[no subject]

2014-01-07 Thread Hugo Pompougnac
Good morning, Before all, please forgive my language, I'm french. As a student, I'm discovering OpenBSD. I'm trying to automount USB keys with hotplug, but it's quite difficult. That's why I ask to you. To recap : - I downloaded hotplug-diskmount - I created the directory /vol with /usr/local/

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Daniel Bolgheroni
On Tue, Jan 07, 2014 at 03:05:39PM +, Jurjen Oskam wrote: > Hi everybody, > > Earlier I had a Linux machine (well, a Raspberry Pi actually) which > I used to read out my energy meter. The energy meter was connected > to a USB port with a custom FTDI cable. The energy meter only > supports read

Re: Group access issue

2014-01-07 Thread Andy Hayward
Not OpenBSD related, but this can be achieved with standard Unix permissions. From memory you'll need something like: Two groups, one for read-only (R), the other for write access (W). Anyone in the latter group should also be in the former. Then create the following directory structure: foo (gro

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Alexander Hall
On 01/07/14 21:17, Jurjen Oskam wrote: Philip Guenther gmail.com> writes: On Tue, Jan 7, 2014 at 8:23 AM, Theo de Raadt cvs.openbsd.org> wrote: What you need to instead is wrap all this in a way which keeps the tty open ( stty 9600 sane parenb -parodd crtscts cs7 igncr

Group access issue

2014-01-07 Thread Jon S
Hi! I have a situation where I would like to assign one group of people rights to read a file and a different group of people the right to read and write the same file (there are actually many files). A different way to describe it would be: I would like a file to belong to two groups, one with R

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Philip Guenther
On Tue, Jan 7, 2014 at 12:17 PM, Jurjen Oskam wrote: > Thank you for the responses. I sort of figured out that the stty settings > are set to default each time the device is opened, but now that's confirmed > I ran into the problem that open() does not seem to be returning. > > I created the follo

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Jurjen Oskam
Philip Guenther gmail.com> writes: > On Tue, Jan 7, 2014 at 8:23 AM, Theo de Raadt cvs.openbsd.org> wrote: > > What you need to instead is wrap all this in a way which keeps the > > tty open > > > > ( > > stty 9600 sane parenb -parodd crtscts cs7 igncr > > do your IO loop > >

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Remco
Jurjen Oskam wrote: > uftdi0 at uhub3 port 6 "FTDI P1 Converter Cable" rev 2.00/6.00 addr 3 > ucom0 at uftdi0 portno 1 > > > But now I can't figure out how to read from /dev/ttyU0. > I usually use /dev/cuaU0 when reading from serial-to-USB converters. Unless your cable is different in some wa

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Philip Guenther
On Tue, Jan 7, 2014 at 8:23 AM, Theo de Raadt wrote: > What you need to instead is wrap all this in a way which keeps the > tty open > > ( > stty 9600 sane parenb -parodd crtscts cs7 igncr > do your IO loop > ) &1 0>&2 > > Something like that. I think the desired redirecti

Re: Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Theo de Raadt
> /bin/stty -F /dev/ttyUSB0 9600 sane evenp crtscts cs7 igncr ^^ --- no a standard stty option > The first problem I'm having is that the stty setting doesn't seem to > stick: > > $ stty -f /dev/ttyU0 > ispeed 0 baud; ospeed 9600 baud; > lflags: echoe echoke echoctl > cflags: cs8 -pare

Cannot set stty parameters and read from /dev/ttyU0

2014-01-07 Thread Jurjen Oskam
Hi everybody, Earlier I had a Linux machine (well, a Raspberry Pi actually) which I used to read out my energy meter. The energy meter was connected to a USB port with a custom FTDI cable. The energy meter only supports reading from it, writing to it is not possible. On Linux, I set the necessary

Re: BCM5719/20 or I350

2014-01-07 Thread Hrvoje Popovski
On 7.1.2014. 13:27, mxb wrote: > > This is a pair of CARP-nodes (2x Dell R620 ). Nodes are connected with > cross-over, trunk to trunk (trunk of 2x I350 per node). > No vlans. > > tcpbench from the base; PF used a lot, but with "pass quick on trunk0 keep > state”: > > Conn: 1 Mbps: 926.

Re: 10G with Intel card - GBIC options

2014-01-07 Thread Hrvoje Popovski
On 2.12.2013. 10:05, Andy wrote: > Hmm surprised by that! > > Henning, could you please confirm for us if the 32bit bandwidth limit > was lifted in the new queuing subsystem, or if it is just still in place > whilst dual-running the new and the old? > > I guess considering Hrvoje's findings the l

Re: Barcode Scan OpenBSD Order: 54.02757 2013/11/2-18:29:24-31073:

2014-01-07 Thread Gustavo Coelho
Dear Austin, i am witing to let you know that up to the present momment, i did not received my CD Set. I have sent email to the computer clagary shop, but no response i get back. May you help me ? I would really enjoy to have this OpenBSD CD Set. Thank you for your time and cooperation. Best

My CD Set did not arrived.

2014-01-07 Thread Friedrich Locke
Hi folks, i did order my OpenBSD 5.4 CD Set on 2013/11/02. The people at calgary shop sent me an email saying my order was shipped on 2013/11/12. Until the present moment i did not receive any thing yet. I am writing to the mailing list because none o the email i sent to shipp...@computershop.ca

delete-old

2014-01-07 Thread Christian Weisgerber
Sometime last year I wrote: | Those who also update FreeBSD machines from source may know "make | delete-old", which offers to delete obsolete files and directories. | | Here's the same as a shell script. As posted, the script would also offer to delete files that have been moved between sets,

Re: BCM5719/20 or I350

2014-01-07 Thread mxb
This is a pair of CARP-nodes (2x Dell R620 ). Nodes are connected with cross-over, trunk to trunk (trunk of 2x I350 per node). No vlans. tcpbench from the base; PF used a lot, but with "pass quick on trunk0 keep state”: Conn: 1 Mbps: 926.569 Peak Mbps: 939.483 Avg Mbps: 926.569