t; permit nopass msv cmd touch
> permit nopass setenv { TRUSTED_PKG_PATH TERM } msv cmd pkg_add
> permit nopass setenv { TERM } msv cmd pkg_delete
>
> permit keepenv nopass msv as _pbuild
> permit keepenv nopass msv as _pfetch
>
> permit msv as root
>
Hi, have you given a look at this tutorial:
https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2020-01-11-privsep.html
--
Ottavio Caruso
a multiple question trainer
written circa 2006. Not to mention countless old electrical/electronic
software that nobody is bothered porting to 64-bit *nix.
--
Ottavio Caruso
distros that
has been taken over by "corporate" are Red Hat (but it was annoyingly
corporate-friendly even before it was bought by IBM) and SuSE. The
remaining have not been taken over by
"corporate" if they wanted to.
Cheap digs don't usually get the facts right.
--
Ottavio Caruso
ME="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_COLLATE="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MONETARY="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MESSAGES="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_PAPER="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_NAME="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_ADDRESS="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_TELEPHONE="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MEASUREMENT="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_IDENTIFICATION="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_ALL=
--
Ottavio Caruso
On Tue, 12 May 2020 at 02:13, wrote:
>
> Linux GNU software has hardly visible NSA backdoors
If you have the technical skills to back this argument up, please look
in the "Linux GNU software" source, find the backdoors and report
back.
--
Ottavio Caruso
x27;t have a clue. It's ok to ask,
but don't make sweeping statements if you don't have a clue
4) Learn how to quote a message.
--
Ottavio Caruso
at still relevant.
Some of these documents have a proprietary licence attached to it and
I believe it's due to the 1994 AT&T settlement. There are third party
collections (like this: https://github.com/sergev/4.4BSD-Lite2) but
I'm not sure if one could import them all in the source tree or in the
ports tree without violating some copyright here and there.
--
Ottavio Caruso
On Tue, 19 May 2020 at 13:31, Marc Espie wrote:
>
> On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 08:43:19PM +0100, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> > Some of these documents have a proprietary licence attached to it and
> > I believe it's due to the 1994 AT&T settlement. There are third party
> &
are how you did it. bsd.rd, sysupgrade, manual upgrade?
--
Ottavio Caruso
t -smp $(nproc) \
-nic user,model=virtio-net-pci
--
Ottavio Caruso
enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow".
--
Ottavio Caruso
-f PACKAGE-NAME "
but that would not give me full pathnames.
I've looked at the pkg_info man page but I couldn't find a clue.
Thanks.
--
Ottavio Caruso
On Sun, 7 Jun 2020 at 21:11, Ottavio Caruso
wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> "pkg_info -L PACKAGE-NAME"
>
> will give me a list of all the files within each package, regardless
> of whether the package is installed or not.
>
> How can I restrict the output to only instal
On Sun, 7 Jun 2020 at 21:37, Daniel Jakots wrote:
>
> On Sun, 7 Jun 2020 21:11:57 +0100, Ottavio Caruso
> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > "pkg_info -L PACKAGE-NAME"
> >
> > will give me a list of all the files within each package, regardless
> &g
On Sun, 7 Jun 2020 at 22:26, Udo Zorn wrote:
>
> On Sun, Jun 07, 2020 at 10:04:53PM +0100, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> > On Sun, 7 Jun 2020 at 21:37, Daniel Jakots wrote:
> > >
> > > On Sun, 7 Jun 2020 21:11:57 +0100, Ottavio Caruso
> > > wrote:
> &g
On Mon, 8 Jun 2020 at 11:31, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> On 2020-06-08, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> > I probably didn't make myself clear and I apologize. I'd like to have
> > a list of files for just one package, and only if that package has
> > been installed. I
ricity problem.
Isn't it just easier to buy a UPS?
--
Ottavio Caruso
gt;
What do you mean by "login prompt"? Maybe the MOTD?
You need to login in your system, right? Unless your program is a
shell (and registered in /etc/shells), you won't be able to log in.
https://man.openbsd.org/shells.5
https://man.openbsd.org/login.1
--
Ottavio Caruso
ts cvs
tree).
Thanks
--
Ottavio Caruso
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
iously not so. Looking on:
https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=index&fts=OpenBSD
it appears machines running -current have a higher #number.
--
Ottavio Caruso
erspace will have to be compatible with the
kernel.
Back in 2012, I struggled to install Slackware ARM on a similar
Chromebook and then I gave up (there might be traces of it on the
Slackware-arm mailing list archives).
--
Ottavio Caruso
e" just shows an empty and blank window,
> no menu, no address bar.
> May be there is some command line flags I am not aware of?
Can you not just "ssh -Y" into your machine and then launch Chrome
from the command line? At least, you'd get some debug info.
--
Ottavio Caruso
D:~$ touch .hidden/test-file
oc@OpenBSD:~$ ls -R
It looks like "ls -R" is showing some hidden directories but not all.
--
Ottavio Caruso
compiles ports? If OpenBSD is anything similar to
NetBSD, on the latter having multiple libs might cause build
breakages.
--
Ottavio Caruso
quot;, you
> will find a lot results.
I struggle to see how this is relevant to the OP's question.
--
Ottavio Caruso
https://cdn.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD
oc@OpenBSD:~$ doas pkg_add bzip2
quirks-3.187 signed on 2020-05-19T14:41:48Z
bzip2-1.0.8: ok
No stalls here.
--
Ottavio Caruso
boot.conf
$ cat /etc/boot.conf
stty com0 9600
set tty com0
and ttys:
$ grep tty00 /etc/ttys
tty00 "/usr/libexec/getty std.9600" vt220on secure
I can then access the VM via either telnet (to the virtualized serial
console) or ssh.
--
Ottavio Caruso
if [ -f "$HOME/.kshrc" ]; then
. "$HOME/.kshrc"
fi
fi
I wonder if there is a more elegant solution.
--
Ottavio Caruso
On 15/09/2020 14:44, Vincenzo Nicosia wrote:
On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 02:08:16PM +0100, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
Hi,
I have this in ~/.kshrc :
PS1="\u@\h:\w\$ "
which works fine in ksh:
oc@OpenBSD:~$
However, if I open a sh subshell, I get:
\u@OpenBSD:\w$
which is not very nice
On 17/09/2020 00:58, Ashlen wrote:
On 20/09/15 05:49PM, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
Maybe it's just because OpenBSD sh is just ksh in disguise or there
might be other reasons that I obviously don't know.
Yep, you're right. They share the same inode.
ls -li /bin/{,k}sh
77862 -r-
On 17/09/2020 10:40, Tom H wrote:
On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 9:33 AM Ottavio Caruso
wrote:
On 17/09/2020 00:58, Ashlen wrote:
On 20/09/15 05:49PM, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
Maybe it's just because OpenBSD sh is just ksh in disguise or there
might be other reasons that I obviously don't k
On 18/09/2020 09:01, Tom H wrote:
On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 3:16 PM Ottavio Caruso
wrote:
On 17/09/2020 10:40, Tom H wrote:
You've said that you're now sourcing "$HOME/.kshrc" if
"SKSH_VERSION" exists.
You could add the sourcing of "$HOME/.shrc" if &q
bably will work 100%
fine only on Windows/ChromeOS.
Libreoffice is not web based but can work on remote repositories:
https://help.libreoffice.org/6.3/en-US/text/shared/guide/cmis-remote-files-setup.html
--
Ottavio Caruso
)/vmd(8) servers.
Committed, thanks.
Ingo
BTW, for the non-initiated, what is this?
--
Ottavio Caruso
ndard input or standard output. The default
varies by system; on FreeBSD, the default is /dev/sa0; on Linux, the
default is /dev/st0.
I assume it's stdin when compressing and stdout when expanding. Or maybe
vice versa?
--
Ottavio Caruso
A: Because it messes up the order in which people n
an be configured to remove or hide duplicates.
--
Ottavio Caruso
On 24/10/2020 11:33, Kevin Shell wrote:
On Sat, Oct 24, 2020 at 08:55:34AM +0100, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
On 24/10/2020 02:27, Kevin Shell wrote:
Why I keep received 2 copies email again?
Please don't To or Cc me.:-)
Because this is how old school mailing lists work. To: the OP and cc
I'd like to have your opinion about it.
Thanks
--
Ottavio Caruso
or the array is invalid.
I'm not sure if I'm getting what you're saying. I have a barebone
plain-vanilla OpenBSD 6.6 installation and I have ksh as my login
shell. I can do command and file completion with [TAB] on any commands
with a hyphen (pkg-config, ssh-add, ssh-agent, ssh-keygen, ssh-keyscan
and so on).
--
Ottavio Caruso
$ ls /var/log/messages*
/var/log/messages /var/log/messages.1.gz
/var/log/messages.0.gz /var/log/messages.2.gz
--
Ottavio Caruso
On 08/02/2020 10:28, whistlez...@riseup.net wrote:
Hi,
I have some strange output from dmesg, what could be ?
At the follwoing link I've posted some screenshots:
https://postimg.cc/gallery/1o4wsaw74/
Thank you
All I can think of is filesystem corruption.
--
Ottavio Caruso
BSD/doc/obsd-faq.txt> mirrored in
base system?
Or maybe it's there but I could't find it:
oc@OpenBSD:~$ find /usr/share/ -iname *faq.txt*
oc@OpenBSD:~$
--
Ottavio Caruso
single document makes it
easier to search for a specific command.
There's a one-page text file on the ftp server but this is quite old
(it doesn't even mention doas).
--
Ottavio Caruso
skills to actually
contribute code to upstream (incidentally, I have submitted bug
reports and small patches to NetBSD and that was it).
For the sake of clarity: I won't propose or submit any changes on this
issue, as this is clearly not welcome. Amen to that and let's move on.
--
Ottavio Caruso
d down
live usb installations of Linux distros (DSL was one of them that I
remember). I ignore if OpenBSD comes with such a solution out the box,
but I'm sure it wouldn't be difficult to make your own read-only
install. Then, you could either reboot from it or run it through an
emulator.
--
Ottavio Caruso
wise it will crash into a
ddb debug shell)
--
Ottavio Caruso
164.850 ms *
17 * * *
18 * * *
19 * * *
20 * * *
21 * * *
22 * * *
23 * * *
24 * * *
25 * * *
26 * * *
27 * * *
28 * * *
29 * * *
--
Ottavio Caruso
;ve never liked unattended, automatic, Debian-style system upgrades. A
lot of things can go wrong.
--
Ottavio Caruso
nkful.
(Pardon my bad english, it's not my first language)
As far as I know, you can't achieve that in the BSD ecosystem. TLP uses
a Linux kernel model (acpi-call-dkms).
https://github.com/mkottman/acpi_call
--
Ottavio Caruso
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally re
me. So, if somebody can please
tell me where I can set it, I would be very very thankful.
(Pardon my bad english, it's not my first language)
acpibat, as it stands, doesn't and cannot set/manipulate battery charge
threshold levels.
--
Ottavio Caruso
A: Because it messe
On 09/03/2021 04:53, s...@skolma.com wrote:
perhaps as your name suguests you may be located in the Indian sub continent, and Mains Power may be intermittent..
God, how patronizing is that?
--
Ottavio Caruso
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is
On 09/03/2021 05:25, Subhaditya Nath wrote:
And the actual work is done by something called the 'natacpi framework',
which is implemented by the linux kernel itself.
Which is what I said in my previous post.
--
Ottavio Caruso
A: Because it messes up the order in which people nor
privsep.
http://www.openbsd.org/events.html
--
Ottavio Caruso
On 31/03/2021 04:46, Marc Espie wrote:
On Tue, Mar 23, 2021 at 09:41:06AM +, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
On 23/03/2021 05:53, misopolemiac wrote:
I'd appreciate some pointers to documentation or minimal examples of
the 3-process privilege separation model for OpenBSD's daemons.
Interne
On Thu, 3 Nov 2022 at 20:50, Manuel Giraud wrote:
[For some reasons your message got into spam and is not even displayed
on the mail archive]
>
> Ottavio Caruso writes:
>
> [...]
>
> > So I officially joined the club of idiots who don't back up their
> > partiti
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