On 2/22/06, Jonathan Gray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 2) nfe(4) shows a constant 100/interrupts a seconds without having
> > a link; only configured with ifconfig nfe0 127.0.0.1 255.0.0.0; it also has
> > the same interrupt rate when configured normally
>
> This should be fixed in -current by d
Hi!
Some days ago i asked about similar RAID controller. Also i asked to
intel, they said that in SCSI RAID controllers they uses LSI chips.
SRCU42L is suported.
Sevan / Venture37 wrote:
Hi Guys
Can anyone confirm if the Intel SRCS16 controller is compatible with
OpenBSD, It seems from the f
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Guys
Can anyone confirm if the Intel SRCS16 controller is compatible with
OpenBSD, It seems from the freebsd amr (4) man page that this is a
MegaRAID controller.
Sevan
DO YOU SEE these controllers
MegaRAID SCSI 320-1E
MegaRAID SCSI 320-2E
browse archives: any information about any LSI-based controller
would apply to your SRCU42 as it is LSI by nature.
edgarz wrote:
Thanks Alexey :)
Maybe you have expirience with this controller? I'm interested in
performance of this model :)
Alexey E. Suslikov wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Hello,
I was recently asked to setup a VPN tunnel, where I was told to use a
Local-ID other than my internal net, as that was already in use at the peer.
I saw some discussions on the list regarding this, where a solution was
given along the lines of "set up isakmpd with the requested net, the
http://www.papamike.ca/tutorials/pub/obsd_ipsec.html#openbsd
this bioctl/dmesg were dumped from box using cheap LSI MEGARAID 150-4
(4-port Serial ATA RAID controller). it is ami(4) too.
$ sudo bioctl ami0
Password:
Volume Status Size Device
ami0 0 Online 240063086592 sd0 RAID5
0 Online80021028864 0:0.0 noencl
Hi
A simple question.
How to enable dns server to only make dns cache service to my LAN ?
I running OpenBSD 3.7 and with:
named_flags=""
in rc.conf.local but I have this output :
server1# dig @127.0.0.1 yahoo.com
; <<>> DiG 9.3.0 <<>> @127.0.0.1 yahoo.com
;; global options: printcmd
;; con
Yes, this is my resolv.conf:
lookup file bind
nameserver 127.0.0.1
roberto
2006/2/23, Timo Schoeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> thus Roberto Pereyra spake:
> > Hi
> >
> > A simple question.
> >
> > How to enable dns server to only make dns cache service to my LAN ?
> >
> > I running OpenBSD 3.7 an
We have a couple of PCs with Intel SRCU42L that are recognised as "gdt0"
with OpenBSD AMD64 3.8 GENERIC. And they work perfectly.
Here it is the relevant part of the dmsg:
gdt0 at pci0 dev 13 function 0 "Intel GDT RAID" rev 0x00: irq 5 dpmem
eff0 2-bus 1 cache device
gdt0: ver 222, cache
waa-haa-haa! :))
looks like Intel does it's job "well": sales different cards
based on different vendors' chipsets under the same brand.
anyway, gdt(4) is supported too. with minus of bioctl.
my dmesg for SRCU42X can be found here
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-tech&m=111667421201209&
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On Thu, 23 Feb 2006, Ryan McBride wrote:
SNIP
> In my opinion if you're talking about NATing 750 Windows boxes doing
> regular Windows-type things, you're going to want to at least at crank
> the limits on states and turn on adaptive timeouts; I wouldn't go any
> further than that unless you run in
this has nothing to do with openbsd. please take it elsewhere.
* Daniel A. Ramaley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-21 03:42]:
> On Thursday 16 February 2006 01:58, A Rossi wrote:
> >My client didn't really like the idea of just making a windows
> >partition and disallowing the users from accessin
Thanks to all, I solved this issue.
The dns server is behind a firewall and I don't NAT enable for this server
.. I very stupid I know .. :)
roberto
2006/2/23, Roberto Pereyra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Yes, this is my resolv.conf:
>
> lookup file bind
> nameserver 127.0.0.1
>
>
> robert
* Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-21 16:59]:
> do I need to retry writev() on a nonblocking Unix-domain SOCK_STREAM
> socket or will it always write out the exact number of bytes I wanted?
it will tell you wether it wrote out both.
on non-blocking sockets you have to account for part
* Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-23 15:11]:
> * Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-21 16:59]:
> > do I need to retry writev() on a nonblocking Unix-domain SOCK_STREAM
> > socket or will it always write out the exact number of bytes I wanted?
>
> it will tell you wether it w
Daniel Ouellet wrote:
> Ray Lai wrote:
>> I thought you meant you could do something like:
>>
>> block in log-table to port 25
>>
>> where is updated automatically.
>
> If you read on the PF and look at what I send you, you will see that
> IS updated automatically.
>
> That's what the line
On Wednesday 22 February 2006 16:48, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
> If you read on the PF and look at what I send you, you will see that
> IS updated automatically.
>
> That's what the line:
>
> (max-src-conn-rate 5/30, overload flush global)
>
> does. After 5 connection in 30 seconds, the IP address is
Short question: How can I obtain the virtual MAC associated with a
given carp interface from the command line on that server?
(Alternatively, if someone could tell me how they are generated, that
would work just as good)
---background info---
In the process of deploying a pair of carp + pfsync
On Wednesday 22 February 2006 15:37, Ray Lai wrote:
> Do ``block in log on port 25'' and listen to pflog0 to add bad
> hosts.
Bit of a openBSD n00b here. How would I go about listening to pflog0? I
thought that required tcpdump running. What I want it running
continuously on a small, dedicated f
On 2006/02/23 10:16, Kevin Taylor wrote:
> Short question: How can I obtain the virtual MAC associated with a
> given carp interface from the command line on that server?
00:00:5e:00:01:XX where XX is VRID in hex.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dear misc readers.
i have soekris box to do basic nat/rdr on my home networking, one
comp is a squid proxy
server and a client machines http requests are redirected to that
machine trough soekris box.
now i would like to have some kind of basic fail-o
On Wednesday 22 February 2006 16:19, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> recent (preferably -current/snapshot ports) smtp-vilter handles this
> quite nicely.
Thanks but it's probably not a solution in this case. I'm not that
experienced with openBSD but I'm a bit leery about running -current on
a dedicate
quote from http://www.netbsd.org/Changes/#iscsi-target
22 Feb 2006 - NetBSD iSCSI Status and HOWTOs (top)
Alistair G. Crooks has recently added support for an iSCSI target
to NetBSD, and written HOWTOs for using it. iSCSI is specified in
RFC 3720 and describes a method for encapsulating SCSI co
* Chris Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-23 09:34]:
> On Wednesday 22 February 2006 15:37, Ray Lai wrote:
> > Do ``block in log on port 25'' and listen to pflog0 to add bad
> > hosts.
>
> Bit of a openBSD n00b here. How would I go about listening to pflog0? I
> thought that required tcpdump run
two boxes at home, carped and pfsynced. Primary runs your squid,
backup either runs a backup squid yourself, or does an rdr for the
connections to it to the isp's proxy.
-Bob
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-23 09:40]:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash
Chris Smith wrote:
> But with max-src-conn-rate aren't you actually allowing connections? The
> first I want to do is block connections, not allow them. Will use of
> max-src-conn-rate work with a block? With attempted connections that
> never get allowed?
A "block" rule will just block all co
On Thursday 23 February 2006 11:40, Bob Beck wrote:
> > Bit of a openBSD n00b here. How would I go about listening to
> > pflog0? I thought that required tcpdump running. What I want it
> > running continuously on a small, dedicated firewall box (concerned
> > about processing power as well as secu
For future reference, here is the script I generated to provide a MAC
address for a given carp interface. Much thanks to Stuart Henderson in
answering my original question on this topic. This is no rocket
science, but it might save a few people 2 minutes in the future.
-Kevin
#!/usr/bin/perl
#
On 2006-02-23 12:07:03 -0500, Chris Smith wrote:
> ---
> How would I go about listening to pflog0? I
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/logging.html
> IOW, from your experience, is tcpdump safe in this scenario and is it's
> overhead minima
This has plenty to do with OpenBSD, the central server is OpenBSD and
getting it to play nice with windows has to do with it also.
Henning Brauer wrote:
this has nothing to do with openbsd. please take it elsewhere.
* Daniel A. Ramaley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-21 03:42]:
On T
I know you are going to tell me to rtfm, it's bound to be in there but I
can't find anything relevant here so assume I'm stupid and please point me
at something obvious :P
I have just become acquainted with the differences between FreeBSD and
OpenBSD by porting over the ubtbcmfw driver which seems
I need to put a laptop running Mac OS X (10.3 I think) in my
OpenBSD powered network - OpenBSD router/firewall. The problem is that I
don't know
if I need Appletalk or not installed (I have an urgent problem that must
be solved with this laptop, but it's not mine and I haven't
worked
Thank you all and good night!
Chris Zakelj wrote:
A Rossi wrote:
Hi,
I've been hired by a client to perform a number of network services
for him, most of which are completely unrelated to my topic.
Now, onto my topic:
He asked me if I could partition all of his workstation
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Feb 23, 2006, at 1:52 PM, Gabriel George POPA wrote:
I need to put a laptop running Mac OS X (10.3 I think)
in my OpenBSD powered network - OpenBSD router/firewall. The
problem is that I don't know
if I need Appletalk or not insta
On 2/23/06, Andrew Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Looking at the counterpart driver for this device (ubt) I can't see any
> reference to major, minor device numbers so I picked something more obvious.
> the wd driver and I can't figure out how this maps to major number 16 at
> all. (it's been a
On Thu, Feb 23, 2006 at 06:04:31PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Dear misc readers.
>
> i have soekris box to do basic nat/rdr on my home networking, one comp
> is a squid proxy server and a client machines http requests are
> redirected to that machine trough soekris box. now i would like t
On Thu, Feb 23, 2006 at 08:52:13PM +0200, Gabriel George POPA wrote:
>I need to put a laptop running Mac OS X (10.3 I think) in my
> OpenBSD powered network - OpenBSD router/firewall. The problem is that I
> don't know
> if I need Appletalk or not installed (I have an urgent problem t
Hi misc
Saw a post from june 2005 by Henning regarding the work he and Ryan did on
code cleanup and the addition code of interface groups. I think I am on my
way to abuse these groups as simple alias to make PF totaly independant
from the hardware and put all my interface stuff in the hostname.if
* Per-Olov Sj?holm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-02-23 22:08]:
> Hi misc
>
> Saw a post from june 2005 by Henning regarding the work he and Ryan did on
> code cleanup and the addition code of interface groups. I think I am on my
> way to abuse these groups as simple alias to make PF totaly independant
> On 1/26/06, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I agree with your assessment - but disallowing mounts in securelevel 2
> > fixes the most obvious attack (that anybody with even a little UNIX
>
> no, it fixes nothing. root can alter processes' memory. you gain
> *nothing* by prevent
Trying to get OS X to mount an openbsd nfs share. I can force OS X to
use reserved ports by using "mount_nfs -P" from the command line, but
users mounting from the finder don't have that option.
OpenBSD man page for mountd says that there is an -n option to allow
mounting from unreserved ports,
Will H. Backman wrote:
Trying to get OS X to mount an openbsd nfs share. I can force OS X to
use reserved ports by using "mount_nfs -P" from the command line, but
users mounting from the finder don't have that option.
OpenBSD man page for mountd says that there is an -n option to allow
mounti
hi,
i've moved 1 net4801 from openbsd 3.8 to 3.9beta (snap feb 20) successfully.
this one uses only CF for storage & runs happily.
next stage is running the same beast from a 20GB IDE - tested & known good
in a spare laptop. i boot from tftp, using PXEBOOT/DHCP.
unfortunately i get a panic
Is it possible to get net-snmp's snmpd to return an interface
description for ifAlias[1]? If so, how?
I am sure that it is, but I am hoping that someone has an example
because I am not sure how to figure out how to match it to the
interfaces ifIndex value.
It looks like net-snmp 5.2 there is
Sorry for the top-post but there jsut wasn't anywhere appropriate for
a type of thing.
If the laptop only needs www access no appletalk is needed. Appletalk
is purely a file serving mechanism, like samba or nfs. If you need
appletalk it's pretty easy to set up on OpenBSD.
--Bryan
On 2/23/06,
> No this is only processor documentation.
> http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=113398028623246&w=2
Let me be clear.
Imagine if we only had processor documentation for Intel-based machines:
This is what a real i386 dmesg would look like. Look carefully. And I am
not making a joke.
Once again, openafs would allow you to make every windows box a server
hosting data in a flat named space setup.
There is now a port in current for setting up a master server.
-Ober
Richard Chesler: [Reading a piece of paper] The first rule of Fight Club is you
don't talk about Fight Club?
Na
> >Are there any plans to import "ueaglectl" to OpenBSD?
> > http://damien.bergamini.free.fr/ueagle/
The whole idea is to one day fix this so that it can "just work"
automatically, using ifconfig.
Please read a posting about 2 weeks ago by dlg comparing bioctl to
ifconfig. Please google for
On Thu, Feb 23, 2006 at 05:51:24PM -0700, andrew fresh wrote:
> Is it possible to get net-snmp's snmpd to return an interface
> description for ifAlias[1]? If so, how?
Well, nevermind, it got my interest up so here is a way that "works".
It doesn't check for bad input as well as it probably shou
On Thu, 23 Feb 2006 19:59:05 -0700 Theo de Raadt
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > No this is only processor documentation.
> > http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=113398028623246&w=2
>
> Let me be clear.
>
> Imagine if we only had processor documentation for Intel-based
> machines:
Its
> Its actually not "only processor documentation" though. Its docs for
> the new sun4v arch, specifically so people can port operating systems
> to it. Operating systems run on the hypervisor, not on the hardware.
>
> http://opensparc.sunsource.net/specs/Hypervisor-api-current-draft.pdf
>
> That
On Thu, 23 Feb 2006 21:08:26 -0700 Theo de Raadt
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Its actually not "only processor documentation" though. Its docs
> > for the new sun4v arch, specifically so people can port operating
> > systems to it. Operating systems run on the hypervisor, not on the
> > hardwar
Has anyone successfully gotten the patch provided by Frank Denis (of
PureFTPD), found here: ftp://ftp.c9x.org/OpenBSD/misc/php5-fastcgi.patch
to actually patch php5? If so, could you please lend a little insight in
how you managed to do so.
Thanks.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
http://www.fastma
On 2/24/06, Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Feb 2006 21:08:26 -0700 Theo de Raadt
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Its actually not "only processor documentation" though. Its docs
> > > for the new sun4v arch, specifically so people can port operating
> > > systems to it. Operatin
> On Wed, Feb 22, 2006 at 03:21:38AM -0800, Tony Sterrett wrote:
>> I just compiled python2.4 which recommended for Zope 2.9.0. There a
>> small glitch in configure. You'll get an error like below. Its late
>> so just all reference to define_xopen_source starting around 1488.
>> this has to do with
We don't even have any documentation for Sun's ethernet chipsets, even
the old gem found in machines which showed up on the market about 8-10
years ago. Let alone their newer chipsets, or their pci chipsets.
And largely we suspect we don't get documentation because it would
show how buggy their ha
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