On 2014-12-29, Clemens Gößnitzer wrote:
> Hey,
>
>>Since your initial email you have not included any config files, i.e.
>>httpd.conf, etc. Would you, perhaps, care to share them with us? My
>>shew stone is being serviced.
>
> Of course. Here they are:
>
> # cat /etc/httpd.conf
> server "default"
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 10:45:48PM EST, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> Ivy bridge supports three outputs with two of them sharing a clock
> assuming the sytem has two displayport outputs (and none do?).
All SFF and USFF Dell Optiplex desktop PCs in the 70x0 and 90x0
series[0] have 1 x VGA and 2 x Display
Hi,
On 2014-12-30 on 05:30 CET Tuyosi Takesima wrote :
> thanks for good advise .
> surely no need to compile to obtain basic auth .
>
> my test nginx.conf is next .
>
> cat /etc/nginx
> /nginx.conf
>
>
> worker_processes 1;
> worker_rlimit_nofile 1024;
> events {
> worker_connections 8
thanks for good advise .
surely no need to compile to obtain basic auth .
my test nginx.conf is next .
cat /etc/nginx
/nginx.conf
worker_processes 1;
worker_rlimit_nofile 1024;
events {
worker_connections 800;
}
http {
include mime.types;
default_type application/o
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 08:57:15PM +, Fred wrote:
>
> I currently have three monitors connected to my laptop but if I try to
> enable X on the third one I'm getting the following error:
>
> port:fred ~> xrandr --output VGA1 --auto
> xrandr: cannot find crtc for output VGA1
...
> vga1 at pci
On 2014-12-29 at 08:59 CET Tuyosi Takesima wrote:
> Hi ,all .
>
> how to compile nginx who has ability of basic auth using ports ?
>
> according to http://wiki.nginx.org/Modules ,
> if auth_basic is not wanted,
> compile nginx --without-http_auth_basic_module .
> ---
> i need basic au
Linux supports the UEFI boot loader. OpenBSD does not.
Before installing OpenBSD you need to enter its setup and enable legacy
support.
You don't need to do that with Linux.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014, at 09:49 AM, Gabriel Guzman wrote:
>On 2014-12-26, Michael wrote:
>> Apologies, I must've missed something that was mentioned in the man pages,
>> in OpenBSD it seems that addresses are printed for each attempt rather than
>> (the other OS' tested, Win, Debian, Android) that seem to take the first
>> returned name for example
>> It
On 2014-12-26, Michael wrote:
> Apologies, I must've missed something that was mentioned in the man pages,
> in OpenBSD it seems that addresses are printed for each attempt rather than
> (the other OS' tested, Win, Debian, Android) that seem to take the first
> returned name for example
> It just
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 12:45:14PM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 09:29:15 -0800
> Ryan Freeman wrote:
>
> >On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 11:17:55AM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
> >> Greetings All,
> >>
> >> I've used OpenBSD in the past to build redundant routers and
> >> fi
On 2014-12-29, T. Ribbrock wrote:
> Given the current state of development in OpenBSD, I'm now wondering
> what the best way forward is for me:
>
> a) Install apache-httpd-openbsd from ports and keep my configuration
>basically as is
>Advantage: Less work to get everything running - I've d
I'm not experiencing any problems with httpd and php, but I don't have a
need for any of the extras you can get with the other two. It actually
seems to be performing better than nginx from what I can tell.
On 12/29/14 10:07, Ted Unangst wrote:
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 14:30, T. Ribbrock wrote:
On 12/29/14 17:45, Christopher Barry wrote:
On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 09:29:15 -0800
Ryan Freeman wrote:
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 11:17:55AM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
Greetings All,
I've used OpenBSD in the past to build redundant routers and
firewalls and it was fantastic, but it's been quit
Hey,
>Since your initial email you have not included any config files, i.e.
>httpd.conf, etc. Would you, perhaps, care to share them with us? My
>shew stone is being serviced.
Of course. Here they are:
# cat /etc/httpd.conf
server "default" {
listen on wpi0 port 80
directory { no
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 12:45:14PM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 09:29:15 -0800
> Ryan Freeman wrote:
>
> >On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 11:17:55AM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
> >> Greetings All,
> >>
> >> I've used OpenBSD in the past to build redundant routers and
> >> fi
On Mon, 29 Dec 2014 09:29:15 -0800
Ryan Freeman wrote:
>On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 11:17:55AM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
>> Greetings All,
>>
>> I've used OpenBSD in the past to build redundant routers and
>> firewalls and it was fantastic, but it's been quite a few years
>> since I've played
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 11:51:21AM EST, Clemens Goessnitzer wrote:
> [...]
> The first three directories are all empty, and some_number is an
> alphanumeric string. Taking a quick look in the session files did
> not reveal anything new to me - but I am not a developer at all :)
Hi Clemens,
Since
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 11:17:55AM -0500, Christopher Barry wrote:
> Greetings All,
>
> I've used OpenBSD in the past to build redundant routers and firewalls
> and it was fantastic, but it's been quite a few years since I've played
> with it. I've also never used it as my default workstation. Yet
Sessions seem to be ok:
# ls -lh /var/www/tmp/
total 36
drwxr-xr-x 2 www www 512B Dec 28 20:40 owncloud-some_number
drwxr-xr-x 2 www www 512B Dec 29 08:59 owncloud-some_number
drwxr-xr-x 2 www www 512B Dec 28 09:58 owncloud-some_number
-rw--- 1 www www 403B Dec 29 16:14 sess_s
Got exactly the same issue with my Acer Aspire v5-573G several months ago.
Drove me crazy like hell. Nice to know that I wasn't the only one facing
this problem. Updating Acer BIOS didn't help, I had to remove HDD from
SATA-connected slot altogether to be able to boot past BIOS check.
Interesting o
While idly checking the OpenBSD Foundation's web site today I noticed
that the goal for the 2014 campaign
(http://www.openbsdfoundation.org/campaign2014.html)
has been met and even slightly exeeded (rigth now the total stands at 153,000
dollars).
But as anybody following this mailing list knows,
emga...@gmx.net (T. Ribbrock), 2015.12.29 (Mon) 14:30 (CET):
> Hi all,
>
> I'm finally getting round to updating my home server (gets a fresh 5.6
> install).
>
> Of course, there were a lot of changes over the past versions, one of
> them being the whole apache -> nginx -> httpd migration. My web
Greetings All,
I've used OpenBSD in the past to build redundant routers and firewalls
and it was fantastic, but it's been quite a few years since I've played
with it. I've also never used it as my default workstation. Yet.
I've always used Debian GNU/Linux on my workstations in the past,
but with
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 14:30, T. Ribbrock wrote:
>
> b) Migrate to nginx
> This seems to be the least interesting option - not only do I have to
> migrate now, but once more in the future, as nginx is also on the way
> out (so, the same "developer attention" caveat applies as with
> apache)
ngin
File permissions should be ok, I changed the ownership of
/var/www/owncloud and owncloud-data to www:www, no change whatsoever.
It must be something with owncloud, because when I am not logged in, I
can see the owncloud login screen just fine. Furthermore, a phpinfo()
page works, too. But when I l
> -Original Message-
> From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On
> Behalf Of Gabriel Guzman
> Sent: Monday, December 29, 2014 9:49 AM
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: Openbsd broke my hard drive twice! Getting frustrated
>
> I've been seeing a similar issue on a
Hi Thomas,
On 29 December 2014 at 05:30, T. Ribbrock wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm finally getting round to updating my home server (gets a fresh 5.6
> install).
>
> Of course, there were a lot of changes over the past versions, one of
> them being the whole apache -> nginx -> httpd migration. My webse
I've been seeing a similar issue on a DELL XPS 13" Developer edition I got
back in June -- ran fine with ubuntu as shipped with Dell, and then I
wiped and installed OpenBSD and now can't even access the BIOS.
I'm *sure* it's a BIOS issue as the BIOS is probably trying to do
something silly wit
Sqlite3 is is fine. Â As I said I use it.
What about file permissions?
Maybe run the httpd daemon in the foreground and increase its verbosity.
Did you manage to run a simple perl or bash script through the server?
Sent from Samsung Mobile
Original message
From: Clemens Goess
In more or less the same boat, without php as our virtual sites are simple
display only.
However for future business developement we have wondered the same.
I am inn agreement with your choice of (1) as that would be ours pending
feedback here from those who know.
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 7:30 A
Hi all,
I'm finally getting round to updating my home server (gets a fresh 5.6
install).
Of course, there were a lot of changes over the past versions, one of
them being the whole apache -> nginx -> httpd migration. My webserver
has a CMS running which requires PHP and MySQL, plus a few more
PHP-
On 12/28/14 15:35, Harald Dunkel wrote:
>
> Thats cool. Where did you find this? Searching on openbsd.org
> for "_pf" revealed only
> http://www.openbsd.org/papers/ven05-henning/mgp00011.txt .
> This is surely something that should go to the man page or to
> the FAQs for pf.
>
PS: Another impor
$ ldd /usr/bin/sqlite3
/usr/bin/sqlite3:
StartEnd Type Open Ref GrpRef Name
00b21e80 00b21ec11000 exe 10 0
/usr/bin/sqlite3
00b491c4e000 00b49212 rlib 01 0
/usr/lib/libsqlite3.so.28.0
00b498a0f000 0
On 27 December 2014 at 16:32, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> OpenBSD has its own sensorsd which is pure gold and unlike other BSDs
Yes, and sensorsd(8) / sensor_attach(9) stuff has also been imported
into DragonFly BSD (and also briefly into FreeBSD, too).
http://mdoc.su/d/sensor_attach.9
h
Hi ,all .
how to compile nginx who has ability of basic auth using ports ?
according to http://wiki.nginx.org/Modules ,
if auth_basic is not wanted,
compile nginx --without-http_auth_basic_module .
---
i need basic auth because of family privacy photos ,
i run nginx on arch linux
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