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Hi all
Disbling ipv6 on the ifs didn't help.
It turned out pf was blocking the outgoing carp advertisements on 2 out
of 4 interfaces without logging.
Adding keep state (no-sync) to the carp rules, activating them, and
then flushing states on both firewalls finally brought the cluster back
to
* Markus Wernig liste...@wernig.net [2012-01-15 16:19]:
After upgrading to 5.0 (and also on -current) I keep getting those
errors for 2 out of 4 carp'd interfaces in a fw cluster pair:
/bsd: carp2: ip_output failed: 65
/bsd: carp3: ip_output failed: 65
i bet pf is blocking your carp
I built a storage server to run the Bacula storage daemon on. My plan
was to boot of a usb key then to use the four 2TB sata disks that are in
the server as a softraid raid 5 volume. The server in question is a dell
poweredge R310, i3 CPU 540 @ 3.07GHz with OBSD 5.0 amd64.
I put the OS onto
Aproveche los descuentos para viajar todo el aqo, marque al 01 800 681
6973 o vea los detalles, desde ya muchas felicidades. Hector Guzman
Escapate Al Paraiso
Canczn
Hi,
Are there any dynamic or static C code analysis tools available for
OpenBSD? I've historically used valgrind on Linux and whilst I know it
is not compatible with OpenBSD, I'd still like to be able to check that
I've not made any hideous cock-ups in my code.
A few minutes of poking around the
Hi Chris,
On Mon Jan 16 2012 12:21, Chris Smith wrote:
Are there any dynamic or static C code analysis tools available for
OpenBSD?
there has been a thread around here [1]. Examples include lint,
cppcheck, clang's static analyser and parfait.
Yours,
Norman
[1]
On 01/16/12 02:09, Wesley M. wrote:
On Mon, 16 Jan 2012 07:40:57 +0100, Tomas Bodzar tomas.bod...@gmail.com
wrote:
There's sendmail in base system and there's ongoing work on smtpd by
OpenBDS devs (other components are in ports). Anyway you're welcome to
start port see
Chris Smith wrote [2012-01-16 13:21+0100]:
Are there any dynamic or static C code analysis tools available for
OpenBSD? [swoosh]
You may try llvm from packages, it aims to have a good analyzer.
lint(1) is in base.
I'd still like to be able to check that I've not made any
hideous cock-ups in
On Mon, Jan 16, 2012 at 1:12 PM, keith ke...@scott-land.net wrote:
I built a storage server to run the Bacula storage daemon on. B My plan was
to boot of a usb key then to use the four 2TB sata disks that are in the
server as a softraid raid 5 volume. The server in question is a dell
poweredge
Anyone know the history behind mg being called mg?
THis in the mg tutorial (/usr/share/doc/mg/tutorial):
The mg editor was originally named MicroGNUEmacs. The name was changed
to mg at the request of Richard Stallman,...
The second sentence suggests Richard Stallman suggested the name mg
but in
On Monday 16 January 2012, keith wrote:
I built a storage server to run the Bacula storage daemon on. My plan
was to boot of a usb key then to use the four 2TB sata disks that are in
the server as a softraid raid 5 volume. The server in question is a dell
poweredge R310, i3 CPU 540 @ 3.07GHz
On 16/01/2012 15:43, Joel Sing wrote:
On Monday 16 January 2012, keith wrote:
I built a storage server to run the Bacula storage daemon on. My plan
was to boot of a usb key then to use the four 2TB sata disks that are in
the server as a softraid raid 5 volume. The server in question is a dell
looks like someone either got onto a spam list or their machine is infected...
oh joy!
On Jan 16, 2012, at 10:14 AM, Software Press wrote:
This is the confirmation email. To confirm your email address and to
activate on our mailing list click the link:
snip
Mark Lumsden wrote:
Anyone know the history behind mg being called mg?
THis in the mg tutorial (/usr/share/doc/mg/tutorial):
The mg editor was originally named MicroGNUEmacs. The name was changed
to mg at the request of Richard Stallman,...
The second sentence suggests Richard Stallman
On 14/01/2012, at 12:29 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2012-01-12, Sam Vaughan samjvaug...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a web server handling predominantly https traffic sitting on a DMZ
behind a CARP'd firewall of two ALIX 2D3s.
Since the firewall is NATting traffic to the web server, the source
I don't think the name of the program ever changed. (Who would want
to type MircoGNUEmacs every time you edit a file?) mg used to be an
acronym, now it officially means nothing.
On Mon, Jan 16, 2012, Mark Lumsden wrote:
Anyone know the history behind mg being called mg?
THis in the mg
Drop the RAID 5 and go with a RAID 10 as you were talking about but add a hot
spare if you can. RAID 10 doesn't have a parity bit which slows down write
times. But if a disk is bad and isn't replaced you can have a bad day. Hot
spares have saved my butt more than once.
Regards,
Dain Bentley
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