Annotation of www/mail.html, Revision 1.125
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1.25 deraadt 16: <p>
1.66 nick 17: <h1><font color="#e00000">Mailing Lists</font></h1>
1.57 horacio 18: <hr>
1.7 downsj 19:
1.66 nick 20: Mailing lists are an important means of communication among users and
1.121 tedu 21: developers of OpenBSD. With the exception of <b>announce</b>,
22: the lists are not moderated. We deliberately
1.66 nick 23: restrict the number of different mailing lists.
24: This helps reduce the amount of cross-posting and makes sure that the
25: information gets distributed to a wide audience.
26:
1.28 louis 27: <p>
1.66 nick 28: <a name="Netiquette"></a>
29: <h2><font color="#e00000">Netiquette</font></h2>
1.28 louis 30: <p>
31: Be considerate of other subscribers on the mailing lists.
32: <dl>
1.66 nick 33: <dt><b>Plain text, 72 characters per line</b>
34: <dd>Many subscribers and developers read their mail on text-based mailers
35: (mail(1), emacs, Mutt)
1.45 millert 36: and they find HTML-formatted messages, or lines that stretch beyond 72
37: characters often unreadable.
38: Most OpenBSD mailing lists strip messages of MIME content before
39: sending them out to the rest of the list.
40: If you don't use plain text your messages will be reformatted or,
41: if they cannot be reformatted, summarily rejected.
1.66 nick 42: The only mailing list that allows attachments is the <b>ports</b> list,
1.45 millert 43: they will be removed from messages on the other mailing lists.
1.66 nick 44:
45: <dt><b>Do your homework before you post</b>
1.28 louis 46: <dd>If you have an installation question, make sure that you have read the relevant
47: documents such as the INSTALL.* text files in the FTP installation directories, the
1.57 horacio 48: <a href="faq/index.html">FAQ</a> and the relevant man pages (start with
1.66 nick 49: <a href= "http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=afterboot&sektion=8">afterboot(8)</a>),
50: and check the mailing list <a href="#Archives">archives</a>.
51: We want to help, but we wouldn't want to deprive you of a valuable
52: learning experience, and no one wants to see the same question on the
53: lists for the fifth time in a month.
54:
55: <dt><b>Include a useful Subject line</b>
1.45 millert 56: <dd>Messages with an empty Subject will get bounced to the list manager and
1.57 horacio 57: so they will take longer to show up. Including a relevant Subject in the message
1.45 millert 58: will ensure that more people actually read what you've written.
59: Also, avoid Subject lines with excessive capitalization.
1.96 jmc 60: "Help!" or "I can't get it to work!" are not useful subject lines.
1.66 nick 61: Do not change the subject line while on the same topic. YOU may know
62: what it is regarding, the rest of us who get several hundred messages a
63: day will have no idea.
64:
65: <dt><b>Trim your signature</b>
66: <dd>Keep the signature lines at the bottom of your mail to a reasonable
67: length. PGP signatures, and those automatic address cards are merely
68: annoying and are stripped out. Legal disclaimers and advisories are
69: very annoying, and inappropriate to public mailing lists.
70:
71: <dt><b>Stay on topic</b>
1.28 louis 72: <dd>Please keep the subject of the post relevant to users of OpenBSD.
1.66 nick 73:
74: <dt><b>Include important information</b>
75: <dd>Don't waste everyone's time with a hopelessly incomplete question.
76: No one other than you has the information needed to resolve your
77: problem, it is better to provide more information than needed than one
78: detail too little. Any question should include at least the
79: <a href="faq/faq5.html#Flavors">version</a> of OpenBSD (i.e.,
80: "3.2-stable", "3.3-current as of July 20, 2003"). Any hardware related
1.69 nick 81: questions should mention the platform (i.e., sparc,
1.66 nick 82: alpha, etc.), and provide a full
1.70 nick 83: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=dmesg&sektion=8">dmesg(8)</a>.
1.66 nick 84: Hardware model numbers, unfortunately, don't indicate much about the
85: actual content of a particular machine or accessory, and are useless to
86: anyone who doesn't have that exact machine sitting where they can easily
87: recognize it. The dmesg(8) tells us exactly what is IN your machine,
88: not what stickers are on the outside.
89:
90: <dt><b>Respect differences in opinion and philosophy</b>
91: <dd>Intelligent people may look at the same set of facts and come to
92: very different conclusions. Repeating the same points that didn't
93: convince someone previously rarely changes their mind and irritates all
94: the other readers.
95:
96: <dt><b>Do not cross-post or repeat post</b>
97: <dd>Posting the same message to multiple lists and/or multiple times
98: does not increase the likelihood of getting a useful response, but is
99: likely to irritate the people you want to help you. If you didn't get a
100: satisfactory response the first time you posted to an appropriate list,
101: it is usually because you provided insufficient or unclear information.
102: Don't simply repost the same message.
103:
1.28 louis 104: </dl>
1.1 deraadt 105:
1.33 millert 106: <p>
1.66 nick 107: <a name="spam"></a>
108: <h2><font color="#e00000">Spam</font></h2>
1.33 millert 109: <p>
1.66 nick 110: The OpenBSD mailing lists use
1.78 millert 111: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=spamd&sektion=8">spamd(8)</a> in greylisting mode as well as
1.66 nick 112: <a href="http://www.spamassassin.org">SpamAssassin</a> to keep down the
1.87 millert 113: spam volume but things do sneak through--deal with it.
1.66 nick 114: In addition, the list server also has regex-based rules to reject
1.87 millert 115: based on some common spam and virus telltales.
116: If you get spam through one of the OpenBSD mailing lists, you don't need to
117: send a copy to the list owner--chances are he's already seen it.
118: Also, please do <b>not</b> submit spam received through the
119: mailing lists to <a href="http://spamcop.net">spamcop</a>
120: as this will result in the list server being added to their RBL.
121: Complaining about and commenting upon spam on the list proper
122: is counter-productive as it generates more traffic than the spam itself.
123: <p>
1.77 millert 124: Note that if you are sending mail from a dynamic IP address you
125: will probably <b>not</b> be able to post to the mailing lists.
126: In this case you should use a <em>smart host</em> sendmail configuration
127: that utilizes your ISP's mail server. See the comments in
128: <tt>/usr/share/sendmail/cf/openbsd-proto.mc</tt> for how to do this.
1.66 nick 129:
130:
131: <a name="Lists"></a>
132: <h2><font color="#e00000">The Mailing Lists</font></h2>
1.33 millert 133:
1.66 nick 134: <h3>General Interest Lists</h3>
135: These lists are of interest to most users of OpenBSD.
1.1 deraadt 136: <dl>
1.66 nick 137:
138: <dt><b>misc</b>
139: <dd>User questions and answers, general questions. This is the most
140: active list. Please, <a href="faq/index.html">read the FAQ</a> and the
141: installation documents, and see <a href="report.html">How to report a
142: Problem</a> before posting.
143:
144: <dt><b>advocacy</b>
145: <dd>Promoting the use of OpenBSD. Non-technical discussions in
146: <i>misc</i> often get shunted here.
147:
148: <dt><b>announce</b>
149: <dd>Important announcements. This low volume list is excellent for
150: people who just want occasional news about the project.
151:
152: <dt><b>ports</b>
153: <dd>Discussions about using and contributing to the 'ports' source tree.
154:
155: <h3>Developer's Lists</h3>
156: These lists are for technical discussions of aspects of OpenBSD. They
157: are NOT for beginning or average users, they are not for problem
158: reporting (unless you are including a good fix), and they are not for
159: installation problems. If you have any question about if a message
160: should be posted to any of these lists, almost invariably, it should not
161: be. Use <b>misc</b>, above, instead. <b>Please</b> do not cross post
162: to multiple lists.
163:
164: <dl>
165: <dt><b>bugs</b>
1.57 horacio 166: <dd><a href="report.html">Bug reports</a> as sent in via
1.66 nick 167: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=sendbug&sektion=1">sendbug(1)</a>
1.119 nick 168: and follow-up discussions.
1.66 nick 169:
170: <dt><b>tech</b>
171: <dd>Discussion of technical topics for OpenBSD developers and advanced
172: users. This is <b>not</b> a "tech support" forum, do not use it as
173: such.
1.86 nick 174: OpenBSD developers will often make patches to implement new features
175: and other important changes available for public testing through this
176: list.
1.123 deraadt 177: </dl>
1.66 nick 178:
179: <h3>Platform Specific Lists</h3>
180: These lists are focused on user issues and development on individual
181: platforms.
182: <dl>
183: <dt><b>alpha</b>
184: <dd>OpenBSD/alpha port
185:
1.75 miod 186: <dt><b>arm</b>
1.105 deanna 187: <dd>OpenBSD/zaurus port and other ARM porting efforts
1.75 miod 188:
1.66 nick 189: <dt><b>hppa</b>
190: <dd>OpenBSD/hppa port
191:
192: <dt><b>mac68k</b>
193: <dd>OpenBSD/mac68k port (not PowerPC Macintosh systems)
194:
1.98 miod 195: <dt><b>m88k</b>
196: <dd>OpenBSD/aviion, OpenBSD/luna88k and OpenBSD/mvme88k ports
197:
1.66 nick 198: <dt><b>ppc</b>
1.81 nick 199: <dd>OpenBSD/macppc and other PowerPC porting efforts
1.66 nick 200:
1.109 jsing 201: <dt><b>sgi</b>
202: <dd>OpenBSD/sgi port
203:
1.66 nick 204: <dt><b>sparc</b>
205: <dd>OpenBSD/sparc and OpenBSD/sparc64 ports
206:
207: <dt><b>vax</b>
208: <dd>OpenBSD/vax port
209: </dl>
210:
211: <h3>CVS Changes Mailing Lists</h3>
212: Every time a developer commits a change to the OpenBSD
1.69 nick 213: <a href="why-cvs.html">CVS tree</a>, a message is mailed out to all the subscribers
1.66 nick 214: of these lists, containing the commit comments.
215:
216: <dl>
217: <dt><b>source-changes</b>
218: <dd>Automated mail-out of CVS source tree changes in all the repositories
219: other than <i>ports</i>.
220:
221: <dt><b>ports-changes</b>
222: <dd>Automated mail-out of ports-specific CVS source tree changes.
1.1 deraadt 223: </dl>
224:
1.116 sthen 225: <a name="Mirrors"></a>
226: <h3>Mirror-related Mailing Lists</h3>
227: Announcements and discussion relating to mirrors of OpenBSD.
228:
229: <dl>
230: <dt><b>mirrors-announce</b>
231: <dd>This is a moderated list used solely for important announcements
232: to operators of OpenBSD mirrors.
233:
234: <dt><b>mirrors-discuss</b>
235: <dd>Discussion relating to OpenBSD mirrors.
236: </dl>
237:
1.66 nick 238: <a name="Majordomo"></a>
239: <h2><font color="#e00000">Managing Mailing List Membership via
240: Majordomo</font></h2>
1.1 deraadt 241: <p>
1.57 horacio 242: If you want to be sent a complete list with all mailing lists available
1.66 nick 243: at openbsd.org, send the command "<tt>lists</tt>" on the body of
1.57 horacio 244: a message to
245: <a href="mailto:majordomo@OpenBSD.org">majordomo@OpenBSD.org</a>.
1.28 louis 246:
247: <p>
1.66 nick 248: To subscribe to a given list, send mail to
249: <a href="mailto:majordomo@OpenBSD.org">majordomo@OpenBSD.org</a>
250: with a message body of "<b>subscribe mailing-list-name</b>".
251:
252: <p>
253: For further assistance, send a message body of "<b>help</b>"
1.57 horacio 254: to <a href="mailto:majordomo@OpenBSD.org">majordomo@OpenBSD.org</a>
1.13 deraadt 255: and you will receive a reply outlining all your options. Your domain
1.66 nick 256: <b>MUST</b> resolve properly or the mail will not go through!
1.1 deraadt 257:
1.66 nick 258:
259: <a name="Web"></a>
260: <h2><font color="#e00000">Managing Mailing List Membership via
261: Web</font></h2>
262: Your membership to the OpenBSD mailing lists can also be managed via
263: a web interface at:
264: <blockquote>
265: <a href="http://lists.openbsd.org/">http://lists.openbsd.org/</a>
266: </blockquote>
267:
268:
269: <a name="Tricks"></a>
270: <h2><font color="#e00000">Mailing Lists Tricks</font></h2>
271: There are a number of very useful options that can be selected, either
272: by the <a href="http://lists.openbsd.org">web interface</a> or through
273: <a href="mailto:majordomo@openbsd.org">Majordomo</a>. You can change
274: your email address without having to unsubscribe and resubscribe, you
1.69 nick 275: can temporarily disable your message delivery for a few days while you go on
1.66 nick 276: vacation, and much more. The user is invited to spend some time reading
277: through the options, available by sending
278: <a href="mailto:majordomo@openbsd.org">Majordomo</a> a message
279: containing "<tt>help</tt>" as the body text, or through the
280: "<tt>Help</tt>" tab of the <a href="http://lists.openbsd.org">web
281: interface</a>.
282:
283: <p>
284: As an example, if you were going on vacation for two weeks and didn't
1.69 nick 285: wish to come back to several thousand e-mails, you can disable
1.70 nick 286: message delivery by the mail server for the time of your vacation and have
287: delivery automatically resume upon your scheduled return using the command:
1.66 nick 288: <pre>
1.82 nick 289: set ALL nomail-14d
1.66 nick 290: </pre>
1.68 nick 291: This will suspend your subscription to all mail lists for 14 days
292: (<tt>-14d</tt>). More details and options can be seen on the
1.90 grunk 293: <a href="http://lists.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/mj_wwwusr?&user=&passw=&list=GLOBAL&func=help&extra=overview">Majordomo
1.68 nick 294: overview page</a>.
295:
1.66 nick 296:
297: <h3>Digests</h3>
298: If you would prefer to see a "digest" (a consolidated listing of all the
299: messages for a time period), rather than getting messages individually
300: in "real-time" form, you can use the commands:
301: <pre>
302: set misc digest-daily
303: set source-changes digest-weekly
304: </pre>
305: for daily digests of the <b>misc</b> list, and weekly digests of the
306: <b>source-changes</b> list. Yes, multiple commands can be placed in one
307: Majordomo email.
308:
309:
310: <a name="OtherLists"></a>
311: <h2><font color="#e00000">Other Mailing Lists</font></h2>
312: <p>
313: The fine folks at
314: <a href="http://www.squish.net/openbsd/">squish.net</a> run mailing
315: lists with daily and weekly digests of the OpenBSD <b>source-changes</b>
316: and <b>ports-changes</b> mailing list. This is handy for those who
1.72 nick 317: don't like the typically high volume of these lists.
1.42 millert 318:
319: <p>
1.108 merdely 320: The insomniac at <a href="http://www.benzedrine.cx/mailinglist.html">benzedrine.cx</a>
1.66 nick 321: maintains the <b>pf</b> list for people using the OpenBSD
1.61 dhartmei 322: packet filter. To subscribe:
323: <br>
324: echo subscribe | mail pf-request@benzedrine.cx
325:
1.66 nick 326: <a name="nonEnglish"></a>
327: <h2><font color="#e00000">Non-English Lists</font></h2>
1.28 louis 328:
1.66 nick 329: Several non-English speaking mailing lists related to OpenBSD are available
1.59 miod 330: separately. Here is a list of the currently known mailing lists:
331:
332: <!--
333: PLEASE KEEP THIS LIST SORTED, EXCEPT FOR TRANSLATIONS, WHERE YOU SHOULD PUT
334: THE LIST IN YOUR LANGUAGE, IF ONE EXISTS, HEAD OF LIST.
335: -->
336:
337: <p>
1.84 otto 338: Dutch:
339: <b>openbsd@list.ii.nl</b>
340: <br>To subscribe, visit the URL at:
341: <a href="http://list.ii.nl/listinfo/openbsd">http://list.ii.nl/listinfo/openbsd</a>.
342:
343: <p>
1.71 todd 344: French:
1.100 aanriot 345: <b>misc@openbsd-france.org</b>
1.71 todd 346: <br>To subscribe, visit the URL at:
1.117 gilles 347: <a href="http://www.openbsd-france.org/communaute.php">http://www.openbsd-france.org/communaute.php</a>.
1.71 todd 348:
349: <p>
1.59 miod 350: Italian:
1.66 nick 351: <a href="http://www.sikurezza.org/">sikurezza.org</a>, an Italian language
352: non-commercial security portal hosts <b>openbsd@sikurezza.org</b>.
1.59 miod 353: <br>To subscribe just send an empty message to <a
354: href="mailto:openbsd-subscribe@sikurezza.org">openbsd-subscribe@sikurezza.org</a>.
355:
356: <p>
1.114 syuu 357: Japanese:
358: <b>openbsd-japan@googlegroups.com</b><br>
359: To subscribe, please visit
360: <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/openbsd-japan">
361: http://groups.google.com/group/openbsd-japan</a>
362:
363: <p>
1.93 grunk 364: Polish:
365: <b>openbsd@lists.bsd.org.pl</b><br>
366: To subscribe, send mail with subject "subscribe" to
367: <a href="mailto:openbsd-request@lists.bsd.org.pl">openbsd-request@lists.bsd.org.pl</a>.
1.24 deraadt 368:
369: <p>
1.59 miod 370: Portuguese:
1.66 nick 371: <b>openbsd@neei.uevora.pt</b>
1.59 miod 372: <br>To subscribe, visit the URL at:
373: <a href="http://neei.uevora.pt/mailman/listinfo/openbsd/">http://neei.uevora.pt/mailman/listinfo/openbsd/</a>.
374:
375: <p>
1.60 miod 376: Russian:
1.66 nick 377: <b>openbsd@openbsd.ru</b>
1.47 form 378: <br>To subscribe, send mail to
379: <a href="mailto:minimalist@openbsd.ru">minimalist@openbsd.ru</a> with
1.66 nick 380: subject "<b>subscribe openbsd</b>".
1.34 form 381:
382: <p>
1.73 nick 383: Slovenian:
384: to subscribe please visit the URL at
385: <a href="http://obsd.17slon.org/mailinglist.php"
386: >http://obsd.17slon.org/mailinglist.php</a>
387:
388: <p>
1.62 fgsch 389: Spanish:
1.91 grunk 390: <b>OpenBSD-Mexico@googlegroups.com</b>, run from Mexico.
391: <br>To subscribe, please visit
392: <a href="http://groups.google.com.mx/group/OpenBSD-Mexico">
393: http://groups.google.com.mx/group/OpenBSD-Mexico</a>
1.49 horacio 394:
395: <p>
1.101 steven 396: Ukrainian:
397: <b>openbsd@uaoug.org.ua</b>
398: <br>To subscribe, send mail to
399: <a href="mailto:openbsd+subscribe@uaoug.org.ua">
400: openbsd+subscribe@uaoug.org.ua</a>
401:
402: <p>
1.66 nick 403: <a name="Archives"></a>
404: <h2><font color="#e00000">Mailing List Archives:</font></h2>
405: These mailing list archives are not managed by the OpenBSD project.
406: Take the time to look at more than one -- each is a little different,
407: and has different search abilities. If you don't find an answer in
408: one, check another.
409:
1.19 deraadt 410: <ul>
1.106 martynas 411: <li><a href="http://marc.info/">MARC</a>
1.120 sthen 412: <li><a href="http://dir.gmane.org/index.php?prefix=gmane.os.openbsd">Gmane</a> (also available by <a href="nntp://news.gmane.org/">NNTP</a>)
1.57 horacio 413: <li>Neohapsis has a
414: <a href="http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/">mixed archive
415: for tech@, misc@ and ports@</a> and a
416: <a href="http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/cvs/">mixed
417: archive for CVS commits</a>
1.120 sthen 418: <li><a href="http://www.sigmasoft.com/~openbsd/archives/">Sigmasoft</a> has posts up to March 2010
419: <li><a href="http://www.monkey.org/openbsd/">Monkey.org</a> has posts up to June 2009
1.19 deraadt 420: </ul>
1.1 deraadt 421:
1.97 nick 422: <p>
423: General search engines, such as
424: <a href="http://www.google.com">Google</a> also prove very effective at
425: finding answers to OpenBSD questions.
426:
1.103 reyk 427: <p>
428: <a name="Feeds"></a>
429: <h2><font color="#e00000">RSS Feeds:</font></h2>
430: There are also some RSS feeds available. Most recent web browsers will
431: support RSS feeds, but there are also a number of RSS readers available.
432: The RSS feeds are not managed by the OpenBSD project.
433:
434: <ul>
435: <li><a href="http://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=rss">OpenBSD Journal</a>
436: <li><a href="http://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=errata">OpenBSD Errata (provided by the OpenBSD Journal)</a>
437: </ul>
1.1 deraadt 438:
439: </body>
440: </html>