Non @OpenBSD.org Mailing Lists You can find a
Non @OpenBSD.org Mailing Lists You can find a fairly complete list of all OpenBSD-related mailing lists hosted by third parties at http://www.OpenBSD.org/mail.html. This includes a variety of lists in languages other than English, as well as some very narrow, special-purpose lists. One particular mailing list I highly recommend for less experienced UNIX administrators is the OpenBSD Newbies list. To subscribe, send a message to < openbsd-newbies-subscribe@sfobug.org>. Using the Mailing Lists Now that you have a subscription to an appropriate OpenBSD mailing list (hopefully misc, and definitely security-announce), you can go and ask all your questions on that mailing list. You won’t make any friends, though, and you may even be told to shut up and go away. That’s mainly for two reasons: discussion topics are permitted only within a narrow range, and the lists are there to be read and not posted to. Unless you’re in a truly unique situation or really on the bleeding edge of OpenBSD development, someone has probably struggled with your problem before. They’ve probably posted a message to the mailing lists before. They probably got an answer. That answer probably hasn’t changed. The quickest way to get an answer to your question is to find that previous message. That’s where the mailing list archives come in. You can find a variety of mailing list archives on the Net at places such as Geocrawler ( http://www.geocrawler.com/). By far, the easiest way to get access to the mailing list archives is to use a powerful search engine such as Google. Carefully choosing your search terms will get results very quickly. Page 29
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