- Robert Morris was supposedly involved in early roff work. The same
Robert Morris who later worked for the NSA. Could this be the REAL OpenBSD
FBI/NSA/aliens/Berlusconi backdoor? They can read your MANUALS, man; your
MANUALS.
Being italian, your statement kinda hurts me :-)
... unless you
Chris,
why would you suggest unbound instead of bind?
Which advantages do you
see?
Thanks,
Manuel
--
Hana wa sakuragi, hito wa bushi
>
> From: Chris Cappuccio
>To: hvom .org
>Cc: misc@openbsd.org
>Sent: Monday,
November 21, 2011 7:02 PM
>Subject: Re: DNS Goog
> Nobody at OpenBSD would claim that they could guarantee
> that there is no exploit waiting to be found in the OS.
> They just make better efforts than anybody else to reduce
> the chances.
> The errata page shows that they are forever responding to
> possible problems publically rather than s
May I ask why is i386 considered "hardware insecure"?
Can anyone point me to some documentation on the issue?
Thank you all.
Manuel
--
Hana wa sakuragi, hito wa bushi
- Original Message
> From: Gregory Edigarov
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Sent: Fri, January 22, 2010 9:42:36 AM
> Subject
Whooops...
Sorry, I missed it.
Thank you again,
Manuel
--
Hana wa sakuragi, hito wa bushi
- Original Message
> From: Maurice Janssen
> To: Manuel Ravasio
> Cc: openbsd
> Sent: Friday, July 3, 2009 12:26:20 PM
> Subject: Re: Ultrabasic guide to NAT
>
> On Fr
Lars Nooden
> To: Manuel Ravasio
> Cc: openbsd
> Sent: Thursday, July 2, 2009 1:29:53 PM
> Subject: Re: Ultrabasic guide to NAT
>
> Manuel Ravasio wrote:
> > ... I don't have much time to ...
>
> There's your problem. Try to plan better next time
> > ... I don't have much time to ...
>
> There's your problem. Try to plan better next time.
Eh...
Sometimes you can, sometimes shit just happens and you have to manage it the
way it comes :-).
> > Can someone point me to some proper documentation,
>
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi
Hello list.
I know this is a very simple issue, but I can't find a quick answer and I don't
have much time to google around; I need the thing working in short time.
OpenBSD + PF firewall, connecting 3 "internal" networks to an "external" one.
The firewall has 5 NICs, re0 to re4; re0 is connected
l the effort you put in creating and
maintaining such a smoothly running operating system.
Manuel Ravasio
--
Hana wa sakuragi, hito wa bushi
Just a detail I didn't clarify in my email.
The FastTrack is the typical ultracheap windows-only RAID controller.
I used it as a completely stupid PATA controller, then I created the RAID
volume using softraid.
That's why I hope I can just switch to another controller...
Thank you anyway,
Manuel
Hello list.
A few months ago I posted a help request concerning the creation of a RAID0
volume using OpenBSD 4.4.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=122796220028136&w=2
Shortly:
i386 PC with 3 PATA disks.
- a 60g Maxtor attached to motherboard's IDE controller (wd0)
- two 160g Maxtor attached to
Netgear WG511T.
I'm using it at home, it works flawlessly and it took me 45 seconds or so to
set up.
Manuel
- Original Message
> From: Parvinder Bhasin
> To: misc
> Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2009 1:56:47 AM
> Subject: OpenBSD as Wireless access point
>
> All,
>
> Can someone sugg
Back to my 3 disks PC...
Suppose I decide to move the two disks containing the RAID0 volume to a
different OpenBSD-4.4 PC.
Suppose also I put another disk in said PC, so that the two disks are labeled
wd1 and wd2 again.
Or suppose I need to reinstall OpenBSD.
Would the filesystem on RAID0 volume
rightly to apprehend the kind of
confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question."
-- Charles Babbage
- Original Message
> From: Marco Peereboom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Manuel Ravasio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: openbsd
> Sent: Saturday, November 29, 200
I read that softraid now supports RAID0 and RAID1 only.
I'm thinking of adding two more disks to the i386 pc I wrote about in this
thread.
Would a RAID 1+0 or 0+1 supported in this case?
I can think of a procedure like this:
- fdisk and disklabel all 4 disks with a single RAID partition
- create
> Did you read the EXAMPLES section in SOFTRAID(4) and followed it by the
> letter?
> I would also recommend to try another PATA cable (80-conductor if possible)
> to
> see whether the CRC errors disappear.
Thank you.
This time it worked.
I strictly followed the example described in softraid(4
Hello list.
i386 PC with 3 PATA disks.
- a 60g Maxtor attached to motherboard's IDE controller
- two 160g Maxtor attached to a Promise FastTrak TX2 PCI controller
During install all 3 disks are correctly recognized and fully assigned to
OpenBSD.
Both 160g disks have a single partition (a) spannin
make messes in the house.
-Robert Heinlein
- Original Message
> From: Dogbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Manuel Ravasio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: misc@OpenBSD.org
> Sent: Monday, February 11, 2008 12:37:45 PM
> Subject: Re: 4.1 Hacked? S
Please, forgive my ignorance, but I can't understand the meaning of your post.
Can you please explain, or point me to some useful link in order to understand
the issue?
Thanks,
Manuel
--
Anyone who cannot cope with mathematics is not fully human.
At best he is a tolerable sub-human who has lear
> Write a random number on a piece of paper. I'd suggest "42" for
> laughs. At least people will understand how you derived it.
>From a book?
Better: from THE book? :-)
> You can't just define something as complicated as "hard disk speed"
> in one number. Or twenty numbers.
Ok, I got the idea
Hello list.
Can anyone suggest me a way to measure a hard disk speed?
I'm thinking about a tool like linux's hdparm / sdparm
A simple solution could be measuring the time required for the generation of a
big file, something like "time dd if=/dev/zero of=/some/file bs=whatever
count=whatever", h
Hello list.
A friend of mine is trying to install a OpenBSD 4.2 box in order to run it as a
file server, print server, etc.
He bought a Intel DQ965GF MiniATX motherboard and a nice and pretty little case
to store it in.
He also bought 2 SATA disk because he would really like to build a mirrored
> check your DNS configuration. xauth(1) needs a working DNS to
> translates names to addresses and vice-versa.
> If it block, this blocks X startup.
Hmmm...
Maybe the first time the problem showed up the laptop was disconnected from the
network,
but I'm positive it showed more than once when th
Hello list.
I am running 4.2/i386 on my company's Dell Latitude D510 laptop.
I started with a fresh 4.2 install, all hardware got recognized, everything
went just great... until a couple of days ago.
I'm experiencing an annoying problem with startx.
Since a few days each time I log in (via consol
--- qw er <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It really sucks. it is slow.
>
>
While you are extremely fast, as your girlfriend can witness...
Get the free Yahoo! toolbar and rest assured with the added secu
> "pcmcia cardbus" is an oxymoron.
Whoops...
Something like "childproof" and "CiscoWorks"? :-)
> pcmcia is a 16bit isa-like bus w/ 3.3v and 5v power.
> cardbus is a pci-like 32bit bus w/ 3.3v power only.
> pccard is a form factor for this devices also.
Hmmm...
I have something that looks like a
I have a doubt...
PCMCIA ethernet interface cannot negotiate more than 10Mbps, ignoring my
trials to force 100full...
PCMCIA wireless interface doesn't run at more than 11Mbps, ignoring my trials
to force 54Mbps...
Maybe it's something with old PCMCIA cardbus?
Bud
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail ha
> If you hard set one side of an Ethernet link it disables the auto
> negotiation pulse so the other side defaults to 10baseT half duplex. I
> would suggest using media autoselect or media 10baseT unless you can
> configure the port on the switch.
The "switch" is actually a 8-port 10/100 hub/sw
Hello list.
Maybe you remember I'm trying to build a firewall/proxy/DNS server/DHCP
server/access point using an old Toshiba laptop and 3 network interfaces.
A friend of mine gave me a pcmcia card with no recognizable brand/model on
it.
I plugged it in and OpenBSD told me it's a Realtek 8139 card
Problem solved.
The card is faulty: it doesn't work on other systems either.
It *apparently* works, it gets recognized, it can be assigned an IP address,
connection led lights up, but no actual connection is available.
A close look to the card-dongle connector shows a little damage to the
plastic
Hello list.
I'm setting up an old Toshiba laptop as a firewall, DNS forwarder, DHCP
server and wireless access point using OpenBSd 4.0 i386.
I have 3 network interfaces:
- unknown-brand USB 10/100 interface, available as axe0, working perfectly
- Netgear PCMCIA wireless interface, available as ath
Great!
Thank you all!
Manuel
>
> man speaker(4)
>
> for example,
> # echo 'CDEFGAHO>C' > /dev/speaker
Get your own web address.
Have a HUGE year through Yahoo! Small Business.
http://smallbusiness.
Hello list.
I have a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
help me in a second.
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is
--- Leonardo Rodrigues <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello everyone =)
>
> So, the title says it all. Anyone know a nice download manager utility
> for OpenBSD?
wget ?
The fish are biting.
Get more visitors
Really?
I have a completely different experience: I never managed to completely loose
a filesystem, except by on OpenBSD...
I've been using slackware linux on reiserfs and xfs for many years now, on my
home PCs and company laptop (so, no real production environment) and I'm
happy with both their s
Hello all.
I'm trying to set up a firewall/web-proxy/dns-proxy/dhcp-server box at
home, using a quite old i386-based pc (AMD k6-2 300, 256mb RAM, 2x10G
IDE disks) and OpenBSD 4.0.
OS installation, disk management, additional software installation and
configuration... everything went fine.
Problem
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