=squid-usersm=120938897115089w=2
Tim Donahue
sonjaya wrote:
ye that is my point , if i using obsd as guest os will be reduce
benefit of OBSD .
so now only two candidate
- XEN
- qemu
- vmware server ( price is high 0
- virtualbox SUN
may be i will try taht candidate .
Thank's for all sharing :)
I run OpenBSD under VMware
to in your laptop.
[1] - http://mln.sourceforge.net/
[2] - http://ovirt.org/
[3] - http://openqrm.com/
Tim Donahue
dt...@drizzle.com wrote:
Tim Donahue wrote:
I run OpenBSD under VMware Server and ESXi. (Both are free) It is
fairly stable and the performance isn't bad. I would recommend you use
the Other Linux (64-bit) profile so you can get access to the e1000
virtual NIC.
In an earlier thread, I
are created with the MAKEDEV script. To
recreate them, all you need to do is copy the MAKEDEV script back into
the /dev directory and run the following command.
# sh MAKEDEV all
Tim Donahue
to a base station that acts as a keyboard wedge.
--
Tim Donahue
This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program.
to wsdisplay0
As you can see, there is no SCSI black magic or any proprietary voodoo
going on here. The scanner is simply detected as a USB keyboard, and
acts just like one in my day to day use of it.
Tim Donahue
Quoting Predrag Punosevac [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
Dear Jacob
can be
logged into with a public key now.
2) Since I'm using dedicated box for backups, I don't need to hide
password from ps.
What is the cleanest way to pass password to ssh?
RANCID uses expect scripts to do the logins.
--
Tim Donahue
or
something and maximize the window to see the descriptive versions.
--
Tim Donahue
This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program.
On 6/6/08 6:52 AM, Geoff Steckel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sometimes it matters to be small and sometimes fast. That is a decision
made by the kernel hacker. Joe user does not make these decisions
because he/she does not understand the overall impact.
As someone else who writes code for
series.
I'm just curious what is in 2.x that you need, that is unavailable in 1.3?
mod_proxy_balancer
Ok, you have a need for Apache 2.x. That does not mean that the
Apache server in the base install needs to be updated.
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/ports/www/apache-httpd/
--
Tim
that I
have read about the Sun-MySQL deal it will be business as usual for
MySQL, just with lots more cash laying around.
*http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/ports/databases/mysql/Makefile?rev=1.1content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup
--
Tim Donahue
enough to write a quick script to add those
registry entries into the reg. of a new computer. Look in the PuTTY
FAQ, I think there is an example of how to do it in there.
--
Tim Donahue
This message was sent using IMP, the Internet
PF
firewalls with no issues. If this doesn't work, please post a dmesg
and your pf ruleset so that we actually have the information we need
to help you out.
--
Tim Donahue
This message was sent using IMP, the Internet
this over-sized packet. To check which drivers are capable of
supporting it you can grep for IFCAP_VLAN_MTU in
the /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/if_driver.c files. I personally have had the
best luck with the fxp, sis, and em drivers when I am doing vlan
trunking.
Tim Donahue
times in the past with trademark issues
and don't want to go through that again.
Tim Donahue
Make sure that you have your 'open-files-limit' parameter set to a sane
value in your my.cnf. If you don't have anything set for that limit
the default is extremely low (so low that using views tended to not
work on my dev box). I have been using open-files-limit = 8192,
however YMMV.
Tim
I have used tidy (for html) and perltidy to clean up messy/generated
code in the past. Both are extremely customizable in the format they
output code.
Tim Donahue
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006 14:59:31 +0200
Kyrre Nygerd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello people,
I'm looking for the best ways to create
for my laptop.
Tim Donahue
Ahh... Looks like a fully functional DMI (Detonate Machine Interface)
has arrived at last... Wonder how that would work out as a LART.
Tim Donahue
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 21:20:31 +0200 (CEST)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Because I know some peoples here own DELL Notebooks:
It happened
Or even simpler... from my crontab:
cd /usr/src cvs -q update -PAd -rOPENBSD_3_9 21 |mail -s CVS update `date
+%Y-%m-%d` your mail here
I run this at 6:04am each day so it is completed before I get into work.
You could add a check to see if there is any output from the cvs command
before
compelling reasons for everything to be put into
the ports tree.
Tim Donahue
is not supported. Please upgrade with an
install disk/bsd.rd then update to -stable.
Tim Donahue
.
No, just like you can produce a BSD-licensed AES implementation in the US, but
it would still be subject to US Export Laws.
Tim Donahue
if it not already
set.
vncviewer 192.168.1.122
Tim Donahue
by
its full pathname or an abbreviated disk form. In its abbreviat-
ed form, the path to the device, the `r' denoting raw device,
and the slice, can all be omitted. For example, the first IDE
disk can be specified as either /dev/rwd0c, /dev/wd0c, or wd0.
Tim
it to talk to
3 different networks. When I start `ospfd -d` to see why no networks ever
get populated into the FIB I get the follow errors. Is there anything I can
do to resolve this problem?
Tim Donahue
recv_dd_description: invalid MTU 1500 sent by neighbor ID 10.4.64.3, expected
1496
if_fsm
On Wednesday 12 April 2006 15:38, Jason Ackley wrote:
Tim Donahue wrote:
recv_dd_description: invalid MTU 1500 sent by neighbor ID 10.4.64.3,
expected 1496
This is your problem. Your physical interface driver
doesn't understand frames that are 'slightly' larger
than 1500 (baby giant
to do with backups for
servers (though amavisd-new does run quite happily on backup MX servers).
Tim Donahue
this, as well as
keeping up to date on the security patches, will keep your system's risk to a
minimum.
Don't forget that if someone is good enough to gain access to your system,
odds are they are smart enough to copy the code and complier that they need
to completely root the system.
Tim Donahue
On Monday 06 March 2006 13:37, Bryan Brake wrote:
Bryan Irvine wrote:
For a laugh go here.
http://wideopenbsd.org/
How much does it cost to register a domain these
days? Is it registered to Dave Feustel? The
whois wideopenbsd.org reveals:
Tech Name:Registration Private
Which I
You could take a look at pfflowd, flow-tools, flowd, and tcpflow. These are
all in the ports tree.
Tim Donahue
On Thursday 02 March 2006 11:16, David Elze wrote:
Hi,
I just searched the net for hours but didn't find a reasonable solution.
My intention is to get traffic graphs, like
Speaking from experience, I put /etc on a separate partition once, only took 2
hours to recover it but it was a lesson well learned... There are several
file located in the /etc/ directory that need to be immediately available
upon boot. These include /etc/fstab and /etc/rc*.
Tim Donahue
dozen other ways to do it if i really wanted in.
In other words, just adding boot to your boot.conf does not really add any
security. It does make your life more difficult when you actually need to
access single user mode, but without physical security, nothing is secure.
Tim Donahue
On Friday 24
:-).
Tim Donahue
and a 1GHz Dell POS. If all you are looking to do is run a
firewall for a DSL/Cable connection at home, the 4501 is likely overpowered.
Tim Donahue
On Sun, 2005-05-01 at 20:25 +0200, Christoph Machon wrote:
Am Sonntag, den 01.05.2005, 06:35 -0400 schrieb Todd Boyer:
On Saturday, April 30, Theo de Raadt wrote:
Something else... today I had a chance to checkout a new
wireframe puffy tshirt. The texture of them is incredible,
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