Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Scott McEachern

On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:

I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
and my little mistakes.

I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal bunch
of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?

Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
researched crap with no answers contain.

If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

John Tate.

Note: Yes, it's not my list.



John, if you don't mind, I'll give you some advice:  Do your homework 
before posting to the list.  Your basic instinct is to click Send 
instead of thinking first.  I've lost count of how many of your posts 
were retracted by yourself, with a big oops, my bad or were replied to 
with RTFM-type responses.  I got a kick out of one retraction where you 
said something like Sorry, I was drunk.


You're obviously new here.  Sure, it's a tough crowd at times, but that 
only happens when people don't bother reading the FAQ, or the man pages, 
or trying things out for themselves.  A lot of people have asked 
stupid questions or said something dumb -- myself included -- and 
got painful responses.  I've had my share of facepalm experiences and 
had my ass handed to me plenty of times, but I deserved it.


But you know what?  I try to not make a regular occasion of it.  It 
seems you do.


I help a lot of people off-list, and I know for a fact many others do 
the same.  I've found through years of experience there are two kinds of 
people on this list: those that need a little help and pointed in the 
right direction, and those that need their hands held for every step.  
Guess which category I put you in?  And that's exactly why I've helped 
you a grand total of zero times.


Now you have the gall to come on this list and insult the people that 
are trying to help you.  I don't think there's anyone on this list that 
sits idly, waiting for an opportunity to pick on or bully someone.  
Get a grip, get some thicker skin, and most of all, RTFM first.


I guarantee that if you take my advice, you'll find this list to be a 
very, very valuable resource.  Remember, there is a difference between 
*reading* and *comprehension*.  Work a little harder on the latter and I 
think you'll find you won't be picked on.


Stop playing the victim.  You're not the first and it's old.

--
Scott McEachern

https://www.blackstaff.ca



how much last entries should exist?

2011-12-01 Thread [BG-Consulting] Elmar Bschorer
Hi list,

my server just had a little crash. Currently running:
OpenBSD 4.9 GENERIC#477 amd64

After reset I checked last and I found only 5 entries.
I am wondering I this is normal? Shouldn't there be more entries?
The last one is from Wed Nov 30 09:43 - 09:43  (00:00).

Could someone plz tell me when a entry gets deleted from last?

Tia,
Greets
Elmar



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Gregory Edigarov
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 21:05:05 +0100
Jan Stary h...@stare.cz wrote:

 On Nov 30 10:26:46, T. Valent wrote:
  sure will solve what you have understood to be my problem. But what
  really annoys me here is that I'm not taken seriously when I say
  this isn't an option. Why don't you just believe my words instead
  of permanently speaking about things that I explicitly said are
  impossible?
 
 Because if someone simply says this is impossible, it is only
 natural to ask why is that impossible?. How does that annoy you?
 
 (Solving your problem is impossible. Really.
 Don't waste your time asking why.)
 
  Did you read my mail in which I said that the hardware cannot be
  changed? A new flashcard would be a change in hardware.
 
 So the 32MB storage is a CF card? Don't be surprised that
 people ask, because it begs the question (no really, it does):
 why can't you put a bigger CF card in there that would
 just hold GENERIC? No, really: why? Answering this question
 will take a few minutes of our time.
 
  I think you know
  that. You just don't take my words seriously and keep talking about
  things that I already said are not possible in this project. Why
  discuss this? From my point of view it's not me wasting your time,
  but it's you wasting your time, because you don't really care about
  what I said.
  
  The overall project is about updating multiple systems
 
 How many multiple systems?
 
  that are in
  production. By _just_ using just a software update. Changes in
  hardware are not an option.
 
 Putting, say, a bigger CF card in them is a change in hardware,
 granted. Would that change eliminate the need for the whole process of
 maintaining custom kernels and custom stripped down systems?
 If not, why?
 
  dmesg output of any of these devices would be possible, but like I
  said it's a very stripped down environment. dmesg is not part of
  it. I'd have to setup an old system with dmsg on it,
 
 So, at some point, you had a system on it that had dmesg(1).
 How long does it take to put that system on it again and run
 dmesg(1)? (That's not a rhetorical question that wants to be
 sarcastic - that's an honest question). Generally, how long
 does it take to put a new system in, once it is built?
 
  then export the output, just to
  convince you of what I've done in the past. Then, after I've proven
  my point with this dmesg output, we'd be no step further,
 
 Yes we would: we would know your hardware from OpenBSD's point of
 view.
 
  because like I
  said often enough now, I'm not interested in a hint like add this
  line to your config, but I want to learn about what steps to do,
  next time I run into the same problem (which I probably will with
  the next OpenBSD release that I want to migrate the systems to).
  If you can help me by explaining where to look and what to read to
  learn how to build the smallest custom kernels possible, I'd be
  happy.
 
 You have been told several times already: strip GENERIC down to what
 will fit on your system. Start with things you definitely do not need
 (sound? wifi?), then continue with the rest. If things break, put
 the last thing that you removed back there. It is a way to arrive
 at the smallest possible kernel that works for you. Isn't it?

What he rather need is to boot GENERIC, then record dmesg, and strip
the kernel down according to that dmesg.  



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread STeve Andre'

On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:

I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
and my little mistakes.

I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal bunch
of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?

Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
researched crap with no answers contain.

If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

John Tate.

Note: Yes, it's not my list.



What a huge number of people coming to OpenBSD don't get
is the very very different culture here, as compared to the Linux
world.  I briefly subscribed to some Linux lists several years ago,
but dropped them when bombarded with completely undecipherable
pleas for help, which usually described nothing relevant but sounded
like a bad political bad in its intensity.

Newcomers are expected to *read* the documentation and try things,
try things several times before asking for help.  Squealing for help
returns comments of equal usefulness, and possibly comic relief for
some people.

That the BSD world comes from an academic history shows in terms
of the documentation that all the BSDs have, and Linux belies a more
active development culture, larger, at the cost of thinking things out,
and definitely placing less importance on documentation.  It's like oil
and water.

So it isn't a bug in the OpenBSD crowd, as much as the expectation
that people will work on their problems before asking, and to state
clearly what the problem is.

--STeve Andre'



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Tomas Bodzar
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 8:28 AM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:
 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.

http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=125312230626856w=2


 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?

 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.

 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

 John Tate.

 Note: Yes, it's not my list.

 --
 www.johntate.org



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread T. Valent
 So: your machine has 32MB of Flash storage that holds the entire
 system. On boot, it all gets loaded as a RAMDISK. Right?

Doesn't have to do with my question, but: more or less correct.


 It certainly sounds interesting. Out of curiosity: what do these
 system do? Are their routers? Rocket launchers?

These machines are used for measuring and controlling. (In German:
Steuerungscomputer). Now come on. I got complaints about wasting
peoples time. Let's not talk about things that have absolutely nothing
to do with my problem.


 I can provide a dmesg from a virtual machine
 A dmesg from the actual machine would; really, it would.

The dmesg I provided is not from one of the production machines, but
from a VM on which I wasn't yet able to compile a minimal kernel, too.
So if you say the dmesg helps, there you are!

If I got a custom kernel on that VM (and would know WHY I had to add the
lines that I had to add to get it running), I'm pretty sure, I'd get the
kernel running on that embedded system, too.


 Because if someone simply says this is impossible, it is only
 natural to ask why is that impossible?. 

Might be a question of culture. For me this doesn't sound natural. If
I'm being asked a question and given (detailed?) circumstances, I'd try
to answer and take the circumstances as they are. I believe the person
asking me might have reasons to tell me that this and that ain't
possible, otherwise he wouldn't have said it, right?


 (Solving your problem is impossible. Really.
 Don't waste your time asking why.)

This is the exact kind of answer you have to expect in certain
situations. Why should I question the conclusion of an expert that I
asked? If I knew better, why should I ask an expert?

Say you ask a lawyer about what to do after you've stolen a Picasso and
while you tried to sell it somewhere, it caught fire and was burned
down. You tell the lawyer that there's no way you can give it back and
you need an advice. Would you find it natural that the lawyer ignores
that you said you cannot give it back and instead keeps on asking
questions about where you burnt it, what you burnt it with, how hot the
fire was, where the ashes are now and what the painting smelled like?

I am an expert for the circumstances of this very defined little problem
I have. I was seeking for help to find an answer to the question Which
drivers are required for proper system functioning. That's it.

I doubt that this is a question that cannot be answered. And I doubt
that answering this question has to do with the hardware or what it is
used for.


 So the 32MB storage is a CF card? Don't be surprised that
 people ask, because it begs the question (no really, it does):
 why can't you put a bigger CF card in there that would
 just hold GENERIC? No, really: why? Answering this question
 will take a few minutes of our time.

These machines (100) are not on site here. The flash mem is inside a
box which the people who run the box would have to screw open.

The one reason that should stop all discussion about this: The project
goal is to update existing systems by software only. Ever been given a
project and then tried to discuss the project goals because you didn't
find the solution (required lines in the config) within 3 days? I'm sure
I can solve this since I have been able to in the past. I was just
seeking for help to maybe find a quicker and more structured way than
fiddling around with the config.


 How long does it take to put that system on it again and run
 dmesg(1)? (That's not a rhetorical question that wants to be
 sarcastic - that's an honest question). Generally, how long
 does it take to put a new system in, once it is built?

That would be a second step. I'd need a running kernel on this test
machine from which I gave the dmesg already, anyway. So until I don't
have a running minimal kernel on this VM, it's not worth the effort. If
I then don't get the kernel running on the production machine, that
would be a point at which it would make sense to get the dmesg output of
the production machines. But I'm not there yet.


 You have been told several times already: strip GENERIC down to what
 will fit on your system. Start with things you definitely do not need
 (sound? wifi?), then continue with the rest. If things break, put
 the last thing that you removed back there. It is a way to arrive
 at the smallest possible kernel that works for you. Isn't it?

That's the way I've done it in the past (since OpenBSD 3.5). Because
this is a lot of work to be done each time I'd update to a new OpenBSD
version (which I admit I haven't done with every release), I was
thinking I'd better try to understand what is really required at
minimum. And then do it the other way round: Start with an empty file
and add the entries I found to be required. To achieve this goal, I
asked you folks.

What I've learned now from this discussion is: Either there is no way to
do it bottom up, or you folks don't know it either.

Anyway, while 

Re: Packet filter log tools

2011-12-01 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
On Thu, Dec 01, 2011 at 12:23:30PM +1100, John Tate wrote:

 What tools can you guys recommend for browsing through a pf log? GUI not
 needed, ideally, something a bit like webalizer that spits out HTML. If no
 such thing exists, perhaps I should make one, I am looking for a project.

pf logs are written to be viewed via tcpdump, and it's a fairly trivial 
excercise to 
produce text output that will be acceptable for tools designed for syslog-like
formats. It's a common topic in my tutorials, variations have been mentioned
various places on-line (and it's in a certain book).

-- 
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nuug.no/
Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic
delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Peter Hessler
On 2011 Dec 01 (Thu) at 09:44:25 +0100 (+0100), T. Valent wrote:
: You have been told several times already: strip GENERIC down to what
: will fit on your system. Start with things you definitely do not need
: (sound? wifi?), then continue with the rest. If things break, put
: the last thing that you removed back there. It is a way to arrive
: at the smallest possible kernel that works for you. Isn't it?
:
:That's the way I've done it in the past (since OpenBSD 3.5).

Please compare the values you used in the previous release (I'm guessing
4.9), vs what you are attempting in this release.

Since users (and developers) pretty much /only/ use GENERIC, there are
many options which are not optional.  We don't look for them, and many
of them are required for proper use.

Essentially, you are one of the very very few that does this.  The only
advice we can give is to do the top-down method of stripping out
options.  I know you don't want to do it, but it is what it is.



-- 
Adolescence, n.:
The stage between puberty and adultery.



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Marc Espie
On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 11:09:25PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
 On 2011-11-29, Torsten Valentin valen...@4ss.de wrote:
  welcome to the ignore list of many developers.  You aren't even
  following directions on how to hurt yourself properly without wasting
  people's time.
 
  I always found that people waste my time when they write explanations
  and tons of bla bla that does not have to do with the issue itself,
  instead of just writing about what the problem really is.
 
  Because of the permanent repeating of USE THE GENERIC KERNEL instead
  of answering any questions that have to do with my problem:
 
 That's because your problem is not worth wasting other people's time
 on solving if you aren't prepared to do it yourself.

If you really want that, tell us how much you're prepared to spend, maybe
someone would be willing to sell you time to solve that very specific problem
since obviously, no OpenBSD developer wants to do it for free, as it's
considered a waste of time that could otherwise benefit the project for
useful purposes...



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Benny Lofgren
On 2011-12-01 08.28, John Tate wrote:
 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.
 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?

(Ok, this turned out to be quite a long text, but if you truly want to
know why things are the way they are, please read all of it anyway.)

My experience is that this is without a doubt one of the most competent,
matter-of-fact and fun, in a unixy sort of way, bunch of people I've
ever been around (and I haven't even met anyone in person yet).

I have never, not once, been met with snarky remarks, disrespect, bad
advice, been ignored, bashed, beaten, humiliated or anything of the sort.

Sure, I've had ideas, patches and suggestions thouroughly dissected and
sometimes declared not good enough, but I'd expect nothing less than
the highest standards being applied to whatever is submitted for review.
The way to handle that is to learn from the experience and submit better
stuff next time, not taking it as a personal insult.

The one and only reason people who come on to the list from nowhere,
name unknown to the community, gets bashed is THEY DIDN'T DO THEIR
HOMEWORK FIRST. It is written just about everywhere, so the only way
one could possibly miss the lessons about how to behave on this list
is to not even bother to look.

Let me give you an example you might be able to relate to, because it
involves you:

A while ago you asked about a problem with mounting an NFS drive. After
some questions back-and-forth with a few people I chipped in with this
diagnosis, also arrived at by others:

888888 (cut)
Your mountd and/or portmap most likely isn't running.

Have you followed the instructions in the FAQ? If not, backtrack
all your efforts, read up on what to do and try again.

http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq6.html#NFS
man portmap
man nfsd
man mountd
man exports
888888 (cut)

Your reply:
888888 (cut)
Sorry I should have posted. mountd, portmap, and also the appropriate
services are running on the server portmap and nfsd.
888888 (cut)

Then then next day, you wrote, problem solved:
888888 (cut)
mountd was unhappy with my /etc/exports and wasn't starting. I truly
wish mountd checked the environment to see where I was running it from
and just told me with stdout, but for whatever clever unix reasons
does not.
888888 (cut)

What this tells me is this:

* you don't listen to advice (several people including me told you
a service wasn't running, yet you didn't actually CHECK)

* you don't do your homework (several people also gave you sound
reading advice, which you apparently ignored)

* you do sloppy work (since mountd actually WASN'T running on your
system, which you failed to check even when pointed towards the
likely solution by several people, you ended up misleading all who
tried to help)

* you're blaming the system for your shortcomings (I truly wish
mountd...bla bla bla...) instead of learning to do things right
from the beginning, using the truly outstanding documentation that
sets OpenBSD apart from *everything* else on the market.

* you're not respectful of other people's time and effort, which
you apparently expect them to devote to YOU for free, while also
obviously reserving the right to take offense when they do

WHY should anyone spend even a minute of his or her time to help
you, given that you're not even prepared to do a minimum amount
of homework yourself, let alone listen to advice from people who
actually know what they're talking about?

Even so, I've been surprised how civil and courteous people here
have been towards you and your numerous problems. Not only don't
I agree with your general observations and criticism, as far as
I can tell they don't even apply in your own case.


Regards,
/Benny


 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?
 
 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.
 
 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.
 
 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.
 
 John Tate.
 
 Note: Yes, it's not my list.
 

-- 
internetlabbet.se / work:   +46 8 551 124 80  / Words must
Benny Lofgren/  mobile: +46 70 718 11 90 /   be weighed,
/   fax:+46 8 551 124 89/not counted.
   /email:  benny -at- internetlabbet.se



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread T. Valent
@Gregory
 What he rather need is to boot GENERIC, then record dmesg, and strip 
 the kernel down according to that dmesg. 

That is exactly what I've done and this led me to my first posting here,
because it generally worked fine, but only to a certain extend. It
didn't work completely. Something is still missing. With the help of
Andres Perara I got one step further, means, I found one more
dependency. After I could not find the dependency of the dependency, he
pointed me to this:

 The npx driver is required for proper system functioning regardless
 of whether or not an NPX is present.
 
 so there's no 1:1 mapping between the devices you have and the ones
 you may need included in the kernel config. could potentially apply to
 other drivers

So, unfortunately, it's not as easy as you and I thought.


@Peter
 Please compare the values
 you used in the previous release (I'm guessing 4.9), vs what you are
 attempting in this release.

Unfortunately I have to admit that I was a bit lazy and did not update
for quite a while. The latest kernel config files I stripped down were
from 4.3. So nearly 4 years ago. And even then I was just stripping
down as much as was obvious to me would not be needed for me. I
continued removing parts of the config until my goal was reached to have
a small enough kernel.
Now the kernel is much bigger than in 4.3 so I need to get rid of more
stuff than I had to before. So comparing the config files could maybe
help a bit, but won't generally solve my problem.


 Since users (and developers) pretty much /only/ use GENERIC, there
 are many options which are not optional.  We don't look for them,
 and many of them are required for proper use.

Yeah, I know and I don't think that this is a problem with OpenBSD.
However, I'm in an unusual situation not comparable to the standard user
or developer. I have a very special demand. I'm asking if anybody can
tell me anything about how to find out which optional parameters
aren't actually really optional.


 Essentially, you are one of the very very few that does this.

I agree here.


 The
 only advice we can give is to do the top-down method of stripping
 out options.  I know you don't want to do it, but it is what it is.

Nah, it's not that I don't want to do it. It's just that I was searching
for a better way. It seems there is none. Which is OK with me. Just asking.


@marc
 If you really want that, tell us how much you're prepared to spend, maybe
 someone would be willing to sell you time to solve that very specific problem
 since obviously, no OpenBSD developer wants to do it for free, as it's
 considered a waste of time that could otherwise benefit the project for
 useful purposes...

Well, I'd be ready to spend money for this, if that would mean a future
change in the kernels config files in a way that mandatory options are
marked as such. But that to happen is very unlikely. So it would only be
a solution for 5.0 and it may happen that with 5.1 there is a new
mandatoy driver which depends on another driver that's included in
GENERIC but not in my configs and then I'd have to start all over. So
thanks for the offer, but I'm not afraid of working my way through this.
I was always just asking if there might be a more clever way which I
just didn't know.


Regards,
T.



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Otto Moerbeek
On Thu, Dec 01, 2011 at 12:08:38PM +0100, T. Valent wrote:

 @marc
  If you really want that, tell us how much you're prepared to spend, maybe
  someone would be willing to sell you time to solve that very specific 
  problem
  since obviously, no OpenBSD developer wants to do it for free, as it's
  considered a waste of time that could otherwise benefit the project for
  useful purposes...
 
 Well, I'd be ready to spend money for this, if that would mean a future
 change in the kernels config files in a way that mandatory options are
 marked as such. But that to happen is very unlikely. So it would only be
 a solution for 5.0 and it may happen that with 5.1 there is a new
 mandatoy driver which depends on another driver that's included in
 GENERIC but not in my configs and then I'd have to start all over. So
 thanks for the offer, but I'm not afraid of working my way through this.
 I was always just asking if there might be a more clever way which I
 just didn't know.


Ok, so I'll bite and give you a hint, just to end this thread. 

Use the config from RAMDISK as a starting point. It will produce a
useable, small kernel.  It wil have a ramdisk as root, but that should
be easy to change. 

Of course drivers for your hardware might be missing, but at least you
have a compiling kernel.

But be warned: RAMDISK kernels miss some stuff you might actually need
or want. 

Can we end this now?

-Otto



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread T. Valent
Otto,
thanks for your hint.

 Can we end this now?


I thought I had initiated the end of this thread this morning by writing:

 I'm happy that some of you took the time and tried to explain over
 and over again what you thought was best for me. I really appreciate the
 good will.


But I have to admit I cannot resist answering if someone comments on my
mail. :-)



Re: pf and includes

2011-12-01 Thread Peter Hallin
On 2011-11-30 16:14, Guido Tschakert wrote:
 
 How about a definition.conf with all your (Name,IP-Adress)-Pairs which
 is included first in your pf.conf, so your vlan.confs only include
 the rules but no definitions.
 
 guido
 

Thanks, this is probably the way to do it. Sometimes we move vlans 
between firewalls and then it can be good to remove the rules, but still
keep some macros.

I'm also planning to have the same set of variables on all 10 firewalls
so that the only difference between them will be the rules files.

//Peter



Re: pf and includes

2011-12-01 Thread Peter Hallin
On 2011-11-30 20:20, Adriaan wrote:
 
 You could use a Makefile to concatenate a pf.conf from separate files.
 This can give more flexibility than provided by include :

Thank you very much for your elaborate solution.

To keep things a little less complex, I will probably go with includes
and keep all the macros and tables in one big file shared on all
firewalls.

//Peter



Re: [5.0] pkg_add too many FTP connections

2011-12-01 Thread Stuart Henderson
if this goes via ftp-proxy(8), you can sometimes expect problems like
this, because ftp-proxy does not correctly handle the SYNCH sequence
required to abort connections mid-stream.

I generally suggest using http for pkg_add -u anyway though, it is
usually *way* faster.


On 2011-11-30, Patrick Lamaiziere patf...@davenulle.org wrote:
 Hello,

 I'm trying to update packages with pkg_add via ftp :

 # pkg_add -ui  
 Error from
 ftp://ftp.irisa.fr/pub/OpenBSD/5.0/packages/amd64/gperf-3.0.4.tgz 421
 There are too many connections from your internet address. ftp: Can't
 connect or login to host `ftp.irisa.fr'
 Error from
 ftp://ftp.irisa.fr/pub/OpenBSD/5.0/packages/amd64/gtar-1.26p0.tgz 421
 There are too many connections from your internet address. ftp: Can't
 connect or login to host `ftp.irisa.fr'
 ...

 Is there a way to limit the number of FTP connections for pkg_add?

 Thanks, regards.



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Henning Brauer
* T. Valent tmp...@4ss.de [2011-12-01 10:19]:
  It certainly sounds interesting. Out of curiosity: what do these
  system do? Are their routers? Rocket launchers?
 These machines are used for measuring and controlling. (In German:
 Steuerungscomputer). Now come on. I got complaints about wasting
 peoples time. Let's not talk about things that have absolutely nothing
 to do with my problem.

out of curiosity was pretty clear, no?
isn't it kinda natural that people are interested in uncommon use
cases of the OS they write / are part of the community?

  I can provide a dmesg from a virtual machine
  A dmesg from the actual machine would; really, it would.
 The dmesg I provided is not from one of the production machines, but
 from a VM on which I wasn't yet able to compile a minimal kernel, too.
 So if you say the dmesg helps, there you are!

still doesn't help a bit for figuring out what you might need on your
production system.

  Because if someone simply says this is impossible, it is only
  natural to ask why is that impossible?. 
 Might be a question of culture. For me this doesn't sound natural. If
 I'm being asked a question and given (detailed?) circumstances, I'd try
 to answer and take the circumstances as they are. I believe the person
 asking me might have reasons to tell me that this and that ain't
 possible, otherwise he wouldn't have said it, right?

people often incorrectly assume an impossible is a given. when it
isn't really. and instead of stupid ways to work around the problem
you can give them a beter solution. your situation is partially
exactly that, see below.

 Say you ask a lawyer about what to do after you've stolen a Picasso and
 while you tried to sell it somewhere, it caught fire and was burned
 down. You tell the lawyer that there's no way you can give it back and
 you need an advice. Would you find it natural that the lawyer ignores
 that you said you cannot give it back and instead keeps on asking
 questions about where you burnt it, what you burnt it with, how hot the
 fire was, where the ashes are now and what the painting smelled like?

the lawyer would care about the why is it impssible to give back.
and your answers to the why? aren't as convincing as a can't give
back anytjing but the ashes.

  So the 32MB storage is a CF card? Don't be surprised that
  people ask, because it begs the question (no really, it does):
  why can't you put a bigger CF card in there that would
  just hold GENERIC? No, really: why? Answering this question
  will take a few minutes of our time.
 These machines (100) are not on site here. The flash mem is inside a
 box which the people who run the box would have to screw open.

so. the decision to employ such a crippled system instead of using
bigger flash was a bad one. you can try to work around that or draw
the right conclusion - the extra cost for a flash card of a reasonable
size, yes even hundreds of cases, can't be cheaper than the (not free)
work time it takes you to build your strange images.
now with a reasonable flash where you could just use mostly-standard
kernels...

of course that doesn't help you with your installed base. the question
wether it is really a clever idea to invest a lot of time to build a
system that fits in 32M (repeatedly, not just once) versus upgrading
flash - which, yes, costs money too - is a valid one.

 Ever been given a
 project and then tried to discuss the project goals because you didn't
 find the solution (required lines in the config) within 3 days?

when the goals were stupid (and too specific, the real goal was usually
another from which the wrong conclusions lead to the project goals),
yes, repeatedly. a good move.

  You have been told several times already: strip GENERIC down to what
  will fit on your system. Start with things you definitely do not need
  (sound? wifi?), then continue with the rest. If things break, put
  the last thing that you removed back there. It is a way to arrive
  at the smallest possible kernel that works for you. Isn't it?
 That's the way I've done it in the past (since OpenBSD 3.5). Because
 this is a lot of work to be done each time I'd update to a new OpenBSD
 version (which I admit I haven't done with every release), I was
 thinking I'd better try to understand what is really required at
 minimum. And then do it the other way round: Start with an empty file
 and add the entries I found to be required. To achieve this goal, I
 asked you folks.

you have been given the answer repeatedly: start with GENERIC(.MP) and
start stripping.
you don't like the answer, but that doesn't make it wrong or bad or
anything like that.

 What I've learned now from this discussion is: Either there is no way to
 do it bottom up, or you folks don't know it either.

what do you expect? us explaining you every single line in GENERIC?
ridiculous. offload YOUR job to the community. awesome. that rightly
fails.

and yes, there is very little knowledge about stripping kernels in the
community 

Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Henning Brauer
* Henning Brauer lists-open...@bsws.de [2011-12-01 13:21]:
 the extra cost for a flash card of a reasonable
 size, yes even hundreds of cases, can't be cheaper than the (not free)
 work time it takes you to build your strange images.

err... that is pretty much the opposite of what I wanted to say. can
be cheaper of course. can easily.

-- 
Henning Brauer, h...@bsws.de, henn...@openbsd.org
BS Web Services, http://bsws.de, Full-Service ISP
Secure Hosting, Mail and DNS Services. Dedicated Servers, Root to Fully Managed
Henning Brauer Consulting, http://henningbrauer.com/



sendmail(failed)

2011-12-01 Thread Wesley M.
Hi

I upgraded my mailserver to OpenBSD 5.0

Now at startup i have :
Starting Network Daemons : sshd sendmail(failed) inetd
failed ? why ? Normal ?
And in rc.local we have a script that execute postfix with the option
set-permissions
If i do : netstat -anf inet ; i can see that the box listen well in 25 587
... smtp ports

If i remove : sendmail_flags=-bd -q30m in /etc/rc.conf.local
restart the computer
and try manually : sendmail -bd -q30m tell me that postfix is running.

If i remove : sendmail_flags=-bd -q30m in /etc/rc.conf.local
and also remove the script in rc.local (needed to start postfix) ; restart
the box
and try manually : sendmail -bd -q30m, things works well, therefore, just
after that,
postfix start automatically.

So ?

Thank you very much for your help.

Wesley.



Re: problem making IPv6 address from rtadvd prefix

2011-12-01 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2011-11-30, Douglas Maus dm...@speakeasy.net wrote:
 Followup:
 (sorry for unconventional thread posting and the delay -
 learning OpenBSD is my very late night hobby
 so I'm not subscribed to the misc list)

If you post from gmane's web interface, it will keep the references
etc intact, which makes it easier to follow the thread.

 stu wrote:
no dmesg.

 okay - sorry - I've put it at the bottom of this post
 (always seems to me like a waste of electrons)

That is less important than the time of people who are trying to help. :)

I suspect some re(4) don't do multicast correctly. does it start
working if you leave tcpdump running on the interface?

 When I let tcpdump run for a couple minutes before to snag the route
 solicitation and advertisement - no help.
 How long of a time are you suggesting?

Yes that would do the trick (in some cases the nic may need to be in
promiscuous mode while the advertisement is received; also in some other
cases it may be necessary that it is *not* in promiscuous mode)...

 bios0: Supermicro X7SLA

...but I can confirm the realtek nic on those does handle multicast
OK with the OpenBSD re(4) driver.

for your obfuscated MAC addresses, did you just change them in the
email or did you set them on the nic with ifconfig lladdr?

 no, I did not set them with ifconfig
 I just fudged them in the email to hide my MAC
 (don't most people do that - make up DEAD:BEEF:CAFE:BABE etc?)

Only people who want to make it a bit harder for others to help them ;)
(sometimes people use lladdr or similar to change the actualy address on the
nice and might inadvertently flip the U/L or multicast bits of the address).
(and if you're using IPv6 SLAAC, you'll likely be sending that mac address to
all sorts of places anyway...)

 here's my rtsol
 $ sudo rtsol -d re0
 checking if re0 is ready...
 re0 is ready
 send RS on re0, whose state is 2
 received RA from fe80::00a1:b1ff:fea1:b1e1 on re0, state is 2
 stop timer for re0
 there is no timer

that looks right

 It seems to see the RA
 however, this doesn't say anything about processing the prefix.
 Is there any toggle/flag to get it to output debug info about the prefix?

I would watch output from 'tcpdump -nire0 -s1500 -Xvvv icmp6'
while doing the rtsol -d re0, you should see something like this:-

# tcpdump -nitrunk0 -s1500 -Xvvv icmp6
tcpdump: listening on trunk0, link-type EN10MB
tcpdump: WARNING: compensating for unaligned libpcap packets
12:29:33.242725 fe80::21b:21ff:fe2d:f70c  ff02::2: icmp6: router solicitation 
(src lladdr: 00:1b:21:2d:f7:0c) (len 16, hlim 255)
  : 6000  0010 3aff fe80     `.:.
  0010: 021b 21ff fe2d f70c ff02     ..!..-..
  0020:    0002 8500 4a84    ..J.
  0030: 0101 001b 212d f70c  !-..

12:29:33.727694 fe80::20d:b9ff:fe17:cc4  ff02::1: icmp6: router 
advertisement(chlim=64, router_ltime=1800, reachable_time=0, 
retrans_time=0)(src lladdr: 00:0d:b9:17:0c:c4)(prefix info: LA 
valid_ltime=2592000, preferred_ltime=604800, prefix=2001:4b10:1002:100::/64) 
(len 56, hlim 255)
  : 6000  0038 3aff fe80     `8:.
  0010: 020d b9ff fe17 0cc4 ff02     
  0020:    0001 8600 1fa5 4000 0708  @...
  0030:     0101 000d b917 0cc4  
  0040: 0304 40c0 0027 8d00 0009 3a80    ..@..':.
  0050: 2001 4b10 1002 0100       .K.


 mherrb further suggested:
But you may have a crappy ethernet switch or hub in the path that
blocks or damages  multicast frames. I've had such a device it the
past. Replacing it by a little more expensive switch fixed my v6 SLAAC
issues.

...and sometimes the expensive switches need special config ;)



Re: usb device causes system crash (ucomstart: null oxfer)

2011-12-01 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2011-11-30, Daniel Gracia lists.d...@electronicagracia.com wrote:
 At the very least you're seeing some errors. In my case, the USB/serial 
 adapters -uticom, uftdi and uplcom- would fail without notice. Ports 
 would open, but with no TX/RX. Detaching/reattaching won't bring them 
 back to live; only rebooting.

 If your project has deadline, search for a PCI/ePCI serial board and enjoy!

careful with some of the PCIe boards though, OXPCIE95x aren't supported by
the current puc(4) driver (it's fairly easy to get them partially working but
the port speeds will be wrong and you won't get access to certain speeds).



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Kenneth R Westerback
On Thu, Dec 01, 2011 at 09:44:25AM +0100, T. Valent wrote:
  So: your machine has 32MB of Flash storage that holds the entire
  system. On boot, it all gets loaded as a RAMDISK. Right?
 
 Doesn't have to do with my question, but: more or less correct.
 
 
  It certainly sounds interesting. Out of curiosity: what do these
  system do? Are their routers? Rocket launchers?
 
 These machines are used for measuring and controlling. (In German:
 Steuerungscomputer). Now come on. I got complaints about wasting
 peoples time. Let's not talk about things that have absolutely nothing
 to do with my problem.

Every little bit helps when you are attempting to attract help!

Working on a device that will measure and control atomic energy
plants to make Fukashima's impossible may well elicit more interest
and thus potential solutions than a device measuring and controlling
an espresso machine to produce a perfect cup of espresso. Or visa
versa. Reluctance to describe the device can be taken as proving
it is a NSA/Mossad/etc project to finally measure and control all
communications.

It seems well established by now that there is no magic bullet for your
problem, since it is a problem few if anyone has had to address before
within the constraints you have described.

 Ken



Re: sendmail(failed)

2011-12-01 Thread Wesley M.
 Change in startup procedure for Postfix and exim: The base OS has moved 
 to using scripts in /etc/rc.d to start all daemons. The script for 
 sendmail does not function fully for alternative MTAs (in particular it 
 will display failed at startup, although the daemon will still be 
 started, and /etc/rc.d/sendmail reload or ...stop will not work as 
 expected). If you were using Postfix or exim and starting it using the 
 standard method of setting sendmail_flags in rc.conf.local, you should 
 set sendmail_flags=NO and start the relevant daemon via pkg_scripts,
e.g.
 
  pkg_scripts=${pkg_scripts} postfix

I'm agree, but how to start sendmail with pkg_scripts using flags : -bd
-q30m ??

Thank you for your reply.

Wesley.



Re: sendmail(failed)

2011-12-01 Thread Antoine Jacoutot
On Thu, Dec 01, 2011 at 05:09:47PM +0400, Wesley M. wrote:
  Change in startup procedure for Postfix and exim: The base OS has moved 
  to using scripts in /etc/rc.d to start all daemons. The script for 
  sendmail does not function fully for alternative MTAs (in particular it 
  will display failed at startup, although the daemon will still be 
  started, and /etc/rc.d/sendmail reload or ...stop will not work as 
  expected). If you were using Postfix or exim and starting it using the 
  standard method of setting sendmail_flags in rc.conf.local, you should 
  set sendmail_flags=NO and start the relevant daemon via pkg_scripts,
 e.g.
  
   pkg_scripts=${pkg_scripts} postfix
 
 I'm agree, but how to start sendmail with pkg_scripts using flags : -bd
 -q30m ??

pkg_scripts are, as the name suggests, only for packages.
sendmail is part of the base system and is not a package.

What is it you're trying to do exactly, I'm totally confused whether you are 
trying to start postfix or sendmail.

-- 
Antoine



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread T. Valent
 It seems well established by now that there is no magic bullet for your
 problem, since it is a problem few if anyone has had to address before
 within the constraints you have described.

This is a good summary for that quite long thread.

Again, thanks to everybody! I really do appreciate all your contributions.

T.



Re: mplayer problems

2011-12-01 Thread Amit Kulkarni
even after latest kernel, userland, xenocara AND ports trees?

please redirect ports stuff to ports@ in future

On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 10:17 PM, Luis Useche use...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi Guys,

 Is anyone having problems lately with mplayer? After my last update of
 packages mplayer alternates between these two errors:

 (0)$ mplayer
 mplayer: can't load library 'liborc-0.4.so.4.0'
 (0)$ mplayer
 mplayer: can't load library 'libenca.so.0.0'

 I also tried to compile from ports without success:

 Missing library for orc-0.4=0.0

 Any advice?

 Thanks,
 Luis.



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Kevin Chadwick
On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 12:08:38 +0100
T. Valent wrote:

 Yeah, I know and I don't think that this is a problem with OpenBSD.
 However, I'm in an unusual situation not comparable to the standard user
 or developer. I have a very special demand. I'm asking if anybody can
 tell me anything about how to find out which optional parameters
 aren't actually really optional.

What size do you need to get your kernel down to? If mines small enough
I could share mine but if your having this much difficulty then I
imagine you need to go further than what I do.



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread John Tate
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca wrote:

 On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:

 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.

 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
 bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?


I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
learning.



 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

 Well I get messages that are worthless and seem to be insults.


 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.

 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

 John Tate.

 Note: Yes, it's not my list.


 John, if you don't mind, I'll give you some advice:  Do your homework
 before posting to the list.  Your basic instinct is to click Send instead
 of thinking first.  I've lost count of how many of your posts were
 retracted by yourself, with a big oops, my bad or were replied to with
 RTFM-type responses.  I got a kick out of one retraction where you said
 something like Sorry, I was drunk.

 You're obviously new here.  Sure, it's a tough crowd at times, but that
 only happens when people don't bother reading the FAQ, or the man pages, or
 trying things out for themselves.  A lot of people have asked stupid
 questions or said something dumb -- myself included -- and got painful
 responses.  I've had my share of facepalm experiences and had my ass handed
 to me plenty of times, but I deserved it.

 But you know what?  I try to not make a regular occasion of it.  It seems
 you do.

 I help a lot of people off-list, and I know for a fact many others do the
 same.  I've found through years of experience there are two kinds of people
 on this list: those that need a little help and pointed in the right
 direction, and those that need their hands held for every step.  Guess
 which category I put you in?  And that's exactly why I've helped you a
 grand total of zero times.

 Now you have the gall to come on this list and insult the people that are
 trying to help you.  I don't think there's anyone on this list that sits
 idly, waiting for an opportunity to pick on or bully someone.  Get a
 grip, get some thicker skin, and most of all, RTFM first.

 I guarantee that if you take my advice, you'll find this list to be a
 very, very valuable resource.  Remember, there is a difference between
 *reading* and *comprehension*.  Work a little harder on the latter and I
 think you'll find you won't be picked on.

 Stop playing the victim.  You're not the first and it's old.

 --
 Scott McEachern

 https://www.blackstaff.ca




-- 
www.johntate.org



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread David Coppa
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 4:25 PM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca wrote:

 On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:

 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.

 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
 bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?


 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot

See the subject: Narcicism

And, btw, the correct spelling is Narcissism: as a guru, this is
something you should already have known ;)

ciao,
David



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Rares Aioanei

On 12/01/2011 05:25 PM, John Tate wrote:

On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachernsc...@blackstaff.ca  wrote:

I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
learning.


You forgot to list modesty there as well, John.

--
Rares Aioanei



Re: sendmail(failed)

2011-12-01 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2011-12-01, Wesley M. open...@e-solutions.re wrote:
 Hi

 I upgraded my mailserver to OpenBSD 5.0

 Now at startup i have :
 Starting Network Daemons : sshd sendmail(failed) inetd
 failed ? why ? Normal ?

You missed following some steps in the upgrade guide.
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/upgrade50.html#Pkgup

 And in rc.local we have a script that execute postfix with the option
 set-permissions

You shouldn't need set-permissions.



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Jan Stary
On Dec 02 02:25:06, John Tate wrote:
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot

Why don't you dig me?
I dig you
But you don't dig me
I don't understand what it is
I had my car re-upholstered
I got my hair processed
I got a nice pompadour job on it
I bought a new pair of shoes
I got some new khakis and I met you
And we went out to get a Coca-Cola...



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Andres Genovez
2011/12/1 John Tate j...@johntate.org

 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca
 wrote:

  On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:
 
  I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of
 me
  and my little mistakes.
 
  I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
  seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking
 on
  me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
  bunch
  of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?
 
 
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
 learning.


One thing to point it out:

When you are a real Hacker, you don`t call yourself one, people do.
When you are a real Guru, you don`t call yourself one, people do.

I dont have a big knowledge of OpenBSD, i must say i am just starting, but
the first lesson I learneddon`t make stupid questions on a list or i
will get a paybackIn some way i understand your frustration...

Peace.



 
  Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying
 or
  are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?
 
  Well I get messages that are worthless and seem to be insults.

 
  It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you
 poorly
  researched crap with no answers contain.
 
  If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.
 
  But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.
 
  John Tate.
 
  Note: Yes, it's not my list.
 
 
  John, if you don't mind, I'll give you some advice:  Do your homework
  before posting to the list.  Your basic instinct is to click Send
 instead
  of thinking first.  I've lost count of how many of your posts were
  retracted by yourself, with a big oops, my bad or were replied to with
  RTFM-type responses.  I got a kick out of one retraction where you said
  something like Sorry, I was drunk.
 
  You're obviously new here.  Sure, it's a tough crowd at times, but that
  only happens when people don't bother reading the FAQ, or the man pages,
 or
  trying things out for themselves.  A lot of people have asked stupid
  questions or said something dumb -- myself included -- and got painful
  responses.  I've had my share of facepalm experiences and had my ass
 handed
  to me plenty of times, but I deserved it.
 
  But you know what?  I try to not make a regular occasion of it.  It seems
  you do.
 
  I help a lot of people off-list, and I know for a fact many others do the
  same.  I've found through years of experience there are two kinds of
 people
  on this list: those that need a little help and pointed in the right
  direction, and those that need their hands held for every step.  Guess
  which category I put you in?  And that's exactly why I've helped you a
  grand total of zero times.
 
  Now you have the gall to come on this list and insult the people that are
  trying to help you.  I don't think there's anyone on this list that sits
  idly, waiting for an opportunity to pick on or bully someone.  Get a
  grip, get some thicker skin, and most of all, RTFM first.
 
  I guarantee that if you take my advice, you'll find this list to be a
  very, very valuable resource.  Remember, there is a difference between
  *reading* and *comprehension*.  Work a little harder on the latter and I
  think you'll find you won't be picked on.
 
  Stop playing the victim.  You're not the first and it's old.
 
  --
  Scott McEachern
 
  https://www.blackstaff.ca
 
 


 --
 www.johntate.org




--
Atentamente

Andris Genovez Tobar / Tecnico
Elastix ECE - Linux  LPI-1 - Novell CLA - Apple ACMT
http://www.puntonet.ec



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Rares Aioanei

On 12/01/2011 05:39 PM, David Coppa wrote:


See the subject: Narcicism

And, btw, the correct spelling is Narcissism: as a guru, this is
something you should already have known ;)

ciao,
David



As a citizen of an English-speaking country AND a guru, John, you should
at least know how to spell. David's right, you know.

--
Rares Aioanei



Re: bad link for bind's named server patch for Openbsd 5.0 -stable

2011-12-01 Thread Ralph W Siegler
Daniel Ouellet daniel at presscom.net writes:

 
 What you are looking at here:
 
 http://www.openbsd.org/errata50.html
 
 May not have replicated everywhere yet.
 
 Give it a day or two.
 
 Daniel

In reply to your first post, this is on CA site:

001: RELIABILITY FIX: November 30, 2011   All architectures
A vulnerability has been found in BIND's named server (CVE-2011-4313). An
unidentified network event caused BIND 9 resolvers to cache an invalid record,
subsequent queries for which could crash the resolvers with an assertion 
failure.
A source code patch exists which remedies this problem.



And in reply to this one:
Even on the Canadian server, the link is broken, so all replications will
 be broken too!

best,

Ralph   



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Bret S. Lambert
On Fri, Dec 02, 2011 at 02:25:06AM +1100, John Tate wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca wrote:
 
  On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:
 
  I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
  and my little mistakes.
 
  I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
  seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
  me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
  bunch
  of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?
 
 
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
 learning.

Psyche-shatteringly awesome troll has massive balls, but is still a troll.

News at 11.

 
 
 
  Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
  are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?
 
  Well I get messages that are worthless and seem to be insults.
 
 
  It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
  researched crap with no answers contain.
 
  If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.
 
  But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.
 
  John Tate.
 
  Note: Yes, it's not my list.
 
 
  John, if you don't mind, I'll give you some advice:  Do your homework
  before posting to the list.  Your basic instinct is to click Send instead
  of thinking first.  I've lost count of how many of your posts were
  retracted by yourself, with a big oops, my bad or were replied to with
  RTFM-type responses.  I got a kick out of one retraction where you said
  something like Sorry, I was drunk.
 
  You're obviously new here.  Sure, it's a tough crowd at times, but that
  only happens when people don't bother reading the FAQ, or the man pages, or
  trying things out for themselves.  A lot of people have asked stupid
  questions or said something dumb -- myself included -- and got painful
  responses.  I've had my share of facepalm experiences and had my ass handed
  to me plenty of times, but I deserved it.
 
  But you know what?  I try to not make a regular occasion of it.  It seems
  you do.
 
  I help a lot of people off-list, and I know for a fact many others do the
  same.  I've found through years of experience there are two kinds of people
  on this list: those that need a little help and pointed in the right
  direction, and those that need their hands held for every step.  Guess
  which category I put you in?  And that's exactly why I've helped you a
  grand total of zero times.
 
  Now you have the gall to come on this list and insult the people that are
  trying to help you.  I don't think there's anyone on this list that sits
  idly, waiting for an opportunity to pick on or bully someone.  Get a
  grip, get some thicker skin, and most of all, RTFM first.
 
  I guarantee that if you take my advice, you'll find this list to be a
  very, very valuable resource.  Remember, there is a difference between
  *reading* and *comprehension*.  Work a little harder on the latter and I
  think you'll find you won't be picked on.
 
  Stop playing the victim.  You're not the first and it's old.
 
  --
  Scott McEachern
 
  https://www.blackstaff.ca
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 www.johntate.org



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Johan Beisser
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 8:02 AM, Rares Aioanei bsdlis...@gmail.com wrote:

 As a citizen of an English-speaking country AND a guru, John, you should
 at least know how to spell. David's right, you know.

You don't need to know how to spell. People have spell checkers these days.



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Mark Romer
Man, youth is really wasted on the young.
On Dec 1, 2011 11:04 AM, Rares Aioanei bsdlis...@gmail.com wrote:

 On 12/01/2011 05:39 PM, David Coppa wrote:


 See the subject: Narcicism

 And, btw, the correct spelling is Narcissism: as a guru, this is
 something you should already have known ;)

 ciao,
 David


  As a citizen of an English-speaking country AND a guru, John, you should
 at least know how to spell. David's right, you know.

 --
 Rares Aioanei



[SOLVED] Re: ssh vpn

2011-12-01 Thread Manuel Giraud
Manuel Giraud man...@ledu-giraud.fr writes:

 Hi,

 I've set up an openssh based vpn as described in ssh(1). Now, I want to
 send all my traffic through this pipe. So I've put the following nat
 rules on both ends of the pipe:
 match out on em0 from tun0:network nat-to (em0)

 and modified the client route table like this:
 route add ssh-server-ip isp-gw
 route change default 10.1.1.1 # --- IP on tun0

 It works as needed but now I need to access a service (e.g. a www
 server) on ssh-server-ip and the www port is filtered by isp-gw. How
 can I do this? (I've tried some rdr-to and route-to rules on specific
 port without success).

Ok, I reply to myself because I found something that works. I prepend
the two following rules to my client /etc/pf.conf:

match out proto tcp from em0 to ssh-server-ip port www \
rdr-to tun0:peer
pass out quick proto tcp from em0 to tun0:peer port www \
nat-to tun0

Don't know if it is the best way to do it though.
-- 
Manuel Giraud



Re: how to find dependencies when building a new kernel

2011-12-01 Thread Jan Stary
On Dec 01 09:44:25, T. Valent wrote:
  Because if someone simply says this is impossible, it is only
  natural to ask why is that impossible?. 
 
 Might be a question of culture. For me this doesn't sound natural. If
 I'm being asked a question and given (detailed?) circumstances, I'd try
 to answer and take the circumstances as they are. I believe the person
 asking me might have reasons to tell me that this and that ain't
 possible, otherwise he wouldn't have said it, right?
 
 
  (Solving your problem is impossible. Really.
  Don't waste your time asking why.)
 
 This is the exact kind of answer you have to expect in certain
 situations. Why should I question the conclusion of an expert that I
 asked? If I knew better, why should I ask an expert?
 
 Say you ask a lawyer about what to do after you've stolen a Picasso and
 while you tried to sell it somewhere, it caught fire and was burned
 down. You tell the lawyer that there's no way you can give it back and
 you need an advice. Would you find it natural that the lawyer ignores
 that you said you cannot give it back and instead keeps on asking
 questions about where you burnt it, what you burnt it with, how hot the
 fire was, where the ashes are now and what the painting smelled like?

That's a very weak analogy. A better analogy would be

- So why don't you give the painting back?
- That's impossible.
- Why is it impossible?
- Because I burned it.

Can you spot the difference between this and the following?

- So why don't you put a bigger CF card in there?
- That's impossible.
- Why is that impossible?
- Don't ask.

 I am an expert for the circumstances of this very defined little problem
 I have. I was seeking for help to find an answer to the question Which
 drivers are required for proper system functioning. That's it.

No, that's not it. You have said several times that you are NOT looking
for an answer that goes add these three lines and it will work. Isn't
that exactly adding the drivers that are required?

 I doubt that this is a question that cannot be answered. And I doubt
 that answering this question has to do with the hardware or what it is
 used for.

LOLWUT? The set of pieces required to be in the kernel
does not depend on which hardware you run?

  So the 32MB storage is a CF card? Don't be surprised that
  people ask, because it begs the question (no really, it does):
  why can't you put a bigger CF card in there that would
  just hold GENERIC? No, really: why? Answering this question
  will take a few minutes of our time.
 
 These machines (100) are not on site here. The flash mem is inside a
 box which the people who run the box would have to screw open.

See? If you spent ten seconds putting this into your first email,
nobody would question that it is indeed ruled out.

 The one reason that should stop all discussion about this: The project
 goal is to update existing systems by software only. Ever been given a
 project and then tried to discuss the project goals because you didn't
 find the solution (required lines in the config) within 3 days? I'm sure
 I can solve this since I have been able to in the past.

I am sure you can (no sarcasm here), and that you have. So why don't
you do the same you did before? What *did* you do before?  Strip
GENERIC down to what you absolutely need to have? Did it work?

 I was just
 seeking for help to maybe find a quicker and more structured way than
 fiddling around with the config.

By definition, you *are* fiddling with kernel config.

  You have been told several times already: strip GENERIC down to what
  will fit on your system. Start with things you definitely do not need
  (sound? wifi?), then continue with the rest. If things break, put
  the last thing that you removed back there. It is a way to arrive
  at the smallest possible kernel that works for you. Isn't it?
 
 That's the way I've done it in the past (since OpenBSD 3.5). Because
 this is a lot of work to be done each time I'd update to a new OpenBSD
 version (which I admit I haven't done with every release), I was
 thinking I'd better try to understand what is really required at
 minimum. And then do it the other way round: Start with an empty file
 and add the entries I found to be required. To achieve this goal, I
 asked you folks.

 What I've learned now from this discussion is: Either there is no way to
 do it bottom up, or you folks don't know it either.

I don't think there is a way to arrive to a minimal working kernel
from below that would be easier/faster than striping down to a minimal
kernel from above. Not if you know the internal dependencies in various
parts of the kernel. (I sure don't.) Some of that information probably
lives in the set of Makefiles in the src tree.



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread David Riley
On Dec 1, 2011, at 10:25 AM, John Tate wrote:

 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca
wrote:

 On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:

 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of
me
 and my little mistakes.

 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
 bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?


 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
 learning.

I'm wary of 24-year-olds calling themselves gurus.  I'm only 28, but for me,
that's at least old enough to know that there's a lot I don't know.  I think
you'll find most of the serious people on this list also started programming
in the language of their respective times about the same time you did.

The problem is not the list or the operating system, it's your attitude.  Yes,
you find yourself getting picked on a lot, but at times it's largely because
you've been sloppy.  When I get picked on because I've been sloppy, I take it
in stride and try to learn a lesson from it (at work, they apply a Dave Riley
Coefficient of about 2.5 to any time estimates I make, for example, because
I'm consistently bad at it; it's something I'm still working on, but there's
no reason for me to take it personally).

This is not the list to come to if you want hand-holding or soothing words to
assure you that you're master of your domain.  It's not an operating system
for people who don't like digging into the guts of things, which is partly why
it's not wildly popular.  To that extent, there's an expectation that if you
have a problem with NFS, and Google hasn't provided the instant answer you
expected, you might dig around in the (very good) documentation to see how it
really works instead of just asking for the quick answers.

To wit:

  Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for the night.
  Set fire to a man, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.

  - Terry Pratchett

So if you get burned over and over because of the same goof (not RTFMing),
perhaps it's time to stop complaining about being cold.


- Dave



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Sime Ramov
Hi,

* John Tate j...@johntate.org [2011-12-02 02:25+1100]:
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a
 guru and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. I am
 the guru sort of guy, I know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting
 it and in that sense still learning.

Now I know who I'm gonna call when I get guru meditation.



Re: how much last entries should exist?

2011-12-01 Thread Nick Holland

On 12/01/2011 03:23 AM, [BG-Consulting] Elmar Bschorer wrote:

Hi list,

my server just had a little crash. Currently running:
OpenBSD 4.9 GENERIC#477 amd64

After reset I checked last and I found only 5 entries.
I am wondering I this is normal? Shouldn't there be more entries?
The last one is from Wed Nov 30 09:43 - 09:43  (00:00).

Could someone plz tell me when a entry gets deleted from last?

Tia,
Greets
Elmar


man last
see newsyslog.conf, also.

in short: unlike some other systems that default to showing you every 
person who ever logged in, OpenBSD rotates those log files.  Of course, 
you can adjust the rotation schedule.


What you see is (potentially?) entirely normal.

Nick.



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Chris Cappuccio
John Tate [j...@johntate.org] wrote:
 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.
 

Hi John,

It's actually spelled narcissism. 
   

Chris



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Mehma Sarja

On 12/1/11 7:25 AM, John Tate wrote:

I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru

[snip]

age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I


A guru is someone who knows stuff.


Mehma



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Amit Kulkarni
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a
 guru

 [snip]

 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I

 A guru is someone who knows stuff.

and somebody who doesn't come crying or complaining. Gurus help other
lesser mortals.

What a good laugh for the day!



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Chris Cappuccio
John Tate [j...@johntate.org] wrote:
 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.
 

You also think facebook is narcissistic because...no negativity is allowed.

http://johntate.org/node/29

Perhaps it's time for the aspiring novelist/philosopher to learn some new words.



-- 
There are only three sports: bullfighting, motor racing, and mountaineering; 
all the rest are merely games. - E. Hemingway



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Gilles Chehade
On Thu, Dec 01, 2011 at 09:28:25AM -0800, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
 John Tate [j...@johntate.org] wrote:
  I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
  and my little mistakes.
  
 
 You also think facebook is narcissistic because...no negativity is allowed.
 
 http://johntate.org/node/29
 
 Perhaps it's time for the aspiring novelist/philosopher to learn some new 
 words.
 

.. byebye misc@, too much spam ...

-- 
Gilles Chehade

http://www.poolp.org@poolpOrg



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Kevin Chadwick
On Thu, 1 Dec 2011 16:39:24 +0100
David Coppa wrote:

 See the subject: Narcicism
 
 And, btw, the correct spelling is Narcissism: as a guru, this is
 something you should already have known ;)

I prefer narsciscism ;^)

Kc



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Duncan Patton a Campbell
On Thu, 1 Dec 2011 10:49:23 -0500
Andres Genovez andresgeno...@gmail.com wrote:

 When you are a real Hacker, you don`t call yourself one, people do.

I call myself a hacker.  Others call me a reverse systems engineer, 
systems analyst  programmer, network analyst, repurposing specialist, 
blablabla.  But I've been a hacker since I learned about model railroads
and ham radios from my buddy's dad.  I have an apple 2 in the basement
and know minix, so there ;-)

Dhu



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Duncan Patton a Campbell
On Thu, 1 Dec 2011 17:37:44 +
Kevin Chadwick ma1l1i...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:

 On Thu, 1 Dec 2011 16:39:24 +0100
 David Coppa wrote:
 
  See the subject: Narcicism
  
  And, btw, the correct spelling is Narcissism: as a guru, this is
  something you should already have known ;)
 
 I prefer narsciscism ;^)
 
 Kc
 

narchischism?

Dhu



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread patric conant
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 11:37 AM, Kevin Chadwick ma1l1i...@yahoo.co.ukwrote:

 On Thu, 1 Dec 2011 16:39:24 +0100
 David Coppa wrote:

  See the subject: Narcicism
 
  And, btw, the correct spelling is Narcissism: as a guru, this is
  something you should already have known ;)

 I prefer narsciscism ;^)

 Kc


The alternative to beating people up for posting things like What use
flags can I use to recompile the kernel to be smaller and faster is
entertaining the post below, which happens on the vast majority of open
source mailing lists.

Date: Wed, Aug 10, 2011 at 1:54 PM
Subject: hostname
To: netbsd-us...@netbsd.org


I haven't installed NetBSD yet, I'm trying to configure the network. It
says 'no route to host' I think I need a valid hostname. Can you help me?
Thanks



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Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Scott McEachern

On 12/01/11 10:25, John Tate wrote:

I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
learning.



John, sorry to burst your bubble, but in your case it really must be done.

You are not a hacker.  Really.

You are not a guru.  Really.

You are a kid who is having a great deal of difficulty learning the 
basics.  You say you're 24, but I seriously doubt that, considering you 
cannot spell narcissism and cannot distinguish between apprehend and 
comprehend.  I think you are in dire need of a dictionary (I recommend 
Oxford).


John, you are a legend, but only in your own mind.  Your gun has no 
bullets; your pencil has no lead; your tree has no wood.


You have some miles to go beyond setting up basic NFS before you can be 
called a hacker.


This is a good start to your journey:

$ man man

Thanks for the laughs.  No reply is necessary.  Really.


--
Scott McEachern

https://www.blackstaff.ca



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Brandon Weaver
...which is exactly the reason I don't post questions. I know that 95% of my
questions I've thought of have been answered by a simple man page search, the
other 5% are hacked together with Python.

As far as being a hacker when people call you that, good lord that term has
been bastardized. Any punk that catches your Facebook open is a hacker
anymore.

I don't answer questions because I don't have the knowledge necessary to yet.
When I do I'm sure I'll parrot in with a few RTFMs. Until then I'll just stalk
about and read. Cheers.

Thanks for your time in reading,

Brandon Weaver

On Dec 1, 2011, at 1:28 AM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:

 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.

 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?

 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.

 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

 John Tate.

 Note: Yes, it's not my list.

 --
 www.johntate.org



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Dmitrij Czarkoff
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 4:25 PM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13.
 ...
 At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I started learning C++ as well.

Are You sure? You wrote C++ Linux kernel code in 2000? Really?

-- 
Dmitrij D. Czarkoff



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Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread David Riley
On Dec 1, 2011, at 2:39 PM, Dmitrij Czarkoff wrote:

 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 4:25 PM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13.
 ...
 At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I started learning C++ as well.
 
 Are You sure? You wrote C++ Linux kernel code in 2000? Really?

To be fair, he didn't say that.


- Dave



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Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Benny Lofgren
On 2011-12-01 16.25, John Tate wrote:
 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
 learning.

John, just to put things into perspective... I know you've been bashed
quite a bit for the above, as well as for your tendency to ask first
and shoot later, which is good if you're a law enforcement officer but
not so good if you're trying to blend into a knowledgeable community
full of professionals who, frankly, are busy guys.

I, on the other hand, kind of like the cockiness you display above -
self confidence is important in order to succeed just about anywhere
in the world. Don't listen to those who mock you for spelling errors
or for having the confidence to do things and stand up for yourself
- but *DO* listen to those who, without having to, volonteer their
time in order to help you and others on this list and anywhere.

Now for the perspective part.

I, like you, started out young. Got my first computer at age 11, which
was more or less the last my parents saw of me for the next few years
or so. It also got me a good head start into the then emerging computer
industry; by the time I was 17 I landed an internship with a local
unix computer manufacturer due in part to my knowledge of low level
machine language programming (but mostly because my father and the
CEO of that company were buddies...).

By the time you were born, I had about 5 years of unix application,
utility and kernel development experience to add to my five years
of more or less low level hacking in one of the popular Z-80 based
personal computer platforms of the day.

I felt much like you do. I was on top of the world. :-)

I was young and I was *good* at what I did, and I worked in an emerging
field where there were, perhaps, a few hundred people IN THE WORLD doing
what I did at the level I were at.

Well, that was nearly 25 years ago. I'm 45 now.

Since then, I've realized that what I know is not nearly as important as
what I *don't* know.

I'm still constantly learning new stuff - every day I pick up something
new and interesting. I know now what I didn't know then - there is always
someone else who knows this particular part of the equation better than
you. AND I LISTEN TO THEM. Hopefully they listen to me in turn other times
- not because I tell them I'm a guru or whatnot but because I've shown
that I only open my mouth when I know what I'm talking about.

I'm still very confident in my own abilities though, and because of that
I'm good at selling my consulting services to those needing my particular
skill set. Therefore, the confidence and cockiness of youth are not at
all bad traits. You just need to be more aware of other things.

Don't waste time feeling insulted by faceless people on mailing lists -
adapt and overcome! Study the archives, learn from those whose advice have
proven adequate, correct and useful in the past and ignore the trolls and
those who have nothing more useful to share than correcting your spelling
errors. Fight the urge to join the dark, trolly side!

And, wax on. Wax off.


Regards,
/Benny


 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

 Well I get messages that are worthless and seem to be insults.
 

 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.

 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

 John Tate.

 Note: Yes, it's not my list.


 John, if you don't mind, I'll give you some advice:  Do your homework
 before posting to the list.  Your basic instinct is to click Send instead
 of thinking first.  I've lost count of how many of your posts were
 retracted by yourself, with a big oops, my bad or were replied to with
 RTFM-type responses.  I got a kick out of one retraction where you said
 something like Sorry, I was drunk.

 You're obviously new here.  Sure, it's a tough crowd at times, but that
 only happens when people don't bother reading the FAQ, or the man pages, or
 trying things out for themselves.  A lot of people have asked stupid
 questions or said something dumb -- myself included -- and got painful
 responses.  I've had my share of facepalm experiences and had my ass handed
 to me plenty of times, but I deserved it.

 But you know what?  I try to not make a regular occasion of it.  It seems
 you do.

 I help a lot of people off-list, and I know for a fact many others do the
 same.  I've found through 

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Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Eric Oyen
like any other population, we have our parrots, non-thinkers, OCD, Bi-polar,
stupid or the otherwise normal. we also have more than a few extremely
intelligent people.

one thing I have noticed (because I also suffer from it) is that more
intelligent you are, the worse your interpersonal skills tend to be. mow, I
happen to be fairly intelligent (somewhere north of the upper 130's) , but I
am not so far above the normals that I can't understand them. I have known
people so intelligent that they have virtually no understanding of how their
fellow human beings work (and I can understand that position as well).

the point I am  hoping to make is that we all have our quirks, behavioral
problems and skills (and that is fine by me). all that is needed is a little
understanding and a very thick skin.

-eric

On Dec 1, 2011, at 12:28 AM, John Tate wrote:

 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
 and my little mistakes.

 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?

 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.

 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

 John Tate.

 Note: Yes, it's not my list.

 --
 www.johntate.org



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Richard Thornton
I have known geniuses who were computer illiterate.
On Dec 1, 2011 5:58 PM, Eric Oyen eric.o...@gmail.com wrote:

 like any other population, we have our parrots, non-thinkers, OCD,
 Bi-polar,
 stupid or the otherwise normal. we also have more than a few extremely
 intelligent people.

 one thing I have noticed (because I also suffer from it) is that more
 intelligent you are, the worse your interpersonal skills tend to be. mow, I
 happen to be fairly intelligent (somewhere north of the upper 130's) , but
 I
 am not so far above the normals that I can't understand them. I have known
 people so intelligent that they have virtually no understanding of how
 their
 fellow human beings work (and I can understand that position as well).

 the point I am  hoping to make is that we all have our quirks, behavioral
 problems and skills (and that is fine by me). all that is needed is a
 little
 understanding and a very thick skin.

 -eric

 On Dec 1, 2011, at 12:28 AM, John Tate wrote:

  I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of
 me
  and my little mistakes.
 
  I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
  seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
  me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
 bunch
  of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?
 
  Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying
 or
  are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?
 
  It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you
 poorly
  researched crap with no answers contain.
 
  If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.
 
  But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.
 
  John Tate.
 
  Note: Yes, it's not my list.
 
  --
  www.johntate.org



Mapeo, Análisis y Rediseño de Procesos

2011-12-01 Thread Lic. Adriana Batrez
Presentacisn znica Nacional en el aqo...

Mapeo, Analisis y Rediseqo de Procesos
Presencial: 08 de Diciembre   /   Ciudad de Mixico
Online en Vivo: 09 de Diciembre   /   Por Internet

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Al finalizar este programa, el participante sera capaz de realizar el
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miden el desempeqo de las operaciones, alcanzando la sinergia de los
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tiempos, costos y esfuerzos.

Dirigido a: Jefes y Supervisores de areas operativas.

!Obtenga la Informacisn Completa!

Opcisn.1) Llamando al 01-800-25010-20
Opcisn.2) Respondiendo los siguientes datos:
-Empresa:
-Nombre:
-Puesto:
-Tel: (  )
-E-mail: misc@openbsd.org

Desuscripcisn? responda con la palabra no.mapeo



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Neal Hogan
On 12/1/11, Eric Oyen eric.o...@gmail.com wrote:
 like any other population, we have our parrots, non-thinkers, OCD, Bi-polar,
 stupid or the otherwise normal. we also have more than a few extremely
 intelligent people.

 one thing I have noticed (because I also suffer from it) is that more
 intelligent you are, the worse your interpersonal skills tend to be. mow, I
 happen to be fairly intelligent (somewhere north of the upper 130's) ,

Oh ya? Well, you spelled 'now' wrong ;-)



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Brandon Weaver
so remind me again why we're catering to NLB's and Trolls?

On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 5:12 PM, Neal Hogan nealho...@gmail.com wrote:

 On 12/1/11, Eric Oyen eric.o...@gmail.com wrote:
  like any other population, we have our parrots, non-thinkers, OCD,
 Bi-polar,
  stupid or the otherwise normal. we also have more than a few extremely
  intelligent people.
 
  one thing I have noticed (because I also suffer from it) is that more
  intelligent you are, the worse your interpersonal skills tend to be.
 mow, I
  happen to be fairly intelligent (somewhere north of the upper 130's) ,

 Oh ya? Well, you spelled 'now' wrong ;-)



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Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Frans Haarman
2011/12/1 Brandon Weaver keystonele...@gmail.com:
 so remind me again why we're catering to NLB's and Trolls?


I think people are still debugging his bug report.



Aplicacion Exitosa de los INCOTERMS en el Comercio Internacional y Aduana

2011-12-01 Thread Mildreth Lara
Aplicacisn Exitosa de los INCOTERMS en el Comercio Internacional y Aduana

Presencial:  09 de Diciembre   /   Ciudad de Mixico
Online en Vivo:   13 de Diciembre   /   Por Internet

Permita que su negocio llegue mas lejos aprendiendo y dominando los
tirminos comerciales internacionales establecidos por la Camara
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o importar, ni qui medio utilice, conocer a fondo estas especificaciones
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una mayor eficiencia en sus procesos globales.

El seminario-taller Aplicacisn Exitosa de los INCOTERMS en el Comercio
Internacional y Aduana que Quality Training de Mixico pone a su alcance
es una herramienta invaluable para todo empresario que quiera
incorporarse al comercio mundial, que quiera mejorar las practicas
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las compaqmas globalizadas deben enfrentar, de manera 100% practica y
efectiva.

!Comience a elevar la competitividad de su empresa hoy mismo!
- Domine los INCOTERMS y otros tirminos relevantes para las practicas de
exportacisn e importacisn
- Amplme sus conocimientos y mejore el manejo de sus negociaciones y
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mediante ejercicios practicos
- Conozca sus obligaciones y derechos y las de su contraparte en todo
proceso de compra/venta en el extranjero.

Dirigido a:
Empresarios, ejecutivos y funcionarios vinculados con operaciones de
Exportacisn e Importacisn; Personal de Agencias Aduanales, Operadores
Logmsticos, Transportes y Servicios, asm como Profesores y Estudiantes de
Comercio y Negocios Internacionales y Especializaciones relacionadas.

!Obtenga la Informacisn Completa!

Opcisn.1) Llamando al 01-800 2501.020
Opcisn.2) Respondiendo los siguientes datos:
-Empresa:
-Nombre:
-Puesto:
-Tel: (  )
-E-mail: misc@openbsd.org

*Divulgue esta informacisn entre compaqeros de trabajo y amigos, sin duda
se lo agradeceran.

Desuscripcisn? responda con la palabra noComInt



CanSecWest 2012 Mar 7-9; 2nd call for papers, closes next week, Monday. Dec 5 2011

2011-12-01 Thread Dragos Ruiu
So after a dozen years or so organizing conferences, you
get the urge to pull levers and try experimenting with
things. So this year I sent out the CanSecWest CFP
only over Twitter, and G+ publicly. Just curious as to the
adoption and information dispersion rate, and some
estimate of the attention these newer channels are getting.

So after this experiment I hear about people having
submissions and missing  the CFP. So for my control set,
here is the normal announce message to different e-mail
lists. We'll do a Second CanSecWest CFP, but a brief one.
Send us your proposal by the end of Monday next week,
December 5, 2011.

The questions and information needed is the same as
usual (see website), also for my curiosity could you
include:

12. Where did you hear about the CFP from?

cheers,
--dr

--
World Emerging Security Technology
Vancouver, March 7-9  http://cansecwest.com
pgpkey http://cansecwest.com/ kyxpgp



Re: Packet drop because of invalid IP checksum on Soerkis / vr / ral

2011-12-01 Thread Christiano F. Haesbaert
I think I've found the problem.

when a packet comes from ral0 --- 10.0.0.1, the bridge changes the
received interface to vr0, which has IFCAP_CSUM_IPv4.

So when the icmp layer is about to test the checksum, it assumes the
output interface is the same one which the packet came in (in our
case, vr0, and not ral0). So the checksum does not get calculated.

That's why it works when we remove the capabilities from vr0.



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Eric
Thanks for the laugh, John.
I made a meme for you:

http://memegenerator.net/instance/11838771



On Dec 1, 2011, at 10:25 AM, John Tate wrote:

 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:20 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca
wrote:

 On 12/01/11 02:28, John Tate wrote:

 I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of
me
 and my little mistakes.

 I am not talking about people who actually have a solution, but I can't
 seem to ask anything on this list without parrots coming along picking on
 me. I think some people just hang out here because it's the most anal
 bunch
 of hackers ever, in recorded history. What are your experiences?


 I'm 24 years old. I was a Linux hacker since I was 13. I am a bit of a guru
 and do my own Kerberos and such on an all BSD/Linux network. OpenBSD and
 Debian Linux. I love OpenBSD, I'm a bit weird because I use bash. I can put
 up with being made fun of. At 13 I didn't just start learning Linux I
 started learning C++ as well. I failed to apprehend it properly at that
 age, but at an older age I relearned it well. I am the guru sort of guy, I
 know a hell of a lot but I'm still connecting it and in that sense still
 learning.



 Is it true that occasionally we attract people who either love bullying
or
 are just lazy and pretending to be one of the clever?

 Well I get messages that are worthless and seem to be insults.


 It just figures some of these people sit on the list, and email you
poorly
 researched crap with no answers contain.

 If you hate a question, it truly doesn't belong, bug me.

 But if you just can't answer a question, ignore it.

 John Tate.

 Note: Yes, it's not my list.


 John, if you don't mind, I'll give you some advice:  Do your homework
 before posting to the list.  Your basic instinct is to click Send
instead
 of thinking first.  I've lost count of how many of your posts were
 retracted by yourself, with a big oops, my bad or were replied to with
 RTFM-type responses.  I got a kick out of one retraction where you said
 something like Sorry, I was drunk.

 You're obviously new here.  Sure, it's a tough crowd at times, but that
 only happens when people don't bother reading the FAQ, or the man pages,
or
 trying things out for themselves.  A lot of people have asked stupid
 questions or said something dumb -- myself included -- and got painful
 responses.  I've had my share of facepalm experiences and had my ass
handed
 to me plenty of times, but I deserved it.

 But you know what?  I try to not make a regular occasion of it.  It seems
 you do.

 I help a lot of people off-list, and I know for a fact many others do the
 same.  I've found through years of experience there are two kinds of
people
 on this list: those that need a little help and pointed in the right
 direction, and those that need their hands held for every step.  Guess
 which category I put you in?  And that's exactly why I've helped you a
 grand total of zero times.

 Now you have the gall to come on this list and insult the people that are
 trying to help you.  I don't think there's anyone on this list that sits
 idly, waiting for an opportunity to pick on or bully someone.  Get a
 grip, get some thicker skin, and most of all, RTFM first.

 I guarantee that if you take my advice, you'll find this list to be a
 very, very valuable resource.  Remember, there is a difference between
 *reading* and *comprehension*.  Work a little harder on the latter and I
 think you'll find you won't be picked on.

 Stop playing the victim.  You're not the first and it's old.

 --
 Scott McEachern

 https://www.blackstaff.ca




 --
 www.johntate.org



Re: pppoe

2011-12-01 Thread John Tate
Using userland ppp, this pf configuration is preventing proper pppoe
connections. The same would happen with pppoe(4). I know how to accept, but
I'm not sure about (a) pppoe only (2) the order and position of where it
should go, though i didn't plagiarize these filters except from the manual.
I generally understand them.

# cat
/etc/pf.conf
int_if=xl0

ext_if=tun0 #has to be changed to pppoe(4)



thenetwrk=10.0.0.0/8

rothbard=10.0.0.10

baal=10.0.0.2

smass=10.0.0.1



etcp_services={22}

itcp_services={22,53}

icmp_types=echoreq



ports_rothbard={17000,17001,17002,17003,17004,17005,2322}

ports_smass={17100,17101,17102,17103,17104,17105,}



set block-policy
return
set loginterface
$ext_if
set skip on
lo


anchor
ftp-proxy/*


pass in quick on $int_if inet proto tcp to any port ftp
\
divert-to 127.0.0.1 port
8021


match out on $ext_if from 10.0.0.0/8 to any nat-to
$int_if
pass on $ext_if from 10.0.0.0/8 to
any


pass out on $ext_if proto tcp from any to
any


pass in on $ext_if proto tcp from any to any port $ports_rothbard rdr-to
$rothba
rd

pass in on $ext_if proto tcp from any to any port $ports_smass rdr-to
$smass


antispoof quick for { lo $int_if
}


pass in on egress inet proto tcp from any to (egress)
\
port
$etcp_services
pass in on egress inet proto tcp from any to $baal port
$itcp_services


pass in inet proto icmp all icmp-type $icmp_types

On Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 8:46 PM, Eric Furman ericfur...@fastmail.netwrote:

 On Monday, November 21, 2011 7:57 AM, Jan Stary h...@stare.cz wrote:
  On Nov 21 12:37:37, John Tate wrote:
   I am setting up an OpenBSD firewall, and have everything working but I
   am using userland pppoe. I am not sure if it ever became an official
   part of OpenBSD, but I've heard there might be kernel level pppoe
   support.
  
   Is there kernel level pppoe support? Or is the cybersphere filling my
   head with dreams?
 
  Is http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq6.html#PPP a part of cybersphere?

 PPP?!?!?!?
 Aughugh, hsss, hs. It hurts usss it hurts uss!
 Take it away take it away!!!
 LOL

 Sorry, you have my sympathy...




-- 
www.johntate.org



Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread VICTOR TARABOLA CORTIANO
 .. byebye misc@, too much spam ...


Indeed.



Asistentes de Excelencia: Desata tus habilidades y Potencial. Evento premier.

2011-12-01 Thread Susana Hernandez
1328602

[IMAGE]

Pms de Mixico prestigiada firma de Capacitacisn presenta:
Congreso Nacional Secretarias Ejecutivas y Asistentes 8 de Diciembre
Guadalajara, Jalisco.
-Mas de 900 asistentes satisfechas nos respaldansupera con ixito los
retos del 2012.
-Obtenga las herramientas necesarias para alcanzar un sptimo desempeqo en
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Re: Narcicism?

2011-12-01 Thread Nomen Nescio
See changes below:

 Date: Wed, Aug 10, 2011 at 02:30 AM
 Subject: help me
 To: netbsd-us...@netbsd.org
 
 
 I am a seasoned expert at OpenBSD. I downloaded the IA64 version for my
 new Intel Quad and burned a CD. I got some stupid warning about burning a
 5.2G ISO as data on a 80 minute CD but I ignored it and it worked so no
 problem. Now it won't even boot. Don't you guys test this stuff before you
 put it out there. The Windows 7 Ultimate Seasoned Pro Guru Totally
 Expanded Master Edition that came on this computer runs perfectly, why
 doesn't FreeBSD even work on this PC. They warned me Linux is totally
 bogus and I didn't believe that until now. If the installer can't even
 work I may be forced to go back to Windows.



夏侯泽厶何梓欣

2011-12-01 Thread iec
D K ece$d/f3=e6d=ff,#cg%(

cf,h?f%g5e(h/c13534016620  i g

d f  d;# e

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=?utf-8?B?5Luj5byA5Y+R56WoLmpwZw==?=]



Como Manejar Exitosamente Sucursales

2011-12-01 Thread Marines Felix
Simplemente el mejor Seminario de...

Csmo Manejar Exitosamente Sucursales

Al asistir a este seminario, conocera los secretos internos para el
manejo de mzltiples oficinas evitando preocuparse de incurrir en
equivocaciones costosas que puedan afectar las finanzas de su compaqma,
ademas le ayudara a supervisar la calidad, lograr una estructura fuerte,
dirigir equipos de colaboradores independientes, enfrentar desafmos y dar
soluciones a los problemas propios de cada oficina.

Entre los puntos a tratar se incluye:
-Csmo aplicar el plan de negocio adecuado en las sucursales  para 
dirigirlas  correctamente.
-Csmo mantener el orden mientras usted dirige a control remoto (larga
distancia).
-Csmo crear procedimientos claros para que el personal  los  pueda seguir
al pie de la letra.
-Por qui es importante generar la competencia entre sucursales.
-Csmo manejar a distancia polmticas impopulares.
-Un comzn, pero mortal error de la gerencia.
-Cada cuando debe visitar las sucursales.
-Csmo controlar problemas, incluso cuando usted esta  ausente.

!De regreso a su oficina, usted podra poner en marcha las estrategias
aprendidas!

Dirigido a: Gerentes, Supervisores, Jefes, Encargados y cualquier persona
que desee ganar experiencia practica en el manejo de sucursales y
oficinas remotas en cualquier parte de la ciudad o del pams.

Fechas znicas a nivel Nacional...

Presencial:
08 de Diciembre / Ciudad de Mixico
14 de Diciembre / Guadalajara, Jal.
16 de Diciembre / Monterrey, N.L.

Online en Vivo:
19 de Diciembre / Por Internet

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