Ted Unangst t...@tedunangst.com writes:
As a short term workaround, type -c at the boot prompt, then disable
cbb at the next prompt, then quit, and see what happens.
I still get a panic and it didn't change the panic string or the trace.
Kendall
On Wed, Mar 07, 2012, Kendall Shaw wrote
Kendall Shaw ks...@kendallshaw.com writes:
Hi,
I have a lifebook p1110 which causes a kernel panic related to APM, I
think. Either by setting power savings settings in BIOS to suspend or
standby, or
disabling power savings in BIOS and running apmd and apm -z or apm -S
causes a kernal
Hi,
I have a lifebook p1110 which causes a kernel panic related to APM, I
think. Either by setting power savings settings in BIOS to suspend or standby,
or
disabling power savings in BIOS and running apmd and apm -z or apm -S
causes a kernal panic.
Do you have any advice, other than give up on
I get no reply when I try to subscribe to the pf mailing list, so I'll
ask here. I'm running OpenBSD 4.3 stable on amd64. I use what is in the
pf faq to allow ftp from my internal lan via nat, which works, but I
can't ftp from the computer that is running pf unless I use ftp -AaE as
I read about
missed because they are incoming with source port 20. So, I added:
pass in quick on $ext_if proto tcp from any port 20 to $ext_if port
{ 4 65500 }
and I can now use pkg_info.
On 10/16/08, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I get no reply when I try to subscribe to the pf mailing list
Hi,
I got an alix2c2 which I'm hoping to install openbsd on. Is there a way to
upgrade it's bios and install openbsd on it from openbsd?
I see instructions for upgrading the bios using freedos, so I got a CF card
reader and used instructions to install freedos from windows xp, but when I
boot
On Sun, 2008-05-25 at 22:41 -0400, deoxy wrote:
Hello.
I dont know if this a cuestion for this list, but I think is it a valid
cuestion...
I reading a book recomended in http://www.openbsd.org/books.html The book is
Advanced programmig in the unix environment.
In this book I read Figure
On Sun, 2008-05-25 at 22:41 -0400, deoxy wrote:
Hello.
I dont know if this a cuestion for this list, but I think is it a valid
cuestion...
I reading a book recomended in http://www.openbsd.org/books.html The book is
Advanced programmig in the unix environment.
In this book I read Figure
On Mon, 2008-05-26 at 00:11 -0400, deoxy wrote:
Hello.
apue.h is OK I take this of http://safari.oreilly.com/0201433079/app02
and this is in my folder.
The err_quit is in line 108 void err_quit(const char *, ...)i;
err_dump and err_sys are similar.
regards.
Dmitri.
On Mon, May 26,
In the networking section of the OpenBSD FAQ it suggests reading
Understanding IP addressing:
http://www.3com.com/other/pdfs/infra/corpinfo/en_US/501302.pdf
I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2
numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232 (4,294,967,296). Can you understand what they
On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 12:46 -0700, Chris Kuethe wrote:
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are
only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses available.
232 what?
Typesetting error. That should be 2^32
On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 13:10 -0700, Kendall Shaw wrote:
On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 12:46 -0700, Chris Kuethe wrote:
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:36 PM, Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are
only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses
I'm following -stable until I read some more, and I'm unclear on some
aspects of syncing source.
What's a patch?
---
There was an earlier post about why there are no security patches for
4.3 listed at:
http://www.openbsd.org/pkg-stable.html
Is that different from:
On Tue, 2008-05-20 at 18:25 -0400, Martin Gignac wrote:
On Tue, 20 May 2008, Kendall Shaw wrote:
I'm following -stable until I read some more, and I'm unclear on some
aspects of syncing source.
There was an earlier post about why there are no security patches for
4.3 listed
On Tue, 2008-05-20 at 22:37 -0400, Martin Gignac wrote:
On Tue, 20 May 2008, Kendall Shaw wrote:
Can you also help me understand these words about -current, from the
FAQ:
There are also flag days and major system changes that the developers
navigate with one-time tools, which mean
I'm an openbsd novice. I replaced cards on computers in my home network
with gigabit ethernet and got a a gigabit switch. Can I determine what
speed or maybe what media my re0 interface is using?
On Mon, 2008-05-19 at 15:18 -0700, Lord Sporkton wrote:
2008/5/19 Kendall Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I'm an openbsd novice. I replaced cards on computers in my home network
with gigabit ethernet and got a a gigabit switch. Can I determine what
speed or maybe what media my re0 interface
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