Is Your have two video cards?
Same problem exists on Ubuntu Linux.
Try xrandr
F.e. xrandr --output LVDS1 --brightness 0.75
On 27.06.2014 03:18, Riccardo Mottola wrote:
Hi,
I noticed that since I upgraded to 5.5, the two keys that controls the
screen brightness do not work anymore, my LCD is
It think the designer wanted to keep the board compatible with the old
case, or the other way around. To cool the CPU more one needs better pads (
i doubt there are much better, since the industry has standards) or adds a
fan.
Current situation is like this:
\__/ - CPU
One of the best pads around are Fujipoly [1] with thermal conductivity
of 17 W/mK.
These made a big difference on several laptop workstations that were
having overheating issues.
Some default pads are good enough, but in some cases thermal
conductivity is a problem and you just need a
0
C Cyprus
P Nicosia
T Strovolos
I Socrates Papachilleos
M socratesp1...@gmail.com
B +35799222339
N Over 10 years of experience Technical Support and Consulting for Linux/
OpenBSD networking and Server Administration. Providing fully
customized solutions for Routers/Firewalls,VPN servers, IDS
Hi,all.
I was able to do it thanks to the instruction of misc all
.I report it.
In addition , this openBSD is running on USB memory only .
sd1 at scsibus2 targ 1 lun 0: JetFlash, Transcend 32GB, 1100 SCSI4
0/direct removable serial.85641000CE38A0VNSTPO
sd1: 30944MB, 512 bytes/sector, 63373312
On 2014-06-27, Josh Grosse j...@jggimi.homeip.net wrote:
I just updated from a June 17 to June 26 snapshot. The ssh-add utility
now fails immediately: [...]
Between these two snapshots there was a major bump for libcrypto from 28.0
to 29.0, but that may not be relevant.
It's most likely
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 4:29 AM, Christian Weisgerber
na...@mips.inka.de wrote:
On 2014-06-27, Josh Grosse j...@jggimi.homeip.net wrote:
I just updated from a June 17 to June 26 snapshot. The ssh-add utility
now fails immediately: [...]
Between these two snapshots there was a major bump for
On 2014-06-27 08:21, Kent Fritz wrote:
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 4:29 AM, Christian Weisgerber
na...@mips.inka.de wrote:
It's most likely fallout from the ssh changes on June 23:
Yes, there were significant revisions, and they are integrated, as I
cannot back off ssh-add.c r1.110 alone.
I'd
I can also confirm that newest snapshot works now.
On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 7:45 AM, Nils R m...@hxgn.net wrote:
Works now with the latest snapshot (dsdt.c rev. 1.211), thanks!
I know on my laptop no acpi meant doesn't work. My saving grace is I
always keep a kernel from the previous snapshot I tried as obsd. So if
bsd doesn't work, I just boot from that. Do you have an older snapshot
kernel you can tell tech support to boot into?
On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 7:36 PM, Scott
Hi misc@-readers!
I have once more read man afterboot(8) and a question came up related
to the superuser's password.
In section 'root password' advisory is given to choose a password
that has digits and special characters (not space). This last advice
is what I do not understand - all of my
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 6:12 AM, Josh Grosse j...@jggimi.homeip.net wrote:
On 2014-06-27 08:21, Kent Fritz wrote:
Seeing the same here. I tested re-creating my keys, and the problem
seems to be with password. With password, it fails; without, it
works.
If I didn't have passphrases, I
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 16:50, Stefan Wollny wrote:
Hi misc@-readers!
I have once more read man afterboot(8) and a question came up related
to the superuser's password.
In section 'root password' advisory is given to choose a password
that has digits and special characters (not space).
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 12:56:33PM -0400, Ted Unangst wrote:
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 16:50, Stefan Wollny wrote:
Hi misc@-readers!
I have once more read man afterboot(8) and a question came up related
to the superuser's password.
In section 'root password' advisory is given to
Unfortunately, not. It was a fresh install from a CD image to a hard
drive which I then shipped to the ISP for installation, which replaced a
failing drive in my machine co-located there.
In any event, bypassing acpi in ukc got the machine up again, and I was
able to upgrade to the latest
On 2014-06-26, Scott Vanderbilt li...@datagenic.com wrote:
Having done a little man page reading on boot-time configuration, I
learned about the existence of ukc. I'm wondering whether something like
ukc disable acpi0
might circumvent the kernel panic and allow the boot to successfully
On 2014-06-26, Scott Vanderbilt li...@datagenic.com wrote:
Having done a little man page reading on boot-time configuration, I
learned about the existence of ukc. I'm wondering whether something like
ukc disable acpi0
might circumvent the kernel panic and allow the boot to
Em 27-06-2014 11:50, Stefan Wollny escreveu:
Hi misc@-readers!
I have once more read man afterboot(8) and a question came up related
to the superuser's password.
In section 'root password' advisory is given to choose a password
that has digits and special characters (not space). This last
On 6/27/2014 12:10 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2014-06-26, Scott Vanderbilt li...@datagenic.com wrote:
Having done a little man page reading on boot-time configuration, I
learned about the existence of ukc. I'm wondering whether something like
ukc disable acpi0
might circumvent the
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 01:15:59PM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
On 2014-06-26, Scott Vanderbilt li...@datagenic.com wrote:
Having done a little man page reading on boot-time configuration, I
learned about the existence of ukc. I'm wondering whether something like
ukc disable acpi0
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 12:37:33PM -0700, Scott Vanderbilt wrote:
On 6/27/2014 12:10 PM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2014-06-26, Scott Vanderbilt li...@datagenic.com wrote:
Having done a little man page reading on boot-time configuration, I
learned about the existence of ukc. I'm wondering
On 6/27/14, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
On 2014-06-26, Scott Vanderbilt li...@datagenic.com wrote:
Having done a little man page reading on boot-time configuration, I
learned about the existence of ukc. I'm wondering whether something
like
ukc disable acpi0
might
For people who might stumble on this thread I ended up using Nginx with
a configuration file which looks similar to this.
Predrag
# $OpenBSD: nginx.conf,v 1.16 2014/01/28 14:48:53 stephan Exp $
#user www;
worker_processes 4;
#syslog local5 nginx;
#error_log logs/error.log;
On 2014-06-27, Giancarlo Razzolini grazzol...@gmail.com wrote:
Perhaps you should take a look at this funny and very accurate xkcd
comic strip:
http://xkcd.com/936/
yes, cracking a stolen hash is faster, but it's not what the average user
should worry about
I disagree, that is *exactly*
Em 27-06-2014 19:48, Stuart Henderson escreveu:
yes, cracking a stolen hash is faster, but it's not what the average user
should worry about
I disagree, that is *exactly* what the average user should worry about.
And knowing that some people use xkcd style passwords, who would start on
a
Hi all .
i add some .
USB memory only 2GB running openbsd works as dhcpd + nat .
namely
sd1 at scsibus2 targ 1 lun 0: TDKMedia, Trans-It Drive, PMAP SCSI0
0/direct removable serial.1d0d0211078C0D1310DE
sd1: 1900MB, 512 bytes/sector, 3891200 sectors
root on sd1a (4ef3e82a493a09dc.a) swap on
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