On Sat, 8 Oct 2011 16:31:24 -0500, Matt Bettinger wrote: >The classic answer. Wont just work so why are you even using this software >because of the security risk... I still run openbsd at the house but for >anything,that actually pays the bills WE USE ANYTHING BUT. Intel mpi? >Openmpi? Etc. > >If you are going,to use webmin shit run it on linux or freebsd. Keep >openbsd where it operates 'ok' at,..routing and filtering on non production >networks.
Stop trolling. Webmin is shit - no argument from me on that but you're just an ignorant twit with that slander about non-production networks. We have OpenBGPd in front of a v4/21 and a v6/32 and one of the upstream transit guys watched the first global routing table being loaded from his system to our Soekris 5501. He was amazed at the short time it took compared with a suitable sized cisco. We will go to higher performance hardware when we need to but it will still run OBSD. Of course you looked at all the tiny users listed at http://www.openbsd.org/users.html didn't you? And the "little guys" include: AMS-IX, Netherlands The Amsterdam Internet Exchange, in short AMS-IX, is one of the largest Internet Exchanges in the world. Elisa Jasinska writes: AMS-IX deployed two OpenBGPD route servers end of 2009. Each is currently running with over 350 route server client sessions, altogether announcing over 38000 prefixes. and "really tiny": NTT Communications Global IP Network, Japan NTT is a global IP carrier based in Tokyo, Japan. Joseph Birthisel writes: "Why tax a router with gathering statistical or operational data when OpenBGPD can do it natively quickly and efficiently? OpenBGPD fulfills the OpenBSD promise of providing reliability and security over flashy buttons and knobs. Trolls reply to /dev/null *** NOTE *** Please DO NOT CC me. I <am> subscribed to the list. Mail to the sender address that does not originate at the list server is tarpitted. The reply-to: address is provided for those who feel compelled to reply off list. Thankyou. Rod/ --- This life is not the real thing. It is not even in Beta. If it was, then OpenBSD would already have a man page for it.

