Hi All,
Thanks to all for your advices.
I will think about it and find a way about those things.
I was thinking that due to chroot, even apache got into one could not
take over the rest.
Anyway there are some practices that I did not used but I'm new to those
considerations.
Thanks,
Le jeudi
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 05:46:33PM +, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 21, 2009 at 10:54:57AM +, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> > I got more panics, both while using the laptop (in X, so no trace),
> > and today I got another one at boot time (totally different than
> > any other one I had be
ports/net/spectrum-tools
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 10:44 PM, Marcel Dan wrote:
> Besides Kismet, are there other Site Survey tools or commercial software
> applications that run on OpenBSD?
>
> I'm wondering if I can use a couple different tools on OpenBSD for a site
> survey to end up with similar
Besides Kismet, are there other Site Survey tools or commercial software
applications that run on OpenBSD?
I'm wondering if I can use a couple different tools on OpenBSD for a site
survey to end up with similar results & reports as Ekahau.
Marcel
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 7:10 PM, ropers wrote:
> 2009/2/26 Saifi Khan :
>>
>> Thank you for the detailed reply.
>>
>> boot> boot -c
>> UKC> disable acpiprt
>> UKC> quit
>>
>> worked and IRQ 1 was assigned to the keyboard.
>>
>> The system works absolutely fine and so does the "8139 chip type
>> 'R
Chris wrote:
I have had to interrupt (^c) cvs -d$CVSROOT checkout -P src command
about three times. I was wondering whether checking out src three
times would overwrite the old files or ignore what's already on the
disk and update files that are not there or do anything else?
cvs will never red
--- Chris [Fri, Feb 27, 2009 at 01:18:56PM +1100]: ---
> I have had to interrupt (^c) cvs -d$CVSROOT checkout -P src command
> about three times. I was wondering whether checking out src three
> times would overwrite the old files or ignore what's already on the
> disk and update files that are no
I have had to interrupt (^c) cvs -d$CVSROOT checkout -P src command
about three times. I was wondering whether checking out src three
times would overwrite the old files or ignore what's already on the
disk and update files that are not there or do anything else?
I know I am supposed to run cvs -d
On Wednesday 25 February 2009 22:08:22 Jean-Francois wrote:
> Hi All,
>
Hi,
> I actually built the following system :
>
> - OpenBSD running on a standard AMD platform
> - This box is actually used as firewall
> - This box is also used as webserver
> - This box is finally used as local shared driv
Hi Jean-Francois,
Jean-Francois wrote on Wed, Feb 25, 2009 at 10:08:22PM +0100:
> I actually built the following system :
> - OpenBSD running on a standard AMD platform
> - This box is actually used as firewall
> - This box is also used as webserver
> - This box is finally used as local shared dr
2009/2/26 Marc Balmer :
>
> Am 26.02.2009 um 00:27 schrieb ropers:
>
>> 2009/2/25 Joseph C. Bender :
>>>
>>> Marc Balmer wrote:
I am using a TNC7multi. http://nt-g.de/de/tnc7multi/tnc7multi.php5
>>>
>>> The venerable KPC-3 from Kantronics is always a good choice as well.
>>>
>>> htt
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 08:09:44AM +0100, Marc Balmer wrote:
> Yes. The normal speed for packet radio over UHF/SHV is 1200 or 9600
> bps, over HF usually 300 bps.
>
> Heck, a very popular tranmission technique on HF, PSK31, uses 31 bps.
Thats what, about the same speed as manual-key morse?
Do
On Wed, Feb 25, 2009 at 3:08 PM, Jean-Francois wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I actually built the following system :
>
> - OpenBSD running on a standard AMD platform
> - This box is actually used as firewall
> - This box is also used as webserver
> - This box is finally used as local shared drives via NFS
On 2009/02/26 20:10, ropers wrote:
> 2009/2/26 Saifi Khan :
> >
> > Thank you for the detailed reply.
> >
> > boot> boot -c
> > UKC> disable acpiprt
> > UKC> quit
> >
> > worked and IRQ 1 was assigned to the keyboard.
> >
> > The system works absolutely fine and so does the "8139 chip type
> > 'RTL
2009/2/26 Saifi Khan :
>
> Thank you for the detailed reply.
>
> boot> boot -c
> UKC> disable acpiprt
> UKC> quit
>
> worked and IRQ 1 was assigned to the keyboard.
>
> The system works absolutely fine and so does the "8139 chip type
> 'RTL-8100B/8139D' " card. This was having issues on FreeBSD 7.1
Hi,
I have an openBSD 4.3 as firewall/router/vpn Server ( Server A
production)( local ip 10.10.100.254 mask 255.255.0.0 )
I just got it working when I give to pptp clients an IP of the same
subnet as VPN Server ( 10.10.9/24).
I know/read about proxy arp issue, so I installed an OpenBSD 4.4(
2009/2/26 Alexander Hall
> Jean-Francois wrote:
>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> I actually built the following system :
>>
>> - OpenBSD running on a standard AMD platform
>> - This box is actually used as firewall
>> - This box is also used as webserver
>> - This box is finally used as local shared drives via
You have been invited to join the private link exchange services (beta)
by The Webmasters Kit Team.
Click the link below (or paste it into your browser) to get set up:
http://www.webmasterskit.com/
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successfully register using th
On Sat, Feb 21, 2009 at 10:54:57AM +, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> I got more panics, both while using the laptop (in X, so no trace),
> and today I got another one at boot time (totally different than
> any other one I had before, and also not reproducable, I couldn't
> take pics of the trace but
I'll tag on to this message as I seem to have deleted the original...
On Fri, Feb 20, 2009 at 09:08:03AM +0100, Matthieu Herrb wrote:
> You probably didn't clean you obj tree before starting the build.
Or your base system is a bit too old as some drm defines are apparently
coming from base includ
Dave Wilson wrote:
I confess, I believe the bit they're opening is the schematics for the
circuit board and the board layout files, rather than the internals of
the chip. After all, anything that encourages as many people as possible
to buy their SoC that lies at the heart of the design is in th
Insan Praja SW wrote:
> I understand that we can have vlan priority on vlan interfaces.
Yes. It should work, but it has seen little testing.
> My question is, can OpenBSD process these 802.1p tags for CoS/QoS purposes?
> In PF we can mark/tag/process traffic by its DSCP code. Can we do
>
Le Thu, 26 Feb 2009 13:50:12 +0100,
Otto Moerbeek a icrit :
> On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 11:23:16AM +0100, Nicolas Letellier wrote:
>
> > Hello m...@.
> >
> > My server crashed this night. However, OpenBSD 4.4 does not want to
> > boot. There are errors on my /home partition (125 Go, ffs type).
> >
* Arnoud Vermeer [2009-02-26 16:21]:
> Foundry advertises the route refresh capability ( RFC2918 ), and not the
> ability for Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP ( RFC4724 ). In Frame 75
> the route server sends AS1200 a big update. AS1200 responds in frame 87
> with a notification of a malformed a
On Thu, 26 Feb 2009, Zhu Sha Zang wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
How i can solve this:
bash-3.2# make install
===> net/nagios/cnagios
===> net/nagios/nagios
===> net/nagios/nagios,chroot
===> nagios-3.0.3-chroot depends on: nagios-plugins-* - found
===> Verifying specs:
Hi, first remove nagios-3.0.3 and last install nagios-3.0.3-chroot.
2009/2/26 Zhu Sha Zang
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> How i can solve this:
>
> bash-3.2# make install
> ===> net/nagios/cnagios
> ===> net/nagios/nagios
> ===> net/nagios/nagios,chroot
> ===> nagios-3.0.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
How i can solve this:
bash-3.2# make install
===> net/nagios/cnagios
===> net/nagios/nagios
===> net/nagios/nagios,chroot
===> nagios-3.0.3-chroot depends on: nagios-plugins-* - found
===> Verifying specs: glib-2.0 ltdl.>=4 intl.>=4 iconv.>=4 c m pt
Jean-Francois wrote:
Hi All,
I actually built the following system :
- OpenBSD running on a standard AMD platform
- This box is actually used as firewall
- This box is also used as webserver
- This box is finally used as local shared drives via NFS file but only
open to subnetwork through PF
On Wed, Feb 25, 2009 at 10:33 PM, ropers wrote:
> Your laptop wouldn't be a Compaq Presario C300, would it?
> If you disable acpi/acpiprt via boot -c (cf.
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=boot_config ,
> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=boot ), does the keyboard
> get it
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 11:23:16AM +0100, Nicolas Letellier wrote:
> Hello m...@.
>
> My server crashed this night. However, OpenBSD 4.4 does not want to
> boot. There are errors on my /home partition (125 Go, ffs type).
>
> The following file system had unexpected inconsistency
> ffs: /dev/rwd0
Hi,
> There is one piece missing and that's a smarter dhclient script as it
> currently removes the default route even if it was not inserted by
> dhclient. I have a diff to fix this issue that I will send out in the next
> days or hours.
Will the dhclient-script support interface priorities in 4
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Hello m...@.
My server crashed this night. However, OpenBSD 4.4 does not want to
boot. There are errors on my /home partition (125 Go, ffs type).
The following file system had unexpected inconsistency
ffs: /dev/rwd0g (/home)
I must run fsck_ffs manually.
However, when I run it :
fsck_ffs /dev/
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2009/2/25 Claudio Jeker :
> man netstat(1) and look what the flags mean.
> UGHD, up, gateway, host, dynamic. This route got created because of an
> ICMP control packet or TCP PMTU and is normaly only valid for a certain
> time.
Thanks, Claudio.
I knew it was "DYNAMIC", i didn't know how it was cr
On 2009-02-26, ropers wrote:
> And I think that's why a "pass out" rule
> would be unnecessary, as the default is to pass packets.
Watch out with this; the implicit "pass" rule is not "pass out
keep state", it is "pass out NO STATE".
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