Hi,
I have been upgrading my machines to 5.3 this weekend and I am seeing
some strange behaviours with dhclient. The config is simple:
/etc/dhclient.conf
send host-name pc-1;
request subnet-mask, broadcast-address, routers, domain-name,
domain-name-servers, host-name;
(FWIW The dhcp
Sun 12.May'13 at 15:41:11 -0600, Evan Root
So Stuart,
I was looking at the OpenBSD mailing list rules because I
wasn't sure about long links and I saw that lines over 72
characters are discouraged, that's were I decided to manually
put in line breaks. :/
On 2013-05-10, Christian Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de wrote:
Stuart Henderson s...@spacehopper.org wrote:
TemperNTC (http://www.pcsensor.com/index.php?_a=productproduct_id=7)
uses uthum(4) but has a problem where the sensor drops out occasionally;
diff I posted to tech@ improves (but doesn't
YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
On Wed, 08 May 2013 12:32:16 +0100
Joe Holden li...@rewt.org.uk wrote:
YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
On Tue, 07 May 2013 22:38:46 +0100
Joe Holden li...@rewt.org.uk wrote:
I'm testing out npppd as a termination device which is being fed from
existing LACs (in this particular
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 09:40:59AM +0100, Mike Williams wrote:
Hi,
I have been upgrading my machines to 5.3 this weekend and I am
seeing some strange behaviours with dhclient. The config is simple:
/etc/dhclient.conf
send host-name pc-1;
request subnet-mask, broadcast-address, routers,
On 05/13/13 15:19, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 09:40:59AM +0100, Mike Williams wrote:
Hi,
I have been upgrading my machines to 5.3 this weekend and I am
seeing some strange behaviours with dhclient. The config is simple:
/etc/dhclient.conf
send host-name pc-1;
request
On Fri, 10 May 2013 14:42:48 -0700
Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
The quality of the error checking demonstrated by this crash, btw,
should have you filing bugs with the claws-mail developers. Bad
input files is not a valid reason to crash; it should be reporting
what file is
Dear Group,
I would like to know what kind of environment you use for remote management
of one or more openbsd servers. Which KVM over IP solution would you
recomend.
Thanks
Tony
on his/her laptop as *only* OS and uses it daily for scientific work?
please contact me off list. Thanks
PS: scientific: physics, math, bio, etc...
On 05/13/2013 03:24 PM, Tony Berth wrote:
Dear Group,
I would like to know what kind of environment you use for remote management
of one or more openbsd servers. Which KVM over IP solution would you
recomend.
Oh, I remember those.
Last IP KVM switch I used worked BETTER for OpenBSD than it
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling, IPsec, IPv6.
Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the desktop is the ultimate case of square
peg/round hole.
On 05/13/2013 05:12 PM, Pau wrote:
on his/her laptop as
Salim Shaw [salims...@vfemail.net] wrote:
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling,
IPsec, IPv6.
Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the desktop is the ultimate case of
square peg/round hole.
Salim, that's
2013/5/13 Chris Cappuccio ch...@nmedia.net
Salim Shaw [salims...@vfemail.net] wrote:
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling,
IPsec, IPv6.
Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the desktop is the ultimate
thanks for the prompt replies. Any recommendation for IPMI cards and KVM
over IP switches that work well with openbsd?
Tony
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 12:07 AM, Nick Holland
n...@holland-consulting.netwrote:
On 05/13/2013 03:24 PM, Tony Berth wrote:
Dear Group,
I would like to know what kind
On May 13, 2013 4:33 PM, Chris Cappuccio ch...@nmedia.net wrote:
Salim Shaw [salims...@vfemail.net] wrote:
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling,
IPsec, IPv6.
Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the
On 05/13/13 17:28, Salim Shaw wrote:
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling, IPsec,
IPv6.
Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the desktop is the ultimate case of
square peg/round hole.
You're quite a
You are wrong with your statement that OpenBSD is not designed for the
desktop. We are running several hundred desktop on the enterprise, thin
clients and so on ...
On Mon, 2013-05-13 at 17:28 -0400, Salim Shaw wrote:
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
Flame bait. Not even funny.
Salim Shaw salims...@vfemail.net wrote:
OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling, IPsec,
IPv6.
Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the desktop is the ultimate case of square
peg/round
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 11:58:08AM +0100, James Griffin wrote:
I just use the base vi(1)
and then fmt(1) to format the text. Same for mail(1) if use the command
to write in an external editor.
Why not:
set editor=EXINIT=':set wrapmargin=8' vi %s
in the muttrc? No need for fmt.
--
Brett
I would like to reinstall a fresh system on an SSD that contains an
existing installation. From my limited knowledge of SSDs, I wonder if
the drive controller may retain data from the old filesystem, unaware
that there is a new filesystem put in place.
Is this a concern? If so, how does one
This is probably something stupid I'm doing, but I can't see it right this
second.
Trying to build xenocara from sources pulled from
anon...@anoncvs3.usa.openbsd.org:/cvs
as of about 60 minutes before sending this email message gives me
cc -O2 -pipe -I/usr/xenocara/lib/freetype/include
On 05/14/13 00:04, Clint Pachl wrote:
I would like to reinstall a fresh system on an SSD that contains an
existing installation. From my limited knowledge of SSDs, I wonder if
the drive controller may retain data from the old filesystem,
unaware that there is a new filesystem put in place.
On 05/14/13 00:15, Marco S Hyman wrote:
This is probably something stupid I'm doing, but I can't see it right this
second.
Trying to build xenocara from sources pulled from
anon...@anoncvs3.usa.openbsd.org:/cvs
as of about 60 minutes before sending this email message gives me
cc -O2 -pipe
On May 13, 2013, at 9:47 PM, Scott McEachern sc...@blackstaff.ca wrote:
*** Error 1 in lib/freetype (bsd.lib.mk:37 'type1.o': @cc -O2 -pipe
-I/usr/xenocara/lib/freetype/include -I/usr/xenocara/lib/freetype/...)
*** Error 1 in lib/freetype (Makefile:36 'build')
*** Error 1 in lib
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 21:04, Clint Pachl wrote:
I would like to reinstall a fresh system on an SSD that contains an
existing installation. From my limited knowledge of SSDs, I wonder if
the drive controller may retain data from the old filesystem, unaware
that there is a new filesystem put
Scott McEachern wrote:
2) Do you mean there could still be data residing on unused parts of
the SSD? Yes, it can happen.
Yes, this is what I'm referring to. I was hoping there was some way to
instruct the drive controller that the entire drive space is free?
SSDs have their own way of
27 matches
Mail list logo