Sean Brown wrote:
> I'm looking forward to OpenBash
Do you realize that on my only Linux machine I don't even have
bash installed. I replaced /bin/sh with ash and I use zsh for my
shell.
bash for Linux is like Internet Explorer for windows. It comes
preinstalled so everyone uses it and doesn't bo
On Sun, May 01, 2005 at 10:09:17AM -0400, Monah Baki wrote:
> I'm certain I'm using the right cabling.
<...>
> But why would the system act like this in the first place?
probably has to do with the order the system finds the NICs.
the 'new' one you're putting in is found before the one yo
On 5/1/05, Matthew Clarke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> dimanche, le 1 mai, 2005, Arnaud Bergeron nous a dit ceci:
>
> > I have been playing around with netstat and found lots of strange
> > (read uknown ports) udp connections. I wanted to know what processes
> > where doing these connections. Af
> Sean Brown wrote:
>>I'm looking forward to OpenBash
>
> They already have it, it's called ksh.
Yes you're right but a "OpenHTTPD" with "OpenMOD_GZIP" and maybe IPv6 is
still missing. And maybe a OpenSQUID... :-)))
Just jokingoO(But httpD improvements would be realy cool. :) )
Kind regards,
> I am currently going through the netstat code, and I see it makes a lot of use
> of kvm.
It is terrifying.
> I take it that the preferred method for looking up kernel data would
> be sysctl.
Yes.
> Now, I am stuck in the kvm code. I have no idea where I can find a list of
> kernel symbols th
I am currently going through the netstat code, and I see it makes a lot of use
of kvm. I take it that the preferred method for looking up kernel data would
be sysctl.
Now, I am stuck in the kvm code. I have no idea where I can find a list of
kernel symbols that can be placed into nl struct. Is
Shawn Brand wrote:
My Name is Shawn,
I have a fulll version Window XP Professional and it is bootable but when I
go into the BIOS it only gives the option to check the flooping then the hard
drive, then the CD Rom, but I need it to check the CD Rom first can you tell
me how to change boot sequence
On Sun, May 01, 2005 at 03:26:46PM -0300, kroty wrote:
> I'm going to buy a book about Operating Systems. I've seen two titles
> "Modern Operating Systems" (Tanenbaum) and "Operating Systems Concepts"
> (Silberschatz). I don't know wich one would be better for a newbie
> in OSs like me. Any suggest
Yippee! I made it back from a short visit into the near future (May 19)
and I even brought back 2 CD sets of 3.7 and the Puffy Wireframe T.
Getting these through Customs and into my mailbox here in Australia
this early proves that early orders are worth doing.
Thanks to all who made the code, mad
dimanche, le 1 mai, 2005, Arnaud Bergeron nous a dit ceci:
> I have been playing around with netstat and found lots of strange
> (read uknown ports) udp connections. I wanted to know what processes
> where doing these connections. After reading the netstat man page I
> concluded that it can't do
Arnaud Bergeron wrote:
> I have been playing around with netstat and found lots of strange
> (read uknown ports) udp connections. I wanted to know what processes
> where doing these connections. After reading the netstat man page I
> concluded that it can't do it. Google provided no useful infor
I have been playing around with netstat and found lots of strange
(read uknown ports) udp connections. I wanted to know what processes
where doing these connections. After reading the netstat man page I
concluded that it can't do it. Google provided no useful information.
So I wonder if there i
On 2005 May 1, at 4:23 PM, Shawn Brand wrote:
> I have a fulll version Window XP Professional and it is bootable but
> when I
> go into the BIOS it only gives the option to check the flooping then
> the hard
> drive, then the CD Rom, but I need it to check the CD Rom first can
> you tell
> me
Locate an OLD (like 80s) version of the latter. It's an AWESOME fundamentals
book. The never versions are watered down big time. Windows windows
windoww... blablabla.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
kroty
Sent: Sunday, May 01, 2005 10:27 AM
Sean Brown wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
They already have it, it's called ksh.
_
Take charge with a pop-up guard built on patented Microsoft. SmartScreen
Technology.
http://join.msn.com/?pgmarket=en-ca&page=byoa/prem&xAPID=
My Name is Shawn,
I have a fulll version Window XP Professional and it is bootable but when I
go into the BIOS it only gives the option to check the flooping then the hard
drive, then the CD Rom, but I need it to check the CD Rom first can you tell
me how to change boot sequence. Can you help?
On Sun, May 01, 2005 at 08:25:25PM +0200, Christoph Machon wrote:
> Hmm...very interesting. OpenBSD logo on the windows machine ?!
> The pauper fish ;)
You'r really be sure that it isn't fvwm with a good made XP theme?
But i wouldn't bet :-)
--
Veit Waltemath <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | *B
Thierry Deval wrote:
On May 1, 2005, at 23:31, Miod Vallat wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
I think they should write the ultimate virus! Take out Windows completely!
Think of it!; it would be the big bang all over again!
Alternately, I could live with mount_smbfs
(puts on flame retardant su
Sean Brown wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
If you keep saying things like that, Theo's going to change the default
shell back to csh.
On May 1, 2005, at 23:31, Miod Vallat wrote:
I'm looking forward to OpenBash
Why do you want every OpenBSD developer to puke?
Jeez, I didn't read that !
And it is indeed MY feeling. :p
Am Sonntag, 1. Mai 2005 20:25 schrieb Christoph Machon:
> Am Sonntag, den 01.05.2005, 06:35 -0400 schrieb Todd Boyer:
> > On Saturday, April 30, Theo de Raadt wrote:
...
> Hmm...very interesting. OpenBSD logo on the windows machine ?!
> The pauper fish ;)
> --
> Wer die Freiheit aufgibt, um Si
> I'm looking forward to OpenBash
>
Why do you want every OpenBSD developer to puke?
Miod
On May 1, 2005 2:11 pm, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Sun, 1 May 2005, Ben Goren wrote:
> > I did *not* say that I expected a Sendmail replacement any time
> > soon--quite the opposite. Let me put a definite limit on this: I'd bet
> > no more than (a modest) lunch, and only on the condition that I alre
Sorry If I didn't read to well, but when exactly is the hackaton planned?
I always like to have my personal hackaton at the same time and I
always watch every CVS commit.
Wijnand
Oops, I mailed to Damien, but I wanted this one on misc@
2005/5/1, Wijnand Wiersma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Well, I sure am interested, but I am not able to give a lot of money for that.
>
> Wijnand
On Sun, 1 May 2005, Ben Goren wrote:
> I did *not* say that I expected a Sendmail replacement any time
> soon--quite the opposite. Let me put a definite limit on this: I'd bet
> no more than (a modest) lunch, and only on the condition that I already
> happened to be in the same city when the be
On Sat, Apr 30, 2005 at 02:02:29PM -0500, L. V. Lammert wrote:
> On Sat, 30 Apr 2005, RGA wrote:
> > Do you want to use *all* of wd0 for OpenBSD? [no] y
> >
> Depends if you want other OS installations.
if you want other OS installations (on that disk), would
it be better to answer 'n' to that
On Sun, 1 May 2005, eric wrote:
> Would donations to the developers for ipv6 support in httpd(8) help for the
> upcoming hack-a-thon? Or are all the developers going to be busy already?
why don't you just use the already existing patch?
--
quit whining you haven't done anything wrong
because f
On 5/1/05, Monah Baki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm certain I'm using the right cabling.
The 'right cabling' means that you need to make sure your
configuration on xl0 and xl1 should match the machines you connect
through the cables going into these devices.
> As you can see I no longer have
Am Sonntag, den 01.05.2005, 06:35 -0400 schrieb Todd Boyer:
> On Saturday, April 30, Theo de Raadt wrote:
>
> > Something else... today I had a chance to checkout a new
> > wireframe puffy tshirt. The texture of them is incredible,
> > blind people will appreciate the shirts a lot, heck they
On Sat, 30 Apr 2005 17:40:50 +0200
"Paul Wittmayer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Does OpenBSD support Intel Xeon 64Bit processors?
>
> Didn't find anything on the web.
>
> Thanks for help.
>
> Paul
Booted on an IBM x336 last time i tried, with AMD64 kernel ofcourse.
// nick
On Sun, May 01, 2005 at 03:26:46PM -0300, kroty wrote:
> I'm going to buy a book about Operating Systems. I've seen two titles
> "Modern Operating Systems" (Tanenbaum) and "Operating Systems Concepts"
> (Silberschatz). I don't know wich one would be better for a newbie
> in OSs like me. Any sugges
On Sat, Apr 30, 2005 at 03:00:40PM +0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> a portion of daily output:
>
> ...
> mail:
> 27 Apr 2005 02:24:28 GMT #1834485 9664 <>
> remote [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 24 Apr 2005 00:16:13 GMT #1834467 3474 <>
> remote [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 27 Apr 2005 02:2
I'm going to buy a book about Operating Systems. I've seen two titles
"Modern Operating Systems" (Tanenbaum) and "Operating Systems Concepts"
(Silberschatz). I don't know wich one would be better for a newbie
in OSs like me. Any suggestion would be appreciated. Thanks!
On 2005 May 1, at 3:35 AM, Todd Boyer wrote:
> http://www.autumntech.com/bsdstuff/puffy-desktop.jpg
Huh? A well-used Windows machine with Puffy and the motto?
Whatever
b&
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had
a name of PGP.sig]
On 2005 Apr 30, at 5:22 PM, Jeff Bachtel wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 30, 2005 at 02:30:28PM -0700, Ben Goren wrote:
>> As much as I'm sure Theo would love to get rid of gcc and
>> friends...damn, that's a big undertaking. I don't think it's the sort
>> of thing that would happen at a hackathon. If I had
even on windoze...!?!
At 08:35 PM 1/05/2005, Todd Boyer wrote:
On Saturday, April 30, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Something else... today I had a chance to checkout a new
> wireframe puffy tshirt. The texture of them is incredible,
> blind people will appreciate the shirts a lot, heck they are
> just p
> Makes a plain sexy desktop too
> http://www.autumntech.com/bsdstuff/puffy-desktop.jpg
But wait... something's not quite right...
The "sexy" desktop is running Windows.
--
"Then the wolf threw Little Red Riding Hood on the bed and he ate her."
--Little Red Riding Hood, The Grimm Brot
I installed -current on an i386 laptop from
ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/i386
Running xorgconfig I have:
xorgconfig: can't load library 'libc.so.35.1'
Same problem with xf86config3, xf86config, xf86cfg and xorgcfg.
I'm also having problems with two PCMCIA wireless cards (I disabl
On Sunday 01 May 2005 14:50, J.D. Bronson wrote:
> Is this expected and normal or did I place the sysctl in the wrong place?
Take a look into /etc/rc.securelevel
--
Lukas Ratajski - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Feel free to use PGP public key 0xEF4DA75A for e-mail encryption
I'm certain I'm using the right cabling.
Right now my ifconfig -a displays:
xl0: flags=8843 mtu 1500
lladdr 00:10:4b:24:40:a0
media: Ethernet autoselect (100baseTX full-duplex)
status: active
inet 192.168.3.1 netmask 0xff00 broadcast 192.168.3.255
inet
On 5/1/05, Monah Baki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I decided to add another interface xl1.
> All of a sudden I get the following error:
Are you sure that the correct cable leads to the correct interface?
OpenBSD may very well detect the cards in an order different from what
you expect. In other wo
On May 1, 2005, at 9:18 AM, Monah Baki wrote:
I'm running an old dell 2300/350 with OBSD3.7.
I have 3 interfaces (xl0, fxp0 and wi0) attached to it. I decided to
add another interface xl1.
All of a sudden I get the following error:
xl0: flags=8802 mtu 1500
lladdr 00:60:08:0d:8c:4c
At 07:50 AM 5/1/2005, J.D. Bronson wrote:
I have finished an install of obsd and wanted to finalize it
by setting the securelevel as high as I can.
I presume this value 'kern.securelevel=2' is in sysctl.conf
and when I put it in there - booting it does enter into
securelevel=2.
However, I see this
Hi All,
I'm running an old dell 2300/350 with OBSD3.7.
I have 3 interfaces (xl0, fxp0 and wi0) attached to it. I decided to add
another interface xl1.
All of a sudden I get the following error:
xl0: flags=8802 mtu 1500
lladdr 00:60:08:0d:8c:4c
media: Ethernet autoselect (100bas
I have finished an install of obsd and wanted to finalize it
by setting the securelevel as high as I can.
I presume this value 'kern.securelevel=2' is in sysctl.conf
and when I put it in there - booting it does enter into
securelevel=2.
However, I see this on the boot up:
..
...
May 1 07:38:14 obs
eric wrote:
Would donations to the developers for ipv6 support in httpd(8) help for the
upcoming hack-a-thon? Or are all the developers going to be busy already?
I posted a couple days ago and there was some interest that I received
privately on making donations for this specifically, but I'm curio
A few promissing tasks indeed,
What ever endeavours you may embark on during the Hackathon, I hope
you find a nice beer buzz and as Jan Izary put it;
> Beyond that we can hope that someone has
> a moment of clarity and comes up with
> another sweet addition like spamd.
> If I wasn't sure develop
Sounds like a Cisco Router to me.
-Oorspronkelijk bericht-
Van: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Namens
Christopher Kruslicky
Verzonden: zondag 1 mei 2005 2:46
Aan: misc@openbsd.org
CC: adrian kok
Onderwerp: Re: firewall log
On Saturday 30 April 2005 06:01 pm, adrian kok wrote:
On Saturday, April 30, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Something else... today I had a chance to checkout a new
> wireframe puffy tshirt. The texture of them is incredible,
> blind people will appreciate the shirts a lot, heck they are
> just plain sexy. We should have made a wireframe blowfish
> t
Would donations to the developers for ipv6 support in httpd(8) help for the
upcoming hack-a-thon? Or are all the developers going to be busy already?
I posted a couple days ago and there was some interest that I received
privately on making donations for this specifically, but I'm curious to know
On 4/30/05, Rick Barter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Rick Barter wrote:
> > Rick Barter wrote:
> >
> >> Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >>
> >>> Something else... today I had a chance to checkout a new wireframe
> >>> puffy tshirt. The texture of them is incredible, blind people will
> >>> appreciate the s
* Otto Moerbeek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [050430 19:00]:
> dd allocates a a buffer twice as large as the blocksize in this case. So
> that's 37m * 2 = 74m, which is 75776. Your data limit is 76800, so
> probably some allocaations are already there, making the 74m allocation
> fail.
Ah, thank you, th
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