deadly.org doesn't work. I read www.deadly.org
since long time, thank you pal. I haven't seen
a worthwile BSD-article in Samag since long time.
WOuld you care to list the 3 articles?
That's funny, because I actually was going not
to prolong my subscription to Sysadmin: I
subscribed to it a year ago and am disappointed
how boring it is. No good shell scripts, no
information about my favorite operating system, lots of annoying commercials. Only Merlin's articles were good.
They should look at some german magazines and
learn how to do an interesting and enthusiastic Unix-publication. I mean Linux Magazine and iX.
But now since the excellent TPJ is back, I'll
extend my subscription of course:-) Great news
What I dislike:
distribution/ports mixes free and non-free software (Motif etc.) without prompting the user what is free and not; bad not only for Free Software zealots, but also for people who want to make sure they can use software without limitations in their environment (FreeBSD looks as it is made by people for whom software freedom is a secondary concern)
Then go for OpenBSD - they have performed (and are
still performing) a licence audit. Which I think
is very clever!
I use OpenBSD as firewall on one PC and
as desktop on another since 1 year and
like it! Already the man pages alone make it worth. Here's a screenshot from my wide-screen 21" Sony FW900
Not an answer to the original question,
but do you guys know that OpenBSD policy
is to never touch the/etc (neither from
the ports, nor during the system upgrades)?
As for logging the changed files, how
about looking at
mtree and tripwire?
I'd like to know, what does Theo think of Sun's
trusted Solaris and if he is going to download
the recently released Solaris source code.
Another question: what tools do you use for
hacking? Vim or Emacs? ctags and grep and what
else? Can you share few tricks (like some Vi or
Emacs commands)?
A half-measure would be the database admin to
setup a trigger, allowing fetching only some
limited number of forgotten (or stolen) passwords
from the database.
The reason is that proprietary modifications can be made for "internal" use... and this includes web serving. This means that Microsoft could power all of.NET with a modified version of Interbase (see my root-level post) and not have to give up source. The MPL is a bad license.
It can be done with the GPL either, since GPL regulates distribution only.
Sending encrypted data is bad - the government does not need to break it - it will put you to jail, if they just suspect anything.
Better setup two public web servers - for example some solitaire server in USA and some chinese chess (or whatever) in China. And then exchange messages by moving cards or pieces. Though it will allow only text communication...
My last failed Sony product:
:-/
a 24" widescreen monitor FW-900
It died after 3 years (flimmers, yellow corners)
and I had paid a lot for it
http://www.heise.de/mobil/artikel/2003/07/03/umts/
Ok, let's look... 6 nerds have replied to this joke sofar.
http://home.t-online.de/home/Alexander.Farber/foto s/icewm-openbsd.gif
I think OpenBSD does:n s
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#Optio
I don't see an ID==1:
/usr/sbin/sshd
pref:alex {309} ps uawx | grep ssh
root 29251 0.0 0.2 360 1168 ?? Is 8:16PM 0:01.11
root 24161 0.3 0.3 404 1524 ?? S 11:29PM 0:10.04 sshd: alex@ttyp0 (sshd)
alex 18458 0.0 0.3 512 1452 p0 I 11:52PM 0:00.39 ssh grappa.unix-ag.uni-kl.de -l anoncvs cvs server
alex 26968 0.2 0.3 704 1668 p0 S+ 11:53PM 0:05.35 ssh grappa.unix-ag.uni-kl.de -l anoncvs cvs server
root 12424 0.0 0.3 404 1524 ?? S 12:02AM 0:01.13 sshd: alex@ttyp2 (sshd)
alex 13765 0.0 0.2 1284 872 p2 RV 12:08AM 0:00.00 grep ssh (tcsh)
pref:alex {310} uname -a
OpenBSD pref 3.0 GENERIC.pref#3 i386
deadly.org doesn't work. I read www.deadly.org
since long time, thank you pal. I haven't seen
a worthwile BSD-article in Samag since long time.
WOuld you care to list the 3 articles?
That's funny, because I actually was going not to prolong my subscription to Sysadmin: I subscribed to it a year ago and am disappointed how boring it is. No good shell scripts, no information about my favorite operating system, lots of annoying commercials. Only Merlin's articles were good. They should look at some german magazines and learn how to do an interesting and enthusiastic Unix-publication. I mean Linux Magazine and iX.
But now since the excellent TPJ is back, I'll extend my subscription of course :-) Great news
Then go for OpenBSD - they have performed (and are still performing) a licence audit. Which I think is very clever!
I use OpenBSD as firewall on one PC and as desktop on another since 1 year and like it! Already the man pages alone make it worth. Here's a screenshot from my wide-screen 21" Sony FW900
Not an answer to the original question, but do you guys know that OpenBSD policy is to never touch the /etc (neither from
the ports, nor during the system upgrades)?
As for logging the changed files, how about looking at mtree and tripwire?
http://groups.google.com/groups?q=rnum=1&seld=9095 76303&ic=1
http://www.linux-magazin.de/ausgabe/2000/09/Helio/ helio.html
I'd like to know, what does Theo think of Sun's
trusted Solaris and if he is going to download
the recently released Solaris source code.
Another question: what tools do you use for
hacking? Vim or Emacs? ctags and grep and what
else? Can you share few tricks (like some Vi or
Emacs commands)?
/Alex
http://savage.net.au/Perl.html#VCS::CVS
4.* is not nearly in good enough shape for shipping
A half-measure would be the database admin to setup a trigger, allowing fetching only some limited number of forgotten (or stolen) passwords from the database.
The reason is that proprietary modifications can be made for "internal" use... and this includes web serving. This means that Microsoft could power all of .NET with a modified version of Interbase (see my root-level post) and not have to give up source. The MPL is a bad license.
It can be done with the GPL either, since GPL regulates distribution only.
http://www.winternet.com/~mikelr/flame11.html
...where are the screenshots?
Sending encrypted data is bad - the government
does not need to break it - it will put you to
jail, if they just suspect anything.
Better setup two public web servers - for
example some solitaire server in USA and some
chinese chess (or whatever) in China. And then
exchange messages by moving cards or pieces.
Though it will allow only text communication...
/Alex
s|<(?!$okay_tags)[^>]*>||gi; is faster
Get your daily Perl news shot at Nandor's site http://use.perl.org
They will probably have to change their product's name.
Uh dear...
--