On Thu, Jan 01, 2015 at 11:54:46PM -0500, Geoff Steckel wrote:
Is there any way todo the equivalent of:
server an.example.com
listen on 192.168.2.99
listen on 2001.fefe.1.1::99
??
It appears that the code in parse.y explicitly forbids this
and the data structures for a server
On Sat, Jan 03, 2015 at 04:40:19PM +0100, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
Hi,
On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 14:42:18 +0100 Reyk Floeter r...@openbsd.org wrote:
On Thu, Jan 01, 2015 at 11:54:46PM -0500, Geoff Steckel wrote:
Is there any way todo the equivalent of:
server an.example.com
Hi,
On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 14:42:18 +0100 Reyk Floeter r...@openbsd.org wrote:
On Thu, Jan 01, 2015 at 11:54:46PM -0500, Geoff Steckel wrote:
Is there any way todo the equivalent of:
server an.example.com
listen on 192.168.2.99
listen on 2001.fefe.1.1::99
I used include
On Sat, Jan 03, 2015 at 05:19:16PM +0100, Reyk Floeter wrote:
My tests show that memory usage is not the problem but that there's
indeed a problem with the pre-opened file descriptors for servers;
something that is not necessary with aliases. A simple fix will follow.
Here is a fix for the
Is there any way todo the equivalent of:
server an.example.com
listen on 192.168.2.99
listen on 2001.fefe.1.1::99
??
It appears that the code in parse.y explicitly forbids this
and the data structures for a server don't *seem*
to have more than one slot for an address.
Is there another