But, that's also up for
debate depending on if you interpret secure to be synonymous with
secure enough or with completely secure.
I think you hit the nail on the head there :)
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Ian Turner
Sent:
Theo does have a point...you gain nothing from tip toeing around these
issues...especially when dealing with people like them
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Duncan Patton a Campbell
Sent: 18 May 2009 12:04
To: Theo de Raadt
Unlike the western governments who don't give a shit about anyone or
anything as long as the super elite bankers are feeding them... As a British
citizen, I can say whole heartedly, mine and America's political system is
just BS, lets get the bankers to tell us what to do. Would you like an RFID
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Jason Dixon
Sent: 21 May 2009 17:08
To: Obiozor Okeke
Cc: misc@openbsd.org; Diana Eichert
Subject: Re: OpenBSD ESXi VMware image on Soekris Net5501
On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 08:05:52AM -0700,
Oh I didnt realise it was that under-poweredoh now I just feel stupid
:(
-Original Message-
From: Edho P Arief [mailto:edhopr...@gmail.com]
Sent: 21 May 2009 17:54
To: Michal
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: OpenBSD ESXi VMware image on Soekris Net5501
On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 11:35
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Gaby Vanhegan
Sent: 27 May 2009 18:00
To: OpenBSD general usage list
Subject: Re:
On 27 May 2009, at 17:38, bofh wrote:
On a post it in her drawer (and no, I will not be drawn into a
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Joachim Schipper
Sent: 10 June 2009 11:09
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: controlling the fan?
On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 11:53:39AM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
Scenario: 4.5 on MSI Wind PC,
Not that I am disagreeing or anything, more questioning...but would we say
OpenBSD is better then Nokia Checkpoint Firewalls (disregarding cost
here)...
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Joachim Schipper
Sent: 11 June 2009 10:14
Well yes, horse's for courses :)
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Stuart Henderson
Sent: 11 June 2009 16:51
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: OpenBSD HA
On 2009-06-11, Michal mic...@sharescope.co.uk wrote:
Not that I am
Someone once said this too me
Comparing FreeBSD and OpenBSD, FreeBSD is generally better at disk-related
I/O whereas OpenBSD handles net-I/O better. No test has been carried out to
prove this though.
Every offence to the person which said this, but they are not the best admin
ever, though
It wasn't an argument or a versus anything. It was just a question relating
to what he had said and the truth in it and the two OS's being used for
different reasons. That's all. No rage, no debate or looking for any winner!
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-sta...@freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-sta...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Charlie Kester
Sent: 19 June 2009 20:24
To: freebsd-sta...@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Open Vs Free BSD
On Fri 19 Jun 2009 at 11:23:26 PDT Michael R. Wayne wrote:
OK, I'm going
-Original Message-
From: Comhte [mailto:com...@daknet.org]
Sent: 26 June 2009 16:42
To: Michal
Subject: Re: random crashes on a firewall with OpenBSD 4.5-stable
Oh sorry :p
How could i test the power supply unit ?
Michal a icrit :
Other servers?? I don't mean PDU, I mean PSU...the power supply
With the Woolworths collapse, there are still some things up for grabs. It's
phase 4 now, almost all has gone, but people might be interested
http://www.hilcoind.com/sales/sale.asp?SALE_ID=1412SALE_REFERENCE_ID=DLNOCM
OFBC611200952523
As far as I'm aware ADD is on the autistic spectrum, and it is generally
believed that a lot of people in IT are on the spectrum, especially those in
the more technical areas, so in a way, your probably sort of right...in a
way.
Though, have you been tested for Asperger Syndrome?
-Original
What about ISPConfig. I can vouch for webmin, but ISP config comes highly
recommended by a lot of people. You also have Cpannel but I am not sure if
that has an OpenBSD port...or ISPConfig for that matter but you didn't
mention it so though I would...
-Original Message-
From:
I liked the video, I liked the concept, I give you more credit for using ogv
and I will defiantly have a look at MICO...but please...for love of atheism,
please dont keep highlighting bits of text if you make another one...it
made it incredibly tedious to watch at times.
All credit to the fact
Is there a set time when this will happen, say after it's been up for ~5
hours, or is it completely random, 2 days one time, 1 hour another
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Andres Salazar
Sent: 17 August 2009 01:29
To:
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Jacob Meuser
Sent: 19 August 2009 04:08
To: OpenBSD Misc
Subject: Re: 4.6 will be released on October 1st?
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 10:03:58PM +0300, Lars Nooden wrote:
wim wauters wrote:
That whole site as brilliant rants that remind me zero punctuation videos :)
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Gilles Chehade
Sent: 18 September 2009 12:22
To: Jacob Yocom-Piatt
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: OT: Iphone with
How dare she...you'd only be thinking about it ;)
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of Matt
Bettinger
Sent: 18 September 2009 15:39
To: Michael
Cc: m...@cvs.openbsd.org
Subject: Re: 4.6 postponed to Nov 1
On 9/18/09, Michael
...you just kill-joyed that whole page. It's a stupid rant that's quite funny
if you like that humour and he is going on the first version of the iphone,
non-jailbreak, (you cant bring that into it by the way as he is taking both
phones as-is) So please donbt suck the humour out of everything
Simen Stavdal wrote:
Hello misc,
I have an openbsd host running that I wish to access in different
manners depending on where the users connect from.
This host runs sftp chrooted for internet users, and at the same time,
I wish to administer the box with ssh.
At the same time, I do not wish
Janne Johansson wrote:
Nick Guenther wrote:
So, as nicely summarized at
http://www.h-online.com/open/news/item/Possible-data-loss-in-Ext4-740467.html
,
ext4 is kind of broken. It won't honor fsync and, as a /feature/, will
wait up to two minutes to write out data, leading to lots of files
So what...someone was wrong, someone's train of thought was wrong...so
what? Someone posts something and it's the wrong place...ok, say this
isn't the place and move on. If this person though they where helping
and people think they are not...well they have a different opinion but
really they
but if a questioner seems sincere there is usually a certain
level of friendliness in Linux community towards them.
I'm on Open/Free BSD, Fedora and Debian and while sometimes I find there
can be a bit of unnecessary rudeness on the OpenBSD ML it's a truck load
better then what you see on
On 14/04/2010 19:27, J Sisson wrote:
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 1:19 PM, Matthias Kilian k...@outback.escape.de
wrote:
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 12:38:56PM -0500, Ron McDowell wrote:
Yup, nowhere in that goals page does it say anything about don't be
rude to the casual users. Maybe that is why
I hate to admit this, but I am stumped by what quite clearly is such a
simple problem but I can't find the answer. I've seen many sites,
tutorials, guides but just cannot figure this one out...it's probably my
bad skills with PF but admiittedly some of the things I've read are for
older version of
On 11/05/2010 12:45, Toni Mueller wrote:
Hi,
I've been trying to figure out whether I can use OpenBSD in a nested
vlan scenario. I'm looking at a data centre where I want to get two
wires, each carrying several vlans, and funneling them home across a
WAN link. Various switch vendors claim
On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 08:09:00AM -0500, Matt Bettinger wrote:
That is unfortunate. I emailed theo if they could use some origin 350s
but got no response. They have been recycled yesterday. I do have sgi
memory etc if needed.
I don't want to sound like I'm digging at you...but that was
On 01/07/2010 14:15, Fred Snurd wrote:
fu...@safe-mail.netfu...@safe-mail.net wrote:
I have one question: Is the any way to put the mini
in server mode (make it boot automatically after Power Loss)?
While asking about server mode, is it also possible to run a PPC mini headless?
Thanks.
On 15/07/10 13:35, Leonardo Lombardo wrote:
Hi all,
do you know if there is any project/packet/something that runs on
openbsd similar to this http://www.medusabusiness.com/overview.html ?
I'm interested even to abandoned or uncomplete projects.
Thanks for any advice !
Leonardo
I have no
Again I got
Segmentation Fault, this time from sshd and ssh. Now I used gdb, and it
was telling me about some problem with libcrypto.so.18.0, my bad I did
not keep this file, I directly overwrote it with the lib from my backup
, which I needed to create the Softraid. After this sshd and ssh was
I've had no luck Googling this issue so thought I'd ask the experts.
Ok we have 4 firewalls providing internet connectivity whose internal interfaces
are on a single shared subnet, although the IPs are different. Outbound traffic
from the various hosts on this subnet are distributed across the
On 28/07/10 14:49, Robert wrote:
On Wed, 28 Jul 2010 05:50:19 -0600
Chris Bennettch...@bennettconstruction.biz wrote:
My advice is to setup a server with some websites (doesn't matter if the
are real or bogus) and learn to deal with the problems that pop-up. Be
sure to get an ISP with
snip
It may be an irrelevant coincidence but each
FTP site that this happened with was Microsoft FTP. It never happened (ie
FTP always worked fine) with other server types.
snip
I don't know if this matters, but I had some problems recently with
people downloading from external FTP servers
I think that this is the point. I installed from a plain
install46.iso, but then I thought I could have choosen which ports
tree to choose, -stable or -current. Where can I get more info about
the upgrade process to -current?
Thanks
Sebastiano
http://openbsd.org/anoncvs.html#starting
On 04/02/2010 23:02, Jean-Francois wrote:
All,
I am looking forward to reduce the TDP for a server planned to be built.
As low as possible shall be best, is AMD cool'n quiet operating with latest
OpenBSD ?
Regards
Depending on what you where looking at, you can reduce the voltages (if
Hello,
I think of doing this too.
What I would like to understand is if I will be able to use the frequency
change 1000 / 2000 MHz dynamic load based.
Regards
Do you mean change the frequency depending on load on the computer...?
This is very easy in a virtual environment, I am not
On 14/02/2010 02:40, TS Lura wrote:
Thank you all for the replies.
I might do a lecture on my own, presenting OpenBSD.
If I where to do that it, as a subsection, would be cool to give references
to other institutions that are using OpenBSD and why they are using it.
Why one would use
I would ignore this if you don't like Off topic posts, and flame me if
you so wish, just there is a small discussion going on in a debian mail
list and this post made me chuckle a bit...reminded me of Jason's
presentation about bsd dying. In hindsight, why I said anything in the
first place I will
On 24/02/2010 09:52, Jan Stary wrote:
On Feb 23 19:20:28, Noah McNallie wrote:
Hey guys. Noah here. I'd like to use openbsd on an older machine i have.
I've had it on there before and never tested something that i've been
testing on various operating systems lately. That's how well they do
On 17/03/2010 22:23, Glenn Beadle wrote:
Hello,
I know this is the OpenBSD mailing list, but I'm having an issue with
relayd on FreeBSD and was just hoping to get some direction.
I'm currently using relayd as a load balancer, and it's working fine.
Now I'm trying to add ssl accelration,
I think I can say without fear of contradiction, interest in 3.4
problems can only be measured by instruments sensitive enough to
measure pixie dust. Brandished by those rare birds, OpenBSD
Software Archeologists.
Seriously dude, you need to upgrade if you want OpenBSD help/suggestions!!
On 30/08/10 13:03, Jean-Francois wrote:
Hello,
I was thinking about how to help openbsd project, and since I am not able to
help in programming, I'm thinking about starting something aroung openbsd such
as a layer making it an easy enough to manage home nas server of good quality.
I have not
Well, it optionally comes with one of five (or so) different RAID
controllers, so if it is possible to check which - if any - it has it
would be great.
Thanks,
--
Bjvrn Sandellbi...@chalmers.se
You can look those up and check in the archives or on compatibility
lists. I think the main ones
Dmitry-T Is in OpenBSD lacks developers?
That might as well be the last message you post here.
Any little help you would get, you've just offended them.
reading his e-mails, I don't think he is trying to be offensive, I think
his English is just poor
It would be even better to simply ask them what exact Supermicro
hardware (specifically, model numbers) they're using to build these
systems. You can see Supermicro mentioned in thetitle of their site,
so that's definitely what they're using, even down to the controller
card offerings (some of
The books outlined bellow are not the same book the OP was asking about...
On 21/10/10 13:11, open...@e-solutions.re wrote:
I also bought this one this morning ;-)
And have it on PDF also !! Thanks to NOSTARCH!
On Thu, 21 Oct 2010 12:03:41 +0100,alastair.john...@trinity.ox.ac.uk
wrote:
For me, the ability to boot of the install media is not a requirement. I do
all my installs via pxeboot.
If there were enough room on the DVD, you could also provide the CDROM ISOs.
If a user REALLY needed bootable media, they could
burn the ISOs to CDROMs, and do that.
Again, these are only
I can confirm that OpenBSD doesn't always work as a virtual machine.
So I would focus on using OpenBSD as the host and using some other OS
as a client in QEMU.
If you insist and I don't know about the latest version, then vmware is
likely much more reliable than virtualbox but still more
Storage Controller
Embedded SATA Controller with Embedded RAID (0, 1)
This concerns me. Generally with RAID, it's either a known, branded raid
controller that can easily be replaced, or software raid. Anything in
the middle like raid on desktop motherboards I avoid for servers
On 23/11/10 13:56, Bahador NazariFard wrote:
OK
You are right.
But you know in this case your security level is not higher than virtual
machine.
Because your security level in complex chained system is not higher than
weakest point.In fact you are accepting the risk of using virtual machine.
I
On 25/11/10 12:22, Toni Mueller wrote:
Hi,
I discover that CARP and routing don't always mix well:
Internet --- host1 host2
If host1 and host2 have a CARP interface with the same IP, then packets
destined for that IP don't ever reach host2, even if the interface on
host1 is in BACKUP
On 25/11/10 13:20, Robert Hoffmann wrote:
On Thu, 25 Nov 2010 13:22:13 +0100
Toni Muelleropenbsd-m...@oeko.net wrote:
Internet --- host1 host2
Because your setup should rather look like this?
Internet --- switch --- host1 --- switch --- LAN
+ --- host2 +
wim wauters wrote:
If there's any UK developers on this list with cash to spend or budget
to burn;
Woolworths backoffice and serverroom equipment is being auctioned of.
There's lots of little IBM servers and a few IBM laptops and Cisco
routers -
full details here:
Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
irix wrote:
Hello Misc,
I am a customer and not the network administrator, and someone in
the network makes MiTM attack, a network of billet in the
uncontrolled swithes and ISP will not translate everything on the
managed.
Therefore, software
- Tethys wrote:
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Marco Peereboom sl...@peereboom.us wrote:
because it is.
And therein lies some of the problem with the OpenBSD community. Don't
get me wrong, I like OpenBSD, I use it, and have donated to the
project. But here we have a user that has
Sorry but I worked for a very successful company in the UK that didn't use
auto neg's on Cisco switches and routers so I wouldn't call it evil AT all,
please explain why manual is evil.
C
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Henning
With a CD install of 4.4 it didnt pick up the VMWare nic...that was with
VMware workstation 4 however...
-Original Message-
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of
Linus Swdlas
Sent: 18 March 2009 09:03
To: sonjaya
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re:
Something else that is trouberling me also, other then the face its wd2b and
wd1b. When I do raidctl -s raid0 it says
Raid0 Components:
Component0: failed
/dev/wd1b: optimal
No spares
...
This doesn't seam right to me and bearing in mind, the command I am having
trouble with is
This is a bit off topic IMHO and misc isn't a place to discuss history or
fairytales or to bitch about stuff like this. We just went through a week of
he said she said shit on the Wim/Eruopean Orders scandal, can we not start
another one. We already have enough noobs on here asking how to mount
Seriously, shut up, the pair of you, it's going no where. You're both being
immature twats about raid. Work on what your bitching about, or shut up, or
at least keep the e-mails between your self. I don't fancy reading through a
bitch fest for 6 more hours. This isn't a celebrity paparazzi
no support for globs
there. This means I would need to constantly adjust my filters when they
release new version into the wild.
Has anyone had any success with achieving something similiar? Frankly I
was a bit surprised that globs in value are not supported. Seems like a
great use case.
---
Michal
Hello
I've noticed a bit different behaviour with regard to delayed acks on OBSD.
Some other systems (2 linux distros, win2k/xp) I tested, pretty much acted
as I've always seen it - 1 ack per max. 2 segments, but no bigger delay than
some arbitrary value (looking at rfc, no more than 500ms,
Bihlmaier Andreas wrote:
Hello misc@,
I stumbled across a problem with all X terminal emulators in OpenBSD
(that is xterm and aterm, eterm and rxvt from ports).
None of the above seems to support 256 colors. I tried various
combinations of $TERM (xterm, xterm-color, xterm-xfree86,
Matthew R. Dempsky wrote:
Is my guess correct? If so, is it possible to have OpenBSD route
traffic both ways across the ethernet cable?
Thanks.
icmp's replies would go through loopback in such case.
If you wanted to force it to go over the cable, you could use route(8) to
manually set
Matthew R. Dempsky wrote:
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 11:24:17PM +0200, Michal Soltys wrote:
icmp's replies would go through loopback in such case.
Really? I got the impression from tcpdump that traffic from sk0 to sk1
(whether ICMP request or reply) always went over the ethernet cable
while
Matthew R. Dempsky wrote:
I have three machines that I'm using for testing network performance:
- 2.0GHz Pentium 4, 256MiB RAM, Ubuntu 6.06, e1000
- 266MHz Pentium II, 192MiB RAM, Debian Unstable, sk98lin
- 600MHz Pentium M, 256MiB RAM, OpenBSD 4.0-current, em(4)
[cut]
Can
Lawrence Horvath wrote:
Is there a way to monitor how much traffic is passing through a queue in
bps?
Besides pfctl -vvsq, try pftop from ports - it's great pf monitor, similar
in use to top.
Cedric Brisseau wrote:
I think spamd can't help a lot since mails aren't received directly.
Maybe you have similar cases with spamassassin+clamav or relaydb,
procmail ?
postfix (with basic smtpd restrictions that can do wonders)
clamav + spamassassin (with bayes enabled) ran from amavisd
You
So my question is this: is doing a remote network restore using
'bsd.rd' at all possible (or even suggested/recommended) or are
directly attached devices (IDE/SCSI/USB drives tapes drives) the
only supported restore(8) sources with 'bsd.rd'?
You can pipe ftp's output to restore.
smith wrote:
If you successfully do this, can you post how you did it?
The magic is in bsd's ftp(1) -o flag, which makes it a bit similar beast
to the wget. It can also pull the file using http or, since 4.0, https -
check AUTO-FETCHING FILES section in the man, it's quite fexible piece
with an application-like user interface (XHTML, CSS 2, AJAX).
Regards,
Michal
/mandoc %s
_build.[1-9n] /usr/bin/mandoc -Owidth=`stty size |
awk '{print $2 - 2}'` %s
to have the manpage fit my display. Especially usefull if I have split
screen in a tiling window manager, and the terminals are smaller than 80
columns.
--
Michal Mazurek
uhub1 at usb1 AMD OHCI root hub rev 1.00/1.00 addr 1
mtrr: K6-family MTRR support (2 registers)
nvram: invalid checksum
vscsi0 at root
scsibus0 at vscsi0: 256 targets
softraid0 at root
scsibus1 at softraid0: 256 targets
root on wd0a (c8fc559b0e991404.a) swap on wd0b dump on wd0b
--
Michal Mazurek
targets
root on wd0a (c8fc559b0e991404.a) swap on wd0b dump on wd0b
clock: unknown CMOS layout
--
Michal Mazurek
Has anybody successfully installed OpenBSD on a QNAP TS-412 Turbo NAS? I'm
looking for a NAS that I can keep in my room, and would like to run OpenBSD.
--
Michal Mazurek
);
+ }
}
if (sc-sc_hot != -1 sc-sc_hot = sc-sc_tmp) {
printf(%s: _HOT temperature\n, DEVNAME(sc));
--
Michal Mazurek
It was pointed out to me to attach acpidump and dmesg. Kernel is custom
built to include bce.
--
Michal Mazurek
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/octet-stream]
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/octet-stream]
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment
(a1b91d15922da01d.a) swap on wd0b dump on wd0b
--
Michal Mazurek
1.00
uhub4
port 1 powered
port 2 powered
port 3 powered
Controller /dev/usb5:
addr 1: full speed, self powered, config 1, OHCI root hub(0x),
ATI(0x1002), rev 1.00
uhub5
port 1 powered
port 2 powered
port 3 powered
Best Regards,
Michal
On 14.05.2015 15:02, Joel Sing wrote:
On Thursday 14 May 2015, Michal Lesniewski wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to configure OpenBSD 5.7 httpd with tls with
intermediate/chain certificate without no success.
my httpd.conf:
server default {
listen on 10.11.0.200 tls port 443
openssl s_client:
michal@michal-MSQ87TN:~$ openssl s_client -connect 10.11.0.200:443
CONNECTED(0003)
GET / HTTP/1.0
httpd log:
# httpd -dvv
startup
server_tls_load_keypair: using certificate /etc/ssl/server-unified.pem
server_tls_load_keypair: using private key /etc/ssl/private
On 14.05.2015 14:43, Abel Abraham Camarillo Ojeda wrote:
On Thu, May 14, 2015 at 7:35 AM, Michal Lesniewski
open...@michal.wildnet.pl wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to configure OpenBSD 5.7 httpd with tls with intermediate/chain
certificate without no success.
my httpd.conf:
server default
On 14.05.2015 16:01, Joel Sing wrote:
On Thursday 14 May 2015, Michal Lesniewski wrote:
On 14.05.2015 15:02, Joel Sing wrote:
On Thursday 14 May 2015, Michal Lesniewski wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to configure OpenBSD 5.7 httpd with tls with
intermediate/chain certificate without no success
On 2015-10-08 Thu 16:33, Aaron Poffenberger wrote:
> On 10/08/15 16:13, ian kremlin wrote:
> >Hello
> >
> >Syracuse, NY -- no CD, but poster has arrived. looks great!
> >
> >http://ce.gl/openbsd-5.8-poster.jpg
> >
> >ian
> >
> >On Wed, Oct 7, 2015 at 10:51 AM, M Wheeler <6f84c...@refn.co.uk>
.. i was wondering before, why *bin/factor is in games, now i get it.
Very nice observation!
Another factor game fake primes:
18446744073709551503 == 2^64 - 113 == 119026343 * 154980348121
18446744073709551499 == 2^64 - 117 == 363269 * 50779846542671
18446744073709551491 == 2^64 - 125 ==
there's more..
* worst case is 18446744030759878681, which is
previous_prime(sqrt(2^64))^2, which is
4294967291^2
* _smallest_ OpenBSD composite prime seems to be 4295360521,
which is 65539^2
Michal Bozon
> ...
> Michael
>
you have won!
>
> --- /usr/src/games/factor/factor.c Wed Oct 28 00:59:24 2009
> +++ factor.cTue Sep 8 20:06:44 2015
> @@ -192,6 +192,19 @@ pr_fact(u_int64_t val) /* Factor this value.
> */
> (void)putchar('\n');
> }
>
> +static u_int32_t
>
When compiling a program that calls pledge(2) with "-pg" the resulting
binary will execute seemingly fine, but at the very end die with:
Abort trap (core dumped)
I think the problem lies in a call to profil(2).
Is this a bug or a feature?
--
Michal Mazurek
> On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 10:23:22AM +0200, Michal Bozon wrote:
> > Hi, I've had an issue connecting to a wireless network
> > (by doas sh /etc/netstart $if). Its password contained
> > '#' character(s).
> >
> > Even adding "debug" keyword did not a
this is what i hear:
-With twitchy fingers on flashing keys
+Twitchy fingers, flashing keys
-always claiming "it was just a prank!"
+Claiming "it was just a prank!"
regards,
michal bozon
Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > As i said, my config with # in the password worked
> > > without any escaping or quoting needed.
> > >
> >
> > i understood from your mail that you'd had to escape it.
>
> that is correct.
...
now i'm jealous, i want to be able to read other
people's thoughts too.
> Even adding "debug" keyword did not assure me
> whether the problem is with my password definition:
> wpakey s3cur3-as-#311, for illustration (was not sure
> if the '#' has to be escaped somehow); or somewhere
> else. Finally, it was the latter, but it took me a while
> to realize that.
.. or
> -With twitchy fingers on flashing keys
> +Twitchy fingers, flashing keys
>
> -always claiming "it was just a prank!"
> +Claiming "it was just a prank!"
hi, this time (60c), i hear this:
Money, donate your pay.
Automate with a cron job and we'll be ok.
+Money, donate your pay.
Thoughtful
Hi, I've had an issue connecting to a wireless network
(by doas sh /etc/netstart $if). Its password contained
'#' character(s).
Even adding "debug" keyword did not assure me
whether the problem is with my password definition:
wpakey s3cur3-as-#311, for illustration (was not sure
if the '#' has to
Hi, this also bugs me. But ksh is not bash. Try hitting ESC
before an arrow. (I'm not sure if it is a consistent keystroke
behavior of ksh or not)
Here's one of older threads to this:
https://marc.info/?t=12126533981=1=2
regards,
Michal Bozon
Dave Cohen wrote:
...
I'll try to describe
> Why?
good(?) news: sysmerge is gone in 6.0
but not removed by 5.9 to 6.0 uprade process.
> > good(?) news: sysmerge is gone in 6.0
> > but not removed by 5.9 to 6.0 uprade process.
> >
>
> I really have a hard time understanding what you're trying to point out.
>
> Yes, systrace is gone, but it's an ordinary binary that does no harm,
> feel free to remove it if it makes you feel
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