I will drink a beer to commemorate our lose.

Jay

> ...was rather unspectacular: Hardware failiure.
>
> The system's name was "base", originally installed with
> OpenBSD 2.3 on Jun 12, 1998:
>
> -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  5 Jun 12  1998 etc/myname
>
> It ran the OpenBSD 2.3 kernel and most of the userland until
> it stopped responding about three weeks ago and couldn't be
> resurrected.
>
> Small hardware problems had happened before, as with most
> systems that have been running uninterrupted for nearly 10
> years, but this time I decided against getting it up again:
> Running modern software had gotten a real chore (never managed
> to backport OpenSSH, for example, so it still had the last
> version of the old ssh.com daemon (1.2.32?).
> (Well, that, and the 2.3 GENERIC kernel reliably shot down
> the VMWare session I tried to get it running in.)
>
> Good old internet software like sendmail or bind never were
> a problem though, even in their most recent versions (which may
> or may not be a compliment, depending on your point of view).
>
> To my knowlege, the system never was hacked - despite running
> software like qpop 2.53 or really, really old versions of
> apache and php. (I sometimes found core files, but I guess
> the system was just too obscure to be a valid target for
> any type of automated attack.)
>
> base had lots of old stuff still lying around, like an emergency
> netboot environment for the sun3/160 that it had replaced as main
> server for infra.de back at the time, an Amanda client for my
> old employer's network backup system that's long gone, or the
> configuration for half a dozen UUCP feeds which have lost
> their peers ages ago.
>
> Gone are the days when 32MB RAM was a lot, a stripped down OpenBSD
> kernel had a whopping 1MB, and a handful of blacklists got rid
> of almost all of the spam.
>
> -rwxr-xr-x   1 root      wheel    1056157 Jul 31  2002 /bsd
>
> Alex.

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