a quirk, probably
not a bug, possibly a feature.)
And remember, if in doubt about what exactly is going wrong in a pf
ruleset, enable logging on all block rules, and use the information thus
obtained to track down the problem.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
for
$UNGODLY_AMOUNT_OF_CASH; sorry, but I don't have that kind of money.
I can't wait until Kaffe is usable as a JVM, as I suspect it won't have
the same problems that Sun has put into its reference Java
implementation. Until then, I've decided simply to avoid using Java
applications as much as possible.
--
Shawn K
, or did
I misread something?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2005-08-22 at 11:49 +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
If you don't already have something like 'pass quick on lo0' near the
start of your PF ruleset, you might like to add it.
Actually, as of 3.7 set skip on lo0 is the preferred method of
bypassing pf on loopback.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
On Tue, 2005-08-23 at 17:25 -0400, Jason Crawford wrote:
Secondly, it seems pretty pointless to setup pf on a single host.
I beg to differ. man pf.conf, and look at the user and group
keywords.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
the network interface?
You probably want to do something like:
cd /etc; mv hostname.dc0 hostname.xl0; ./netstart
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sun, 2005-09-04 at 13:57 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
p.s.
Forget about D-Link! I recomment to stay far far away of these crap.
I am using a D-Link switch and it has performed acceptably so far. Their
wireless access points might be another story, though...
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL
, but at the same time, realize this isn't
the [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or eavesdrop on connections (such as a
LAN where either you are the sole admin or you know and trust the other
admins).
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Revolution to succeed. So I
think the proper place for your anti-freedom license, however well
intentioned, is a place where the sun does not shine.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
1699012% /
/dev/wd0d 148M104K140M 0% 14 19312 0% /tmp
Like, duh, /tmp is full!
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
are after. I, of
course, consider myself closer to the GNU camp, but have no problem
contributing to a BSD-licensed project under that license. Not that my
programming skills are yet back up to snuff to do so, but that's a rant
for another day and thread...
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
BSD-style licenses are compatible with the
GPL, there are perfectly acceptable social goals achieved only by
releasing under the GPL or a similar license.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, I understand perfectly well what his point is: to slander
the GNU project and its users. I re-read the message several times
before replying.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
interface. (Not that there ever was such intimidation for
*me*, mind you.)
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
to
executable after the install is done.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
is available for it. Heck, I miss my old
Pentium 100 I was using as a router (well, sort of).
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
. (Note this is exactly why you shouldn't compile a custom kernel
unless you know what you're doing.)
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
to figure out.
GNU/Linux has no problem booting from an extended partition, I've done
it before.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
that makes the catalog
available as HTML or PDF?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
driver doesn't support anything USB so I doubt it's an
8180, I think I remember seeing a reference to 8198 somewhere).
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
holding out
some hope (not a lot) that Microsoft really, truly gives a damn someday.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(and most
people don't need to in the case of OpenBSD).
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2005-05-16 at 12:11 +0530, Siju George wrote:
http://news.com.com/India+eyes+own+open-source+license/2100-7344_3-5701861.html?tag=nefd.led
Thankyou so much
My gut reaction: This can't be good.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 2005-05-17 at 10:12 -0600, Whyzzi wrote:
The problem wasn't in the setup at all, the problem was in
Windows Server 2003's TCP/IP Stack,
Okay, show of hands, who was surprised by this?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
praises.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
not even be as much of a deterrent as we think it
is. I'd really like to think Intel is better than this. Then again, I'm
writing this on an old Athlon-based PC...
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
=%2Flanguage_tools'
very interesting :)
This kept dumping me to the original page. I had to yank out the URL and
paste it into Altavista Babelfish to get a translation, which still
wasn't all that clear.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
/
It's a good starting place.
Reading the date header of the original message would have been a good starting
place, too...
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Wed, 2005-07-06 at 10:11 -0500, Ryan Corder wrote:
Jul 6 08:55:56 smitty ftp-proxy[15298]: cannot find user proxy
I'll give you a hint: this error message means exactly what it says.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
/logs to /var/log/squid and reserving /var/squid
itself for the cache).
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, but I couldn't seem to make that work.
I'd just start again. Before you do, are you sure this is a 20G disk?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
console switching.
But ymmv.
For those more accustomed to the FreeBSD/Linux behavior.
Which leads me to ask... why is OpenBSD the only odd one out that
requires Ctrl+Alt+F{1,2,3,4,5} when switching between text consoles? Is
there really a good reason for leaving it the way it is?
--
Shawn K. Quinn
On Mon, 2005-07-11 at 23:28 -0600, Chris Kuethe wrote:
On 7/11/05, Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Which leads me to ask... why is OpenBSD the only odd one out that
requires Ctrl+Alt+F{1,2,3,4,5} when switching between text consoles? Is
there really a good reason for leaving
doing it here.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, AFAIK.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 2005-07-21 at 14:11 +0200, Bjvrn Sjvberg wrote:
On Wed, Jul 20, 2005 at 08:32:45PM -0700, Tim Hammerquist wrote:
Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
It's great for testing basic service availability, version strings,
or
even a manual session without a lot of process overhead or
connection
instinct points toward bad hardware.
Are both machines the same architecture? Does the problem follow the
Ethernet interface in use? (i.e. try switching interfaces used for
carp0)
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2005-07-25 at 10:17 +0100, Gordon Ross wrote:
Is it possible to disable IPv6 on OpenBSD 3.7 without building a custom
kernel ?
No, but why would you need to? Just don't assign an Internet-routable
IPv6 address to the interface, if you're worried about security.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
reproduce the problem booting GENERIC?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
. To the first two of those, I offer as
counterexamples the rather famous Soekris Technologies hardware. Even a
loaded net4801 is relatively low power (1.5A at 12V). As for cheap, they
certainly aren't out of our budget as home users.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
would have
been a nightmare.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
that people think typing is an optional
part of computer literacy. Especially given the level of people that
abbreviate three-letter words in chat/IM...
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
BIOS disk 80
dkcsum: wd1 matched BIOS disk 81
root on wd0a
rootdev=0x0 rrootdev=0x300 rawdev=0x302
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
been down that road, or have no desire to go down
it.
The people that WTFM intend for you to RTFM.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
are the card is working. I'd look elsewhere for
the problems with TCP and UDP.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
you recommend?
I, personally, always use a unique login group, and add the group
users as a secondary group. But, like a lot of other things, it really
depends on what you need, and what your users need.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
a
throttling mechanism. As an example, I'm pretty sure Armagetron does not
have one as such, it just sends updates and the client handles any
significant amount of packet loss very ungracefully.
Other things like DNS resolution won't have a throttling mechanism
because they don't need one.
--
Shawn K
Oops, sorry, wrong list. Meant this to go to the pf list.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sat, 2005-08-06 at 03:00 +0100, poncenby wrote:
Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
On Fri, 2005-08-05 at 07:33 +0100, poncenby wrote:
May I suggest some tolerance(doesn't have to be sincere) for people
who are simply either too busy or too lazy to read man pages in their
entirety. or just simply
and
downright ludicrous at worst. We already have some USB-only KVM
switches.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
not worth it).
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Fri, 2007-03-23 at 10:49 -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
On Fri, Mar 23, 2007 at 06:56:32AM -0500, Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
On Wed, 2007-03-21 at 22:37 -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Hello,
I've got a 486DX4-100 with 32 MB ram, ISA bus, with two drives: 840 MB
and 1280 MB IDE
by a 600 MHz Athlon with
128M of RAM, which of course is way overkill for a basic firewall/router
with Squid, but the only box I have not otherwise occupied.)
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
example of this:
http://lists.xiph.org/pipermail/icecast-dev/2001-February/05.html)
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
dual-licensing, something different altogether ;)
I think you are misinterpreting commercial to imply proprietary. It
does not: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html#Commercial
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
source is
about: convenience, not freedom for its own sake. This is exactly why it
is important to make a distinction between the free software movement
and the open source movement and not lump the two together.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
code, the more bugs get found and
fixed.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
of the phrases he used in the
first posts announcing the GNU project.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
combination of everything else. Been there,
done that.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, this is for good reason as in general, you don't want the
programming equivalent of a Rube Goldberg contraption as the default
packet dumper/viewer).
--
Shawn K. Quinn
device. If you do, then it'll
probably work. If not, then you're probably SOL.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
processors.)
--
Shawn K. Quinn
not fulfill any real security goal.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
.
Yes, crontab'ing arp -ad as Karsten suggested is a good workaround,
but I'd hardly call that a long term fix.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
of these components finally reached end-of-life a few
months ago.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
matters. if the file is on the filesystem, the filesystem
supports files of that size.
Isn't it possible, though, to split a file on one filesystem, writing
the pieces to another filesystem with a smaller maximum file size?
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
equivalent would be). Money is not
the only way to contribute to a project.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
without good cause.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sun, 2007-10-28 at 10:51 -0500, Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
A friend of mine recently bought a Trendnet TEW-429UB
I guess now I'm the clown, because I misremembered and mistyped the
model number. It's the TEW-424UB, not the 429UB.
--
Shawn K. Quinn [EMAIL PROTECTED]
it uses an OS which uses the kernel Linux is
encouraging, though GPL source code is pretty much useless to a
BSD-licensed project from a documentation standpoint. We have nothing to
lose by asking for docs, though.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
what I needed from the backups.
That said, going through each individual release upgrade may be a bit
safer, but it's a lot more time consuming.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
posts about this problem, perhaps
since 4.9 there's news, or it can be solved
i.e http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.os.openbsd.misc/191903)
Looks like some kind of issue with the MII because of media none.
Driver needs updating, perhaps?
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
just as rare in your area?)
--
Shawn K. Quinn skqu...@rushpost.com
.
--
Shawn K. Quinn skqu...@rushpost.com
should reach out to whoever's
running the domain so it may be included as an official mirror.
--
Shawn K. Quinn skqu...@rushpost.com
are careful to either only allow outbound connections via
Tor (difficult but possible), or not allow outside Internet connectivity
at all (easier but may well defeat the purpose of what you're trying to
do).
--
Shawn K. Quinn skqu...@rushpost.com
the stream you are using is actually playable
somewhere before fooling with Asterisk.
--
Shawn K. Quinn skqu...@rushpost.com
; maybe it works only from inside Canada (I'm in the US).
--
Shawn K. Quinn skqu...@rushpost.com
that you can configure visudo, vipw, and vigr to use an editor
besides vi. It's possible to get by on Unix without knowing vi, I did so
on GNU/Linux systems for most of 4 years, but I finally broke down and
figured it out and promptly realized it wasn't as hard as it had been
made out to be.
--
Shawn K
(Makefile:53 'asn1_rfc2459_asn1.x')
*** Error 1 in kerberosV/lib (bsd.subdir.mk:48 'depend')
*** Error 1 in lib (bsd.subdir.mk:48 'depend')
*** Error 1 in /usr/src (Makefile:86 'build')
1m5.68s real 0m6.40s user 0m8.22s system
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
with processor and memory specs
similar to a net4501 with no issues. Some of them even had enough disk
space left over to run Squid.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
there are a lot of things that would just
work on a GNU/Linux system that will not work on OpenBSD without
twiddling a sysctl or two, or running something as root that wouldn't
require it on GNU/Linux.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
than that. Actually, even if you somehow manage to not get a
single piece of spam, you'll see far worse things from time to time on
this mailing list right here.
I like bigbu...@bofh.ucs.ualberta.ca and I cannot lie.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
.
Issues with non-home-compiled kernels are more interesting.
I thought as long as it was an unmodified GENERIC or GENERIC.MP that the
issue was still valid. Is this no longer the case?
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
of ram per 1 GB
of disk space that http://openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#LargeDrive suggests?
I don't think 1MB RAM per 1GB disk space applies to fsck_msdos, only the
fsck for FFS.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
it will get a workout.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
a lot of users probably don't do.)
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
then, three
hours later, it would be about 8 hours and it would keep going up from
there.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
kernel you need to compile in certain drivers, even if
they not show up in the dmesg. Unfortunately I've forgotten which ones
they were and I don't have a system I can experiment on...
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
sure there are better ways to do even this.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
On Mon, Jan 20, 2014, at 06:22 PM, Juan Francisco Cantero Hurtado wrote:
I use a (good) power meter. Don't buy the cheapest one.
There's also the possibility of using a clamp-style AC ammeter on the
power cable and multiplying by the nominal line voltage.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu
K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
again after being spun down, try leaving the box powered up at the
failed boot screen for a time (at least 15 minutes, I recommend at least
30 minutes) before rebooting. This at least worked for me on a 200
megabyte disk in the 1990s (I fortunately have not had the problem
since).
--
Shawn K
packages with -stable userland is something you can
often get away with but isn't recommended. I would always rebuild both
if keeping up with -stable.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
skqu...@rushpost.com
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