> Hello
>
>
> I have installed and used sound successfully in the past. I reread the
> man and faq pages
> about sound but still no good.
>
> This is an amd64 setup so I dont know if that is the reason for my
> trouble. On motherboard
> is nForce4 AC97 and USB is Creative Technology SB Live! 24-
Thanks David,
I just tried that line but it seems to be the same or if anything it
seems even slower.
Gary
David Gwynne wrote:
I would suggest looking at the socket options parameter in /etc/samba/
smb.conf. I have the following in my smb.conf and transfer speeds seem
to perform a lot bett
Steven Manos wrote:
something like...
kill `ps aux | grep mplayer | head -n 1 | awk {'print $2'}`
see pkill(1)
On Jul 19, 2005, at 1:23 AM, Kent Kostuk wrote:
I would like to schedule mplayer to record a radio station's online
feed but can't figure out how to stop process. In Linux I was able
to use killall mplayer. But that doesn't appear to be an option
under OpenBSD. What do I need to do?
man
Try
man pkill
Next time before posting (and possible getting your ass flamed ) to this list
try
man -k KEYWORD
In your example KEYWORD would be "kill"
and magic:
man -k kill
baudrate, erasechar, has_ic, has_il, killchar, longname, termattrs, termname (3)
- curses environment query routines
k
something like...
kill `ps aux | grep mplayer | head -n 1 | awk {'print $2'}`
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 11:23:01PM -0600, Kent Kostuk wrote:
> I am an OpenBSD neophyte and couldn't track this down in the archives.
> If this has been covered before please let me know how to track this
> informati
I am an OpenBSD neophyte and couldn't track this down in the archives.
If this has been covered before please let me know how to track this
information down.
I would like to schedule mplayer to record a radio station's online feed
but can't figure out how to stop process. In Linux I was able
On Fri, Jul 15, 2005 at 04:06:42AM -0400, Mike Schreckengost wrote:
> Hello all,
>I have recently installed OpenBSD 3.7-current (as of 07/12/05) and have
> selected the bsd.mp kernel since I am running a system with 2 CPUs. After
> looking at the dmesg output after the initial boot, I noticed
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 11:34:10AM -0700, Bryan Irvine wrote:
>
> I've googled and read TFA, but couldn't find anything with this scenario.
at the moment, seems you would have to come up with
something hackish. doesn't look like spamd has a facility for
communicating its database to peers
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 04:39:36PM -0700, Golliher, Blake wrote:
> So I can get the serial number, but I'm not sure how to change anything
> on the raidlabel.
was wondering if the situation you're in is if you didn't get
the physical drives in the same logical order for the component
raid s
Hi All,
I just built a OpenBSD 3.7 samba file server for my home lan. It's a P3
500, 128mb RAM, with a 2 gig IDE HDD for the OS and two x Maxtor 200 GB
IDE drives for data.
Everything is working fine except that when I copy files to the box from
a Windows XP box the transfers are very slow, li
Nick Holland wrote:
Steve Williams wrote:
...
Sorry to follow up on such an old post, but it really caught my
attention now that I am facing the same problem. I have inherited a
cpu0: Intel Pentium II ("GenuineIntel" 686-class, 512KB L2 cache) 349 MHz
with an old
wd0: 16-sector PIO, LBA, 4
On 7/18/05, Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 7/17/05, Steven Bowers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On 7/16/05, Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Yes. lcdproc-0.4.5, released 2004-04-13.
> > >
> > > > If so what comments do you have?
> > >
> > > There have in the past been overflows in th
Steve Williams wrote:
...
> Sorry to follow up on such an old post, but it really caught my
> attention now that I am facing the same problem. I have inherited a
> cpu0: Intel Pentium II ("GenuineIntel" 686-class, 512KB L2 cache) 349 MHz
> with an old
> wd0: 16-sector PIO, LBA, 4028MB, 8249472 se
On Mon, 18 Jul 2005, Gordon Ross wrote:
> I've got an OpneBSD 3.7 machine (no patches - just the standard 3.7 CD
> install) running under VMWare GSX Server V3.1 Today, the machine had stopped
> with a panic. I did a "trace" and "ps" as per the instructions. Below is the
> result of these extrac
Hi all!
I have a problem with OpenBSD 3.6. I've configured a raid5 set, on a 6 PATA
disks. 5 data, 1 spare. I had some motherboard problem ( a capacitor
popped on it), and I had to quickly run out and get a new motherboard.
After swapping these out, my drive id changed. My boot disk became
/de
Chris Zakelj wrote:
Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
On Sun, 2005-07-10 at 00:16 -0400, Nick Holland wrote:
BTW: your 10G drive probably has a jumper to bring it below 8G or 2G,
which is more than enough for a firewall, and will speed the boot.
You will lose the rest of your disk, however.
What'
On Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 02:17:19AM +0200, Rico wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >On Mon, July 18, 2005 11:31 am, Rico wrote:
> >
> >>You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
> >
> >
> >>Runing any OS under a product like VMWare makes it hard to trust which
> >>product is actually causing the err
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, July 18, 2005 11:31 am, Rico wrote:
You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
Runing any OS under a product like VMWare makes it hard to trust which
product is actually causing the errors, incl. kernel panics.
That's ridiculous.
No. But I trust you hav
Bruno Delbono wrote:
+++ Rico [Mon Jul 18, 2005 at 06:07:31PM +0200]:
Bruno Delbono wrote:
+++ Rico [Mon Jul 18, 2005 at 05:31:59PM +0200]:
You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
What makes you say that?
I did explain this.
Well then looking at what your wrote initially, there is
Hello
I have installed and used sound successfully in the past. I reread the
man and faq pages
about sound but still no good.
This is an amd64 setup so I dont know if that is the reason for my
trouble. On motherboard
is nForce4 AC97 and USB is Creative Technology SB Live! 24-bit External.
Neith
So I can get the serial number, but I'm not sure how to change anything
on the raidlabel. Is there a way to muck with the raid label? Perhaps
a way that wouldn't require a coredump, and lots of time poking around
gdb...
-Blake
+ -Original Message-
+ From: jared r r spiegel [mailto:[EM
G'Day,
Is there a way to reduce the interval NTPD polls for time updates?
I have installed 3.7 and have determined NTPD is contacting the time server
approx. 30sec. My normal configuration in 3.4 was to configure /etc/ntpd.conf
with 5 time servers and turn NTPD loose. If I do that now t
J.D. Bronson wrote:
> I was wondering if this seems normal or not...
>
> The stock 3.7 released kernel is about 5151552 in size.
> I cvs'd up to 3.7-stable today and rebuilt GENERIC.
>
> It ended up rather larger at 7372576 Jul 18 06:27 bsd.
>
> I know this might be a stupid question, but normall
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 02:21:09PM -0700, Golliher, Blake wrote:
>
> I've changed the raidframe.conf to reflect the change, but that didn't
> work, unless I missed something. I still get a message about a hosed
> raid device. I think the raidlabels contain some disk id information,
> and I'll ne
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 10:47:10PM +0200, Henning Brauer wrote:
> * Andreas Bihlmaier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-07-18 19:20]:
> > The result is that the max throuput I was able to get with a X-over cable
> > directly linked and with two (desently) fast machines is ~78 Mbps !
> > Is this normal?
> >
Le jeudi 30 juin 2005 C 14:30 -0400, Garance A Drosihn a C)crit :
> At 1:48 PM -0400 6/30/05, Roy Morris wrote:
> >>
> >>As to the speed of connections, I've been meaning to check into
> >>the idea that every ssh session would see some short delay
> >>(maybe 1/2 of a second). Something where sysl
Kenneth,
if possible on using -current snapshots .. than -current (via cvs)
which one would you recommend ?
thanks,
Edgar
On 7/18/05, Kenneth R Westerback <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 01:35:37PM -0700, edgar mortiz wrote:
> > I have a 1gb USB Flash Drive and i formatted
Andreas,
You ROCK dude! hehe .. it worked .. i formatted it on windows xp
again .. then stick it on my obsd box .. did a fdisk sd0 and found
some creepy info .. like Netware .. whatever .. so i wiped it ..
fdisk -i sd0
relic# fdisk sd0
fdisk: sysctl(machdep.bios.diskinfo): Device not config
I totally forgot about the protocol overhead, I asumed thah "net/iperf" and
"benchmarks/netpipe" would show the approximate RAW throuput.
But you calculation makes perfect sense 73 + 22 = 95 Mbps that is actually quite
nice.
I did set both machines to media 100baseTX mediaopt full duplex ( I also
c
Jason Opperisano wrote:
>On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 02:40:01PM -0400, Brandon Mercer wrote:
>
>
>>hello group,
>>I was recently playing around with dbmail and in doing so, had to
>>overcome some shell unknowns. i was instructed to pipe an email message
>>as follows:
>>
>>|/usr/local/sbin/dbmail-sm
I just went though a motherboard swap on a OpenBSD 3.6 system (x86).
After doing so, my boot drive went from wd0 to wd6. My raid set was
wd1-wd6, in a raid5 setup, and 1 spare. The spare was wd1. I got the
system backup by editing the fstab, to reflect the change, and in bios
choosing wd6 as my
On 7/17/05, Steven Bowers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 7/16/05, Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Yes. lcdproc-0.4.5, released 2004-04-13.
> >
> > > If so what comments do you have?
> >
> > There have in the past been overflows in the network listener.
> >
> > Also, using CrystalFontz driver
It would be nice to see a comparison between em and sk.
--
Tony Sarendal - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
IP/Unix
-= The scorpion replied,
"I couldn't help it, it's my nature" =-
hello group,
I was recently playing around with dbmail and in doing so, had to
overcome some shell unknowns. i was instructed to pipe an email message
as follows:
|/usr/local/sbin/dbmail-smtp -g ${RECIPIENT:7}
When I did this I got a bad substitution error in my logs. I have a
feeling this is c
> > I have a 1gb USB Flash Drive and i formatted it on Windows XP so i can
> > move files from windows to openbsd and vice versa. i plugged the usb
> > on my bsd box and dmesg shows up as:
> >
> > ** dmesg: **
> > umass0 at uhub0 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0
> > umass0: SONY USB 2.0 Flash,
I have a 1gb USB Flash Drive and i formatted it on Windows XP so i can
move files from windows to openbsd and vice versa. i plugged the usb
on my bsd box and dmesg shows up as:
** dmesg: **
umass0 at uhub0 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0
umass0: SONY USB 2.0 Flash, rev 1.10/1.00, addr 2
umass
I am trying to install a Fuji 18GB scsi drive into an existing 3.7
install and ran into an issue with fdisk.
The dmesg shows this:
mpt0 at pci1 dev 3 function 0 "Symbios Logic 53c1030" rev 0x08: irq 11
mpt0: IM support: 6
scsibus0 at mpt0: 16 targets
sd0 at scsibus0 targ 0 lun 0: SCSI3 0/dire
On 7/18/05, edgar mortiz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> a: 209721763 MSDOS # Cyl 0*-
> 1024*
This disklabel entry appears to differ from your fdisk entry. sd0a
starts at 63 sectors while the fdisk partition appears to start at 32
sectors.
> *3: 0B0
thanks for the input chuck .. :)
i tried it and got a different result this time
relic# relic# mount_msdos /dev/sd0i /mnt/flash
mount_msdos: /dev/sd0i on /mnt/flash: Device not configured
thanks,
edgar
On 7/18/05, Chuck McCollum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey Edgar, I'm no OpenBSD exper
100Mbps is the max the line can carry including interframe gap, preamble,
and CRC, which with 64 byte packets add up to about ~22Mbps.
I don't know the utils you used to test. What sized packets would that
create?
-Original Message-
From: Andreas Bihlmaier [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of
> Andreas Bihlmaier
> Sent: Monday, July 18, 2005 1:16 PM
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: interrupt comparison
>
> Hello @ misc@,
> I just happend to run a little network benchmark since my networked
se
On 7/18/05, James Harless <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Well, my objective is to have fail-over on the outbound connections,
> primarily. The load-balancing comes about because of that.
> Load-balancing is definitely not a requirement for this site and I
> probably should have worded my email a bi
I have a mail server located in a DMZ and I just changed my gateway to
run with carp. I was wondering if there's a way to sync the spamd db
so that in the event of failover new messages won't take twice as long
to arrive. I don't expect any email to get fully lost in the event of
a failure but so
Well, my objective is to have fail-over on the outbound connections,
primarily. The load-balancing comes about because of that.
Load-balancing is definitely not a requirement for this site and I
probably should have worded my email a bit differently. One
connection is a cable modem and the other
Good day:
I happen to be very familiar with this subject, having developed, analyzed
and qualified two different card-shuffling algorithms for real-money play
in the online card game business. There is a fair bit of literature on
this subject.
Some tips that I can share without breaking an NDA:
Brad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> models which should work. One notable exception is the DWL-G520+ card,
>> which is based on Intel's super-secret acx111 chip.
>
> The chipset is actually by TI (Texas Instruments), not Intel.
Thanks for the correction, I'll make a note of it. I really do not w
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 02:40:01PM -0400, Brandon Mercer wrote:
> hello group,
> I was recently playing around with dbmail and in doing so, had to
> overcome some shell unknowns. i was instructed to pipe an email message
> as follows:
>
> |/usr/local/sbin/dbmail-smtp -g ${RECIPIENT:7}
i'm sure t
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 01:35:37PM -0700, edgar mortiz wrote:
> I have a 1gb USB Flash Drive and i formatted it on Windows XP so i can
> move files from windows to openbsd and vice versa. i plugged the usb
> on my bsd box and dmesg shows up as:
>
> ** dmesg: **
> umass0 at uhub0 port 2 configurati
* Andreas Bihlmaier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-07-18 19:20]:
> The result is that the max throuput I was able to get with a X-over cable
> directly linked and with two (desently) fast machines is ~78 Mbps !
> Is this normal?
>
> Here are the hardware specs:
> host1 -> ibm x40 1,4 ghz 1024mb ra
Hello @ misc@,
I just happend to run a little network benchmark since my networked seemed to be
slower than I'm used to.
The result is that the max throuput I was able to get with a X-over cable
directly linked and with two (desently) fast machines is ~78 Mbps !
Is this normal?
Here are the hardwa
+++ Rico [Mon Jul 18, 2005 at 06:07:31PM +0200]:
> Bruno Delbono wrote:
> >+++ Rico [Mon Jul 18, 2005 at 05:31:59PM +0200]:
> >
> >>You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
> >
> >
> >What makes you say that?
>
> I did explain this.
Well then looking at what your wrote initially, there is no meri
On Mon, July 18, 2005 11:31 am, Rico wrote:
> You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
> Runing any OS under a product like VMWare makes it hard to trust which
> product is actually causing the errors, incl. kernel panics.
That's ridiculous. Sure, it adds a layer of complexity, but not much more
Bruno Delbono wrote:
+++ Rico [Mon Jul 18, 2005 at 05:31:59PM +0200]:
You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
What makes you say that?
I did explain this.
+++ Rico [Mon Jul 18, 2005 at 05:31:59PM +0200]:
> You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
What makes you say that?
> If you need serveral "virtual" machines, you can run OpenBSD chrooted as
> many times as you need, without running it under VMWare.
That simply is not true. OpenBSD runs grea
You should not run OpenBSD under VMWare.
If you need serveral "virtual" machines, you can run OpenBSD chrooted as
many times as you need, without running it under VMWare.
Runing any OS under a product like VMWare makes it hard to trust which
product is actually causing the errors, incl. kerne
I've got an OpneBSD 3.7 machine (no patches - just the standard 3.7 CD install)
running under VMWare GSX Server V3.1 Today, the machine had stopped with a
panic. I did a "trace" and "ps" as per the instructions. Below is the result of
these extracted from /var/adm/messages after I rebooted the m
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 02:58:40PM +0100, Jonas Melian wrote:
> Marc Espie wrote:
>
> >On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 07:56:11PM +0100, Jonas Melian wrote:
> >
> >
> >>For installing a port in another subdirectory, i'd used DESTDIR and
> >>DESTDIRNAME but both fails.
> >>
> >>I also tried with 'FAKE_FLA
Marc Espie wrote:
On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 07:56:11PM +0100, Jonas Melian wrote:
For installing a port in another subdirectory, i'd used DESTDIR and
DESTDIRNAME but both fails.
I also tried with 'FAKE_FLAGS=${DESTDIRNAME}=/usr/test' and
'PREFIX=${DESTDIR}/usr/local' in /etc/mk.conf but nothi
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of
> James Harless
> Sent: Saturday, July 16, 2005 4:27 AM
> Cc: OpenBSD-misc list
> Subject: Re: Load Balance net connections w/ redirect
>
> I'm not sure I understand the suggestion. Feel free to enlighte
On 7/18/05, Kenneth R Westerback <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Current thinking is that this is not a useful addition. The install
> scripts are *extremely* space constrained and getting more so as
> people keep putting new stuff in the kernel. The goal of the install
> scripts is to get a working O
Alexander Farber wrote:
Hi,
I'm developing a small multiplayer card game on OpenBSD
(but also try to keep it at least compilable on Linux).
After 32 cards have been shuffled, each of 3 players gets
10 cards. At the moment I use the sum of time()s when any
data has been received from a playe
On Sun, 17 Jul 2005 15:22:02 -0700
Christian Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 7/17/05, Bruno Delbono <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > How does mozilla-firefox perform on OpenBSD? Are there any
> > differences in performance compared to Linux/Windows?
> >
> pkg/DESCR says that extensions don't
:
:
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
On Sun, 17 Jul 2005 14:53:06 -0700
Bruno Delbono <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> +++ Ulrich Kahl [Sun Jul 17, 2005 at 10:36:20PM +0200]:
> > On Sun, 17 Jul 2005 08:50:56 -0400
> > Josh Grosse <[EMAIL P
Alexander Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> And what is the highest number returned by arc4random(), is it RAND_MAX?
> The man page doesn't elaborate on this subject
32 bits.
//art
On 2005-07-18 03:32, Vivek Ayer wrote:
One last thing. Looking at my pf.conf, which I assume you still have,
what modification would I have to make to make sure rsync over ssh
work properly between two clients on the internal networks? Thanks.
Vivek
If it's over SSH you should only need port 2
I was wondering if this seems normal or not...
The stock 3.7 released kernel is about 5151552 in size.
I cvs'd up to 3.7-stable today and rebuilt GENERIC.
It ended up rather larger at 7372576 Jul 18 06:27 bsd.
I know this might be a stupid question, but normally when I did this
in the past I n
Thank you for both good advices.
Until I have money to pay an expert and my card game isn't using real money...
Would arc4random() % 32 be the usual way to get random integers from 0 to 31,
or are some bits of the returned value more random than the others?
And what is the highest number retur
Said Outgajjouft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Can you actually only use software code to achieve true randomness?
Who cares?
You don't need "true" randomness. You need "good enough". What "good
enough" is depends on your application, the potential threats, the
sophisitcation of the attackers, t
Hi,
I use a different approach and instead of hardcoding port
numbers for mldonkey and BitTorrent run those as a separate
user on my lil' firewall:
altq on $ext_if priq bandwidth 100Kb queue \
{tcp_ack, ssh_login, other, p2p}
queue tcp_ackpriority 7 priq
queue ssh_login priority 5
Artur Grabowski wrote:
A good suggestion might be to use arc4random(3) instead of random(3).
If the security of your application depends on randomness, you should
really pay an expert to help you do it. Randomness is harder than it
looks and most likely you will screw it up very badly (a few ye
On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 07:56:11PM +0100, Jonas Melian wrote:
> For installing a port in another subdirectory, i'd used DESTDIR and
> DESTDIRNAME but both fails.
>
> I also tried with 'FAKE_FLAGS=${DESTDIRNAME}=/usr/test' and
> 'PREFIX=${DESTDIR}/usr/local' in /etc/mk.conf but nothing.
>
> sudo m
matt lawless wrote:
On 7/17/05, Bruno Delbono <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How does mozilla-firefox perform on OpenBSD? Are there any differences
in performance compared to Linux/Windows?
pkg/DESCR says that extensions don't work. Has anyone had any luck
with changing that?
some do, at least
A good suggestion might be to use arc4random(3) instead of random(3).
If the security of your application depends on randomness, you should
really pay an expert to help you do it. Randomness is harder than it
looks and most likely you will screw it up very badly (a few years ago
some online Black
Hi,
I'm developing a small multiplayer card game on OpenBSD
(but also try to keep it at least compilable on Linux).
After 32 cards have been shuffled, each of 3 players gets
10 cards. At the moment I use the sum of time()s when any
data has been received from a player as the seed value:
ty
On 7/17/05, Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> P.S. Skip the reverse DNS part unless you really need it. That part
> can cause more headaches than it will likely ever be worth in a
> smallish network like the one you describe.
Preparing for a reverse lookup is rather simple; there are plenty of
ex
Rickard Dahlstrand wrote:
Hi,
My dream has come true, a new (BLACK) fan-less LEX CV863A-3U10E. Three
em gig-interfaces and a 1GHz Via Eden processor with encryption and
random number acceleration.
Well, except the fact that I can't monitor the temperature inside the
box since it uses a VIA VT1
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