On Jan 07 11:49:41, dera...@openbsd.org wrote:
> Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > > 1) If you edit that file yourself,
> >
> > Is there any other way this file is supposed to come to existence
> > (except the one containing the default answers, which sysupgrade
> > writes itself) beside editing it by hand
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 01:44:51PM -0800, Sean Kamath wrote:
> > On Jan 7, 2022, at 13:38, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 01:23:30PM -0800, Sean Kamath wrote:
> >> gpg < file.gpg
> >
> > Why gpg and not openssl?
>
> 21 years of muscle memory?
>
> But that is a good point
When the touchpad stops working, you could enable wsmouse logging, make
one or two movements on the touchpad, and extract and post the relevant
part of /var/log/messages. It might help to determine where the problem
is.
# Enable logging
$ doas wsconsctl mouse0.param=256:1,257:1
# Dis
I use https://www.passwordstore.org/
pkg_add password-store
On Fri, Jan 7, 2022 at 2:03 PM wrote:
> Hello. I hope this these types of questions are okay for an mailing list..
> I completely understand if they are not..
>
> There's password-store, but it does need some shitty dependencies..
> Th
> On Jan 7, 2022, at 13:38, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
>
> On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 01:23:30PM -0800, Sean Kamath wrote:
>> gpg < file.gpg
>
> Why gpg and not openssl?
21 years of muscle memory?
But that is a good point. . . Hrm.
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 01:23:30PM -0800, Sean Kamath wrote:
> gpg < file.gpg
Why gpg and not openssl?
I'm reading pci_mapreg_type(9) and I'm wondering about the returns of
this function. The documentation says it can return either
PCI_MAPREG_TYPE_IO or PCI_MAPREG_TYPE_MEM. But I also see at least one
driver checking the type for PCI_MAPREG_MEM_TYPE_64BIT
Looking at the definitions of these in sys
> On Jan 7, 2022, at 11:53, fo...@dnmx.org wrote:
>
> Hello. I hope this these types of questions are okay for an mailing list..
> I completely understand if they are not..
>
> There's password-store, but it does need some shitty dependencies..
> Then there's opm, but since it doesn't seem to be
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 06:31:38PM +, Laura Smith wrote:
> > Is there any hardware handshaking on this serial connection?
>
> Not AFAIK, vendor spec for connection is "serial port settings are 115200, 8
> data bits, and no parity"
> I'm using a good old "Cisco-style" cable (serial at one end,
Jan Stary wrote:
> > 1) If you edit that file yourself,
>
> Is there any other way this file is supposed to come to existence
> (except the one containing the default answers, which sysupgrade
> writes itself) beside editing it by hand?
sysupgrade creates it, exactly as it wants it to be.
If y
On Jan 07 11:15:20, dera...@openbsd.org wrote:
> Jan Stary wrote:
>
> > On Jan 07 10:52:51, dera...@openbsd.org wrote:
> > > Set name(s) = -x*
> > > Set name(s) = done
> > >
> > > By giving two seperate answers to the same question, you are making a
> > > gigantic assumption.
> >
> > Yes, t
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 06:01:39PM +, Laura Smith wrote:
> Hi
>
> I'm having a really weird experience on a 6.9 box trying to connect to a
> switch serial console.
>
> If I run "cu -r" then I can see the switch (when the switch is running its
> fine, I can interact with the CLI, but if the
Jan Stary wrote:
> On Jan 07 10:52:51, dera...@openbsd.org wrote:
> > Set name(s) = -x*
> > Set name(s) = done
> >
> > By giving two seperate answers to the same question, you are making a
> > gigantic assumption.
>
> Yes, that's probably wrong.
> But the same happens with just
>
> S
On Fri, 7 Jan 2022, Roderick wrote:
It seems there is a way to disable the search in chrome "omnibox",
but it is still not clear to me how to do it.
I added a "search engine" in settings with URL "http://localhost?q=%s";,
set it as default and deleted all other search engines.
Do you know a
On Jan 07 10:52:51, dera...@openbsd.org wrote:
> Set name(s) = -x*
> Set name(s) = done
>
> By giving two seperate answers to the same question, you are making a
> gigantic assumption.
Yes, that's probably wrong.
But the same happens with just
Set name(s) = -x*
Is the grammar of th
Set name(s) = -x*
Set name(s) = done
By giving two seperate answers to the same question, you are making a
gigantic assumption.
This is current/arm64 (I have the same problem on current/amd64).
I am trying toi sysupgrade with the following /auto_uprade.conf:
Which disk is the root disk = sd0
Force checking of clean non-root filesystems = no
Location of sets = disk
Is the disk partition already mounted = yes
Pathn
Surf is actually excellent BUT it has no ad blocker and some sites don’t
load properly, ala YouTube.
On Friday, January 7, 2022, Crystal Kolipe
wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 04:36:36PM +, Roderick wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, 7 Jan 2022, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> >
> > >>But you might encounter i
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 11:39:43AM -0500, Daniel Wilkins wrote:
> Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> >>* https://sourceforge.net/projects/midori-browser/ (as on Raspbian)
> >Midori might be worth looking at as a light-weight browser replacement for
> >Firefox, although I haven't used it for a number of years
I do internet banking with epiphany.
On 1/7/22, Raymond, David wrote:
> I use epiphany quite a bit, and like it a lot, though there are
> websites on which it crashes. It uses the same toolkit as midori and
> in my opinion has a somewhat better user interface. Don't know
> whether it works on i
I use epiphany quite a bit, and like it a lot, though there are
websites on which it crashes. It uses the same toolkit as midori and
in my opinion has a somewhat better user interface. Don't know
whether it works on i386 at this point.
Dave Raymond
On 1/7/22, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
> On Fri, Ja
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 04:36:36PM +, Roderick wrote:
>
> On Fri, 7 Jan 2022, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
>
> >>But you might encounter increasingly more websites that do not work
> >>with them, as the web grows in complexity.
> >
> >Agreed.
>
> And this is the main point. I need the web browser f
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 05:08:16PM +0100, Jan Stary wrote:
> This is how ps(1) differentiates between displaying
> processes that have a terminal and those that have not:
>
> -a Display information about processes
> for all users with controlling terminals.
>
> -x Display in
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 05:08:16PM +0100, Jan Stary wrote:
> This is how ps(1) differentiates between displaying
> processes that have a terminal and those that have not:
>
> -a Display information about processes
> for all users with controlling terminals.
>
> -x Display inf
Crystal Kolipe wrote:
* https://sourceforge.net/projects/midori-browser/ (as on Raspbian)
Midori might be worth looking at as a light-weight browser replacement for
Firefox, although I haven't used it for a number of years.
Worth nothing that this version of Midori has been abandoned for the
On Fri, 7 Jan 2022, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
But you might encounter increasingly more websites that do not work
with them, as the web grows in complexity.
Agreed.
And this is the main point. I need the web browser for example for
internetbanking, not just "surfing". The web developers decide
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 05:06:24PM +0100, Josuah Demangeon wrote:
> * https://surf.suckless.org/ (webkit/gtk+)
Surf would work well on his hardware, but it's minimal interface is somewhat
different to a traditional web browser, and probably not what he is expecting.
It also has some fairly uniq
This is how ps(1) differentiates between displaying
processes that have a terminal and those that have not:
-a Display information about processes
for all users with controlling terminals.
-x Display information about processes
without controlling terminals.
Roderick wrote:
> I just updated OpenBSD to 7.0. After pkg_add -u, it seems
> firefox was not updated:
I did not have this problem with firefox installed before my 6.9
-> 7.0 upgrade, but I'm on amd64 :
lap1$ uname -a
OpenBSD lap1.josuah.net 7.0 GENERIC.MP#3 amd64
lap1$
On Fri, 7 Jan 2022, Crystal Kolipe wrote:
Are you actually running on hardware that doesn't support amd64?
That is the case. A light and small samsumg nc10 nettop. No amd64,
only 2 GB RAM.
The problem is that important Web-Sites are done for chrome and firefox.
I do not see much choice.
I
On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 03:38:11PM +, Roderick wrote:
> I just updated OpenBSD to 7.0. After pkg_add -u, it seems
> firefox was not updated:
Firefox no longer builds on i386, since shortly after the release of OpenBSD
6.9.
> Any hint?
Are you actually running on hardware that doesn't suppor
I just updated OpenBSD to 7.0. After pkg_add -u, it seems
firefox was not updated:
firefox core dumped, I deleted it, but I cannot reinstall it
(cannot find that package).
With chrome I have a problem, because it does not separate URL
entry from search entry. And I do not know an alternative t
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