There are so many differences between Linux and every other flavour of
UNIX;
like OpenBSD, AIX, Solaris, etc, that WTF is your point??
Really?
What about Gnu's Not UNIX don't you get?
This crap is just trolling, IMHO.
On Fri, Jan 8, 2016, at 09:27 AM, Alexander Hall wrote:
> On January 8, 2016 11:
If it changes console with Alt then it is getting the keypress.
You might try out getting its keycode with xev and mapping it to proper
Alt with xmodmap.
On 2016-01-09 03:54, Teng Zhang wrote:
hi,
the Alt key doesn't work on my machine in most cases except for
changing console(Crtl+Alt+F_num
hi,
the Alt key doesn't work on my machine in most cases except for
changing console(Crtl+Alt+F_number). So, what key i can use to replace Alt.
On Fri, 8 Jan 2016 11:13:08 -0500
sven falempin wrote:
> You will need to forward the all rule set i think, maybe the set prio
> 0 is erased by a further rules, try to pass in quick those p2p
> traffic before maybe ?
I had the luxury of ditching the complete ruleset for very simple one:
---pf.c
On 8 януари 2016 г. 17:51:21 Marko Cupać wrote:
I am completely confused. It seems that everything I've known about
queueing in PF does not apply any more, while at the same time there are
no reliable sources to learn new stuff.
Let's follow this paragraph from 'Book of PF':
---quote---
Shapi
On Tue, Jan 5, 2016 at 5:05 PM, Remi Locherer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I tried to mount an ext4 filesystem on OpenBSD which was created on
> CentOS7. I get this:
>
> remi@mistral:~% doas mount -t ext2fs /dev/sd0m /mnt
> mount_ext2fs: /dev/sd0m on /mnt: specified device does not match mounted
> device
> r
I tried to duplicate the configuration on a machine with rl(4) interface and I
cannot reproduce... em(4) issue perhaps ?
On Fri, Jan 08, 2016 at 07:08:26PM +0100, Denis Fondras wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am using svlan(4) and when I add a new svlan(4) interface after the system
> has
> booted I alway
Hello,
I am using svlan(4) and when I add a new svlan(4) interface after the system has
booted I always get a duplicated IPv6 and the new interface is not usable. If I
add a /etc/hostname.svlan file and I reboot, everything is fine.
Any idea why ?
Thanks,
Denis
Example (after boot) :
# ifconfig
You are comparing two very different versions of sudo. The sudo
that used to ship with OpenBSD is version 1.7.2p8 which is rather
ancient. On Linux you probably have some variant of sudo 1.8.x.
Newer versions of sudo escape spaces in the command run via "sudo
-s" whereas the ancient 1.7.2p8 does
I am completely confused. It seems that everything I've known about
queueing in PF does not apply any more, while at the same time there are
no reliable sources to learn new stuff.
Let's follow this paragraph from 'Book of PF':
---quote---
Shaping by Setting Traffic Priorities
If you’re mainly in
On January 8, 2016 11:52:32 AM GMT+01:00, Jiri B wrote:
>On Fri, Jan 08, 2016 at 12:04:15PM +0200, Alexey Kurinnij wrote:
>> And what about difference? Explain please.
>>
>> > > I discovered an article about sudo and globbing[1] and
>> > > there's difference how it does work on Linux and OpenBSD.
On Fri, Jan 8, 2016 at 12:44 PM, Marko Cupać wrote:
> Should I conclude my goal of throttling smaller priority traffic to
> minimum when higher priority traffic arrives can't be achieved with
> current PF? If I haven't gone senile, I did this successfully on dozens
> of firewalls back in altq/HFS
On Thu, 7 Jan 2016 22:41:47 + (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2016-01-07, Marko Cupać wrote:
> > # QUEUES
> > queue upload on $if_ext bandwidth 860K
> >queue ack parent upload qlimit 50 bandwidth 10K
> >queue fast parent upload qlimit 50 bandwidth 20K
On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 04:43:14PM GMT, Jiri B wrote:
> I discovered an article about sudo and globbing[1] and
> there's difference how it does work on Linux and OpenBSD.
AFAIK, globbing is done by shell and sudo doesn't take part in it.
> # su -s /usr/local/bin/bash - nobody
2016-01-08 11:52 GMT+01:00 Jiri B :
>
> So the question is: why does same command on equally "restricted" dir
> path gets different output - why on openbsd does '*' get expanded
> immediatelly but on linux is it taken into account somehow by sudo (?)...
>
> j.
>
you put a dash between the shell an
On 2016 Jan 08 (Fri) at 05:52:32 -0500 (-0500), Jiri B wrote:
:On Fri, Jan 08, 2016 at 12:04:15PM +0200, Alexey Kurinnij wrote:
:> And what about difference? Explain please.
:>
:> > > I discovered an article about sudo and globbing[1] and
:> > > there's difference how it does work on Linux and Ope
On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 11:42:32PM +, Roderich wrote:
> On Thu, 7 Jan 2016, Philip Guenther wrote:
>
> >>Unpacking base58.tgz with "tar xvzpf" is not enough to serve a diskless
> >>machine, the missing files are necessary.
> >>
> >>What can I do?
> >
> >You could USE THE INSTALLER, instead of
On Fri, Jan 08, 2016 at 12:04:15PM +0200, Alexey Kurinnij wrote:
> And what about difference? Explain please.
>
> > > I discovered an article about sudo and globbing[1] and
> > > there's difference how it does work on Linux and OpenBSD.
> >
> > http://zurlinux.com/?p=2244
> >
> > > - openbsd
> > >
And what about difference? Explain please.
On Thu, Jan 7, 2016 at 7:03 PM, Jiri B wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 11:43:14AM -0500, Jiri B wrote:
> > I discovered an article about sudo and globbing[1] and
> > there's difference how it does work on Linux and OpenBSD.
>
> I forgot to put the url
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