What's the smallest, most tablet-ish device I can put OpenBSD on? Want to
travel and stay connected.
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # like pawn structure in modern chess.
http://www.softwoehr.com # Checkmate ends the game. - N. Shor
reply if any q's are asked until Monday, thanks again..
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # like pawn structure in modern chess.
http://www.softwoehr.com # Checkmate ends the game. - N. Short
Theo de Raadt wrote:
Finding them inside the global shipping system is easier than you
think
One of the joys of growing old is watching the really bad sci fi you read as a
youth all come true :)
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402
Eduardo Lopes wrote:
May someone point to me how do I can obtain, in the console, the keycode of
any particular key, in OpenBSD?
in gforth (a port) you can do KEY .
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # like pawn structure in modern
.
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # like pawn structure in modern chess.
http://www.softwoehr.com # Checkmate ends the game. - N. Short
=booksie=UTF8qid=1414126274sr=1-1
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # like pawn structure in modern chess.
http://www.softwoehr.com # Checkmate ends the game. - N. Short
STeve Andre' wrote:
Happy birthday, OpenBSD!
Also John Le Carré's birthday. Coincidence? :)
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis on things
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # like pawn structure in modern chess.
http://www.softwoehr.com # Checkmate ends the game. - N. Short
that made the first two editions such a hit. With the help of this
fast-paced, clear, instructional guide, readers will master the latest PF developments to build strong and secure
networks better able to handle today's network demands.
--
Jack Woehr # There's too much emphasis
Theo de Raadt wrote:
1 person noticed. Took about 6 years.
Clark Kent, you're a real SOB when you're drunk! :)
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The
Ted Unangst wrote:
It's pretty difficult to create CDs that both contain signatures and are
themselves signed.
Yeah, you'd have to replace SHA with something like Ouroboros :)
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have
., the excellent SOL390 (Open Solaris for mainframes) port was
born only to die a lonely death.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
http://www.itnews.com.au/News/382068,serious-openssl-bug-renders-websites-wide-open.aspx
accurate w/r/t 5.3?
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art
Journal:
http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=articlesid=20140408063423
Thanks for the update. Should have read the errata list first. I'm getting old
and slow.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http
I would volunteer to translate the FAQ into Bazgelootz, a language my wife and
daughter and I made up
over 25 years around the dinner table, but they don't use OpenBSD.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all
nor a grantmaster,
he wants a sustainable model.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
Bob Beck wrote:
so it's not a source of sustainable funding, unless we were to do something
like introduce an annual quota of bugs
http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1995-11-13/
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all
Christopher Ahrens wrote:
Wish I could split everything off to physical, but all I have for space for is a mini-rack that fits under my desk in
my apartment
Sounds like you have answered your own question!
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO
Erling Westenvik wrote:
Anyway: When can we expect OpenBSD support for these devices?
Erling made my day :)
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art
difficult. It's fast enough to install and try that you might as well
grab a spare computer and try it once. Read the directions, they're concise and accurate.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http
of execution time per year.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
Michael Motyka wrote:
Meanwhile, even the new Beagle Bone has ~120KB of secure code and hands off execution to the user in non-secure
supervisor mode. It's probably that way for my own good. Sigh. I may try to get past that since it's a cool little board.
http://www.colorforth.com/
--
Jack
Miod Vallat wrote:
Pretty sure it takes more than 1.7G to build Java.
But then how can java people pretend it has any usefulness, besides
filing disks?
Miod
métaphysico-théologo-cosmolo-nigologie :)
Language wars are s-o-o-o 20th century.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we
.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
provacateur.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
Peter Bisroev wrote:
Maybe I am missing something but how come there are so many out of order packets?
What's missing may be methodical forensics.
Can you monitor the incoming via some other device and see if they come out of the
wall socket out of order?
--
Jack Woehr # We
made second edition.
I have the Kindle version to review and will be reviewing on Amazon soon.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
/RX0JLQ3WC3KHW/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm)
I have pointed out several already in your 2nd Ed. to the publisher!
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_
skills.
If no, there is always Linux.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
for trouble?
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - James Mason, _The Art of Chess_, 1905
Eric Oyen wrote:
they have. however, thermoform paper is actually more expensive than standard
paper stock.
Ah. Real-world economics scotches another clever techno solution :(
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we
Eric Oyen wrote:
btw, an
actual braille embosser (a monster braille printer) costs about $10K.
Hmm, sounds like an entrepreneurial opportunity making a cheaper unit. What's
the input? Unicode?
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402
Eric Oyen wrote:
120 pound bond paper is rather hard on the print heads they use (and
its the only stuff that will reasonably hold braille).
Bond paper is traditional. Haven't they figured out a way to emboss thin sheets
of polymer yet?
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have
Amit Kulkarni wrote:
completely don't understand why there is still no braile terminal
available.
Especially since they were invented back in the 1980's (at the latest). I
played with a prototype at a meeting
of the Forth Interest Group circa 1987.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly
Weldon Goree wrote:
mdoc(7) (the suggested format)
Ah, the yin and yang of formats and tools ... is there a WYSIWIG editor for
mdoc format?
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all that there is.
http
style will mature. Recently passed 60th birthday and spend most of these days playing
music, chess, and with grandchildren :)
Yours, Ingo
Nice to chat with you again, Ingo. Keep up your excellent work.
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402
Marc Espie wrote:
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 12:46:24PM -0600, Jack Woehr wrote:
Weldon Goree wrote:
mdoc(7) (the suggested format)
Ah, the yin and yang of formats and tools ... is there a WYSIWIG editor for
mdoc format?
vi
!Gmandoc|more
u
funny guy :)
--
Jack Woehr # We
present in the process list and holds the port, is
certainly possible.
A server daemon in java or in any other language which had a bug could
certainly behave that way. Good luck!
--
Jack Woehr # We commonly say we have no time when,
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # of course, we have all
statements before the securelevel=1 statement or is the
man page in error, please?
--
Jack Woehr # I'm not lazy, I'm useless.
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # There's a big difference.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - Wally (Dilbert 20110318)
4 set out od jp5pin12;
and it seems to sort of work but I can't find the -c option in the manual.
--
Jack Woehr # I'm not lazy, I'm useless.
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # There's a big difference.
http://www.softwoehr.com # - Wally (Dilbert 20110318)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
They are using code from 2008 or earlier.
My bad. Using three different OBSD machines at different levels, man gpioctl on
wrong one :(
Thanks, Stuart.
--
Jack Woehr # I'm not lazy, I'm useless.
Box 51, Golden CO 80402 # There's a big difference.
http
Anyone working with TBB ( http://www.threadingbuildingblocks.org/ )
on OpenBSD?
--
Jack J. Woehr# I run for public office from time to time. It's like
http://www.well.com/~jax # working out at the gym, you sweat a lot, don't get
http://www.softwoehr.com # anywhere, and you fall
jared r r spiegel wrote:
$ cp file file.bak
as far as 'wtf is going on with cp(1)', maybe would've hinted at
you are executing something other than /bin/cp earlier in the game.
Wasn't executing something other than. Was getting NLS error messages
for OBSD
commands from the Object Rexx
I'm experiencing something with 4.3 I never experienced before,
or maybe I just wasn't paying attention.
In the following example, I'm trying to copy a file (wrongly)
in a directory I don't own and which is write-protected:
cp factor.rex factor.rex.bak
cp: factor.rex.bak: Invalid
Philip Guenther wrote:
Hmm, I don't see that error message in the stock /bin/cp or /bin/rm.
Are you running your own version of them or have shell script wrappers
for them or something? What's the output of which cp rm?
Is it maybe builtin to ksh? Besides, the error message is probably
Paul de Weerd wrote:
Also compare the md5 sum of your /bin/rm with the sum from a clean
install of 4.3 (assuming this is a -RELEASE version you're running).
It's 4.3 release but I did rebuild from freshly checked out source.
Both the release and the checkout came from ftp3.usa.openbsd.org
Philip Guenther wrote:
Perhaps, but /bin/rm and /bin/cp are staticly linked, so the message
would appear in the binary in some form.
strings /bin /rm doesn't show that string.
Anway:
$ echo $SHELL
/bin/ksh
$ which rm
/bin/rm
$ ls -l ccreply.rex
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel
Philip Guenther wrote:
What's the output of
ktrace rm ccreply.rex
kdump | egrep -A1 -B2 'execv|errno'
You answered it.
Look here:
16524 rm CALL open(0xcfbd1e60,0,0)
16524 rm NAMI /opt/ooRexx/bin/rexx.cat
Hmm ...
$ set | grep NLSPATH
NLSPATH=/opt/ooRexx/bin/rexx.cat:
Bryan Irvine wrote:
A total shot in the dark
Bryan al. thanks. Matthew Dempsky and Brian Keefer have helped
debug and it looks to be a bogus CNAME on one of PlanetDomain's name
servers:
bash-3.00$ dig @ns1.planetdomain.com. www.oorexx.org cname
; DiG 9.2.4
Theo de Raadt wrote:
A HP XFP SR-optic 10GE module for a HP 3500yl switch which already has
the 10Gb card installed. If anyone can help us with getting this to
us, we'd love it.
Yes, we know they are very expensive. Brutal, in fact.
Hmm, $2,822.97 at http://keenzo.com/showproduct.asp?id=741395
/bsd single kernel traps on my box during 'make obj' in /usr/src:
((
OpenBSD 4.0 (GENERIC) #1104: Fri Sep 1 11:54:27 MDT 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
))
...
=== sbin/restore
/usr/src/sbin/restore/obj - /usr/obj/sbin/restore
uvm_fault(0xd073ff00, 0xd200,
It's been pointed out my trap report was inadequate (Thanks Jonathan Gray).
I have reproduced the problem. Here is a better report (typed in by hand,
since I haven't figured out this modern all-USB mboard with no regular
comm port).
/bsd single kernel traps on my box during 'make obj' in
Stuart Henderson wrote:
Good luck with the serial cables :-)
Stuart
Figured out my problem. Doesn't have a regular serial port.
Just USB.
Oh well, here's a few lines of the screen typed in manually from
a bsd.mp boot. Happens just after em0 loads okay.
...
pci_intr_map: no MP mapping found
I'd like to build an OBSD box based on Intel BOXDP965LTCK Main Board
http://www.intel.com/products/motherboard/dp965lt/index.htm
http://www.intel.com/products/motherboard/dp965lt/index.htm with one
Intel Core2 Duo E6400 CPU.
My interpretation from searches of the mailing lists is that this is
I'm confused ... I built /usr/ports/www/mediawiki but php (built
automagically
as a pre-req) doesn't seem to work in the server. Do I have to change the
default OBSD 3.8 web server config (or chrooting) to run PHP stuff?
--
Jack J. Woehr # Men never do evil so completely and
PO
Thanks everyone for helping me get mediawiki started ... sorta ...
but I have one problem left ... mysqld isn't installed.
ports/www/mediawiki descended into ports/databases/mysql, but even
though that dir *builds* the mysqld, it only installs the client. What
do I have
to do to get mysqld
Seems to me I solved this one before about four years ago, but ...
OBSD 3.8 w/ the installed Apache httpd doesn't follow my symlinks,
e.g., /var/www/htdocs/doc/ is a link to /usr/local/doc but no love
on http://localhost:/doc
FollowSymLinks is there in httpd.conf ... all the dirs and fiels seem
Bryan Irvine wrote:
On 12/14/05, Jack Woehr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Recommendations for another POP3/IMAP/SMTP mail reader client (if one
exists) other than Mozilla?
Want to stay in gui-ville? I recommend evolution.
Thanks to everyone for the lively discussion and many
Recommendations for another POP3/IMAP/SMTP mail reader client (if one
exists) other than Mozilla?
Years ago I hopped directly from Elm on a host server to graphic mail
clients on my desktop
box without ever dealing with, e.g., mutt setting up sendmail. Now
Mozilla 1.7.2 crashes hard
on
Simon Morgan wrote:
I recommend Sylpheed Claws. BTW I hope you filed a bug report for that crash. :)
Bugzilla for Mozilla says don't bother for releases over two weeks old.
--
Jack J. Woehr # I never played fast and loose with the
PO Box 51, Golden, CO 80402 #
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