OT: Test new email conf

2024-03-01 Thread Nowarez Market
Hello,

You can take it like a *curtesy email* to disclose my new email address.
Kindly thxs and take care of the pacman..


> N0\/\/@r€Z
> --
>    /\/\@rk€T



Re: qwx0 / QCNFA765 Does 802.11g Only

2024-03-01 Thread Stefan Sperling
On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 07:14:17PM -0500, Philippe Meunier wrote:
> Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: sending assoc_req to 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c on 
> channel 40 mode 11a
> Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: association failed (status 18) for 
> 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c
> Mar  1 18:22:23 t14 /bsd: qwx0: association timed out for 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c

Apparently the AP refused association because the client's request does
not meet the basic rate set requirements (status 18).

qwx works fine on my 11ac AP in 11a mode. This driver does not yet
support 11n/11ac modes, and adding such support will require a big
chunk of further development time, it won't be ready for 7.5.

Does your AP have support for "legacy 11a/b/g" clients disabled somehow?
Some APs advertise such options for performance in their config and may
need to be disabled to make it work.

Can you please show a beacon of this AP?

One line from tcpdump this command while trying to associate to the AP should
suffice:

  tcdump -n -i qwx0 -y IEEE802_11_RADIO -s 1500 -v wlan host 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c

I am looking for the field which lists the supported rates:

   ... rates 6M* 9M 12M* 18M 24M* 36M 48M 54M, ...



qwx0 / QCNFA765 Does 802.11g Only

2024-03-01 Thread Philippe Meunier
Hi,

I have a Thinkpad T14g3 (dmesg at the end, using the most recent snapshot)
with a QCNFA765 Wifi card.  The local access point (not under my control)
provides two networks, one 802.11g one (Fios-RSXPW) and one 802.11ac
(Fios-RSXPW-5G):

$ ifconfig qwx0 scan
qwx0: flags=808843 mtu 1500
lladdr 04:7b:cb:b9:0b:44
index 2 priority 4 llprio 3
groups: wlan
media: IEEE802.11 autoselect (OFDM6 mode 11a)
status: no network
ieee80211: join Fios-RSXPW-5G chan 40 bssid 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c -86dBm 
wpakey wpaprotos wpa2 wpaakms psk wpaciphers ccmp wpagroupcipher ccmp
nwid 0x00 chan 40 bssid 
22:c0:47:bb:bc:4d -32dBm HT-MCS23 privacy,spectrum_mgmt,radio_measurement,wpa2 
[...]
nwid Fios-RSXPW-5G chan 40 bssid 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c -32dBm 
HT-MCS23 privacy,spectrum_mgmt,radio_measurement,wpa2 
nwid Fios-RSXPW chan 11 bssid 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4e -40dBm HT-MCS23 
privacy,short_preamble,short_slottime,radio_measurement,wpa2 
[...]
nwid Biscuit chan 48 bssid 78:45:58:f7:a2:dd -90dBm HT-MCS31 
privacy,spectrum_mgmt,radio_measurement,wpa2 

Both networks use the same password and I can connect to Fios-RSXPW without
problem (I'm using it to send this message).  I cannot connect to
Fios-RSXPW-5G, though:

$ while true; do ifconfig qwx0; sleep 1; done
qwx0: flags=808843 mtu 1500
lladdr 04:7b:cb:b9:0b:44
index 2 priority 4 llprio 3
groups: wlan
media: IEEE802.11 autoselect (OFDM6 mode 11a)
status: no network
ieee80211: join ""
[...]
qwx0: flags=808843 mtu 1500
lladdr 04:7b:cb:b9:0b:44
index 2 priority 4 llprio 3
groups: wlan
media: IEEE802.11 autoselect (OFDM6)
status: no network
ieee80211: join Fios-RSXPW-5G wpakey wpaprotos wpa2 wpaakms psk 
wpaciphers ccmp wpagroupcipher ccmp
[...]
qwx0: flags=808843 mtu 1500
lladdr 04:7b:cb:b9:0b:44
index 2 priority 4 llprio 3
groups: wlan
media: IEEE802.11 autoselect (OFDM6 mode 11a)
status: no network
ieee80211: join Fios-RSXPW-5G chan 40 bssid 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c -83dBm 
wpakey wpaprotos wpa2 wpaakms psk wpaciphers ccmp wpagroupcipher ccmp

(I've cut redundant output.)  The interface just cycles through the three
states listed above for ever without associating with the access point and
so never gets an IP address.

Here's the output I get when putting the interface in debug mode (again,
I've cut redundant / unrelated output):

Mar  1 18:22:13 t14 /bsd: qwx0: end passive scan
Mar  1 18:22:13 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 00:57:94:d5:04:f2   40  +169 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "D504E2_5G"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:13 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4e   11  +216 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Fios-RSXPW"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:13 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - f0:72:ea:44:2c:bd  149  +168 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Nest Home"!
Mar  1 18:22:13 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - fa:8f:ca:76:66:01   48  +176 54M   ess   
no!  rsn! ""!
Mar  1 18:22:13 t14 /bsd: qwx0: SCAN -> SCAN
Mar  1 18:22:16 t14 /bsd: qwx0: end passive scan
Mar  1 18:22:16 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 00:57:94:d5:04:f2   40  +169 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "D504E2_5G"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:16 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4e   11  +214 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Fios-RSXPW"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:16 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - f0:72:ea:44:2c:bd  149  +168 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Nest Home"!
Mar  1 18:22:16 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - fa:8f:ca:76:66:01   48  +176 54M   ess   
no!  rsn! ""!
Mar  1 18:22:16 t14 /bsd: qwx0: SCAN -> SCAN
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: end passive scan
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 00:57:94:d5:04:f2   40  +169 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "D504E2_5G"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: + 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c   40  +225 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Fios-RSXPW-5G"
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4e   11  +214 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Fios-RSXPW"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - f0:72:ea:44:2c:bd  149  +168 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "Nest Home"!
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - fa:8f:ca:76:66:01   48  +176 54M   ess   
no!  rsn! ""!
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: SCAN -> AUTH
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: sending auth to 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c on channel 40 
mode 11a
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: AUTH -> ASSOC
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: sending assoc_req to 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c on 
channel 40 mode 11a
Mar  1 18:22:19 t14 /bsd: qwx0: association failed (status 18) for 
20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c
Mar  1 18:22:23 t14 /bsd: qwx0: association timed out for 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c
Mar  1 18:22:23 t14 /bsd: qwx0: ASSOC -> SCAN
Mar  1 18:22:27 t14 /bsd: qwx0: end passive scan
Mar  1 18:22:27 t14 /bsd: qwx0: best AP 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4c "Fios-RSXPW-5G" score 
56
Mar  1 18:22:27 t14 /bsd: qwx0: switching to network "Fios-RSXPW-5G"
Mar  1 18:22:27 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 00:57:94:d5:04:f2   40  +170 54M   ess  
privacy   rsn  "D504E2_5G"!
[...]
Mar  1 18:22:27 t14 /bsd: qwx0: - 20:c0:47:bb:bc:4e   11! 

Re: how to external encrypted drive that supports OpenBSD and FreeBSD?

2024-03-01 Thread Kirill A . Korinsky
On Fri, 01 Mar 2024 18:08:39 +0100,
beecdadd...@danwin1210.de wrote:
> 
> that will do! is just backup! thank you very much

If you need only backup... why not use restic?

> what if it wasn't read-only and was active partition with writing?
> 

See https://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#softraid as anoter way.

-- 
wbr, Kirill



Re: how to external encrypted drive that supports OpenBSD and FreeBSD?

2024-03-01 Thread Stefan Kreutz
Depending on your needs, you could use a FUSE-based solution like encfs.
There are numerous alternatives such as gocryptfs, or ecryptfs but AFAIK
they don't work with OpenBSD's FUSE implementation.

Rclone supports encrypted remotes. Without FUSE you'd need to copy files
manually, though.

You could also have a look at VeraCrypt.

On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 04:50:01PM -, beecdadd...@danwin1210.de wrote:
> hi list
> do you have any recommendation? internet can't find my answer
> 
> drive is external usb and it has to be encrypted..
> something that can also supports freeBSD is what I need
> fast solution is fat32, but how do I encrypt it? freebsd doesn't have
> softraid or bioctl
> 



Re: how to external encrypted drive that supports OpenBSD and FreeBSD?

2024-03-01 Thread beecdaddict
that will do! is just backup! thank you very much
what if it wasn't read-only and was active partition with writing?

and doesn't freebsd support ffs? I was reading manual and found something
about it

On Fri, March 1, 2024 5:00 pm, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 04:50:01PM -, beecdadd...@danwin1210.de
> wrote:
>
>> hi list do you have any recommendation? internet can't find my answer
>>
>> drive is external usb and it has to be encrypted.. something that can
>> also supports freeBSD is what I need fast solution is fat32, but how do
>> I encrypt it? freebsd doesn't have
>> softraid or bioctl
>
> What is your use case exactly?
>
>
> Do you actually need to re-write the data on the disk after it's been
> written, or is this just a one-off archiving of data to an encrypted volume
> that might need to be read back on either OS in the future?
>
> If the data is unchanging or rarely changing, you could use a FAT
> volume to store tar archives and encrypt those tar archives individually
> using a symmetric cipher using the openssl command line tool.
>





Re: how to external encrypted drive that supports OpenBSD and FreeBSD?

2024-03-01 Thread Crystal Kolipe
On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 04:50:01PM -, beecdadd...@danwin1210.de wrote:
> hi list
> do you have any recommendation? internet can't find my answer
> 
> drive is external usb and it has to be encrypted..
> something that can also supports freeBSD is what I need
> fast solution is fat32, but how do I encrypt it? freebsd doesn't have
> softraid or bioctl

What is your use case exactly?

Do you actually need to re-write the data on the disk after it's been
written, or is this just a one-off archiving of data to an encrypted
volume that might need to be read back on either OS in the future?

If the data is unchanging or rarely changing, you could use a FAT
volume to store tar archives and encrypt those tar archives
individually using a symmetric cipher using the openssl command line
tool.



how to external encrypted drive that supports OpenBSD and FreeBSD?

2024-03-01 Thread beecdaddict
hi list
do you have any recommendation? internet can't find my answer

drive is external usb and it has to be encrypted..
something that can also supports freeBSD is what I need
fast solution is fat32, but how do I encrypt it? freebsd doesn't have
softraid or bioctl