After realizing that FuguIta runs stable and not current like I thought
(sorry for the noise) I decided to download a snapshot from an openbsd
mirror and to install it in my Thinkpad T410. I indeed noticed an
improvement in the CPU temperature issue:
With 5.7 release after booting:
On Sun, Jun 21, 2015 at 05:24:35PM -0400, Peter Pauly wrote:
A twenty percent power reduction is no improvement? You have high
expectations.
I know that my English is horrible :-) but what do you read below?
On Sun, Jun 21, 2015 at 5:13 PM, Walter Alejandro Iglesias
roque...@gmail.com wrote
Hello,
I'd appreciate someone tell me if I'm doing something wrong. I want to
test the latest ACPI changes in two Thinkpad I own (T410 and x201).
I assume:
1. To test current I can just use the latest snapshot.
2. FuguIta LiveCD is regularly updated to the latest snapshot.
In case I'm not
I've noticed a mplayer's issue on OpenBSD. With different desktop
machines and usb webcams I've successfully tested the webcam with the
command:
$ mplayer tv://
But in all cases, when you press 'q' mplayer hangs for some seconds
before quitting.
Any idea of why this happens?
Walter
Hello,
After running:
# cp /etc/example/inetd.conf /etc/
# /etc/rc.d/inetd -f start
$ biff y
$ echo Hello | mail -s 'testing biff' `whoami`
Biff should print its message and beep in login shells. But nothing
happens.
Now I have installed:
OpenBSD 5.8-beta (GENERIC.MP) #1116: Wed Jul 1
On Wed, May 20, 2015 at 08:56:57PM -0600, Shaun Reiger wrote:
Hello I'm trying to find out if the power consumption relating to the
intel_powerclamp driver (Package Level C-state Idle Injection for
Intel CPUs) was ever fixed. I'm current running 5.7 stable and I find
my cpu is still consuming
Hello Todd,
On Mon, Jul 06, 2015 at 06:37:24AM -0600, Todd C. Miller wrote:
Is your mail being delivered to /var/mail/yourname or do you have
a .forward file? The comsat daemon is notified by mail.local which
delivers mail to the local mail spool. If you have a .forward file,
mail.local is
About Thinkpad's batteries.
A bit off-topic being a hardware specific question but taking in care
several people here say to use Thinkpads (and the cost of their
batteries) I think it'll be useful for everyone to share our experience.
My experience with these laptops is short, I bought a
On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 04:56:33PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
I bought a refurbished x201 in Jan 2014 and a T420...
Sorry, I'm getting old and idiot. The laptop isn't a T420, it's a T410.
Walter
This doesn't directly apply to OpenBSD, but it gives you an idea of
the complexity:
https://wiki.freebsd.org/TuningPowerConsumption
Good info.
Thanks,
Walter
Upgraded to latest snapshot and Biff is alive and barking again ;-).
Thanks Todd.
Walter
Another option (using current):
Section "Module"
Load"dri2"
Load"glamoregl"
EndSection
Section "Device"
Identifier "Card0"
Driver "intel"
BusID "PCI:0:2:0"
Option "AccelMethod" "glamor"
EndSection
There
Does this workaround work for you?
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc=146520183827302=2
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc=146523968007324=2
If it does then it's related to this bug:
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-bugs=146451346724515
(I'm just an user, not a developer)
Some security concern
Wouldn't be better mailx to use umask 077 to save mbox files by default
as Mutt does (or to provide ~/.mailrc variable)?
Hello,
Not what you asked for, but taking in care some people here complain
about not having a "desktop wireless connection app" as they got used by
the popular OSs, I'll share (shamelessly) what I improvised to solve my
specific needs with the aim to encourage others to write their own
Sorry!
I have an entry in vimrc for my mail that replaces '>>' for '> >'. That
screwed the code, it was a bad idea. Here the corrected code:
=
#!/bin/sh
# ~/bin/wifi.sh - occasional wireless connection in OpenBSD
[
Just guessing. I've noticed this bug:
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-bugs=146505858532099=2
disappeared after Aug 7 xkbcomp update.
Probably what you're experiencing is a side effect of that changes.
Stefan Wollny wrote:
> at least with
>
> $ dmesg | grep Open
> OpenBSD 6.0-current (GENERIC.MP) #166: Wed Feb 8 19:15:03 MST 2017
>
> the issue still persists.
The patch that solve the issue (at least in my machine) was committed today:
Hello,
Probably Ingo will know about this.
fmt, when using utf8 locale, replaces utf8 spaces for ascii ones (I use
utf8 spaces in html to get web browsers render doble space at the end of
a sentence). This doesn't happen with LC_CTYPE=C.
Is this feature or a bug?
Starting from Feb 11 my httpd logs are filled with 408 messages:
roquesor.com 79.xxx.150.xx4 - - [14/Feb/2017:15:48:32 +0100] "GET / HTTP/1.1"
200 2535
roquesor.com 79.xxx.150.xx4 - - [14/Feb/2017:15:48:32 +0100] "GET
/en/styles.css HTTP/1.1" 200 282
roquesor.com 79.xxx.150.xx4 - -
On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 11:34:02AM -0800, Reyk Floeter wrote:
> Yes, this is possible. Could you send me some more
> details including config?
I just sent another message with the whole logs that didn't reach misc@,
too heavy :-). Here you go a simplified version:
OpenBSD 6.0-current
On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 02:34:24PM -0500, trondd wrote:
> On Tue, February 14, 2017 2:27 pm, trondd wrote:
> > http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/usr.sbin/httpd/server.c.diff?r1=1.106=1.107=h
> >
> > Unfortunately the commit message is not helpful here.
> >
>
> Ah hah. I knew it'd be
After investigating a bit I realized that what I called utf8 space is a
'nobreakspace' so it's ok fmt to replace them for ascii ones. I made a
stupid question. Sorry!
On Sun, Feb 12, 2017 at 10:21:11PM -0800, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> Unfortunately I do not have access to an OpenBSD machine to verify
> whether or not its fmt does the correct thing.
By the way, if you try your example in openbsd take in care obsd printf
won't recognize \u00a0. Use '\xc2\xa0'
On Sun, Feb 12, 2017 at 10:21:11PM -0800, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 12, 2017 at 09:21:37PM +0100, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > After investigating a bit I realized that what I called utf8 space is a
> > 'nobreakspace' so it's ok fmt to replace them for asci
I'm posting this here instead of asking directly to groff mailing list
because (I hate to say it) I can't reproduce this issue in Linux using
the same groff version (1.22.3). I use groff every so often but, if I
remember well, I experienced the same with groff in openbsd years ago.
I mean, it
On Fri, Sep 02, 2016 at 05:25:18PM +0200, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi Walter,
>
> Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote on Fri, Sep 02, 2016 at 05:11:57PM +0200:
>
> > I'm posting this here instead of asking directly to groff mailing list
>
> Correct choice.
>
> > b
I know complaining is useless. Forgive me this time.
I'm about to run my own web server using OpenBSD. I'm giving my first
steps with pf. I was very enthusiastic till I got to this point:
https://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/logging.html
It says:
The log file written by pflogd is in binary
On Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 02:36:10PM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > So, *binary* logs. Sounds familiar to me. And then:
>
> Your type of person seems familiar to be me. Undeducated *check*
> opinioned *check* Contrasting authoritatively without any education
> to back it up *check*
>
> pflog
To the other people who answer me here, sorry for the delay, I took some
time to calm down and not degrade myself to the level of discussion some
person here proposed me.
Martin Brandenburg,
I know what pcap files are, I used them. But, as I said, I'm not an
expert, I didn't take in care that
I post this here because I don't know if considering it bug.
To use a macro in the "file" table option I had to enclose double on
single quotes:
blockIP='"/path/to/file"'
table persist file $blockIP
Any of these syntax examples return errors:
blockIP="/path/to/file"
Does acme-client take in care /etc/acme-client.conf in any way?
Entries as the documented in acme-client.conf man page:
domain example.com {
alternative names { secure.example.com }
domain key /etc/ssl/private/example.com.key
domain certificate /etc/ssl/example.com.crt
Hi everyone,
First of all, is dkimproxy a work in progress?
If it's not, then the long one. I've tried something similar to
the example in smtpd.conf(5). Outgoing messages don't get signed.
# dkim-genkey -s default -d mydomain.com -r -D /var/dkimproxy
/etc/dkimproxy_out.conf
On Wed, Nov 09, 2016 at 09:27:58AM -0500, trondd wrote:
> On Wed, November 9, 2016 9:14 am, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > Hi everyone,
> >
> > First of all, is dkimproxy a work in progress?
> >
> > If it's not, then the long one. I've tried som
trondd,
Your response was also useful to me in another more important way.
I took a look to the headers of your message and I observe gmail says
your dkim is correct:
Authentication-Results: mx.google.com;
dkim=pass header.i=@kagu-tsuchi.com;
However, I had to rescue your message from
On Wed, Nov 09, 2016 at 11:57:18AM -0500, trondd wrote:
> Should also be in the maillog.
Hey, I think I found the problem:
Nov 9 10:37:12 server dkimproxy.out[38514]: signing error: Error: cannot read
/var/dkimproxy/default.private: Permission denied
The permissions are:
# ls -l
On Wed, Nov 09, 2016 at 06:13:47PM +0100, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> Taking in care /etc/rc.d/dkimproxy_out flags:
>
> daemon_flags="--conf_file=/etc/dkimproxy_out.conf --user=_dkimproxy
> --group=_dkimproxy"
>
> These files should be owned by _dkimproxy u
Hello trondd,
On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 11:03:49AM -0500, trondd wrote:
> On Fri, November 25, 2016 4:17 am, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > Is this on purpose?
> >
> > I've tried adding 'set keep' to /etc/mail.rc and /root/.mailrc
> > but mail(1) still removes
On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 01:13:17PM -0500, trondd wrote:
> On Fri, November 25, 2016 12:36 pm, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > Hello trondd,
> >
> > On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 11:03:49AM -0500, trondd wrote:
> >> On Fri, November 25, 2016 4:17 am, W
On Sat, Nov 26, 2016 at 12:18:23PM +0100, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> There's not much you can do besides adding the offending addresses in a
> pf blacklist.
Yeah, that's what I thought (at least using opensmtpd, I guess what
Claus quoted is from actual sendmail man page).
Thanks to all for
Hello everyone,
Is there a way to detect on the fly spam attacks like the pasted below
(maillog)? It seems pf max-src-conn-rate takes in care only the
"connected" event.
I obscured the recipients. Basically sorted addresses of the same target
Chinese host.
Nov 26 05:59:42 server
Is this on purpose?
I've tried adding 'set keep' to /etc/mail.rc and /root/.mailrc
but mail(1) still removes empty mailbox files before quiting.
I mentioned this in other thread, now I'll ask this question directly.
I was running my own mail server for a while but not enough to make a
conclusion. I'd appreciate the opinion of the experienced.
I'm noticing messages with no spf or dkim records reach my gmail inbox.
At the same time,
On Sat, Dec 10, 2016 at 01:11:30PM +0100, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 10, 2016 at 11:51:34AM +0100, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > I mentioned this in other thread, now I'll ask this question directly.
> >
> > I was running my own mail server for a while b
On Mon, Dec 12, 2016 at 11:32:07AM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 12, 2016 at 11:26:31AM +0100, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > # du -cs /bin /sbin /dev /bsd*
> > 20800 /bsd
> > 15552 /bsd.rd
> > 20704 /bsd.sp
> > 1932484 /dev
>
> Th
Question:
Is the lately included makefs intended to be a replacement for mkhybrid?
Is it already reliable or a work in progress?
Issue:
I noticed two issues in mkhybrid (not present in J. Schilling's
mkisofs) I don't know if considering them bugs.
It ignores the '-quiet' option.
It
It seems the size picked by the partitioner at install time for / isn't
large enough (I choose the defaults except I enlarged /var to run a web
server).
OpenBSD 6.0-current (GENERIC.MP) #25: Fri Dec 9 16:53:25 MST 2016
# dmesg | grep sd0 | grep MB | uniq
sd0: 476940MB, 512 bytes/sector,
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2017-04-21, Craig Skinner wrote:
> > Email is not instant messaging.
> >
> > Customers need educated to that fact.
>
> How do you educate them to that when they send to their gmail account
> and it shows up on their phone within seconds?
On Thu, Apr 20, 2017 at 03:08:30PM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 20, 2017 at 02:59:10PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > Hello everyone,
> >
> > Just to be sure, when I get this message:
> >
> > maillog:Apr 20 13:53:03 server smtpd[995
Hello everyone,
Just to be sure, when I get this message:
maillog:Apr 20 13:53:03 server smtpd[99586]: smtp-out: Server certificate
verification failed on session 81c5fc1509d4c884
Is it about my server cert or the remote one?
Hello Bryan and Radoslav,
In article <20170802015654.ga64...@c.brycv.com> you wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 01, 2017 at 08:19:23PM -0400, Radoslav_Mirza wrote:
> > Dear Group, Are there any places to start helping out for a beginner?
> > Any junior jobs or todo lists?
> >
> > I have a new Ryzen 1700
On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 05:10:00PM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 01:29:16PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > >
> > > accept from any for any virtual [...]
> > >
> >
> > Besides, after modifying that rule in t
Hello everyone,
I'd appreciate experienced opensmtpd users tell me if I'm understanding
well the mechanism in the following rule.
Currently, in my smtpd.conf I have this line:
accept from any for domain virtual deliver to mbox
But since all keys in my "valiases" table are full email
Hi Gilles,
On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 11:15:32AM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 09:22:41AM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > Hello everyone,
> >
> > I'd appreciate experienced opensmtpd users tell me if I'm understanding
> > well the mech
>
> accept from any for any virtual [...]
>
Besides, after modifying that rule in the file I also had to change the
order. Since rules below the "catch-all" one never get evaluated, it
has forcibly to be the last one:
[...]
accept from local for local alias deliver to mbox
accept
Hi Stuart,
In article you wrote:
> On 2017-08-10, Rui Ribeiro wrote:
> > An email server in a residential setting will fail PTR unless you are
> > working with a medium sized/an ISP that cares about their customers.
> >
> > see
In article you wrote:
> Hi Stuart,
>
> In article you wrote:
> > On 2017-08-10, Rui Ribeiro wrote:
> > > An email server in a residential setting will fail PTR unless you are
> > > working
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 07:26:16PM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> Rephrasing: if you make an outgoing SMTP connection, a reverse DNS PTR
> record should exist for the source address you're connecting from (whether
> that's v4 or v6), and an A (for v4) or (for v6) lookup for the name
> in
Yesterday while copying a big file from one machine to another in my LAN
I noticed that restarting pf:
# pfctl -d && pfctl -e -f /etc/pf.conf
scp stops and quits showing this message:
- stalled - Conection reset by 192.168.1.* Lost connection
Is this expected or is a bug?
On Sat, Aug 12, 2017 at 11:08:23AM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> Yesterday while copying a big file from one machine to another in my LAN
> I noticed that restarting pf:
>
> # pfctl -d && pfctl -e -f /etc/pf.conf
I assume it's not necessary to say I'm doing t
In article <5127ac707aa6f...@server.roquesor.com> you wrote:
> Hi Stuart,
>
> In article <slrnootn18.31bc@naiad.spacehopper.org> you wrote:
> > On 2017-08-12, Walter Alejandro Iglesias <w...@roquesor.com> wrote:
> > > Yesterday while copying a big
Hi Stuart,
In article <slrnootn18.31bc@naiad.spacehopper.org> you wrote:
> On 2017-08-12, Walter Alejandro Iglesias <w...@roquesor.com> wrote:
> > Yesterday while copying a big file from one machine to another in my LAN
> > I noticed that restarting pf:
> >
In article <20170812123632.p7zgt2l4kz43y...@symphytum.spacehopper.org> you
wrote:
> On 2017/08/12 14:33, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > In article <5127ac707aa6f...@server.roquesor.com> you wrote:
> > > Hi Stuart,
> > >
> > > In article <s
Guys,
The issue was solved after the fist answer (Martijn van Duren's).
Everyone's opinions have been very useful. But since this is not
OpenBSD related I propose to let it die.
Hello Rupert,
In article
In article <20170808121343.46a8ddb9@fir.internal> you wrote:
> Hi Walter:
>
> On Sun, 6 Aug 2017 19:45:22 +0200 Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > What determines those "ranges", who regulates that?
>
> Some ISPs submit IP blocks to various blacklists
Hello everyone,
I was using smtpd(8) (static IP and FQDN resolving direct and reverse)
for a year without problems. Today sending from my server (from the
same address I'm using now) to gmail and hotmail they answered the
following (MAILER-DAEMON answer).
Sending to gmail addresses:
Hi Martijn,
On Sun, Aug 06, 2017 at 05:09:10PM +0200, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> Not an authority on this, so take my reply for what you want.
>
> As far as I know this list is used to keep track of ip-addresses by ISPs
> for home-addresses, which are not intended to be used for outgoing mail.
>
On Sun, Aug 06, 2017 at 06:02:25PM +0200, Jesper Wallin wrote:
> Like Martijn pointed out, you're sending mail from a IP which is not
> intended for mail-servers.
This was my main question. What is an "IP intended for mail-servers"?
Hi Gareth,
On Sun, Aug 06, 2017 at 04:12:45PM +0100, Gareth Nelson wrote:
> I'm assuming that you have your SPF records setup correctly.
>
I did that at first, and all the tricks (dkim, etc) they ask to make you
appear as a legal sender, but after confirming my mail still went to
SPAM in both
Hi Niels,
On Sun, Aug 06, 2017 at 07:19:04PM +0200, Niels Kobschätzki wrote:
>
> > On 6. Aug 2017, at 18:40, Walter Alejandro Iglesias <w...@roquesor.com>
> > wrote:
> >
> >> On Sun, Aug 06, 2017 at 06:02:25PM +0200, Jesper Wallin wrote:
> >> Like
In article <slrnooes63.31bc@naiad.spacehopper.org> you wrote:
> On 2017-08-06, Walter Alejandro Iglesias <w...@roquesor.com> wrote:
> > I visited spamhaus.org site and found out my IP is included in a list
> > called PBL that, as they explain is not a spammers
On Fri, Aug 18, 2017 at 07:31:05PM +0200, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 12, 2017 at 02:40:41PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
>
> > In article <20170812123632.p7zgt2l4kz43y...@symphytum.spacehopper.org> you
> > wrote:
> > > On 2017/08/12 14:33
Hello everyone,
With mailx(1) in mind and resurrecting the few I know about C I wrote
the code pasted below. It encodes mail headers in MIME quoted-printable
format. Unless I'm missing something it complies with all stated here:
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2047.txt
You can pipe to it a line
I was pointed out words (no spaces) longer than 256 characters produce a
buffer overflow with my previous version.
I scanned my saved (since ~ 2005) mbox for header lines without spaces
longer than 256 and found several. Most of them are non wrapped base64
encoded text, a few are "References:"
In article <39c822f4-07f1-3544-0a8e-b75446f94...@4ss.de> you wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I thought I could copy the same static server definition block and only
> change a unique macro definition at the top of each server. But this is
> not working:
>
> ##
> # from httpd.conf
>
An overlook I can't figure out why didn't core dumped.
--- encode-qprint-header.c Wed May 24 22:04:24 2017
+++ encode-qprint-header.c Wed May 24 22:03:49 2017
@@ -66,13 +66,12 @@ main()
} else {
if (c > ASCII)
Inspired in the new utf8 man page (thanks tedu@) I think I found a
solution to the charset issue.
New version:
/*
* MIME encode mail header quoted-printable.
*
*/
#include
#define ASCII 0x7f
#define IN 1
#define OUT 0
#define MAX 1024
int
main()
{
int c, i, n, nl,
On Sat, Nov 11, 2017 at 05:58:59AM -0700, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >A question to the experts here.
> >
> >My home router (a crappy one provided by my ISP) has ipv6 disabled, at
> >least it's what its guied configuration tells me. :-) And I have ipv6
> >disabled in all my LAN machines. The laptop
A question to the experts here.
My home router (a crappy one provided by my ISP) has ipv6 disabled, at
least it's what its guied configuration tells me. :-) And I have ipv6
disabled in all my LAN machines. The laptop I use with OpenBSD has
slaacd(8) up and running by default, even when I didn't
On Sat, Nov 11, 2017 at 04:57:14PM -0700, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >On Sat, Nov 11, 2017 at 05:58:59AM -0700, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >> >A question to the experts here.
> >> >
> >> >My home router (a crappy one provided by my ISP) has ipv6 disabled, at
> >> >least it's what its guied configuration
In article <20171026083919.ga38...@www.stare.cz> Jan Stary
wrote:
> I am not sure whether man -Tpdf and man -Tps honour the paper size.
I think it does.
I don't have a printer at hand to verify it but if in the gv(1) menu
I select alternativelly A4 (or Letter) and Default I can
In article Mike Williams
wrote:
> Hiya
>
> On 10/27/17 14:31, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> > [ sending this particular one back to the list
> > because it contains something useful for everyone and nothing private ]
>
>
In article <20180518004729.gl68...@athene.usta.de> Ingo Schwarze
wrote:
> Hi Aner,
>
> Aner Perez wrote on Thu, May 17, 2018 at 06:32:44PM -0400:
> > On 05/17/2018 05:22 PM, x...@dr.com wrote:
> >> "Ingo Schwarze" wrote:
>
> >>> Absolutely not.
> >>> Mandoc
Could someone tell me if my changes below are OK. :-)
The part I'm not clear is I read in current.html remote authenticated
users need a explicit rule. Do I need to add some "match auth" rule?
# /etc/mail/smptd.conf
egress_int="em0"
server="server.roquesor.com"
table aliases
On Fri, May 25, 2018 at 03:58:59PM +0300, Consus wrote:
> On 14:31 Fri 25 May, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> > On Fri, May 25, 2018 at 02:20:50PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > > Could someone tell me if my changes below are OK. :-)
> > >
> > &
On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 08:15:18AM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> > Gilles, I also saw the "ca" directive. I've been using the acme
> > certificates in pki directives, can I use them in the "ca" directive
> > too? (any advantage in doing this?)
> >
>
> don't touch a knob if you don't KNOW that
On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 12:35:57PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 08:15:18AM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> > > Gilles, I also saw the "ca" directive. I've been using the acme
> > > certificates in pki directives, can I use them
Just in case it could be useful to others.
After upgrading the snaptshot requiring the new version of smtpd.conf
it happend that the new rules I'd written (included the last one Gilles
passed me) were all wrong.
I could get it working thanks to the man page. The result:
# OLD
accept from local
Hi Visa,
On Sun, Jun 24, 2018 at 05:54:15PM +, Visa Hankala wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 24, 2018 at 12:37:45PM +0200, Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote:
> > panic: mtx 0x81c86470: locking against myself
> > Stopped at db_enter+0x12: popq%r11
> > TIDP
In article <20171026193138.ga41...@www.stare.cz> Jan Stary
wrote:
> > > > In the ps file generated by mandoc you should have this line:
> > > >
> > > > %%DocumentMedia: Default 595 841 0 () ()
> > > >
> > > > Where 595 841 correspond to A4. If you set output paper to "letter"
In article <20171027104221.gd9...@www.stare.cz> Jan Stary wrote:
> On Oct 27 12:12:21, w...@roquesor.com wrote:
> > In article <20171026193138.ga41...@www.stare.cz> Jan Stary
> > wrote:
> > > > > > In the ps file generated by mandoc you should have this line:
> > >
In article <20171026122507.ga13...@www.stare.cz> Jan Stary
wrote:
> On Oct 26 11:36:45, w...@roquesor.com wrote:
> > In article <20171026083919.ga38...@www.stare.cz> Jan Stary
> > wrote:
> > > I am not sure whether man -Tpdf and man -Tps honour the paper size.
> >
In article <a67500574d104...@server.roquesor.com> Walter Alejandro Iglesias
<w...@roquesor.com> wrote:
> Hi Ruben,
>
> In article
> <caenp9cg+b-5b+8r3w9eaebodaxeybrdhg7jhfgq2ascrbfg...@mail.gmail.com> Ruben
> Miller <rubenmil
Hi Ruben,
In article
Ruben Miller wrote:
> In article
> Ruben Miller wrote:
> >The speed is not a problem, since
On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 07:24:43PM +0200, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi Walter,
>
> Walter Alejandro Iglesias wrote on Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 05:44:16PM +0200:
>
> > I have files generated with GNU roff that defaults to letter size.
>
> That's the upstream (GNU troff) defa
Answering myself.
In article <a675001fecbb3...@server.roquesor.com> Walter Alejandro Iglesias
<w...@roquesor.com> wrote:
> As a side note. You made me realize of something I didn't notice when
> I migrated to openbsd; I have files generated with GNU roff that
> de
In article <20171026104155982590.bfb59...@talsever.com> Amelia A Lewis
<amyz...@talsever.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 26 Oct 2017 16:14:36 +0200 (CEST), Walter Alejandro Iglesias
> wrote:
> > In the ps file generated by mandoc you should have this line:
> >
> >
Hello,
I had a kernel panic while reproducing a video with mpv.
It's my first kernel panic with OpenBSD, so I didn't know how to use
ddb(4). Since I'm running my http and smtp server in this machine I
cannot entertain myself too much reproducing the panic to get more info.
That's why I don't
Hi Todd,
Not an expert here and just to be sure, :-)
In article <21bf906b4c6c6...@sudo.ws> Todd C. Miller
wrote:
> I don't think there is much interest in having a pop3 daemon in
> base due to the use of plain-text passwords
I've been assuming that running pop3d(8) from ports, listening in
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