Surprising that you can do that on a VM, clearly they don't provide much
security if you can do such powerful things as flashing firmware, pretty easy
to write a VM virus that flashes all the flash memory to random, 1, or 0 values
that would totally brick a server and add in cards as well as har
On 03/19/2018 08:02 PM, mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com wrote:
A virtual machine is useful largely because it isolates the VM from the real
hardware, therefore it's not likely you can update firmware from a VM (you
really shouldn't be able to).
Actually you can update firmware from a VM, I
On 03/20/2018 02:41 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Mon, 19 Mar 2018 21:07:05 -0600, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
>
>> I'm upgrading older system and I have a blocker I can not resolve:
>> running: emerge -eavq @world
>
> That's more a reinstall than an upgrade, do you have a particular reason
> f
On Mon, 19 Mar 2018 21:07:05 -0600, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
> I'm upgrading older system and I have a blocker I can not resolve:
> running: emerge -eavq @world
That's more a reinstall than an upgrade, do you have a particular reason
for using -e?
> dev-libs/openssl:0 ("dev-libs/openssl:0"
On 20/03/18 05:07, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
I'm upgrading older system and I have a blocker I can not resolve:
running: emerge -eavq @world
dev-libs/openssl:0 ("dev-libs/openssl:0" is blocking dev-libs/libressl-2.6.0)
[blocks B ] dev-libs/openssl:0 ("dev-libs/openssl:0" is blocking
de
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