two custom
> drivers for the keyboard and touchpad.
>
> So no, the device does not work on OpenBSD unless you use a USB
> keyboard/mouse.
>
>
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
nyone else has a similar issue.
Thank you for sharing. I had (I think) been using ipcomp in my old
ikev1 (ipsec.conf/isakmpd) setup but had not yet gotten around to
enabling it in the ikev2 setup. Based on this, I won't bother.
-Andrew
[1] https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/4b5fa55
thousands) offer it. If you
search for a VPS provider that offers KVM (not OpenVZ, VIrtuozzo, or Xen)
you will find many.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
resumably present your disk via the emulated IDE controller.
-Andrew
OpenBSD 6.4 (GENERIC.MP) #364: Thu Oct 11 13:30:23 MDT 2018
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 1056964608 (1008MB)
avail mem = 1015713792 (968MB)
mpath0 at root
scsibus0 at mpath0:
Wed, Nov 21, 2018 at 3:42 AM Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> Andrew Lemin [andrew.le...@gmail.com] wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am running an ASRock J4105B-ITX board and wanting to run OpenBSD on
> this.
> > https://www.asrock.com/MB/Intel/J4105B-ITX/index.asp#BIOS
> &g
m,
least-states and source-hash
If I change the 'route-to' pool to "{ (tun2 10.8.8.1), (tun1 10.8.8.1) }",
then only tun2 is used instead.. :(
So 'route-to' seems to only use the first tunnel in the pool.
Any advice on what is going wrong here. I am wondering if
for more reasoning and you might look at p5-Coro if you
really need threads, I haven't had a need for them but have heard they
work better than the core implementation.
https://metacpan.org/pod/Coro
l8rZ,
--
andrew - http://afresh1.com
People who invent random theories which only defend the vendor must have
been beaten as children. Beaten with sticks.
At least, that's my theory.
-- Theo De Raadt
Hi,
I am running an ASRock J4105B-ITX board and wanting to run OpenBSD on this.
https://www.asrock.com/MB/Intel/J4105B-ITX/index.asp#BIOS
It boots up, and at the 'boot>' prompt I can use the keyboard find.
However after it boots up, the keyboard stops working, and no disks are
found by the insta
On 11/13/18 16:28, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018/11/13 10:15, Andrew wrote:
On 11/13/18 11:08, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2018-11-11, Andrew wrote:
> > ~: doas pfctl -t cidr_typo -T add 1.2.3.4*5
> > 1 table created.
> > 1/1 addresses added.
>
> This wou
On 11/13/18 11:08, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018-11-11, Andrew wrote:
~: doas pfctl -t cidr_typo -T add 1.2.3.4*5
1 table created.
1/1 addresses added.
This would normally fail right here.
~: doas pfctl -t cidr_typo -T show
127.0.0.1
I think your name resolver may be giving out
On 11/11/18 19:23, Klemens Nanni wrote:
On Sun, Nov 11, 2018 at 12:01:33PM -0600, Andrew wrote:
~: doas pfctl -t cidr_typo -T add 1.2.3.4*5
1 table created.
1/1 addresses added.
I fail to reproduce this with recent snapshots on both amd64 and sparc64:
# pfctl -t cidr_typo -T add
Hi list,
I really need some help mounting an install.fs disk image, and hope someone
can help :)
I have been trying and failing to create an auto-installing USB flash drive
for OpenBSD.
All of the below steps are being performed using an existing OpenBSD VM
1) Create /auto_install.conf file
https
On 11/11/18 19:23, Klemens Nanni wrote:
On Sun, Nov 11, 2018 at 12:01:33PM -0600, Andrew wrote:
~: doas pfctl -t cidr_typo -T add 1.2.3.4*5
1 table created.
1/1 addresses added.
I fail to reproduce this with recent snapshots on both amd64 and sparc64:
# pfctl -t cidr_typo -T add
I stumbled upon this because the "/" and the "*" keys are adjacent to
each other on a numeric keypad.
Note: This is a (GENERIC) kernel and I have hyper-threading disabled on
this laptop, if that matters ???
Just your basic upgrade to -current ...
- download today's SHA256.sig, bsd.rd, install
On 11/10/18 19:29, Chris Bennett wrote:
On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 11:36:17PM +0100, Solene wrote:
This is normal. Look at 26th October https://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html
The suid was removed to prevent bad things to happen. Use xenodm instead of
startx.
I have switched to using xenodm.
e CUPS test page from the web interface leaves the
printer idle. The job now shows up in "$ lpstat" and can also
be cancelled with "$ cancel $job_id".
Please, if anyone knows which documentation I should look at to get
at the root of this problem or if anyone here has experience with
setting up a driver for their own printer on OpenBSD, contact me.
Greetings
Andrew Easton
>
> is there a paper on the web that explains work and relationship
> from pledge and unveil for dummies?
>
> Best wishes,
> Heinz
>
>
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
On 10/06/18 00:28, Klemens Nanni wrote:
On Fri, Oct 05, 2018 at 04:02:12PM -0600, Andrew wrote:
recent snapshot:
$> uname -vrsm
OpenBSD 6.4 GENERIC#329 amd64
What's the timestamp? Please provide more detailed information next time.
$> doas pfctl -t sample -T add 74.125.0.0
I just came upon this while stumbling across my numeric keypad.
(If case you are wondering, the "*" key is next to the "/" key ...)
---
recent snapshot:
$> uname -vrsm
OpenBSD 6.4 GENERIC#329 amd64
$> doas pfctl -t sample -T add 74.125.0.0*16
1 table created.
1/1 addresses added.
$> doas pf
I just discovered something unexpected using pfctl and tables. I'm far
from a networking guy and apparantly I can't type either.
Try this on a patched 6.3 amd64.
$> uname -mrsv
OpenBSD 6.3 GENERIC.MP#10 amd64
The following are a couple CIDRs for amazon.
$> pfctl -t sample -T add 176.0.0.0/8
1
On 09/11/18 12:32, Steve Litt wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 15:28:09 + (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2018-09-11, Steve Litt wrote:
> I've created a downloadable CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing)
> network calculator, whose sole dependency is Python3. It runs in any
> terminal or termi
Hi list,
I use an OpenVPN based internet access service (like NordVPN, AirVPN etc).
The issue with these public VPN services, is the VPN servers are always
congested. The most I’ll get is maybe 10Mbits through one server.
Local connection is a few hundred mbps..
So I had the idea of running mu
27;ll make ports for the required
modules.
https://github.com/tokuhirom/plenv
l8rZ,
--
andrew - http://afresh1.com
Unix is very simple,
but it takes a genius to understand the simplicity.
-- Dennis Ritchie
ly, since NTLDR works with the PBR): there is a
problem with the PBR, or with the BIOS's ability to boot from it.
Using the NT loader menu may end up being a better solution for you,
but this should sort out the direct-boot case.
-Andrew
On 07/17/18 17:53, Edgar Pettijohn III wrote:
For some reason xconsole has decided to start seg faulting regularly.
I can't remember how to build X with debugging symbols. Could anyone
give me a quick rundown so I can provide more information.
Thanks,
Edgar
OpenBSD 6.3 (GENERIC.MP) #4: Sun
On Fri, Jun 15, 2018 at 2:42 PM, Stuart Henderson
wrote:
> One thing to be aware of is the not-very-well-known restriction that one
> user can be in a maximum of 16 groups.
If memory serves, this limitation derives from an nfs limitation.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
rk device
rtw(4) - Realtek RTL8180L IEEE 802.11b wireless network device
rum(4) - Ralink Technology/MediaTek USB IEEE 802.11a/b/g wireless network device
ural(4) - Ralink Technology/MediaTek USB IEEE 802.11b/g wireless network device
ifconfig(8) - configure network interface parameters
--
andrew
> >
> > > Was this caught in an audit?
> > >
> > > I am just curious about causality that kept OpenBSD in the clear of
> > > this one
> > > that made such headlines yesterday.
> >
> >
> > We didn't chase the fad of using every Intel cpu feature.
>
> This goes into the achive! Thank you for the slice of sanity in an
> insane word.
>
> /jl
>
>
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
On 04/23/18 15:50, Bogdan Kulbida wrote:
Hi Everyone,
I'm trying to use wkhtmltopdf to generate PDF from my HTML files. I
was googling like crazy but did no find any valuable information so
far.
When I run (as root)
# /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf http://google.com /tmp/out.pdf
It does generate p
First, and as always, I want to express my appreciation to Theo and to
all the past and present devs. The world is not full of bunny rabbits
and wildflowers ...
---
I have a refurb Lenovo T420 off ebay with a very old BIOS from 2011.
Nice refurb, eh ?? Here are some before and after notes base
Hi Ted !!!
Today I downloaded a fresh SHA256.sig and bsd.rd and successfully
verified them both with signify(1).
--
signify -C [-q] -p pubkey -x sigfile [file ...]
Just wondering if signify(1) is intended to exit 0 ONLY if the [file
...] is within the shell's pwd ?? By chance, I noticed that
On 02/22/18 09:27, George Ramirez wrote:
with intel 620 UHD graphics. At first, the console shows with underscan,
then the resolution changes to the native one, and finally it goes black.
It's a frustrating problem because there are no errors and it seemingly
doesn't work. I bet X is actually
esync.btg.co.nz/index.php/s/rvc8mc9RCpTR1Lg
Is there anything we can do to stop OpenBGPD from dropping the
session? Running per-VRF label's is default on all Juniper
platforms, and is common on Cisco as well.
Regards,
Andrew
rectory.
You could add your home directory to the SUIDSKIP environment variable
in /etc/daily.local to avoid searching there if this message keeps
annoying you and you don't care about devices and suid changes there.
http://man.openbsd.org/security#SUIDSKIP
l8rZ,
--
andrew - http://afresh
Thanks Tom and Tony,
That is the solution. It is so obvious now :D
On Fri, Jan 26, 2018 at 7:10 PM, Tom Smyth wrote:
> Hi Andrew
>
> Try replacing
>
> route-reflector
> cluster-id 202.49.106.0
>
> With
> route-reflector 202.49.106.0
>
>
> On 26 Jan
e. I have
also tried "clusterid" with no success.
On reading through parse.c it does not have cluster-id or clusterid
specified as keywords.
Is cluster-id supported by OpenBGPD or am I configuring it incorrectly ?
Regards,
Andrew
I want to take a moment to thank Theo -- for, uhhh, being Theo ;-) I've
seen some good projects fail from a lack of strong leadership. In
contrast, OpenBSD pushes forward because of his good judgement, combined
with the hard work of all the past and present devs. Even a regular
fella like me has s
On 01/11/18 14:45, Andreas Thulin wrote:
Hi!
Again, an ignorant question (as usual):
How might I do something similar to
# dd if=/dev/one of=/dev/sd0 bs=1M
as a complement to the usual and well-described
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sd0 bs=1M
followed by
Personally, given your premise of "pa
Virtual machines are pretty much necessary, because no matter what
distribution of what OS you run, there are always those one or two apps
you can't get from the package manager and can't compile, so you need
to use a VM. The first six months I used Void Linux I ran LyX on a
Ubuntu VM to compile m
out of date very fast.
Ultimately, this is like the thread recently on using something other than
CVS. The onus is on the proposer to demonstrate value.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
ng off.
* Suspend and hibernate do not work.
* Reported temperatures via hw.sensors are about 10-15C lower than reality.
I'll submit a proper bug report for the reboot & suspend stuff once I
do more testing (e.g. acpi disabled, BIOS settings for S1 vs. S3
suspend, etc.).
-Andrew
[1] https://marc.
hus the installer uses the real disk device, but since vmm
doesn't implement that call, instead of marking the disk as not having
an ID, invalid disk IDs somehow get used.
-Andrew
text mode under Xen).
This was my first time trying out vmm and it was very straightforward,
once I figured out what were dumb mistakes on my part. vmm is already
very capable and it is steadily improving!
-Andrew
[1]
https://doc.opensuse.org/documentation/leap/startup/single-html/book.opensuse.startup/index.html#id2504
On Wed, Oct 11, 2017 at 11:01 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> What is not good is when you do have a RAID array, the controller is
> in RAID mode, but OpenBSD doesn't understand the metadata, so it corrupts
> data on the disk.
>
> This is a difficult area. We don't want to corrupt data, but then som
Hello Folks !!
Regarding GENERIC.MP #115
I have a feeling you are about to roll into 6.2, however I just want
to bring the following to your attention in case it matters.
I just did a clean install of -current using the bsd.rd dated
2017-09-27. Within the install sequence of questions, the d
On Fri, Sep 1, 2017 at 1:57 AM, Mike Larkin wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 01, 2017 at 01:04:40AM -0500, Andrew Daugherity wrote:
> >
> > boot> hd0a:/bsd.61
> > cannot open hd0a:/etc/random.seed: No such file or directory
> > booting hd0a:/bsd.61: 7678420+2057220+1
I recently dug out of the closet my old IBM PS/2E, which had served as
my firewall box from 2000ish-06, and was in fact the very first
machine I ever installed OpenBSD on, to see if it still worked
properly. It did (after changing the CMOS battery), but booted into
OpenBSD 4.1... yeah, just a *bit
First of all, big thanks to Theo for his strong leadership and to all
the past and present devs !!! Have a great week ahead !!!
---
Just a little FWIW from a Lenovo T440s ...
---
dmesg | sort | uniq -c
1 3834:intel_uncore_check_errors] *ERROR* Unclaimed register before interrupt
30 error
1 Online 500107862016 0:1.0 noencl
'unknown serial'
Not sure about the 'unknown serial', but otherwise looks correct.
Nice work! Sorry I don't have a card with cache (e.g. H730) to test on,
t; Sent from a teeny tiny keyboard, so please excuse typos
>
> On 20 Jun 2017, at 20:23, Andrew Lemin wrote:
>
> Hi Misc,
>
> Has anyone else come across any issues recently with Openvpn, Libressl and
> TLS on OpenBSD 6.1?
>
> I am using an .ovpn file with TLS auth static key
Hi Misc,
Has anyone else come across any issues recently with Openvpn, Libressl and
TLS on OpenBSD 6.1?
I am using an .ovpn file with TLS auth static key and cert inline within
the file, to connect to VPN service. Running openvpn binary from command
line without any special params, just .ovpn fil
On Tue, May 30, 2017 at 12:22:09PM -0400, Maximilian Pichler wrote:
As mentioned, I booted another OS from a USB stick and it runs at
2560x1440@60MHz. Doesn't this make it unlikely that the issue is with
the monitor or cable? Also, the connection is via DisplayPort, even
the most basic version of
alexander.uk/ ?
>
I don't think that's a redirect. It looks like the owner of that site
simply ripped the OpenBSD main page and placed it on his site.
At least he was thorough - images are served from his site and not via
hotlink.
As to normal thing...I'd say not.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
My understanding is that there is some support for the Pine64 platform, though
it requires access to the pins to get a serial console. I haven't opened mine
up yet, but I assume it's a Pine64, on a different footprint PCB. Though... I
have no idea about any other IO pins...
> On May 13, 2017, a
:0:Charlie &:/root:/bin/ksh
> > daemon:*:1:1:The devil himself:/root:/sbin/nologin
> > operator:*:2:5:System &:/operator:/sbin/nologin
> > bin:*:3:7:Binaries Commands and Source:/:/sbin/nologin
> >
> > You can parse that with awk and do stuff. Read about passwd(5) to
> > understand the format. A login shell of /sbin/nologin means
> > it isn't interactive. That might get you started?
> >
> > --STeve Andre'
> >
> >
> > !DSPAM:590e28ea17913841584367!
> >
>
>
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
system boots fine. Now I'm more
confused... I don't know what to make of the extra 256MB, but it's possible
your system's crossing the 512GB boundary may be the issue.
-Andrew
I was setting up a new server where I wasn't sure whether com0 or com1 was
the port I wanted, so I turned on both tty00 and tty01 in /etc/ttys to see
which one to use in boot.conf. Edited the file, did the 'kill -HUP 1',
and... nothing. getty processes are listening on tty00 and tty01, but both
p
On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 02:29:01AM +, Bryan C. Everly wrote:
> I have been trying to nuke and pave my daily driver's OpenBSD partition
> since Feb 5. Trying to install libproxy failed on a bad major (I have 17.1
> and it wants 18.0) for libperl.
>
> I figured this was the normal behavior I hav
e not using a directory of
some sort) is the same headache regardless of how you pick them.
If the OP meant every server has different, unique randomized UID/GIDs then
that's a separate craziness.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
So in summary, if you want random UID/GID for user accounts, that's a
one-liner shell script - go for it! But if you want random UID/GID for
service accounts, I think there would need to be a lot more justification
for what would be a lot more work.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
Thanks for all your work. There is a learning curve involved in this,
and I'm glad to be with OpenBSD operating system. Its a far cry from
stumbling into phrack, 2600, and cdc, and all the other horrible shit
on the internet on a pentium 100 and win95(highschool). I'm glad for
OpenBSD and people
nd from there follow the links to some of
the many perl web development frameworks that exist.
https://metacpan.org/pod/Task::Kensho#Task::Kensho::WebDev:-Web-Development
(I am in the middle of doing this at work, so may not have a good handle
on how someone new sees things)
l8rZ,
--
andrew
I gave a talk about moving from mod_perl to Plack and FastCGI at the local
perlmonger group. It was fairly straight forward and there are a fair number
of options on the CPAN, although I'm unsure which have ports.
http://cvs.afresh1.com/~andrew/talks/cgi_to_psgi_pdx_pm/
There is also
Yes. Yes it is, and he's trying to get OpenBSD running on top of
Libreboot, which makes it very much relevant. PAY ATTENTION!
On Tue, Sep 27, 2016 at 11:03 AM, Mihai Popescu wrote:
> Dude, this is OpenBSD's mailing list not libreboot's. Pay attention, please!
>
--
http://apgwoz.com
bright shining future when vmm is done, you may be able
to buy an OpenBSD guest VM on an OpenBSD host...and then these piddling
Amazon and Microsoft Azure empires will fall as Puffy storms the net. To
the cloud!
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
t less important now.
Regards,
Andrew
On Tue, Aug 23, 2016 at 8:34 PM, John Jasen
wrote:
> All your carp devices have the same VHID. As two share the same network,
> that could cause problems.
>
>
>
>
> On 08/23/2016 01:40 PM, Andrew Seguin wrote:
> > Hi,
>
ostname.if, etc but didn't get any new
ideas.
Any ideas or suggestions what else I might look at?
Is this expected behavior or have I overlooked some configuration option?
Thanks in advance,
Andrew
> Like I said, long shot.
>
> Cheers
>
> --
> Best Regards
> Edd Barrett
>
> http://www.theunixzoo.co.uk
>
>
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
all,
>
> Sorry if this question sounds stupid, but how can I avoid this type of
> entry in OpenBSD's httpd access.log:
>
> 172.22.55.1:44710 -> 172.22.55.10, /favicon.ico (404 Not Found), [/]
> [/favicon.ico]
>
> ??
>
> Thanks.
> --
> Greetings,
> C. L. Martinez
>
>
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
> Does OpenBSD come up with any in-house software to encrypt a file? Or do
> I have to use gnupg?
Yes -- libressl may do what you want. Read man openssl(1) and skim
down to the section entitled "ENC" and the subsequent sections
including examples. It's well written.
elings:
http://i.imgur.com/EKsD7aG.png
OpenBSD's documentation, in my experience, exceeds the docs provided by
some commercial operating systems, and those companies can afford to have
full-time doc writers on staff. OpenBSD documentation is the gold standard.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
x9280, size 16384, enabled
bar [18] = type Memory, range 32, base 0x9200, size 8388608,
enabled
Any suggestions?
-Andrew
Hi misc@,
Just a user experience for your consideration.
I picked up a new bsd.rd from snapshots in toronto. Checked the sha256
and signify to make sure it's good. Moved it to / and rebooted with:
boot> hd0a:/bsd.rd
selected Install with standard options.
clean download from the mirror followed
rking correctly?
If so, would you mind sharing your configs? I'd love to reinstall OpenBSD
on this machine, but can't sacrifice that.
Cheers,
Andrew
[0]: To be fair, I suffered the same problems you did, where I thought the
drive was dead. But, in reality, I just had to repartition it w
ikely because the file already exists (because adduser tries to open
the file O_CREAT|O_EXCL).
l8rZ,
--
andrew - http://afresh1.com
Unix is very simple,
but it takes a genius to understand the simplicity.
-- Dennis Ritchie
eding more complex data
structures, you've outgrown the shell and should look at something like
perl, python, etc. Not saying there aren't ways to do queues in
bash/ksh/etc., just...why would you?
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
assuming those people are not
authorized by OpenBSD nor do they pass on profits, alas.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
tedius process. I love how with isakmpd I can just pass it the -L parameter
and it will automatically dump a capture of the decrypted exchange.
Warm regards,
Andrew
[ttl 0] (id 1, len 108)
Perhaps another set of eyes might catch what I have not. Any input would be
greatly appreciated. :)
Warm regards,
Andrew
d as a LAC client or does it only function as an LNS? If the
latter, is there other software available that can act as a native LAC client
on OpenBSD? This is in reference to OpenBSD 5.8 stable.
Thank you,
Andrew Lester
On Sat, Feb 20, 2016 at 08:06:57PM +0100, Federico Giannici wrote:
> In a server (OpenBSD amd64 5.7) with many concurrent perl programs that have
> to open a lot of SSH connections, I get many errors like this:
>
> connect() on closed socket GEN136 at
> /usr/local/libdata/perl5/site_perl/Net/S
r one usually end up just writing a quick web app using
Mojolicious::Lite* or some other framework. Doesn't exactly answer your
question, but I haven't had a desire to write a GUI app in quite a few
years.
* The p5-Mojo package from
http://mojolicious.org/perldoc/Mojolicious/Lite
l8rZ,
to not
exist.
Is this an optional patch or am I missing something? This is an amd64 platform
and I installed all the sets. Patch 001 and 002 had no problem.
Warm regards,
Andrew Lester
GENERIC.MP #1870 amd64
FWIW: Last night did a clean (re) installl using the toronto.edu mirror.
boot> boot hd0a:/bsd.rd
Puffy loaded up fine -- but no packages.
I edited my /etc/pkg.conf
from:
... toronto.edu/pub/OpenBSD/%c/packages/%a/
to:
toronto.edu/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/packages/
Thank you Jiri !! This works:
sh> pkg_add p7zip
sh> 7z e *dmg
On 2/12/16, Jiri B wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 12:43:18PM -0600, Andrew wrote:
>> sh> file tws-stable-standalone-macosx-x64.dmg
>>
>> tws-stable-standalone-macosx-x64.dmg: Macintosh HFS Extended
sh> file tws-stable-standalone-macosx-x64.dmg
tws-stable-standalone-macosx-x64.dmg: Macintosh HFS Extended version 4
data last mounted by: '10.0', created: Tue Feb 2 16:12:22 2016, last
modified: Tue Feb 2 22:12:22 20to 16, last backup: Tue Feb 2
22:12:22 2016, last checked: Tue Feb 2 22:12:22
OTOH, you can get 4TB SATA drives for $250.
The OP was just pointing out that SSD-acceleted (aka SSD-cached) SATA/SAS
is very common in Win/Lin/OSX and was wondering what the status is on
OpenBSD.
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
> I had the same problem with a Gigabyte GA-970A-UD3 based computer, but the
> latest snapshot (#1846: Sun Jan 17 02:34:54 MST 2016) fixed it for me.
>
> Kind regards,
>
>
> Martijn Rijkeboer
Just downloaded GENERIC.MP #1847 amd and it boots seamlessly to a login prompt.
As always, thanks to Theo
FYI -- the current snapshot fails on a Gigabyte Brix.
The boot process blows up at:uhub0
--
uhub0: device problem, disabling port 1
uhub0: device problem, disabling port 2
ehci_sync_hc: tsleep() = 35
ehci_sync_hc: tsleep() = 35
ehci_sync_hc: tsleep() = 35
ehci_sync_hc: tsleep() = 35
ehci_sync_hc:
penBSD, but not for your particular FS -- yours contains
the bit 0x80 (INCOMPAT_64BIT, not even listed in OpenBSD, let alone in
EXT4F_RO_INCOMPAT_SUPP).
If you want to share the FS read/write between OpenBSD and Linux, it's
probably easier to create it as ext2 rather than tracking down which
ext4 features to disable.
-Andrew
On 11/28/15, Doug Hogan wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 27, 2015 at 09:47:23AM +, freeu...@ruggedinbox.com wrote:
>> I installed OpenBSD 5.8 on USB flash memory. It's fine:)
>> Then Lenovo G50-80 could booting. but, startx fail and xdm was fail.
>
> I would focus on startx.
>
>> 1.background is blank(bla
definitely room in the ecosystem for more than one
tool, especially if other operating systems adopt pledge.
l8rZ,
--
andrew - http://afresh1.com
I wish life had an UNDO function.
On Tue, Nov 03, 2015 at 02:03:34PM -0200, Alceu Rodrigues de Freitas Junior
wrote:
> Hello Andrew,
>
> Em 02-11-2015 23:52, Andrew Fresh escreveu:
> >Yes, we don't support many of the algorithms that the tests attempt to
> >use. I should probably push this patch upstre
gain if needed.
That would be helpful, along with specific versions of perl you are
trying to install.
l8rZ,
--
andrew - http://afresh1.com
Full-time system administration is a delicate balance
between proactiveness and laziness.
-- jhorwitz from use.perl.org
The X220 is older, so you can probably find it via ebay or other sources
for way less than your budget.
On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 8:33 AM, Domovoy wrote:
> Thinkpads are over my budget (i find them starting with the E550 at 758â¬
> on my usual reseller).
>
> What about the B50-80 (80LT003C): i3,
Last time I tried (many months ago) ended in a kernel panic.
Big thanks to Puffy/ Theo/ devs for liberating this box from it's old kernel !!
Much happiness :-)
---
OpenBSD 5.8-current (RAMDISK_CD) #1211: Wed Sep 2 08:50:46 MDT 2015
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/R
On 8/14/15, Frank White wrote:
> Hi, anyone has some advices to make more secure a browser like firefox ?
> chroot + systrace ?
This previoius thread is one solution. Plus read a subsequent thread
on pdf viewers.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=142676615612510&w=2
On 7/28/15, Craig Skinner wrote:
> On 2015-07-28 Tue 15:30 PM |, Mohammad BadieZadegan wrote:
>> What is the best and lightest browser that usefull with fvwm?
>
> Dillo is generally good, with Firefox for heavy sites.
>
> Depends on where _you_ surf.
I'm just an obsd end-user, but it would be wr
vert your BIND setup
to unbound+nsd" would be nice. (Good guidance, not misleading and/or
incorrect advice from ca***el.org!) nsd on a localhost high port,
serving my old BIND zone files, and unbound forwarding to it for my
zones was easy enough, but the two "magic" options letting unbound
actually talk to nsd were somewhat less obvious.
-Andrew
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=any~.*&sec=9&arch=default&manpath=OpenBSD-5.7&apropos=1
--
andrew fabbro
and...@fabbro.org
blog: https://raindog308.com
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