>Date: Sun, 29 Apr 2001 08:42:20 +0400
>From: "Andrey A. Chernov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>On Sat, Apr 28, 2001 at 21:22:59 -0700, David Wolfskill wrote:
>> I have at least one application where I generate ipfw rules in a script,
>> for a set of subnets which I read from a file at execution time. I
On Sat, Apr 28, 2001 at 21:22:59 -0700, David Wolfskill wrote:
> I have at least one application where I generate ipfw rules in a script,
> for a set of subnets which I read from a file at execution time. I am
> able to use the numbers to group the firewall rules , so that for any
> given subnet,
On Sat, Apr 28, 2001 at 23:09:07 +0300, Tomi Vainio - Sun Finland - wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My source disk is quite noisy so normally I stop it after building the
> world and restart it once a week. Couple weeks this restart hasn't
> worked as before. Only way to start disk again is reboot.
>
> cam
>Date: Sun, 29 Apr 2001 08:11:32 +0400
>From: "Andrey A. Chernov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>I think it is very contr-intuitive way, better action will be "replace" if
>number is the same. We have _enough_ numbers to not compact rules in such
>bad manner.
>For example "ipfw delete" takes number as an
On Sat, Apr 28, 2001 at 20:21:36 -0700, Rich Wales wrote:
> Andrey A. Chernov wrote:
>
> > I use equal "ipfw add" several times from the script, but
> > the rule number was the same all times. I expect that rule
> > is replaced, not added with same number several times.
>
> No. Ther
On Sat, 28 Apr 2001, Bruce Evans wrote:
> On Fri, 27 Apr 2001, Cejka Rudolf wrote:
>
> > Right now, I have upgraded my -current machine from
> > February 13 to April 26.
> >
> > I were pleased with change to dir allocation in FFS,
> > but here are my unpleasant test results (UDMA33, partition
>
Andrey A. Chernov wrote:
> I use equal "ipfw add" several times from the script, but
> the rule number was the same all times. I expect that rule
> is replaced, not added with same number several times.
No. There can be multiple rules with the same number. If you run
multiple "ipfw
How it can be possible? ipfw -a l:
07001 401680 deny tcp from any to any 7006
070010 0 deny tcp from any to any 7006
070010 0 deny tcp from any to any 7006
I use equal "ipfw add" several times from the script, but the rule number
was the same all
Some of you who use CVSup might wish to consider upgrading to the new
snapshot, called version 16.1a. It contains fixes for a number of
bugs, including ...
... the one that sometimes caused CVSup to delete the symbolic link to
your ports tree and replace it with a new copy of the tree.
For th
Hi,
My source disk is quite noisy so normally I stop it after building the
world and restart it once a week. Couple weeks this restart hasn't
worked as before. Only way to start disk again is reboot.
camcontrol stop 1:2:0
Unit stopped successfully
mount /f
mount: /dev/da1s1e: Input/output er
Erick Kinnee wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 28, 2001 at 09:24:40AM -0500, Erick Kinnee wrote:
> > No flames please, I feel I have tried to find the answer. :)
>
> Ok, I do deserve a flame it seems. I totally missed man ata. The
> loader.conf manpage does state that there are 4 sysctl knobs tuneable
> from
[ resending, with a subject ]
> OK, I;ve looked and looked and can't seem to figure out how to set
hw.ata.wc to enabled. I've put and a few other things in
/etc/sysctl.conf, the others get set, hw.ata.wc doesn't. You can't
change it by hand either as sysctl tells you it's readonly. Grepping in
/s
> OK, I;ve looked and looked and can't seem to figure out how to set
hw.ata.wc to enabled. I've put and a few other things in
/etc/sysctl.conf, the others get set, hw.ata.wc doesn't. You can't
change it by hand either as sysctl tells you it's readonly. Grepping in
/sys/i386/conf has turned up noth
> > Feature, not bug. PAM has been told to use "unix" authentication.
>
> The bug turns out to be that PAM shouldn't have been told this. The
> non-PAM case uses the following check to avoid checking for passwords
> on passwordless accounts:
> ---
> /* if target requires a password
On Sat, 28 Apr 2001, Mark Murray wrote:
> > > 1) su on passwordless accounts.
> > >(a) `su ' now bogusly prompts for a password. It lets
> > >you in if you type an empty password.
(a1) It also lets you in if you type garbage followed by a newline.
> > >(b) `echo somec
-On [20010426 23:27], Matt Dillon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>There is a whole lot more to doing an efficient copy then simply checking
>the mtime. It's silly to try to integrate it into 'cp'. Use cpdup
>instead. plug plug plug.
That's missing the point.
This is for script compati
> > 1) su on passwordless accounts.
> >(a) `su ' now bogusly prompts for a password. It lets
> >you in if you type an empty password.
> >(b) `echo somecommand | su ' now bogusly prompts for
> >a password. su doesn't find a password, and exits without printing
> >a
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