Hi!
On Tuesday, August 04, 2015 at 4:47 PM, Mike Larkin mlar...@azathoth.net
wrote:
From your first link:
Docker on FreeBSD relies heavily on ZFS, jail and the 64bit Linux
compatibility layer
I think that says enough to answer your question.
Sort of, but
Hi!
Are there any efforts being made to port the FreeBSD Docker port to OpenBSD?
https://wiki.freebsd.org/Docker
https://github.com/kvasdopil/docker
Wish I didn't have to ask, but it's the only way I can install Discourse
(https://github.com/discourse/discourse) without being shunned by its
Hi!
On Tuesday, August 04, 2015 at 4:44 PM, Giancarlo Razzolini
grazzol...@gmail.com wrote:
From what I read on their site, they use off the shelf software that
might have a package/port on OpenBSD. You could succeed in installing it
outside a docker. Unless their software is stupid and try to
Hi!
On Wednesday, July 22, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Jorge Castillo voo...@gmail.com
wrote:
Since I am on topic! If you want to run OpenBSD on DigitalOcean
check this:
http://www.tubsta.com/2015/04/openbsd-on-digital-ocean/
Remember use snapshots, not release.
Nice find - thanks for sharing!
For those of you who are interested:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9916005
Many thanks!
O.D.
On 13. juni 2015 at 1:47 PM, Edho Arief m...@myconan.net wrote:
You need to install postgresql-contrib.
Have you managed to install Discourse yourself? Not via Docker but as a regular
Rails app. If so, would you happen to know how to make it send emails? All my
normal Rails apps can send
Hi!
OpenBSD's httpd and Ruby on Rails - is this a reality yet?
Thanks!
O.D.
Hi!
On 13. juni 2015 at 1:47 PM, Edho Arief m...@myconan.net wrote:
You need to install postgresql-contrib.
That did the trick - thank you so much!
O.D.
Hi!
Trying to install the Discourse forum (https://github.com/discourse/discourse)
manually without Docker. I got PostgreSQL 9.4, Redis and my bundle all set up,
however the migration seems to fail:
== 20120921162512 AddMetaDataToForumThreads: migrating
--
Cool, there's a package. Super awesome, thanks Jeremy! Sorry for not noticing
it during my struggles.
Have a great day!
O.D.
On 12. juni 2015 at 6:12 AM, Jeremy Evans jeremyeva...@gmail.com wrote:
To install the ruby 2.2 version via a package:
pkg_add ruby22-therubyracer
To install the
Hi!
Is there a way to install devel/ruby-therubyracer with the latest Ruby 2.2.0p0
package as a dependency? It seems to require Ruby 2.1 and I'd rather not
install that.
Thanks!
O.D.
Hi Marc / Otto!
On 29. januar 2015 at 7:07 PM, Marc Espie es...@nerim.net wrote:
And it shouldn't ! script(1) is often used for debugging
purposes, and that noise becomes paramount to figuring
out what's going on.
Thanks, I had no idea. Would it be possible though to mention some use cases
Greetings Nick!
On 29. januar 2015 at 12:48 PM, Nick Holland n...@holland-consulting.net
wrote:
On 01/28/15 17:25, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
...
Most of my daemons don't have any flags ...
...
Really? Look closer...
IF the vast majority of daemons didn't have any flags at all, maybe
Hi,
On 27. januar 2015 at 11:14 PM, Andy Bradford
amb-sendok-1424992915.iclgpijjkmllbbajd...@bradfords.org wrote:
man script:
``script makes a typescript of everything printed on your terminal.''
That's fine, I just don't understand why it can't do it without all the noise
and ^Ms.
O.D.
Hi,
On 28. januar 2015 at 11:45 PM, James Ryland Miller
james.ryland.mil...@gmail.com wrote:
As a brand new OpenBSD user, I *love* how the flags work in
rc.conf.local:
says to me that the daemon is being called with no flags.
YES doesn't tell me that; it just tells me that I might have to
On 29. januar 2015 at 12:02 AM, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
I've think you've had your say.
Thank you sir!
O.D.
Hello,
On 28. januar 2015 at 11:02 PM, Ingo Schwarze schwa...@usta.de wrote:
When you do need flags, it needs only one variable instead of two,
which means less complexity.
Due to OpenBSD's excellent convention over configuration (1), most people
don't need flags.
Your argument that the
Hello,
Wouldn't `daemon_enable=YES` (like FreeBSD's rc.conf) make more sense for
enabling daemons than `daemon_flags=` in rc.conf.local?
Most of my daemons don't have any flags so it looks a bit strange (and messy)
with all these empty flag specs.
Thanks!
O.D.
Hi,
I find myself using script(1) (together with https://github.com/defunkt/gist)
all the time. I was wondering though:
1. Why does it use CRLF line endings?
2. What's with all the startup noise?
Script started on Tue Jan 27 23:47:12 2015
[1m[7m#[27m[1m[m [m[27m[24m[Jroot@mybox:~#
Hello,
Why won't `postgresql-server-9.4.0` accept my locale? Just upgraded to 5.7 from
5.5. Whatever `postgresql-server` version was in 5.5 didn't have this problem.
% su _postgresql
% initdb -D /var/postgresql/data/
The files belonging to this database system will be owned by user
Hello,
On 21. januar 2015 at 8:26 PM, frantisek holop min...@obiit.org wrote:
LC_ALL is not supported yet, try LC_CTYPE.
$ sudo su - _postgresql
$ export LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8
$ initdb -D /var/postgresql/data -U postgres -E UTF8 -A md5 -W
$ psql -U postgres -l
I couldn't get it to work with
On 21. januar 2015 at 8:44 PM, frantisek holop min...@obiit.org wrote:
you are not giving details, so i don't know.
but a non-utf8 database nowadays is very limiting.
Indeed, thanks for your example. I'm now rolling with `initdb -D
/var/postgresql/data/ --no-locale -E UTF8`.
O.D.
On 19. januar 2015 at 6:45 PM, Jeremy Evans jeremyeva...@gmail.com wrote:
Our make doesn't handle some syntax they used in that file. I'm
not sure if it's an issue with our make or a bug in exts.mk. It's
currently patched out in the lang/ruby/2.2 port.
Great news -- thanks Josh and
Hi,
As we all know DigitalOcean now supports FreeBSD. Despite over half of the
upvotes at the main BSD thread
(https://digitalocean.uservoice.com/forums/136585-digitalocean/suggestions/3232571-support-bsd-os)
being for OpenBSD, OpenBSD users have been forced to open up their own
separate
Hi!
Anybody know why I'm getting this Ruby 2.2.0 build error?
% uname -a
OpenBSD dev.my.domain 5.5 GENERIC#276 i386
% ruby-install ruby 2.2.0
...
linking shared-object digest/sha2.so
installing default sha2 libraries
generating constant definitions
compiling etc.c
linking shared-object etc.so
Hi,
On 16. desember 2014 at 11:14 PM, Jan Stary h...@stare.cz wrote:
On Dec 16 17:58:37, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
I think the typical user will eventually realize that OpenBSD is
one of the most valuable assets he or she can use in the pursuit
of happiness and livelihood for ones family.
Hi,
It seems that DigitalOcean's BSD debut is going to be FreeBSD only. We, in the
OpenBSD community, are being asked to open up a separate UserVoice vote for
OpenBSD -- despite the fact that we've worked so hard to promote the existing
one. So, please drop by and share your frustrations:
What is digital ocean?
They're touted as the new rock stars of the hosting industry. Cheap SSD-enabled
cloud hosting for your apps. You do have apps don't you?
O.D.
On 16. desember 2014 at 3:43 PM, Richard E. Thornton
thornton.rich...@gmail.com wrote:
What is digital ocean?
On Tue, 16 Dec
Hi,
On 16. desember 2014 at 4:17 PM, Lars li...@srdn.de wrote:
Says who? Now it's digital ocean - next month it will be somebody
else.
I seem to fall out of the target group for this. As I don't share your
obvious enthusiasm and just don't care - so many rock stars rise
and fall.
Hi,
On 16. desember 2014 at 4:20 PM, jungle Boogie jungleboog...@gmail.com
wrote:
I have not personally tested openBSD on https://www.vultr.com/ but
I have read (tweets, probably) that it will work.
I'm not so sure about Vultr. Icelandic Greenqloud (https://www.greenqloud.com/)
are nice
On 16. desember 2014 at 5:46 PM, Richard E. Thornton
thornton.rich...@gmail.com wrote:
So, its a cloud based server farm? What's the point for the
typical user?
I think the typical user will eventually realize that OpenBSD is one of the
most valuable assets he or she can use in the pursuit
Hi,
An intra-BSD desktop environment based on Google's Material Design guidelines
[1] -- would anyone be interested in something like that?
This way we could retire PC-BSD, and, coupled with the fact that OpenBSD is the
world's only OS allowing you to run Xorg as an unprivileged user [2], we
Hi,
From what I gather, RBAC / MAC isn't really necessary unless you add people to
your system that you don't really trust (ref. Nick Holland @
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-miscm=139321387226212). But what about FreeBSD's
Capsicum?
Thanks!
O.D.
Hello!
Thank you so much. You're most right, there was no need for Polipo,
uncommenting the control port in `torrc` was enough.
I really appreciate the help, and I hope that I one day can make it up to you.
Sharing with you a little bit of music for what it's worth:
Hi,
Does anyone know what's wrong with my Tor + Polipo setup? So far I've done
`pkg_add tor pkg_add polipo`, uncommented `socksParentProxy` and
`socksProxyType` in `/etc/polipo/config` and then `/etc/rc.d/tor start
/etc/rc.d/polipo start`. However I'm still getting connection refused for
On 22. oktober 2014 at 3:55 PM, Dawe dawed...@gmx.de wrote:
I think you have to configure proxyAddress if you want polipo to
listen on more
than localhost:
# Uncomment one of these if you want to allow remote clients to
# connect:
Hi,
After upgrading all of my OpenBSD packages
(http://lteo.net/blog/2012/11/08/reinstalling-all-your-openbsd-packages-with-pkg-adds-fuzzy-matching-feature/)
I've started getting frequent core dumps in Node.js.
All I'm seeing is `segmentation fault (core dumped)`. I wanted to try
Hi,
Does anybody have experience compiling the Ruby libv8 JavaScript
engine (https://github.com/cowboyd/libv8) on OpenBSD 5.5?
It says it can't find a supported compiler despite repeated attempts
to point it to `gcc` or `g++` 4.8.2 or 4.6.4
Hi!
Thanks for your help.
Actually I am using Node, but for some reason ruby-clean-css
(https://github.com/joseph/ruby-clean-css) -- which looks like it's
specifically made for Node -- requires libv8 as well. I've contacted
the author.
All the best,
O.D.
On 29. september 2014 at 1:12 PM, Edho
Some clarification:
On 29. september 2014 at 2:04 PM, Joseph Pearson wrote:
Ruby needs an interface into the JavaScript runtime, which libv8
provides. Node is a different concept entirely (though it too needs
such an interface, which internally V8 provides).
You can see this here:
Because /etc/pkg.conf ?
Sorry, no such file over here.
O.D.
On 23. september 2014 at 1:47 PM, Alexander Hall wrote:On September
23, 2014 3:00:41 PM CEST, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Expanding on the whole
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_over_configuration thing --
why aren't
OpenBSD solution is to ask the user to choose a mirror at
installation time.
I don't see this preference being remembered after the installation
though.
O.D.
On 23. september 2014 at 1:25 PM, ludovic coues wrote: why aren't
there any sane PKG_PATH defaults? Ie.:
release=$(uname -r)
Because your sane default includes ftp.openbsd.org, which is not
sane at all. If PKG_PATH or /etc/pkg.conf were set to default to
ftp.openbsd.org then that host would get hammered instead of the user
being put in the position of choosing a local mirror.
The proper local mirror should ofcourse
Indeed, the installer only creates that if you install from a
mirror. Apart from that, as someone else pointed out, which mirror
should one choose?
Cool, I didn't know that.
Then, in the event that someone installed via an ISO or some
pre-defined VM (ie. a DigitalOcean droplets) -- how about
Hi,
Expanding on the whole
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_over_configuration thing --
why aren't there any sane PKG_PATH defaults? Ie.:
release=$(uname -r)
architecture=$(uname -p)
export
PKG_PATH=ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/${release}/packages/${architecture}/
Thanks!
O.D.
On 5. mars 2014 at 5:11 PM, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
[...snip...]
So here's your chance! A good article could earn you undeadly.org
fame and megabytes of fan mail!
I'll get started right away!
O.D.
On 5. mars 2014 at 5:11 PM, Peter N. M. Hansteen
wrote:openda...@hushmail.com writes:
Just wanted to say great job guys!
A gift to humanity and a serious power move for OpenBSD.
O.D.
I'm sending 200 dollars... after I clear the blood from my eye
sockets... Comic Sans... Now I know how the Nazis felt in Raiders of
the Lost Ark
I use it all the time to piss off hipsters too. It's a beautiful font.
O.D.
Ref. http://helveticafilm.com/
On 22. april 2014 at 2:10 PM, Bryan
Anybody have any thoughts on how to achieve this?
Thanks.
O.D.
And this:
http://openbsd.7691.n7.nabble.com/Ruby-on-Rails-and-the-chrooted-nginx-8-td229745.html
If you're new to webdev perhaps it's best to avoid PHP while you can
so you don't regret having made the wrong choice later down the line.
O.D.
On 2. mars 2014 at 4:58 AM, Jay Patel wrote:May be
Thank you so much for the explanation guys.
It makes perfect sense now.
O.D.
On 24. februar 2014 at 3:50 AM, Nick Holland wrote:On 02/23/14
21:09, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
Hello,
Got some more layman's questions here after reading
[url snipped]
OpenBSD for security
I dunno, I
Your blog has potential.
Protips:
- simplify the design like Medium.com, or better, join Medium.com
- make it mobile friendly---https://github.com/h5bp/mobile-boilerplate
- remove the focus on DragonFly to avoid alienating non-DragonFly
users
- get yourself a relevant domain name
O.D.
On 22.
Hello,
Got some more layman's questions here after reading
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7287639 --
OpenBSD for security
I dunno, I hear this a lot. Sure OpenBSD has created and implemented
some (often very bleeding edge) hardening features, but nothing that
hasn't seen the light
On 16. februar 2014 at 10:11 PM, Daniel CegieÅka wrote:try this:
--- cat id0.c ---
int getuid(){return 0;}
int geteuid(){return 0;}
int getgid(){return 0;}
int getegid(){return 0;}
--- end cut ---
# shell (as normal user):
id -un
cc -shared id0.c -o id0
LD_PRELOAD=./id0 sh
id -un
What does
Hello!
Came across this on Hacker News earlier today:
New Linux userland rootkit with anti-debugging, new backdoors and
pcap hiding
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7246836
And it made me wonder -- how vulnerable is OpenBSD to this type of
stuff?
Thanks!
O.D.
Hello,
Are OpenBSD's packages extremely outdated? What would you say to this
guy?
At least with Linux I don't have to wait 6 hours for all my software
to finish compiling. Think about all the trees that are unnecessarily
cut down because of all that compiling. [...snip...] OpenBSD only has
a
On 11. desember 2013 at 11:03 AM, Some Developer wrote:Hi,
I'm looking for a VPS provider that supports OpenBSD (preferably the
latest version). I've obviously found a few but what I really want is
easy to create and destroy instances in the same way you can on
Digital
Ocean and Linode (which
Hi,
Are there any plans to make somelike like http://www.ubuntu.com/phone for
OpenBSD?
Thanks.
O.D.
Hi,
What are the ups and downs of replacing Linux with OpenBSD in Google's Android
operating system? I guess this question would apply to the new Sailfish OS as
well.
Thanks.
O.D.
* something like
On 26. november 2013 at 4:09 PM, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Are there any plans to make somelike like
http://www.ubuntu.com/phone for OpenBSD?
Thanks.
O.D.
.
5.4 works fine as long as gyp is installed.
Also, in 5.4 everything should work flawless right?
O.D.
% npm install fibers
npm http GET https://registry.npmjs.org/fibers
npm http 304 https://registry.npmjs.org/fibers
fibers@1.0.1 install
/home/opendaddy/myapp/node_modules
https://registry.npmjs.org/fibers
npm http 304 https://registry.npmjs.org/fibers
fibers@1.0.1 install /home/opendaddy/myapp/node_modules/fibers
node ./build.js
gmake: Entering directory `/home/opendaddy/myapp/node_modules/fibers/build'
g++ '-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE' '-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
Hello,
On 5. november 2013 at 1:06 PM, David Coppa dco...@gmail.com wrote:
OpenBSD lacks the ucontext.h and associated functions
(setcontext/getcontext, swapcontext, and makecontext).
Ouch. That does not look good. From
https://code.google.com/p/cog/issues/detail?id=132 --
Secondly, its not
On 5. november 2013 at 2:22 PM, Alexey E. Suslikov
alexey.susli...@gmail.com wrote:
David Coppa dcoppa at gmail.com writes:
OpenBSD lacks the ucontext.h and associated functions
(setcontext/getcontext, swapcontext, and makecontext).
Hello,
On 5. november 2013 at 2:29 PM, Aaron def...@gmail.com wrote:
The problem is because node's gyp was not taught (my bad - I fixed
it for next release) what OpenBSD boxes are.
To fix it - simply `pkg_add gyp` (obviously you will need to have
PKG_PATH set). Once gyp is installed the ['OS
Hello again,
On 5. november 2013 at 2:31 PM, Aaron def...@gmail.com wrote:
The problem is because node's gyp was not taught (my bad - I fixed
it for next release) what OpenBSD boxes are.
To fix it - simply `pkg_add gyp` (obviously you will need to have
PKG_PATH set). Once gyp is installed the
Hello,
On 5. november 2013 at 4:37 PM, Aaron def...@gmail.com wrote:
If you need 1.0.1, I would recommend pkg_delete'ing the port
version - and letting npm install it (just make sure gyp is installed).
gyp-0.1282 is installed, but it seems I'm getting the same
../src/libcoro/coro.h:321:23:
Don't forget to vote!
On 9. oktober 2013 at 2:09 PM, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Could you guys help me vote for OpenBSD at Digital Ocean?
https://digitalocean.uservoice.com/forums/136585-digital-ocean/suggestions/3232571-support-bsd-os-
Basically it's the only SSD cloud hosting
On 10. oktober 2013 at 7:15 AM, InterNetX - Robert Garrett
robert.garr...@internetx.com wrote:
I just want to know what a cloud is.
Not really satisfied with the definition at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing, here's my own attempt at one:
A cloud is a bunch of machines connected
On 10. oktober 2013 at 10:34 AM, Janne Johansson icepic...@gmail.com wrote:
Clouds solve problems for you. Like this:
http://www.cloudave.com/17213/cloud-is-simple-well-its-real-
complex-but-that-complexity-can-and-should-be-hidden-from-
users/geek-poke-cloud-complex/
2013/10/10 Florian Obser
Hi,
Could you guys help me vote for OpenBSD at Digital Ocean?
https://digitalocean.uservoice.com/forums/136585-digital-ocean/suggestions/3232571-support-bsd-os-
Basically it's the only SSD cloud hosting provider
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHZLCahai4Q) in existance and if the response
is
* existence
On 9. oktober 2013 at 2:09 PM, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Could you guys help me vote for OpenBSD at Digital Ocean?
https://digitalocean.uservoice.com/forums/136585-digital-
ocean/suggestions/3232571-support-bsd-os-
Basically it's the only SSD cloud hosting provider
On 6. oktober 2013 at 1:15 PM, Manolis Tzanidakis mtzanida...@gmail.com
wrote:
First, upgrade to STABLE to avoid potential kernel panics. Check
patch 007 in http://openbsd.org/errata53.html for more info. M:Tier
offers pre-built patches and packages, if you want to avoid compiling.
Check
On 9. oktober 2013 at 7:06 PM, Dorian H. doj...@gmail.com wrote:
I've got a few OpenBSD boxes running at TransIP, very satisfied
about it. QEMU/KVM based, and they recently added a new feature, 'private
networks' between two or more VPS's.
It might not explicitly have the label 'cloud' attached
Keep them coming guys! Couple hundred more and OpenBSD will top the list:
https://digitalocean.uservoice.com/forums/136585-digital-ocean/filters/top
Would be great PR for OpenBSD too.
On 9. oktober 2013 at 9:45 PM, Stuart Henderson s...@spacehopper.org wrote:
On 2013-10-09,
Hi,
Can anyone recommend a decent OpenBSD cloud hosting provider?
Digital Ocean looks nice but they don't yet offer OpenBSD
(https://digitalocean.uservoice.com/forums/136585-digital-ocean/suggestions/3232571-support-bsd-os-).
There's ARP Networks and TransIP but they don't offer clouds.
On 6. oktober 2013 at 4:29 AM, Chris Cappuccio ch...@nmedia.net wrote:
This is really vague. What tasks are taking so long?
You are sharing disk I/O, oversubscribed. You are sharing CPU
time, oversubscribed.
Any clues?
Good point. I'm doing asset precompilation in this Ruby on Rails app - a
Hi,
On 6. oktober 2013 at 10:18 AM, Manolis Tzanidakis mtzanida...@gmail.com
wrote:
Hello,
virtio(4) can make a big difference.
Providing at least a dmesg dump will get you better answers :).
Looks awesome! I just load this into my kernel?
On 6. oktober 2013 at 10:35 AM, Darren Tucker
Hi,
On 6. oktober 2013 at 1:15 PM, Manolis Tzanidakis mtzanida...@gmail.com
wrote:
First, upgrade to STABLE to avoid potential kernel panics. Check
patch 007 in http://openbsd.org/errata53.html for more info. M:Tier
offers pre-built patches and packages, if you want to avoid compiling.
Check
Hi,
My OpenBSD VPS is taking way too long to complete certain tasks. Is there a way
to stress test my system to find out if it's working the way it should?
I'm suspecting my ISP is having trouble with their hardware or KVM setup, but
I'd like to do everything I can before I take it to them.
Is this the Akai MPD18 or 24?
O.D.
On 15. september 2013 at 11:57 AM, Monah Baki monahb...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I'm running OpenBSD 5.2 with squid for a friend who owns an ISP
outside the U.S and uses my OpenBSD squid proxy to access netflix. I've been
told this can be also accomplished via DNS Proxy. Is it true?
If yes
On 12. september 2013 at 12:04 PM, Peter N. M. Hansteen pe...@bsdly.net
wrote:
I assume you paid somebody for a list that includes addresses
likely to produce negative reactions. I'll give you this much better list
for free, with a total of 25083 adresses:
http://www.bsdly.net/~peter/sortlist
Hi,
Anybody else having trouble getting PostgreSQL to run on startup? I always have
to do /etc/rc.d/postgresql start manually. My line in /etc/rc.conf.local
reads: pkg_scripts=postgresql,enginx. Nothing fishy in the logs. I'm using
postgresql-server-9.2.3 (initdb -D /var/postgresql/data/) on
On 11. september 2013 at 3:19 PM, Antoine Jacoutot ajacou...@bsdfrog.org
wrote:
This is not how pkg_scripts works.
See rc.conf.local(5).
Thanks a lot Vijay, Antoine. Works great now. Can't recall where I got the
pkg_scripts=foo,bar format from though.
O.D.
On 5. september 2013 at 6:24 PM, Kasper Adel karim.a...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
A bit off topic but i was looking for a way/tool that could crawl
through
a mailing list/news archives and try to filter most common
discussions and
things like that, if anyone is aware of such a tool, pls let me
On 19. juli 2013 at 9:13 PM, Miod Vallat m...@online.fr wrote:
Pretty sure it takes more than 1.7G to build Java.
But then how can java people pretend it has any usefulness, besides
filing disks?
They say Android apps are just an excuse for Java devs to keep programming in
Java. Now that
On 20. juli 2013 at 3:54 PM, Amit Kulkarni amitk...@gmail.com wrote:
Nope, plenty of disk space left in /usr/local (my ports are in
/usr/local/ports).
why are ports inside /usr/local. it should be /usr/ports. Some
ports may fail.
Maybe, yeah. I updated PORTSDIR in /etc/mk.conf though. Anyway
On 20. juli 2013 at 5:34 PM, Jan Stary h...@stare.cz wrote:
Why are you building the (huge) port,
instead of simply installing the package?
Whoa. When did that get there? Thanks man!
O.D.
Hi,
Anybody managed to build /usr/ports/devel/jdk on OpenBSD 5.3?
Getting a rather nasty compile error here on amd64, was wondering if maybe
someone could help? Tried asking on the ports mailinglist as well as reaching
out to the port maintainer but no luck.
http://pastie.org/8155843
O.D.
On 19. juli 2013 at 3:17 PM, Matthew Dempsky matt...@dempsky.org wrote:
write error? Did you run out of disk space?
Nope, plenty of disk space left in /usr/local (my ports are in
/usr/local/ports).
% df -h
Filesystem SizeUsed Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/wd0a 985M 50.8M
On 11. juli 2013 at 9:23 PM, Chris Cappuccio ch...@nmedia.net wrote:
Anybody have any thoughts on Snort vs Suricata?
Code quality is going to be a big question with the new one, as it
always has been with Snort (does running this utility open up a
new attack vector on your network)
Yeah,
Hi,
I use Capistrano (http://www.capistranorb.com/) in a super simple Rails app
with similar schematics to the ones provided by Jummo.
O.D.
On 11. juli 2013 at 1:41 PM, Andy a...@brandwatch.com wrote:
Hi,
I use 'puppet' for this to manage over 20 OpenBSD firewalls now.
I don't know how I
Hi,
Anybody have any thoughts on Snort vs Suricata?
Also, how important is it to use an IDS if you run a server that hosts a
popular website?
I'm reading here (http://www.aldeid.com/wiki/Suricata-vs-snort): Suricata
offers new features that Snort could implement in the future: multi-threading
The ironic thing is that OpenBSD is being widely used in the world's largest
tissue engineering labs -- which, and as crazy as it might seem, should be able
to generate new eyes for blind people (based on their existing cells) in 5-10
years from now.
O.D.
On 7. juli 2013 at 11:41 AM, ropers
On 5. juli 2013 at 6:49 AM, Luca Ferrari fluca1...@infinito.it wrote:
Uhm...and I guess OpenBSD is feeling the same for abandoning you ;)!
I believe people, from time to time, should try to read source code
and track the development. It will remove this stupid messages.
No it won't. Stop
On 5. juli 2013 at 4:30 AM, Tito Mari Francis Escaño
titomarifran...@gmail.com wrote:
[...snip...]
Can't you tell by the way he wrote that that he's just a kid (or an uneducated
adult)?
I oughta smack y'all faces in for even replying to this shit.
O.D.
On 5. juli 2013 at 4:59 AM, eric oyen eric.o...@gmail.com wrote:
My only problem (and it seems none of the devs really understand this)
is that I must have sighted assistance to install and initially configure the
OS.
What do you mean sighted assistance?
O.D.
On 5. juli 2013 at 5:13 AM, Marc Espie es...@nerim.net wrote:
I actually, no, we don't. You're not anybody I've ever heard of, and your
opinion doesn't matter. I have no particular reason to trust you.
They said the same of Edward Snowden you know.
Now, I read your hilarious email. You have
On 5. juli 2013 at 5:31 AM, Jean-Francois Simon jfsimon1...@gmail.com wrote:
May I understand you U go for Microsoft instead ?
That would be great idea, they are said to be free from backdoors.
Sorry
France is in the house y'all.
O.D.
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