On 2020-03-13 18:31, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2020-03-13, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
I wouldn't get too excited about running on low memory machines. The
more RAM you can throw at something, the better, as this allows more
cache room as well as improving function of ASLR and other memory
rand
On 2020-03-13, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
> I wouldn't get too excited about running on low memory machines. The
> more RAM you can throw at something, the better, as this allows more
> cache room as well as improving function of ASLR and other memory
> randomizations.
It does allow more cache, b
On 2020-03-11 19:20, Aaron Mason wrote:
On Wed, Mar 11, 2020 at 6:47 PM Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
On 2020-03-11 00:13, Stuart Longland wrote:
On 15/2/20 6:43 pm, Dumitru Moldovan wrote:
[SNIP]
[SNIP]
Sometimes it's better to realise when something has past its prime.
A year or two ago I
On Wed, Mar 11, 2020 at 6:47 PM Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
>
>
>
> On 2020-03-11 00:13, Stuart Longland wrote:
> > On 15/2/20 6:43 pm, Dumitru Moldovan wrote:
> >> [SNIP]
> > [SNIP]
> >
> > Sometimes it's better to realise when something has past its prime.
>
> A year or two ago I had OpenBSD working
On 2020-03-11 00:13, Stuart Longland wrote:
On 15/2/20 6:43 pm, Dumitru Moldovan wrote:
Not really, about 21 years ago I was learning to get XFree86 working,
to break free from the console on a desktop with 24MB of RAM.
It's all relative… I can recall years ago experimenting with operating
s
On 15/2/20 6:43 pm, Dumitru Moldovan wrote:
> Not really, about 21 years ago I was learning to get XFree86 working,
> to break free from the console on a desktop with 24MB of RAM.
It's all relative… I can recall years ago experimenting with operating
systems on old machines (even by that day's sta
On Sat, Feb 15, 2020 at 01:54:56AM +0100, Noth wrote:
I wouldn't call 64Mb "small" for memory, it's tiny. Even 20 years ago
64 wasn't really enough.
Not really, about 21 years ago I was learning to get XFree86 working,
to break free from the console on a desktop with 24MB of RAM. Built
that ma
On Sat, Feb 15, 2020 at 01:54:56AM +0100, Noth wrote:
> The only thing I can recommend is to stick to an older version of the OS
I wouldn't recommend running old releases, at least not until i386
officially becomes an unsupported platform.
On Fri, Feb 14, 2020 at 10:01:06PM +0900, rgc wrote:
> every boot OpenBSD relinks the kernel ... i stared at the top display and
> saw ld on top with around 170Mb ... literally out of memory ... and out of
> swap space. on machines with small memory swap is configured by disklabel
> as 2x physmem.
I wouldn't call 64Mb "small" for memory, it's tiny. Even 20 years ago 64
wasn't really enough. The introduction of kernel relinking on boot has
been noted since 6.5 (or was it 6.4?) to make tiny memory systems
obsolete. They simply can't cope. Theo has noted he has other projects
in the pipelin
misc@
sharing a recent experience with OpenBSD 6.6 and old, low spec, low memory
devices.
remember the Toshiba Libretto? back in 2000, OpenBSD got some CPU time on
one of mine. sadly that Libretto is now dead, and with the current state of
affairs, it wont be able to run OpenBSD.
last weekend i
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