On Thursday 27 July 2006 00:43, David B. wrote:
> sorry to bother, can anyone suggest a definitive book I should buy on how
> to set up Sendmail on Openbsd 3.8?
>
> I have looked all over the net for a HOWTO or an article that steps me
> through how to set up a user account and password, and then h
Nick Price wrote:
> I'm interested in starting to do development on the OpenBSD OS. What are
> some good tasks that need to be done that someone isn't currently working
> on? Someone suggested ACPId, but apparently it's already being worked on.
iSCSI? ;)
Stephan
[demime 1.01d removed an attach
Hi all.
Brand new dual xeon machine - looking forward to getting OpenBSD 3.9
running on it. Problem... getting this message every second.
ichiic0: timeout, status 0x0
ichiic0: transaction abort failed, status 0x42
I've searched the archives and googled and I've found this issue raised,
but
(Apologies to the list: I was unable to make direct contact with Brad.)
Brad:
I sent you email twice this month regarding em(4)'s unknown link state
behavior, but have not heard back yet. Have you simply not had time to
reply yet or were my messages lost in transit?
Thanks.
Date: Sun, 9 Jul
sorry to bother, can anyone suggest a definitive book I should buy on how to
set up Sendmail on Openbsd 3.8?
I have looked all over the net for a HOWTO or an article that steps me
through how to set up a user account and password, and then how to retrieve
it (look at it on the server), but all
On Thursday 27 July 2006 06:37, elaconta.com Webmaster wrote:
>
> Router (192.168.1.120) <-> (192.168.1.121) Firewall PC (192.168.1.122)
> <-> (192.168.1.0/24) LAN
>
> Now, thing is, the Linux firewall has two NICs:
>
> NIC 1: 192.168.1.121
> NIC 2: 192.168.1.122
>
> The two NICs on the Linux box a
elaconta.com Webmaster wrote:
The networking scheme is:
Router (192.168.1.120) <-> (192.168.1.121) Firewall PC (192.168.1.122)
<-> (192.168.1.0/24) LAN
Now, thing is, the Linux firewall has two NICs:
NIC 1: 192.168.1.121
NIC 2: 192.168.1.122
The two NICs on the Linux box are configured with 1
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 08:29:17PM -0400, Nick Holland wrote:
> Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
> ...
> >MIME has been around for 14 years. There's no excuse for any MUA not to
> >be able to deal with it at least minimally. In the case of
> >/usr/bin/Mail that means recognizing content types and only d
Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
...
MIME has been around for 14 years. There's no excuse for any MUA not to
be able to deal with it at least minimally. In the case of
/usr/bin/Mail that means recognizing content types and only displaying
text/* sections when printing to the screen. It doesn't *have*
elaconta.com Webmaster wrote:
Howdy
We have here an old (Mandrake Linux 8 - yeah i know...) PC with two NICs
which serves as a firewall for our LAN and runs a Bind caching nameserver.
Although the machine is getting old, it still works well. Thing is, i'm
having a hard time trying to reproduce i
On 2006/07/26 23:37, elaconta.com Webmaster wrote:
> Router (192.168.1.120) <-> (192.168.1.121) Firewall PC (192.168.1.122)
> <-> (192.168.1.0/24) LAN
> >From what i've googled, this shouldn't even be possible, everything is
> on the same subnet. Regardless, it works great, and if i went and got a
On 7/25/06, Mike Erdely <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
prad wrote:
> what is the best way to stop those robots and spiders from getting in?
Someone on this list (who can reveal themselves if they want) has a
pretty good setup to block "disrespectful" robots.
They have a robots.txt file that specifi
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Now, thing is, the Linux firewall has two NICs:
>
> NIC 1: 192.168.1.121
> NIC 2: 192.168.1.122
>
> The two NICs on the Linux box are configured with 192.168.1.121 and
> 192.168.1.122, both interfaces on the same subnet.
> 192.168.1.121 acesses
> the company router (19
elaconta.com Webmaster wrote:
Howdy
We have here an old (Mandrake Linux 8 - yeah i know...) PC with two NICs
which serves as a firewall for our LAN and runs a Bind caching nameserver.
Although the machine is getting old, it still works well. Thing is, i'm
having a hard time trying to reproduce i
Howdy
We have here an old (Mandrake Linux 8 - yeah i know...) PC with two NICs
which serves as a firewall for our LAN and runs a Bind caching nameserver.
Although the machine is getting old, it still works well. Thing is, i'm
having a hard time trying to reproduce it, that is, getting another PC
t
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On 7/26/06, Leonardo Rodrigues <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Would you please implement the C99 %a string format support that is
> > missing in our libc? :DD
> > I'd love if someone could do it =)
> >
> > Anyway, you could start by taking a look at the bug tracking syste
On 7/26/06, Leonardo Rodrigues <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Would you please implement the C99 %a string format support that is
missing in our libc? :DD
I'd love if someone could do it =)
Anyway, you could start by taking a look at the bug tracking system
(http://www.openbsd.org/query-pr.html). *P
J Moore wrote:
> Lyndon is right... and in recognition of that I understand that the
> project lead is negotiating with Microsoft (through Warren Buffet) to
> port Outlook to OpenBSD. Theo will provide more details...
(Can't... help... it... Must... reply...)
That's great news! I look forward t
On Wed, 26 Jul 2006, Nick Price wrote:
> I'm interested in starting to do development on the OpenBSD OS. What are
> some good tasks that need to be done that someone isn't currently working
> on? Someone suggested ACPId, but apparently it's already being worked on.
General guideline: pick somet
Would you please implement the C99 %a string format support that is
missing in our libc? :DD
I'd love if someone could do it =)
Anyway, you could start by taking a look at the bug tracking system
(http://www.openbsd.org/query-pr.html). *Plenty* of work to be done
there.
On 7/26/06, Nick Price <[
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 12:19:45PM -0700, Nick Price wrote:
> What are some good tasks that need to be done that someone isn't
> currently working on?
Searching the archives :-)
-p.
I'm interested in starting to do development on the OpenBSD OS. What are
some good tasks that need to be done that someone isn't currently working
on? Someone suggested ACPId, but apparently it's already being worked on.
Thanks
Nick
On Wed, 26 Jul 2006, Matthew P Szudzik wrote:
> My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the only
> email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail does not
> handle MIME-encoded messages, so I was wondering what most people use to
> read and send them.
For rea
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 11:40:30AM -0700, Spruell, Darren-Perot wrote:
>
> Good lord, do these threads never end?
Replying with that somewhat invalidates your point. That is something
that one should mumble while hitting the delete key. ;)
--
Darrin Chandler| Phoenix BSD Users Grou
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> MIME has been around for 14 years. There's no excuse for any
> MUA not to
> be able to deal with it at least minimally. In the case of
> /usr/bin/Mail
> that means recognizing content types and only displaying
> text/* sections
> when printing to the screen. It d
El mii, 26-07-2006 a las 10:40 -0700, Spruell, Darren-Perot escribis:
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > Why isn't there a MIME encoding/decoding solution in the
> > default install?
> > > (Or maybe there is, but I'm ignorant of it?)
>
> Why does it matter? There are lots of things not in the def
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 11:31:39AM -0600, the unit calling itself Lyndon
Nerenberg wrote:
> >Why would you want a MIME encoding solution in the default
> >installation? I mean, really, what do a large majority of systems need
> >MIME for?
>
> 1) Character set support. These days I suspect the nu
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Why isn't there a MIME encoding/decoding solution in the
> default install?
> > (Or maybe there is, but I'm ignorant of it?)
Why does it matter? There are lots of things not in the default install.
Why do people always act like not having something in the default i
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 11:31:39AM -0600, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
> >Why would you want a MIME encoding solution in the default
> >installation? I mean, really, what do a large majority of systems need
> >MIME for?
>
> 1) Character set support. These days I suspect the number of Unix users
> who
Why would you want a MIME encoding solution in the default
installation? I mean, really, what do a large majority of systems need
MIME for?
1) Character set support. These days I suspect the number of Unix users
who can live completely within the US-ASCII glyph set are in the minority.
2) PG
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 07:13:06PM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 10:47:17AM -0400, Matthew P Szudzik wrote:
> | My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the only
> | email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail does not
> | handle MIME-
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 10:47:17AM -0400, Matthew P Szudzik wrote:
> My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the only
> email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail does not
> handle MIME-encoded messages, so I was wondering what most people use to
> read
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 10:47:17AM -0400, Matthew P Szudzik wrote:
> My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the
> only email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail
> does not handle MIME-encoded messages, so I was wondering what most
> people use to read an
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 10:47:17AM -0400, Matthew P Szudzik wrote:
| My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the only
| email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail does not
| handle MIME-encoded messages, so I was wondering what most people use to
| read and
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 10:47:17AM -0400, Matthew P Szudzik wrote:
> My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the only
> email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail does not
> handle MIME-encoded messages, so I was wondering what most people use to
> read
My understanding is that Mail (equivalently mail or mailx) is the only
email client that is in the OpenBSD default install. But Mail does not
handle MIME-encoded messages, so I was wondering what most people use to
read and send them.
Do you download metamail and/or mpack from ports?
Do you us
On 7/26/06, Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
# ~/FMS_2_0_2_r51_linux/fmsini
~/FMS_2_0_2_r51_linux/fmsini: relocation error: /RHEL4/libc.so.6:
symbol _rtld_global_ro, version GLIBC_PRIVATE not defined in file
ld-linux.so.2 with link time reference
I've found that symbol in /lib/ld-lin
I have kern.emul.linux=1 in /etc/sysctl.conf and
have installed the newest redhat_base-8.0p8 package.
Also I've updated to the newest -current.
Then I've copied these libraries from a RH Linux PC:
# ll /usr/local/emul/redhat/RHEL4
2848 -rwxr-xr-x 1 afarber users 1438761 Jul 26 17:12 libc-2.3
On Wed, Jul 26, 2006 at 12:50:41PM +0200, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ which mksmbpasswd
> /usr/local/bin/mksmbpasswd
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ man mksmbpasswd
> man: no entry for mksmbpasswd in the manual.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ pkg_info | grep samba
> samba-3.0.21bp2 SMB and CIFS
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ which mksmbpasswd
/usr/local/bin/mksmbpasswd
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ man mksmbpasswd
man: no entry for mksmbpasswd in the manual.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ pkg_info | grep samba
samba-3.0.21bp2 SMB and CIFS client and server for UNIX
Is there an aim in OpenBSD to have also manual
Hi,
I've compiled some older snapshots of CURRENT and the last time it
worked for me was July, 12th 00:00 (the build failed at texinfo, but
"pkg_add -ui -F update -F updatedepends" worked afterwards).
A build from July, 14th 00:00 didn't work anymore, so I suppose the
breakage was introduced
On 7/24/06, Xavier Mertens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It's still running 3.5 (ok, ok, don't shoot, it's an old one but upgrades are
not easy).
As another poster already mentioned: upgrades are an easy and well
documented process. Do your specific circumstances (e.g. problems to
physically acce
On 7/26/06, Gustavo Rios <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
# Pass encrypted traffic to/from security gateways
pass in proto esp from $GATEWAY_B to $GATEWAY_A
pass out proto esp from $GATEWAY_A to $GATEWAY_B
In the last two line above, if i wanted to specify the interface,
whi
On 7/26/06, Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm going to run fmsini on real Linux and copy the produced
files to OpenBSD, but still I wonder, what call is this "fmsini"
missing in the Linux emulation. Is there a way to find this out?
Actually copying the files from Linux won't help
Hello,
has anybody please succeeded in installing and running
Macromedia's Flash Media Server for Linux on OpenBSD?
I'm currently stuck with the "fmsini" tool failing to
run on OpenBSD: it prints "Abort trap" and quits:
gate:FMS_2_0_2_r51_linux {1008} sudo sh -x ./installFMS -platformWarnOnly
+
Hello list !
I've set up a new ftp mirror for OpenBSD, located physically in
Rennes / West of France, on the RENATER Network (National Research &
Teaching Network, maybe one of the biggest bandwidth in the country)
It is available at ftp://ftp.irisa.fr/pub/OpenBSD/ , and works well..
i've tested
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