look in /var/log/daemon
On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 10:06 AM, stanst...@panix.com wrote:
ON mainstream ntp, you can run ntpq -p to obatin the status, that is
what peers it is atached to, etc. I realize that the OpenBSD version has
beenrewriten to enhance security, and I am thankfull for that.
On Fri, Aug 21, 2009 at 6:41 AM, Edd Barrettvex...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
On Fri, Aug 21, 2009 at 1:03 PM, obvvbooo
obvvbbvvb...@googlemail.com wrote:
Hi,
Is there a way to use memory as a disk/partition? Such as mount it to
/mnt/mem or such things. I can't find information of this in
On Thu, Jul 23, 2009 at 1:59 PM, Frank Brodbeckf...@guug.de wrote:
Everything works like a charm except that sd2 (on which my /home lives)
doesn't get attached at boot time. This causes /etc/rc to yell at me
when it comes to point where it wants to do ``fsck -p''. As I am new to
softraid I am
Have a look in the ports@ archive for clish...
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 4:21 PM, Fernando Quintero
fernando.a.quint...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Tico, Im working in the project too.
Basically, how do you add new commands to nsh?, coding in c?, the
idea is use a .xml file with easy fields.
And,
On Wed, Jul 8, 2009 at 5:55 AM, Jan Staryh...@stare.cz wrote:
Before I buy http://download.asm.cz/inshop/prod/barebone/3V700A.pdf
I want to make sure that the components are supported by OpenBSD,
where supported means it works under 4.5 or current.
Both success stories and failure stories are
On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 8:59 AM, Gaby Vanhegang...@vanhegan.net wrote:
I'd gathered that from reading one of those threads to the end. I really
wanted to avoid having to build a custom kernel, especially if the results
might not even work. I suppose I was just inquiring about the status of
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 2:02 PM, Lars Nooden lars.cura...@gmail.com wrote:
OpenAFS is part of the base distro.
no it isn't.
the arla afs *client* is, but the afs server (milko) isn't. openafs is in ports.
--
GDB has a 'break' feature; why doesn't it have 'fix' too?
On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 2:03 PM, Fortunato
fortunato.montre...@earthlink.net wrote:
Thanks, tcpdump does it alright, but I'd like to have promiscuous mode on
without running tcpdump in the background if possible. (I'll take this as a
learning moment otherwise.) I'm trying to use the first vr[0-3]
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 8:12 PM, Uwe Dippel udip...@uniten.edu.my wrote:
You are right. I simply could not read from the man page the most obvious:
that
the state is displayed without any options (and me stupid tried almost all
options!).
So I guess it still is a cronjob to scan for
the last wimax device i used with openbsd acted a lot like a dsl
modem. plug in to the ethernet port, get an address from dhcp, log in
to the management interface over http, configure settings like the ISP
said to... done. don't remember who made it though.
On Sun, May 3, 2009 at 4:36 PM, Aaron
ports/net/spectrum-tools
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 10:44 PM, Marcel Dan marcel...@nwvd.net wrote:
Besides Kismet, are there other Site Survey tools or commercial software
applications that run on OpenBSD?
I'm wondering if I can use a couple different tools on OpenBSD for a site
survey to end
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvsm=123490079821382w=2
looks like this might already be fixed.
On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 12:06 PM, Jules Desforges ju...@jtel.co.uk wrote:
I admin multipe openbgp servers for a handful of companies.
On Monday (16th), I was notified that bgp had crashed on 4 out of
do you have any programs called echo ./daemon.2.gz?
you want -exec echo {} \;
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Morris, Roy
rmor...@internetsecure.com wrote:
I know this is more of a general 'huh' kind of thing, but I figured someone
could kick start my brain for me. Anyone know why this
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-announcem=120959605703777w=2
it was renamed to relayd
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 5:09 PM, Beavis pfu...@gmail.com wrote:
Greetings List,
I would like to ask some folks here regarding hoststated is it
still available for OpenBSD? All i got through google is
((tcp[0:2] = 10) (tcp[0:2] 120)) || ((tcp[2:2] = 10)
(tcp[2:2] 120))
On Sat, Jan 10, 2009 at 5:36 AM, Steve Laurie st...@foo-unix.org wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to find out if tcpdump can be used to listen on a particular
port range (ports 10 to 120 TCP inclusive to be specific) but can't
yeah, that was my mistake. i could've sworn i've set bigmem that way
to avoid a recompile... i'll shut up now.
On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 11:50 AM, Ted Unangst ted.unan...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 1:34 PM, Markus Hennecke
markus-henne...@markus-hennecke.de wrote:
So I read all
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 6:47 AM, Paul de Weerd we...@weirdnet.nl wrote:
You'll have to
enable bigmem
yes.
and compile a new kernel yourself.
no. the config program can do this without a recompile.
--
GDB has a 'break' feature; why doesn't it have 'fix' too?
DO NOT WANT!
you can already suppress the userid by setting the USER environment
variable, and the server operator gets your ip and/or hostname in the
logs already... if you must do something like this, make lynx honor
the HOST variable.
On Sat, Nov 22, 2008 at 3:08 PM, Dieter Rauschenberger
On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 3:55 PM, Dave Anderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Maybe I'm just confused, but my recollection is that one needs to set up
the appropriate hostname.interface-name to enable the interface before
the egress interface group works.
...
haven't tried this, but maybe you can
As long as your filesystems are still readable, you can use a more
comfortable tool:
mount /dev/wd0a /mnt
mount /dev/wd0d /mnt/var
mount /dev/wd0e /mnt/usr
/mnt/usr/sbin/chroot /mnt
vi (or mg) /etc/fstab
you could possibly even just copy your fstab from your freshly mounted
/var
On Sun, Oct 26, 2008 at 11:41 AM, Matthew Weigel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Actually, (2^32)-1, or 4GB, is the max size per file
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314463). I can see that being a problem if
you're trying to run a database off of your thumb drive, but otherwise... can
you give
On Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 4:14 PM, Prabhu Gurumurthy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I installed 4.4 (current) on Dell 2950, dmesg at the bottom, I am having
trouble seeing the Intel quad port PRO/1000 QP card in OpenBSD.
When I look into /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/{pcidevs, pcidevs.h} I see that the
i can send mail from root to my gmail. check your mail logs and mail queue.
On Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 3:44 PM, Jesus Sanchez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, using a clean install of OpenBSD 4.3, after doing some changes, the
/etc/rc.conf sendmail_flags uses /etc/mail/sendmail.cf as config file.
you can use config to edit the binary kernel.
go ahead and run it, there may be problems but they're not gonna get
fixed unless people test and submit bug reports. i'm running this at
home with good results but maybe i'm just lucky or have just the right
sort of hardware.
On Mon, Oct 6, 2008 at
:
Can you say how you turned it on. I haven't changed configs in openbsd
kernel. (only have done two kernel rebuilds for RAID things)
Want to see this in 4.5 so would like to help or will it be active in
current?
Thanks
Ben
On Mon, Oct 6, 2008 at 3:44 PM, Chris Kuethe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
PGP SIGNATURE-
On Wed, Sep 24, 2008 at 11:59 AM, Chris Kuethe [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
well you can do this
fsck -p
mount -a
TERM=vt220 vi /etc/fstab
(comment out the raid)
exit
to at least get your system booted multiuser again.
maybe boot a -current
library major version bumps. welcome to tracking -current... it happens.
you probably have something like php with php-mhash or php-mcrypt installed.
your httpd is linked against libssl.12, but the php goo is linked
against libssl.11.
you can either wait for new packages, or build 'em yourself.
On Thu, Aug 7, 2008 at 3:40 AM, Protocol Six Consulting
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Has anyone else seen this issue?
Any insights and/or solutions?
At least FPU instructions are broken when kqemu is at all active. I've
seen all kinds of breakage under WinXP, Ubuntu and OpenBSD when using
kqemu:
On Sun, Jul 20, 2008 at 3:00 AM, Jonathan Thornburg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
... In contrast, an
initially-zeroed imagefile would be sparse, with most blocks not
actually allocated, so I'd need the freespace reserve to make
imagefile block allocation reasonably fast
If you have some time and a spare disk, why not experiment with the 3
or 4 options available to you before settling on one.
- cfs
- svnd backed by a file in a filesystem
- svnd backed by a whole slice on disk
- softraid w/ crypto
softraid w/ crypto is still kind of a work in progress, but it's
gee... maybe you should GOOGLE FOR IT!
http://www.google.com/search?q=google+database
http://research.google.com/pubs/papers.html
http://www.mysql.com/customers/customer.php?id=75
On Tue, Jun 24, 2008 at 1:07 PM, badeguruji [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello Group,
sorry this is slightly off
as you said, it's an old machine. possibly the bios doesn't like the
boot cd format (non-emulation).
luckily, there are these wonderful floppy images you can use. your cd
burning program should allow you to build a bootable cd in El
Torito, or floppy emulation format - you might have better luck
On Wed, Jun 18, 2008 at 3:10 PM, Darrin Chandler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You'll notice those commits are preceeded by other commits. Often this
is the case when a device is added to a file and committed, then stuff
is autogenerated. Comitting the autogenerated stuff separately makes it
easier
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 8:59 AM, Yuri Spirin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is it possible to automatically update rules and tables containing
self keyword when interface address changes (like ($ext_if)
behaviour)? Did I missed something in manual?
depending on what you're trying to accomplish, some
On Sun, May 25, 2008 at 8:01 AM, elflord woods [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks everyone
i noticed on this page (http://openbsd.org/faq/faq6.html#Wireless) that my
card(ipw) can not be used as AP(access point)
Does this matter ?
if you only want them to talk to eachother, there's always
On Fri, May 23, 2008 at 12:40 AM, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I can see from the recent undeadly posts and pictures that most
developers are using laptops and I know you have to run -current to do
development work. I was just wondering if these laptops are for
development use only or
On Fri, May 23, 2008 at 3:44 PM, Jeffrey Thunder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
... I'd appreciate it very
much. I'm sure I'm missing something obvious.
I'd almost suggest that the obvious thing you're missing is to just
buy a switch. You can get an 8-port gig switch for $50 at fry's and
it'll
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 10:08 AM, Pollywog [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wednesday 21 May 2008 14:53:36 Mark Mathias wrote:
2008/5/21 Tomas Bodzar [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS2846711250.html
This thing really just sounds like a EEE clone, but with much reduced
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are
only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses available.
232 what?
Typesetting error. That should be 2^32 or 2**32 or pow(2, 32) or
2super32/32
23 or 8 what?
I'd say read the error a couple of times. DHCPD can't find the
definition of dhcpd-sync in /etc/services.
To see if there's a newer version of this file, you can check cvsweb
(http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/etc/services) and patch it
in yourself or use the shiny new sysmerge.sh to
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 1:10 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks everyone.
How about this then from page 4, about class A networks:
Each Class A network address has an 8-bit network prefix, with the
highest order bit set to 0 (zero) and a 7-bit network number, followed
by a
On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 5:02 PM, nuffnough [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2008/5/9 Thomas Althoff [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I don't recall Henning's rule, search the archive something like X times
your number of nics.
I completely misread this to mean Hennings rule of misc is Search the
archive X
On Thu, May 8, 2008 at 8:52 AM, Brian A. Seklecki
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nagios checks almost never have sufficient debugging mechanisms, and UDP
services dont send RST+ICMP.
you should get an ICMP port unreachable if there is no UDP service listening.
i haven't looked at nagios, but i
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 12:11 PM, Maxim Belooussov [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have 2 computers, thinkpad T42 (i386) and sun ultra 10 (sparc64).
Both are running current. I've tried to check in the kernel
configuration files (GENERIC) where I can enable RTHREADS option, but
couldn't find
no.
but you have the source, you can hack up your system however you'd like...
On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 12:51 PM, Parvinder Bhasin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Is there a way to login the passwords that were used in the bruteforce
attack?
thx.
--
GDB has a 'break' feature; why
On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 6:03 PM, Zbigniew Baniewski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not sure about amount of time sacrificed each time to prepare new complete
release... but perhaps it could be spared, if the system+packages is
refreshed piece-by-piece / month-by-month?
Tell ya what: try it and
On Thu, Apr 3, 2008 at 1:05 PM, Fred Snurd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yet I'm puzzled by the desire/need to move /dev into mfs. The timestamp on
the files within /dev don't change, so what is the reason for moving the
device
nodes into memory? Are there parameters which are frequently
Google is the ultimate arbitrator of mentoring organizations. You may
find the following sections of the GSoC faq useful
http://code.google.com/opensource/gsoc/2008/faqs.html#0.1_mentoring_orgs
http://code.google.com/opensource/gsoc/2008/faqs.html#0.1_org_eligible
On Sat, Mar 15, 2008 at 3:06 PM, Sevan / Venture37
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://blog.anamazingmind.com/2008/03/real-reason-we-use-linux.html
oh, and before you started to read, to be more comfortable just do
s/linux/openbsd/g
You mean
%s/linux/openbsd/g
not if you're using
Depends on the chip. As far as I can tell from that photo, it's an NEC
usb controller. The last add-on usb card I bought had an NEC
controller and it worked well enough...
On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 1:52 PM, Douglas A. Tutty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a new-to-me dual P-133 Tyan board with 4
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 11:01 PM, James Hartley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is it possible to watch the NMEA traffic originating from a USB GPS
device *while* attached via nmeaattach(8)?
no
Once nmeaattach(8) has attached to the device, any subsequent
connection attempted via cu(1) fails with
On Feb 11, 2008 8:55 AM, Jay Hart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Regardless, I can't seem to get mail forwarding working. The two main openbsd
books say all I need to do is create a .forwarding file and give the name of
the email address to forward to, but for two months not one email was
forwarded.
looks like you didn't rebuild config...
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html
On Feb 11, 2008 5:47 PM, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am trying to upgrade from 4.2-release to -current. I am following:
http://openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html
I did:
cd /usr
export [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/cvs
cvs
On Feb 10, 2008 8:31 AM, Jim Razmus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to compile a program that uses NAN. It includes math.h which
I'm told C99 says should define it. I've grepped the entire source tree
and read up on man 3 math and man 3 isinf. Still no joy.
Trying to compile the
On Feb 9, 2008 9:29 PM, Rod Whitworth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OpenBSD 4.2-stable (GENERIC) #4: Wed Jan 23 10:41:51 EST 2008
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
Too old, try a snapshot.
bios0: Intel Corporation D945GCNL
Evil, evil machine.
apm0 at bios0: Power
On Feb 6, 2008 7:57 PM, Douglas A. Tutty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Better to throttle the student's desktop than to throttle the student.
:)
You don't know the students I went there.
CK
--
GDB has a 'break' feature; why doesn't it have 'fix' too?
On Feb 2, 2008 3:17 PM, Brian [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* How do I determine my actual up and down provided to me from my service
provider?
The way I did it was to find a very popular torrent with lots of
seeders and leechers (a new linux distro would suffice) and leech as
much as possible
CVS fan-out takes a while. Just keep an eye on it, and I'll try get
the regular patch files and errata entries posted tonight.
CK
On Jan 29, 2008 11:06 AM, Maurice Janssen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I saw an email on the cvs list about some security fixes for 4.1-stable
and 4.2-stable. It
On Jan 28, 2008 11:46 AM, Lord Sporkton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
what keywords should be be searching for?
i have no idea what this would be called?
TLB Shootdowns from 20nm at dawn.
...
start reading up on processor affinity and maybe even asymmetric
multiprocessing.
--
GDB has a 'break'
disklabel is broken in that snapshot. use the one from today (2008-01-28)
On Jan 28, 2008 6:19 PM, Juan Miscaro [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to install using cd42.iso from the 230108 snapshot and I get
a critical error when I try to set up my hard disk.
Right after the question Do you
On Jan 15, 2008 12:06 PM, Chris Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tuesday 15 January 2008 18:13:15 Chris Cappuccio wrote:
Have you tried disabling apm? pcibios? What does your dmesg look like?
No, I haven't. I can try it at the weekend, but since the problem only
appears when I enable pf I
On Jan 14, 2008 4:06 PM, Max Hayden Chiz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Brian,
After your post (and several others), I tried BitTorrent out on my
network (sparc64 router + DOCSIS 2.0 cable connection; see
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=120019379210857w=2)
After some experimentation, I was able
On Jan 14, 2008 5:00 PM, Max Hayden Chiz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
cause the latency issue. By contrast if I limit the number of
connections, BitTorrent can consume almost all of the bandwidth and
the issue will not appear.
Perhaps this problem is specific to my configuration (or specific to
On 1/8/08, Kevin Stam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Either all of the various systems rtorrent crashes have similar bugs, or
rtorrent has bugs. I don't currently have the time to ascertain which is
which. Logic tells me it's more likely rtorrent, but I'm not a coder. Just
tried to help out, that's
On Dec 29, 2007 9:56 AM, Girish Venkatachalam
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just wondering if there was a way to undelete a file.
I have never run into the situation so far (surprise, surprise) but I
sure will in future.
dd, a hex editor and a love of jigsaw puzzles?
maybe sysutils/sleuthkit?
CK
Yes, there's value in it. NFS can benefit greatly if you can stuff a
single read/write block into a single ethernet frame (rather than
splitting it across 3 or 4). It's also helpful for wringing maximum
throughput out of your network at higher speeds. Think about the
interrupt rate to send 1Gb/s
On Dec 16, 2007 7:49 PM, Girish Venkatachalam
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am giving first aid after the war but still it will help.
$ grep sort ~/.muttrc
set sort=threads
Now just watch the fun.
Whenever you see a thread with the favorite subject line or as soon as
you read the first mail
On Dec 8, 2007 11:35 AM, Frank Bax [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Our hardware supplier deals almost exclusively with Windows users (no
surprise); in the low-end business market, they sell many systems with:
Intel D946GZIS motherboard
SigmaTel* STAC9227 audio codec
On Nov 17, 2007 4:24 AM, Jona Joachim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Who says the tool is used the wrong way?
You?
I think when OpenBSD developers go and write a howto about how to use a
tool in a certain way then you can be sure it's meant to be used this way.
Please refer to:
On 11/5/07, Insan Praja SW [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have several intel motherboard as I mentioned in the subject, and it
seem I can't get multiprocessing even after applying your patch
(http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-techm=118975639013313w=2), it still hangs
on boot (with acpi enabled, off
On 10/25/07, Boris Goldberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thank you very much for that (valuable) reply!
BTW, this is an argument for making an OpenNTPD ntpdate tool or adding
one_time_synchronization functionality into ntpd. :)
no, it's not making an argument for a one-shot sync attempt in
On 10/24/07, carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear sirs please: I will return to my original question. I just wondered if
xen
will be included into the OpenBSD's kernel to act as a para-virtualized DomU
or
not. Nothing more. I will not go into issues of the type is insecure or not.
On 10/23/07, Rogier Krieger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Using ntpd gets you better synchronisation without the need of setting
something up with cron. Rdate will work, but the work developers put
into (further integrating) ntpd makes rdate appear rather ...
outdated.
Rdate provides a single
On 10/23/07, Boris Goldberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The ntpd from OBSD is raw and lame yet. It takes days (!) to really
synchronize, adjusting time and clock frequency back and forth (even if you
start with -s) so it's too early to say that using it is right. It will
be right after
On 10/22/07, Brian A. Seklecki [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For my bsd-appliance project, I use CF media strictly for booting a MD/RD
kernel image. If you're doing a full-install on the CF card, you've got the
wrong approach. You're going to nuke your CF media with all of that atime
update
On 10/11/07, Sean Darby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Is there an alternative PGP or OpenPGP-like program available other than PGP
or GnuPG/GPG?
quoth http://www.cypherspace.org/openpgp/
* Tom Zerucha's reference OpenPGP implementation (C code, uses
openSSL library, BSD license -- home
On 10/10/07, Douglas A. Tutty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
If you take the requirement to view a few flash pages at face value,
you're saying that that defeats the whole purpose of OpenBSD and I'm
better off just sticking with Debian for the whole thing.
My mother is an accountant - OpenBSD
On 10/7/07, Timo Myyrd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just trying that but the slice encryption could use some instructions
how to get the proper C/H/S -values. I tried quickly your factor method
and got a errors from fdisk that those were incorrect and I've been
searching the net for some help on
On 10/6/07, Frank Bax [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Presto, a complete ISO install disk. It would have been trivial to add
some packages. It seems to me the install process cannot find filesets
if they are placed in root directory on cdrom; but that's easily
corrected using expected directory
On 10/6/07, Nick Guenther [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
are you sure you want to encrypt your *whole* drive though?
Yes. (says the guy who left his laptop in an airport last week)
Is your
data really that secret?
Why is that important? AKA it's my laptop, and I will explicitly
choose to disclose
On 10/4/07, Julian Leyh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
IIRC, you can't use vnd0 for partitions, somehow it causes problems. But
if you use vnd1 or a higher number, it should just work.
About the only reason I could see for that being the case is that the
release(8) process is hard-coded to use vnd0
On 10/4/07, James Hartley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
After reading the manpages for ntpd(8), ntpd.conf(5), nmeaattach(8),
I thought I had enough information to use a USB GPS device as a time
source.
In /etc/ntpd.conf, the only line left enabled is:
sensor cuaU0
nope sensor nmea0
On 10/3/07, carlopmart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks jacob, but I have received an email from openbsd's developer
that it isn't possible to encrypt partitions or disks ... only image
files created by dd command ...
The developer of whom you speak may be slightly misinformed, or just
hasn't
On 10/1/07, Chris Kuethe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Through mysterious circumstances, my Thinkpad T42 disappeared in the
Minneapolis airport today.
The TSA is pleased to announce that I am a dumbass.
In other words, I left it at the checkpoint, and they kept it under
lock and key until I called
Through mysterious circumstances, my Thinkpad T42 disappeared in the
Minneapolis airport today.
I know it went into the xray machine. I know I didn't have it in my
carry-on when I got home. When and where it went between those two
points, I cannot say. I've called the airports, the airlines, the
On 9/26/07, Chris Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Question is: do I still need to mount / ro on current cf cards or do they have
enough write cycles?
Go ahead and mount rw. I've put a couple of terabytes through a 256M
card with iogen, and it's doing fine. The wear-leveling mechanisms on
the
On 9/22/07, Douglas A. Tutty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Could someone who knows both the details of OBSDs security enhancements
and the details of SELinux comment?
A capsule summary of the situation is:
OpenBSD aims to improve security by taking advantage of easy-to-use,
hard-to-disable,
On 9/23/07, Todd Alan Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does lock -nv not work? I just read about this in BSD Hacks last
night, oddly enough.
# lock -nv
lock: unknown option -- v
usage: lock [-np] [-a style] [-t timeout]
-np will at least lock the terminal with your password and no timeout
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-techm=118975639013313w=2
On 9/16/07, Micha3 Koc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone,
I have a bunch of machines based on Intel motherboards, most of them are
D945GCNL,
but unfortunately I'm not able to use SMP because of ACPI problems.
Beside the kernel side
On 8/2/07, Timo Schoeler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi,
i have an amd64 system running for about six months now flawlessly
(however, due to following -current, not with uptimes 10 days).
today it crashed twice when i had two torrents active (not very big
ones, one 900MByte and one 1300MByte
On 7/3/07, Austin Hook [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Chris,
Thanks!
What kind of an issue was it? You just had to increase the
VM_PHYSSEG_MAX definition, or was that a misdirection?
Just had to increase VM_PHYSSEG_MAX.
BTW, way, how long does it take for such patches to show up in
On 6/29/07, Austin Hook [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Trying to set up a fairly heavy duty web server I encountered boot
problems with this fairly new machine using the release CD ROM. Using the
-c command at the boot prompt I already see error messages, before it
gives me the UKC ...
On 6/6/07, Karl R Balsmeier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
... and restarted named/bind.
-important because named/bind only parses the new changes in the config
after a restart -maybe i'm wrong here but it's a good practice to get in
the habit of [assuring daemons re-read config files after
On 5/29/07, Leon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm new to OpenBSD and I'm trying to setup a traffic shaping router using pf
and altq. The question I want to ask is: Can the kernel interrupt timer be
increased from 100 hz? and if so how do I do that? I though there would have
been a sysctl tunable
On 5/23/07, William Bulley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1) is the Netgear FA120 detected? (doesn't seem that it is
until after I unplug/re-plug in the USB cable)
Yes, though you may be asking for slightly too much power...
2) why do I have to unplug/re-plug in the USB cable for it
On 5/16/07, Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Don't worry about your CF too much, they are designed to be
written to! The main benefit of mounting RO is to avoid fsck.
No kidding. I've been running iogen on a 256MB CF card for over a week
now ... several hundred GB have been
On 5/10/07, Diana Eichert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
if there's one thing that really bugs me when I'm working on a Linux
system ( yes I do touch them on occasion ) is having to use minicom.
Minicom is nice if you want to control logging during your session,
and if you're doing something that
On 5/2/07, Matthew R. Dempsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've found a lot of documents cause xpdf to crash when using
MALLOC_OPTIONS=P, and now I've found a way to crash firefox as well.
Does anyone have advice on tracking down and fixing these bugs?
* build xpdf with debug symbols
cd
On 5/1/07, John Huss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to figure out if one (or any) security patches have been
applied to an OpenBSD 3.9 host.
There is no command line tool (like patchrev, patchlevel, showpatches,
patchinfo, etc.) that tells you reliably, unambigously what patches
are
d'oh! thanks, i'll get that fixed up
CK
On 5/1/07, Egbert Krook [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
The paths in the build instructions are wrong:
cd /usr/src/usr/usr.sbin/ospfd
-should be-
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/ospfd
cd /usr/src/usr/usr.sbin/ripd
-should be-
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/ripd
Kind
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