> > > forward(5) of a_user (that's the one tried first)
> > > |/usr/local/bin/procmail
> > >
> > > after that delivery to b_user is not attempted.
> >
> > THis is relevant to my previous post: why is procmail
> > failing here in the first place? I find that procmail
> > always fails for me with
After cleaning my spamdb on the first of last month,
I see that there are 572 WHITE hosts now.
Only a handfull of those are legitimate (my mailserver
is very low traffic, basically just mail for my family).
Looking at the logs, I see that most of them got themselves
whitelisted by actually resend
On Apr 14 19:48:24, mcmer-open...@tor.at wrote:
> hello (opensmtpd-) folks,
>
> I think OpenSMTPd aborts delivery to multiple aliased recipients as soon
> as a delivery attempt returns non-zero.
> I consider this unwanted: a super user defined delivery list in
> aliases(5) is not applied if some
On Oct 31 14:27:41, phess...@theapt.org wrote:
> On 2012 Oct 31 (Wed) at 18:05:09 +0200 (+0200), Rares Aioanei wrote:
> :On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 10:28:35AM +0400, Sergey Bronnikov wrote:
> :> Yesterday I have found an unpleasent bug in OpenBSD.
> :>
> :> I started two virtual machines in qemu with
On Sep 02 18:46:41, h...@stare.cz wrote:
> On my amd64 workstation (see dmesg below), my android appears
> as an urndis(4) device a can provide the box with a network conection.
>
> urndis0 at uhub0 port 3 configuration 1 interface 0 "SAMSUNG Electronics Co.,
> Ltd. Samsung Android USB Device" re
This is current/i386 on an IBM Thinkpad T40.
It comes with an ipw(4) wifi interface, which works fine. Anyway,
the ipw(4) seems to be one of the substantial battery eaters. So
I would like to not use the interface when running on battery
and not actually using a wifi connection.
Running 'ifconfig
This is current/i386 on IBM Thinkpad T40.
I am using a crypto RAID to host my /home partition,
set up in rc.local as follows:
RAID=/dev/wd0o
HOMEFS=/dev/sd0a
echo mounting encrypted /home
bioctl -h -v -c C -l $RAID softraid0
fsck $HOMEFS && mount -v -o rw,softdep,noatime,nodev,nosuid $HO
On Oct 17 09:33:28, o...@drijf.net wrote:
> Op 17 okt. 2012 om 09:16 heeft Joakim Aronius het
> volgende geschreven:
>
> > * Boudewijn Dijkstra (sp4mtr4p.boudew...@indes.com) wrote:
> >> Op Tue, 16 Oct 2012 22:01:54 +0200 schreef Joakim Aronius
> >> :
> >>
> >>> Any ideas on what I am doing wrong
> > > I'm struggling with 7Tb filesystems, it takes about 30 minutes to check
> > > them in case of cold reset. Too much. Very too much.
> > > and currently, no journals or anything else which could speed up 7Tb
> > > filesystems check ?
> >
> > man newfs, in particular the -i option.
> > What does
> > > Is it possible to mount dirty filesystem in read-only mode ? If not, it
> > > doesn't make sense at all.
> >
> > Yes, you can mount dirty filesystem with -f. Even read-write iirc.
> > Very dangerous.
> >
>
> I'm struggling with 7Tb filesystems, it takes about 30 minutes to check
> them in ca
On Oct 11 10:38:04, be...@kroenchenstadt.de wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've got to port some shell scripts which rely on env vars. One
> amongst those is $SSH_CLIENT.
>
> On OpenBSD 5.1 machines, I don't get what I'd assume to get:
>
> # echo $SSH_CLIENT
>
> It returns just a blank line.
Are you in fact
This is current/i386 on an IBM Thinkpad T40.
I am having problems with the ipw(4) wifi device.
The firmware package I have is ipw-firmware-1.3p1
ipw0: timeout waiting for disabled state
ipw0: association failed (error=35)
ipw0: fatal firmware error
A quick search only shows that other *BSD's have
On current/i386, tmux seems to open a new shell with the current
directory being the same as in the window I am opening from.
What that means in particular is that if I run 'man whatever'
in a tmux window, and open a new windowd ('ctrl-b c' in my case),
the news shell is opened in /usr/local/man.
This is current/i386on an IBM ThinkPad T40.
I am experiencing the same problems as described at
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2008-09/1445.html
After a long(er) use, the ipw0 starts reporting
"scan request failed (error=35)"
and nothing but a reboot makes that go away.
On Sep 18 16:02:58, Nick Holland wrote:
> On 09/18/2012 12:36 PM, Ed Flecko wrote:
> >I have State and Federal regulators that want me to PROVE (since their
> >only used to looking at Micro$oft servers) my OBSD 5.1 server is up to
> >date, and there are no outstanding patches that need to be applie
This is a -recent/macppc. It runs fine, but I am puzzled
about how it uses the memory and swap; top says:
Memory: Real: 83M/266M act/tot Free: 719M Cache: 162M Swap: 39M/1024M
I might be missing something obvious, but if there is 719M of free memory,
why is the system swapping at all?
Also, what
On Sep 11 12:48:40, MERIGHI Marcus wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I did a complete deletion of all partitions of an external usb hd by
> means of diskmgmt.msc under windows, followed by partitioning and
> formating to msdos fat32 with kind help of acronis true image since
> windows xp does not do such thing
> > just run standard OpenBSD. Or talk to the flashrd people.
> >
> > Fair point. I put on the 2012-10-04 snapshot and the system immediately
> became stable. I'll reply again once I've sorted a completely working
> wireless configuration (Android/athn aren't getting on, sadly)
I have the yesterd
On my amd64 workstation (see dmesg below), my android appears
as an urndis(4) device a can provide the box with a network conection.
urndis0 at uhub0 port 3 configuration 1 interface 0 "SAMSUNG Electronics Co.,
Ltd. Samsung Android USB Device" rev 2.00/4.00 addr 3
urndis0: address be:a1:fc:82:8f:
On Aug 20 23:01:44, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> Dear misc@ and tech@,
>
> We are getting closer to a stable version of OpenSMTPD and now would be
> the perfect time for you to start stress-testing and trying to crash it
> in various ways to make sure it is rock-solid.
>
> Eric's recent commits brough
On Aug 09 23:12:27, Alexander Shendi (web.de) wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am currently running a snapshot of OpenBSD-current (amd64) as of
> 31st July, 2012. I am having audio problems, i.e. the sound is distorted
> when playing an mp3 or ogg-file.
How exactly do you play it?
Do you run sndiod? How ex
Hello Eric,
On Jul 27 05:50:42, Eric Oyen wrote:
> I use OpenOffice for editing html pages. this makes editing web pages
> remarkably easy for me. Believe me, editing raw html is a real pita. so, if I
> want to properly edit a man page, I need to use something that supports DOC 7?
> that wood be n
On Jul 26 22:03:12, STeve Andre' wrote:
>I'm sitting here reading documentation about audio, but I feel a
> little blind, not quite knowing what to look at.
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq13.html
>I am interested in recording audio, ie my local FM station, via mplayer.
If you wan't to rec
On Jul 26 13:30:01, Christiano F. Haesbaert wrote:
> On 26 July 2012 13:01, Jan Stary wrote:
> > On Jul 23 21:07:09, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> >> On 2012-07-23, Jan Stary wrote:
> >> >> On Jul 21, 2012 4:02 PM, "Jan Stary" wrote:
> >> >
On Jul 23 21:07:09, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2012-07-23, Jan Stary wrote:
> >> On Jul 21, 2012 4:02 PM, "Jan Stary" wrote:
> >>
> >> > Is there any support present or planned for Ethernet over USB?
> >> >
> >> > http://en.wi
seems to be part
> >of the question instead.
> >
> >thx,
> >Alexander
> >
> >On 07/11/12 21:55, Jan Stary wrote:
> >>Trying to reinstall with the current i386/bsd.rd.
> >>All goes well until I actually select a ftp mirror,
> >>and asked
On Jul 26 06:55:54, Shaka NKofo wrote:
> I'm new to Open BSD but no stranger to *nix OSs. My question here is
> simple. I have been reading the man pages and documentation and have
> installed and setup a 5.1 box on my lan. Now after understanding its
> basic inner workings I wish to put it to heav
On Jul 23 11:00:19, Peter Laufenberg wrote:
> I want to set up a minimal mp3 Internet radio streamer directly on my Alix
> Geode 500 MHz gateway. The idea is to grab the data closest to my PPPoE ADSL
> modem so it doesn't travel through the rest of the LAN and pollute logs,
> assuming the decode
> On Jul 21, 2012 4:02 PM, "Jan Stary" wrote:
>
> > Is there any support present or planned for Ethernet over USB?
> >
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_over_USB#Treat_USB_as_an_Ethernet_network
> >
> > The motivation is to conenct my smartph
On Jul 21 18:04:51, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
> On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 17:28:12 +0200
> Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > On Jul 21 10:02:10, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
> > > On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 09:50:40 +0200
> > > Jan Stary wrote:
> > >
> > &
On Jul 21 10:02:10, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
> On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 09:50:40 +0200
> Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > Having happily switched from postfix to smtpd,
> > the one thing I am missing is running mailing lists.
> > I see it has been discussed before:
> > ht
Is there any support present or planned for Ethernet over USB?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_over_USB#Treat_USB_as_an_Ethernet_network
The motivation is to conenct my smartphone via USB to my workstation,
thus having the phone connected to the net without either a wifi AP
or using the oper
Having happily switched from postfix to smtpd,
the one thing I am missing is running mailing lists.
I see it has been discussed before:
http://marc.info/?t=13170923832&r=1&w=2
Is it really possible to use commands as aliases, as said in
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=131714762522589&w=2 ?
On Jul 19 11:58:21, David Diggles wrote:
> I am looking for ways to speed up scp over 10GigE.
> With parallel transfer of 4x 8GB files, I get
> the following test results with various ciphers.
>
> These tests maxed out 4 cores with encryption overhead.
>
> SSH Options: []
> 42.1912726115170477378
On Jul 18 22:22:40, Matthieu Herrb wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 16, 2012 at 06:01:37PM -0700, Steve wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am having ongoing problems with X. I have highlighted some past
> > problems with intel drivers on HP. Unable to get a stable platform even
> > after
> > using the vesa driver I ha
> * Jan Stary [120712 01:55]:
> > Trying to reinstall with the current i386/bsd.rd.
> > All goes well until I actually select a ftp mirror,
> > and asked for the ftp login, I accept the default of
> > 'anonymous'. It keeps asking:
> >
> >
On Jul 11 13:13:39, Bryan Irvine wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 12:55 PM, Jan Stary wrote:
> > Trying to reinstall with the current i386/bsd.rd.
> > All goes well until I actually select a ftp mirror,
> > and asked for the ftp login, I accept the default of
> > &
Trying to reinstall with the current i386/bsd.rd.
All goes well until I actually select a ftp mirror,
and asked for the ftp login, I accept the default of
'anonymous'. It keeps asking:
ftp login ? anonymous [enter]
ftp login ? anonymous [enter]
ftp login ? anonymous [enter]
On Jul 11 20:56:24, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
> would it be there?
> http://www.openbsd.org/plat.html shows nothing.
> googling around too showed information not upto date (from my location).
>
> need a reliable desktop system with a good resale value, hence a mac mini. :)
Mine is not core i5, but ru
On Jul 05 13:51:06, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 04, 2012 at 09:00:27PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > On Jul 04 10:57:45, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jul 03, 2012 at 07:06:37PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > >
> > > > > this is another probl
Hi,
I disabled a few user account on my 5.1 by letting them expire yesterday
(is that the correct way)? When testing today that the account are
indeed unavailable, this is what I get:
>
> Checking the /etc/master.passwd file:
> Login koles has expired.
> Login lubosek has expired.
# su - expire
On Jul 05 03:36:30, Peter Laufenberg wrote:
> >On 2012-06-27 19:25, Peter Laufenberg wrote:
> >>> On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 5:29 PM, Peter Laufenberg
> >>> wrote:
> I'm willing to indirectly donate to OpenBSD by paying a professional
> >> graphic
> >>> designer to redo parts of OpenBSD's visual
On Jul 04 10:57:45, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 03, 2012 at 07:06:37PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > > this is another problem. configure
> > > swap to be double the RAM size, or if you insist on loading the
> > > machine about 4 times the RAM size.
On Jul 03 11:26:44, Amit Kulkarni wrote:
> >> > Recently, processes started to die for reasons unknown, as in
> >> >
> >> > pid 20260 (postgres): user write of 118784@0x28052000 at 159088 failed:
> >> > 14
> >> > pid 1872 (cron): user write of 118784@0x2b1e3000 at 30224 failed: 14
> >> >
> >> > 14
On Jul 03 10:32:29, Amit Kulkarni wrote:
> > This is 5.1-beta/i386 on an ALIX about five years old,
> > running as my home server.
> >
> > Recently, processes started to die for reasons unknown, as in
> >
> > pid 20260 (postgres): user write of 118784@0x28052000 at 159088 failed: 14
> > pid 1872 (c
This is 5.1-beta/i386 on an ALIX about five years old,
running as my home server.
Recently, processes started to die for reasons unknown, as in
pid 20260 (postgres): user write of 118784@0x28052000 at 159088 failed: 14
pid 1872 (cron): user write of 118784@0x2b1e3000 at 30224 failed: 14
14 is EF
On Jul 03 09:25:01, Jan Stary wrote:
> This is smtpd on current/macppc.
> Having the obligate
>
> root: hans
>
> (hans is a local user) in /etc/mail/aliases
> works just fine and root's mail gets redirected.
> However, changing that to
>
> roo
On Jul 03 11:28:34, Johan Ryberg wrote:
> I need to log all user activity and store the data on a logging facility.
> Accouting provides some information but not all.
> Is it possible to use syslog and transmit every command entered by the users?
You could probably use script(1) as their shell.
Do
This is smtpd on current/macppc.
Having the obligate
root: hans
(hans is a local user) in /etc/mail/aliases
works just fine and root's mail gets redirected.
However, changing that to
root: h...@stare.cz
or indeed any address that is not local to the machine
results in the follow
On Jun 21 16:35:16, Paul Irofti wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 21, 2012 at 08:26:31AM -0400, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 09:16:24PM +0200, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 11:39:44AM -0500, John wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 08:28:22AM +0530, Jay
On Jun 19 22:12:07, Ton Muller wrote:
> normaly i dont write much.
> but this time i am stuck with nasty isue.
> i want to count send/received packets from each network device i have in
> my lan.
netstat -I $iface
5.1/current @ HP EliteBook 8530w. Sometimes during boot, acpitz says
acpitz2: critical temperature exceeded 5424C (56976K), shutting down
and at the end of the booting sequence,
Process (pid 1) got signal 31
It seems to happen more often when running on battery.
The temperature
On Jun 14 14:46:56, Jan Stary wrote:
> On Jun 14 13:18:11, Eric Faurot wrote:
> > Can you try this diff instead?
>
> Still the same.
Argh, forgot to restart. Yes, this solves it. Thanks!
Jan
On Jun 14 13:18:11, Eric Faurot wrote:
> Can you try this diff instead?
Still the same.
> Eric.
>
> Index: sockaddr.c
> ===
> RCS file: /cvs/src/usr.sbin/smtpd/sockaddr.c,v
> retrieving revision 1.4
> diff -u -p -u -r1.4 sockaddr.c
On Jun 13 19:39:46, Jan Stary wrote:
> Through my smtpd, I am sending an email to an address
> in the fjfi.cvut.cz domain. The email get delivered alright,
> but the maillog message is strange:
>
> Jun 13 19:32:08 mini smtpd[7138]: 93fe4a4f: from=,
> size=427, nrcpts=1, pr
On Jun 13 20:45:07, Eric Faurot wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 07:39:46PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > Through my smtpd, I am sending an email to an address
> > in the fjfi.cvut.cz domain. The email get delivered alright,
> > but the maillog message is strange:
> >
>
200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> > ouch, will look into it
> >
> > On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 05:37:52PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > > On my current/macppc, trying to remove message from the queue
> > > kills the whole smtpd:
> > >
> > > # mailq
> >
On Jun 13 19:39:46, Jan Stary wrote:
> Through my smtpd
sorry: current/macppc
> I am sending an email to an address
> in the fjfi.cvut.cz domain. The email get delivered alright,
> but the maillog message is strange:
>
> Jun 13 19:32:08 mini smtpd[7138]: 93fe4a4f: from=,
&g
Through my smtpd, I am sending an email to an address
in the fjfi.cvut.cz domain. The email get delivered alright,
but the maillog message is strange:
Jun 13 19:32:08 mini smtpd[7138]: 93fe4a4f: from=,
size=427, nrcpts=1, proto=ESMTP, relay=0@localhost [IPv6:::1]
Jun 13 19:32:10 mini smtpd[6586]:
On my current/macppc, trying to remove message from the queue
kills the whole smtpd:
# mailq
MTA|d4c2da0cc94048ad|ENQUEUED|r...@mini.stare.cz|jan.st...@fjfi.cvut.cz|1339601616|345600|3|450
4.1.8 : Sender address rejected: Domain not found
# smtpctl remove d4c2da0cc94048ad
command succeeded
But
On Jun 12 23:18:57, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> You might be able to build a GENERIC with a line:
> config bsd root on wd0a
Yes, that does it. A kernel with a hardcoded root device (wd0a)
doesn't have this problem and boots alright. Thank you!
(It seems I will need to do this after every upgrade,
unle
> iirc the kernel gets a boot path from ofw, and tries to map that to a
> unix device to find it's root partition.
On Jun 13 00:23:43, Halvard wrote:
> Try Self-Hypnosis for Personal Growth
I guess I'm about to try that next, actually ...
On Jun 12 23:18:57, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 11:04:35PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > On Jun 12 22:20:16, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 10:00:05PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Jun 12 21:27:18, Jan
On Jun 12 22:20:16, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 10:00:05PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > On Jun 12 21:27:18, Jan Stary wrote:
> > > On Jun 12 20:17:38, Jan Stary wrote:
> > > > > There is another problem now though:
>
On Jun 12 21:27:18, Jan Stary wrote:
> On Jun 12 20:17:38, Jan Stary wrote:
> > > There is another problem now though:
> > > the booting sequence ends with
> > >
> > > bootpath /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@1:/bsd
> > > root device: _
> > &
On Jun 12 20:17:38, Jan Stary wrote:
> > There is another problem now though:
> > the booting sequence ends with
> >
> > bootpath /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@1:/bsd
> > root device: _
> >
> > and that's where it stops, with '_' indi
> There is another problem now though:
> the booting sequence ends with
>
> bootpath /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@1:/bsd
> root device: _
>
> and that's where it stops, with '_' indicating the cursor.
>
> It seems the ofwboot problem is solved, but something else is wrong.
> What does
> > > > > hd /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@0
> > > > > cd /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@1
> > > >
> > > > > cd0 at scsibus0 targ 0 lun 0: ATAPI
> > > > > 5/cdrom removable
> > > > > wd0 at wdc1 channel 0 drive 1:
> > > > setenv boot-device /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@1:,
On Jun 12 09:10:32, Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 09:30:44AM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > On Jun 11 19:54:21, Miod Vallat wrote:
> > > > I understand that "hd" and "cd" are just devaliases; in my case,
> > > >
On Jun 11 19:54:21, Miod Vallat wrote:
> > I understand that "hd" and "cd" are just devaliases; in my case,
> >
> > hd /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@0
> > cd /pci@f400/ata-6@d/disk@1
> >
> > Does that mean that those device aliases are somehow mixed up?
>
> Well, given the dme
> > > > I got this Mac Mini on my hands, and I would like to install
> > > > current/macppc on it. According to
> > > > http://www.openbsd.org/macppc.html#hardware
> > > > the following MicMini's are supported:
> > > >
> > > > Mac mini (PowerMac10,1)
> > > > Mac mini (Late 2005 (Po
On Jun 10 13:43:07, Peter J. Philipp wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 10, 2012 at 12:51:46PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > I got this Mac Mini on my hands, and I would like to install
> > current/macppc on it. According to
> > http://www.openbsd.org/macppc.html#hardware
> > the follow
On Jun 10 13:42:28, Martin Pieuchot wrote:
> On 10/06/12(Sun) 12:51, Jan Stary wrote:
> > I got this Mac Mini on my hands, and I would like to install
> > current/macppc on it. According to
> > http://www.openbsd.org/macppc.html#hardware
> > the following MicMini's
> > I got this Mac Mini on my hands, and I would like to install
> > current/macppc on it. According to
> > http://www.openbsd.org/macppc.html#hardware
> > the following MicMini's are supported:
> >
> >Mac mini (PowerMac10,1)
> >Mac mini (Late 2005 (PowerMac10,2))
> >
> > My model n
> Ok, I have restored original rc.conf file, and created rc.conf.local with
> my options ... and works.
>
> But then a doubt emerges. What files are not recommended to touch between
> upgrades? Where can I found this info??
> >>>
> >>>http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html
> >>>
I got this Mac Mini on my hands, and I would like to install
current/macppc on it. According to
http://www.openbsd.org/macppc.html#hardware
the following MicMini's are supported:
Mac mini (PowerMac10,1)
Mac mini (Late 2005 (PowerMac10,2))
My model number is A1103. A quick search
On Jun 02 23:38:14, Robert Connolly wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I am running apmd without arguments from rc.conf. I am also running lid
> close suspend from sysctl.conf. When I close the lid, and open it again,
> apmd is gone from 'ps auxw'.
>
> In /etc/apm/suspend I am hitting xidle with a signal 30.
W
On May 31 07:37:18, Jan Stary wrote:
> On May 30 20:15:42, Robert Connolly wrote:
> > Hello.
> >
> > Is there any way to configure an ACPI event, such as closing the lid of a
> > laptop, to run a script, like 'apm -C' and screensaver?
> > apm(8) and sens
On May 30 20:15:42, Robert Connolly wrote:
> Hello.
>
> Is there any way to configure an ACPI event, such as closing the lid of a
> laptop, to run a script, like 'apm -C' and screensaver?
> apm(8) and sensorsd(8) don't seem to do anything like this.
Not exactly hooked to a lid close but to a susp
On May 30 14:29:01, Tony Abernethy wrote:
> Jan Stary wrote:
> >There is a difference between an empty table and a nonexistent table,
> >and there is a difference between a table not existing at load time
> >and table being deleted.
>
> Exactly what difference in behavi
On May 30 12:14:22, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > There is a difference between an empty table and a nonexistent table,
> > and there is a difference between a table not existing at load time
> > and table being deleted.
>
> Since you have such firm opinions, perhaps you should write your
> own packet
> Le 2012-05-30 07:05, Jan Stary a icrit :
> >It seems that pf will accept rules in pf.conf that refer
> >to a nonexistent. I came to know about his in
> >a sadly laughable way, trying to figure out why pf redirects
> >even the connections comming "from" to sp
On my 5.1-current, the syslog.conf(5) manpage says:
If a received message matches the specified facility and is of the
specified level (or a higher level), and the first word in the message
after the date matches the program, the action specified in the action
^^
It seems that pf will accept rules in pf.conf that refer
to a nonexistent . I came to know about his in
a sadly laughable way, trying to figure out why pf redirects
even the connections comming "from " to spamd.
Apparently, this gets treated as an empty table.
This is on
OpenBSD 5.1-beta (GENERIC
On May 30 10:34:31, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 10:25:01AM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > On May 29 22:22:35, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> > > On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 09:53:40PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
> > >
> > > > It seems that during
Being a happy new user of spamd and friends (thank you Bob!),
I have a few nitpicking questions as I go through the manpages.
(1)
spamd whitelists a given host by _adding_ it as a whitelist entry;
the original GREY entry is left there. Why is is kept around, now
that the host is WHITE anyway? Is
On May 29 22:22:35, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 09:53:40PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > It seems that during the SMTP dialogue, spamd says things like
> > "250 Hello spammer, this is gonna hurt you" and similar
> > - but it also happens f
It seems that during the SMTP dialogue, spamd says things like
"250 Hello spammer, this is gonna hurt you" and similar
- but it also happens for hosts that are GREY at the time.
Is that right, and is that expected?
Jan
On May 29 09:14:29, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 08:24:07AM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > When I run the same command from the command line,
> > everything goes fine. Is the cron job run in a more
> > restricted environment?
>
> you cou
Pretty current 5.1-current/amd64.
This is what happens with the following line in root's crontab
0 * * * * /usr/libexec/spamd-setup -d
On May 29 03:00:02, Cron Daemon wrote:
> Getting http://www.openbsd.org/spamd/traplist.gz
> spamd-setup: Could not add blacklist uatraps: Illegal seek
> G
According to the spamd(8) manpage, the '-v' option makes
message detail including subject and recipient information
logged with LOG_INFO; but the subject doesn't seem to be logged
(not that I miss it):
May 28 20:05:23 www spamd[13382]: 91.121.238.116: connected (1/0)
May 28 20:05:34 www spamd[1338
On May 28 15:53:03, Jan Stary wrote:
> Byt the pflogd(8) manpage, the '-x' option can be used
> to check the integrity of an existing logfile.
>
> Is there a way to tell whether pflogd did find
> the file to be OK or not? For example:
>
> # pflogd -x -f
Byt the pflogd(8) manpage, the '-x' option can be used
to check the integrity of an existing logfile.
Is there a way to tell whether pflogd did find
the file to be OK or not? For example:
# pflogd -x -f /var/log/pflog
# echo $?
0
# echo foo > /t
The manpage says
"-P Print ports using their names in /etc/services if available".
This works with "pfctl -P -sr", but not with "pfctl -P -ss"
- is that intended?
Jan
In the final tftp example of ftp.html,
is the second anchor line really needed?
match out on $ext_if from $int_if nat-to ($ext_if)
anchor "tftp-proxy/*"
pass in quick on $int_if inet proto udp from $int_if to port tftp \
divert-to 127.0.0.1 port 6969
anchor "tftp-proxy
> > If someone wants to carefully go over faq/pf/ (or at least going
> > over one whole page rather than just parts of a page), check/update things
> > and send a diff, that would be very nice and there's a good chance it would
> > get committed..
The http://www.pintday.org/whitepapers/ftp-review.
On May 26 12:30:25, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2012-05-26, Jan Stary wrote:
> > The "Passing Traffic" example at
> > http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/filter.html
> > doesn't seem to be completely accurate.
> >
> > # Pass traffic in on dc0 from
The "Passing Traffic" example at
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/filter.html
doesn't seem to be completely accurate.
# Pass traffic in on dc0 from the local network, 192.168.0.0/24,
# to the OpenBSD machine's IP address 192.168.0.1. Also, pass the
# return traffic out on dc0.
> cp: /mnt/oldhome/xxx/Virtualisation/QEmu/FreeBSD/doc/doc.gd:
> Bad file descriptor
Why are you usign cp? Why don't you "dump | restore"?
On May 15 01:55:32, Ralph Ellis wrote:
> >FWIW, I believe your Brother printer will emulate PostScript OOTB--and
> >OpenBSD, and most UNIXes, supports this natively. All I needed to do
> >to print to my Brother printer at home is start lpd add the following
> >to /etc/printcap:
> ># Brother HL-537
901 - 1000 of 1471 matches
Mail list logo