Re: problems with Squirrelmail IMAP connection to courier-imap

2006-02-07 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 2006-02-07 11:00, Joakim Roubert wrote:

> Configtest fails in IMAP connection (and so does, naturally, login).

...but after some experiments with the config file, it seems I do now
also belong to the people that have Squirrelmail running.

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



problems with Squirrelmail IMAP connection to courier-imap

2006-02-07 Thread Joakim Roubert
Hi!

I have been searching the archives to find info on my problem, but I
only seem to find a lot of "using courier-imap, apache chrooted and
squirrelmail, and things work perfectly"-messages. I use that
combination of programs, but have some problems.

Setup:
OBSD 3.8/i386, Apache 1.3 (chrooted), courier-imap-3.0.5p2, Squirrelmail
1.4.5 (put in the /var/www directory).

I only allow port 993 SSL IMAP connections, except from 127.0.0.1 where
plain 143 is allowed. Using IMAP with Outlook and Thunderbird on port
993 works just fine. My regular PHP-based web-pages work perfectly, and
I also can get the Squirrelmail login screen and configtest screen.
Squirrelmail is set to use port 143 on localhost.

Configtest fails in IMAP connection (and so does, naturally, login).
In my local network, the OBSD machine is 192.168.0.12. The cumputer
where I run the webbrowser is 192.168.0.26. But checking the logs for:

Feb  7 10:52:32 cub imapd-ssl: LOGIN, user=jokke, ip=[:::192.168.0.11]

Obviously, a connection from 192.168.0.11 on port 143 will be rejected,
since only 127.0.0.1 is allowed here, but where does it get 192.168.0.11
(which is another computer on the network, not being used by anyone
right now)?

Any input or light on this issue would be very appreciated!

Best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: RAIDframe stability and reliability

2006-02-05 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 30/01/06 08:32, Joachim Schipper wrote:

> that a dying drive on a IDE bus is likely to confuse the bus
> sufficiently that the other drive on the bus (if there is one) goes down
> as well. 

I guess this would be avoided when the drives are on different buses, if
 there is space for using only one drive per bus?

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: std. paths for IMAP folders

2006-01-25 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 25/01/06 22:06, Tomasz Kniaz wrote:

> Yes, $HOME/something (e.g. $HOME/MAIL/inbox ) is a fine place for
> incoming mail (and other mboxes/maildirs).

Excellent, thanks a lot!

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



std. paths for IMAP folders

2006-01-25 Thread Joakim Roubert
Hi!

I guess I can configure things to be anyway I want it, but I would like
to ask you guys what would be the most common place where users' IMAP
folders are to be stored. If all the incomping mail goes to in /var/mail
something, is this also the place that would be the best place to let
them (us) have their (our) folders? Or perhaps the home directories?

TIA, and best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: where to buy LSI hardware

2006-01-23 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 2006-01-23 11:30, Joakim Roubert wrote:

> * I cannot find MegaRAID 150-2 in ami(4). Am I right supposing this one
> is not supported?

Please ignore that question; as so often, I found the answer soon after
posting.
(http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=110176873614887&w=2)

Sorry about that,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



where to buy LSI hardware

2006-01-23 Thread Joakim Roubert
Hi!

I would like to find a LSI SATA RAID card which is as simple (and thus
cheap) as possible. Perhaps you guys could help me with these questions:

* I cannot find MegaRAID 150-2 in ami(4). Am I right supposing this one
is not supported?
* Which of the supported LSI SATA RAID card would you say is the least
advanced?
* Does anybody know a good seller within the European Union thats sells
it (and perhaps has a link)?

Best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: ASUS A7V8X-X anyone?

2006-01-22 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 22/01/06 11:41, Matthias Kilian wrote:

> Yes, dmesg below.

On 22/01/06 13:15, Andy Hayward wrote:

> Works perfectly, as long as you either tweak the pcibios(4) flags, or
> disable the audio device in the BIOS.

Thanks a lot!!
I have bought that computer now, and the guy who sold it actually had an
OpenBSD on it! Super!!

Best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



ASUS A7V8X-X anyone?

2006-01-22 Thread Joakim Roubert
Hi!

Searching archives for ASUS A7V8X-X, I have found some bug reports from
2003-2004, but then nothing. Is anybody using that motherboard with e.g.
3.8, and if so, is it working/stable?

Best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Supported chipsets (was: Re: Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?)

2006-01-21 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 20/01/06 21:08, Travers Buda wrote:

> I think the only real difference between the 8237 and the 8237R is the 
> ability to asynchronously clock the cpu bus and the AGP/PCI busses. 

Ah, cool! I will see if I can find something that confirms that. Do you
thus think the 8237R would work with OBSD?

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Supported chipsets (was: Re: Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?)

2006-01-21 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 20/01/06 15:02, Stuart Henderson wrote:

> working...VIA usually get recommended when the topic of amd64 boards
> comes up (you'll find a few posts in the archives about this).

Ah, good to know! I will do a better dive in the archives.

> Generally: you have a better chance of full support if you stick
> to slightly older hardware (and at least, it increases the chances
> of someone having already posted if it doesn't work!).

Absolutely; my headache is the computer providers only sell new "cool"
hardware. I was checking into a pre-owned system today, but there was
too much I would have to change to get that one functional (case,
cooling, noise, disks).

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?

2006-01-20 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 2006-01-19 18:49, Stuart Henderson wrote:

> CPU is fast enough that it wasn't horribly slow, but obviously not as
>  good as it could be.  "anything else" - in my case, the next fastest
>  is a celeron 2ghz (my asrock board has an opteron 146). I haven't
> seen any reliability problems with it, but I haven't worked it harder
> than a few cvs pulls and 'make build's.
[...]
> SuSE Linux seems to support the nic about the best. I don't see
> anything in FreeBSD cvsweb to indicate that their -current would be

First, I would like to say I am really grateful for your answers here!
Thanks a lot!
I managed to install FBSD on the machine (failed with OBSD, NBSD,
Debian, Knoppix and Trustix) which was good since I prefer a BSD on this
compared to e.g. SuSE.

Now I won't have to buy additional hardware for this one (but thanks
again for your ideas on that area), but I am about to choose H/W for a
server that _must_ run OpenBSD. Learning from "the past", I am now
checking the M/B spec. and compare them to
http://www.openbsd.org/i386.html and http://www.openbsd.org/amd64.html.

I have found 4 available motherboards (socket 754, so the amd64 port
would be the best choice, I guess) at our provider, that might work;
the southbridges/all-in-one chips in those are, respectively:

* nVidia nForce 410 MCP
* nVidia nForce3 250
* VIA 8237R
* nVidia nForce4-4X

In the OBSD hardware list, I find

* NVIDIA nForce/nForce2/nForce2-400/nForce3/nForce3-250/nForce4
* VIA Technologies VT82C586/A/B, VT82C596A/B, VT82C686A/B, VT8231,
VT8366, VT8233, VT8235, VT8237

Which one do you think would be the safest bet here?

It would be good to be able to run the SATA disks, but perhaps the
safest bet of them all is to get regular ATA ones?

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?

2006-01-19 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 2006-01-19 17:43, Stuart Henderson wrote:

>>vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product 0x5287 (class mass storage subclass
>>SATA, rev 0x02) at pci0 dev 31 function 1 not configured
> 
> Good, it's not hidden behind an unrecognisable pci-pci bridge.

Ok, at least that's something! :)

> Try looking for a BIOS setting called something like legacy/native,
> and toggle it. By doing that, I got M5289 to function (DMA unsupported,
> but even with onboard disks it still completes 'make build' faster than
> anything else I have, and I think I'll put my ami(4) in that box
> anyway).

Ok, I won't have the real RAID-H/W as an option, so the question is what
"anything else" you have... :) How slow is the system without DMA? I
would guess it would be horrible, but perhaps it is not?

The system I am to setup is a backup server that is to do pretty much
nothing but wait all the time, and each night get the backup from our
server. So perhaps the most incredible disk speed is not needed, but
disk I/O has to be reliable.

Now I have tried some different actions, and FreeBSD 6.0 finds the disks
 right away (but not the network, but perhaps it is easier to tinker
with that compared to the disk stuff?).

Unfortunately, I am not that much of a home-hacker, so I would like to
fit the most secure and stable minimal UN*X system on this one. What
would you do in my situation?

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?

2006-01-19 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 2006-01-19 15:42, Stuart Henderson wrote:

> No dmesg, so it's difficult to help you...

Ok, here goes:
(there might be typos, since I write down what I read on the screen next
to me...)

=

OpenBSD 3.8 (RAMDISK_CD) #794: Sat Sep 10 15:58:32 MDT 2005
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/RAMDISK_CD
cpu0: Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU 2.80GHz ("GenuineIntel" 686-class) 2.80 GHz
cpu0:
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,TM2,CNXT-ID
real mem  = 469012480 (458020K)
avail mem = 421904384 (412016K)
using 4278 buffers containing 23552000 bytes (23000K) of memory
mainbus0 (root)
bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+(00) BIOS, date 12/05/05, BIOS32 rev. 0 @ 0xf0010
apm0 at bios0: Power Management spec V1.2
apm0: flags 20102 dobusy 0 doidle 1
pcibios0 at bios0: rev 3.0 @ 0xf/0x1
pcibios0: PCI IRQ Routing Table rev 1.0 @ 0xf5d60/144 (7 entries)
pcibios0: no compatible PCI ICU found: ICU vendor 0x10b9 product 0x1573
pcibios0: Warning, unable to fix up PCI interrupt routing
pcibios0: PCI bus #2 is the last bus
WARNING: can't reserve area for I/O APIC.
WARNING: can't reserve area for Local APIC.
WARNING: can't reserve area for BIOS PROM.
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0xf000! 0xcf000/0x5600
cpu0 at mainbus0
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0: configuration mode 1 (no bios)
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 vendor "ATI", unknown product 0x5a33 rev 0x01
ppb0 at pci0 dev 1 functon 0 "ATI RS480 PCIE" rev 0x00
pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
vga1 at pci1 dev 5 function 0 "ATI Radeon XPRESS 200" rev 0x00
wsdisplay0 at vga1 mix 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
ppb1 at pci0 dev 25 function 0 vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product
0x5249 rev 0x00
pci2 at ppb1 bus 2
ral0 at pci2 dev 21 function 0 "Ralink RT2560" rev 0x01: irq 5, address
00:14:85:16:b2:2c
ral0: MAC/BBP RT2560 (rev 0x04), RF RT2525
vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product 0x5263 (class network subclass
ethernet, rev 0x50) at pci0 dev 27 function 0 not configured
ohci0 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 "Acer Labs M5237 USB" rev 0x03: irq 10,
version 1.0, legacy support
usb0 at ohci0: USB revision 1.0
uhub0 at usb0
uhub0: Acer Labs OHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub0: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered
ohci1 at pci0 dev 28 function 1 "Acer Labs M5237 USB" rev 0x03: irq 5,
version 1.0, legacy support
usb1 at ohci1: USB revision 1.0
uhub1 at usb1
uhub1: Acer Labs OHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub1: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered
ohci2 at pci0 dev 28 function 2 "Acer Labs M5237 USB" rev 0x03: irq 5,
version 1.0, legacy support
usb2 at ohci2: USB revision 1.0
uhub2 at usb2
uhub2: Acer Labs OHCI root hub, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub2: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered
ehci0 at pci0 dev 28 function 3 vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product
0x5239 rev 0x01: irq 5
isb3 at ehci0: USB revision 2.0
uhub3 at usb3
uhub3: Acer LAbs EHCI root hub, rev 2.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub3: 8 ports with 8 removable, self powered
vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product 0x5455 (class multimedia subclass
audio, rev 0x20) at pci0 dev 29 function 0 not configured
pcib0 at pci0 dev 30 function 0 vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product
0x1573 rev 0x31
"Acer Labs M7101 Power" rev 0x00 at pci0 dev 30 function 1 not configured
pciide0 at pci0 dev 31 function 0 "Acer Labs M5229 UDMA IDE" rev 0xc7:
DMA, channel 0 configured to compatibility, channel 1 configured to
compatibility
atapiscsi0 at pciide0 channel 0 drive 0
scsibus0 at atapiscsi0: 2 targets
cd0 at scsibus0 targ 0 lun 0:  SCSI0 5/cdrom
removable
cd0(pciide0:0:0): using PIO mode 4, Ultra-DMA mode 2
pciide0: channel 1 disabled (no drives)
vendor "Acer Labs", unknown product 0x5287 (class mass storage subclass
SATA, rev 0x02) at pci0 dev 31 function 1 not configured
isa0 at pcib0
isadma0 at isa0
pckbc0 at isa0 port 0x60/5
pckbd0 at pckbc0 (kbd slot)
pckbc0: using irq 1 for kbd slot
wskbd0 at pckbd0: console keyboard, using wsdisplay0
npx0 at isa0 port 0xf0/16: using exception 16
pccom0 at isa0 port 0x3f8/8 irq 4: ns16550A, 16 byte fifo
fdc0 at isa0 port 0x3f0/6 irq 6 drq 2
fd0 at fdc0 drive 0: 1.44MB 80 cul, 2 head, 18 sec
biomask fed netmask ffed ttymask ffef
rd0: fixed, 3800 blocks
root on rd0a
rootdev=0x1100 rrootdev=0x2f00 rawdev=0x2f02

=

Regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Re: Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?

2006-01-19 Thread Joakim Roubert
On 2006-01-19 15:42, Stuart Henderson wrote:

> No dmesg, so it's difficult to help you... Even if all you can do is
> boot the install kernel, save a dmesg to a file, and ftp it somewhere,
> that's a lot better than nothing.

I will see if I can fix that.

> ULi want an NDA before releasing documentation, and have now been bought
> by nvidia, so finding information to write correct drivers isn't going
> to be easy.

N! :-( But, on the other hand, when it comes to gfx cards there is,
for Linux, support for all cards but one (old), so perhaps they will do
the same with these ones.

> If you haven't already, try playing with the BIOS settings. You may be
> able to get your disks to work (but even if you do, possibly no DMA).

Ok! Thanks a lot for your input! Perhaps I will have to go with another
OS on this machine (I am about to get us a more critical server too; I
will make sure I get a controller OpenBSD really supports on that one,
because that one really has to run OBSD.)

Best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/



Is it possible to run OpenBSD on ASRock 775TWINS-HDTV S775?

2006-01-19 Thread Joakim Roubert
Hi!

I have a computer based on this motherboard (more info here:
http://www.asrock.com/product/product_775Twins-HDTV.htm), and the
OpenBSD 3.8 install CD won't find the disks.

The southbridge is an ULi 1573, and since it is not present in the
OpenBSD chipset support list, the reason 3.8 won't find my disks are
rather obvious even to me. :)

FreeBSD finds the disks, though, but I would prefer to run OpenBSD on
the machine. You guys that know everything there is to know about
OpenBSD, is there support in ULi 1573 to find in the CVS or so?

Best regards,

/Joakim
-- 
 http://www.df.lth.se/~jokke/