On 5/7/24 19:25, Jo MacMahon wrote:
I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base system - I would
want something like etckeeper or git that was a true version control system,
rather than dump(8)/restore(8) which are backup systems. I'm idly considering
learning CVS for it, and
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:25:43AM +0100, Jo MacMahon said:
I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base
system
I've had a set of functions in my .profile for about 15 years
that keeps large parts of my home directory available and in
sync across Linux, macOS and OpenBSD
I'm interested if anybody has solutions using just the base system - I would
want something like etckeeper or git that was a true version control system,
rather than dump(8)/restore(8) which are backup systems. I'm idly considering
learning CVS for it, and I suppose if I'm going to become a
On 07.05.2024 16:08, Martin Kjær Jørgensen wrote:
Hello,
I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing
environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home
or work) and laptops?
Example programs for this could be syncthing, stow, chezmoi,
Stefan Moran writes:
> dump(8) and restore(8) also worth mentioning; I'm particularly fond of
> restore(8)'s interactive mode that lets you cherrypick what you want to
> import.
I agree. My backups are mostly dump(8) and rsync(1). Out of habit, I've
used cpio(1) in copy mode (-p) for copying
rdist
On Wednesday, May 8, 2024 at 12:25:13 a.m. GMT+9, Martin Kjær Jørgensen
wrote:
Hello,
I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing
environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home
or work) and laptops?
Example programs
On 5/7/24 1:09 PM, Страхиња Радић wrote:
Дана 24/05/07 04:08PM, Martin Kjær Jørgensen написа:
I was wondering which programs you use for
replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd
systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops?
git(1), rsync(1).
git push
dump(8) and restore(8) also worth mentioning; I'm particularly fond of
restore(8)'s interactive mode that lets you cherrypick what you want to
import.
Дана 24/05/07 04:45PM, Riccardo Mottola написа:
> I too... even if I don't like where Firefox is going with their UI and rustc
> choices... I feel it is still better than Chromium, where the long arm of
> data-sucking of Google is so strong.
Some links to check out:
Дана 24/05/07 04:08PM, Martin Kjær Jørgensen написа:
> I was wondering which programs you use for
> replicating/copying/syncing environments/configs on your openbsd
> systems with between your desktops (home or work) and laptops?
git(1), rsync(1).
Hi Austin,
I feel your pain.
The world things Chrome, or at least Blink, is the only Browser. It is
the new IE!!!
Austin Hook wrote:
In the past 6 months is has gotten more and more difficult to sign-on
to with Firefox and OpenBSD, as they have tried to make their sites more
and more bullet
Hello,
I was wondering which programs you use for replicating/copying/syncing
environments/configs on your openbsd systems with between your desktops (home
or work) and laptops?
Example programs for this could be syncthing, stow, chezmoi, etc.
Do you also maintain installeded/removed packages
2024-05-07T09:54:23Z "Karsten Pedersen" :
> > Second-hand Lenovo M710q tiny with a wifi-card could also work:
> > https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=view=5296
>
> A quick note that the slightly older M625q (with an AMD processor) isn't
> quite so good with OpenBSD.
> It runs overly slow and I
Hi,
I just updated my 7.5/amd64 system with syspatch75-001_xserver.
Unfortunately now when booting shortly after "starting network" I
receive the error: "acpitz0: critical temperature exceeded 60C, shutting
down".
Disabling acpitz* at the boot-config helps, or, also reverting the
syspatch is a
> A quick note that the slightly older M625q (with an AMD processor) isn't
> quite so good with OpenBSD.
What exactly is "good" with OpenBSD?
> It runs overly slow and I have yet had time to figure out why.
So again, what is "slow"?
> Interestingly, even on apm -H it takes longer to compile a
> Second-hand Lenovo M710q tiny with a wifi-card could also work:
> https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=view=5296
A quick note that the slightly older M625q (with an AMD processor) isn't quite
so good with OpenBSD.
It runs overly slow and I have yet had time to figure out why. Interestingly,
On Mon, May 6, 2024 at 11:06 AM Stuart Henderson
wrote:
> I've bumped REVISION in the port so pkg_add -u should pick it up after
> the next set of packages are built, but if you rorce a reinstall of
> pfstat from current packages, that should do the trick too.
>
That worked. Thanks!
--
chs
Second-hand Lenovo M710q tiny with a wifi-card could also work:
https://dmesgd.nycbug.org/index.cgi?do=view=5296
Jan Stary írta 2024. máj.. 7, K-n 08:47 órakor:
> On May 06 21:03:17, mytraddr...@gmail.com wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the
On May 06 21:03:17, mytraddr...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> can anyone please advise on what computer I can purchase with the following
> requirements:
>
> - fully supports OpenBSD
> - no noise
> - good quality wifi
> - small form factor preferably
> - processor does not need to be fast (no
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