Hi,
I have created a fat partition to use tphdisk etc etc... and I don't
really know what the difference is between apm -S and apm -z. The man
page says it is
-S Put the system into stand-by (light sleep) state.
-z Put the system into suspend (deep sleep) state.
I was expecting that d
On 21:22:19 Nov 11, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> PCL is a printer control language. PS is a stack based programming
> language with graphics primitives for drawing. it may also be
> classed as a PDL (page description language).
Thanks. I definitely stand corrected. I definitely meant PDL and not
hi,
i have similar problem too, my sk(4) autoselect only show 10baseT full
duplex, before upgrade to 4.2 its show 1000baseT full duplex. it also
use eephy*. from this thread i know there's a patch, but how do i apply
the patch without upgrade to current ? just download the diff and re
compile
On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 06:26:47PM +0100, Tony Sarendal wrote:
> New version. Less duplication and a nice feature as bonus.
> With softreconfig in enabled the looped prefixes are accepted
> into the Adj-RIB-In.
>
> This means that I can tell if my neighbor AS is using
> a path via myself. Either I
I just got through updating a mailserver that had been running 4.0 to
4.2 using a new HDD, fresh install of OS and required packages. All old
scripts settings etc preserved on original HDD now sitting in an
accessible older box so I can grab anything forgotten.
The one thing that hit me was the ou
RW wrote:
What has not been addressed here is the question of what created those
files. It isn't something you do with a shell script usually.
Many things can do this, or could use this.
So if you have, just as an example, a database program that does make
such a file it is often possible to
On 11/11/07, Siju George <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Both
>
> http://www.wireshark.org/ and http://www.wireshark.org/
>
> are not found in ports. Could somebody recommend any softwarew in 4.2
> ports that has related functionality?
I like ettercap.
On Sun, 11 Nov 2007 22:31:13 -0500, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
>Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
>> I tried making a very sparse file (100 MB data, 1000 GB sparseness) and
>> gave up trying to compress it. gzip has to process the whole thing,
>> sparseness and all. Sure it would probably end up with a very sm
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
I tried making a very sparse file (100 MB data, 1000 GB sparseness) and
gave up trying to compress it. gzip has to process the whole thing,
sparseness and all. Sure it would probably end up with a very small
file, but the whole thing has to be processed.
Yes it does an
Lars Noodin wrote:
> Nick Holland wrote:
>> ...
>> In general, it seems to be bad to drastically change the disklabel on a
>> running system (i.e., changing the beginning and ending points of a
>> currently mounted partition).
>>
>> HOWEVER, if you can do it from bsd.rd, it should be no problem.
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11.11-06:51, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
[ ... ]
Now I only know what you people seem to be saying about PPD files and
drivers. I have never used CUPS either.
However long ago I have read that postscript is a PCL - printer command
language.
And most printers thes
> #!/bin/sh
> xterm -e "telnet `echo ${*##telnet://} | sed 's/:/ /g'`"
[...]
> - I *think* the {} bit is awk(1),
No, "/bin/sh" is not awk(1), but sh(1). =;c)
[...]
> If awk(1) can remove telnet:// from $* (if present),
> then surely it should be able to turn a colon (if present)
> into a space,
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 09:18:34PM +0100, knitti wrote:
> if I'm not completely wrong, you could always tar -czf the sparse file, scp
> the
> archive and then tar -xzf the file in place in the other side. this should
> also
> create a new sparse file. of course, you lose the rsyncabilty and you
> thanks, is there an comparison table somewhere?
To compare various ISPs, you mean? I'm sure there are a number
of them... There are several sites out there where people can
write their own reviews (good and bad) for products/services, so
you might do a little googling.
Benny
--
"If it'
On Mon, 12 Nov 2007 00:25:29 +0100, ropers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
xterm -e "telnet `echo ${1##telnet://}|sed -e 's/:/ /'`"
...
My .telnet4firefox.sh file now is:
#!/bin/sh
xterm -e "telnet `echo ${*##telnet://} | sed 's/:/ /g'`"
...
- I understand the backtick quoted execution.
On 11/11/2007, Barry Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 10:32:05PM +0100, ropers wrote:
> > xterm -e "telnet ${1##telnet://}"
> >
> > When I click a telnet URL that does not specify a port, it works,
> > xterm launches with telnet, which duly connects to the port.
> >
> > H
Adrian Fisher wrote on Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 06:47:56PM +:
> I am sure many of you will be familiar with the web-site Linux from
> scratch (http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/) which is fine for those
> who wish to use Linux but has anyone here tried it with Open?
OpenBSD ist designed as a consis
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 10:43:42AM -0500, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 09:57:56PM -0500, William Boshuck wrote:
> > ... you can use rg in /etc/printcap.
>
> IIRC, LRNng also lets you make it easy so that, for example, if you have
> 1000 users in 100 work groups, with 100 work
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 10:32:05PM +0100, ropers wrote:
> xterm -e "telnet ${1##telnet://}"
>
> When I click a telnet URL that does not specify a port, it works,
> xterm launches with telnet, which duly connects to the port.
>
> However, if I click a telnet URL that *does* specify a port, it does
On Nov 11, 2007, at 10:03 AM, Barry Miller wrote:
Of course, if a bad guy _does_ get control of wireshark, he OWNS your
network, but at least you're not totally rooted. Take your chances.
How so? Given that all it is a frontend to libpcap. And how does this
not apply to tcpdump?
--Barry
> "Posted by Reza Behforooz, Software Engineer
>
> In my first month at Google, I complained to a friend on the Gmail
> team about a couple of small things that I disliked about Gmail. I
...
Dear Google,
Could you get Reza to fix contact/label whitelisting in Gmail while he's at it?
thanks,
mik
thanks, is there an comparison table somewhere?
~~Kalyan-mastu~~
- Original Message
From: C. Bensend <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: misc@openbsd.org
Sent: Sunday, November 11, 2007 12:48:39 PM
Subject: Re: Best ISP hosting services on OpenBSd?
> I am sure
Hello friends.
I tried install java in OpenBSD 4.2 but I've a error:
===> Checking files for jdk-1.4.2
`/usr/ports/distfiles/j2sdk-1_4_2-src-scsl.zip' is up
to date.
`/usr/ports/distfiles/j2sdk-1_4_2-bin-scsl.zip' is up
to date.
`/usr/ports/distfiles/bsd-jdk14-patches-7.tar.gz' is
up to date.
`/
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 11:16:51AM -0600, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
> Nick Guenther wrote:
> >On Nov 10, 2007 5:00 AM, Sean Darby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >>On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 10:31:11AM +0100, xavier brinon wrote:
> >>
> >>>from the "Official Google Blog"
> >>>
> >>>"Posted by Re
I noticed some slight problems pulling the files to my home. I've put
them at http://www.phxbsd.com/OpenBSD/inigo/ for others to use (with
Inigo's ok). This is in the USA, so it might be better for people in the
Americas.
--
Darrin Chandler| Phoenix BSD User Group | MetaBUG
[EMAIL
This is only tangentially OpenBSD-related, but probably a no-brainer
for most of you who have a basic understanding of awk(1), so I'm
hoping I can pick your brains:
Now please bear with me, I'll get to the awk problem soon:
I want to make Firefox respect telnet URLs, ie. if I click on a URL
such a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Did you look at the Perl script I sent?
I should also add in my previous emails in regards to good and bad part
of it that it is actually a much better idea then what I was doing by
the way! I think my emails didn't come out right in regard to the idea
express howeve
On 11.11-06:51, Girish Venkatachalam wrote:
[ ... ]
> Now I only know what you people seem to be saying about PPD files and
> drivers. I have never used CUPS either.
>
> However long ago I have read that postscript is a PCL - printer command
> language.
>
> And most printers these days support pr
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Quoting Daniel Ouellet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Only two things here.
1. "you have to identify your sparse file in advance."
That is the question. Look at the title.
Hi, Daniel.
Did you look at the Perl script I sent?
I am playing with it and looking if that can hel
On 10.11-17:01, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
[ ... ]
> >PPD files are post script description files that act as a drivers for
> >post script printers. This seems clear to me.
no. they simply describe the functions available on the printer.
this allows the interface to display those printer options t
Quoting Daniel Ouellet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Only two things here.
>
> 1. "you have to identify your sparse file in advance."
>
> That is the question. Look at the title.
>
Hi, Daniel.
Did you look at the Perl script I sent?
[code]
use strict;
use warnings;
use File::Find;
sub process_file
I had a busy week, but that solved my problem.
thanks to all :)
matheus
--
We will call you cygnus,
The God of balance you shall be
knitti wrote:
if I'm not completely wrong, you could always tar -czf the sparse file, scp the
archive and then tar -xzf the file in place in the other side. this should also
create a new sparse file. of course, you lose the rsyncabilty and you have to
identify your sparse file in advance. But 16G
Hi
I have router running with one 4 port starfire adapter. Everything
runs fine except that mbuf value keeps going up. After all mbufs are
used machine crashes. I did upped the number to 40960 so I don't need
to reboot it every ~6 hours.
I did following when I did debug situation:
I did disable u
On 11/11/07, Daniel Ouellet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2.3 ==
> Now using scp as many times it's can also be use for quick sync of
> changed files. Here however, we are up for a big surprise as well for
> sure. Here we can't even do it as the sparse file like in rsync example
> #1 wil
El sC!b, 10-11-2007 a las 03:57 -0600, Sean Darby escribiC3:
> > It is:
> > http://inigo.homeunix.net/art/art.tgz
>
> I think it's /files/art/art.tgz ?
Yes, it is. My apologies.
> In any case - those are impressive pics.
>
> Would it be possible to provide the same ones but in 1680x1050?
Th
read release(8)
_
Feel like a local wherever you go.
http://www.backofmyhand.com
* Adrian Fisher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-11-11 18:47:56]:
> Hello all,
>
> I am sure many of you will be familiar with the web-site Linux from scratch
> (http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/) which is fine for those who wish to use
> Linux but is has anyone here tried it with Open?
>
> A.
>
Every
> I am sure someone has done this research before. (so before i go and try
> to (re)invent the wheel) I want to request, the intelligent ones, to share
> their knowledge and research of the best internet isp (on OpenBSD only)
> available on the internet today.
>
> I am looking for 'dedicated serve
Hello all,
I am sure many of you will be familiar with the web-site Linux from scratch
(http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/) which is fine for those who wish to use
Linux but is has anyone here tried it with Open?
A.
Nick Holland wrote:
> ...
> In general, it seems to be bad to drastically change the disklabel on a
> running system (i.e., changing the beginning and ending points of a
> currently mounted partition).
>
> HOWEVER, if you can do it from bsd.rd, it should be no problem.
I was booting from a live C
dear list.
the cardbus device of my laptop (Sony Corporation VGN-FS295XP) is
not being mapped and thus i'm unable to use it. i guess it's because
"The BIOS does not include the cardbus controllers in the PCI IRQ
routing table (...)".
(http://www.gratisoft.us/ftp/pub/todd/OpenBSD/srx77/cardbus.dif
Hello all,
I am sure someone has done this research before. (so before i go and try to
(re)invent the wheel) I want to request, the intelligent ones, to share their
knowledge and research of the best internet isp (on OpenBSD only) available
on the internet today.
I am looking for 'dedicated
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 09:13:42PM +0530, Siju George wrote:
> Both
>
> http://www.wireshark.org/ and http://www.wireshark.org/
>
> are not found in ports. Could somebody recommend any softwarew in 4.2
> ports that has related functionality?
>
If you don't mind building wireshark yourself, one w
Lars Noodin wrote:
> I had a hard drive die and used the chance to move to 4.2. Since the
> 'new' machine is of the same vintage as the one it replaced, I expect it
> to start grinding to a halt soon, too.
>
> Is there a way to copy one entire hard drive, partition table and all,
> to another --
On Sonntag 11 November 2007 06:41:41 Urban Hillebrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I have a problem with pf redirection. I used this simple setup to reproduce
> this issue:
>
> An external host ("HostA") connects to port 55111 on my external interface
> ($IF_EXT) on my openbsd box
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 11:28:49AM +0100, Jurjen Oskam wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I suspect that the harddrive in my new Thinkpad T61p (dmesg below) is
> failing, so I tried to examine its SMART statistics. I encountered two
> problems. I'm using OpenBSD 4.2-RELEASE (amd64).
>
> The first problem was
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 10:27:52AM +0200, Lars Nood??n wrote:
> Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
>
> > FAQ#10.2. use dump(8) and restore(8). Or tar(1)
>
> Nope. I've looked at dump and tar, and have looked at the faq. Those
> suggestions seem to only work with the contents of the filesystems.
>
> Wha
Nick Guenther wrote:
On Nov 10, 2007 5:00 AM, Sean Darby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 10:31:11AM +0100, xavier brinon wrote:
from the "Official Google Blog"
"Posted by Reza Behforooz, Software Engineer
In my first month at Google, I complained to a friend on the
On Nov 10, 2007 5:00 AM, Sean Darby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 10:31:11AM +0100, xavier brinon wrote:
> > from the "Official Google Blog"
> >
> > "Posted by Reza Behforooz, Software Engineer
> >
> > In my first month at Google, I complained to a friend on the Gmail
> > t
> Could somebody recommend any softwarew in 4.2
> ports that has related functionality?
Netdude might be of some use (it's a front-end to tcpdump), but
I usually just use tcpdump directly (some tips: -vv to increase
verbosity, -X for a hex+ascii dump, -s<##> to increase snap
length to capture enti
As some of you may recall, there are Linux binaries (such as Mathematica)
which will not run under OpenBSD's Linux emulation because the
Linux mprotect system-call uses flags that are not supported by OpenBSD.
To remedy this problem, I had posted a patch for OpenBSD 4.1
http://marc.info/?l=op
You can look at this page :
http://www.cromwell-intl.com/unix/openbsd-dell.html
(I never try)
On Nov 11, 2007 4:43 PM, Siju George <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Both
>
> http://www.wireshark.org/ and http://www.wireshark.org/
>
> are not found in ports. Could somebody recommend any softwar
On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 09:57:56PM -0500, William Boshuck wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 08:46:19PM -0500, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
> > ...
> > And this is the big difference between lpd and LPRng. With LPRng you
> > can specify who can use what of those printers even if all the
> > originators a
Hi,
Both
http://www.wireshark.org/ and http://www.wireshark.org/
are not found in ports. Could somebody recommend any softwarew in 4.2
ports that has related functionality?
Thank you so much
Kind Regards
Siju
Why? (...why bother sending that to this list? fyi: this isn't a google list.)
Just curious, not intending to spark anything negative.
On Sat, Nov 10, 2007 at 10:31:11AM +0100, xavier brinon wrote:
> from the "Official Google Blog"
>
> "Posted by Reza Behforooz, Software Engineer
>
> In my firs
> It is:
> http://inigo.homeunix.net/art/art.tgz
I think it's /files/art/art.tgz ?
In any case - those are impressive pics.
Would it be possible to provide the same ones but in 1680x1050?
I could put great use to those on multiple computers running OpenBSD, though
wouldn't want to do any in
* Lars Noodin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-11-11 09:30]:
> Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
>
> > FAQ#10.2. use dump(8) and restore(8). Or tar(1)
>
> Nope. I've looked at dump and tar, and have looked at the faq. Those
> suggestions seem to only work with the contents of the filesystems.
>
> What I want
Hi there,
I suspect that the harddrive in my new Thinkpad T61p (dmesg below) is
failing, so I tried to examine its SMART statistics. I encountered two
problems. I'm using OpenBSD 4.2-RELEASE (amd64).
The first problem was that I couldn't get atactl to work. The command:
# atactl sd0c smartstatus
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
> FAQ#10.2. use dump(8) and restore(8). Or tar(1)
Nope. I've looked at dump and tar, and have looked at the faq. Those
suggestions seem to only work with the contents of the filesystems.
What I want to do is to take machine A which has a swap partition plus
/
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