Re: recommended input methods?

2014-10-14 Thread Bryan Linton
On 2014-10-14 14:02:52, Joel Rees joel.r...@gmail.com wrote: What're the recommended input methods for Japanese and Spanish? I can't speak for anything officially recommended, but for Japanese at least, I use ports/inputmethods/anthy with ports/inputmethods/uim and it works well. The only

Re: recommended input methods?

2014-10-14 Thread Abel Abraham Camarillo Ojeda
On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 1:14 AM, Bryan Linton b...@shoshoni.info wrote: On 2014-10-14 14:02:52, Joel Rees joel.r...@gmail.com wrote: What're the recommended input methods for Japanese and Spanish? I can't speak for anything officially recommended, but for Japanese at least, I use

Re: recommended input methods?

2014-10-14 Thread Anthony J. Bentley
Hi Bryan, Bryan Linton writes: I can't speak for anything officially recommended, but for Japanese at least... (snip) As far as Spanish is concerned... (snip) I'd be interested in what other people use for the above tasks as well. For typing non-ASCII characters, I use a compose key (see

NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Mikael
NetMap (http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/) in OpenBSD would be a great idea. It's a simple API for solving an important problem, at least its core parts. Is OBSD's kernel structure suited as it is for NetMap? What's the interest out there for NetMap on OBSD? Thanks, Mikael

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Henning Brauer
* Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com [2014-10-14 10:24]: NetMap (http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/) in OpenBSD would be a great idea. for what? to create even more broken userland networking stuff? We kinda like our stack. What's the interest out there for NetMap on OBSD? roughly somewhere

cvs update: move away any file; it is in the way

2014-10-14 Thread Stefan Wollny
Hi there, I am puzzled with a strange behaviour of CVS. In my .profile I have PKG_PATH=http://ftp.hostserver.de/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/packages/amd64/ CVSROOT=anon...@ftp.hostserver.de:/cvs export PKG_PATH CVSROOT Now when updating e.g. /usr/src I get the following: /usr/src $ sudo cvs -q up

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Mikael
Dear Henning, Thank you for your thoughtful response. 2014-10-14 11:02 GMT+02:00 Henning Brauer hb-open...@ml.bsws.de: * Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com [2014-10-14 10:24]: NetMap (http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/) in OpenBSD would be a great idea. We kinda like our stack. Of

Re: cvs update: move away any file; it is in the way

2014-10-14 Thread Ingo Schwarze
Hi Stefan, Stefan Wollny wrote on Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 02:25:04PM +0200: I am puzzled with a strange behaviour of CVS. In my .profile I have PKG_PATH=http://ftp.hostserver.de/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/packages/amd64/ CVSROOT=anon...@ftp.hostserver.de:/cvs export PKG_PATH CVSROOT When

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread sven falempin
On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 8:55 AM, Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com wrote: Dear Henning, Thank you for your thoughtful response. 2014-10-14 11:02 GMT+02:00 Henning Brauer hb-open...@ml.bsws.de: * Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com [2014-10-14 10:24]: NetMap

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Henning Brauer
* Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com [2014-10-14 14:57]: 2014-10-14 11:02 GMT+02:00 Henning Brauer hb-open...@ml.bsws.de: * Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com [2014-10-14 10:24]: NetMap (http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/) in OpenBSD would be a great idea. We kinda like our stack. Of

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Mikael
2014-10-14 16:15 GMT+02:00 Henning Brauer hb-open...@ml.bsws.de: Of course, OBSD has a very good stack as it is, but it has no NetMap functionality yeah, and that is good. netmap bypasses teh stack and you look at reimplementing the stack in userland, repeating mistakes, bugs and whatnot

Re: cvs update: move away any file; it is in the way

2014-10-14 Thread Stefan Wollny
Hi Ingo! Thank you very, very much for your valuable, in-depth answer and advice! I have issues with the system loosing it's routes. Because of this I had tried several mirror sites and must have caught the divergent entries doing so. Your advice solved the problem. Thanks again! Cheers,STEFAN

problem with CARP+VLAN+OpenBSD 5.5

2014-10-14 Thread Fede
Hello, I am experiencing some problems with OpenBSD 5.5, specifically with CARP and VLAN. My setup is: 2 Dell R415 servers, MASTER (system-1)/BACKUP (system-2) with 8 vlan interfaces (2 WAN + 6 LAN) + 49 carp interfaces (40 WAN + 9 LAN) + pfsync interface + pf configured with several

host(1) prints errors to STDOUT

2014-10-14 Thread Craig R. Skinner
$ host loopy.loo.found.not; print $? Host loopy.loo.found.not not found: 3(NXDOMAIN) 1 $ host loopy.loo.found.not /dev/null; print $? 1 $ host loopy.loo.found.not 2/dev/null; print $? Host loopy.loo.found.not not found: 3(NXDOMAIN) 1 There's a printf at line 429 of

Re: host(1) prints errors to STDOUT

2014-10-14 Thread Theo de Raadt
Unfortunately host is maintained upstream, in the bind codebase, by ISC. You should file your bug report there, because that is the right way to get change into the ecosystem. We could fix it here, and be different, then there will be even more problems. (Unfortunately, I expect them to mumble

Re: problem with CARP+VLAN+OpenBSD 5.5

2014-10-14 Thread Andy
On 14/10/14 17:03, Fede wrote: Hello, I am experiencing some problems with OpenBSD 5.5, specifically with CARP and VLAN. My setup is: 2 Dell R415 servers, MASTER (system-1)/BACKUP (system-2) with 8 vlan interfaces (2 WAN + 6 LAN) + 49 carp interfaces (40 WAN + 9 LAN) + pfsync interface +

Route on self pointing to internal CARP to allow VPN to work causes error arpresolve: 10.16.0.254: route without link local address

2014-10-14 Thread Andy
Hi, We have pairs of firewalls at all our remote office sites, with CARP interfaces on all physical interfaces. Head office also has a pair.. Every remote office site has IPSec VPNs to the head office (built against the CARP IPs and using sasyncd etc..). NB: VPN fail-over works brilliantly

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Jan Stary
On Oct 14 16:33:23, mikael.tr...@gmail.com wrote: Most devices in a system can be accessed with good performance from userland as it is now, for instance block devices, USB, serial ports, video and audio. Repeat after me: userland is not supposed to access devices. It is supposed to talk to a

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Henning Brauer
* Mikael mikael.tr...@gmail.com [2014-10-14 16:35]: 2014-10-14 16:15 GMT+02:00 Henning Brauer hb-open...@ml.bsws.de: i.e. there's no way for a userland application to do high speed packet-level IO. there are plenty of methods actually. Like what? bpf, for example. but since you still

sudo bad practice or inconsistency?

2014-10-14 Thread Alessandro DE LAURENZIS
Dear list, I was playing with xfe (which by the way I consider a great program) and noticed that opening a root window with sudo in OBSD doesn't work. After a bit of debugging, I found out that the root cause is the following definition inside xfedefs.h: #define SUDOCMD -fn 7x14 -geometry 60x4

Re: sudo bad practice or inconsistency?

2014-10-14 Thread Todd C. Miller
On Tue, 14 Oct 2014 20:58:56 +0200, Alessandro DE LAURENZIS wrote: Now, launching sudo that way returns an error: just22@poseidon:[xfe] sudo su -c ls su: no such login class: ls so basically sudo is parsing the -c option instead of passing it to su. Probably this is just a bad practice

Re: sudo bad practice or inconsistency?

2014-10-14 Thread Miod Vallat
just22@poseidon:[xfe] sudo su -c ls su: no such login class: ls so basically sudo is parsing the -c option instead of passing it to su. No, it is not. If it were, the error message would come from sudo, not from su. And, in any case, why the same command works in Linux? do they use a

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Henning Brauer
* Henning Brauer hb-open...@ml.bsws.de [2014-10-14 20:52]: netmap is luigi's research framework, and he used it for some cool research an sure will do so more in the future. no more, no less. I should clarify: I am aware of a few use cases that profit enormously from netmap. Let's look at what

Re: problem with CARP+VLAN+OpenBSD 5.5

2014-10-14 Thread Federico Donati
On 10/14/2014 06:53 PM, Andy wrote: Why do you have so many CARP interfaces? Generally it's good practice to have one CARP interface per broadcast domain / VLAN etc, and have all your alias IP addresses defined in that one CARP interface. NB; when adding; inet alias ipaddress mask Always set

Re: NetMap in OpenBSD

2014-10-14 Thread Raimundo Santos
Sorry, replied to fast and to OP only. Below is one use case and a lot o things that Henning have said, put from my point of view. -- Forwarded message -- From: Raimundo Santos rait...@gmail.com Date: 14 October 2014 15:02 Subject: Re: NetMap in OpenBSD To: Mikael

RAID1C discipline and alternatives

2014-10-14 Thread Vladislav Manchev
Hello, I need to set up a few machines in the coming weeks and was wondering what's the status of stacked softraid and especially RAID1C discipline - i.e. CRYPTO on top of RAID1? Unfortunately I don't have the hardware right now so I can't really try it out, but any input is appreciated. Would

Re: problem with CARP+VLAN+OpenBSD 5.5

2014-10-14 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2014-10-14, Federico Donati nix.b...@gmail.com wrote: On 10/14/2014 06:53 PM, Andy wrote: Why do you have so many CARP interfaces? Generally it's good practice to have one CARP interface per broadcast domain / VLAN etc, and have all your alias IP addresses defined in that one CARP

Re: Route-to with a dynamic 'next hop'

2014-10-14 Thread Justin Mayes
Thanks to both of you for the advice Just to followup I ended up with the relayd 'routers' setup as described in man page but with a script monitor rather than icmp. The monitor finds gateway for interface in route table and pings it with -I interface source address. Seems to work as desired.

Re: sudo bad practice or inconsistency?

2014-10-14 Thread Alessandro DE LAURENZIS
On Tue 14/10 19:08, Miod Vallat wrote: just22@poseidon:[xfe] sudo su -c ls su: no such login class: ls so basically sudo is parsing the -c option instead of passing it to su. No, it is not. If it were, the error message would come from sudo, not from su. And, in any case, why