of recent updates to -current, the latest of which was today
(04/10/09), my pf rules are not loading due to a syntax error in my
scrub line. I have not touched my pf.conf in a while, so the
difference must be from recent source. I don't
Am 05.04.2009 um 19:44 schrieb ropers:
I'm looking for a colour laser printer...
2009/4/5 STeve Andre' and...@msu.edu:
Seems that this might make a good faq entry, if it isn't already there(?).
OpenBSD printing in general? It's not currently in the FAQ as such.
I gotta admit here that I've
On Thu, Apr 09, 2009 at 07:53:36PM +0200, jul spoke thusly: anyone ?
jul wrote on 5/04/09 14:50:
i'm using chroot sftp with the following command:
#Subsystem sftpinternal-sftp -l VERBOSE -f AUTH
Subsystem sftpinternal-sftp -l INFO -f AUTH
from
The -w option for ssh creates a tun device on the local and remote
systems, but seems to require remote root login as well as local root.
What way is there to use sudo on both the local and the remote machine
instead? Or some other work around to avoid granting root, at least on
the remote
Hi Jeroen,
I do not know Wim personally.
I have met Wim personally on more than one occasion, including having
invited him for beer and dinner, and he always seemed a really nice guy.
Being let down by somebody who might have become a friend is hard to
bear.
Lemme say this, from what I know,
My OpenBSD version is 4.4 GENERIC#1021 i386. I'm experiencing a similar
issue to the thread here:
http://kerneltrap.org/index.php?q=mailarchive/openbsd-misc/2008/6/9/2068624
where Option 66 (tftp-server-name) seems to only work for the first client
that boots up and then no other client
When dealing with web based submission, the best thing I have found is
to make sure the web based submission adds its own headers like what it
is and where the user came from and such so when diagnosing the problem
one can easily block based on that information. If there is an account
involved,
I want to thank everybody again for the interest and good information
regarding this admittedly semi-OT topic. :)
I hope I'm not stretching everybody's patience now, but given your
interest, maybe I can elaborate a bit on where I'm coming from (if
you're pressed for time and only interested in
Uwe Dippel wrote:
I'm sorry, but I lack the experience to understand what you mean. I have
200+ users, several of them having set up (sorry, yes, written!),
who can install any CMS of their liking, using ftp; or any other script
that
sends mail. Some of them are official websites, so I can
Lars NoodC)n wrote:
What way is there to use sudo on both the local and the remote machine
instead? ...
Ok. (so that this goes in the archives) One work-around is to change
the group for the relevant tun device on the remote machine. Then give
the group rw privileges to the
device. e.g.
Uwe Dippel wrote:
When dealing with web based submission, the best thing I have found is
to make sure the web based submission adds its own headers like what it
is and where the user came from and such so when diagnosing the problem
one can easily block based on that information. If there is an
On Sat, Apr 11, 2009 at 02:20:25PM +0200, ropers wrote:
went on behind the scenes. I am trying to catch up on that, though I'm
finding that comprehensive, thorough, and up-to-date documentation on
the whole Unix printing landscape seems to be somewhat hard to find.
There is a chapter on
Hello,
I use several OpenBSD/i386 (versions 4.3 and 4.4)
VMs under VMWare Workstation and ESX.
They work great for my purposes (few LAMP servers +
1 OpenVPN server), but there is one annoyance:
when I close the VMWare or shutdown the host,
then the OpenBSD VMs aren't shutdown properly.
I've
* Alexander Farber alexander.far...@gmail.com [090411 16:42]:
Hello,
I use several OpenBSD/i386 (versions 4.3 and 4.4)
VMs under VMWare Workstation and ESX.
They work great for my purposes (few LAMP servers +
1 OpenVPN server), but there is one annoyance:
when I close the VMWare or
hi there,
after removing my wireless mouse receiver from the usb
port i was greeted with the following message:
wsmouse1 detached
ums0 detached
uhidev0 detached
uhid0 detached
uhidev1 detached
ehci0: port reset timeout
ehci_freex: xfer=0xd1386700 not busy, 0x4f4e5155
uhub0: port 2 reset failed
On Sun, Apr 12, 2009 at 2:19 AM, frantisek holop min...@obiit.org wrote:
hi there,
after removing my wireless mouse receiver from the usb
port i was greeted with the following message:
wsmouse1 detached
ums0 detached
uhidev0 detached
uhid0 detached
uhidev1 detached
ehci0: port reset
Matthew Weigel unique at idempot.net writes:
Then you have grown your userbase too fast with a terrible setup, and now
you're caught in the middle of fixing the problem or avoiding downtime.
Are you sure this is not a misunderstanding? When you host user accounts, on a
tight, default, setup of
On Sat, 11 Apr 2009 18:37:51 +0200 ropers rop...@gmail.com wrote:
I want to thank everybody again for the interest and good information
regarding this admittedly semi-OT topic. :)
Ropers,
We're *way* off-topic. Not only are we talking about home brew
electronics, but such devices are
Chris Bennett wrote:
This could be helpful, possibly. First, you can maintain a functional
mini_sendmail by putting a nother script at /bin/mini_sendmail, this
script could do some sort of logging and then pass things on to the real
mini_sendmail, located somewhere else, different (hidden)
Uwe Dippel wrote:
Matthew Weigel unique at idempot.net writes:
Then you have grown your userbase too fast with a terrible setup, and now
you're caught in the middle of fixing the problem or avoiding downtime.
Are you sure this is not a misunderstanding? When you host user accounts, on a
Ingo Schwarze wrote:
...
I think it *needs* to be done privately.
I hate to say so, but that doesn't agree with my experience. Private
communication was still reasonably civil, but led to nothing. When i
went public, the part of the problem i was directly involved in got
resolved quickly.
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