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Re: OBSD 4.7 and Via C7 motherboards problem

2010-08-09 Thread Henning Brauer
* Geoff Steckel g...@oat.com [2010-08-08 22:47]:
 On 08/08/2010 03:28 PM, Henning Brauer wrote:
 * Geoff Steckelg...@oat.com  [2010-08-08 20:29]:
 Your pf.conf should only hold state on one side. Multiple conflicting
 state table entries for the same connection ensure flaky failures.
 
 that is wrong in so many ways.
 
 first, should only hold state on one side is bullshit advice.
 holding state on both sides is absolutely fine. wether it is a good
 idea depends on a number of factors. it never really hurts.
 
 second, these state table entries will never ever collide.
 i may recommend a read here:
 http://bulabula.org/papers/2009/eurobsdcon-faster_packets/
 especially slides 40 to 50
 
 I'm saying what has worked for me.
 
 The state code has changed a lot since I did my last big
 set of tests. If states are truly unified between input
 and output interfaces, then the correct objection is:
 
 States found on any interface are reused quickly on
   all interfaces
 
 The documentation is not terribly clear about that.

you have no idea what you are talking about, that part is clear. the
above statements make no sense at all.

we don't need to document the inner workings of the state table. there
is no need for a user to know the details, at all. and if he wants to,
there's the code. and my slides.

 I'm still a bit dubious about handling late FINs and other
 legal packets which the older PF code needed extra help
 to dispose correctly.

i have no idea what you are talking about.

-- 
Henning Brauer, h...@bsws.de, henn...@openbsd.org
BS Web Services, http://bsws.de
Full-Service ISP - Secure Hosting, Mail and DNS Services
Dedicated Servers, Rootservers, Application Hosting



Re: No VLAN Tag seen by switch on CARP interface on VLAN interface

2010-08-09 Thread Steve Johnson
Sorry about forgetting dmesg, thanks for the info about inline/pastebin. 
Since this was very long information, I really wasn't sure. Here are all 
the details inline:


===
DMESG
===
OpenBSD 4.7 (GENERIC.MP) #130: Wed Mar 17 20:48:50 MDT 2010
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 2141519872 (2042MB)
avail mem = 2075058176 (1978MB)
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.5 @ 0x7fb9c000 (67 entries)
bios0: vendor Dell Inc. version 2.3.1 date 04/29/2008
bios0: Dell Inc. PowerEdge 1950
acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
acpi0: tables DSDT FACP APIC SPCR HPET MCFG WD__ SLIC ERST HEST BERT 
EINJ TCPA

acpi0: wakeup devices PCI0(S5)
acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.27 MHz
cpu0: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu0: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu0: apic clock running at 332MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 4 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu1: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu1: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 2 (application processor)
cpu2: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu2: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu2: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 6 (application processor)
cpu3: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu3: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu3: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu4 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu4: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu4: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu4: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu5 at mainbus0: apid 5 (application processor)
cpu5: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu5: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu5: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu6 at mainbus0: apid 3 (application processor)
cpu6: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu6: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu6: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
cpu7 at mainbus0: apid 7 (application processor)
cpu7: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5405 @ 2.00GHz, 1995.02 MHz
cpu7: 
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,TM2,CX16,xTPR,NXE,LONG

cpu7: 6MB 64b/line 16-way L2 cache
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 8 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 8
acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus 4 (PEX2)
acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 5 (UPST)
acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 6 (DWN1)
acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus 8 (DWN2)
acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus 1 (PEX3)
acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus 0 (PE2P)
acpiprt6: no apic found for irq 64
acpiprt6: no apic found for irq 65
acpiprt6: no apic found for irq 78
acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus 10 (PEX4)
acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus 15 (PEX6)
acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus 2 (SBEX)
acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus 17 (COMP)
acpicpu0 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu1 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu2 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu3 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu4 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu5 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu6 at acpi0: C3
acpicpu7 at acpi0: C3
ipmi at mainbus0 not configured
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel 5000X Host rev 0x12
ppb0 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci1 at ppb0 bus 4
ppb1 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci2 at ppb1 bus 5
ppb2 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci3 at ppb2 bus 6
ppb3 at pci3 dev 0 function 0 ServerWorks PCIE-PCIX rev 0xc3
pci4 at ppb3 bus 7
bnx0 at pci4 dev 0 function 0 Broadcom BCM5708 rev 0x12: apic 8 int 16 
(irq 6)

ppb4 at pci2 dev 1 function 0 Intel 6321ESB PCIE rev 0x01
pci5 at ppb4 bus 8
ppb5 at pci1 dev 0 function 3 Intel 6321ESB PCIE-PCIX rev 0x01
pci6 at ppb5 bus 9
ppb6 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 Intel 5000 PCIE rev 0x12
pci7 at ppb6 bus 1
mfi0 at pci7 dev 0 function 0 Symbios Logic SAS1078 rev 0x04: apic 8 
int 16 (irq 6), Dell 

Re: bootstrap, crypto, hibernation/suspend-to-disk

2010-08-09 Thread Jiri B.
 Date: Mon, 9 Aug 2010 14:01:08 +0200

 I am also very interested in this features (encrypted root, swap, raid
 1, key on a i.e. usb stick, boot from kernel from RO media etc.)

 A few things work with minor configuration work, others are not
 supported yet.

 I am new to openBsd and at the moment I am totally out of free time, but
 I plan to understand and later work on such thinks. Maybe we could
 exchange experiences.

 Best Regards

 Andreas

I think it's impossible to create trusted bootloader which would not be
affected
by physical attacks, see here:

http://theinvisiblethings.blogspot.com/2009/10/evil-maid-goes-after-truecrypt
.html

Thus even bootloader would be able to open softraid crypto device, it could be
tampered.

I'm going to create a usb stick with minimal installation on which I will
carry checksums
of files in '/' and I'm going to scan '/' for tampered files before normal
boot.
I do not know any better solution. I don't know if there can be some other
shit which
could somehow get my passphrase for softraid (bios, mbr...)? Is it
theoretically
possible?

jirib



Re: bootstrap, crypto, hibernation/suspend-to-disk

2010-08-09 Thread andreas
 I think it's impossible to create trusted bootloader which would not be 
 affected
 by physical attacks, see here:
 
 http://theinvisiblethings.blogspot.com/2009/10/evil-maid-goes-after-truecrypt.html
 
 Thus even bootloader would be able to open softraid crypto device, it could 
 be 
 tampered.
 
 I'm going to create a usb stick with minimal installation on which I will 
 carry checksums
 of files in '/' and I'm going to scan '/' for tampered files before normal 
 boot.
 I do not know any better solution. I don't know if there can be some other 
 shit which
 could somehow get my passphrase for softraid (bios, mbr...)? Is it 
 theoretically
 possible?

I think a hard disk should be crypt with Deniability. When you boot from
CD or usb-stick and dislocate them, no one should be able to proof that
the disk is crypt.

I am not an expert in this, so please correct me if I am wrong, this
scenario is attackable from bios side, or if the attacker reads the key
from memory (i.e. just booting with a minimal system from CD...) Also I
read about cooling and removing the ram to read the key :D

How to proof your bios? wassent there just last weeks a big company in
the IT news with mallware in their bios?

I don't know if it make sense/is possible, but why dont build a system
where the keys are stored in that part of the ram, which is used by the
bios when booting from cd or usb? So that a least a part of the key will
overwritten during every boot. That the attacker is forced to remove ram
or bios.

Andreas



DRM/OpenGL problems with Radeon HD 4670 on -current

2010-08-09 Thread Mattieu Baptiste
Hi all,

I have some problems I am seeing with DRM on my Radeon HD
4670 in -current (dual head setup with two monitors at
1280x1024). I can't display any OpenGL applications.

The best way to reproduce this is by running glxgears :

matt...@kronenbourg: ~ $ glxgears
drmRadeonCmdBuffer: -22. Kernel failed to parse or rejected command
stream. See dmesg for more info.


In dmesg I have these errors :

error: [drm:pid30830:r300_emit_carefully_checked_packet0] *ERROR*
Register 4e4c failed check as flag=00
error: [drm:pid30830:r300_do_cp_cmdbuf] *ERROR* r300_emit_packet0 failed


My Xorg.0.log can be found at :
http://www.brimbelle.org/mattieu/stuff/Xorg.0.log

Here is my dmesg :

OpenBSD 4.8 (GENERIC.MP) #1: Sun Aug  8 22:25:28 CEST 2010
r...@kronenbourg.panam.brimbelle.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENE
RIC.MP
real mem = 3211198464 (3062MB)
avail mem = 3111903232 (2967MB)
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xf0710 (68 entries)
bios0: vendor American Megatrends Inc. version 1408 date 03/25/2010
bios0: ASUSTeK Computer INC. P7P55D
acpi0 at bios0: rev 0
acpi0: sleep states S0 S1 S3 S4 S5
acpi0: tables DSDT FACP APIC MCFG OEMB HPET ASPT OSFR SSDT
acpi0: wakeup devices P0P4(S4) BR1E(S4) UAR1(S4) PS2K(S4) PS2M(S4)
EUSB(S4) USB0(S4) USB1(S4) USB2(S4) USB3(S4) USBE(S4) USB4(S4)
USB5(S4) USB6(S4) BR21(S4) BR22(S4) BR23(S4) P0P1(S4) P0P3(S4)
P0P5(S4) P0P6(S4) USB8(S4) BR20(S4) BR24(S4) BR25(S4) BR26(S4)
BR27(S4)
acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU 660 @ 3.33GHz, 3344.19 MHz
cpu0:
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUS
H,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,PCLMUL,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,ES
T,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,AES,NXE,LONG
cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu0: apic clock running at 133MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 4 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU 660 @ 3.33GHz, 3343.71 MHz
cpu1:
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUS
H,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,PCLMUL,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,ES
T,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,AES,NXE,LONG
cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU 660 @ 3.33GHz, 3343.71 MHz
cpu2:
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUS
H,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,PCLMUL,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,ES
T,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,AES,NXE,LONG
cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 5 (application processor)
cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU 660 @ 3.33GHz, 3343.71 MHz
cpu3:
FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUS
H,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,PCLMUL,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,ES
T,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,AES,NXE,LONG
cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 6 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 1, remapped to apid 6
acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus 7 (BR1E)
acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus -1 (BR21)
acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus -1 (BR22)
acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (BR23)
acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus 1 (P0P1)
acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P3)
acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P5)
acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P6)
acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus 6 (BR20)
acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus 5 (BR24)
acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus 4 (BR25)
acpiprt12 at acpi0: bus 3 (BR26)
acpiprt13 at acpi0: bus 2 (BR27)
acpiec0 at acpi0
acpicpu0 at acpi0: C2, C1, PSS
acpicpu1 at acpi0: C2, C1, PSS
acpicpu2 at acpi0: C2, C1, PSS
acpicpu3 at acpi0: C2, C1, PSS
aibs0 at acpi0
aibs0: TSIF not found
aibs0: FSIF not found
aibs0: VSIF not found
aibs0: no sensors found
acpibtn0 at acpi0: PWRB
cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 3343 MHz: speeds: 3334, , 3200, 3067,
2933, 2800, 2667, 2533, 2400, 2267, 2133, 2000, 1867, 1733, 1600,
1467, 1333, 1200 MHz
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel Core Host rev 0x12
ppb0 at pci0 dev 1 function 0 Intel Core PCIE rev 0x12: apic 6 int 16 (irq
10)
pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
vga1 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 ATI Radeon HD 4670 rev 0x00
wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (80x25, vt100 emulation)
radeondrm0 at vga1: apic 6 int 16 (irq 10)
drm0 at radeondrm0
azalia0 at pci1 dev 0 function 1 ATI Radeon HD 4000 HD Audio rev
0x00: apic 6 int 17 (irq 5)
azalia0: no supported codecs
azalia0: initialization failure, detaching
ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 Intel 3400 USB rev 0x06: apic 6 int
16 (irq 10)
usb0 at ehci0: USB revision 2.0
uhub0 at usb0 Intel EHCI root hub rev 2.00/1.00 addr 1
azalia1 at pci0 dev 27 function 0 Intel 3400 HD Audio rev 0x06: apic
6 int 22 (irq 3)
azalia1: codecs: VIA/0x4441
audio0 at azalia1
ppb1 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 Intel 3400 PCIE rev 0x06: apic 

cwm: don't warp to ignored windows

2010-08-09 Thread Christian Neukirchen
Hi,

cwm currently warps to all newly mapped windows.  I think it would be
nice to not warp to windows marked as ignore in .cwmrc, so popping
windows you are not interested in don't disturb you.

Thanks,
-- 
Christian Neukirchen  chneukirc...@gmail.com  http://chneukirchen.org



Re: cwm: don't warp to ignored windows

2010-08-09 Thread Bret S. Lambert
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 09:28:40PM +0200, Christian Neukirchen wrote:
 Hi,
 
 cwm currently warps to all newly mapped windows.  I think it would be
 nice to not warp to windows marked as ignore in .cwmrc, so popping
 windows you are not interested in don't disturb you.

I think your mailer ate your patch.

 
 Thanks,
 -- 
 Christian Neukirchen  chneukirc...@gmail.com  http://chneukirchen.org



Votre Annonce

2010-08-09 Thread dcarole37
Bonjour,

dC)posez votre annonce gratuitement http://www.mobilebleu.com/annonce.php  
votre annonce apparaitra immC)diatement



,



Re: cwm: don't warp to ignored windows

2010-08-09 Thread Christian Neukirchen
Bret S. Lambert bret.lamb...@gmail.com writes:

 On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 09:28:40PM +0200, Christian Neukirchen wrote:
 Hi,
 
 cwm currently warps to all newly mapped windows.  I think it would be
 nice to not warp to windows marked as ignore in .cwmrc, so popping
 windows you are not interested in don't disturb you.

 I think your mailer ate your patch.

Whoops, my bad.


diff --git a/xevents.c b/xevents.c
index 9681790..ca0c9db 100644
--- a/xevents.c
+++ b/xevents.c
@@ -77,6 +77,8 @@ xev_handle_maprequest(XEvent *ee)
XMapRequestEvent*e = ee-xmaprequest;
struct client_ctx   *cc = NULL, *old_cc;
XWindowAttributesxattr;
+   struct winmatch *wm;
+   int  ignore = 0;
 
if ((old_cc = client_current()) != NULL)
client_ptrsave(old_cc);
@@ -86,7 +88,15 @@ xev_handle_maprequest(XEvent *ee)
cc = client_new(e-window, screen_fromroot(xattr.root), 1);
}
 
-   client_ptrwarp(cc);
+   TAILQ_FOREACH(wm, Conf.ignoreq, entry) {
+   if (strncasecmp(wm-title, cc-name, strlen(wm-title)) == 0) {
+   ignore = 1;
+   break;
+   }
+   }
+
+   if (!ignore)
+   client_ptrwarp(cc);
 }
 
 static void


-- 
Christian Neukirchen  chneukirc...@gmail.com  http://chneukirchen.org



You've received a gift copy of the game Crysis Warhead (EU) on Steam

2010-08-09 Thread Steam Store
STEAM

YOUVE RECEIVED A GIFT

YOUR GIFT

fd,

fdfd

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which monitoring do you use (on OpenBSD)

2010-08-09 Thread Jiri B.
Hello,

I'm thinking to choose a monitoring tool which would run on OpenBSD
of course.

I have been working with Tivoli and Netview for couple of years so my
idea is:

* clients

- heartbeats of course
- simple interface to give a client some input as alert
- text configuration on client node (can be pushed from central repo)
- light

* infrastructure nodes

- proxy feature for far networks or dmz
- filtering rules (thresholds, time filters ...)
- text configuration
- light

* main server(s)

- good filtering
- surveillance console for monitoring center
- be able to change status of an alert (acknowledge, closed, solved...)
- be able to have some categories of clients based on roles

I'm watching zabbix... not sure...

If I wouldn't want event console I would probably check snmp - sec -
snmptt.

jirib



Re: which monitoring do you use (on OpenBSD)

2010-08-09 Thread Robert
On Tue, 10 Aug 2010 01:28:09 +0200
Jiri B. ji...@live.com wrote:
 I'm thinking to choose a monitoring tool which would run on OpenBSD
 of course.

*) Nagios to monitor for problems
*) Cacti for performance logs

Nfsen, smokeping and pfstat are also handy sometimes.

Don't expect exact Tivoli/Netview clones; it's just important that you
get the required *information* from your tools, not the same
interface...

regards,
Robert



clobbered by `longjmp' warning

2010-08-09 Thread Edwin Eyan Moragas
Hi misc,

i have this warning when i compile picolisp in obsd 4.7:

flow.c: In function `doCatch':
flow.c:1351: warning: argument `x' might be clobbered by `longjmp' or `vfork'

the offending code is:

any doCatch(any x) {
   any y;
   catchFrame f;

   x = cdr(x),  f.tag = EVAL(car(x)),  f.fin = Zero;
   f.link = CatchPtr,  CatchPtr = f;
   f.env = Env;
   y = setjmp(f.rst)? Thrown : prog(cdr(x));
   CatchPtr = f.link;
   return y;
}

any hints on how to remove the warning would be greatly appreciated.

thank you.

/e



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Re: no sound Intel 82801I HD Audio in -current

2010-08-09 Thread Luis Cortes
Hello,

I've got -current running on a Toshiba Tecra M10-S3454 laptop.
Everything seems to be working ok.  However, I've got no audio and I
really would like to get this working.

I also noticed the patch that was provided earlier in this thread but
I'm reluctant to try it since I get nothing from mixerctl and
audioctl.

Not sure what else to try.  Can someone point me in the right direction.

--
Luis

OpenBSD 4.8-beta (GENERIC.MP) #0: Sun Aug  1 17:55:54 PDT 2010
r...@vkd202-lc.nu.edu:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC.MP
cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU P8700 @ 2.53GHz (GenuineIntel
686-class) 2.53 GHz
cpu0: 
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,XSAVE
real mem  = 3079827456 (2937MB)
avail mem = 3019476992 (2879MB)
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+ BIOS, date 09/08/09, BIOS32 rev. 0 @
0xf1841, SMBIOS rev. 2.5 @ 0xec000 (53 entries)
bios0: vendor TOSHIBA version Version 3.00 date 09/08/2009
bios0: TOSHIBA TECRA M10
acpi0 at bios0: rev 0
acpi0: tables DSDT FACP SSDT BOOT APIC MCFG HPET TCPA SLIC SSDT SSDT SSDT
acpi0: wakeup devices USB1(S4) USB3(S4) USB4(S4) USB5(S4) USB6(S4)
EHC1(S4) EHC2(S4) AZAL(S3) WLAN(S4) EXCB(S4) LAN_(S4) LID_(S4)
PWRB(S4) HS87(S4) HS86(S4)
acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: apic clock running at 266MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU P8700 @ 2.53GHz (GenuineIntel
686-class) 2.53 GHz
cpu1: 
FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,DS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,SBF,SSE3,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,SMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,XSAVE
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 1 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 1
acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus 5 (PCIB)
acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 1 (MPEX)
acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 2 (EXCB)
acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus 4 (PEX3)
acpicpu0 at acpi0: C1, PSS
acpicpu1 at acpi0: C1, PSS
acpipwrres0 at acpi0: PDOC
acpitz0 at acpi0: critical temperature 107 degC
acpibtn0 at acpi0: LID_
acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT1 model G71C00084H10 serial 001643 type
Li-ION   oem 0
acpibat1 at acpi0: BAT2 not present
acpibtn1 at acpi0: PWRB
acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit online
acpidock0 at acpi0: DOCK not docked (0)
acpivideo0 at acpi0: VGA_
acpivout0 at acpivideo0: LCD_
acpivout1 at acpivideo0: CRT_
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0x1 0xd/0x1000 0xd1000/0x3000 0xe8000/0x8000!
cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2528 MHz: speeds: 2531, 2530, 1600, 800 MHz
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0: configuration mode 1 (bios)
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel GM45 Host rev 0x07
vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel GM45 Video rev 0x07
wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (80x25, vt100 emulation)
intagp0 at vga1
agp0 at intagp0: aperture at 0xe000, size 0x1000
inteldrm0 at vga1: apic 1 int 16 (irq 10)
drm0 at inteldrm0
Intel GM45 Video rev 0x07 at pci0 dev 2 function 1 not configured
Intel GM45 HECI rev 0x07 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 not configured
em0 at pci0 dev 25 function 0 Intel ICH9 IGP M AMT rev 0x03: apic 1
int 20 (irq 11), address 00:23:18:82:28:7c
uhci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 16 (irq 10)
uhci1 at pci0 dev 26 function 1 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 21 (irq 11)
uhci2 at pci0 dev 26 function 2 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 19 (irq 11)
ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 7 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 19 (irq 11)
usb0 at ehci0: USB revision 2.0
uhub0 at usb0 Intel EHCI root hub rev 2.00/1.00 addr 1
azalia0 at pci0 dev 27 function 0 Intel 82801I HD Audio rev 0x03:
apic 1 int 22 (irq 255)
azalia0: invalid CORBSZCAP: 0x 0
azalia0: initialization failure, detaching
ppb0 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 Intel 82801I PCIE rev 0x03
pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
iwn0 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 Intel WiFi Link 5100 rev 0x00: apic 1
int 16 (irq 10), MIMO 1T2R, MoW, address 00:26:c6:b7:bd:18
ppb1 at pci0 dev 28 function 1 Intel 82801I PCIE rev 0x03: apic 1
int 16 (irq 10)
pci2 at ppb1 bus 2
ppb2 at pci0 dev 28 function 2 Intel 82801I PCIE rev 0x03
pci3 at ppb2 bus 4
uhci3 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 23 (irq 11)
uhci4 at pci0 dev 29 function 1 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 19 (irq 11)
uhci5 at pci0 dev 29 function 2 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 18 (irq 11)
ehci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 7 Intel 82801I USB rev 0x03: apic 1
int 23 (irq 11)
usb1 at ehci1: USB revision 2.0
uhub1 at usb1 Intel EHCI root hub rev 2.00/1.00 addr 1
ppb3 at pci0 dev 30 function 0 Intel 82801BAM Hub-to-PCI rev 0x93
pci4 at ppb3 bus 5
cbb0 at pci4 dev 11 function 0 Ricoh 5C476 CardBus rev 0xba: apic 1
int 22 (irq 255)
Ricoh 5C832 Firewire rev 0x04 at pci4 dev 11 

Re: Battery update frequency

2010-08-09 Thread Luis Useche
I tried today's (August 9th) snapshot and the problems is gone.

Thanks,
Luis.

On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 4:38 AM, Peter Hessler phess...@theapt.org wrote:

 There was a fix for this very recently, please update to a snapshot or
 -current.

 On 2010 Jul 24 (Sat) at 12:04:56 -0700 (-0700), Luis Useche wrote:
 :HI Guys,
 :
 :I have a Dell Inspiron 1420 laptop where I am using OpenBSD.
 :
 :My problem is that the battery status is not updated frequently enough. It
 :is updated when the machine boots and when less than 10% of the battery is
 :remaining. I was wondering if this is the expected behavior.
 :
 :I check apm and apmd code and the issue seems to be comming from the
 acpi
 :driver itself. I tried to read acpi, but it looks very intimidating to me.
 :
 :Any thoughts?
 :
 :Thanks in advance,
 :Luis.
 :

 --
 I often quote myself; it adds spice to my conversation.
-- G. B. Shaw



Re: clobbered by `longjmp' warning

2010-08-09 Thread Kamo Hiroyasu
Hello,

From: Edwin Eyan Moragas e...@yndy.org
Subject: clobbered by `longjmp' warning
Date: Tue, 10 Aug 2010 08:20:49 +0800
 i have this warning when i compile picolisp in obsd 4.7:
 
 flow.c: In function `doCatch':
 flow.c:1351: warning: argument `x' might be clobbered by `longjmp' or `vfork'

The patch

- any doCatch(any x) {
+ any doCatch(volatile any x) {
any y;
catchFrame f;
 

may works.

setjmp() saves some of the registers which longjmp() will recover.  If
some variable assigned to a register changes its value after a call of
setjump(), its value may be recovered by a call of longjmp().  To
prevent such an unexpected recovery, you should tell the compiler that
the value of the variable may be modified between the call of
setjump() and the call of the jongjmp() by using the keyword
`volatile'.

Kamo Hiroyasu [Kamo is the family name and Hiroyasu the given name.]



Re: clobbered by `longjmp' warning

2010-08-09 Thread Edwin Eyan Moragas
Hi Hiroyasu,

On Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 1:37 PM, Kamo Hiroyasu w...@ics.nara-wu.ac.jp wrote:
 Hello,

 From: Edwin Eyan Moragas e...@yndy.org
 Subject: clobbered by `longjmp' warning
 Date: Tue, 10 Aug 2010 08:20:49 +0800
 i have this warning when i compile picolisp in obsd 4.7:

 flow.c: In function `doCatch':
 flow.c:1351: warning: argument `x' might be clobbered by `longjmp' or
`vfork'

 The patch

 - any doCatch(any x) {
 + any doCatch(volatile any x) {
any y;
catchFrame f;


 may works.

thank you.

i guess it is for me to find out if it is indeed ok for  the variable
to be changed between setjmp()s. :)


 setjmp() saves some of the registers which longjmp() will recover.  If
 some variable assigned to a register changes its value after a call of
 setjump(), its value may be recovered by a call of longjmp().  To
 prevent such an unexpected recovery, you should tell the compiler that
 the value of the variable may be modified between the call of
 setjump() and the call of the jongjmp() by using the keyword
 `volatile'.

 Kamo Hiroyasu [Kamo is the family name and Hiroyasu the given name.]