On 8/09/2012 6:14 AM, russell wrote:
...
my intention is to hack boot.c(my guess, at this point I am still just
looking at source) to check for and use some sort of global kernel
macaddress var pxeboot claims to set.
...
I played with a similar patch from here many years ago:
On 5/09/2012 1:36 PM, Rowdy OpenBSD wrote:
Is there any way to verify that distribution sets and packages that I
have downloaded have not been tampered with (e.g., by someone with
access to the mirror from which I downloaded them)?
Compare them to the CD set.
On 1/09/2012 8:22 PM, C. L. Martinez wrote:
Hi all,
I am trying to configure dhcpd daemon in a OpenBSD 5.1 host to use
iPXE options for booting vm guests via iscsi. To do this, I have
configured dhcpd.conf with these options:
option space ipxe;
option ipxe-encap-opts code 175 = encapsulate
On 14/06/2012 3:44 AM, Dominguez, Roland wrote:
I just came across this article and was wondering if it's legit:
http://www.h-online.com/open/news/item/OpenBSD-forked-to-create-Bitrig-161695
4.html
Those who do not study history...
On Wed, Jul 30, 2008 at 7:25 AM, Ingo Schwarze [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snippage]
Quite probably, your server might be terribly out of date.
OpenBSD servers ought to be updated at least once a year.
Please look at the first line of the output of dmesg(8).
If the server has been up for a
I've put up some notes about NextG networking on OpenBSD at
http://www.ajd.net.au/nextg/openbsd.html
including a kernel patch to suit ZTE handsets which will probably work
with other Qualcomm-based handsets.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
but doesn't work.
I use |exec /usr/local/bin/procmail.
Are you sure your procmail is in /usr/bin?
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
' system into your 'dev' system, but that is probably not
a good idea.
or should i just go with virtualization?
is it in that state already that i can?
I use qemu for quick-and-dirty tests. It works, but is a bit slow.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
of changes
to the code
You might want to check out Michael Lyu's Handbook of Software
Reliability Engineering
http://www.cse.cuhk.edu.hk/~lyu/book/reliability/
(You can now download all 800+ pages in pdf.)
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
/newsyslog.conf is one way, but hard to
maintain. Is Apache's own rotatelogs program the way to go?
I use newsyslog.
With make and m4, nothing is hard to maintain.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
On Wed, Sep 13, 2006 at 11:49:29PM -0400, steve szmidt wrote:
I don't get very emotional about either one and try to keep things simple.
I'm
curious to see how many not equally hard core users prefer vi over vim when
having a choice.
These days I mostly use vi, because it is already there.
, no? And with an mfs ``mount /var'' succeeds twice.
There'd be a problem with nfs mounted anything before dhclient is run.
The N stands for network...
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
and understanding the docs.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
products marginal.
I've had this happen with add-on DSP boards before.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
it to the beginning of PATH,
so having it at the end by default is a reasonable compromise.
Anyone with enough experience to know why they want it removed
also has enough experience to remove it themselves.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
On Tue, Mar 14, 2006 at 08:34:08PM +, Edd Barrett wrote:
Nice to see someone who says something constructive. Would you mind if
you can point me to a HOWTO on how to do that. I will be pleased to
help. I supose that I must compile gnumeric with debugging simbols
first, as someone
-weight window managers, try them all.
If memory is tight, rxvt uses a tad less than xterm.
On my laptop I use evilwm with rxvt, and get text windows of 58x167
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
On Sun, Jan 08, 2006 at 02:46:51PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
[snip]
The questions is, what *do* people use for updating /etc?
I use a cvs vendor branch.
Regards,
Andrew Dalgleish
On Fri, Dec 23, 2005 at 11:51:14AM -0600, L. V. Lammert wrote:
Better recommendation - rsync /home to an external system (especially if
you're using Maildir). WAY less overhead! You can even backup more often.
An archive machine is less costly than a bundle of DVD-RWs, and you don't
have to
On Thu, Nov 10, 2005 at 08:24:35AM -0600, Justin Krejci wrote:
It did not core dump on me.
Same here.
On Thu, Aug 18, 2005 at 10:28:45AM -0500, Dave Feustel wrote:
The c't article, the link to which I posted to misc@ yesterday, stated that a
data
recovery company was able to retrieve the user disk password (set by the
authors
of the article) from the disk, aparently without opening (and
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