Ping:
On Tue, 11 Apr 2017 11:28:38 +0100 Craig Skinner wrote:
> Hi again,
>
> On 2017-04-10 Mon 14:31 PM |, Craig Skinner wrote:
> > On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 12:46:03 +0100 Craig Skinner wrote:
> > > $ openssl enc -bf -salt \
> > > -pass file:/etc/myname -in /bsd \
> > > -out
Hi Theo,
Theo de Raadt wrote on Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 08:13:24AM -0600:
> Sure.. or, make some comments about it being highly non-portable.
> It isn't even really a BSD'ism. The idea is a flop. I wonder if
> it was an attempt to pull a VMS idea.
Here is a stronger version.
I like that even
> On 11. Apr 2017, at 4:09 PM, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
>
> Index: sysexits.3
> ===
> RCS file: /cvs/src/share/man/man3/sysexits.3,v
> retrieving revision 1.12
> diff -u -r1.12 sysexits.3
> --- sysexits.330
Sure.. or, make some comments about it being highly non-portable.
It isn't even really a BSD'ism. The idea is a flop. I wonder if
it was an attempt to pull a VMS idea.
> I'd like to make that plainer. It isn't the first time people
> waste time reading sysexits(3) and arguing about it.
>
>
Hi,
Theo de Raadt wrote on Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 07:08:30AM -0600:
> sysexits.h is a thing that came from sendmail, and only a few things
> use it. Further use isn't encouraged.
I'd like to make that plainer. It isn't the first time people
waste time reading sysexits(3) and arguing about it.
> On 2017-04-10 Mon 14:31 PM |, Craig Skinner wrote:
> > On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 12:46:03 +0100 Craig Skinner wrote:
> > > $ openssl enc -bf -salt \
> > > -pass file:/etc/myname -in /bsd \
> > > -out /altroot/tmp/bsd.crypto
> > >
> > > /altroot: write failed, file system is
Hi again,
On 2017-04-10 Mon 14:31 PM |, Craig Skinner wrote:
> On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 12:46:03 +0100 Craig Skinner wrote:
> > $ openssl enc -bf -salt \
> > -pass file:/etc/myname -in /bsd \
> > -out /altroot/tmp/bsd.crypto
> >
> > /altroot: write failed, file system is
On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 12:46:03 +0100 Craig Skinner wrote:
> $ openssl enc -bf -salt \
> -pass file:/etc/myname -in /bsd \
> -out /altroot/tmp/bsd.crypto
>
> /altroot: write failed, file system is full
> $ print $?
> 0
Whoops;- I forgot to mention