Re: cumbersome mtree

2023-11-27 Thread Nowarez Market
Hello Michael, thnx for the answer. I come from a couple of long white nights and indeed this night was the longest one (for who is interested I'm playing on a barely simple ide that at a certain point in time hopefully should enforce RAD amenities, good practices, etc. I'm working in tcltk).

Re: cumbersome mtree

2023-11-27 Thread Michael Hekeler
> Hello, > > I was enthusiastic to write down a tool that permitted everyone > to check and print the default file permissions of a given path > but when I knocked my eyes against mtree behavior I remained > frightened. > > Given for example: > > mtree -c -f /etc/mtree/4.4BSD.dist -K

Re: OnLogic Helix 330

2023-11-27 Thread Jonathan Gray
On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 09:10:18PM -0700, Devin Reade wrote: > On Tue, 2023-11-28 at 11:29 +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote: > > > STD_PHYID1  67C9 > > STD_PHYID2  DC00 > > > > /sys/dev/mii/miivar.h > [...] > > Thanks. > > So it looks like the approach here is to add a gpyphy.c and >

Re: OnLogic Helix 330

2023-11-27 Thread Devin Reade
On Tue, 2023-11-28 at 11:29 +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote: > STD_PHYID1  67C9 > STD_PHYID2  DC00 > > /sys/dev/mii/miivar.h [...] Thanks. So it looks like the approach here is to add a gpyphy.c and gpyphyreg.h file, and tie it in via miidevs, correct? I don't understand files.mii but it

Re: a couple question about my fde setup

2023-11-27 Thread Shadrock Uhuru
From: Nick Holland To: misc@openbsd.org Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2023 07:47:40 -0500 Subject: Re: a couple question about my fde setup On 11/19/23 18:09, Shadrock Uhuru wrote: hi all a couple question about my fde first, i have fde setup using a keydisk on my laptop, encryption and decryption

Re: OnLogic Helix 330

2023-11-27 Thread Jonathan Gray
On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 11:30:23PM -, Stuart Henderson wrote: > On 2023-11-27, Devin Reade wrote: > > Once running snapshots, I initially configured the network for dwqe0. > > It came up and I was able to ping hosts on the dwqe0 network, but > > I noticed that carrier state seemed

Re: OnLogic Helix 330

2023-11-27 Thread Devin Reade
On Mon, 2023-11-27 at 23:30 +, Stuart Henderson wrote: > I don't know enough about it to go into detail, but these sort of > symptoms are making me think of issues with the PHY driver rather > than the nic driver. Yeah, mostly at the moment I'm trying to understand the different obsd network

Re: OnLogic Helix 330

2023-11-27 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2023-11-27, Devin Reade wrote: > Once running snapshots, I initially configured the network for dwqe0. > It came up and I was able to ping hosts on the dwqe0 network, but > I noticed that carrier state seemed unpredictable. I then deleted > hostname.dwqe0 and started trying to determine

httpd: request rewrite & directory auto index

2023-11-27 Thread Benjamin Stürz
Hi misc@, I may have found a bug with the combination of `request rewrite` and `directory auto index` when using httpd(8). Preparation: mkdir -p /var/www/htdocs/pub/user echo "Hello World" > /var/www/htdocs/pub/user/test /etc/httpd.conf: server "example.com" { listen on * port 80

Re: (Tina Turner) Scrumbled sectors playing dvd

2023-11-27 Thread Stuart Longland VK4MSL
On 28/11/23 00:10, Nowarez Market wrote: Talking about medium, I just mounted a dvd of Tina Turner: wiz# mount -t cd9660 /dev/cd0a /mnt/cdrom And I understand OpenBSD could eventually get a little wired but not like from screenshot attached.. I'm trying to playing it with Parole.. DVDs have

Re: OnLogic Helix 330

2023-11-27 Thread Devin Reade
It took me a while to get to this, and I'm just starting to investigate, but I figured I'd give an update. Based on Stefan's comments, I wasn't expecting things to work, but I figured I'd post what I have so far. The behavior seems to be consistent between the 18 Nov and 24 Nov snapshots; the

Re: CPU0 at 100% on Thinkpad 480 with OpenBSD 7.4

2023-11-27 Thread Mike Larkin
On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 11:38:01AM -0700, Theo de Raadt wrote: > Mike Larkin wrote: > > > On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 01:05:56PM -0500, Laurent Cimon wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > > The CPU0 on my Thinkpad 480 is always running at around 100%. It's on > > > OpenBSD 7.4. > > > > > > It seems to be

Re: CPU0 at 100% on Thinkpad 480 with OpenBSD 7.4

2023-11-27 Thread Theo de Raadt
Mike Larkin wrote: > On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 01:05:56PM -0500, Laurent Cimon wrote: > > Hi, > > > > > > The CPU0 on my Thinkpad 480 is always running at around 100%. It's on > > OpenBSD 7.4. > > > > It seems to be doing this in the kernel. > > > > > > Here is the CPU's line from top(1). > > > >  

Re: CPU0 at 100% on Thinkpad 480 with OpenBSD 7.4

2023-11-27 Thread Laurent Cimon
On 11/27/23 13:12, Mike Larkin wrote: On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 01:05:56PM -0500, Laurent Cimon wrote: Hi, The CPU0 on my Thinkpad 480 is always running at around 100%. It's on OpenBSD 7.4. It seems to be doing this in the kernel. Here is the CPU's line from top(1).     CPU0:  0.0% user, 

Re: CPU0 at 100% on Thinkpad 480 with OpenBSD 7.4

2023-11-27 Thread Mike Larkin
On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 01:05:56PM -0500, Laurent Cimon wrote: > Hi, > > > The CPU0 on my Thinkpad 480 is always running at around 100%. It's on > OpenBSD 7.4. > > It seems to be doing this in the kernel. > > > Here is the CPU's line from top(1). > >     CPU0:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice, 79.3% sys, 

CPU0 at 100% on Thinkpad 480 with OpenBSD 7.4

2023-11-27 Thread Laurent Cimon
Hi, The CPU0 on my Thinkpad 480 is always running at around 100%. It's on OpenBSD 7.4. It seems to be doing this in the kernel. Here is the CPU's line from top(1).     CPU0:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice, 79.3% sys,  3.8% spin, 16.3 It's always this specific CPU, and it's been draining my

Re: OpenBSD SMP - BGPd - send_rtmsg: action 1, prefix A.B.C.D/24: No buffer space available - panic: malloc: out of space in kmem_map

2023-11-27 Thread Claudio Jeker
On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 04:57:35PM +0100, Laurent CARON wrote: > Hi, > > I'm currently migrating a BGPd server. > > Specs of "old" machine: > > - Dell R720 with Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2637 v2and 16GB RAM > > - SMP Kernel (default) > > - BGPd runs fine with 5 full views > > - X710 NIC (ixl)

OpenBSD SMP - BGPd - send_rtmsg: action 1, prefix A.B.C.D/24: No buffer space available - panic: malloc: out of space in kmem_map

2023-11-27 Thread Laurent CARON
Hi, I'm currently migrating a BGPd server. Specs of "old" machine: - Dell R720 with Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2637 v2and 16GB RAM - SMP Kernel (default) - BGPd runs fine with 5 full views - X710 NIC (ixl) 4 port interface Specs of "new" machine: - Dell R750xs with Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6334

(Tina Turner) Scrumbled sectors playing dvd

2023-11-27 Thread Nowarez Market
Hello, 7.4 Talking about medium, I just mounted a dvd of Tina Turner: wiz# mount -t cd9660 /dev/cd0a /mnt/cdrom And I understand OpenBSD could eventually get a little wired but not like from screenshot attached.. I'm trying to playing it with Parole.. == Nowarez Market

Re: OpenBSD alternative setup to ZFS on Linux or FreeBSD

2023-11-27 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2023/11/26 11:36, Crystal Kolipe wrote: > On Sun, Nov 26, 2023 at 01:52:22PM -, Stuart Henderson wrote: > > On 2023-11-24, Crystal Kolipe wrote: > > > At the end of last year, I did a comprehensive write-up about using > > > blu-ray > > > recordable on OpenBSD, and as part of that I

Re: FAT names exceeding spec length

2023-11-27 Thread Nowarez Market
There is also some ironic stuff behind these happenings: if you have the possibility to check your lost long file names you will discover that the most significant information are contained in the first 99 chars. Nowarez Market wrote: > > Clearly the problem is that from the user

Re: FAT names exceeding spec length

2023-11-27 Thread Nowarez Market
Clearly the problem is that from the user prospective in these kind of events all the information contained in the longer file names are lost. A file copy from Android is always completely transparent to the user, anyhow. Android open behavior "doesn't help" copping with these long names: if I

FAT names exceeding spec length

2023-11-27 Thread Nowarez Market
Hello, I have a fat32 usb stick that I use to transfer files from/to my Android tablet since years. I just want to drop the hint that Android manage to render the file names exceeding 255 chars offering the user the long form anyway while OpenBSD strictly apply the FAT specs rendering these file