Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Mike Korbakov
30.10.2012, 09:17, Jiri B ji...@devio.us:
 On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 06:47:15AM +0400, Mike Korbakov wrote:

  Hi, Group!

  GENERIC kernel from OpenBSD5.1 to current hangs at boot,
  trace pointed to acpivout. I've commented acpivout in kernel config,
  kernel boots successfully, but X seems unstable and CPU runs
  at lowest speed.

 Quite useless report. 'trace pointed to...' but not included here.
 You should be able to disable drivers without rebuilding kernel,
 man config.

 jirib

This device has no COM port etc, a can only attach photo from screen.
To use config I must boot, isn't it ?
Now faulty driver is known, may be the time to read the source code and
specifications of the hardware?
In any case, full debugging is impossible.
Any idea to connect remote console during boot time (ethernet or usb-to-com) ?



Re: ttyC5, keyboard doesn't work

2012-10-30 Thread Wesley

Le 2012-10-29 19:57, David Coppa a écrit :

I suspect a sleep is required.

See:


http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/~checkout~/ports/x11/slim/pkg/slim.rc?rev=1.3;content-type=text%2Fplain


I don't use 'xdm', and 'slim' is not installed.
I just have this in my /etc/ttys :
ttyC5   /usr/bin/su - thin -c /usr/X11R6/bin/xinit xterm on secure

Any idea ?
Thank you very much.

Cheers,

--
Wesley



Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Jiri B
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 10:24:03AM +0400, Mike Korbakov wrote:
 This device has no COM port etc, a can only attach photo from screen.

Yep, photo - text.

 To use config I must boot, isn't it ?

config allows you to change kernel before it is used.

 Now faulty driver is known, may be the time to read the source code and
 specifications of the hardware?
 In any case, full debugging is impossible.
 Any idea to connect remote console during boot time (ethernet or usb-to-com) ?

Maybe HW geeks know some tricks but I think you have no
other choice then making photo, or check your bios, if the
machine is quite new maybe it has that Intel AMT...

j.



Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Tomas Bodzar
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 3:47 AM, Mike Korbakov mike-...@yandex.ru wrote:
 Hi, Group!

 GENERIC kernel from OpenBSD5.1 to current hangs at boot,
 trace pointed to acpivout. I've commented acpivout in kernel config,
 kernel boots successfully, but X seems unstable and CPU runs
 at lowest speed.
 This laptop has hybrid videocard Intel HD Graphics 3000 and
 NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 2GB DDR3 VRAM
 Linux (Ubuntu-12.04) has problems with this video too (especially proprietary 
 drivers)

It's Sandybridge platform. Your only real option is current for that
anyway. You are supposed to at least try it as well because of
http://www.openbsd.org/report.html


 # diff -u GENERIC ASUS
 --- GENERIC Tue Oct 16 18:21:34 2012
 +++ ASUSTue Oct 30 09:09:48 2012
 @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@
  acpithinkpad*  at acpi?
  acpitoshiba*   at acpi?
  acpivideo* at acpi?
 -acpivout*  at acpivideo?
 +#acpivout* at acpivideo?
  acpipwrres*at acpi?
  aibs*  at acpi?

 # head GENERIC
 #   $OpenBSD: GENERIC,v 1.334 2012/10/08 17:26:02 deraadt Exp $

 # dmesg
 OpenBSD 5.2-current (ASUS.MP) #2: Tue Oct 30 10:07:18 MSK 2012
 r...@mike-nb2.kmv:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/ASUS.MP
 real mem = 8488275968 (8095MB)
 avail mem = 8239837184 (7858MB)
 mainbus0 at root
 bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xeb9e0 (79 entries)
 bios0: vendor American Megatrends Inc. version N55SF.207 date 08/29/2011
 bios0: ASUSTeK Computer Inc. N55SF
 acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
 acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
 acpi0: tables DSDT FACP APIC DBGP ECDT SLIC HPET MCFG SSDT SSDT ASF!
 acpi0: wakeup devices P0P1(S4) HDEF(S4) GLAN(S4) PEG0(S4) PEG1(S4) PEG2(S4) 
 PEG3(S4) B0D4(S4) EHC1(S3) USB1(S3) USB2(S3) USB3(S3) USB4(S3) EHC2(S3) 
 USB5(S3) USB6(S3) USB7(S3) RP01(S4) RP02(S4) WLAN(S3) RP03(S4) RP04(S4) 
 XHCI(S3) RP05(S4) RP06(S4) GLAN(S4) RP07(S4) RP08(S4) SLPB(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) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.94 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu0: apic clock running at 99MHz
 cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 2 (application processor)
 cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
 cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 3 (application processor)
 cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
 acpiec0 at acpi0
 acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
 acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xe000, bus 0-63
 acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
 acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P1)
 acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 1 (PEG0)
 acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG1)
 acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG2)
 acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
 acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus 2 (RP01)
 acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus 3 (RP02)
 acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
 acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus 4 (RP04)
 acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
 acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus 5 (RP06)
 acpiprt12 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
 acpiprt13 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
 acpicpu0 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpicpu1 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpicpu2 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpicpu3 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpitz0 at acpi0acpitz0: THRM: failed to read _CRT
 : no critical temperature defined
 acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit in unknown state
 acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT0 not present
 acpibtn0 at acpi0: LID_
 acpibtn1 at acpi0: PWRB
 acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
 acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
 acpivout at acpivideo0 not configured
 acpivideo1 at acpi0: GFX0
 acpivout at acpivideo1 not configured
 cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2394 MHz: speeds: 2401, 2400, 2000, 1800, 1600, 
 1400, 1200, 1000, 800 MHz
 pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
 pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 Intel Core 2G Host rev 0x09
 ppb0 at pci0 dev 1 function 0 Intel Core 2G PCIE rev 0x09: msi
 pci1 at ppb0 

Re: vlan(4), run(4) and dhclient

2012-10-30 Thread Daniel Melameth
On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 4:32 PM, Frank Brodbeck f...@guug.de wrote:
 I am currently playing with VLANs and found myself unable to get a lease
 via run(4) device when using VLAN:

 ifconfig vlan4094 vlandev run0
 dhclient vlan4094

 I see the packets leaving vlan4094 but they are not arriving at the dhcp
 server:

 # tcpdump -i vlan4094 -n -e -ttt port bootpc
 tcpdump: listening on vlan4094, link-type EN10MB
 tcpdump: WARNING: compensating for unaligned libpcap packets
 Oct 29 23:21:04.375894 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0xf3925c17 ether 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 
 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]
 Oct 29 23:21:05.576563 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0xf3925c17 secs:1 ether 
 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]
 Oct 29 23:21:06.788399 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0xf3925c17 secs:2 ether 
 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]
 Oct 29 23:21:09.200824 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0xf3925c17 secs:5 ether 
 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]
 Oct 29 23:21:12.813338 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0xf3925c17 secs:8 ether 
 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]
 Oct 29 23:21:18.825187 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0xf3925c17 secs:14 ether 
 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]
 Oct 29 23:21:20.744245 00:0c:f6:61:c5:41 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 0800 342: 
 0.0.0.0.68  255.255.255.255.67: xid:0x653ba9ae secs:45 ether 
 00:0c:f6:61:c5:40 [|bootp] [tos 0x10]

 If I don't tag the packets at the OS side but leave it to the switch
 (Cisco SG300) via:

 switchport trunk native vlan 4094

 everything works fine. This is on a -current machine. Sorry if this is a
 dump question, but could this be a driver error or could it be a problem
 with my el cheapo access point (netgear)?

 I guess the problem lies w/ that shitty access point who discards the
 packets if they come in tagged but would appreciate a confirmation.

 Doing the same w/ re(4) on the same port works just fine, so I'd like to rule 
 out a
 switch or server misconfiguration.

I've never done this/had a need to do it so I don't know if it'll
actually work.  If you tcpdump run0, do you see the tagged packets
leaving?  If you mirror and tcpdump the port your AP is connected to,
do you see the DHCP packets?  Are they tagged?  In every Wi-Fi network
I've ever deployed, VLANs were assigned to SSIDs or were based on some
RADIUS/802.1x attribute so I've never expected a client to tag its
Wi-Fi packets.



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Re: CPU max frequency

2012-10-30 Thread Olivier Cherrier
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 03:53:21AM +0100, rusty...@gmx.fr wrote:
 that's maybe a stupid question, but how can I get the max frequency of
 my cpu ?
 
 I saw sysctl has hw.cpuspeed and hw.setperf, but can I get the maximum
 frequency
 without setting setperf to 100%, getting cpuspeed and then restoring
 setperf to
 the value it has before ?

Yes you can try : sysctl hw.setperf=200
But you need oil cooling !  ;-)



Re: CPU max frequency

2012-10-30 Thread Remco
rustyBSD wrote:

 Hi,
 that's maybe a stupid question, but how can I get the max frequency of
 my cpu ?
 
 I saw sysctl has hw.cpuspeed and hw.setperf, but can I get the maximum
 frequency
 without setting setperf to 100%, getting cpuspeed and then restoring
 setperf to
 the value it has before ?
 
 Thanks !

AFAICT these dmesg lines tell me the possible frequency settings of my CPU:

$ dmesg |grep acpicpu
acpicpu0 at acpi0: FVS, 2400, 1600 MHz
acpicpu1 at acpi0: FVS, 2400, 1600 MHz

Is that what you're after ?



Re: ttyC5, keyboard doesn't work

2012-10-30 Thread MERIGHI Marcus
works for me (tm):

$ grep ttyC1 /etc/ttys
ttyC1   /usr/local/sbin/autologin.getty vt220 on  secure

$ cat /usr/local/sbin/autologin.getty
#!/bin/sh -e
TERM=vt220 /usr/local/sbin/autologin  /dev/$1  /dev/$1

$ cat /usr/local/sbin/autologin
#!/bin/sh -e
echo running autologin...
exec su -l autologin

$ cat /home/autologin/.profile
/usr/X11R6/bin/startx

used to run rdesktop in fvwm(1)

Bye, Marcus

open...@e-solutions.re (Wesley), 2012.10.30 (Tue) 07:30 (CET):
 Le 2012-10-29 19:57, David Coppa a écrit :
 I suspect a sleep is required.
 
 See:
 
 
 http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/~checkout~/ports/x11/slim/pkg/slim.rc?rev=1.3;content-type=text%2Fplain
 
 I don't use 'xdm', and 'slim' is not installed.
 I just have this in my /etc/ttys :
 ttyC5   /usr/bin/su - thin -c /usr/X11R6/bin/xinit xterm on secure
 
 Any idea ?
 Thank you very much.
 
 Cheers,
 
 --
 Wesley
 
 
 !DSPAM:508f744f41541879064755!



Re: CPU max frequency

2012-10-30 Thread rustyBSD
Le 30/10/2012 09:19, Remco a écrit :
 AFAICT these dmesg lines tell me the possible frequency settings of my CPU:

 $ dmesg |grep acpicpu
 acpicpu0 at acpi0: FVS, 2400, 1600 MHz
 acpicpu1 at acpi0: FVS, 2400, 1600 MHz
It doesn't give me the frequency.

 Is that what you're after ?

In fact, I need to get the max frequency programmatically
- in C -, and dmesg is arch-depedentso it's not really
what I'm looking for.

Thanks !



Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Paul Irofti
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 06:47:15AM +0400, Mike Korbakov wrote:
 Hi, Group!
 
 GENERIC kernel from OpenBSD5.1 to current hangs at boot,
 trace pointed to acpivout. I've commented acpivout in kernel config,
 kernel boots successfully, but X seems unstable and CPU runs
 at lowest speed.
 This laptop has hybrid videocard Intel HD Graphics 3000 and
 NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 2GB DDR3 VRAM
 Linux (Ubuntu-12.04) has problems with this video too (especially proprietary 
 drivers)
 

Can you please send the acpidump, the panic and the trace?

You can copy the panic and the trace on a piece of paper first if you
don't have a serial connection.

You can fetch the acpidump from the shell when running your custom kernel.



Swapping ctrl and caps

2012-10-30 Thread Alexander Polakov
I used

 setxkbmap -option 'ctrl:nocaps,grp:lctrl_toggle,grp_led:caps,compose:lwin'

to swap ctrl and caps in X. It worked fine.
But I got quickly annoyed when switching to console. So I set

 keyboard.encoding=us.swapctrlcaps

in wsconsctl.conf and 

 setxkbmap -option 'grp:caps_toggle,grp_led:caps,compose:lwin'

in X11.

It works in console, but in X I can't switch layout. xev shows
Caps Lock when I press ctrl, not ISO_Next_group.

Is there a way to swap ctrl and caps and use the new caps
(real 'ctrl') to switch keyboard layouts in X?

kern.version=OpenBSD 5.2-current (GENERIC.MP) #60: Wed Oct 17 22:44:44 MDT 2012
dera...@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC.MP

--
Alexander Polakov | plhk.ru



Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Tomas Bodzar
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 8:23 AM, Tomas Bodzar tomas.bod...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 3:47 AM, Mike Korbakov mike-...@yandex.ru wrote:
 Hi, Group!

 GENERIC kernel from OpenBSD5.1 to current hangs at boot,

Upss missed part to current, sorry.

 trace pointed to acpivout. I've commented acpivout in kernel config,
 kernel boots successfully, but X seems unstable and CPU runs
 at lowest speed.
 This laptop has hybrid videocard Intel HD Graphics 3000 and
 NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 2GB DDR3 VRAM
 Linux (Ubuntu-12.04) has problems with this video too (especially 
 proprietary drivers)

 It's Sandybridge platform. Your only real option is current for that
 anyway. You are supposed to at least try it as well because of
 http://www.openbsd.org/report.html


 # diff -u GENERIC ASUS
 --- GENERIC Tue Oct 16 18:21:34 2012
 +++ ASUSTue Oct 30 09:09:48 2012
 @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@
  acpithinkpad*  at acpi?
  acpitoshiba*   at acpi?
  acpivideo* at acpi?
 -acpivout*  at acpivideo?
 +#acpivout* at acpivideo?
  acpipwrres*at acpi?
  aibs*  at acpi?

 # head GENERIC
 #   $OpenBSD: GENERIC,v 1.334 2012/10/08 17:26:02 deraadt Exp $

 # dmesg
 OpenBSD 5.2-current (ASUS.MP) #2: Tue Oct 30 10:07:18 MSK 2012
 r...@mike-nb2.kmv:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/ASUS.MP
 real mem = 8488275968 (8095MB)
 avail mem = 8239837184 (7858MB)
 mainbus0 at root
 bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xeb9e0 (79 entries)
 bios0: vendor American Megatrends Inc. version N55SF.207 date 08/29/2011
 bios0: ASUSTeK Computer Inc. N55SF
 acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
 acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
 acpi0: tables DSDT FACP APIC DBGP ECDT SLIC HPET MCFG SSDT SSDT ASF!
 acpi0: wakeup devices P0P1(S4) HDEF(S4) GLAN(S4) PEG0(S4) PEG1(S4) PEG2(S4) 
 PEG3(S4) B0D4(S4) EHC1(S3) USB1(S3) USB2(S3) USB3(S3) USB4(S3) EHC2(S3) 
 USB5(S3) USB6(S3) USB7(S3) RP01(S4) RP02(S4) WLAN(S3) RP03(S4) RP04(S4) 
 XHCI(S3) RP05(S4) RP06(S4) GLAN(S4) RP07(S4) RP08(S4) SLPB(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) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.94 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu0: apic clock running at 99MHz
 cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 2 (application processor)
 cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
 cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 3 (application processor)
 cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
 cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
 ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
 acpiec0 at acpi0
 acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
 acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xe000, bus 0-63
 acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
 acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P1)
 acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 1 (PEG0)
 acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG1)
 acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG2)
 acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
 acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus 2 (RP01)
 acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus 3 (RP02)
 acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
 acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus 4 (RP04)
 acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
 acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus 5 (RP06)
 acpiprt12 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
 acpiprt13 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
 acpicpu0 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpicpu1 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpicpu2 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpicpu3 at acpi0: C1, PSS
 acpitz0 at acpi0acpitz0: THRM: failed to read _CRT
 : no critical temperature defined
 acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit in unknown state
 acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT0 not present
 acpibtn0 at acpi0: LID_
 acpibtn1 at acpi0: PWRB
 acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
 acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
 acpivout at acpivideo0 not configured
 acpivideo1 at acpi0: GFX0
 acpivout at acpivideo1 not configured
 cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2394 MHz: speeds: 2401, 2400, 2000, 1800, 1600, 
 1400, 1200, 1000, 800 MHz
 pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0
 pchb0 at pci0 dev 

figuring out the current xkb layout

2012-10-30 Thread LEVAI Daniel
Hi!

Alexander's mail made me remember that I was wondering about this for a
while.
I'm setting up my keyboard layout with `setxkbmap -layout 'us,hu'` so I
can comfortably switch between layouts with alt+shift. But I can't seem
to figure out what is the current layout. setxkbmap -query only shows
'us,hu', and no amount of -v would display the current, which could be
shown in certain places like tmux's or my wm's status bar.
Is there a way to do this before I punch in some characters to test it?


Daniel

-- 
LÉVAI Dániel
PGP key ID = 0x83B63A8F
Key fingerprint = DBEC C66B A47A DFA2 792D  650C C69B BE4C 83B6 3A8F



Re: figuring out the current xkb layout

2012-10-30 Thread Jérémie Courrèges-Anglas
LEVAI Daniel l...@ecentrum.hu writes:

 Hi!

Hi,

 Alexander's mail made me remember that I was wondering about this for a
 while.
 I'm setting up my keyboard layout with `setxkbmap -layout 'us,hu'` so I
 can comfortably switch between layouts with alt+shift. But I can't seem
 to figure out what is the current layout. setxkbmap -query only shows
 'us,hu', and no amount of -v would display the current, which could be
 shown in certain places like tmux's or my wm's status bar.
 Is there a way to do this before I punch in some characters to test it?


 Daniel

I don't have a direct answer to your question, but I use setxkbmap
... -option 'grp:shift_toggle,grp_led:scroll'; this allows me to switch
between layouts pressing both shift keys, the scroll lock tells me
which layout I'm using. Hack taken from kbd(4).

-- 
Jérémie Courrèges-Anglas
GPG fingerprint: 61DB D9A0 00A4 67CF 2A90 8961 6191 8FBF 06A1 1494



Re: figuring out the current xkb layout

2012-10-30 Thread LEVAI Daniel
On k, okt 30, 2012 at 12:09:05 +0100, Jérémie Courrèges-Anglas wrote:
[...]
 I don't have a direct answer to your question, but I use setxkbmap
 ... -option 'grp:shift_toggle,grp_led:scroll'; this allows me to switch
 between layouts pressing both shift keys, the scroll lock tells me
 which layout I'm using. Hack taken from kbd(4).

Neat trick, thanks! :)

Daniel

-- 
LÉVAI Dániel
PGP key ID = 0x83B63A8F
Key fingerprint = DBEC C66B A47A DFA2 792D  650C C69B BE4C 83B6 3A8F



Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Mike Korbakov
30.10.2012, 13:53, Paul Irofti p...@irofti.net:

  On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 06:47:15AM +0400, Mike Korbakov wrote:
   Hi, Group!

   GENERIC kernel from OpenBSD5.1 to current hangs at boot,
   trace pointed to acpivout. I've commented acpivout in kernel config,
   kernel boots successfully, but X seems unstable and CPU runs
   at lowest speed.
   This laptop has hybrid videocard Intel HD Graphics 3000 and
   NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 2GB DDR3 VRAM
   Linux (Ubuntu-12.04) has problems with this video too (especially 
 proprietary drivers)
  Can you please send the acpidump, the panic and the trace?

  You can copy the panic and the trace on a piece of paper first if you
  don't have a serial connection.

  You can fetch the acpidump from the shell when running your custom kernel.

Fortunately, dmesg smart enough to show last fail:

OpenBSD 5.2-current (GENERIC.MP) #11: Tue Oct 30 17:37:33 MSK 2012
r...@mike-nb2.kmv:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 8488275968 (8095MB)
avail mem = 8239828992 (7858MB)
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xeb9e0 (79 entries)
bios0: vendor American Megatrends Inc. version N55SF.207 date 08/29/2011
bios0: ASUSTeK Computer Inc. N55SF
acpi0 at bios0: rev 2
acpi0: sleep states S0 S3 S4 S5
acpi0: tables DSDT FACP APIC DBGP ECDT SLIC HPET MCFG SSDT SSDT ASF!
acpi0: wakeup devices P0P1(S4) HDEF(S4) GLAN(S4) PEG0(S4) PEG1(S4) PEG2(S4) 
PEG3(S4) B0D4(S4) EHC1(S3) USB1(S3) USB2(S3) USB3(S3) USB4(S3) EHC2(S3) 
USB5(S3) USB6(S3) USB7(S3) RP01(S4) RP02(S4) WLAN(S3) RP03(S4) RP04(S4) 
XHCI(S3) RP05(S4) RP06(S4) GLAN(S4) RP07(S4) RP08(S4) SLPB(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) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.92 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu0: apic clock running at 99MHz
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 2 (application processor)
cpu1: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
cpu1: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu2 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
cpu2: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
cpu2: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
cpu3 at mainbus0: apid 3 (application processor)
cpu3: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2430M CPU @ 2.40GHz, 2394.56 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,PBE,SSE3,PCLMUL,DTES64,MWAIT,DS-CPL,VMX,EST,TM2,SSSE3,CX16,xTPR,PDCM,PCID,SSE4.1,SSE4.2,x2APIC,POPCNT,DEADLINE,XSAVE,AVX,NXE,LONG,LAHF
cpu3: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
ioapic0 at mainbus0: apid 2 pa 0xfec0, version 20, 24 pins
acpiec0 at acpi0
acpihpet0 at acpi0: 14318179 Hz
acpimcfg0 at acpi0 addr 0xe000, bus 0-63
acpiprt0 at acpi0: bus 0 (PCI0)
acpiprt1 at acpi0: bus -1 (P0P1)
acpiprt2 at acpi0: bus 1 (PEG0)
acpiprt3 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG1)
acpiprt4 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG2)
acpiprt5 at acpi0: bus -1 (PEG3)
acpiprt6 at acpi0: bus 2 (RP01)
acpiprt7 at acpi0: bus 3 (RP02)
acpiprt8 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP03)
acpiprt9 at acpi0: bus 4 (RP04)
acpiprt10 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP05)
acpiprt11 at acpi0: bus 5 (RP06)
acpiprt12 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP07)
acpiprt13 at acpi0: bus -1 (RP08)
acpicpu0 at acpi0: C1, PSS
acpicpu1 at acpi0: C1, PSS
acpicpu2 at acpi0: C1, PSS
acpicpu3 at acpi0: C1, PSS
acpitz0 at acpi0acpitz0: THRM: failed to read _CRT
: no critical temperature defined
acpiac0 at acpi0: AC unit in unknown state
acpibat0 at acpi0: BAT0 not present
acpibtn0 at acpi0: LID_
acpibtn1 at acpi0: PWRB
acpibtn2 at acpi0: SLPB
acpivideo0 at acpi0: GFX0
acpivout0 at acpivideo0: LCDD
 [\\_SB_.PCI0.SBRG.EC0_.PWAC] 0x801cb188 cnt:02 stk:00 buffer: 40 {33, 
40, 4d, 5a, 67, 73, 80, 8d, a7, cd, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, 21, 2e, 3b, 48, 55, 
61, 6e, 7b, 9a, c5, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, 
ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, ff, 
ff, ff, ff}
Index out of bounds 3818/64

13665 Called: \\_SB_.PCI0.PEG0.GFX0.LCDD._BCL
  local0:  0x80208c88 cnt:01 stk:60 integer: 0
  local3:  0x80212488 cnt:02 stk:63 integer: eea
  local4:  0x8020d408 cnt:01 stk:64 integer: ee0
13632 Called: \\_SB_.PCI0.PEG0.GFX0.LCDD._BCL
  

Re: figuring out the current xkb layout

2012-10-30 Thread Alexander Polakov
* LEVAI Daniel l...@ecentrum.hu [121030 15:30]:
 Hi!
 
 Alexander's mail made me remember that I was wondering about this for a
 while.
 I'm setting up my keyboard layout with `setxkbmap -layout 'us,hu'` so I
 can comfortably switch between layouts with alt+shift. But I can't seem
 to figure out what is the current layout. setxkbmap -query only shows
 'us,hu', and no amount of -v would display the current, which could be
 shown in certain places like tmux's or my wm's status bar.
 Is there a way to do this before I punch in some characters to test it?

I have written a small utility to do just that:

http://plhk.ru/static/skb/skb-0.4.tar.gz

-- 
Alexander Polakov | plhk.ru



Re: figuring out the current xkb layout

2012-10-30 Thread LEVAI Daniel
On k, okt 30, 2012 at 16:07:03 +0400, Alexander Polakov wrote:
 * LEVAI Daniel l...@ecentrum.hu [121030 15:30]:
  Hi!
  
  Alexander's mail made me remember that I was wondering about this for a
  while.
  I'm setting up my keyboard layout with `setxkbmap -layout 'us,hu'` so I
  can comfortably switch between layouts with alt+shift. But I can't seem
  to figure out what is the current layout. setxkbmap -query only shows
  'us,hu', and no amount of -v would display the current, which could be
  shown in certain places like tmux's or my wm's status bar.
  Is there a way to do this before I punch in some characters to test it?
 
 I have written a small utility to do just that:
 
 http://plhk.ru/static/skb/skb-0.4.tar.gz

Cool, thanks!

Daniel

-- 
LÉVAI Dániel
PGP key ID = 0x83B63A8F
Key fingerprint = DBEC C66B A47A DFA2 792D  650C C69B BE4C 83B6 3A8F



Re: GENERIC-kernel hangs at acpivout, ASUS N55SF laptop

2012-10-30 Thread Mike Korbakov
30.10.2012, 13:53, Paul Irofti p...@irofti.net:

  On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 06:47:15AM +0400, Mike Korbakov wrote:
   Hi, Group!

   GENERIC kernel from OpenBSD5.1 to current hangs at boot,
   trace pointed to acpivout. I've commented acpivout in kernel config,
   kernel boots successfully, but X seems unstable and CPU runs
   at lowest speed.
   This laptop has hybrid videocard Intel HD Graphics 3000 and
   NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 2GB DDR3 VRAM
   Linux (Ubuntu-12.04) has problems with this video too (especially 
 proprietary drivers)
  Can you please send the acpidump, the panic and the trace?

  You can copy the panic and the trace on a piece of paper first if you
  don't have a serial connection.

  You can fetch the acpidump from the shell when running your custom kernel.

I'm forgotten pcidump, which may be usefull:
Domain /dev/pci0:
 0:0:0: Intel Core 2G Host
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 0104
0x0004: Command: 0006 Status ID: 2090
0x0008: Class: 06 Subclass: 00 Interface: 00 Revision: 09
0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 00 Latency Timer: 00 Cache Line Size: 00
0x0010: BAR empty ()
0x0014: BAR empty ()
0x0018: BAR empty ()
0x001c: BAR empty ()
0x0020: BAR empty ()
0x0024: BAR empty ()
0x0028: Cardbus CIS: 
0x002c: Subsystem Vendor ID: 1043 Product ID: 1347
0x0030: Expansion ROM Base Address: 
0x0038: 
0x003c: Interrupt Pin: 00 Line: 00 Min Gnt: 00 Max Lat: 00
0x00e0: Capability 0x09: Vendor Specific
 0:1:0: Intel Core 2G PCIE
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 0101
0x0004: Command: 0007 Status ID: 0010
0x0008: Class: 06 Subclass: 04 Interface: 00 Revision: 09
0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 81 Latency Timer: 00 Cache Line Size: 10
0x0010: 
0x0014: 
0x0018: Primary Bus: 0 Secondary Bus: 1 Subordinate Bus: 1 
Secondary Latency Timer: 00
0x001c: I/O Base: d0 I/O Limit: d0 Secondary Status: 2000
0x0020: Memory Base: da00 Memory Limit: dc00
0x0024: Prefetch Memory Base: c001 Prefetch Memory Limit: d3f1
0x0028: Prefetch Memory Base Upper 32 Bits: 
0x002c: Prefetch Memory Limit Upper 32 Bits: 
0x0030: I/O Base Upper 16 Bits:  I/O Limit Upper 16 Bits: 
0x0038: Expansion ROM Base Address: 
0x003c: Interrupt Pin: 01 Line: 0b Bridge Control: 0010
0x0088: Capability 0x0d: PCI-PCI
0x0080: Capability 0x01: Power Management
0x0090: Capability 0x05: Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI)
0x00a0: Capability 0x10: PCI Express
Link Speed: 5.0 / 5.0 GT/s Link Width: x16 / x16
 0:2:0: Intel HD Graphics 3000
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 0116
0x0004: Command: 0007 Status ID: 0090
0x0008: Class: 03 Subclass: 00 Interface: 00 Revision: 09
0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 00 Latency Timer: 00 Cache Line Size: 00
0x0010: BAR mem 64bit addr: 0xdc40/0x0040
0x0018: BAR mem prefetchable 64bit addr: 0xb000/0x1000
0x0020: BAR io addr: 0xe000/0x0040
0x0024: BAR empty ()
0x0028: Cardbus CIS: 
0x002c: Subsystem Vendor ID: 1043 Product ID: 2050
0x0030: Expansion ROM Base Address: 
0x0038: 
0x003c: Interrupt Pin: 01 Line: 0b Min Gnt: 00 Max Lat: 00
0x0090: Capability 0x05: Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI)
0x00d0: Capability 0x01: Power Management
0x00a4: Capability 0x13: PCI Advanced Features
 0:22:0: Intel 6 Series MEI
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 1c3a
0x0004: Command: 0006 Status ID: 0010
0x0008: Class: 07 Subclass: 80 Interface: 00 Revision: 04
0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 80 Latency Timer: 00 Cache Line Size: 00
0x0010: BAR mem 64bit addr: 0xdf00b000/0x0010
0x0018: BAR empty ()
0x001c: BAR empty ()
0x0020: BAR empty ()
0x0024: BAR empty ()
0x0028: Cardbus CIS: 
0x002c: Subsystem Vendor ID: 1043 Product ID: 1347
0x0030: Expansion ROM Base Address: 
0x0038: 
0x003c: Interrupt Pin: 01 Line: 0b Min Gnt: 00 Max Lat: 00
0x0050: Capability 0x01: Power Management
0x008c: Capability 0x05: Message Signaled Interrupts (MSI)
 0:26:0: Intel 6 Series USB
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 1c2d
0x0004: Command: 0006 Status ID: 0290
0x0008: Class: 0c Subclass: 03 Interface: 20 Revision: 05
0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 00 Latency Timer: 00 Cache Line Size: 00
0x0010: BAR mem 32bit addr: 0xdf008000/0x0400
0x0014: BAR empty ()
0x0018: BAR empty ()

Máster en Aplicaciones para Dispositivos Móviles

2012-10-30 Thread Javier Toledo
MÁSTER EN APLICACIONES PARA DISPOSITIVOS MÓVILES

Pulse AQUÍ si no visualiza correctamente las imágenes.

GRUPO IOE - FORMACIÓN 100% BONIFICABLE

MÁSTER
EN APLICACIONES PARA DISPOSITIVOS MÓVILES

MODALIDAD NO PRESENCIAL

DESARROLLA TUS PROPIAS APPS

[IMAGE]

MÁS
INFORMACIÓN

Sus datos han sido obtenidos de fuentes de acceso público, en especial,
listines telefónicos, guías de empresas y otros medios de comunicación
titularidad de Fundamental Negocios, S.L. Si no desea que le enviemos
publicidad de cursos de formación, por favor, pulse aquí o envíe un
correo electronico a i...@paradirectivos.com para solicitar su baja.

[IMAGE]



Re: sysmerge on 5.2?

2012-10-30 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2012-10-29, bofh goodb...@gmail.com wrote:
 I kept reading - is sysmerge for use only on upgrades, for merging new
 /etc things into the existing config?

Yes.

 Is that what' I'm missing?  So, since I did a full fidks/new install,
 and then manually added the changes from my old box, sysmerge
 essentially did nothing for me, since i started from a brand new
 5.2...

You can save a lot of time by doing an upgrade from the install kernel,
then reboot/sysmerge/pkg_add -u. This has worked reliably for quite some
time (and over the last few releases, sysmerge has got smarter and asks
fewer questions).



Re: phpMyAdmin

2012-10-30 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2012-10-25, Tony Berth tonybe...@googlemail.com wrote:
 I'm trying to run phpMyAdmin on a 5.1 box (i386) with MySQL 5.1.60
 installed from the OpenBSD packages.

ah, phpMyAdmin, that popular cross-site-scripting and local file
inclusion toolkit with a sideline in web-based database access.

you might like to try chive instead.



Re: sysmerge on 5.2?

2012-10-30 Thread bofh
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 7:11 PM, Stuart Henderson s...@spacehopper.org wrote:
 On 2012-10-29, bofh goodb...@gmail.com wrote:
 I kept reading - is sysmerge for use only on upgrades, for merging new
 /etc things into the existing config?
 You can save a lot of time by doing an upgrade from the install kernel,
 then reboot/sysmerge/pkg_add -u. This has worked reliably for quite some
 time (and over the last few releases, sysmerge has got smarter and asks
 fewer questions).

Now that I understand it, yeah.  Someone needs to write an unsysmerge
- takes all the configs in /etc and /var and compares them to
etcXX.tgz and xetcXX.tgz and generates a patch to be applied against a
new install :)

-- 
http://www.glumbert.com/media/shift
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGvHNNOLnCk
This officer's men seem to follow him merely out of idle curiosity.
-- Sandhurst officer cadet evaluation.
Securing an environment of Windows platforms from abuse - external or
internal - is akin to trying to install sprinklers in a fireworks
factory where smoking on the job is permitted.  -- Gene Spafford
learn french:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30v_g83VHK4



Re: unbound performance

2012-10-30 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2012-10-26, Michel Blais mic...@targointernet.com wrote:
 we must leave the DNS resovler allowed to everyone. 

This is a *really* *really* bad idea. Since people started publishing
dnssec-bloated zones, open DNS resolvers became a massive UDP packet
amplification vector.

 Since we are a small ISP, we also receive reverse DNS query that the 
 unbound server will answer instead of NSD. I could have use 2 differents 
 unit, one for unbound + one for NSD but with CARP for high avaibility 
 and since carp and virtualisation don't work from what I readed, it 
 would mean use 4 diffrents unit. So instead, we added NSD on the same 
 box that listen to a other port and use stub-zone so unbound query NSD 
 for our address reverse DNS.

What's wrong with binding NSD to one IP address for authoritative
queries, open to everyone, and binding your resolver to another address,
only permitting users of your ISP?



Upgrade to 5.2?

2012-10-30 Thread Matt M.
Yesterday I upgraded from 5.1-release to -current. Is there any need to 
upgrade to 5.2-release? Could this cause issues since -current is really 
newer than what's on the 5.2 media?




Re: Upgrade to 5.2?

2012-10-30 Thread Daniel Melameth
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 8:55 PM, Matt M. cmorrow...@gmail.com wrote:
 Yesterday I upgraded from 5.1-release to -current. Is there any need to
 upgrade to 5.2-release? Could this cause issues since -current is really
 newer than what's on the 5.2 media?

You are now running bleeding edge software/what will evolve and become
5.3.  Upgrading this machine to 5.2 will actually be a downgrade and
this is unsupported.