ospfd does not follow interface address changes?

2009-11-27 Thread Gregory Edigarov
hi everybody. if you run ospfd in your setup can you test to confirm the behavior: setup an interface in ospfdfor example - ifconfig vlan3 vlandev rl0 192.168.3.0/30 up add this interface to any known area of ospfd. reload, wait for the route to propagate. then change ip on vlan3. ifconfig

tmux hangs, with 100% cpu

2009-11-27 Thread LEVAI Daniel
Hi! With today's (11.27) update for -current, tmux hangs after doing: local$ ssh host host$ logout I can't imagine why would it hang because of this, but it does. I have to do `pkill -9 tmux`. What other information would be helpful? dmesg: OpenBSD 4.6-current (GENERIC.MP) #323: Thu Nov 26

Re: tmux hangs, with 100% cpu

2009-11-27 Thread LEVAI Daniel
On Friday 27 November 2009 11.25.16 you wrote: With today's (11.27) update for -current, tmux hangs after doing: [...] Never mind, compiling from HEAD is working. Sorry for the noise. Daniel -- LIVAI Daniel PGP key ID = 0x4AC0A4B1 Key fingerprint = D037 03B9 C12D D338 4412 2D83 1373 917A 4AC0

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How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread stan
I have a home network tat uses an OpenBSD machine as it's firewall. I now have a company laptop (Windows), and it has some sort of Microsoft VPN. If it remove my block all rule I can get this VPN up. The corporate support folks say that it uses port 1723, but putting thta in pf.conf and restarting

Re: How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread Marcos Laufer
You could fire up the VPN, connect to it from the outside, and then use the netstat command to see which ports are beeing used knowing the origin and destination IPs Regards, Marcos Laufer stan wrote: I have a home network tat uses an OpenBSD machine as it's firewall. I now have a company

Re: How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread Anders Pettersson
Hi Stan I will answer your question regarding Microsoft VPN instead. The corporate support folks might have told you that the most common Microsoft VPN type [still] is something called PPTP: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point-to-point_tunneling_protocol It uses TCP port 1723 as control channel

Re: How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread Steven M. Caesare
You need to allow GRE as well. -sc -Original Message- From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf Of stan Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 9:56 AM To: OpenBSD general usage list Subject: How to determine what ports are being used? I have a home network

Re: How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread Christoph Leser
1723 is PPTP. This uses GRE ( generic routing encapsulation ). You must allow this protocol. And, as far as I know, openBSD cannot NAT this protocol ( it is possible to nat GRE for pptp if you peek into the next higher level protocol ( ppp in this case ? ) but this is not implemented ) So I did

sf NIC buffer issues?

2009-11-27 Thread Steven M. Caesare
Just built a 4.6 box as a firewall. Have an Adaptec quad-100Mb sf0-based NIC (64-bit PCI slot). Server is a Compaq DL360 (G1) w/ latest BIOS (p21). After some time, packets stop passing, and I'm seeing timeout issues for sf0 on the console. Upgraded to 4.6-stable (both kernel and userland).

Re: How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread stan
On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 04:17:50PM +0100, Anders Pettersson wrote: Hi Stan I will answer your question regarding Microsoft VPN instead. The corporate support folks might have told you that the most common Microsoft VPN type [still] is something called PPTP:

Re: How to determine what ports are being used?

2009-11-27 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2009-11-27, stan st...@panix.com wrote: I have a home network tat uses an OpenBSD machine as it's firewall. I now have a company laptop (Windows), and it has some sort of Microsoft VPN. If it remove my block all rule I can get this VPN up. The corporate support folks say that it uses port

nmbclust command not found within config

2009-11-27 Thread Marcos Laufer
Hello list, Looking at this faq page http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#config it shows that under OpenBSD 4.5 modifying NMBCLUSTERS is possible. --- cuted from http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#config $ *sudo config -e /bsd* OpenBSD 4.5 (GENERIC) #1749: Sat Feb 28 14:51:18 MST 2009

Re: nmbclust command not found within config

2009-11-27 Thread Ted Unangst
On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 12:01 PM, Marcos Laufer mar...@ipv4networks.com wrote: Looking at this faq page http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#config it shows that under OpenBSD 4.5 modifying NMBCLUSTERS is possible. That was very confusing to me, as the FAQ is usually up to date and this hasn't

invitatie la cursuri gratuite online

2009-11-27 Thread CURSURI GRATUITE ONLINE
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Re: Make utility documentation

2009-11-27 Thread Marc Espie
On Thu, Nov 26, 2009 at 03:04:16PM -0800, David Hoskin wrote: Could you kindly point me to the documentation about OpenBSD make utility and makefile. A pretty good tutorial can be found here: /usr/share/doc/psd/12.make/ Warning: a large part of this documentation is a bit misleading.

can't get vesa @ 1280x800 or nv

2009-11-27 Thread Peter Miller
I have 4.6 amd64 installed and can't get X to work at 1280x800. After a default install X won't start and i get an error which i think is caused by nv. I created a xorg.conf file using X -configure and then changed the driver from nv to vesa' and was able to get X running, but only at 800x600