and start another one with a
more appropriate title, not before researching to see if this can be
done with the routing table or if I need to use ipfw to re-write the
source address.
Thanks,
--
Alejandro Imass
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
address. For the sake and usefulness of the
mail archives I will end this thread here and start another one with a
more appropriate title, not before researching to see if this can be
done with the routing table or if I need to use ipfw to re-write the
source address.
Thanks,
--
Alejandro
the routing table always
chooses the primary IP assigned to that interface.
I'm trying to figure out if I can fix it in the routing table or will
need IPFW to re-write the source address.
Thanks,
--
Alejandro Imass
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
FreeBSD announce mailing list...
Sexurity announcement (at least) are also cross posted on FreeBSD questions.
Olivier
On Tue, Aug 27, 2013 at 9:34 PM, Zyumbilev, Peter
pe...@aboutsupport.com wrote:
http://www.freebsd.org/security/rss.xml
?
Peter
On 21/08/2013 09:54, Antonio Kless wrote:
multiple IPs on the same subnet so the routing table always
chooses the primary IP assigned to that interface.
I'm trying to figure out if I can fix it in the routing table or will
need IPFW to re-write the source address.
Thanks,
--
Alejandro Imass
One last comment, for the records,
Those solutions sound pretty handy if I need to move the files at the
same time. mtree should do this in-place with minimal fuss as it's just
confirming permissions and ownership on all files.
I also just thought of an idea I need to benchmark: running mtree
On Monday, August 26, 2013 12:06:21 am varanasi sainath wrote:
Thanks John, I have tried as you suggested using a Live CD and yes the
partitions uuid's are present in gptid ..
I found the UUID's in /dev/gptid - how do I determine which uid corresponds
to which partition (ufs or swap or boot)
In the last episode (Aug 26), John Baldwin said:
On Monday, August 26, 2013 12:06:21 am varanasi sainath wrote:
Thanks John, I have tried as you suggested using a Live CD and yes the
partitions uuid's are present in gptid ..
I found the UUID's in /dev/gptid - how do I determine which uid
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 11:03:46PM +0200, Harald Weis wrote:
Hi All,
My membership to this list has been disabled due to excessive bounces.
Could somebody please tell me how to stop these bounces in the future ?
What is their operating mode ?
What can I do if they do not require to
Dear all,
Following advice from thread(s) :
http://forums.pcbsd.org/showthread.php?t=13976
http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=5136
root@grullahighschool:~ # sysctl hw.snd.default_unit=0
hw.snd.default_unit: 1 - 0
Got the sound working like it was.
How do I get it to stick across
My membership to this list has been disabled due to excessive bounces.
Could somebody please tell me how to stop these bounces in the future ?
What is their operating mode ?
What can I do if they do not require to break my (inclusive) firewall
which seems to work fine and which is
Hi--
On Aug 26, 2013, at 2:03 PM, Harald Weis ha...@free.fr wrote:
Hi All,
My membership to this list has been disabled due to excessive bounces.
Could somebody please tell me how to stop these bounces in the future ?
Probably, but without the details it's not possible to give specific
What's the core dump and your config file look like?
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 9:28 PM, alexus ale...@gmail.com wrote:
My bsnmpd(1) keep crashing(
f9# uname -a
FreeBSD f9.alexus.org 9.1-RELEASE-p6 FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE-p6 #0: Wed Aug 21
20:40:52 UTC 2013
f9# gdb `which bsnmpd` /bsnmpd.core
GNU gdb 6.1.1 [FreeBSD]
Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are
welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain
conditions.
Type show copying to see the
Antonio Olivares olivares14...@gmail.com writes:
Dear all,
Following advice from thread(s) :
http://forums.pcbsd.org/showthread.php?t=13976
http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=5136
root@grullahighschool:~ # sysctl hw.snd.default_unit=0
hw.snd.default_unit: 1 - 0
Got the sound
On 25 August 2013 09:41, Joe Altman free...@chthonixia.net wrote:
Seriously, don't scare me like that.
But JIC: I don't need to worry? Right?
Don't hang out around Alan Rickman.
Don't try to blow up any buildings when Bruce Willis is inside.
You'll be fine.
--
--
2013/8/25 Carmel carmel...@hotmail.com:
Using portupgrade-devel-20130718,3 installed from the ports system,
attempting to update texlive-base always ends like this:
--- Build of print/texlive-base ended at: Sun, 25 Aug 2013 15:25:25 -0400
(consumed 00:11:57)
--- Updating dependency info
Thanks John, I have tried as you suggested using a Live CD and yes the
partitions uuid's are present in gptid ..
I found the UUID's in /dev/gptid - how do I determine which uid corresponds
to which partition (ufs or swap or boot) (I used glabel status and after
some trial and error I found them)
On Sat, 24 Aug 2013 06:05:02 -0400
Carmel articulated:
I ran portupgrade last night to upgrade my ports. It upgraded both
openldap24-server and openldap24-client. Now, the server refuses to
start. Upon reboot, I get this message: slapd failed to start. I
went to the rc.d directory and tried
Thanks for all the suggestions. Of them, this was the one that helped me with
my issue:
On Aug 23, 2013, at 1:41 AM, Doug Hardie bc...@lafn.org wrote:
You can add:
rc_debug=YES
to /etc/rc.conf and that might give you what you need. According to the man
page it will produces copious
On 24 August 2013 12:05, Gary Aitken vagab...@blackfoot.net wrote:
If I have a core file that implicates a library:
#0 0x00080525cab0 in wxWindow::DoSetSize () from
/usr/local/lib/libwx_gtk2u_core-2.8.so.0
and
#16 0x0008056bf720 in wxAuiManager::Update () from
On Sat, 24 Aug 2013, ill...@gmail.com wrote:
On 24 August 2013 12:05, Gary Aitken vagab...@blackfoot.net wrote:
If I have a core file that implicates a library:
#0 0x00080525cab0 in wxWindow::DoSetSize () from
/usr/local/lib/libwx_gtk2u_core-2.8.so.0
and
#16 0x0008056bf720 in
On 22/08/2013 21:07, Paul Hoffman wrote:
Greetings again. After doing a freebsd-update, my system is starting
up differently than it was before. I want to figure out why before I
come here and say it's broken.
Is there a way to say show me all of the commands you are running
during startup?
On 22 August 2013, at 13:07, Paul Hoffman phoff...@proper.com wrote:
Greetings again. After doing a freebsd-update, my system is starting up
differently than it was before. I want to figure out why before I come here
and say it's broken.
Is there a way to say show me all of the commands
On 23 August 2013 10:41, Doug Hardie bc...@lafn.org wrote:
On 22 August 2013, at 13:07, Paul Hoffman phoff...@proper.com wrote:
Greetings again. After doing a freebsd-update, my system is starting up
differently than it was before. I want to figure out why before I come here
and say it's
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013, Gary Aitken wrote:
Is anyone using the current port of hugin successfully on 9.1?
I've never used it before but an attempt to start it crashes:
$ hugin
/usr/local/share/hugin/data/plugins/top_five.py
CAT:Control Points
NAM:keep 5 CPs per image pair
On 08/23/13 07:10, Warren Block wrote:
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013, Gary Aitken wrote:
Is anyone using the current port of hugin successfully on 9.1? I've
never used it before but an attempt to start it crashes:
$ hugin /usr/local/share/hugin/data/plugins/top_five.py CAT:Control
Points NAM:keep 5
On Wednesday, August 21, 2013 4:38:00 pm varanasi sainath wrote:
Thanks for the support.
I want to use the uuid's found using sysctl -a in fstab.
/dev/gptid/ has only uuid for boot partition.
You probably have the other GPT paritions already mounted via
another name which removes the names
On Monday, July 29, 2013 3:31:49 am varanasi sainath wrote:
Hello,
I am writing a kernel module in which I am trying to connect to a UNIX
socket
(UNIX domain sockets use the file system as their address name space).
Kernel module (loadable) acts as a client and User mode program acts as
On 08/22/13 17:46, Matt Miller wrote:
We ran into the following scenario in an application recently and were
wondering if the behavior of kern_jail_set() is as expected here.
This was an application bug where we were in, say, the JID 1 context
and tried to call jailparam_set() with the flags
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 11:14:04 +1000
Colin House articulated:
On 22/08/2013 9:34 AM, Doug Hardie wrote:
There appears to be a problem with dig and the +trace option in
9.2. I believe its also in 9.1. The command:
dig freebsd.org +trace
Only yields a dumb response. No useful
finally my printer responds with this command:
nc 192.168.1.105 9100 output.xqx
but I have no idea how to get it running through the normal LPD spooling
system. output.xqx file I generate first with the foo2xqx-wrapper filter
and it accepts only postscript
i tried this printcap entry:
El día Thursday, August 22, 2013 a las 03:43:46PM +0300, Juris Kaminskis
escribió:
finally my printer responds with this command:
nc 192.168.1.105 9100 output.xqx
I can't imagine that LPD port 515 is not supported by the printer; what
telnet 192.168.1.105 515
gives? If this is timing
I can't imagine that LPD port 515 is not supported by the printer; what
telnet 192.168.1.105 515
gives?
telnet 192.168.1.105 515
Trying 192.168.1.105...
Connected to NPI2B483C.
Escape character is '^]'.
port 515 is not accepting file directly, when I tried the output.xqx to
this port
On Thu, Aug 22, 2013, at 8:19, Juris Kaminskis wrote:
generally i would prefer to stick with the native freebsd printing system
which is LPD
As you should! CUPS is horrible... I also use apsfilter. I can print
almost any file I want just by doing lpr filename
apsfilter's generated config
not sure what exactly did the trick either restart of LPD, or removing
Hplip and CUPS packages, but now my printer responds via:
lpr test.ps
Success! Thank you very much to everyone!
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013, Juris Kaminskis wrote:
finally my printer responds with this command:
nc 192.168.1.105 9100 output.xqx
Okay, that's a good start.
but I have no idea how to get it running through the normal LPD spooling
system. output.xqx file I generate first with the foo2xqx-wrapper
On 21 August 2013, at 18:14, Colin House co...@restecp.com wrote:
On 22/08/2013 9:34 AM, Doug Hardie wrote:
There appears to be a problem with dig and the +trace option in 9.2. I
believe its also in 9.1. The command:
dig freebsd.org +trace
Only yields a dumb response. No useful
On 08/20/13 12:41, Dan Lists wrote:
You might turn on logging and post the logs of what is being blocked.
Sometimes things are being blocked by rules you do not expect.
Thanks for the suggestion.
I was seeing refusals from named and mistakenly interpreting them
as ipfw issues.
On Mon, Aug
/dev/gptid/$UID
maybe what you are looking for?
Warner
On Aug 21, 2013, at 12:16 AM, varanasi sainath wrote:
Hello,
How to find UUID's for Disk volumes.
I have used sysctl -a | grep uuid and was able to find
typefreebsd-swap/type
rawuuidb55ff220-dcdd-11e2-a324-00155d55b20c/rawuuid
On Wednesday 21 August 2013 07:54:06 Antonio Kless wrote:
Is there any way to be noticed, when security updates or new releases are
available?
https://twitter.com/freebsd nearly would be a solution, if it did not
repostquestions from its
subscribers and other information that is not related
--On 20 August 2013 18:02 +0100 Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org wrote:
And that's just made me think of something else - I have a horrible
feeling that jexec will attach to the jail using whatever fib it's
running under, i.e. the fib from the host environment. Do you have (or
can you
On 21/08/2013 08:10, dgmm wrote:
On Wednesday 21 August 2013 07:54:06 Antonio Kless wrote:
Is there any way to be noticed, when security updates or new releases are
available?
https://twitter.com/freebsd nearly would be a solution, if it did not
repostquestions from its
subscribers and
On 21/08/2013 11:35, Karl Pielorz wrote:
--On 20 August 2013 18:02 +0100 Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org wrote:
And that's just made me think of something else - I have a horrible
feeling that jexec will attach to the jail using whatever fib it's
running under, i.e. the fib from the host
, then vi /etc/groups), and then re-apply
the mtree to the entire filesystem. It should find all the files that
are now orphaned and fix them to use the new UID/GID that you specified.
:)
What pitfall should I avoid?
Not having a backup :)
___
freebsd
On 21/08/2013 13:36, Olivier Nicole wrote:
Hello,
On my system legacy users come with UID starting from 200 upward, and
all users come with GID lower that 100.
I know it's not a good idea, but consider that some accounts are over 20
years old!
This is not too much a problem with FreeBSD as I
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013, at 11:12, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
On 21/08/2013 13:36, Olivier Nicole wrote:
Hello,
On my system legacy users come with UID starting from 200 upward, and
all users come with GID lower that 100.
I know it's not a good idea, but consider that some accounts are over
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013, at 11:36, Mark Felder wrote:
Those solutions sound pretty handy if I need to move the files at the
same time. mtree should do this in-place with minimal fuss as it's just
confirming permissions and ownership on all files.
I also just thought of an idea I need to
Thanks for the support.
I want to use the uuid's found using sysctl -a in fstab.
/dev/gptid/ has only uuid for boot partition.
Cheers
Sainath
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 11:48 AM, Warner Losh i...@bsdimp.com wrote:
/dev/gptid/$UID
maybe what you are looking for?
Warner
On Aug 21, 2013, at
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1619404
It is helpful too…
On Aug 15, 2013, at 4:14 PM, Doug Hardie bc...@lafn.org wrote:
On 15 August 2013, at 06:37, ajtiM lum...@gmail.com wrote:
How will be ATI supported in FreeBSD 9.2, please? I like bluetooth mouse. Is
it supported?
On 22/08/2013 00:34, Doug Hardie wrote:
There appears to be a problem with dig and the +trace option in 9.2. I believe
its also in 9.1. The command:
dig freebsd.org +trace
Only yields a dumb response. No useful information is provided. Running the
same command on FreeBSD 7.2 yields a
On 21 August 2013, at 17:02, Doug Hardie bc...@lafn.org wrote:
On 21 August 2013, at 16:46, Frank Leonhardt fra...@fjl.co.uk wrote:
On 22/08/2013 00:34, Doug Hardie wrote:
There appears to be a problem with dig and the +trace option in 9.2. I
believe its also in 9.1. The command:
There appears to be a problem with dig and the +trace option in
9.2. I believe its also in 9.1. The command:
dig freebsd.org +trace
Only yields a dumb response. No useful information is
provided. Running the same command on FreeBSD 7.2 yields a
complete trace with lots
On 22/08/2013 9:34 AM, Doug Hardie wrote:
There appears to be a problem with dig and the +trace option in 9.2. I believe
its also in 9.1. The command:
dig freebsd.org +trace
Only yields a dumb response. No useful information is provided. Running the
same command on FreeBSD 7.2 yields a
Thank you,
Those solutions sound pretty handy if I need to move the files at the
same time. mtree should do this in-place with minimal fuss as it's just
confirming permissions and ownership on all files.
I also just thought of an idea I need to benchmark: running mtree with
and without nscd.
On Sun, Aug 18, 2013 at 7:17 AM, Terje Elde te...@elde.net wrote:
On 18. aug. 2013, at 02.43, Adam Vande More wrote:
What about SSL/TLS for example? How would the router swap the header
in an encrypted session?
Same as it would any sessions since only the payload is encrypted. What
must be code unrot
On 19 August 2013 16:13, Michael W. Lucas mwlu...@michaelwlucas.com wrote:
For the archives:
I left the problem alone for a few days, with no changes on my side.
Came back Monday. Tried again. Everything worked on the affected
machines.
==ml
--
Michael W. Lucas -
On 19/08/2013 21:02, Karl Pielorz wrote:
--On 17 August 2013 17:32:18 +0100 Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org
wrote:
What do you get in the jail from
sysctl net.fibs
sysctl net.my_fibnum
?
I didn't know those sysctl's existed :)
I only stumbled on them by doing
sysctl -a |
When i migrated a large mailspool in maildir format from the old nfs server
to the new one in a previous job, I 1st generated a list of the top level
maildirs. I then generated the rsync commands + plus a few other bits and
pieces for each maildir to make a single transaction like function. I then
whops that should have been
ls /tmp/scripts/| while read f
echo sh /tmp/scripts/$f
done | xjobs -j 20
On 20 August 2013 08:32, krad kra...@gmail.com wrote:
When i migrated a large mailspool in maildir format from the old nfs
server to the new one in a previous job, I 1st generated a list of
On 20/08/2013 08:32, krad wrote:
When i migrated a large mailspool in maildir format from the old nfs server
to the new one in a previous job, I 1st generated a list of the top level
maildirs. I then generated the rsync commands + plus a few other bits and
pieces for each maildir to make a
On 2013-08-19 16:12, Ben Laurie wrote:
On 19 August 2013 09:15, Rares Aioanei bsdlis...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, 19 Aug 2013 05:35:48 -0400
Ben Laurie b...@links.org wrote:
Using grip, trying to rip a CD, I get:
(cd0:ahcich3:0:0:0): MODE_SENSE(6) failed, increasing minimum CDB
size to 10
Le Fri, 09 Aug 2013 23:06:01 +0200,
David Demelier demelier.da...@gmail.com a écrit :
Hello,
I can reproduce a panic by just starting a virtual machine with
VirtualBox 4.2.16_2.
Unfortunately, as the kmod driver is not built with debug symbols I
could not provide much information.
Debug
On 20.08.2013 11:21, Patrick Lamaiziere wrote:
Le Fri, 09 Aug 2013 23:06:01 +0200,
David Demelier demelier.da...@gmail.com a écrit :
Hello,
I can reproduce a panic by just starting a virtual machine with
VirtualBox 4.2.16_2.
Unfortunately, as the kmod driver is not built with debug
--On 20 August 2013 08:27 +0100 Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org wrote:
In the source the exec.fib parameter is given as an integer, so the
quotes probably shouldn't be there, but I'm not sure whether it matters.
I tried it just as 'exec.fib = 1;' originally, and it makes no difference :(
This literally looks like a CRUD interface that could easily be rebuilt.
PHPMyEdit, Dadabik, and others provide easy ways to produce these
interfaces from database tables.
For the record I wouldn't recommend Dadabik unless it does something
specific that you need (postgres or sqlite support, I
On Mon, 19 Aug 2013, Juris Kaminskis wrote:
ok I realised the problem was that i sent plain text to filter instead a
postscript.
when I run now:
lpr test.ps
no error messages appear anymore except that in the /var/spool/hp which is
my spooling directory in the status file I have Sending to
On Mon, 19 Aug 2013, Mark Felder wrote:
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013, at 1:46, Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 11:13:25AM -0700, aurfalien wrote:
Is there a faster way to copy files over NFS?
I would use find+cpio. This handles hard links, permissions, and in case
of later runs,
On Tue, 20 Aug 2013 07:31:09 -0600 (MDT), Warren Block wrote:
I would get the filter working alone before involving the extra
complication of lpd. The documentation at the foo2xqx home page may
help: http://foo2xqx.rkkda.com/
That is a good advice. I'd suggest to use a PS test page as
On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 8:52 AM, Mark Felder f...@freebsd.org wrote:
This literally looks like a CRUD interface that could easily be rebuilt.
PHPMyEdit, Dadabik, and others provide easy ways to produce these
interfaces from database tables.
For the record I wouldn't recommend Dadabik unless
On 20/08/2013 12:50, Karl Pielorz wrote:
--On 20 August 2013 08:27 +0100 Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org wrote:
In the source the exec.fib parameter is given as an integer, so the
quotes probably shouldn't be there, but I'm not sure whether it matters.
I tried it just as 'exec.fib = 1;'
On Aug 20, 2013, at 8:33 AM, Adam Vande More amvandem...@gmail.com wrote:
and while you can rewrite that on a NAT-box using an application level
gateway, you can not do that if the session is using SSL or TLS.
Complete BS.
This seems to come down to a misunderstanding in the examples drawn
On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 10:23 AM, Walter Hurry walterhu...@gmail.com wrote:
$ sudo portupgrade -f graphics/lcms2
snip
= Please update your ports tree and try again.
*** [check-vulnerable] Error code 1
I have of course updated the ports tree but it made no difference.
Try updating ports
There was an entry in vuxml for lcms2 2.5 earlier this week that
initially included 2.5 accidentally. It's been corrected now, so an
update of your ports vulnerability database should allow you to
install/update lcms2.
Ryan
On 08/20/2013 01:15 PM, Kurt Buff wrote:
On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at
You might turn on logging and post the logs of what is being blocked.
Sometimes things are being blocked by rules you do not expect.
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 4:18 PM, Gary Aitken vagab...@blackfoot.net wrote:
On 08/19/13 00:36, Jason Cox wrote:
Are you sure that your DNS requests are over
I've done better looking MVC framework websites using PHP Yii Framework,
Perl Catalyst or Perl Mojolicious. It was a while ago, but I had no
experience with MVC back then. It took me about a week to completely grok
the frameworks and concepts (like authorization model abstraction). After
you have
Are you sure that your DNS requests are over TCP? DNS primarily uses UDP to
serve requests. TCP is used when the response data size exceeds 512 bytes
(I think), or for tasks such as zone transfers. I know a few resolver
implementations use TCP for all queries, but most I have used not. You
might
On Wed, 14 Aug 2013 15:40:58 +0200, vermaden wrote:
Hi and thanks for reply ;)
Yay another FreeBSD laptop user!
I use FreeBSD for dekstop/workstation for I do not remember how long:
http://vermaden.deviantart.com/art/CorporateBSD-FreeBSD-at-Work-190680188
Please do this:
*
# my kernel has
# options ROUTETABLES=16
GATEWAY_0=10.3.255.0
GATEWAY_1=10.3.255.1
setfib 0 route add default $GATEWAY_0
setfib 1 route add default $GATEWAY_1
ipfw table 1 add $NET_0 0
ipfw table 1 add $NET_1 0
ipfw table 1 add $NET_2 1
ipfw table 1 add $NET_3 0
ipfw add 00500 setfib
On Mon, 19 Aug 2013 05:35:48 -0400
Ben Laurie b...@links.org wrote:
Using grip, trying to rip a CD, I get:
(cd0:ahcich3:0:0:0): MODE_SENSE(6) failed, increasing minimum CDB
size to 10 bytes
(cd0:ahcich3:0:0:0): MODE SENSE(10). CDB: 5a 0 e 0 0 0 0 0 20 0
(cd0:ahcich3:0:0:0): CAM status:
ok I realised the problem was that i sent plain text to filter instead a
postscript.
when I run now:
lpr test.ps
no error messages appear anymore except that in the /var/spool/hp which is
my spooling directory in the status file I have Sending to 192.168.1.105
and printer is silent
On 19 August 2013 09:15, Rares Aioanei bsdlis...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, 19 Aug 2013 05:35:48 -0400
Ben Laurie b...@links.org wrote:
Using grip, trying to rip a CD, I get:
(cd0:ahcich3:0:0:0): MODE_SENSE(6) failed, increasing minimum CDB
size to 10 bytes
(cd0:ahcich3:0:0:0): MODE
For the archives:
I left the problem alone for a few days, with no changes on my side.
Came back Monday. Tried again. Everything worked on the affected
machines.
==ml
--
Michael W. Lucas - mwlu...@michaelwlucas.com, Twitter @mwlauthor
http://www.MichaelWLucas.com/,
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013, at 1:46, Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 11:13:25AM -0700, aurfalien wrote:
Is there a faster way to copy files over NFS?
I would use find+cpio. This handles hard links, permissions, and in case
of later runs, will not copy files if they already exist
On Sun, Aug 18, 2013 at 8:06 PM, Gary Aitken vagab...@blackfoot.net wrote:
I'm having some weird ipfw behavior, or it seems weird to me, and am
looking
for an explaination and then a way out.
ipfw list
...
21109 allow tcp from any to 12.32.44.142 dst-port 53 in via tun0 setup
keep-state
On Aug 19, 2013, at 10:41 AM, Mark Felder wrote:
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013, at 1:46, Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 11:13:25AM -0700, aurfalien wrote:
Is there a faster way to copy files over NFS?
I would use find+cpio. This handles hard links, permissions, and in case
of
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 1:06 AM, Gary Aitken vagab...@blackfoot.net wrote:
ipfw list
...
21109 allow tcp from any to 12.32.44.142 dst-port 53 in via tun0 setup
keep-state
21129 allow tcp from any to 12.32.36.65 dst-port 53 in via tun0 setup
keep-state
...
65534 deny log logamount 5 ip
--On 17 August 2013 17:32:18 +0100 Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org
wrote:
What do you get in the jail from
sysctl net.fibs
sysctl net.my_fibnum
?
I didn't know those sysctl's existed :) If I fire up the jail, and jexec to
it, and run the above - I get:
root@jail:/ # sysctl
On 08/19/13 11:53, OpenSlate ChalkDust wrote:
On Sun, Aug 18, 2013 at 8:06 PM, Gary Aitken vagab...@blackfoot.net wrote:
I'm having some weird ipfw behavior, or it seems weird to me, and am
looking
for an explaination and then a way out.
ipfw list
...
21109 allow tcp from any to
On 08/19/13 00:36, Jason Cox wrote:
Are you sure that your DNS requests are over TCP? DNS primarily uses UDP to
serve requests. TCP is used when the response data size exceeds 512 bytes
(I think), or for tasks such as zone transfers. I know a few resolver
implementations use TCP for all
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 08:43:13AM +0200, Aymeric Mansoux wrote:
Hello,
On Sat, August 10, 2013 6:03 pm, Nikola Pavlović wrote:
On 09/08/13 18:40, Tim Daneliuk wrote:
I've given up on all OS distribution-based TexLive drops. I install
texlive manually from their installer
Same here. I
On Sun, Aug 18, 2013 at 09:28:03PM +0200, Polytropon wrote:
On Sun, 18 Aug 2013 19:00:39 +0200, Matthias Apitz wrote:
After a nice day in the fields, my wife deleted accidently the pictures
in her cam; the microSD mounts fine in FreeBSD as -t msdosfs; do we have
some FreeBSD 10-CUR tool to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I never needed to use pgp till now.
So I'm not sure where to start.
Is security/gnupg the way to go?
Any other advice?
Thanks
Anton
You might like to look at:
http://www.cyberdelix.net/tech/bsd-gpg.htm
as a start. Its got a list of related
On 18/08/2013 00:29, Terje Elde wrote:
The obvious answer is IPv6, of course. I'm surprised no one has
mentioned it yet.
You seemed dead set on not renumbering the networks, and moving to
IPv6 would not only be just that, but also be harder than just
renumbering IPv4-nets, so you answered
On 18. aug. 2013, at 12.20, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
I'm not sure that TLS would cause more problems than any other packets, but
as you point out, the exercise is bound to be full of pooh traps as yet
undiscovered. FTP should be interesting, for a start. But for most things,
why would
On 18. aug. 2013, at 02.43, Adam Vande More wrote:
What about SSL/TLS for example? How would the router swap the header in an
encrypted session?
Same as it would any sessions since only the payload is encrypted. What
Frank calls basic nat, most people call static nat(at least people
On 08/17/13 19:08, cpghost wrote:
On 08/17/13 18:14, Walter Hurry wrote:
On Sat, 17 Aug 2013 17:31:26 +0200, Polytropon wrote:
Good ole Xeyes... ;-) But beware, xeyes crashes X server right now! Using
xeyes-1.1.1
xorg-server-1.7.7_8,1
on
FreeBSD 9.2-PRERELEASE #0 r253323 Sat Jul 13
On 08/18/13 16:48, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/17/13 19:08, cpghost wrote:
On 08/17/13 18:14, Walter Hurry wrote:
On Sat, 17 Aug 2013 17:31:26 +0200, Polytropon wrote:
Good ole Xeyes... ;-) But beware, xeyes crashes X server right now! Using
xeyes-1.1.1
xorg-server-1.7.7_8,1
on
FreeBSD
On 18/08/2013 12:51, Terje Elde wrote:
On 18. aug. 2013, at 12.20, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
I'm not sure that TLS would cause more problems than any other packets, but as
you point out, the exercise is bound to be full of pooh traps as yet
undiscovered. FTP should be interesting, for a start.
On Sun, 18 Aug 2013 18:29:23 +0200, cpghost wrote:
On 08/18/13 16:48, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/17/13 19:08, cpghost wrote:
On 08/17/13 18:14, Walter Hurry wrote:
On Sat, 17 Aug 2013 17:31:26 +0200, Polytropon wrote:
Good ole Xeyes... ;-) But beware, xeyes crashes X server right now!
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