From rambiusparkisanius at gmail.com Wed Oct 1 18:44:24 2014 From: rambiusparkisanius at gmail.com (Ivan "Rambius" Ivanov) Date: Wed, 1 Oct 2014 18:44:24 -0400 Subject: [talk] [announce] NYC*BUG Tonight In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hey, we have a table at the back of the bar. On Oct 1, 2014 12:41 PM, "NYC*BUG Announcements" wrote: > This month we're meeting informally at the bar/restaurant we have been > visiting after our last couple of meetings: > > 645 PM > BXL Cafe > 125 W 43rd Street between 6th Avenue and Broadway > > We are looking to have informal discussions and mingling. Nothing > fancy, and best of all, no RSVP list. > > We will also start a sign-up for OpenBSD CD releases as per Brian C's > email to talk@ on Tuesday. > _______________________________________________ > announce mailing list > announce at lists.nycbug.org > http://lists.nycbug.org/mailman/listinfo/announce > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mark.saad at ymail.com Wed Oct 1 18:21:16 2014 From: mark.saad at ymail.com (Mark Saad) Date: Wed, 01 Oct 2014 18:21:16 -0400 Subject: [talk] Tonight Message-ID: <542C7E5C.1080902@ymail.com> All George is at a table in the back of BLX. See you there. -- Mark Saad | mark.saad at ymail.com From mark.saad at ymail.com Sat Oct 4 21:37:30 2014 From: mark.saad at ymail.com (Mark Saad) Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2014 21:37:30 -0400 Subject: [talk] Testing Message-ID: <24338AC1-9770-4835-A1AC-C1F054C34A18@ymail.com> All I am testing an issue with yahoo and the lists . Please ignore this email . #1 sent at 9:37pm sat the 4th. --- Mark saad | mark.saad at ymail.com From mark.saad at ymail.com Sat Oct 4 21:41:23 2014 From: mark.saad at ymail.com (Mark Saad) Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2014 21:41:23 -0400 Subject: [talk] Fwd: FreeBSD 10.1-RC1 Now Available References: <20141005013247.GH1171@hub.FreeBSD.org> Message-ID: <94685CE2-059D-4AD3-9144-10FB835CD38F@ymail.com> Again This is just a test please ignore this . #2 sent at 9:41pm sat the 4th . --- Mark saad | mark.saad at ymail.com Begin forwarded message: > From: Glen Barber > Date: October 4, 2014 at 9:32:47 PM EDT > To: freebsd-stable at FreeBSD.org > Cc: FreeBSD Release Engineering Team > Subject: FreeBSD 10.1-RC1 Now Available > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA256 > > The first RC build of the 10.1-RELEASE release cycle is now available > on the FTP servers for the amd64, armv6, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64 > and sparc64 architectures. > > The image checksums follow at the end of this email. > > Installer images and memory stick images are available here: > > ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/ISO-IMAGES/10.1/ > > If you notice problems you can report them through the Bugzilla PR > system or on the -stable mailing list. > > If you would like to use SVN to do a source based update of an existing > system, use the "releng/10.1" branch. > > A list of changes since 10.0-RELEASE are available here: > > https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/relnotes.html > > Important note to ZFS users on the i386 architecture: A regression has > been discovered that affects multi-disk (mirror, raidz-1, raidz-2, etc.) > installations that may cause a kernel panic on boot. If using > a multi-disk ZFS setup, adding 'options KSTACK_PAGES=4' is suspected to > resolve the problem. Please *do* *not* upgrade your system with > freebsd-update(8) if using a multi-disk ZFS setup, since this will > override the kernel configuration with the GENERIC kernel. > > Some of the changes between 10.1-BETA3 and 10.1-RC1 include: > > o A bug that would cause all processes to appear to have the parent > PID of '1' has been fixed. > > o Various updates to bsdinstall(8) and bsdconfig(8). > > o The Hyper-V KVP (key-value pair) driver has been added, and > enabled by default on amd64 and i386 architectures. > > Pre-installed virtual machine images for 10.1-RC1 are also available > for amd64 and i386 architectures. > > The images are located here: > > ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/VM-IMAGES/10.1-RC1/ > > The disk images are available in QCOW2, VHD, VMDK, and raw disk image > formats. The image download size is approximately 135 MB, which > decompress to a 20GB sparse image. > > The partition layout is: > > . 512k - freebsd-boot GPT partition type (bootfs GPT label) > . 1GB - freebsd-swap GPT partition type (swapfs GPT label) > . ~17GB - freebsd-ufs GPT partition type (rootfs GPT label) > > Note to consumers of the dvd1.iso image: The packages included on the > dvd will not be recognized by bsdconfig(8), and the cause is being > investigated. The packages, however, can be installed manually. > > To install packages from the dvd1.iso installer, create and mount the > /dist directory: > > # mkdir -p /dist > # mount -t cd9660 /dev/cd0 /dist > > Next, install pkg(8) from the DVD: > > # env REPOS_DIR=/dist/packages/repos \ > pkg bootstrap > > At this point, pkg-install(8) can be used to install additional packages > from the DVD. Please note, the REPOS_DIR environment variable should be > used each time using the DVD as the package repository, otherwise > conflicts with packages from the upstream mirrors may occur when they > are fetched. For example, to install Gnome and Xorg, run: > > # env REPOS_DIR=/dist/packages/repos \ > pkg install xorg-server xorg gnome2 [...] > > The freebsd-update(8) utility supports binary upgrades of amd64 and i386 > systems running earlier FreeBSD releases. Systems running earlier > FreeBSD releases can upgrade as follows: > > # freebsd-update upgrade -r 10.1-RC1 > > During this process, freebsd-update(8) may ask the user to help by > merging some configuration files or by confirming that the automatically > performed merging was done correctly. > > # freebsd-update install > > The system must be rebooted with the newly installed kernel before > continuing. > > # shutdown -r now > > After rebooting, freebsd-update needs to be run again to install the new > userland components: > > # freebsd-update install > > It is recommended to rebuild and install all applications if possible, > especially if upgrading from an earlier FreeBSD release, for example, > FreeBSD 8.x. Alternatively, the user can install misc/compat9x and > other compatibility libraries, afterwards the system must be rebooted > into the new userland: > > # shutdown -r now > > Finally, after rebooting, freebsd-update needs to be run again to remove > stale files: > > # freebsd-update install > > == ISO CHECKSUMS == > > o 10.1-RC1 amd64 GENERIC: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-bootonly.iso) = 2eed2af8fb933383da64c3c5467815f115e71233514fee50e31f98134e9e23e1 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 6f59a7b0559825ee23baf2bc8db0743baff2d8c300361a6977bb0786dbad6e7c > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-disc1.iso) = ca81416dfe24ba79b902bdf4fbb904e7ab8490f14cd32a4a6ccd87f51d9d9578 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-disc1.iso.xz) = 29da4a6aef2cf316ad93a87f1ecbb148de80f648fdb71f6efd5009cf938d81d2 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-dvd1.iso) = ecec9e2d8051cf97fd428c639fc3851401383582e083fc0664920626d4fc5e97 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-dvd1.iso.xz) = edc578241162f8015e657b46e93bfbe99d73fd533da56508bed2f5185cd643f5 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-memstick.img) = b046148a4c9377c7709da76eaddbe87128ab1c99fcf1dfd46bb4d5216a3053be > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-memstick.img.xz) = c1b76f936c6c547126f6e142c510fdb594f2c7d53ddd1d14b4fe710e0cd4cf2e > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-mini-memstick.img) = e1ac432fb1bbe4029038d25853e38590bb7c43eae0e772159d4ecdd373d63d90 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 35a98206f82d1eddcb5a1be029b2ac37af5783de94812ae4165a1492ec871c6f > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-bootonly.iso) = 2180d1f8a12e2a556114a03d7fceea87d259c184f1bdd4bf235e09be15aa7943 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-bootonly.iso.xz) = 126fd529a5ed5605327ec47da912c25d7293c7e058672610e63f500169d492e0 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-disc1.iso) = 391a605bcfd46e2430db52021438aee439f6b26528299cfae6132d6c363f94e2 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-disc1.iso.xz) = c182dbcf9c0a7c53d696804ef9bc32ade8456479e5a03c6aaeeb9ff1cfef7aa2 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-dvd1.iso) = 02d9bb96ffa2afe24d1ffa44d01e69bd5178b1c3976c35c0d3bdc38479729f7e > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-dvd1.iso.xz) = 7b42038b09db5a7297c496de985e07443f329f9e51301b437a9440d582479009 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-memstick.img) = 94c5de6d49ae270e7c1ee9808771821b62af6438f884425cded9ccbb5844b671 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-memstick.img.xz) = e46efd9571de7a0e507a6fa5ebd7109d62b13df548e8a3e5bb84e21d88a47ad1 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-mini-memstick.img) = c37fb85f285d5c6a3905ce86b6921a96e17b6d23daac498bc75e2233ae7d93e6 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 492a446c1b44860893c5bcd8511b4ab47fb86b0ef0046fe3917cc0dc46713387 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-bootonly.iso) = 3cec3641157b62e4834adaa77aa65b21 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 6f7aad84c2b9549d4bd1a47fea6572a4 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-disc1.iso) = 694b7415a0ec11b34374f51682358fed > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-disc1.iso.xz) = a6489119f0fb3bdca246c85a72fc00be > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-dvd1.iso) = 20f4ca51e63f85703ca918a44439e4af > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-dvd1.iso.xz) = 0f14b016d32395ba6b5ad778449cf370 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-memstick.img) = ea31857ad3ef7ac0524ea5dfb29ea494 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-memstick.img.xz) = 3ea3514fdb8ef77532e9a3f46f946e75 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-mini-memstick.img) = e28e55a49352442773ff3c7421fc6544 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 31ed3a59ceb30469c727681e791ac611 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-bootonly.iso) = 84fde2d9f4a0f356c774272994e76651 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-bootonly.iso.xz) = 3cec1cc74cfe3f59319d4bc8730b9e3b > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-disc1.iso) = 7708a54beaafe6c7430926b0bc39c123 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-disc1.iso.xz) = dd5ca2c9a165542674fe4e44c7c67f8a > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-dvd1.iso) = 6044cef9da5ec926538135fb962d76f7 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-dvd1.iso.xz) = d569a12ef599a289134588135390c32a > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-memstick.img) = c6e16065cc337dd403c7ebc9a0f781c8 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-memstick.img.xz) = 657b1bf49c55fc72be46e31ff42048bd > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-mini-memstick.img) = b2157141a3704cbdc7c0bb1330d37303 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64-uefi-mini-memstick.img.xz) = a6326bbac68159a06b84ef519c7d6676 > > > o 10.1-RC1 i386 GENERIC: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-bootonly.iso) = d9e44dc052e52d6578beecd8cd511defbfa6e8d672cc0109450861e29c2f3aba > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-bootonly.iso.xz) = 598c0d915b4ec25d92d1d2bbc8be493bb881fa1f111161aa32b67aacb0160e69 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-disc1.iso) = 492e52c43e23c3f8e62bed71658a464913201f39f0877aad9bbfd0c8fb553c97 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-disc1.iso.xz) = 6bb2657b45a74158e54016f03a7baa67216df0b8324a25213977eb84bc6635b8 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-dvd1.iso) = 6266ea4bd0ae6df75bd36338284f826d931546dabbce02d4d5b07d4c04adf34a > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-dvd1.iso.xz) = 743016edcf6e6b08495dd8ca088b1a1a4903b80461972bab162d648fb3af5e56 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-memstick.img) = e03846abbec5c64cfb6ea8f2c16d9622652725ce787f23ba32a9e5400d053a93 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-memstick.img.xz) = 1b0ef91cbeb799396140fa9e8b82820f103dda668df6b0a03be20e5430ccc906 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-mini-memstick.img) = 9c59fdcd07f9ab4fa3ee527d18ed8c65ea4527e029bc71b454a034da9826f3cc > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 1c4ffbdc1353d279ba06da8797f6119a1e9f8ca8470e94f1a05d614930042544 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-bootonly.iso) = 45b48b7f831388d733d8969e9d6852c6 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-bootonly.iso.xz) = 654a9fec528a83b9e012672660bf51ff > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-disc1.iso) = bf8197b99cd1b56d5a325fc449bb5442 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-disc1.iso.xz) = a3eac0c4eca9cad3c5527852db28784e > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-dvd1.iso) = 8c7f687a3d23866d34f7fe723cbbc50e > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-dvd1.iso.xz) = 9120a2d5a9c3c792bec855cfe76f5fe0 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-memstick.img) = 1e7618b61e06155c7c7585bb360d7ffe > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-memstick.img.xz) = 8c713265a46635caa12dfd2949faf262 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-mini-memstick.img) = 8d4fbee73e663b39dd770ce8eb7114fe > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386-mini-memstick.img.xz) = e40f07023af3bb714dcc7b7b663491b5 > > > o 10.1-RC1 ia64 GENERIC: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-bootonly.iso) = 9785f71de0a5585eec0edad92aae97422deecc654f7786558bdc240351f65cf8 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 27ea04173bd49718abc124a282cee6bcb6713c39f98bd3905435f5b71a1a2304 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-disc1.iso) = fe4be1e6d704d429865aa177a5bb2db309d670b8c5b5bd26583edfee7ad56d1f > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-disc1.iso.xz) = 34a06438036b69c388706c553041080be4210a1923924dbf4604aaccae621bb9 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-memstick.img) = 789a6daabb5a8f0916267adcfb1f12584961dbf1dc2c8ebbc99ee5b47851a1b4 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-memstick.img.xz) = 99fb6018d3e51ecb382965c67ada6d9b77bf4ae54ddd7602b2c7b853fb17b555 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-mini-memstick.img) = 725964963a295ceae8dbe50c58346357837a045af2debf27c358accb35787266 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 66e06a357324a212e707bd12096ba2df438e905326a8cbe2997e7f1f830642fd > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-bootonly.iso) = a4e5f48b9a72483f752757f4762c2d8d > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-bootonly.iso.xz) = ec7d0edb555f1124167bbc3c091ebfc3 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-disc1.iso) = bebd00ee4de432d28936f12063631b0a > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-disc1.iso.xz) = 395420fbbe57f1a39a01a36ea050ab58 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-memstick.img) = 9356570876ba1897e4fba7cabe2c76c4 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-memstick.img.xz) = 9e8e687862ef2820353abb0134580813 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-mini-memstick.img) = 2815c790cee3c08936cfc5bcca9a968f > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-ia64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = e072378ba20a23c6e72357e793e225d1 > > > o 10.1-RC1 powerpc GENERIC: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-bootonly.iso) = 1e1786dd3733486e8f69d7e7a61bc4658a25a47d4278df8be9a917dde3d642b3 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-bootonly.iso.xz) = 3e33508d5ca8bcdfeff337ea9926bd6df4e4b127b190a644875acfb16af16d00 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-disc1.iso) = 10fd31c20fe946fac07f595acdee85ba9e37c9cf94c06c7f59f70cadc79fb2f6 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-disc1.iso.xz) = 25433ce14a0ca8e14b0f46d43ea1a702e8c9275acac33eb8203906b75f864124 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-memstick.img) = 0fc4953714413d2afddf6a99c93caff9ba7d17e9a1ed8505c7748ccdf8ca1f68 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-memstick.img.xz) = 7093e321ed22396e9051e971780a45dae38c4b1aad01635865321f591f8087f4 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-mini-memstick.img) = daa0fd2a3dc65dbf397982bef2a05dcf4cf9e84855042de9772c6a7ec429faf7 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-mini-memstick.img.xz) = b58dec5803eeec12453627f4834b37161fffd07677b4ca29c32981b7d34baa89 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-bootonly.iso) = 34e46cb239a12d23cdf33a256a1129f2 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-bootonly.iso.xz) = 5142053b6e142479ab1f9a8171cb562f > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-disc1.iso) = 6068393764c9187567a29c982f3170b2 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-disc1.iso.xz) = 9bc027f4844f4b81172463f110bee62c > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-memstick.img) = 94e8fb911bd1e518aaeb5a7aeeff1590 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-memstick.img.xz) = ba5073172bd89424b69e8f35b4291beb > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-mini-memstick.img) = 60b33d70f8140c6c27bb2d0940b51359 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 52e59a5d8ce84d3a41e3bf12d3369cd8 > > > o 10.1-RC1 powerpc64 GENERIC64: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso) = 29ab39b0314f82a6047a95b46ea27422cd28b6f56b274c088f7ebfdb1b780d9b > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 5c68b307f7b007f4e4c932997b71350fb9836647fe7e8e93a572d8ef1efefaad > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso) = 49586a342a41c6694e6f891f61b3901e0aea5e1c516609a5e9a0782a7d1f52de > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso.xz) = 2d62cec427ebdb44dd46bd162a94e34175377bd48bb8012a940da2461ed5e3cb > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img) = 1acd0f035c9314211606b56565d7806923e128d8df018ba55a5ce377c6eb7dbc > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img.xz) = 089e3c541ac97d4f948b3bcb8e706aedb54dde07f91e4a02db0f9326e59b82ba > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img) = 13846c3b8d07d2c72443e6bdc84facb6afc77bf7f20bee7738bfb26c5394f1e6 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = e613d64b85dd07f6773adff779825d7b3eb08c4b6000e2676b077f8624c292fc > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso) = ca61b198ed5fe1170f17e94c072785fb > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 9c4e9e44afac2b049b6cdc3ba9f3b3f2 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso) = d0696be2ccc47075214698ca47318874 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso.xz) = 640967e8d5ee583ee84cf90eeece4f2e > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img) = b7df8e38962aaec5dbbab99d9494ec0a > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img.xz) = 9a74ae8f85339656db55e8b259f4b508 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img) = 578e3f8917dbdebe31f5d795ee791fe8 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = b537ef455b857f5d79281ef82ffcfe22 > > > o 10.1-RC1 sparc64 GENERIC: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-bootonly.iso) = 0303bd3a639857d36a172ec6aa24fb262928b122d3b684076d182318dd267f7b > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 25ae45d13822d78e62e8d8894076e413562c33b708b88d7daff90640f89a5890 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-disc1.iso) = c5aca888ff3976828680702831527ac097ccdfecdd3c3973205ff73167c2b16a > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-disc1.iso.xz) = fbd8e84c023d60104379e9606b499b6c5580d1967089fe41f3757068d5504aa1 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-bootonly.iso) = 1592754606077dc737c853cdf77a72fb > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = c56499efb07bb81f87a017619a71e619 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-disc1.iso) = c367d7588ab539c94b2ae65e4a24f5bb > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-sparc64-disc1.iso.xz) = 5e17b993399cbe0213c74e19ae7bae22 > > > o 10.1-RC1 armv6 BEAGLEBONE: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-BEAGLEBONE.img.bz2) = 3ba36b7cd82bb70fb8a923bf8c8e1412bb655bf9449888e548e9617fd91532f6 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-BEAGLEBONE.img.bz2) = 586631be5a4bfd9d04b135318a6c5d13 > > > o 10.1-RC1 armv6 RPI-B: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-RPI-B.img.bz2) = 39f94bca5a252034ce01e4044aa4e6150fae59dff31e3aed9faeddba1799ee86 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-RPI-B.img.bz2) = 672aa1b356ede1d9e6f07f9cf7d4290d > > > o 10.1-RC1 armv6 PANDABOARD: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-PANDABOARD.img.bz2) = ac27999b27c4fb7622e5e71275daf9ae7052b056dada256abc535221aa13c027 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-PANDABOARD.img.bz2) = 43e2f4508ae30ae7dfcf5bd6e8082d71 > > > o 10.1-RC1 armv6 ZEDBOARD: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-ZEDBOARD.img.bz2) = b15d353053324a194326725f66d19c3d290985baafc548ce1891a971c2144183 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-arm-armv6-ZEDBOARD.img.bz2) = e82b8265728bd11f72176dba225598a3 > > > == VM IMAGE CHECKSUMS == > > o 10.1-RC1 amd64: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.qcow2.xz) = 8ea0d81112a75d5c4d4af51ec7ba9bf5a008006eded524d1699e6c8e6f4e6751 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.raw.xz) = a10e8004011193c33b3cc79d80c8a4c301ba0828930b4f341a27373ca1e4511c > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.vhd.xz) = f512502858cbfad678211a51bfa852a4ee6ca2711936df9296b1222152448be8 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.vmdk.xz) = b77f94f17f59ae6db96b45dd17affa3f35d7b8a9374caab27a915611205b2626 > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.qcow2.xz) = 7310e1511144dd77f215eecd04409bf2 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.raw.xz) = 0bcdf88b14c344822be7a21c9d5a17a0 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.vhd.xz) = 23d81fdac993a67ef9c19fd5a4d3fb5d > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-amd64.vmdk.xz) = e8114d0fa97c60605c112bc160b3329b > > > o 10.1-RC1 i386: > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.qcow2.xz) = 4f645fac9c9527cedaa100a25de241eeb11286c98fce2cde1207c989385248d9 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.raw.xz) = 4c9cb5f96ea365259aeb594d818710a1d48e3657e21ccec760e09c5e651cd106 > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.vhd.xz) = 2433c477fdbbe9539b1e1202e2c0b7c4eb23d0cba6d06040897dee6ac97500ba > SHA256 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.vmdk.xz) = 390a7f9f7b04b73ad7adc1149c7a3c308c3994561e7d90153b5b2279c11ef39c > > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.qcow2.xz) = f17404b10f8f6808b043999264e655ed > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.raw.xz) = abb0c06cab05988d853bbfdba29d71a6 > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.vhd.xz) = 834bb33663e5673df3da1b4858a0d6cf > MD5 (FreeBSD-10.1-RC1-i386.vmdk.xz) = 8b735084edb779d731a3030d6c35bd55 > > > Glen > Love FreeBSD? Support this and future releases with a donation to > the FreeBSD Foundation! https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/donate/ > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v2 > > iQIcBAEBCAAGBQJUMJ+/AAoJEAMUWKVHj+KTcxoP/Ay7ic5d+W85ouvze5vsdhp5 > f0HqYAu7wWIPi/v1KNh9WYhkgXYk6T9ZJ6BOV0ao2bouQJeDHeaA7qs2RgDI3SsV > t6zqYDYk+Ix+RCp7yJT26yuR5sHtnY2V8optTMRjS2rm7S9JZOwrItkxSXTzONta > CTjU79NPSdpBsvLJCm8dmtkCv76oizXSbD8/Zykc4SDDX/RdJgYCEOpOpIxMZdHq > JFt4V2r7sIZHwZfsxmUtkfVdsfjD4TPbc4NSC+SHBAnI9cK1EiwpmaVhZcxVuv8C > SOd7Pa7M18S7WtKhIxebVnAEuPsvh83XQSdbe9f54CCzT0HNmk3ftvWsABKDR0m9 > gMSJUbIe4spc/ABEDBwLwow02XLa4MFHZhqKrI3jegzWj5i2hMDKNBRNmV+uL9rJ > XnPJpuZG86AA3g26zr+4WMTkDsVSEROnF5jdW/umvVC72F5S1vAGB0LMBWWFvldO > h6SSYGdHe+AdBRai9Xlu3jbs+2oLgDhndLckbjYXteKZTtE9NDfh/uMzySlTjVek > TlcFRNEnTAaggGUd3minGBc6z6FLLFcULE9q2DBiYamgfxsjvROyExyDbLTY9lt3 > G15ITpo9Cx6T50nV8oRsOhzcKCW6zbtqu/BCQMiFV8XAaiH4Cz4ofCRHwOzTaNsj > vA1rnkV5vXKmJuincFaW > =rb+f > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-stable at freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscribe at freebsd.org" -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From george at ceetonetechnology.com Mon Oct 6 19:52:42 2014 From: george at ceetonetechnology.com (George Rosamond) Date: Mon, 06 Oct 2014 19:52:42 -0400 Subject: [talk] BeagleBone on armv7/OpenBSD snapshot Message-ID: <54332B4A.8080002@ceetonetechnology.com> Looks like pkgs for arm are propagating, including slowly onto our mirrors.nycbug.org. This is using another mirror: $ sudo pkg_add -r wget quirks-2.9 signed on 2014-10-06T11:37:56Z quirks-1.113->2.9: ok wget-1.15:libiconv-1.14p1: ok Fatal error: Ustar [http://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/packages/arm/gettext-0.19.1p0.tgz][share/doc/gettext/gettext_11.html]: Premature end of archive Adjusting sha for /usr/local/share/doc/gettext/pkg.jLX9KZGcHO from ClPV+QFd7G/WmvIy9IVjWHchWtMAaKveFT30cEOMDpQ= to 47DEQpj8HBSa+/TImW+5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU= Read shared items: ok Fatal error: Installation of gettext-0.19.1p0 failed, partial installation recorded as partial-gettext-0.19.1p0 at /usr/libdata/perl5/OpenBSD/PkgAdd.pm line 821. Good stuff. No really. :) g From george at ceetonetechnology.com Thu Oct 9 09:21:04 2014 From: george at ceetonetechnology.com (George Rosamond) Date: Thu, 09 Oct 2014 09:21:04 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity Message-ID: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. Someone had mentioned Cogent. Over $1k for a 10mb connection. Anybody try Megapath (who soaked up the remnants of Speakeasy)? They push their ethernet (symmetric and asymemtric) and seem to hide their *DSL services. g From alq at datadoghq.com Thu Oct 9 10:51:23 2014 From: alq at datadoghq.com (=?UTF-8?B?QWxleGlzIEzDqi1RdcO0Yw==?=) Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2014 10:51:23 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 9:21 AM, George Rosamond < george at ceetonetechnology.com> wrote: > I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the > latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. > > Someone had mentioned Cogent. Over $1k for a 10mb connection. > > Anybody try Megapath (who soaked up the remnants of Speakeasy)? > > They push their ethernet (symmetric and asymemtric) and seem to hide > their *DSL services. > > g > ?We use 2 FIOS at 150Mb/s, and a cable provider backup all going into a soekris/pfsense box. All for < $1?k/month. We don't host any servers on-premise so we don't care about uplink. Latency and throughput are definitely acceptable for software development and general office use (even during the world cup). -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From henry95 at gmail.com Thu Oct 9 11:51:13 2014 From: henry95 at gmail.com (Henry Mendez) Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2014 11:51:13 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 9:21 AM, George Rosamond < george at ceetonetechnology.com> wrote: > I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the > latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. > > Someone had mentioned Cogent. Over $1k for a 10mb connection. > > Anybody try Megapath (who soaked up the remnants of Speakeasy)? > We have Megapath DSL as a Backup link for the office. They are 'OK'. Just make sure you are close to one of their Central Offices or else you won't be able to get decent speeds from them. Verify the distance before you order because they won't unless you ask. Their tech reps also aren't very helpful (Are any though?). > > They push their ethernet (symmetric and asymemtric) and seem to hide > their *DSL services. > > g > _______________________________________________ > talk mailing list > talk at lists.nycbug.org > http://lists.nycbug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From george at ceetonetechnology.com Thu Oct 9 11:56:45 2014 From: george at ceetonetechnology.com (George Rosamond) Date: Thu, 09 Oct 2014 11:56:45 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: <5436B03D.2080504@ceetonetechnology.com> Henry Mendez wrote: > On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 9:21 AM, George Rosamond < > george at ceetonetechnology.com> wrote: > >> I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the >> latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. >> >> Someone had mentioned Cogent. Over $1k for a 10mb connection. >> >> Anybody try Megapath (who soaked up the remnants of Speakeasy)? >> > > We have Megapath DSL as a Backup link for the office. They are 'OK'. Just > make sure you are close to one of their Central Offices or else you won't > be able to get decent speeds from them. Verify the distance before you > order because they won't unless you ask. Their tech reps also aren't very > helpful (Are any though?). Useful input here. To the first response, they can't get Vze Fios. You know, it's in the one of those remote places called midtown manhattan. Apparently it was just settled by the Anglos. The rep wouldn't even discuss DSL, saying essentially it was junk. But I assume ethernet also terminates in the CO, but what do you mean by "close" since relatively speaking, everything is pretty 'close' in Manhattan. Could you be more specific? g From spork at bway.net Thu Oct 9 13:59:32 2014 From: spork at bway.net (Charles Sprickman) Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2014 13:59:32 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: <5436B03D.2080504@ceetonetechnology.com> References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> <5436B03D.2080504@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: On Oct 9, 2014, at 11:56 AM, George Rosamond wrote: > Henry Mendez wrote: >> On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 9:21 AM, George Rosamond < >> george at ceetonetechnology.com> wrote: >> >>> I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the >>> latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. >>> >>> Someone had mentioned Cogent. Over $1k for a 10mb connection. >>> >>> Anybody try Megapath (who soaked up the remnants of Speakeasy)? >>> >> >> We have Megapath DSL as a Backup link for the office. They are 'OK'. Just >> make sure you are close to one of their Central Offices or else you won't >> be able to get decent speeds from them. Verify the distance before you >> order because they won't unless you ask. Their tech reps also aren't very >> helpful (Are any though?). > > Useful input here. > > To the first response, they can't get Vze Fios. You know, it's in the > one of those remote places called midtown manhattan. Apparently it was > just settled by the Anglos. > > The rep wouldn't even discuss DSL, saying essentially it was junk. Verizon?s DSL as best I can tell, is still running on the same DSLAMs installed when they first rolled it out, so it?s plain old ADSL1 - not 2, not 2+, not any VDSL variation, so you?re stuck at a max of 7Mb/s down and maybe 384K up. Hey, maybe you can get a bunch of ISDN BRIs and bond them though! Dig up some of those old Ascend Pipeline 400?s. :) > But I assume ethernet also terminates in the CO, but what do you mean by > "close" since relatively speaking, everything is pretty 'close' in > Manhattan. Could you be more specific? Bway.net is on-net with Megapath (not formerly speakeasy per-se, but formerly Covad) and we have the full portfolio - ADSL, ADSL2+, bonded ADSL2+, EoC, etc. EoC is still DSL basically, but it?s a symmetric product and they use what seems to be really nice (and expensive) Adtran EOC equipment. I think it maxes out around 8 loops or so. The EoC reach is pretty good, the real problem in NYC is copper availability - sometimes getting more than 2 copper loops is challenging. The ADSL products you really want to be under 4K? or so, which can be difficult as the copper seems to take some fairly circuitous routes. As for Megapath?s technical prowess and support availability, that?s why most of Bway?s customers are customers - we manage dealing with Megapath so you don?t have to. Our phone guys give honest answers about repair times and the like and understand the install/repair process well. We also have resources inside Megapath that a retail customer does not have. And our list of metro-ethernet partners continues to grow, so we can do non-Verizon dependent service in most non-residential NYC buildings at this point. The metro-e product is obviously more pricey since it is an actual ?business grade? connection. On everything we offer we provide everything you?d expect from a smaller shop - no crazy phone queue when you call, one-off special requests for pretty much anything, IPv6 on most products, static IP on everything, IP blocks at a reasonable price, etc. We?re also always looking for building partners - if the build out cost for metro-e in your building is significant and you can round up a few other customers in the building we can really wheel and deal with you. /advertisement Apologies for the ad, but you did ask, and most people are completely unaware that small ISPs still exist in NYC. Oh, we also don?t sell your browsing info, hand over info without warrants, or participate in any of the ?six strike? programs. We only harass you if you?ve got some poor rooted box making trouble on the interwebs for other people. Charles > > g > > _______________________________________________ > talk mailing list > talk at lists.nycbug.org > http://lists.nycbug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk From henry95 at gmail.com Thu Oct 9 22:17:27 2014 From: henry95 at gmail.com (Henry Mendez) Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2014 22:17:27 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: <5436B03D.2080504@ceetonetechnology.com> References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> <5436B03D.2080504@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 11:56 AM, George Rosamond < george at ceetonetechnology.com> wrote: > Henry Mendez wrote: > > On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 9:21 AM, George Rosamond < > > george at ceetonetechnology.com> wrote: > > > >> I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the > >> latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. > >> > >> Someone had mentioned Cogent. Over $1k for a 10mb connection. > >> > >> Anybody try Megapath (who soaked up the remnants of Speakeasy)? > >> > > > > We have Megapath DSL as a Backup link for the office. They are 'OK'. Just > > make sure you are close to one of their Central Offices or else you won't > > be able to get decent speeds from them. Verify the distance before you > > order because they won't unless you ask. Their tech reps also aren't very > > helpful (Are any though?). > > Useful input here. > > To the first response, they can't get Vze Fios. You know, it's in the > one of those remote places called midtown manhattan. Apparently it was > just settled by the Anglos. > > The rep wouldn't even discuss DSL, saying essentially it was junk. > > But I assume ethernet also terminates in the CO, but what do you mean by > "close" since relatively speaking, everything is pretty 'close' in > Manhattan. Could you be more specific? > > Our office was 2800 meters away from the CO, and they recommended at maximum 2500 for DSL speeds above 10Mb. We ordered 25Mb, so it was a bit of a surprise when we were never able to reach the speeds on the contract. After many calls to them about latency they eventually sent someone over to check what was up. Since the modem kept trying to force 25Mb but it couldn't, it caused packet loss. The solution was to change the contract to 10Mb. > g > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sjt.kar at gmail.com Fri Oct 10 10:29:22 2014 From: sjt.kar at gmail.com (Sujit K M) Date: Fri, 10 Oct 2014 19:59:22 +0530 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 6:51 PM, George Rosamond wrote: > I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the > latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. The other thing that comes up my mind is low latency requirements for financial such institutions. Depends on your business. I am sure you will find a lot of hierarchy of providers. -- -- Sujit K M blog(http://kmsujit.blogspot.com/) From brian.gupta at gmail.com Sat Oct 11 20:55:27 2014 From: brian.gupta at gmail.com (Brian Gupta) Date: Sat, 11 Oct 2014 20:55:27 -0400 Subject: [talk] Manhattan office connectivity In-Reply-To: References: <54368BC0.1090408@ceetonetechnology.com> Message-ID: On Fri, Oct 10, 2014 at 10:29 AM, Sujit K M wrote: > On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 6:51 PM, George Rosamond > wrote: >> I raised this a while back, but I'm wondering about alternatives to the >> latency ridden world of business cable providers for SMBs. Not sure what you are looking for but Sidera Networks (formerly "Metro Optical networks" are pretty competitive if you need 100 mbit+ speeds. They can give you a gigabit ethernet handoff and can give you fractional handoff. (There are owned by RCN), but it's certainly not cable modems. (Ethernet Sonet, DWM, Dark fiber, etc.) -Brian From george at ceetonetechnology.com Wed Oct 22 22:30:22 2014 From: george at ceetonetechnology.com (George Rosamond) Date: Wed, 22 Oct 2014 22:30:22 -0400 Subject: [talk] meeting space Message-ID: <5448683E.1060308@ceetonetechnology.com> We tentatively has space sorted out for the November and December meetings. Note that the December meeting will be focused on the new edition of the Design and Implementation of FreeBSD with GNN himself. We'll likely have food and/or drinks covered. Yes, and December will also include the city-wide holiday party again. However, we need to find something for January on. The type of spot we have been searching for is a separate room at a restaurant or bar. We have focused on downtown since it tends to be an area that quiets down after 7 pm, and is convenient for a lot of people. Yes, we miss Suspenders more than ever. We hit some spots on Stone Street, but the search needs to widen. We have pinged the list before about this, but please send some ideas, recommendations, whatever. A semi-secluded private room would be awesome. Decent food and drink is of course ideal. I know that the number of people on this list with 'bar familiarity' is large... please extend your antennae and do your part. g