On Wed, 10 Sep 2008, STeve Andre' wrote:
> On Wednesday 10 September 2008 15:58:03 Kevin Neff wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
> > as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
> > out which keys the user probably typed (keys that are
> >
Hell you say. I wear glasses and have been punched. Hard. In the face.
Good to know I'll be immune from you.
On 9/10/08, Aaron Glenn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 7:56 PM, STeve Andre' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> How about people with severe physical problems? I know
Hi,
Just my view as a beginner with this system (or BFU :-)).Using -current or
following -stable is easy.I was trying following -current ,but found,that using
snapshots is soo easy and that following -current is not really good idea
for people like me,which are in phase of learning this s
On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 7:56 PM, STeve Andre' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> How about people with severe physical problems? I know a C4
> quadriplegic who types slowly, very slowly. Depending on how
> he feels, his speed varies by probably a factor of 4 or so.
>
if I was trying to gank a quadri
On Wednesday 10 September 2008 15:58:03 Kevin Neff wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
> as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
> out which keys the user probably typed (keys that are
> physically close together on a keyboard can be typed
>
Hi,
I've reinstalled OpenBSD 4.3 from scratch and tried
to set up networking with the rtw driver but I couldn't
make it work with dhclient..
Is this a known issue ? I've updated /usr/src to
a recent current tree but I'm stuck trying to compile the
base system... :-)
I thought maybe rtw0 will w
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 10:06:27AM +0900, Hari wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 4:58 AM, Kevin Neff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
> > as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
> > out which keys the user probably
Just wait until you see me type!
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 10:06:27AM +0900, Hari wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 4:58 AM, Kevin Neff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
> > as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
>
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 4:58 AM, Kevin Neff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
> as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
> out which keys the user probably typed (keys that are
> physically close together on a keyboard ca
On Wed, 10 Sep 2008, Kevin Neff wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
> as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
> out which keys the user probably typed (keys that are
> physically close together on a keyboard can be typed
> faster). A caref
Hi,
On Thu, 04.09.2008 at 09:56:32 +0200, Christophe Rioux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> installation, but I don't find the sys.tar.gz (needed to recompile the
> kernel with the raid features).
you could get a CVS checkout. The tree has been tagged, as far as I can
see.
Kind regards,
--Toni++
Even if a bridge is empty it seems impossible to add pppoe to it. This
doesn't change if the first bridge member has an MTU identical to that
of the pppoe interface (thank you to Martin Reindl for a patch
enabling mtu changes on Sun quad ethernet). For my own, and anyone
else's reference, t
Hi,
I've just discovered that this is unsupported.
How difficult would it be to add support for this?
TIA!
Kind regards,
--Toni++
Hi,
Some secure protocols like SSH send encrypted keystrokes
as they're typed. By doing timing analysis you can figure
out which keys the user probably typed (keys that are
physically close together on a keyboard can be typed
faster). A careful analysis can reveal the length of
passwords and pro
Hi Hannah,
On Wed, 10.09.2008 at 13:56:23 +0200, Hannah Schroeter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> (I.e. check whether there's some intervening dir that's not accessible
> to user admin/group admin, but to group wheel).
that was the problem, thanks!
Kind regards,
--Toni++
Top Shop
Ekskluzivna pretprodaja - samo na internetu!
SPECIJALNA JESENJA PONUDA! Space Bag do 30. septembra po Äak 15% nižoj
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Space Bag 7 Set
Vreme je za jesenje spremanje, a Vaši ormari su jednostavno p
library major version bumps. welcome to tracking -current... it happens.
you probably have something like php with php-mhash or php-mcrypt installed.
your httpd is linked against libssl.12, but the php goo is linked
against libssl.11.
you can either wait for new packages, or build 'em yourself.
On Tue, 09 Sep 2008 22:15:39 +0700, Jason Dixon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
On Tue, Sep 09, 2008 at 10:15:16AM -0400, Jason Dixon wrote:
I can confirm this on a kernel I bought last night for testing Henning's
Obviously I meant "built". Although I've already put my pre-order in,
maybe that
> My understanding of this issue is that it is only likely to be
> caused by an exploited domain, or running OpenBSD. Both should be a
> rare event (OpenBSD isn't really production-ready on this
> hardware). It's acceptable in the majority of cases to just let the
> domain be unused.
>
> It's a bu
Henning Brauer escreveu:
> * Giancarlo Razzolini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2008-09-10 15:43]:
>
>> Henning Brauer escreveu:
>>
>>> ntpd -s will time out eventually, but the 'eventually' might be
>>> painfully far away. it's the dns routines that block and cause these
>>> problems. i know how to
* Giancarlo Razzolini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2008-09-10 15:43]:
> Henning Brauer escreveu:
> > ntpd -s will time out eventually, but the 'eventually' might be
> > painfully far away. it's the dns routines that block and cause these
> > problems. i know how to fix this but haven't found the time to do
Hi,
On Wed, 10.09.2008 at 11:57:46 +, Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Specifically, is the user's home directory writable by wheel?
no, I've checked this. But I will have to check whether Hannah's hint,
too... (should have had this idea earlier, doh!).
Kind regards,
--Toni++
Henning Brauer escreveu:
> ntpd -s will time out eventually, but the 'eventually' might be
> painfully far away. it's the dns routines that block and cause these
> problems. i know how to fix this but haven't found the time to do so
> yet. maybe i get a chance on the flight later today. maybe.
>
>
as of
OpenBSD 4.4-current (GENERIC.MP) #1838: Tue Sep 9 16:35:25 MDT 2008
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
I'm having a link error in Apache:
/usr/sbin/httpd:/usr/lib/libssl.so.11.0: /usr/lib/libssl.so.12.0 : WARNING: symb
ol(ssl2_ciphers) size mismatch, relink your
On 2008-09-10, Toni Mueller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> /etc/ssh/sshd_config: PermitRootLogin without-password
>
>=> root login with ssh keys works, as expected.
>
> I've created another user, uid 1000, on the same box, and copied root's
> authorized_keys file over, adjusted ownership, permissions
Hi!
On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 12:55:00PM +0200, Toni Mueller wrote:
>[...]
>debug1: trying public key file /H/admin/.ssh/authorized_keys2
ls -ld /H /H/admin /H/admin/.ssh /H/admin/.ssh/authorized_keys
/H/admin/.ssh/authorized_keys2
(I.e. check whether there's some intervening dir that's not acces
Hi,
I've just experienced a strange problem with OpenSSH. Scenario:
/etc/ssh/sshd_config: PermitRootLogin without-password
=> root login with ssh keys works, as expected.
I've created another user, uid 1000, on the same box, and copied root's
authorized_keys file over, adjusted ownership, permi
ntpd -s will time out eventually, but the 'eventually' might be
painfully far away. it's the dns routines that block and cause these
problems. i know how to fix this but haven't found the time to do so
yet. maybe i get a chance on the flight later today. maybe.
?"DNS routines" means that the pro
My understanding of this issue is that it is only likely to be caused by an
exploited domain, or running OpenBSD. Both should be a rare event (OpenBSD
isn't really production-ready on this hardware). It's acceptable in the
majority of cases to just let the domain be unused.
It's a bug, it's irr
On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 12:25 AM, G 0kita <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I understand that without drift information the time won't be accurate to
> the rest of the world but I really only want local synchronization. If not
> I can use the port easily enough, but I was wondering if there's a tweak I
* Giancarlo Razzolini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2008-09-09 21:20]:
> Peter Fraser escreveu:
> > OpenBSD 4.3 (GENERIC) #698: Wed Mar 12 11:07:05 MDT 2008
> >
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> > Frank Bax
> > Sent: Saturday, September 06, 2
halt with option -ph is unknow option , and shutdown -hp now still
not working always restart
On Tue, Sep 9, 2008 at 2:07 PM, ropers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2008/9/9 Lars Noodin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> sonjaya wrote:
>>> I have been susccess full install openbsd 4.3 at mac mini ( intel
>>>
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