Re: hibernation with APM

2011-08-07 Thread David Vasek

Hi Marco.

Thanks, but I'm not asking about suspend. apmd -z starts suspend, at least 
with my Thinkpad and Compaq, both with Phoenix APM BIOSes. Hibernation is 
sometimes called save to disk suspend, while suspend is then called 
save to RAM suspend.


Regards,
David

On Sat, 6 Aug 2011, Marco Peereboom wrote:


run apmd at startup then type apm -z to initiate it.  Works like a charm
on most laptops of quality.

On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 12:54:22AM +0200, David Vasek wrote:

Hello all,

does anybody please know if there is a way to initiate hibernation
on APM equipped laptops that support it *from software*? Thanks for
answers.

Regards,
David




Re: status of ACPI suspend/resume on Thinkpad T60 w/ T7200 processor?

2011-08-07 Thread Jona Joachim
On Sat, Aug 06, 2011 at 03:24:42AM +0200, Benny Lofgren wrote:
 On 2011-08-05 17.51, Pedro la Peu wrote:
  On Friday 05 August 2011 13:35:16 Jona Joachim wrote:
  There are other resume related problems on my Stinkpad Z61M (console is 
  blank after resume and bge0 can no longer get a link) but at least the 
  machine and X resume enough to be useful.
 
 I've got a Z61p with what I assume is similar hardware (haven't got mine
 handy right now so can't get a dmesg) and exactly the same symptoms. The
 resume would indeed be useful even with the blank text console if only
 the network got back online, but alas no. If memory serves, not even the
 wpi wifi survives a suspend/resume cycle.

wpi(4) did come back nicely back when resume worked on my T60. However
the console never survived a resume, only X was usable.

Best regards,
Jona



installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Michael Treibton
Hi all,

i'm attempting to diagnose if there was a problem with installing
OpenBSD to an external USB hard disk or not.  The disk is a Western
Digital 2TB disk, should it matter.  Needless to say, the install went
fine on to the disk; all the sets were unpacked, and I rebooted the
machine as per the instructions at the end.  During install, I let the
installer auto partition the disk in question, and that ended up
creating a sensible layout that i could tell.

Yet, when i reboot the machine, and ask the BIOS to boot from the
external usb disk, eventually nothing happens, and my machine then
defaults to booting off my internal disk.  What could be causing this?
 i've had other operating systems on this external USB disk in the
past, so I know it's perfectly capable of being detected correctly by
the BIOS.

Since though I can't get at the disk in question, I am unsure what
information I can gather for you -- under Linux using cfdisk, the
best information I can gather is the following:

Number   Flags  Part Type   FilesystemLabelSize
 --
   Pri/Ext Free space0.00MB
  4 Bootable   Primary sun-ufs2000396MB

And:

 Partition info
 --

  Possible partition device: /dev/sdb4
 Partition type: Primary

Partition size in bytes: 2000396288512B
  Partition size in sectors: 3907024001s
   Portion of the hard disk: 100%

Filesystem type: sun-ufs
System type: 0xa6
   System type name: OpenBSD

   Position: 64s-3907024064s
   Start (cyl,heads,sector): 0,1,1
 End (cyl,heads,sector): 243200,254,62

  Flags: boot

If there's a means of providing more information to help with this, please say.

TIA for any help.

Kindly,
Michael



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Francois Pussault
hi, all,

This should be an hardware issue, I've used an usb external drive with
success. whith a dell A6 or A7 version of Dell bios, boot usb enabled, with a
(double-usb) eternal drive, using BSD4.2 filesystem.

so maybe you need a bios upgrade or a double-usb-drive to be able to boot or
to use BSD4.2 fs on / ?




 
 From: Michael Treibton mtreib...@googlemail.com
 Sent: Sun Aug 07 12:32:45 CEST 2011
 To: misc@openbsd.org
 Subject: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not
boot


 Hi all,

 i'm attempting to diagnose if there was a problem with installing
 OpenBSD to an external USB hard disk or not.  The disk is a Western
 Digital 2TB disk, should it matter.  Needless to say, the install went
 fine on to the disk; all the sets were unpacked, and I rebooted the
 machine as per the instructions at the end.  During install, I let the
 installer auto partition the disk in question, and that ended up
 creating a sensible layout that i could tell.

 Yet, when i reboot the machine, and ask the BIOS to boot from the
 external usb disk, eventually nothing happens, and my machine then
 defaults to booting off my internal disk.  What could be causing this?
  i've had other operating systems on this external USB disk in the
 past, so I know it's perfectly capable of being detected correctly by
 the BIOS.

 Since though I can't get at the disk in question, I am unsure what
 information I can gather for you -- under Linux using cfdisk, the
 best information I can gather is the following:

 Number   Flags  Part Type   FilesystemLabel
Size

-
-
Pri/Ext Free space
0.00MB
   4 Bootable   Primary sun-ufs
2000396MB

 And:

  Partition info

-
-

   Possible partition device: /dev/sdb4
  Partition type: Primary

 Partition size in bytes: 2000396288512B
   Partition size in sectors: 3907024001s
Portion of the hard disk: 100%

 Filesystem type: sun-ufs
 System type: 0xa6
System type name: OpenBSD

Position: 64s-3907024064s
Start (cyl,heads,sector): 0,1,1
  End (cyl,heads,sector): 243200,254,62

   Flags: boot

 If there's a means of providing more information to help with this, please
say.

 TIA for any help.

 Kindly,
 Michael



Cordialement
Francois Pussault
3701 - 8 rue Marcel Pagnol
31100 ToulouseB 
FranceB 
+33 6 17 230 820 B  +33 5 34 365 269
fpussa...@contactoffice.fr



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Michael Treibton
hi,

On 7 August 2011 12:19, Francois Pussault fpussa...@contactoffice.fr wrote:
 hi, all,

 This should be an hardware issue, I've used an usb external drive with 
 success. whith a dell A6 or A7 version of Dell bios, boot usb enabled, with a 
 (double-usb) eternal drive, using BSD4.2 filesystem.

 so maybe you need a bios upgrade or a double-usb-drive to be able to boot or 
 to use BSD4.2 fs on / ?

i'd agree with you if it wasn't for the fact that NetBSD has been on
this drive at some point, and has booted from it just fine,
unfortunately only OpenBSD seems to suffer being able to work off this
drive.

I'm wondering if it's down to how the other BSDs partition the disk?
it's entirely possible other OSes gave a small partition for /boot
which the bios could pick up on?  that being the case, is that easy to
do at install time?  i'll have to read the docs i suppose, assuming
its even a good idea.

But bios upgrade?  No, i really can't see how that's correct given
evidence to the contrary.

Thanks,

Michael



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Francois Pussault
if other BSD can boot, you can eliminate bios upgrade solution ;)

 
 From: Michael Treibton mtreib...@googlemail.com
 Sent: Sun Aug 07 13:31:11 CEST 2011
 To: Francois Pussault fpussa...@contactoffice.fr
 Subject: Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not
boot


 hi,

 On 7 August 2011 12:19, Francois Pussault fpussa...@contactoffice.fr
wrote:
  hi, all,
 
  This should be an hardware issue, I've used an usb external drive with
success. whith a dell A6 or A7 version of Dell bios, boot usb enabled, with a
(double-usb) eternal drive, using BSD4.2 filesystem.
 
  so maybe you need a bios upgrade or a double-usb-drive to be able to boot
or to use BSD4.2 fs on / ?

 i'd agree with you if it wasn't for the fact that NetBSD has been on
 this drive at some point, and has booted from it just fine,
 unfortunately only OpenBSD seems to suffer being able to work off this
 drive.

 I'm wondering if it's down to how the other BSDs partition the disk?
 it's entirely possible other OSes gave a small partition for /boot
 which the bios could pick up on?  that being the case, is that easy to
 do at install time?  i'll have to read the docs i suppose, assuming
 its even a good idea.

 But bios upgrade?  No, i really can't see how that's correct given
 evidence to the contrary.

 Thanks,

 Michael


Cordialement
Francois Pussault
3701 - 8 rue Marcel Pagnol
31100 ToulouseB 
FranceB 
+33 6 17 230 820 B  +33 5 34 365 269
fpussa...@contactoffice.fr



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread David Vasek

On Sun, 7 Aug 2011, Michael Treibton wrote:

If there's a means of providing more information to help with this, 
please say.


I guess the devs would like to see the output from OpenBSD fdisk(8) and 
disklabel(8), rather than from Linux. You can obtain those by selecting 
the (S)hell in the install program and using the commands above.


The key part probably is what, if anything, is being displayed by the 
bootloader before the BIOS boots from the internal disk and in what state 
was the disk and the MBR table prior the install.


Regards,
David



Re: hibernation with APM

2011-08-07 Thread Marco Peereboom
Oh I am sorry I missed that.  Hibernation is being worked on.  There was
a measure of some success during the last hackathon.  Any release now
;-)

On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 08:29:49AM +0200, David Vasek wrote:
 Hi Marco.
 
 Thanks, but I'm not asking about suspend. apmd -z starts suspend, at
 least with my Thinkpad and Compaq, both with Phoenix APM BIOSes.
 Hibernation is sometimes called save to disk suspend, while
 suspend is then called save to RAM suspend.
 
 Regards,
 David
 
 On Sat, 6 Aug 2011, Marco Peereboom wrote:
 
 run apmd at startup then type apm -z to initiate it.  Works like a charm
 on most laptops of quality.
 
 On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 12:54:22AM +0200, David Vasek wrote:
 Hello all,
 
 does anybody please know if there is a way to initiate hibernation
 on APM equipped laptops that support it *from software*? Thanks for
 answers.
 
 Regards,
 David



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Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Kenneth R Westerback
On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 02:01:44PM +0200, David Vasek wrote:
 On Sun, 7 Aug 2011, Michael Treibton wrote:
 
 If there's a means of providing more information to help with
 this, please say.
 
 I guess the devs would like to see the output from OpenBSD fdisk(8)
 and disklabel(8), rather than from Linux. You can obtain those by
 selecting the (S)hell in the install program and using the commands
 above.

Yes, we would. :-). All the normal information (e.g. dmesg) and a
serial capture of the install process so we can see exactly what
the installer was saying and was told.

 
 The key part probably is what, if anything, is being displayed by
 the bootloader before the BIOS boots from the internal disk and in
 what state was the disk and the MBR table prior the install.
 

Also true. The 'hd0+', etc. line would be informative.

Best of all, try to install the OpenBSD 5.0 snapshot. That's the most
interesting (and soon to be locked) environment.

 Ken

 Regards,
 David



Azalia Intel 3400 HD Audio rev 0x05: apic 2 int 22 (irq 11)

2011-08-07 Thread Jairo Souto
I can get only noise from the audio of the Acer Aspire 5820T-6825 azalia.

The kernel is OpenBSD uranio.dlg 4.9 GENERIC.MP#2 amd64
only modified for the alc0 driver to operate. As I have a
compatible wireless usb there is no problem with the Broadcom not
configured. But the sound is required and I can not get it to
run.

Do you have any help?

dmesg, audio -a, mixerctl -av follow

dmesg:
-
OpenBSD 4.9 (GENERIC.MP) #2: Sun Jul 17 09:40:29 BRT 2011
jso...@uranio.dlg:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
RTC BIOS diagnostic error 80clock_battery
real mem = 3008843776 (2869MB)
avail mem = 2914725888 (2779MB)
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xe9460 (51 entries)
bios0: vendor INSYDE version V1.23 date 12/21/2010
bios0: Acer Aspire 5820T
acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
acpi0: tables DSDT FACP ASF! HPET APIC MCFG SLIC BOOT ASPT WDAT SSDT
acpi0: wakeup devices EHC1(S3) EHC2(S3) PXSX(S4) RP01(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) 
PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4)
acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.88 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu0: apic clock running at 133MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 4 (application processor)
cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 5 (application processor)
cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 2
acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xf000, bus 0-127
acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P2)
acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 3 (P0P1)
acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 1 (RP01)
acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP02)
acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP04)
acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG5)
acpiec0 at acpi0
acpicpu0 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
acpicpu1 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
acpicpu2 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
acpicpu3 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
acpitz0 at acpi0: critical temperature 105 degC
acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT1 model AS10B3E serial 7F5A type LION oem SANYO
acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit online
acpibtn0 at acpi0: PWRB
acpibtn1 at acpi0: LID0
acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
acpivout0 at acpivideo0: LCD_
acpivideo1 at acpi0: VGA_
cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2660 MHz: speeds: 2667, 2666, 2533, 2399, 2266, 2133, 
1999, 1866, 1733, 1599, 1466, 1333, 1199 MHz
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel Core Host rev 0x18
vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel Mobile HD graphics rev 0x18
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 0xc000, size 0x1000
inteldrm0 at vga1: apic 2 int 16 (irq 7)
drm0 at inteldrm0
Intel 3400 MEI rev 0x06 at pci0 dev 22 function 0 not configured
ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 Intel 3400 USB rev 0x05: apic 2 int 16 (irq 7)
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 3400 HD Audio rev 0x05: apic 2 int 22 
(irq 11)
azalia0: codecs: Realtek ALC269, Intel/0x2804, using Realtek ALC269
audio0 at azalia0
ppb0 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 Intel 3400 PCIE rev 0x05: apic 2 int 17 (irq 
255)
pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
alc0 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 Attansic Technology L1D rev 0xc0: apic 2 int 16 
(irq 7), address 60:eb:69:d8:e3:e3
atphy0 at alc0 phy 0: F1 10/100/1000 PHY, rev. 15
ppb1 at pci0 dev 28 function 5 Intel 3400 PCIE rev 0x05: apic 2 int 16 (irq 
255)
pci2 at ppb1 bus 2
Broadcom BCM43225 rev 0x01 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 not configured
ehci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 Intel 3400 USB rev 0x05: apic 2 int 23 

Re: Azalia Intel 3400 HD Audio rev 0x05: apic 2 int 22 (irq 11)

2011-08-07 Thread Renato dos Santos
nice...
talvez seja o codec..

Em 07/08/2011, `s 11:30, Jairo Souto escreveu:

 I can get only noise from the audio of the Acer Aspire 5820T-6825 azalia.

 The kernel is OpenBSD uranio.dlg 4.9 GENERIC.MP#2 amd64
 only modified for the alc0 driver to operate. As I have a
 compatible wireless usb there is no problem with the Broadcom not
 configured. But the sound is required and I can not get it to
 run.

 Do you have any help?

 dmesg, audio -a, mixerctl -av follow

 dmesg:
 -
 OpenBSD 4.9 (GENERIC.MP) #2: Sun Jul 17 09:40:29 BRT 2011
jso...@uranio.dlg:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
 RTC BIOS diagnostic error 80clock_battery
 real mem = 3008843776 (2869MB)
 avail mem = 2914725888 (2779MB)
 mainbus0 at root
 bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xe9460 (51 entries)
 bios0: vendor INSYDE version V1.23 date 12/21/2010
 bios0: Acer Aspire 5820T
 acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
 acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
 acpi0: tables DSDT FACP ASF! HPET APIC MCFG SLIC BOOT ASPT WDAT SSDT
 acpi0: wakeup devices EHC1(S3) EHC2(S3) PXSX(S4) RP01(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4)
PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4)
 acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
 acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
 acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
 cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
 cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.88 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,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3
,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu0: apic clock running at 133MHz
 cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
 cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3
,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 4 (application processor)
 cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3
,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 5 (application processor)
 cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3
,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
 ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 2
 acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xf000, bus 0-127
 acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
 acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P2)
 acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 3 (P0P1)
 acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 1 (RP01)
 acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP02)
 acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
 acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP04)
 acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
 acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
 acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
 acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
 acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG5)
 acpiec0 at acpi0
 acpicpu0 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpicpu1 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpicpu2 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpicpu3 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpitz0 at acpi0: critical temperature 105 degC
 acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT1 model AS10B3E serial 7F5A type LION oem SANYO
 acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit online
 acpibtn0 at acpi0: PWRB
 acpibtn1 at acpi0: LID0
 acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
 acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
 acpivout0 at acpivideo0: LCD_
 acpivideo1 at acpi0: VGA_
 cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2660 MHz: speeds: 2667, 2666, 2533, 2399, 2266,
2133, 1999, 1866, 1733, 1599, 1466, 1333, 1199 MHz
 pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
 pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel Core Host rev 0x18
 vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel Mobile HD graphics rev 0x18
 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 0xc000, size 0x1000
 inteldrm0 at vga1: apic 2 int 16 (irq 7)
 drm0 at inteldrm0
 Intel 3400 MEI rev 0x06 at pci0 dev 22 function 0 not configured
 ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 Intel 3400 USB rev 0x05: apic 2 int 16
(irq 7)
 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 3400 HD Audio rev 0x05: apic 2 int
22 (irq 11)
 azalia0: codecs: Realtek ALC269, Intel/0x2804, using Realtek ALC269
 audio0 at azalia0
 ppb0 at pci0 dev 28 function 0 Intel 3400 PCIE rev 0x05: apic 2 int 17
(irq 255)
 pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
 alc0 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 Attansic Technology L1D rev 0xc0: apic 2 int
16 (irq 7), address 60:eb:69:d8:e3:e3
 atphy0 at alc0 phy 0: F1 10/100/1000 PHY, rev. 15
 ppb1 at pci0 dev 28 function 5 Intel 3400 PCIE rev 0x05: apic 2 int 16

Re: Azalia Intel 3400 HD Audio rev 0x05: apic 2 int 22 (irq 11)

2011-08-07 Thread Chris Cappuccio
jakemsr sent this which fixed the problem on 6SERIES and is documented on 
datasheets of these other chipsets as well:

Index: azalia.c
===
RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/dev/pci/azalia.c,v
retrieving revision 1.198
diff -u -r1.198 azalia.c
--- azalia.c3 Jul 2011 15:47:16 -   1.198
+++ azalia.c7 Aug 2011 16:46:21 -
@@ -448,6 +448,17 @@
}
 
break;
+
+   case PCI_PRODUCT_INTEL_6SERIES_HDA:
+   case PCI_PRODUCT_INTEL_3400_HDA:
+   case PCI_PRODUCT_INTEL_QS57_HDA:
+   reg = azalia_pci_read(az-pc, az-tag, 0x79);
+   azalia_pci_write(az-pc, az-tag, 0x79, reg  ~0x08);
+   reg = azalia_pci_read(az-pc, az-tag, 0x79);
+   if (reg  0x08)
+   printf(: could not enable PCIe cache snooping\n);
+   break;
+
}
 }
 


Jairo Souto [jairo.so...@holdinggem.com.br] wrote:
 I can get only noise from the audio of the Acer Aspire 5820T-6825 azalia.
 
 The kernel is OpenBSD uranio.dlg 4.9 GENERIC.MP#2 amd64
 only modified for the alc0 driver to operate. As I have a
 compatible wireless usb there is no problem with the Broadcom not
 configured. But the sound is required and I can not get it to
 run.
 
 Do you have any help?
 
 dmesg, audio -a, mixerctl -av follow
 
 dmesg:
 -
 OpenBSD 4.9 (GENERIC.MP) #2: Sun Jul 17 09:40:29 BRT 2011
 jso...@uranio.dlg:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
 RTC BIOS diagnostic error 80clock_battery
 real mem = 3008843776 (2869MB)
 avail mem = 2914725888 (2779MB)
 mainbus0 at root
 bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xe9460 (51 entries)
 bios0: vendor INSYDE version V1.23 date 12/21/2010
 bios0: Acer Aspire 5820T
 acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
 acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
 acpi0: tables DSDT FACP ASF! HPET APIC MCFG SLIC BOOT ASPT WDAT SSDT
 acpi0: wakeup devices EHC1(S3) EHC2(S3) PXSX(S4) RP01(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) 
 PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4)
 acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
 acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
 acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
 cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
 cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.88 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu0: apic clock running at 133MHz
 cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
 cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 4 (application processor)
 cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 5 (application processor)
 cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
 cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
 ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 2
 acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xf000, bus 0-127
 acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
 acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P2)
 acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 3 (P0P1)
 acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 1 (RP01)
 acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP02)
 acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
 acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP04)
 acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
 acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
 acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
 acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
 acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG5)
 acpiec0 at acpi0
 acpicpu0 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpicpu1 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpicpu2 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpicpu3 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
 acpitz0 at acpi0: critical temperature 105 degC
 acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT1 model AS10B3E serial 7F5A type LION oem SANYO
 acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit online
 acpibtn0 at acpi0: PWRB
 acpibtn1 at acpi0: LID0
 acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
 acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
 acpivout0 at acpivideo0: LCD_
 acpivideo1 at acpi0: VGA_
 cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2660 MHz: speeds: 2667, 2666, 2533, 2399, 2266, 
 2133, 1999, 1866, 1733, 1599, 1466, 1333, 1199 MHz
 pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
 pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel Core Host rev 0x18
 vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel Mobile HD graphics rev 0x18
 wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
 wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (80x25, 

VII Ateneo 2011 - Síndrome de Fatiga Crónica

2011-08-07 Thread difusion
Escuela Sistimica Argentina
Institucisn dedicada a la formacisn, asistencia e investigacisn
psicolsgica.
Hoy nos acercamos a Uds. para invitarlos a la realizacisn del VII Ateneo
2011



SINDROME DE FATIGA CRONICA (SFC).



Estoy cansada todo el dma... Me angustia no poder hacer las cosas.
Mi familia no aguanta mas mis quejas y no me cree. Quiero,  pero el
cuerpo no me sigue. Por mas que duerma, me levanto cansada y dolorida.
La memoria me falla. Ya no soy yo. Me duele el cuerpo. Los
resultados de los analisis son normales y los midicos me dicen que no
tengo nada. Me dijeron que puede ser depresisn y me mandaron a hacer
psicoterapia
Estas son las palabras con las que el paciente intenta describir qui le
pasa y que sufre de Smndrome de Fatiga Crsnica (SFC). Son absolutamente
inespecmficas y pueden corresponderse con muchas enfermedades. 
El desconocimiento de la existencia de estas enfermedades lleva al
peregrinaje de estos pacientes por varios consultorios de diferentes
midicos especialistas y a realizar distintos tipos de psicoterapias por
mas de diez aqos (Beretta P y col., Paris 2009) sin encontrar un correcto
diagnsstico ni una solucisn. La difusisn del conocimiento de estas
enfermedades puede reducir el tiempo y los costos de tratamiento para los
pacientes y evitar complicaciones irreversibles en muchos casos.
Saber de su existencia en la practica asistencial cotidiana evita
diagnssticos incorrectos y por lo tanto tratamientos midicos y
psicolsgicos  infructosos. 
Venm al ateneo del viernes y enterate.

Coordina: DR. Pablo BERETTA

Midico Especialista en Psiquiatrma,  Anatomma Patolsgica y Medicina
Aeronautica.
Presidente de la Seccisn de Fibromialgia, Fatiga Crsnica y enfermedades
relacionadas  en Psiquiatrma. Asociacisn Argentina de Psiquiatras (AAP).
Fundador de PHI: Instituto de Asistencia, Investigacisn y Docencia de
Fibromialgia, Fatiga Crsnica y enfermedades relacionadas.
Vicedirector de IPBI: Instituto de Psiquiatrma Biolsgica Integral.

Dma: viernes 12 de Agosto de 2011
Horario: 19 horas

 ENTRADA LIBRE Y GRATUITA (Sin inscripcisn previa)

ESCUELA SISTIMICA ARGENTINA
Fray J. S. M. Oro 1843 (C1414DBC) Cap. Fed.
Tel/ Fax: 4774-2875/6112 -  4899-1053
i...@escuelasistemica.com.ar / www.escuelasistemica.com.ar



Re: hibernation with APM

2011-08-07 Thread Ted Unangst
On Sun, Aug 07, 2011, David Vasek wrote:
 Hi Marco.
 
 Thanks, but I'm not asking about suspend. apmd -z starts suspend, at least
 with my Thinkpad and Compaq, both with Phoenix APM BIOSes. Hibernation is
 sometimes called save to disk suspend, while suspend is then called
 save to RAM suspend.

If you have a BIOS option to change suspend to hibernate, it will work,
otherwise out of luck.

 
 Regards,
 David
 
 On Sat, 6 Aug 2011, Marco Peereboom wrote:
 
 run apmd at startup then type apm -z to initiate it.  Works like a charm
 on most laptops of quality.

 On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 12:54:22AM +0200, David Vasek wrote:
 Hello all,

 does anybody please know if there is a way to initiate hibernation
 on APM equipped laptops that support it *from software*? Thanks for
 answers.

 Regards,
 David



Re: hibernation with APM

2011-08-07 Thread ropers
On 7 August 2011 22:35, Ted Unangst t...@tedunangst.com wrote:
 If you have a BIOS option to change suspend to hibernate, it will work,
 otherwise out of luck.

This is semi-OT, but how does that work, actually? I mean, I know how
suspend to disk works in principle, but if it's done purely from the
BIOS, wouldn't the BIOS need to know about (and use) a special
partition to store the RAM contents? Otherwise, how would the BIOS
know where to store the RAM contents in the absence of OS involvement?

regards,
--ropers



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Michael Treibton
hi,

On 7 August 2011 15:24, Kenneth R Westerback kwesterb...@rogers.com wrote:
 On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 02:01:44PM +0200, David Vasek wrote:
 On Sun, 7 Aug 2011, Michael Treibton wrote:

 If there's a means of providing more information to help with
 this, please say.

 I guess the devs would like to see the output from OpenBSD fdisk(8)
 and disklabel(8), rather than from Linux. You can obtain those by
 selecting the (S)hell in the install program and using the commands
 above.

 Yes, we would. :-). All the normal information (e.g. dmesg) and a
 serial capture of the install process so we can see exactly what
 the installer was saying and was told.

is there a cleverer way of doing this?  i just do not have the
infrastructure here to attempt a serial capture, despite the
well-documented instructions in the OBSD docs.  i can get the output
you want, although because the installer doesn't have scp or anything,
i have no means of copying these files.

is there another means at my disposal to get these files off?

Kindly,
Michael



Re: hibernation with APM

2011-08-07 Thread joshua stein
 This is semi-OT, but how does that work, actually? I mean, I know how
 suspend to disk works in principle, but if it's done purely from the
 BIOS, wouldn't the BIOS need to know about (and use) a special
 partition to store the RAM contents? Otherwise, how would the BIOS
 know where to store the RAM contents in the absence of OS involvement?

on at least older thinkpads, it would swap to an msdos partition
that had a specially-formatted save2dsk.bin file.  tphdisk in the
ports tree can be used for that.



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread ropers
This is a long shot, but could this be related to the USB drive not
having settled in soon enough?

I'm assuming your USB drive has an external power supply, right? It is
a know problem with some external self-powered USB drives and
USB-to-SATA/IDE adapters that some of these can start acting up if
they're plugged in as soon as they have power. Many of these iffy or
inferior drives/adapters will work just fine if you first plug in
their external power supply, then wait for a few seconds, or maybe
even a minute or so, and then and only then plug their USB cable into
the actual computer. But give the computer an opportunity to try
mounting them before these iffy USB devices have had the time to get
their act together and they will misbehave and malfunction in all
kinds of weird and wonderful ways.

If you give your drive the chance to settle in first, does that allow
you to work with the drive properly (i.e. does it allow you to
properly install an OS on the USB drive and/or boot from it)? Let it
settle in first, and then try booting, powering up the PC only after
the USB drive has had time to get its shit together. If that doesn't
work, try letting the USB drive settile in first, and then reinstall
OpenBSD on it, and then try booting from it (again with time to settle
in).

Let us know if this helps or if this was a complete red herring.

regards,
--ropers

On 7 August 2011 12:32, Michael Treibton mtreib...@googlemail.com wrote:
 Hi all,

 i'm attempting to diagnose if there was a problem with installing
 OpenBSD to an external USB hard disk or not.  The disk is a Western
 Digital 2TB disk, should it matter.  Needless to say, the install went
 fine on to the disk; all the sets were unpacked, and I rebooted the
 machine as per the instructions at the end.  During install, I let the
 installer auto partition the disk in question, and that ended up
 creating a sensible layout that i could tell.

 Yet, when i reboot the machine, and ask the BIOS to boot from the
 external usb disk, eventually nothing happens, and my machine then
 defaults to booting off my internal disk.  What could be causing this?
  i've had other operating systems on this external USB disk in the
 past, so I know it's perfectly capable of being detected correctly by
 the BIOS.

 Since though I can't get at the disk in question, I am unsure what
 information I can gather for you -- under Linux using cfdisk, the
 best information I can gather is the following:

Number   Flags  Part Type   FilesystemLabel  
 Size

 
--
   Pri/Ext Free space  
 0.00MB
  4 Bootable   Primary sun-ufs  
 2000396MB

 And:

 Partition info

 
--

  Possible partition device: /dev/sdb4
 Partition type: Primary

Partition size in bytes: 2000396288512B
  Partition size in sectors: 3907024001s
   Portion of the hard disk: 100%

Filesystem type: sun-ufs
System type: 0xa6
   System type name: OpenBSD

   Position: 64s-3907024064s
   Start (cyl,heads,sector): 0,1,1
 End (cyl,heads,sector): 243200,254,62

  Flags: boot

 If there's a means of providing more information to help with this, please
say.

 TIA for any help.

 Kindly,
 Michael



Re: Azalia Intel 3400 HD Audio rev 0x05: apic 2 int 22 (irq 11)

2011-08-07 Thread Jairo Souto
It did not work. The bsd.mp from the current snapshot (today) did
not work also :(

--Jairo Souto (38)8816-1254

On Sun, Aug 07, 2011 at 09:59:29AM -0700, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
 jakemsr sent this which fixed the problem on 6SERIES and is documented on 
 datasheets of these other chipsets as well:
 
 Index: azalia.c
 ===
 RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/dev/pci/azalia.c,v
 retrieving revision 1.198
 diff -u -r1.198 azalia.c
 --- azalia.c3 Jul 2011 15:47:16 -   1.198
 +++ azalia.c7 Aug 2011 16:46:21 -
 @@ -448,6 +448,17 @@
   }
  
   break;
 +
 + case PCI_PRODUCT_INTEL_6SERIES_HDA:
 + case PCI_PRODUCT_INTEL_3400_HDA:
 + case PCI_PRODUCT_INTEL_QS57_HDA:
 + reg = azalia_pci_read(az-pc, az-tag, 0x79);
 + azalia_pci_write(az-pc, az-tag, 0x79, reg  ~0x08);
 + reg = azalia_pci_read(az-pc, az-tag, 0x79);
 + if (reg  0x08)
 + printf(: could not enable PCIe cache snooping\n);
 + break;
 +
   }
  }
  
 
 
 Jairo Souto [jairo.so...@holdinggem.com.br] wrote:
  I can get only noise from the audio of the Acer Aspire 5820T-6825 azalia.
  
  The kernel is OpenBSD uranio.dlg 4.9 GENERIC.MP#2 amd64
  only modified for the alc0 driver to operate. As I have a
  compatible wireless usb there is no problem with the Broadcom not
  configured. But the sound is required and I can not get it to
  run.
  
  Do you have any help?
  
  dmesg, audio -a, mixerctl -av follow
  
  dmesg:
  -
  OpenBSD 4.9 (GENERIC.MP) #2: Sun Jul 17 09:40:29 BRT 2011
  jso...@uranio.dlg:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
  RTC BIOS diagnostic error 80clock_battery
  real mem = 3008843776 (2869MB)
  avail mem = 2914725888 (2779MB)
  mainbus0 at root
  bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xe9460 (51 entries)
  bios0: vendor INSYDE version V1.23 date 12/21/2010
  bios0: Acer Aspire 5820T
  acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
  acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
  acpi0: tables DSDT FACP ASF! HPET APIC MCFG SLIC BOOT ASPT WDAT SSDT
  acpi0: wakeup devices EHC1(S3) EHC2(S3) PXSX(S4) RP01(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) 
  PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4) PXSX(S4)
  acpitimer0 at acpi0: 3579545 Hz, 24 bits
  acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
  acpimadt0 at acpi0 addr 0xfee0: PC-AT compat
  cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
  cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.88 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
  cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
  cpu0: apic clock running at 133MHz
  cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
  cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
  cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
  cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 4 (application processor)
  cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
  cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
  cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 5 (application processor)
  cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 480 @ 2.67GHz, 2660.46 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,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,POPCNT,NXE,LONG
  cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
  ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
  ioapic0: misconfigured as apic 0, remapped to apid 2
  acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xf000, bus 0-127
  acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
  acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P2)
  acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 3 (P0P1)
  acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus 1 (RP01)
  acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP02)
  acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
  acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP04)
  acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
  acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
  acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
  acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
  acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG5)
  acpiec0 at acpi0
  acpicpu0 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
  acpicpu1 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
  acpicpu2 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
  acpicpu3 at acpi0: C3, C1, PSS
  acpitz0 at acpi0: critical temperature 105 degC
  acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT1 model AS10B3E serial 7F5A type LION oem SANYO
  acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit online
  acpibtn0 at acpi0: PWRB
  acpibtn1 at acpi0: LID0
  acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
  acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
  acpivout0 at acpivideo0: LCD_
  acpivideo1 at acpi0: VGA_
  cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2660 MHz: speeds: 2667, 2666, 2533, 2399, 2266, 
  2133, 1999, 1866, 1733, 1599, 

Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Bryan
On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 18:14, Michael Treibton mtreib...@googlemail.com
wrote:
snipped...

 is there a cleverer way of doing this? B i just do not have the
 infrastructure here to attempt a serial capture, despite the
 well-documented instructions in the OBSD docs. B i can get the output
 you want, although because the installer doesn't have scp or anything,
 i have no means of copying these files.


I have gone as far as taking physical pictures of the screen with the
ps, trace, and dmesg on it, then posted the pictures to picasa or
someplace like that, so they could be viewable by everyone.  It's not
perfect, but laptops don't have a serial capture (at least, Dell's
don't).  You can use a camera phone, or if you are desperate, a
camera...



Re: amd64 snapshot kqemu hangs

2011-08-07 Thread ropers
On 7 August 2011 01:06, Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
 You see that ddb{1} prompt that I'm quoting from *your* original
 email?  That's the prompt of the built-in kernel debugger.  It even
 has a manpage: try man ddb on a running system.

Is there a particular reason why the ddb man page doesn't also exist
on the web?
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=+ddb



Re: amd64 snapshot kqemu hangs

2011-08-07 Thread Philip Guenther
On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 6:46 PM, ropers rop...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 7 August 2011 01:06, Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
 You see that ddb{1} prompt that I'm quoting from *your* original
 email?  That's the prompt of the built-in kernel debugger.  It even
 has a manpage: try man ddb on a running system.

 Is there a particular reason why the ddb man page doesn't also exist
 on the web?
 http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=+ddb

Did you insert the '+' in there to test whether people can read URLs?

http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=ddb


Philip Guenther



Re: amd64 snapshot kqemu hangs

2011-08-07 Thread Nick Holland
On 08/07/11 21:46, ropers wrote:
 On 7 August 2011 01:06, Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
 You see that ddb{1} prompt that I'm quoting from *your* original
 email?  That's the prompt of the built-in kernel debugger.  It even
 has a manpage: try man ddb on a running system.
 
 Is there a particular reason why the ddb man page doesn't also exist
 on the web?
 http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=+ddb

  http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=ddb

No leading + char?  Works for me...

Nick.



Re: amd64 snapshot kqemu hangs

2011-08-07 Thread ropers
On 8 August 2011 03:54, Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 6:46 PM, ropers rop...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 7 August 2011 01:06, Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
 You see that ddb{1} prompt that I'm quoting from *your* original
 email?  That's the prompt of the built-in kernel debugger.  It even
 has a manpage: try man ddb on a running system.

 Is there a particular reason why the ddb man page doesn't also exist
 on the web?
 http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=+ddb

 Did you insert the '+' in there to test whether people can read URLs?

 http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=ddb

Ah. No. I see. What happened there was that I inadvertently entered 
ddb into the search field rather than ddb and the space was
converted to a +. Should that input field be made to tolerate/strip
extraneous spaces? I don't know, and since I'm not qualified to do the
work, I won't express an opinion here.

But thanks anyway. :)
--ropers



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Nick Holland
On 08/07/11 07:30, Michael Treibton wrote:
 hi,
 
 On 7 August 2011 12:19, Francois Pussault fpussa...@contactoffice.fr wrote:
 hi, all,

 This should be an hardware issue, I've used an usb external drive with 
 success. whith a dell A6 or A7 version of Dell bios, boot usb enabled, with 
 a (double-usb) eternal drive, using BSD4.2 filesystem.

 so maybe you need a bios upgrade or a double-usb-drive to be able to boot or 
 to use BSD4.2 fs on / ?
 
 i'd agree with you if it wasn't for the fact that NetBSD has been on
 this drive at some point, and has booted from it just fine,
 unfortunately only OpenBSD seems to suffer being able to work off this
 drive.
 
 I'm wondering if it's down to how the other BSDs partition the disk?
 it's entirely possible other OSes gave a small partition for /boot
 which the bios could pick up on?  that being the case, is that easy to
 do at install time?  i'll have to read the docs i suppose, assuming
 its even a good idea.
 
 But bios upgrade?  No, i really can't see how that's correct given
 evidence to the contrary.
 
 Thanks,
 
 Michael

It really boils down to either:
1) your BIOS is brain damaged and can't boot OpenBSD from an external
HD.  Your evidence in no way convinces me that's not true.  I've seen
machines that claimed to be able to boot from a USB device (Dell D610
laptop), but couldn't from an OpenBSD flash drive that booted Just Fine
on a much lower priced machine from a manufacturer with a very poor
reputation for quality and support (Acer Aspire One).  BIOS update
didn't help in my case.

2) Something went wrong with your install process.
All kinds of options there -- no MBR code loaded, PBR didn't install
properly, etc.

No promises that both isn't the answer.

This works, I've been installing OpenBSD on USB drives and flash devices
for a long time.  There's a flash drive sitting on my keyboard right
now, 2G total, 1.5G OpenBSD, 0.5G FAT.  Won't work on the above
mentioned Dell D610, but works on almost everything else.

Look at this:
  http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#Boot386
there's all kinds of info about what happens and how the boot process
works.  If you don't get the Using drive 0, partition 3. message, your
MBR is screwed up.  If you don't get the Loading message, the PBR is
screwed up.  In either case, the BIOS could be at fault (MBR can't say
hi if it isn't being loaded and run).

Nick.



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Ted Unangst
On Mon, Aug 08, 2011, Michael Treibton wrote:
 is there a cleverer way of doing this?  i just do not have the
 infrastructure here to attempt a serial capture, despite the
 well-documented instructions in the OBSD docs.  i can get the output
 you want, although because the installer doesn't have scp or anything,
 i have no means of copying these files.
 
 is there another means at my disposal to get these files off?

You booted the installer somehow, right?  Boot from that disk to the
boot prompt, then boot hd1:/bsd or hd0:/bsd or something as appropriate.



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Brett

I'm assuming your USB drive has an external power supply, right?


In the past, I had installed OpenBSD (I think it was 4.7, either i386 or 
amd64) to an external usb drive, powered from the usb port. It would 
appear to install ok, start the boot process, then about halfway through 
would appear to power cycle or something for a split second, causing 
the boot to fail. Same thing would happen with FreeBSD and Slackware, 
though Ubuntu and Fedora could successfully boot from that drive.


Now that this topic has come up on the lists, I am just wondering are 
there some non-externally powered usb drives that OpenBSD can boot from? 
Would be helpful to run and test -current on external drive, and have 
the release version on internal drive.


Cheers,
Brett.



Votre carte bancaire est suspendue

2011-08-07 Thread visaeurope
[IMAGE]

Bonjour clients de visa carte,

Votre carte bancaire est suspendue, parce que nous avons rencontre un
probleme sur votre diagramme.
Nous avons determine qu'une personne doit peut-etre utiliser votre
diagramme sans votre autorisation.

Pour votre protection, nous avons suspendu votre compte bancaire a
travers votre carte de credit. Pour soulever cette suspension,

Cliquer ici

et suivre le procede indique pour mettre a jour votre compte par la carte
de credit.

Note : Si ce n'est pas accomplit,nous serons contraints de suspendre
votre diagramme indefiniment, parce qu'elle peut etre utilise pour
frauduleux.

Nous vous remercions de votre cooperation dans le cadre de ce dossier.

Merci,
Service a la clientele de soutien.

Copyright 2010-2011 Verifier by Visa . Tous droits reserves.



Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 11:25 PM, Brett brett.ma...@gmx.com wrote:
 I'm assuming your USB drive has an external power supply, right?

 In the past, I had installed OpenBSD (I think it was 4.7, either i386 or
 amd64) to an external usb drive, powered from the usb port. It would appear
 to install ok, start the boot process, then about halfway through would
 appear to power cycle or something for a split second, causing the boot to
 fail. Same thing would happen with FreeBSD and Slackware, though Ubuntu and
 Fedora could successfully boot from that drive.

 Now that this topic has come up on the lists, I am just wondering are there
 some non-externally powered usb drives that OpenBSD can boot from? Would be
 helpful to run and test -current on external drive, and have the release
 version on internal drive.

Besides flash drives, which are trivially available in 8 Gig size at
your local supermarket?



Re: WiFI and VGA issues with Dell E6320 + suspend/resume and em0

2011-08-07 Thread Tomas Bodzar
Hi again,

apm works fine except of apm -z and/or zzz command, it will suspend,
but it's not able to resume. em0 interface doesn't work in bsd.rd
(watchdog timeout) . On normal system it's fine.

On Tue, Aug 2, 2011 at 12:34 PM, Tomas Bodzar tomas.bod...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi all,

 here are some issues with current on new Dell E6320 (dmesg on the end
 of email including those weird characters is real including missing
 chars from starts). Can test some stuff or send more info in case of
 need.

 1. Wifi
 firmware installed, but I can't see networks during scan and driver
 throws errors in dmesg

 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: firmware error log:
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  error type B  B  B = UNKNOWN (0x13AA)
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  program counter = 0x00013FB0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  source line B  B  = 0x00E0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  error data B  B  B = 0x
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  branch link B  B  = 0x00013ED200013ED2
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  interrupt link B = 0xD252
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  time B  B  B  B  B  B = 458
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: driver status:
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 0: qid=0 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 1: qid=1 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 2: qid=2 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 3: qid=3 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 4: qid=4 B cur=9 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 5: qid=5 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 6: qid=6 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 7: qid=7 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 8: qid=8 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring B 9: qid=9 B cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 10: qid=10 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 11: qid=11 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 12: qid=12 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 13: qid=13 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 14: qid=14 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 15: qid=15 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 16: qid=16 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 17: qid=17 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 18: qid=18 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  tx ring 19: qid=19 cur=0 B  queued=0
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  rx ring: cur=10
 Aug B 2 12:19:22 B /bsd: B  802.11 state 0
 Aug B 2 12:19:23 B /bsd: iwn0: RXON command failed
 Aug B 2 12:19:23 B /bsd: iwn0: could not configure device

 $ sudo ifconfig iwn0 up
 $ sudo ifconfig iwn0 scan
 iwn0: flags=8802BROADCAST,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST mtu 1500
 B  B  B  B lladdr a0:88:b4:72:f0:70
 B  B  B  B priority: 4
 B  B  B  B groups: wlan
 B  B  B  B media: IEEE802.11 autoselect
 B  B  B  B status: no network
 B  B  B  B ieee80211: nwid 
 $

 $ sudo ifconfig iw$ pkg_info | grep -i iwn
 iwn-firmware-5.6 B  B Firmware binary images for iwn driver
 $

 2. VGA

 Probably just too much new HW. Resolution is fine, but speed of
 screen is quite slow, but usable.

 $ glxgears
 38 frames in 5.1 seconds = B 7.415 FPS
 37 frames in 5.0 seconds = B 7.353 FPS
 35 frames in 5.0 seconds = B 6.994 FPS
 ^C
 $ glxinfo | grep -i render
 direct rendering: Yes
 OpenGL renderer string: Software Rasterizer
 B  B GL_NV_conditional_render, GL_NV_depth_clamp, GL_NV_fragment_program,
 $

 $ sudo pcidump -v 0:2:0
 B 0:2:0: Intel GT2+ Video
 B  B  B  B 0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 0126
 B  B  B  B 0x0004: Command: 0007 Status ID: 0090
 B  B  B  B 0x0008: Class: 03 Subclass: 00 Interface: 00 Revision: 09
 B  B  B  B 0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 00 Latency Timer: 00 Cache Line
Size: 00
 B  B  B  B 0x0010: BAR mem 64bit addr: 0xe140/0x0040
 B  B  B  B 0x0018: BAR mem prefetchable 64bit addr:
0xd000/0x1000
 B  B  B  B 0x0020: BAR io addr: 0x4000/0x0040
 B  B  B  B 0x0024: BAR empty ()
 B  B  B  B 0x0028: Cardbus CIS: 
 B  B  B  B 0x002c: Subsystem Vendor ID: 1028 Product ID: 0492
 B  B  B  B 0x0030: Expansion ROM Base Address: 
 B  B  B  B 0x0038: 
 B  B  B  B 0x003c: Interrupt Pin: 01 Line: 0b Min Gnt: 00 Max Lat: 00
 B  B  B  B 0x0090: Capability 0x05: Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI)
 B  B  B  B 0x00d0: Capability 0x01: Power Management
 B  B  B  B 0x00a4: Capability 0x13: PCI Advanced Features
 $


 ERIC.MP) #29: Sat Jul 30 17:06:22 MDT 2011
 B  B dera...@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC.MP
 RTC BIOS diagnostic error
 3fconfig_unit,memory_size,fixed_di\^A,invalptal\M-h\M^@
 cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2520M CPU @ 2.50GHz (GenuineIntel
 686-class) 2.50 GHz
 cpu0:
FPU,V86,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

Re: installing OpenBSD 4.9 to external USB harddisk: Disk does not boot

2011-08-07 Thread Brett

On 08/07/11 22:48, Brett wrote:

On 08/07/11 22:17, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 11:25 PM, Brettbrett.ma...@gmx.com wrote:

I'm assuming your USB drive has an external power supply, right?


In the past, I had installed OpenBSD (I think it was 4.7, either i386 or
amd64) to an external usb drive, powered from the usb port. It would
appear
to install ok, start the boot process, then about halfway through would
appear to power cycle or something for a split second, causing the
boot to
fail. Same thing would happen with FreeBSD and Slackware, though
Ubuntu and
Fedora could successfully boot from that drive.

Now that this topic has come up on the lists, I am just wondering are
there
some non-externally powered usb drives that OpenBSD can boot from?
Would be
helpful to run and test -current on external drive, and have the release
version on internal drive.


Besides flash drives, which are trivially available in 8 Gig size at
your local supermarket?



Yes, besides those, since I prefer the 300gb size of hard drives :-)