05:01:43 [illumos-gate] 17668 add more functions to ddi.mapfile -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:44 [illumos-gate] 17670 Kernel GPIO Framework -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:44 [illumos-gate] 17659 I2C and SMBus Framework -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:44 [illumos-gate] 17660 Intel SMBus Controller Drivers -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:44 [illumos-gate] 17661 TS511x DDR5 I2C temperature sensor driver -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:44 [illumos-gate] 17664 EEPROM Driver Framework -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:44 [illumos-gate] 17671 LTC4305/6 I2C Mux/GPIO Driver -- Robert Mustacchi 05:01:45 [illumos-gate] 17769 Want i2c test suite -- Robert Mustacchi 05:26:39 hi 16:53:55 [illumos-gate] 17771 NVMe devices can have only one I/O queue -- Andy Fiddaman 20:06:45 FYI, for those who ship net-snmp: https://github.com/net-snmp/net-snmp/security/advisories/GHSA-4389-rwqf-q9gq 20:13:58 wow, nostalgia 20:14:16 can I get a bind vulnerability, and a tab clear? 20:16:56 https://kb.isc.org/docs/aa-00913 has 6 CVEs for bind in 2025, and 157 prior to that, so there's plenty to choose from 20:16:59 sendmail VOTW ! 20:38:18 if you need to awaken truly ancient memories, https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2025-68920 is "C-Kermit (aka ckermit) through 10.0 Beta.12 (aka 416-beta12) before 244644d allows a remote Kermit system to overwrite files on the local system, or retrieve arbitrary files from the local system." 20:38:59 though I used zmodem more than c-kermit myself, back in the days I had a modem and not yet SLIP or PPP 20:48:42 yeah, I can't remember what kermit client I tried at the time, but i don't think i could ever get it working right, so i stuck with ymodem (until zmodem was available) at 2400 baud :P 20:49:06 though i've been told kermit would pretty much work over any kind of link you can think of 20:49:46 while the others weren't always as guarnteed (though I think for modems on home PCs connecting to BBSes, they all worked fine) 21:31:23 alanc: wow 21:31:50 I think the last I used kermit was to get an unlikely modern protocol onto somethig weird 21:31:57 maybe a nextstation? 21:32:30 I don't even know what kermit is 21:32:53 rzezeski: I mentioned yesterday that I think you had played with zig, was I right? 21:33:05 just in case anyone emails you, if I was wrong, that's totally my fault :) 21:33:36 richlowe: yes, I have been keeping zig alive in omnios-extra, but I've had no time to develop/improve our support over the last few months 21:34:05 this is what happens when one actually gets a real job again, ENOTIME 21:34:36 totally understandable, I just saw people talking about it and vaguely remembered your interest. 21:35:39 yep, thanks for the heads up 22:06:04 kermit let you transfer files over a serial terminal connection without having any sort of TCP/UDP/IP layering, just terminal control characters 22:07:06 things we used when modems just emulated a serial connection, not a network connection 22:23:29 it later grew to support literally everything 22:24:52 from kermitproject.org: In Unix, C-Kermit can be thought of as a user-friendly and powerful alternative to cu, tip, minicom, uucp, ftp, ftpd, telnet, ktelnet, rlogin, ssh, find, grep, iconv, recode, expect, wget, sendpage, bc, and to some extent even Lisp, your shell, and/or Perl; 22:25:21 sounds terrible 22:28:44 uugh uucp 22:28:55 at my first job, we had a few uucp customers 22:29:12 our uucp still has lingering support for datakit 22:29:33 i've not looked at it in decades, but 'hack on hack' is what comes to mind 22:29:36 which I think was circuit switched? 22:29:53 because bell's investment in circuit switching, I guess 22:30:02 maybe dan or bill have the ancient memories 22:44:33 Please remind me of this later? I need to read all of the above, but I have to finish this upstream merge before dinnertime US/Eastern.