#opendoas — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #opendoas, aggregated by home.social.
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One would have to touch the #FreeBSD kernel to get the full #OpenBSD functionality.
OpenBSD provides doas with a way to persist, by storing data in the session structure associated with the controlling terminal. FreeBSD would need to have that added.
The OpenDOAS fork (in FreeBSD ports) uses the more problematic flag files, per sudo, that OpenBSD was trying to get away from. So one must avoid starting from that instead of the original, moreover.
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One would have to touch the #FreeBSD kernel to get the full #OpenBSD functionality.
OpenBSD provides doas with a way to persist, by storing data in the session structure associated with the controlling terminal. FreeBSD would need to have that added.
The OpenDOAS fork (in FreeBSD ports) uses the more problematic flag files, per sudo, that OpenBSD was trying to get away from. So one must avoid starting from that instead of the original, moreover.
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One would have to touch the #FreeBSD kernel to get the full #OpenBSD functionality.
OpenBSD provides doas with a way to persist, by storing data in the session structure associated with the controlling terminal. FreeBSD would need to have that added.
The OpenDOAS fork (in FreeBSD ports) uses the more problematic flag files, per sudo, that OpenBSD was trying to get away from. So one must avoid starting from that instead of the original, moreover.
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One would have to touch the #FreeBSD kernel to get the full #OpenBSD functionality.
OpenBSD provides doas with a way to persist, by storing data in the session structure associated with the controlling terminal. FreeBSD would need to have that added.
The OpenDOAS fork (in FreeBSD ports) uses the more problematic flag files, per sudo, that OpenBSD was trying to get away from. So one must avoid starting from that instead of the original, moreover.
-
One would have to touch the #FreeBSD kernel to get the full #OpenBSD functionality.
OpenBSD provides doas with a way to persist, by storing data in the session structure associated with the controlling terminal. FreeBSD would need to have that added.
The OpenDOAS fork (in FreeBSD ports) uses the more problematic flag files, per sudo, that OpenBSD was trying to get away from. So one must avoid starting from that instead of the original, moreover.