Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 21, 2021 at 06:04:28PM -0500, Rob Whitlock wrote:
> > A problem seems to be that there is no disklabel entry for the ExFAT
> > partition.
>
> You probably wrote a BSD disklabel to the disk before creating the ExFAT
> partition.
>
> If there is no on-disk dis
Hey friends,
i have a OpenBSD 7.0 server with all syspatches applied. On that server
i have setup httpd and PHP 7.4 running via PHP-FPM. I followed the
readme provided by the package and everything seams to be fine.
There is only one issue when i try to establish a secure connection from
PHP
I am not sure you can find someone who knows (almost) everything about
disks and partitions even on OpenBSD area. There are so many "standards"
and "methods" that the utilities got their names in time:
fdisk - %#@& disk
dd - destroy disk
disklabel - diskbabel
But maybe I am mistaken.
On Wed, Dec 22, 2021 at 05:29:34PM +0100, Tilo Stritzky wrote:
> (With an MBR disk you could force feed a handcrafted disklabel but
> that won't work here because on a GPT disk without OpenBSD partition
> the disklabel and the primary GPT share a physical sector and that
> won't work.)
That is inc
On Wed, Dec 22, 2021 at 5:23 AM Crystal Kolipe
wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 21, 2021 at 06:04:28PM -0500, Rob Whitlock wrote:
> > A problem seems to be that there is no disklabel entry for the ExFAT
> > partition.
>
> You probably wrote a BSD disklabel to the disk before creating the ExFAT
> partition.
>
Thanks Stuart,
A year or two ago I set the following sysctl which did help,
fdns1# cat /etc/sysctl.conf
net.inet.udp.recvspace=262144
net.inet.udp.sendspace=262144
Thanks for the tip re diagnosing the UDP buffers output of the command you
suggested looks good from a buffer perspective...
The s
On 22/12/21 13:35 Tilo Stritzky wrote:
Um, well..
What I was going to say is, for some reason the default disklabel
doesn't pick up your partitions (it should also show the EFI, but
doesn't).
As a quick-and-dirty fix you cold try and change the partition ID to
something that's picked up by the d
James Cook wrote:
> I thought the disklabel lives at the start of the OpenBSD partition.
That is incorrect.
On Wed, Dec 22, 2021 at 07:21:41AM -0300, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 21, 2021 at 06:04:28PM -0500, Rob Whitlock wrote:
> > A problem seems to be that there is no disklabel entry for the ExFAT
> > partition.
>
> You probably wrote a BSD disklabel to the disk before creating the ExFAT
> pa
On 21/12/21 18:04 Rob Whitlock wrote:
> I have two disks, one an MBR partitioned 1TB external SSD, and the other a
> GPT partitioned 5TB external HDD. Both have a single ExFAT partition on
> them and both have the same contents. Both show up as sd1 under "sysctl
> hw.disknames" (when plugged in on
On 2021-12-22, Dirk Coetzee wrote:
> Hi Tom,
>
> I would recommend debugging using "unbound-control stats_noreset" and
> referencing the unbound configuration documentation at
> https://www.nlnetlabs.nl/documentation/unbound/unbound.conf/
Also check for "dropped due to full socket buffers" in
Rather than sentences like "finagled a Google router/modem to give me
back the same local reserved address" and "some kinda round-robin with
god knows what but it was messing with my internet" it would be better
to show exactly what you are doing/typing/seeing, I think nobody can
help without accur
On Tue, Dec 21, 2021 at 06:04:28PM -0500, Rob Whitlock wrote:
> A problem seems to be that there is no disklabel entry for the ExFAT
> partition.
You probably wrote a BSD disklabel to the disk before creating the ExFAT
partition.
If there is no on-disk disklabel, the kernel will create one in me
I have a Ethernet westmere-ep Supermicro server I use for a local dns
server which I have local devices vpn connected into.
I started with em0 and I finagled a Google router/modem to give me back the
same local reserved address for em3 for the new Intel i350-t2 card.
I was watching “tcpdump -aetv
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