Hi,
Thanks for your comments.
(Marcus, you meant only this 2015-05 thread right?
https://marc.info/?t=14318149831 )
I think I like to keep dumps enabled also on a production machine. Even
if it's incredibly rare, it is possible for a production machine to
crash, and the dump could be instru
I had an issue with CA intermediate Certificate Chains before,
with stunnel about 8 years ago, believe it or not, my Ca Provider
( in fairness to them ) actually worked out how to get my
ca certs working in Stunnel on OpenBSD
What they suggested me to do which worked for me
was to copy all the inte
I am far from an expert; having issues myself at the moment, but maybe
if we get all of the iked experimenters together, we can figure it out
:)
First, try "-dvv" ... an extra "v" might give more info.
Next, from the existing trace it looks like your endpoint responds,
which is good, but your O
Hi Xianwen,
if you try with the USB Boot device... you can see if you can load it .
then I suggest you get a compact low profiile USB key so that it
doenst snag on your bag when putting
the laptop back in the case
Tom
On 22 February 2018 at 02:11, Xianwen Chen wrote:
> Dear Steve,
>
> I agree
I have an issue using certs as well, though I am not 100% sure whether
it has to do with a CA cert chain (why did you come to this
conclusion?). Do you have a config and a debug trace to share?
---
Igor V. Gubenko
System Engineer
On 2018-02-21 20:14, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> Has anyone alrea
Dear Luis,
That will be fantastic! Thank you!
Yours sincerely,
Xianwen
On Thu, Feb 22, 2018 at 2:05 AM, Luis Coronado
mailto:lcoron...@ticoit.com>> wrote:
I used Huawei and Dlink GSM usb based modems. I don’t recall the models but I
will look around for the notes I had about that and send it y
Dear Steve,
I agree! Thank you for the advice!
Yours sincerely,
Xianwen
On Mon, Feb 12, 2018 at 11:27 PM, STeve Andre'
mailto:and...@msu.edu>> wrote:
On 02/12/18 12:07, Xianwen Chen wrote:
Dear OpenBSD users,
I am not able to run OpenBSD 6.2 amd64 on a Dell Latitude E6330. The
installation w
I used Huawei and Dlink GSM usb based modems. I don’t recall the models but
I will look around for the notes I had about that and send it your way.
-luis
On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 7:59 PM Xianwen Chen wrote:
> Dear Luis,
>
> Thank you. Do you use a USB dongle to drive the SIM card? If yes, which
Dear Luis,
Thank you. Do you use a USB dongle to drive the SIM card? If yes, which one do
you use?
Yours sincerely,
Xianwen
On Thu, Feb 22, 2018 at 1:45 AM, Luis Coronado
mailto:lcoron...@ticoit.com>> wrote:
I used smstools from ports to deliver sms alerts from nagios. There are other
alterna
I used smstools from ports to deliver sms alerts from nagios. There are
other alternatives as well.
-luis
On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 6:59 PM Xianwen Chen wrote:
> Dear David,
>
> I actually do not know. I just have this idea that I would like to use my
> OpenBSD laptop as a mobile phone as well. I
Has anyone already figured out how to, or know whether it's possible
to, get iked working with letsencrypt certs? (Or indeed any CA with
chain certs?)
Use case: "standard" clients (Windows/iOS/StrongSwan), EAP auth,
not particularly technical users so trying to avoid the need for them
to manually
Dear David,
I actually do not know. I just have this idea that I would like to use my
OpenBSD laptop as a mobile phone as well. I think there are USB dongles that
act as GSM network device. I am wondering if I could use such a dongle to
operate a SIM card on OpenBSD, to receive/send SMS and to
On Mon, 19 Feb 2018 16:01:19 -0600
Ed Ahlsen-Girard wrote:
> Since the snapshot of the 16th, I cannot run X apps from a W10 box
> with PuTTY and mingw. No config changes to Windows, put X11Forwarding
> yes back into sshd_config.dmesg and sshd_config below signature.
>
Discovered that libGL.s0.1
On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 4:10 AM, Jean-Michel Pouré wrote:
> I know this is a little bit farfetched, pardon my ignorence, but
> OpenBSD seeems vulnerable on first installation. In case of DNS
> poisoning, what can stop a virus from forwarding the installer to a
> false SHA256.sig and false reposito
>On Tue, 20 Feb 2018 18:45:01 +0100
>Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
>> > I download SHA256.sig abd file sets from mirror, how can I trust it?
>>
>> You run a trusted signify binary, which was not obtained from the
>> mirror but is part of your existing install, to check the signature
>> on SHA256.sig.
Hey, at least some people think these systems are interesting.
I gave up trying to build much of anything on the Ubiquiti USG. I really
bought it to give me some play time with it over christmas to new year
holiday.
At work I have a USG Pro and it is capable of building GCC and LLVM,
albeit you
Hi Diana,
Have you tried the Ubiquiti Edge Router Lite / Pro...
They have a USB adapter inside on the PCB to allow for reasonably easy
Loading of install.fs etc
it may be worth trying as it uses a similar architecture as the UBiquiti USG...
I hope this is some help to you ...
I was using them a
On 2018-02-21, Jean-Michel Pouré wrote:
> On Tue, 20 Feb 2018 18:45:01 +0100
> Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
>> > I download SHA256.sig abd file sets from mirror, how can I trust it?
>>
>> You run a trusted signify binary, which was not obtained from the
>> mirror but is part of your existing install
>If someone is able to provide a fake ISO, he will also provide fake
>SHA256.sig and/or fake public key on the ISO. So there is no gain to
>provide such material as people will think "it is safe" whereas it is
>not.
that is true.
however, the real reason it isn't on the media is that internal
sig
On Wed, 21 Feb 2018 10:10:30 +0100
> I know this is a little bit farfetched, pardon my ignorence, but
> OpenBSD seeems vulnerable on first installation. In case of DNS
> poisoning, what can stop a virus from forwarding the installer to a
> false SHA256.sig and false repository? My guess would be
On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 10:10:30AM +0100, Jean-Michel Pouré wrote:
>
> I know this is a little bit farfetched, pardon my ignorence, but
> OpenBSD seeems vulnerable on first installation. In case of DNS
> poisoning, what can stop a virus from forwarding the installer to a
> false SHA256.sig and fal
On Tue, 20 Feb 2018 18:45:01 +0100
Stefan Sperling wrote:
> > I download SHA256.sig abd file sets from mirror, how can I trust it?
>
> You run a trusted signify binary, which was not obtained from the
> mirror but is part of your existing install, to check the signature
> on SHA256.sig.
I know
Let me guess, that /bsd link was another "security" idea from that
mercury chloride .org?
On 2018-02-21, Nicolas Schmidt wrote:
> Thanks Tim, that was right on the money! Indeed my „/bsd“ was a symbolic
> link, pointing to „/bsd.mp“. Because the target path of the symlink was
> absolute, when it tried to write the new kernel to „./mnt/bsd“ it of course
> pointed to the ramdisk.
>
>
2018-02-21 13:51 GMT+01:00 Nicolas Schmidt :
> Thanks Tim, that was right on the money! Indeed my „/bsd“ was a symbolic
> link, pointing to „/bsd.mp“. Because the target path of the symlink was
> absolute, when it tried to write the new kernel to „./mnt/bsd“ it of course
> pointed to the ramdisk.
I just tried building the base in 6.2-stable (building the kernel worked fine),
following the instructions in https://man.openbsd.org/release. Unfortunately,
the build process fails when trying to build libcurses. The error I get is
./make_keys keys.list > init_keytry.h
Segmentation faul
Xianwen,
Which application would use this SIM-card dongle? Just curious.
Regards,
dma
> On Feb 21, 2018, at 6:35 AM, Xianwen Chen wrote:
>
> Dear OpenBSD users,
>
> I am thinking of adding a SIM-card dongle to my laptop so that I can receive
> and send SMS, and receive and make phone calls.
Thanks Tim, that was right on the money! Indeed my „/bsd“ was a symbolic link,
pointing to „/bsd.mp“. Because the target path of the symlink was absolute,
when it tried to write the new kernel to „./mnt/bsd“ it of course pointed to
the ramdisk.
After removing that symlink, the upgrade process w
-> 2018-02-19 Mon 10:00, crimeangot...@nigge.rs, :
>
> Hey everyone, I am pretty stupid when it comes to less user friendly
> operating systems. I currently use slackware/windows and am thinking
> of using OpenBSD on either my thinkpad e420 or my libreboot t400. Are
> either supported(or at least
Dear OpenBSD users,
I am thinking of adding a SIM-card dongle to my laptop so that I can receive
and send SMS, and receive and make phone calls. Do you have prior experience
with that? Which USD dongle do you use?
Yours faithfully,
Xianwen
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