Invitación para Recursos Humanos y Supervisores

2011-11-01 Thread Veronica Solis
290205

[IMAGE]

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Re: shift+backspace in X

2011-11-01 Thread richo
On 02/11/11 02:09 -0200, Christiano F. Haesbaert wrote:
>On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 05:12:47PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>> In X, shift + backspace used to work the same as backspace on its own
>> (i.e. delete the previous character), but no longer does so in recent
>> -current, most likely following the xkb update.
>>
>> Does anyone know how to restore the previous behaviour?
>>
>> I don't have any keyboard-related sections in xorg.conf (only
>> a Files section with some old font paths).
>
>This works for me:
>
>Section "ServerFlags"
>Option "DontZap" "false"
>EndSection
>

AFAIK that will reenable killing X with ctrl+alt backspace, but shouldn't
affect the behaviour of Shift+BS surely?

--
richo || Today's excuse:

asynchronous inode failure

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had 
a name of signature.asc]



Re: shift+backspace in X

2011-11-01 Thread Christiano F. Haesbaert
On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 05:12:47PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> In X, shift + backspace used to work the same as backspace on its own
> (i.e. delete the previous character), but no longer does so in recent
> -current, most likely following the xkb update.
> 
> Does anyone know how to restore the previous behaviour?
> 
> I don't have any keyboard-related sections in xorg.conf (only
> a Files section with some old font paths).

This works for me:

Section "ServerFlags"
Option "DontZap" "false"
EndSection



Re: OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Indunil Jayasooriya
Hi,

Thanks a lot for you and all the developers.





On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 8:08 PM, Theo de Raadt wrote:

> 
> Nov 1, 2011.
>
> We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 5.0.
> This is our 30th release on CD-ROM (and 31th via FTP).  We remain
> proud of OpenBSD's record of more than ten years with only two remote
> holes in the default install.
>
> As in our previous releases, 5.0 provides significant improvements,
> including new features, in nearly all areas of the system:
>
>  - Improved hardware support, including:
>o MSI interrupts for many devices, on those architectures which can
>  support them (amd64, i386, sparc64 only so far).
>o A new dma_alloc(9) API makes it easier for kernel code to allocate
>  dma-safe memory.  Many drivers (especially network drivers) and
>  subsystems (in particular scsi and the buffer cache) were adapted
>  to use this.
>o As a result, big-memory support has been enabled on all possible
>  architectures.
>o The rather rare bce(4) driver now copies mbufs all the time, to cope
>  with the hardware having a 1GB limit.
>o Added hds(4), a driver for Hitachi Modular Storage SCSI devices.
>o Added myx(4), a driver for the Myricom Myri-10G 10GB Ethernet devices.
>o Added dfs(4), a driver for Dynamic Frequency Switching on some macppc
>  systems.
>o cardbus(4) and pcmcia(4) support on sgi.
>o Suspend/resume support on Loongson Yeelong laptops.
>o Interrupt handlers for bnx(4), em(4), ix(4) and sis(4) have been
>  improved reducing overhead and increasing performance.
>o New acpitoshiba(4) driver providing ACPI support for Toshiba laptops.
>o Added nvt(4), a driver for the W83795G and W83795ADG hardware monitor.
>o Added support to sdhc(4) for the Ricoh 5U823 SD/MMC controller.
>o A new fw_update(1) tool to install and update non-free firmware
> packages.
>
>  - Generic network stack improvements:
>o Added support for sending Wake on LAN packets using arp(8).
>o Permit turning Wake on LAN support on/off using ifconfig(8).
>o Added Wake on LAN support to xl(4), re(4), and vr(4).
>o Allow ftp-proxy to proxy across rdomains.
>o The IPv4 stack will no longer accept ICMP redirects when
>  acting as a router.
>o By default the IPv6 stack will not process ICMP6 redirects.
>  rtsol(8) will turn it back if -F is used.
>o Reworked large parts of the dhclient(8) options processing for better
>  interoperability.
>o Fixed carp(4) to work in IPv6 only setups.
>o Make it possible to bind(2) to the local network broadcast address
>  on datagram and raw sockets.
>o The default multicast reject route is now ignored if the UDP socket
>  uses the IP_MULTICAST_IF socket option.
>o Make gre(4) work between systems in the same LAN.
>o Removed the link1 mode special addressing mode on lo(4).
>o New net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive sysctl, effectively enabling
>  SO_KEEPALIVE on all TCP sockets.
>
>  - Routing daemons and other userland network improvements:
>o bgpd(8) no longer bumps the rlimits: the rc.d framework respects
>  login classes which is a much better solution.
>o Correctly set the network filtersets on reload in bgpd(8).
>o The routing socket is now sending RTM_DESYNC messages if the
>   socketbuffer overflows.
>o Allow ospfd(8) to send out LS updates and other messages
>  larger than the MTU.
>o Fixed nexthop calculation in ospfd(8) for directly connected P2P
> links.
>o First bits to support opaque LSA in ospfd(8).  Only basic redistribute
>  logic and LSDB handling for now.
>o Creating new interfaces will no longer cause a fatal error in
> ospf6d(8).
>o ospf6d(8) handles link-state changes better.
>o Better loopback handling in ospf6d(8).
>o No longer install extra multicast routes in ripd(8) and ldpd(8).
>o Make kqueue(2) work with sosplice(9).
>o Enabled sosplice(9) in relayd(8) for TCP.
>o Added support for divert-to which provides some benefits over
>  rdr-to in relayd(8).
>o Reload support in relayd(8) has been fixed.
>o Fixed trap sending in snmpd(8).
>o Make ping6(8) compare minimum amount of bytes between what
>  was received and what was sent out.
>o Make traceroute(8) with type-of-service setted (-t) display
>  a message if the returned packet has a different tos type.
>o Added the socket splicing fields of struct socket to netstat -vP
> output.
>o tcpbench(1) now uses libevent and supports both TCP and UDP modes.
>o TCP socket buffer sizes can now be displayed using the netstat(1) -B
> flag.
>o tcpdump(8) can now filter on icmptype and tcpflags.
>o bgplg(8) now supports "show ip bgp peer-as".
>
>  - pf(4) improvements:
>o Make pf(4) reassemble IPv6 fragments.  In the forward case, pf
>  refragments the pack

Re: OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Dave U. Random
Congrats and thanks to you and the entire OpenBSD team!



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
ZZ Wave  writes:

> What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life, "production"
> gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues seem to be too
> "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.

PF setups with various altq disciplines are serving sites with larger
user bases than that.  

If it's the altq syntax you object to, I'm slightly sympathetic, but a
whole new queueing system is being gradually introduced (the new prio
keyword is the first part), and from early access the new syntax will be
a lot easier to deal with.

-- 
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nuug.no/
"Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic"
delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
ZZ Wave  writes:

> For example, in FreeBSD there is "slow" pf in userspace and "fast"
> kernel-level netgraph.

Wow, I can scarcely imagine a single sentence that reveals more
thoroughly and conclusively how little familiarity you have with any of
the systems you mention.

Hint: both pf and netgraph are 'kernel-level', with some userland tools
attached to make the admin's life easier.

-- 
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nuug.no/
"Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic"
delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.



shift+backspace in X

2011-11-01 Thread Stuart Henderson
In X, shift + backspace used to work the same as backspace on its own
(i.e. delete the previous character), but no longer does so in recent
-current, most likely following the xkb update.

Does anyone know how to restore the previous behaviour?

I don't have any keyboard-related sections in xorg.conf (only
a Files section with some old font paths).



Re: OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Johan Ryberg
Great news =)

This is awesome! Good work

// Johan



Re: OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Jay Em Cee
Awesome! Thanks for what is sure to be another great release.

Is this officially the first release that didn't have a patch issued?

http://www.openbsd.org/errata49.html

I've only been paying attention since about 2.6, and don't recall a
clean track record like this.

If so, that's an amazing feat!



Re: OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Alan Cheng
Thanks!  and Yeah!

On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 10:38 PM, Theo de Raadt wrote:

> 
> Nov 1, 2011.
>
> We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 5.0.
> This is our 30th release on CD-ROM (and 31th via FTP).  We remain
> proud of OpenBSD's record of more than ten years with only two remote
> holes in the default install.
>
> As in our previous releases, 5.0 provides significant improvements,
> including new features, in nearly all areas of the system:
>
>  - Improved hardware support, including:
>o MSI interrupts for many devices, on those architectures which can
>  support them (amd64, i386, sparc64 only so far).
>o A new dma_alloc(9) API makes it easier for kernel code to allocate
>  dma-safe memory.  Many drivers (especially network drivers) and
>  subsystems (in particular scsi and the buffer cache) were adapted
>  to use this.
>o As a result, big-memory support has been enabled on all possible
>  architectures.
>o The rather rare bce(4) driver now copies mbufs all the time, to cope
>  with the hardware having a 1GB limit.
>o Added hds(4), a driver for Hitachi Modular Storage SCSI devices.
>o Added myx(4), a driver for the Myricom Myri-10G 10GB Ethernet devices.
>o Added dfs(4), a driver for Dynamic Frequency Switching on some macppc
>  systems.
>o cardbus(4) and pcmcia(4) support on sgi.
>o Suspend/resume support on Loongson Yeelong laptops.
>o Interrupt handlers for bnx(4), em(4), ix(4) and sis(4) have been
>  improved reducing overhead and increasing performance.
>o New acpitoshiba(4) driver providing ACPI support for Toshiba laptops.
>o Added nvt(4), a driver for the W83795G and W83795ADG hardware monitor.
>o Added support to sdhc(4) for the Ricoh 5U823 SD/MMC controller.
>o A new fw_update(1) tool to install and update non-free firmware
> packages.
>
>  - Generic network stack improvements:
>o Added support for sending Wake on LAN packets using arp(8).
>o Permit turning Wake on LAN support on/off using ifconfig(8).
>o Added Wake on LAN support to xl(4), re(4), and vr(4).
>o Allow ftp-proxy to proxy across rdomains.
>o The IPv4 stack will no longer accept ICMP redirects when
>  acting as a router.
>o By default the IPv6 stack will not process ICMP6 redirects.
>  rtsol(8) will turn it back if -F is used.
>o Reworked large parts of the dhclient(8) options processing for better
>  interoperability.
>o Fixed carp(4) to work in IPv6 only setups.
>o Make it possible to bind(2) to the local network broadcast address
>  on datagram and raw sockets.
>o The default multicast reject route is now ignored if the UDP socket
>  uses the IP_MULTICAST_IF socket option.
>o Make gre(4) work between systems in the same LAN.
>o Removed the link1 mode special addressing mode on lo(4).
>o New net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive sysctl, effectively enabling
>  SO_KEEPALIVE on all TCP sockets.
>
>  - Routing daemons and other userland network improvements:
>o bgpd(8) no longer bumps the rlimits: the rc.d framework respects
>  login classes which is a much better solution.
>o Correctly set the network filtersets on reload in bgpd(8).
>o The routing socket is now sending RTM_DESYNC messages if the
>   socketbuffer overflows.
>o Allow ospfd(8) to send out LS updates and other messages
>  larger than the MTU.
>o Fixed nexthop calculation in ospfd(8) for directly connected P2P
> links.
>o First bits to support opaque LSA in ospfd(8).  Only basic redistribute
>  logic and LSDB handling for now.
>o Creating new interfaces will no longer cause a fatal error in
> ospf6d(8).
>o ospf6d(8) handles link-state changes better.
>o Better loopback handling in ospf6d(8).
>o No longer install extra multicast routes in ripd(8) and ldpd(8).
>o Make kqueue(2) work with sosplice(9).
>o Enabled sosplice(9) in relayd(8) for TCP.
>o Added support for divert-to which provides some benefits over
>  rdr-to in relayd(8).
>o Reload support in relayd(8) has been fixed.
>o Fixed trap sending in snmpd(8).
>o Make ping6(8) compare minimum amount of bytes between what
>  was received and what was sent out.
>o Make traceroute(8) with type-of-service setted (-t) display
>  a message if the returned packet has a different tos type.
>o Added the socket splicing fields of struct socket to netstat -vP
> output.
>o tcpbench(1) now uses libevent and supports both TCP and UDP modes.
>o TCP socket buffer sizes can now be displayed using the netstat(1) -B
> flag.
>o tcpdump(8) can now filter on icmptype and tcpflags.
>o bgplg(8) now supports "show ip bgp peer-as".
>
>  - pf(4) improvements:
>o Make pf(4) reassemble IPv6 fragments.  In the forward case, pf
>  refragments the packets with the same maximum size.
> 

Re: OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Zantgo
Yeah!!

El 01-11-2011, a las 11:38, Theo de Raadt 
escribiC3:

> 
> Nov 1, 2011.
>
> We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 5.0.
> This is our 30th release on CD-ROM (and 31th via FTP).  We remain
> proud of OpenBSD's record of more than ten years with only two remote
> holes in the default install.
>
> As in our previous releases, 5.0 provides significant improvements,
> including new features, in nearly all areas of the system:
>
> - Improved hardware support, including:
>o MSI interrupts for many devices, on those architectures which can
>  support them (amd64, i386, sparc64 only so far).
>o A new dma_alloc(9) API makes it easier for kernel code to allocate
>  dma-safe memory.  Many drivers (especially network drivers) and
>  subsystems (in particular scsi and the buffer cache) were adapted
>  to use this.
>o As a result, big-memory support has been enabled on all possible
>  architectures.
>o The rather rare bce(4) driver now copies mbufs all the time, to cope
>  with the hardware having a 1GB limit.
>o Added hds(4), a driver for Hitachi Modular Storage SCSI devices.
>o Added myx(4), a driver for the Myricom Myri-10G 10GB Ethernet devices.
>o Added dfs(4), a driver for Dynamic Frequency Switching on some macppc
>  systems.
>o cardbus(4) and pcmcia(4) support on sgi.
>o Suspend/resume support on Loongson Yeelong laptops.
>o Interrupt handlers for bnx(4), em(4), ix(4) and sis(4) have been
>  improved reducing overhead and increasing performance.
>o New acpitoshiba(4) driver providing ACPI support for Toshiba laptops.
>o Added nvt(4), a driver for the W83795G and W83795ADG hardware monitor.
>o Added support to sdhc(4) for the Ricoh 5U823 SD/MMC controller.
>o A new fw_update(1) tool to install and update non-free firmware
packages.
>
> - Generic network stack improvements:
>o Added support for sending Wake on LAN packets using arp(8).
>o Permit turning Wake on LAN support on/off using ifconfig(8).
>o Added Wake on LAN support to xl(4), re(4), and vr(4).
>o Allow ftp-proxy to proxy across rdomains.
>o The IPv4 stack will no longer accept ICMP redirects when
>  acting as a router.
>o By default the IPv6 stack will not process ICMP6 redirects.
>  rtsol(8) will turn it back if -F is used.
>o Reworked large parts of the dhclient(8) options processing for better
>  interoperability.
>o Fixed carp(4) to work in IPv6 only setups.
>o Make it possible to bind(2) to the local network broadcast address
>  on datagram and raw sockets.
>o The default multicast reject route is now ignored if the UDP socket
>  uses the IP_MULTICAST_IF socket option.
>o Make gre(4) work between systems in the same LAN.
>o Removed the link1 mode special addressing mode on lo(4).
>o New net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive sysctl, effectively enabling
>  SO_KEEPALIVE on all TCP sockets.
>
> - Routing daemons and other userland network improvements:
>o bgpd(8) no longer bumps the rlimits: the rc.d framework respects
>  login classes which is a much better solution.
>o Correctly set the network filtersets on reload in bgpd(8).
>o The routing socket is now sending RTM_DESYNC messages if the
>   socketbuffer overflows.
>o Allow ospfd(8) to send out LS updates and other messages
>  larger than the MTU.
>o Fixed nexthop calculation in ospfd(8) for directly connected P2P
links.
>o First bits to support opaque LSA in ospfd(8).  Only basic redistribute
>  logic and LSDB handling for now.
>o Creating new interfaces will no longer cause a fatal error in
ospf6d(8).
>o ospf6d(8) handles link-state changes better.
>o Better loopback handling in ospf6d(8).
>o No longer install extra multicast routes in ripd(8) and ldpd(8).
>o Make kqueue(2) work with sosplice(9).
>o Enabled sosplice(9) in relayd(8) for TCP.
>o Added support for divert-to which provides some benefits over
>  rdr-to in relayd(8).
>o Reload support in relayd(8) has been fixed.
>o Fixed trap sending in snmpd(8).
>o Make ping6(8) compare minimum amount of bytes between what
>  was received and what was sent out.
>o Make traceroute(8) with type-of-service setted (-t) display
>  a message if the returned packet has a different tos type.
>o Added the socket splicing fields of struct socket to netstat -vP
output.
>o tcpbench(1) now uses libevent and supports both TCP and UDP modes.
>o TCP socket buffer sizes can now be displayed using the netstat(1) -B
flag.
>o tcpdump(8) can now filter on icmptype and tcpflags.
>o bgplg(8) now supports "show ip bgp peer-as".
>
> - pf(4) improvements:
>o Make pf(4) reassemble IPv6 fragments.  In the forward case, pf
>  refragments the packets with the same maximum size.
>o Allow pf(4) to filter

OpenBSD 5.0 released Nov 1, 2011

2011-11-01 Thread Theo de Raadt

Nov 1, 2011.

We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 5.0.
This is our 30th release on CD-ROM (and 31th via FTP).  We remain
proud of OpenBSD's record of more than ten years with only two remote
holes in the default install.

As in our previous releases, 5.0 provides significant improvements,
including new features, in nearly all areas of the system:

 - Improved hardware support, including:
o MSI interrupts for many devices, on those architectures which can
  support them (amd64, i386, sparc64 only so far).
o A new dma_alloc(9) API makes it easier for kernel code to allocate
  dma-safe memory.  Many drivers (especially network drivers) and
  subsystems (in particular scsi and the buffer cache) were adapted
  to use this.
o As a result, big-memory support has been enabled on all possible
  architectures.
o The rather rare bce(4) driver now copies mbufs all the time, to cope
  with the hardware having a 1GB limit.
o Added hds(4), a driver for Hitachi Modular Storage SCSI devices.
o Added myx(4), a driver for the Myricom Myri-10G 10GB Ethernet devices.
o Added dfs(4), a driver for Dynamic Frequency Switching on some macppc
  systems.
o cardbus(4) and pcmcia(4) support on sgi.
o Suspend/resume support on Loongson Yeelong laptops.
o Interrupt handlers for bnx(4), em(4), ix(4) and sis(4) have been
  improved reducing overhead and increasing performance.
o New acpitoshiba(4) driver providing ACPI support for Toshiba laptops.
o Added nvt(4), a driver for the W83795G and W83795ADG hardware monitor.
o Added support to sdhc(4) for the Ricoh 5U823 SD/MMC controller.
o A new fw_update(1) tool to install and update non-free firmware packages.

 - Generic network stack improvements:
o Added support for sending Wake on LAN packets using arp(8).
o Permit turning Wake on LAN support on/off using ifconfig(8).
o Added Wake on LAN support to xl(4), re(4), and vr(4).
o Allow ftp-proxy to proxy across rdomains.
o The IPv4 stack will no longer accept ICMP redirects when
  acting as a router.
o By default the IPv6 stack will not process ICMP6 redirects.
  rtsol(8) will turn it back if -F is used.
o Reworked large parts of the dhclient(8) options processing for better
  interoperability.
o Fixed carp(4) to work in IPv6 only setups.
o Make it possible to bind(2) to the local network broadcast address
  on datagram and raw sockets.
o The default multicast reject route is now ignored if the UDP socket
  uses the IP_MULTICAST_IF socket option.
o Make gre(4) work between systems in the same LAN.
o Removed the link1 mode special addressing mode on lo(4).
o New net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive sysctl, effectively enabling
  SO_KEEPALIVE on all TCP sockets.

 - Routing daemons and other userland network improvements:
o bgpd(8) no longer bumps the rlimits: the rc.d framework respects
  login classes which is a much better solution.
o Correctly set the network filtersets on reload in bgpd(8).
o The routing socket is now sending RTM_DESYNC messages if the
   socketbuffer overflows.
o Allow ospfd(8) to send out LS updates and other messages
  larger than the MTU.
o Fixed nexthop calculation in ospfd(8) for directly connected P2P links.
o First bits to support opaque LSA in ospfd(8).  Only basic redistribute
  logic and LSDB handling for now.
o Creating new interfaces will no longer cause a fatal error in ospf6d(8).
o ospf6d(8) handles link-state changes better.
o Better loopback handling in ospf6d(8).
o No longer install extra multicast routes in ripd(8) and ldpd(8).
o Make kqueue(2) work with sosplice(9).
o Enabled sosplice(9) in relayd(8) for TCP.
o Added support for divert-to which provides some benefits over
  rdr-to in relayd(8).
o Reload support in relayd(8) has been fixed.
o Fixed trap sending in snmpd(8).
o Make ping6(8) compare minimum amount of bytes between what
  was received and what was sent out.
o Make traceroute(8) with type-of-service setted (-t) display
  a message if the returned packet has a different tos type.
o Added the socket splicing fields of struct socket to netstat -vP output.
o tcpbench(1) now uses libevent and supports both TCP and UDP modes.
o TCP socket buffer sizes can now be displayed using the netstat(1) -B flag.
o tcpdump(8) can now filter on icmptype and tcpflags.
o bgplg(8) now supports "show ip bgp peer-as".

 - pf(4) improvements:
o Make pf(4) reassemble IPv6 fragments.  In the forward case, pf
  refragments the packets with the same maximum size.
o Allow pf(4) to filter on the rdomain a packet belongs to.
o Make pf(4) allow userland proxies to establish cross rdomain
  proxy sessions.
o Added IPv6 ACK prioritization 

Re: HP ProLiant DL360 G4p

2011-11-01 Thread Hrvoje Popovski

On 31.10.2011. 19:04, Stuart Henderson wrote:

On 2011-10-31, Hrvoje Popovski  wrote:

hello everyone,

everything is working fine, but after bios update i see some acpi log in
dmesg

acpicpu0 at acpi0acpi0: unable to load \\_PR_.CPU0._PDC.IST0

acpicpu1 at acpi0### AML PARSE ERROR (0x3cb): Undefined name: SSD6
error evaluating: \\_PR_.CPU6._PDC

maybe to put acpidump somewhere?


That sounds like a good idea.




here it is

http://kosjenka.srce.hr/~hrvoje/hpdl360g4p.tar

thank you ..


--
/hrvoje



Re: herbstluftwm

2011-11-01 Thread Sime Ramov
Also, forgot that default autostart file needs some adjustments in order
to work in other shells (it is a bash script). I just removed brackets
in function names and commented tag stuff to work with ksh.



herbstluftwm

2011-11-01 Thread Sime Ramov


I find it extremely good and it has just replaced ratpoison as my
WM. Maybe it will be a good match for someone else too (it is
virtually unknown).

Here's a patch for it to compile on OpenBSD (you'll need `gmake` and
`asciidoc`):


diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index 1412745..bf5c224 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ tar: doc
 
 doc/%.1: doc/%.txt
$(call colorecho,DOC,$@)
-   @a2x -f manpage -a "herbstluftwmversion=herbstluftwm $(VERSION)" -a 
"date=`date +%Y-%m-%d`" $<
+   @a2x.py -f manpage -a "herbstluftwmversion=herbstluftwm $(VERSION)" -a 
"date=`date +%Y-%m-%d`" $<
 
 doc/%.html: doc/%.txt
$(call colorecho,DOC,$@)
diff --git a/config.mk b/config.mk
index 93a3c9a..e7abf05 100644
--- a/config.mk
+++ b/config.mk
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ X11INC = /usr/X11R6/include
 X11LIB = /usr/X11R6/lib
 
 INCS = -Isrc/ -I/usr/include -I${X11INC}  `pkg-config --cflags glib-2.0`
-LIBS = -L/usr/lib -lrt -lc -L${X11LIB} -lX11 `pkg-config --libs glib-2.0`
+LIBS = -L/usr/lib -lc -L${X11LIB} -lX11 `pkg-config --libs glib-2.0`
 
 # FLAGS
 LD = gcc



Re: Pointers on starting X, then run browser and when it quits, automatically shutdown the computer X

2011-11-01 Thread Kenneth R Westerback
On Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 01:29:58PM +0100, Henning Brauer wrote:
> * Sime Ramov  [2011-10-29 13:58]:
> > * Tito Mari Francis Escaqo  
> > [2011-10-29T17:50+0800]:
> > > My idea is for the whole system to run off a Live CD, but I'm quite
> > > lost how to start the X windowing system, then the web browser and
> > > then automatically shutdown the whole system after quitting web
> > > browser.
> > 
> > As for the browser starting when X is started, this would do:
> > 
> > echo exec firefox > ~/.xinitrc
> 
> and with sth like
> 
> PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin/:/usr/local/bin \
> sudo -u display -H /usr/X11R6/bin/startx >/var/log/Xdisplay 2>&1 
>  
> in rc.local you even get it automagically on bootup.
> 
> > When you quit Firefox, X will terminate, too. Your other requirements
> > are a bit trickier though.
> 
> not really - if you start X in rc.local and don't background it just
> poot halt -p as last command in rc.local.
> 
> 
> -- 
> Henning Brauer, h...@bsws.de, henn...@openbsd.org
> BS Web Services, http://bsws.de, Full-Service ISP
> Secure Hosting, Mail and DNS Services. Dedicated Servers, Root to Fully 
> Managed
> Henning Brauer Consulting, http://henningbrauer.com/
> 

Here's the set of files I used for a year or so to create and operate
'public' computers that only ran Firefox. The clic.sh file, when run
from a fresh install, turned the machine into such a dedicated device
by installing the files provided and editing standard installed
config files. i.e. have all the files on a USB stick or something,
and run clic.sh from that directory.

The pf.conf is to ensure no 'internal' machines (which were all on
non-routable addresses) could be accessed. The rc.local magic was
to allow access to the default gateway, obviously an internal
address. :-).

fvwm so the users could close popup windows.

crontab to shut it down everynight at closing time.

Firefox 3.5 because they needed to run Java apps, and the later
plugin did not (and still doesn't I think) work.

The file missing (firefox35.tgz) I created by starting up firefox once
as 'client' and tar'ing up the resulting .mozilla directory. This was to
ensure meant there was a 'clean' firefox everytime it started up.

It was moderately annoying to have to boot to single user and fiddle with
/etc/ttys to do any maintenance, but I never got around to allowing
remote access.

No great innovation, just a lot of trial and error starting with henning's
advice, a lot googling and reading "X Power Tools".

And haven't run it in a year or so, so ymmv.

You might also want to investigate xxxterm and its 'kiosk' mode.

 Ken

== Xinit.local ==
#!/bin/ksh
echo startx -- vt05 | su - client


== adduser.conf ==
#
# $OpenBSD: adduser.perl,v 1.53 2007/01/03 15:26:04 simon Exp $
# /etc/adduser.conf - automatic generated by adduser(8)
#
# Note: adduser reads *and* writes this file.
#   You may change values, but don't add new things before the
#   line ``## DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE!''
#

# verbose = [0-2]
verbose = 1

# Get new password for new users
# defaultpasswd =  yes | no
defaultpasswd = yes

# Default encryption method for user passwords
# Methods are all those listed in login.conf(5)
encryptionmethod = "auto"

# copy dotfiles from this dir ("/etc/skel" or "no")
dotdir = "/etc/skel"

# send this file to new user ("/etc/adduser.message" or "no")
send_message = "no"

# config file for adduser ("/etc/adduser.conf")
config = "/etc/adduser.conf"

# logfile ("/var/log/adduser" or "no")
logfile = "/var/log/adduser"

# default HOME directory ("/home")
home = "/home"

# List of directories where shells located
# path = ('/bin', '/usr/bin', '/usr/local/bin')
path = ('/bin', '/usr/bin', '/usr/local/bin')

# common shell list, first element has higher priority
# shellpref = ('bash', 'tcsh', 'ksh', 'csh', 'sh')
shellpref = ('csh', 'sh', 'bash', 'tcsh', 'ksh', 'nologin')

# defaultshell if not empty ("bash")
defaultshell = "ksh"

# defaultgroup ('USER' for same as username or any other valid group)
defaultgroup = USER

# new users get this uid
uid_start = 1000
uid_end = 2147483647

# default login.conf(5) login class
defaultclass = default

# login classes available from login.conf(5)
# login_classes = ('default', 'daemon', 'staff')
login_classes = ('default', 'daemon', 'staff', 'authpf')

## DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE!
## your own variables, see /etc/adduser.message

## end


== all.js.append ==
//
pref("general.config.filename", "firefox.cfg");
pref("general.config.obscure_value", 0);


== clic.sh ==
#!/bin/ksh

# Turn a normal OpenBSD install into a Clic! station.
: ${CLICNHOME:=.}
: ${PKG_PATH:=../4.9/packages/i386}
export CLICNHOME PKG_PATH

# 1) Save original files for reference.
cp /etc/pf.conf /etc/pf.conf.orig
cp /etc/ttys /etc/ttys.orig
cp /etc/adduser.conf /etc/adduser.conf.orig
cp /etc/rc /etc/rc.orig
cp /etc/rc.conf.local /etc/rc.conf.local.orig
cp /etc/rc.local /etc/rc.l

Re: bootstrap.pl

2011-11-01 Thread Sime Ramov
* Ingo Schwarze  [2011-11-01 14:12+0100]:
> You are reinventing parts of site50.tgz, install.site, and
> rc.firsttime(8), but in a way that requires more manual labour.

Yep, you are right, forgot about those, thanks!

> Parts seem to be missing here to edit mailer.conf(5) and
> rc.conf.local(8) to disable sendmail(8) and enable smtpd(8);

Those are handled with syncing etc files from the storage volume. But I
agree it is a bad solution, so I am going to redone the whole thing with
site50.tgz etc.

> but note that smtpd(8) is still not officially supported for
> production as far as i know - even though it may be getting close.

This is for my personal workstation, it just relays to a smarthost.

Thanks for the tips!



Re: bootstrap.pl

2011-11-01 Thread Ingo Schwarze
Hi Sime,

Sime Ramov wrote on Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 12:45:29PM +0100:

> I've got tired of setting up my system after clean installs of -current
> so I wrote this simple script which I pipe to perl immediately after
> first boot.

You want to look at

  http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#site

You are reinventing parts of site50.tgz, install.site,
and rc.firsttime(8), but in a way that requires more manual labour.

> Maybe someone finds it useful.

Everybody has some local scripts that won't be useful anywhere
else because they are kludgy and highly specialized.  Yours is
a typical case (and i have some, too).


> #!/usr/bin/perl
> # Usage: ftp -o - -V http://dl.ramov.com/bootstrap.pl | perl -

Bad idea for anybody else to do that; who knows how you are going
to change your script tomorrow?

>foreach (@packages) { system('pkg_add', $_); }

pkg_add(8) can install more than one package at once, and with
less overhead.

>system('pkill', 'sendmail');
>system('newaliases');
>system('/usr/libexec/smtpd/makemap', '/etc/mail/secrets');
>system('smtpd');

Parts seem to be missing here to edit mailer.conf(5) and
rc.conf.local(8) to disable sendmail(8) and enable smtpd(8);
and you could use rc.d(8); but note that smtpd(8) is still not
officially supported for production as far as i know -
even though it may be getting close.

Yours,
  Ingo



Undelivered mail

2011-11-01 Thread owner-LISTSERV
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Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 4:10 AM, Gregory Edigarov
 wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 08:53:46 +0100
> "Bret S. Lambert"  wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 09:47:35AM +0200, Gregory Edigarov wrote:
>> > On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
>> > ZZ Wave  wrote:
>> >
>> > > What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
>> > > "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues
>> > > seem to be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.
>> >
>> > Pardon?
>> > What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?
>>
>> I believe he wants to communicate with the kernel with the power of
>> his mind.
> Where's my brain implant? ;-)

Hold still. (I actually used to design electronics for those: they
used a *BIG* and wonderfully frightening drill.)



Re: OpenBSD and shebang line to a script not supported?

2011-11-01 Thread Chris Bennett
Hmm, I guess all those ports that are ported over from Linux sources, well that 
must
be false information. Those damn liars.

And when they talk about how FreeBSD and NetBSD does source/drivers a workable 
way,
and maybe we should try to adapt to OpenBSD, Hmm, another lie!

I am so glad you cleared all this up for us!

Chris Bennett

On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 04:28:12AM -0400, Eric Furman wrote:
> Nobody cares. This is not a list devoted to
> a stupid piece of shit OS developed by the
> dumb shit Linus Torvalds.



Re: OpenBSD and shebang line to a script not supported?

2011-11-01 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
The underlying question, not asked here, is "why do you want to do this" ?

It's a few more lines of code to take the first wrapper script and
pass the arguments to another intepriter script, much like this:

   #!/bin/sh
   second-perl-script $@

There might be some command line argument handling issues, especially
for arguments with spaces, But the "use a sript as a secondary
interpreter" is ripe for awkward abuse.



Re: KDE 4 on OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread David Coppa
Stupid gmail. The correct link is:

https://groups.google.com/group/openbsd-kde/attach/39c330dd15c777e5/snapshot1.png?part=2&authuser=0&view=1



Re: KDE 4 on OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread David Coppa
On Thu, Oct 20, 2011 at 11:45 PM, Paolo Aglialoro  wrote:
>> When 5.0 comes out, I could gladly test it on sparc64, > You'll need
-CURRENT for testing anyway, too many KDE-related changes since > release:
CMake 2.8.6, Raptor2, wscanf(3), removal of JDK <= 1.5, Qt 4 > updates... >
SPARC tests would be great! :) OK! I'll then ask my friend to borrow me the
V240, still hoping to find a suitable video card When I'll be ready I'll
let you know and we'll plan a build together :)

Just FYI... Progress has been made:

https://openbsd-kde.googlegroups.com/attach/39c330dd15c777e5/snapshot1.png?vi
ew=1&part=2

cheers,
David



Re: Performance problems with OpenBSD 4.9 under ESXi 5

2011-11-01 Thread Pete Vickers
On 1. nov. 2011, at 00.15, carlopmart wrote:

> On 10/31/2011 10:01 PM, Tyler Morgan wrote:
>> Hi, I setup four 4.9-RELEASE installs under ESXi 5.0.0:
>>
>> amd64 as "Other"
>> amd64 as "FreeBSD"
>> i386 as "Other"
>> i386 as "FreeBSD"
>>
>> All 4 got 512megs of RAM, unlimited use of the 8 available CPU cores,
>> and totally default installs other than stress from ports.
>>
>> After installing I ran "stress --cpu 8 --io 4 --vm 2 --vm-bytes 128M
>> --hdd 4 --hdd-bytes 128M --timeout 60s" in an infinite loop for a few
>> hours. Then I let them sit for a couple days. Then I the stress loops
>> again for a few hours with 3 days of uptime. I verified the stress was
>> pegging 95%+ of all CPU, doing about 75% of what the RAID array is
>> capable of in disk read/write, and as much RAM as I'd let it have -- all
>> verified using ESXi's standard host monitoring.
>>
>> At the end of testing, I have no unusual messages in dmesg, a normal
>> 0.5ish load when idle, and no noticed performance issues on all four
>> virtual machines.
>>
>> The ESXi host is a 3.5 year old SuperMicro server from Penguin Linux
>> with 2xXeon X5365s, 32Gigs of ECC DDR3, and an Adaptec RAID controller.
>> I can get a real dmesg out of the ESXi host if anyone wants it, and
>> someone already provided a dmesg of 4.9-RELEASE under VMWare, but I can
>> also provide those if desired.
>>
>
> ESXi 3.5?? Can you test with ESXi 4 U2??


I have some OpenBSD AMD64 (as 'other-64bit') VMs running fine for months under
ESX 4.1.0 e.g:


# sysctl hw
hw.machine=amd64
hw.model=Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU X5650 @ 2.67GHz
hw.ncpu=2
hw.byteorder=1234
hw.pagesize=4096
hw.disknames=cd0:,sd0:c71fe08ce57dfde4,sd1:4af057f745d341a4
hw.diskcount=3
hw.sensors.acpiac0.indicator0=On (power supply)
hw.sensors.vmt0.timedelta0=-0.001828 secs, OK, Tue Nov  1 11:45:20.995
hw.cpuspeed=2659
hw.vendor=VMware, Inc.
hw.product=VMware Virtual Platform
hw.version=None
hw.serialno=VMware-xx
hw.uuid=xx
hw.physmem=3220111360
hw.usermem=3220094976
hw.ncpufound=2



Re: Sales & Traffic?? We Can Help!!

2011-11-01 Thread Rod Whitworth
On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 14:50:06 +0530, Sabey Malhotra wrote:

>I am Sabey, SEO Consultant
>
S= Stupid
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O= Output
> 
>
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>
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Re: OpenBSD and shebang line to a script not supported?

2011-11-01 Thread David Coppa
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:28 AM, Eric Furman  wrote:
> Nobody cares. This is not a list devoted to
> a stupid piece of shit OS developed by the
> dumb shit Linus Torvalds.

...But the world's dumbest troll is you.



Re: OpenBSD and shebang line to a script not supported?

2011-11-01 Thread Eric Furman
Nobody cares. This is not a list devoted to
a stupid piece of shit OS developed by the
dumb shit Linus Torvalds.

On Tuesday, November 01, 2011 7:07 PM, "Joel Wiramu Pauling"
 wrote:
> On 1 November 2011 18:21, "K. AndrC) Braselmann" 
> wrote:
> 
> > Am 01.11.2011 um 01:08 schrieb Mikolaj Kucharski:
> >
> 
> Linux accepts up to 4 levels of #! nesting according to the references -
> as
> of 2008 ( http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/9/6/66 )
> 
> Modify your scripts to do 5-10-15 and see what happens?



Re: Performance problems with OpenBSD 4.9 under ESXi 5

2011-11-01 Thread carlopmart

On 11/01/2011 12:47 AM, Daniel Ouellet wrote:

ESXi 3.5?? Can you test with ESXi 4 U2??


I read his tests to be under 5.0

 >> Hi, I setup four 4.9-RELEASE installs under ESXi 5.0.0:

Only the host was a 3.5 year old server.

You may want to read it again.

Best,

Daniel



Yes, yes ... was my fault. Sorry.

--
CL Martinez
carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com



Sales & Traffic?? We Can Help!!

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Re: High interrupt rates after resume

2011-11-01 Thread Alexander Polakov
* Leroy van Engelen  [111019 19:07]:
> This was also seen on a macbook by Jan Stary:
> http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=131213545109050&w=2
> 
> And on my Samsung N210:
> http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=131193104030288&w=2
> 
> I still have this problem, and ran out of options to investigate. The funny
> thing is that, just like the MacBook case above, the high interrupt load
> goes away every other suspend/resume. Do you see this as well?  It seems
> like a clue, but I have no idea where to begin investigating, except for the
> ipi code you wrote the diff for.
>

Hi, 
mikeb@ just committed a diff for ppb which solves the problem for me.
Is it the case for you?

--
Alexander Polakov



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread David Coppa
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:26 AM, ZZ Wave  wrote:
> For example, in FreeBSD there is "slow" pf in userspace and "fast"
> kernel-level netgraph.

And what has this to do with OpenBSD?



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Gregory Edigarov
ah, you mean nat? In OpenBSD all firewall functions (uhmm, almost all,
to be technically correct, in the presence of [t]ftp-proxy) i.e. packet
filtering, NAT, shaping are done on the kernel level.  

On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 12:26:30 +0400
ZZ Wave  wrote:

> For example, in FreeBSD there is "slow" pf in userspace and "fast"
> kernel-level netgraph.
> 
> 2011/11/1 Gregory Edigarov 
> 
> > On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
> > ZZ Wave  wrote:
> >
> > > What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
> > > "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues
> > > seem to be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.
> >
> > Pardon?
> > What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?
> >
> >
> > --
> > With best regards,
> >Gregory Edigarov



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Bret S. Lambert
On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 12:26:30PM +0400, ZZ Wave wrote:
> For example, in FreeBSD there is "slow" pf in userspace and "fast"
> kernel-level netgraph.

*headasplode*

> 
> 2011/11/1 Gregory Edigarov 
> 
> > On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
> > ZZ Wave  wrote:
> >
> > > What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
> > > "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues seem to
> > > be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.
> >
> > Pardon?
> > What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?
> >
> >
> > --
> > With best regards,
> >Gregory Edigarov



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Paul de Weerd
On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 12:26:30PM +0400, ZZ Wave wrote:
| For example, in FreeBSD there is "slow" pf in userspace and "fast"
| kernel-level netgraph.

This isn't a FreeBSD list.  This is OpenBSD - pf is in the kernel.
And besides .. do you think the cpu runs slower when it's executing
userland code ?

Paul 'WEiRD' de Weerd

PS: pretty sure pf is in the kernel in FreeBSD too, but I refer to my
first statement...

-- 
>[<++>-]<+++.>+++[<-->-]<.>+++[<+
+++>-]<.>++[<>-]<+.--.[-]
 http://www.weirdnet.nl/ 



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread ZZ Wave
For example, in FreeBSD there is "slow" pf in userspace and "fast"
kernel-level netgraph.

2011/11/1 Gregory Edigarov 

> On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
> ZZ Wave  wrote:
>
> > What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
> > "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues seem to
> > be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.
>
> Pardon?
> What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?
>
>
> --
> With best regards,
>Gregory Edigarov




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Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Gregory Edigarov
On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 08:53:46 +0100
"Bret S. Lambert"  wrote:

> On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 09:47:35AM +0200, Gregory Edigarov wrote:
> > On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
> > ZZ Wave  wrote:
> > 
> > > What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
> > > "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues
> > > seem to be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.
> > 
> > Pardon?
> > What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?
> 
> I believe he wants to communicate with the kernel with the power of
> his mind.
Where's my brain implant? ;-)

-- 
With best regards,
Gregory Edigarov



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Bret S. Lambert
On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 09:47:35AM +0200, Gregory Edigarov wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
> ZZ Wave  wrote:
> 
> > What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
> > "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues seem to
> > be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.
> 
> Pardon?
> What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?

I believe he wants to communicate with the kernel with the power of his mind.

> 
> 
> -- 
> With best regards,
>   Gregory Edigarov



Re: traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread Gregory Edigarov
On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:17:56 +0400
ZZ Wave  wrote:

> What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life,
> "production" gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues seem to
> be too "userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.

Pardon?
What do you mean "userspace"-ish ?


-- 
With best regards,
Gregory Edigarov



traffic shaping in OpenBSD

2011-11-01 Thread ZZ Wave
What solution should be used for traffic shaping on real-life, "production"
gateways with tens and hundreds users? PF queues seem to be too
"userspace"-ish and CPU consuming.