> cpu0: 256KB 64b/line 8-way L2 cache
> rdmsr to register 0xc80 on vcpu 0
> fatal protection fault in supervisor mode
> trap type 4 code 0 rip 811c1d17 cs 8 rflags 202 cr2 0 cpl e rsp
> 81a05940
> panic: trap type 4, code=0, pc=811c1d17
Tha
On Wed, Apr 05, 2017 at 12:46:27PM +1000, Jason Tubnor wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just wondering if anyone else is seeing the same issue I am booting a
> 6.1-snapshot in bhyve? In preparation for the 6.1 pending release, I have
> tried to spin up 6.1-snap to iron out any issues in bhyve but I don't get
> v
Hi,
Just wondering if anyone else is seeing the same issue I am booting a
6.1-snapshot in bhyve? In preparation for the 6.1 pending release, I have
tried to spin up 6.1-snap to iron out any issues in bhyve but I don't get
very far into the installation process:
Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 19
Pete, you propose a waste of time.
Everyone has the source code. Everyone can run it. Everyone can see
the problems other people report, and the things which are not supported.
Everyone already can tell what needs improving. Everyone has a brain,
and can come up with their own goals.
If they
Would the devs consider compiling a list of specific improvements they'd like
to see volunteer'd upon this summer? I'd love to help especially if it was a
group effort/friendly competition.
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org on behalf of Bob Beck
Sent: April 2,
Dear Misc group
I am trying to install 6.0 (amd64) in a Samsung Laptop (model np300v4a) but
in the default graphic mode the display just let nothing good to read, so i
assumed that the video resolution is not supported. (Attach pic, but nothing
interesting to show there)
I had the same experienc
* lawgi...@nym.hush.com le [03-04-2017 13:52:20 -0700]:
> On 4/3/2017 at 1:31 PM, "Thuban" wrote:
> >I try to help a friend installing OpenBSD on a Dell Latitude E6440.
> >It seems the disk (SSD) isn't recognised, only the USB stick is
> >found by
> >the installer, even with the last snapshot.
>
Hi all,
I'm trying to use dpb in 6.1-current, and my setup works till it
tries to sign the package it makes and then fails with this message:
==> Building package for bzip2-1.0.6p8
Create /data/packages/amd64/all/bzip2-1.0.6p8.tgz
^Mreading plist|ESC[KESC[K^Mchecking
dependencies|ESC[KES
On 04/04/17 20:40, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>>> I have a case of OpenBSD-5.9 (i386) kernel panic.
> Upgrade.
I suspect that this kernel panic could be caused by hardware problems so
upgrade will not be a cure.
I sent the problem report to b...@openbsd.org
(http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-bugs&m=1491309
On 2017-04-04, Mihai Popescu wrote:
>> ... to connect to openbsd.org ...
>
> www.openbsd.org is for the public.
> ^^^
They're both the same these days.
It looks more like a bug than a hw fault. Upgrading (preferably to a
-current snapshot) means we will know whether the problem still exists or
whether it has been fixed already and gives an easier base for anyone
trying to track it down if it's still there.
--
Sent from a phone, apologies for
> ... to connect to openbsd.org ...
www.openbsd.org is for the public.
^^^
On Tue, Apr 04, 2017 at 04:12:53AM -0400, Jiri B wrote:
> I recently had an issue with frozen VM on qemu-kvm and we were discussing
> how to get memory of that VM for investigation.
>
> How would this be handle with VMM? This could be especially useful for
> troubleshooting VMM VMs running with Se
>> I have a case of OpenBSD-5.9 (i386) kernel panic.
Upgrade.
On 2017-04-03, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> I am surely not afraid to rebuild the kernel, but since I don't have
> a static IPv4 address, I would assume that setting PPPOE_TERM_UNKNOWN_SESSIONS
> wouldn't make a difference in this case, correct?
That description has been adjusted for -current. I don't
On 2017-04-03, Harald Dunkel wrote:
>
> Hi folks,
>
> AFAICT adding 2 lines to hostname.pppoe0 (as shown in the man
> page) doesn't give you a full featured IPv6 subnet yet. Is there
> some support for IPV6CP (RFC 5072) in OpenBSD?
pppoe(4) does exactly use IPV6CP. But IPV6CP doesn't do what you
On Tue, 04 Apr 2017, Kristoff Haler wrote:
> Hello misc@,
>
> Unable to provide direct link from this email account
> Search indiegogo "gpd-pocket-7-0"
> Not ARM,
> x86_64,
> 8GB RAM,
> TrackPoint,
> 7in 1920x1200,
> Touchscreen,
> Gorilla Glass,
> This "feels" OpenBSD.
>
> Regards,
> Krist
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 4, 2017, at 10:47 AM, Todd C. Miller
wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 04 Apr 2017 09:21:45 -0500, Edgar Pettijohn wrote:
>>
>> This is somewhat a continuation of my previous question about max
>> interfaces. I wanted to know how much space I needed for a buffer using
>> ioctl().
On Tue, 04 Apr 2017 09:21:45 -0500, Edgar Pettijohn wrote:
> This is somewhat a continuation of my previous question about max
> interfaces. I wanted to know how much space I needed for a buffer using
> ioctl(). Then I discovered getifaddrs()
Good, you want to use getifaddrs() and not the old
> This is somewhat a continuation of my previous question about max
> interfaces. I wanted to know how much space I needed for a buffer using
> ioctl(). Then I discovered getifaddrs()
>
> I'm not sure if I'm doing something wrong or this is the correct
> output. I have this sample code:
>
>
Hello misc@,
Unable to provide direct link from this email account
Search indiegogo "gpd-pocket-7-0"
Not ARM,
x86_64,
8GB RAM,
TrackPoint,
7in 1920x1200,
Touchscreen,
Gorilla Glass,
This "feels" OpenBSD.
Regards,
Kristoff Haler.
--
Take back your privacy. Switch to www.StartMail.com
This is somewhat a continuation of my previous question about max
interfaces. I wanted to know how much space I needed for a buffer using
ioctl(). Then I discovered getifaddrs()
I'm not sure if I'm doing something wrong or this is the correct
output. I have this sample code:
#include
#inc
I think it ends up neutral or slightly positive. If your site developers
have got rid of the old HTTP/1.x antipatterns (separate FQDN for static
resources, FQDN sharding, etc), turning on HTTP/2 will probably be a net
win. Easily enough to cancel out the added cost of mandatory TLS?
But just adopt
I can confirm this for the https site
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 04. April 2017 um 11:04 Uhr
> Von: "Luke Small"
> An: openbsd-misc
> Betreff: I can't connect to openbsd.org in most cases.
>
> I have an openbsd vm on a windows 7 host, windows 7 asus, iPhone, and
> Android phone. Only the iPhone 7+ se
On 2017-04-02, Niko Pavlinek wrote:
> On 2. 04. 2017 14:08, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>>
>> Please try a -current snapshot and report back. If you get it now (before
>> the kernel version moves to 6.1-current) you'll be able to safely update
>> to the proper 6.1 release when it's out.
>>
>> ACPI is
I have an openbsd vm on a windows 7 host, windows 7 asus, iPhone, and
Android phone. Only the iPhone 7+ seems to be able to connect to openbsd.org
correctly without getting a https validation error. they are all going
through the same wifi router.
I am running firefox on everything. Safari also wo
I recently had an issue with frozen VM on qemu-kvm and we were discussing
how to get memory of that VM for investigation.
How would this be handle with VMM? This could be especially useful for
troubleshooting VMM VMs running with SeaBIOS.
We have found this https://github.com/juergh/lqs2mem.py pr
>You can see the dmesg and installer output as screenshots below.
Your BIOS firmware is very old, I think. Try an update and try to
disable RAID mode.
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