I think I am winning at this point: $ sysctl hw hw.machine = i386 hw.model = Intel Pentium Pro ("GenuineIntel" 686-class, 256KB L2 cache) hw.ncpu = 1 hw.byteorder = 1234 hw.physmem = 133804032 hw.usermem = 133410816 hw.pagesize = 4096 $
This is an old pentium pro box. Dmesg lists it at 194mhz. It is the firewall in front of three low volume (500 pages/day) web servers. It works great. --ja On Thu, 12 Oct 2006, Floor Terra wrote: > My server is kind of old but runs OpenBSD like a charm. > > # sysctl hw > hw.machine=i386 > hw.model=Intel Celeron ("GenuineIntel" 686-class, 128KB L2 cache) > hw.ncpu=1 > hw.byteorder=1234 > hw.physmem=268017664 > hw.usermem=267587584 > hw.pagesize=4096 > hw.disknames=wd0,cd0,fd0 > hw.diskcount=3 > hw.cpuspeed=401 > > Floor Terra > > > On Oct 12, 2006, at 8:54 PM, Falk Husemann wrote: > > > Hello List! > > We're trying to put an old server to good use again and would like > > to know what's exactly the oldest machine running OpenBSD? > > > > > > As machine we defined something with processor, ram, network, hard > > disk and a connection to the internet. So no Newton or toaster (at > > least not if there's no disk being toasted). > > > > > > Thank you in advance, > > Falk > > --