On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 04:53:35PM +0300, Alexey Suslikov wrote:
> Jurjen Oskam wrote:
> >At home, I have a wireless access point which is directly connected to rl1.
> >To eliminate the access point, I put a wireless PCI card in the machine,
^^^
>
I am using ion/wmii either, Timo... and my site is more...
"elaborated" than yours, it's not incompatible. But I like simplicity
too!
if you get into the S1 from Schoeneberg in direction to Potsdam in ~15
min you'll see somebody wearing the obsd 3.6 t-shirt
well, it's nice to see I'm not "alone"
not sure where to start with this problem:
i have a compaq proliant 5500 that was running openbsd4.0 with 4
aha-2944's powering 4 sun arrays. i moved a few months back and decided
it was time to bring this server back to life. When i power up the
proliant it hard locks right after probing "hd2". S
On Thu, 19 Jul 2007, openbsd misc wrote:
> > misc(at)openbsd.org wrote:
> >> Hello,
> >>
> >> I have a system with openbsd 4.1 installed. Everything works fine
> (lynx
> >> / ping / ...) but I'm not able to connect to another system via ssh.
> I'm
> >> not able to connect to the system, too.
> >>
> misc(at)openbsd.org wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have a system with openbsd 4.1 installed. Everything works fine
(lynx
>> / ping / ...) but I'm not able to connect to another system via ssh.
I'm
>> not able to connect to the system, too.
>> The error I got:
>>
>> 2: Bad packet length
>>
>> I googled
Humppa,
this all is a proof that OpenBSD is much more than a ordinary OS
2007/7/19, Serge Basterot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 10:45:56AM +0200, Guido Tschakert wrote:
> Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> > "Anton Karpov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> >> People who don't know ea
On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 10:45:56AM +0200, Guido Tschakert wrote:
> Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> > "Anton Karpov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> >> People who don't know each other but wears PUFFY, should salute each other.
> >> "It's an OpenBSD thing. You wouldn't understand" ;-)
> >
> > obvi
On 19/07/07, Martin SchrC6der <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
We already have OpenBSD/i386, and I can supply these for 2008 also.
The installer is currently broken for OpenBSD (or it was on
2007-release), I was going to have a look at it but I still have much
work to do for other ports which used to
Sorry, this went to the wrong list by accident.
On 18/07/07, Guido Tschakert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just say "Humpaa" to everyone wearing an OpenBSD-Shirt or other signs of
lovely Puffy.
Loving the humpaa salute!
I have actually never seen anyone in the UK wearing a bsd shirt apart
from my friends.Sometimes I wonder if I am the only bri
We tested three PCI Ralink RT2561 802.11 b/g adapter on OpenBSD 4.0:
. Edimax EW-7128G (RT2561S)
ral0 at pci1 dev 15 function 0 "Ralink RT2561S" rev 0x00: irq
5, address 00:0e:2e:c7:c9:9a
ral0: MAC/BBP RT2561C, RF RT2527
. Zinwell ZWX-G361 (RT2561)
misc(at)openbsd.org wrote:
Hello,
I have a system with openbsd 4.1 installed. Everything works fine (lynx
/ ping / ...) but I'm not able to connect to another system via ssh. I'm
not able to connect to the system, too.
The error I got:
2: Bad packet length
I googled a bit, but I wasn't able t
> Hello,
>
> i've been happily testing acpi following -current since six or seven
> months,
> and i've noticed a little regressions :
> - before June, it worked perfectly, halt -p power-offs the machine, i have
> acpi detected in dmesg.
> - after around start of June, halt -p doesn't poweroff the m
On Mon, Jul 09, 2007 at 11:02:46PM +0100, Brian Candler wrote:
> My home desktop system is an
> Epia M-1 in a fanless case. I've not measured its power consumption, but
> I think it's pretty low.
I just got an Electrisave. Its resolution is only 10W, but according to
that, this PC takes 20W (i
thus Vim Visual spake:
Hi,
inspired by the Zurich email, I would like to ask here whether there
is somebody from / living in Berlin in this list
Cheers,
Pau
Always wanted to post this: We have some really addicted OpenBSD freaks
here in Berlin -- this guy opened Wim's packet after it arriv
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007, Tim Kuhlman wrote:
> On Wed July 18 2007 2:06:55 pm Patrick Hemmen wrote:
> > Squid runs under the user _squid and this user is in the login class
> > "daemon" in which the data size is set to infinity. Or do I have to set
> > a another capability?
>
> Whoops, I missed that d
Vim Visual wrote:
Hi,
inspired by the Zurich email, I would like to ask here whether there
is somebody from / living in Berlin in this list
I'm from Berlin:
http://blog.innerewut.de
I often wear my OpenBSD shirts around City-West.
Jonathan
--
Jonathan Weiss
http://blog.innerewut.de
Hello,
I have a system with openbsd 4.1 installed. Everything works fine (lynx
/ ping / ...) but I'm not able to connect to another system via ssh. I'm
not able to connect to the system, too.
The error I got:
2: Bad packet length
I googled a bit, but I wasn't able to find out what exactly is wr
Patrick Hemmen wrote:
Squid runs under the user _squid and this user is in the login class
"daemon" in which the data size is set to infinity. Or do I have to set
a another capability?
How do you start your squid is the key.
man 5 login.conf
man 8 rc
explain it. Just putting the class there
On Wed July 18 2007 2:06:55 pm Patrick Hemmen wrote:
> Squid runs under the user _squid and this user is in the login class
> "daemon" in which the data size is set to infinity. Or do I have to set
> a another capability?
Whoops, I missed that detail. I see it on the original posting now. I'm not
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 05:18:49PM +0200, Die Gestalt wrote:
> On 7/17/07, Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >But why encrypt the whole disk? I can see why you'd want to encrypt user
> >data - say, /home - but why encrypt boring stuff like /usr?
>
> This makes cryptanalysis harder sinc
howdy,
Hi,
inspired by the Zurich email, I would like to ask here whether there
is somebody from / living in Berlin in this list
Cheers,
Pau
yap, me:
http://timo-schoeler.de
http://riscworks.net
(sometimes on the metro wearing one of several puffy t-shirts ;)
cheers,
timo
On 2007/07/18 12:56, J.C. Roberts wrote:
> NFS over SSH can be done, but most would consider it wonky for personal
> mad hackery, and no one in their right mind would never expect
> *END*USERS* to ever get it right.
Possibly, with tun forwarding.
> Current best practice for this sort of thing i
Hi,
inspired by the Zurich email, I would like to ask here whether there
is somebody from / living in Berlin in this list
Cheers,
Pau
Squid runs under the user _squid and this user is in the login class
"daemon" in which the data size is set to infinity. Or do I have to set
a another capability?
Best regards.
Patrick
Tim Kuhlman schrieb:
> On Mon July 16 2007 12:00:41 pm Patrick Hemmen wrote:
>> Thanks for your reply.
>> I in
On Wednesday 18 July 2007, Edd Barrett wrote:
> Hello again,
>
> On 17/07/07, J.C. Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > It is possible. How to configure the mount port is in the man page
> > for mount_nfs(8).
>
> Yes there are 2 ports needed as far as i can see:
> 1) nfsd port
> 2) mountd port
>
On Mon July 16 2007 12:00:41 pm Patrick Hemmen wrote:
> Thanks for your reply.
> I installed squid from the Package "squid-2.6.STABLE9.tgz" on OpenBSD
> 4.1-stable i386.
> Here the relevant parts of my squid.conf.
>
> cache_mem 192 MB
> maximum_object_size 16 MB
> cache_dir ufs /v
RafaE Brodewicz wrote:
Peter N. M. Hansteen pisze:
See how far you get with the cd41.iso from a recent snapshot.
[...]
pctr: 686-class user-level performance counters enabled
mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support
This is how far I can get with today's snapshot.
Can you capture any more of the dm
Hello,
i've been happily testing acpi following -current since six or seven months,
and i've noticed a little regressions :
- before June, it worked perfectly, halt -p power-offs the machine, i have
acpi detected in dmesg.
- after around start of June, halt -p doesn't poweroff the machine anymore,
On 7/18/07, Alexey Suslikov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Jurjen Oskam wrote:
> At home, I have a wireless access point which is directly connected to rl1.
> To eliminate the access point, I put a wireless PCI card in the machine,
> and configured it for hostap mode.
>
> A laptop running Linux is th
Peter N. M. Hansteen pisze:
See how far you get with the cd41.iso from a recent snapshot.
[...]
pctr: 686-class user-level performance counters enabled
mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support
This is how far I can get with today's snapshot.
--
RafaE Brodewicz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Frans Haarman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It hangs somewhere when booting the kernel. I figured I check here
> first for known problems. Searches came up empty.
Fetch a recent snapshot and see if it makes a difference.
(running -current on your laptop isnt that scary, really)
--
Peter N.
RafaE Brodewicz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Once when I was trying to install I got following error: (sorry for
> image quality)
> http://brodewicz.pl/boot.jpg
hm. there's been a bit of SATA related work done in -current. See how
far you get with the cd41.iso from a recent snapshot.
- P
--
On 7/18/07, nicodache <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> what do you mean by "couldn't boot the cd41.iso proprerly" ?
> did you get any error message, any kernel panic, or things like that ?
>
> for info to the other RpenBSD-misc reader, this laptop seems to be
> more than recent, with hardware like Co
"Frans Haarman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I couldnt boot the cd41.iso properly.
Not sufficient information. What happened? (as in any messages on the
screen, did you try burning the iso to fresh media, for good measure
in a different burner, etc)
> Anyone running similar laptop ?
>From the
Frans Haarman pisze:
Anyone running similar laptop ?
I do, 6510b.
As for me cd41.iso (snapshot) boots, but hangs at:
[...]
biomask fffd netmask fffd ttymask
rd0: fixed, 3800 blocks
After that only power off helps.
I saw that OpenBSD reports ahci0 as "Intel 82801HBM" but under Windows
it'
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007, Tang Tse wrote:
Are you using the same part of the disk for both tests?
- Yes on both, is an old scsi controller but supported ( I checked the HLC )
Is the OpenBSD fs using softdep?
- How can i check this?
`mount -v` will report 'softdep' for the filesystem in question if
Hello again,
On 17/07/07, J.C. Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It is possible. How to configure the mount port is in the man page for
mount_nfs(8).
Yes there are 2 ports needed as far as i can see:
1) nfsd port
2) mountd port
I'm unsure which the man page is describing.
--
Best Regards
Are you using the same part of the disk for both tests?
- Yes on both, is an old scsi controller but supported ( I checked the HLC )
Is the OpenBSD fs using softdep?
- How can i check this?
What is the amount of memory in the machine?
- 2Gb
How many runs is this the average of?
- On linux in the
what do you mean by "couldn't boot the cd41.iso proprerly" ?
did you get any error message, any kernel panic, or things like that ?
for info to the other RpenBSD-misc reader, this laptop seems to be
more than recent, with hardware like Core 2 duo 7300, GB965, SATA
drive, X3100 (Intel gpu), broadc
My boss gave me a laptop! Its a Compaq 6710b. I am hoping someone is
running OpenBSD on it.
I couldnt boot the cd41.iso properly.
Anyone running similar laptop ?
Jurjen Oskam wrote:
At home, I have a wireless access point which is directly connected to rl1.
To eliminate the access point, I put a wireless PCI card in the machine,
and configured it for hostap mode.
A laptop running Linux is the wireless client. When the client associates
with the ral0 car
retaking this thread,
I got the same issue, very poor disk performance comparing openbsd 4.1 with
linux 2.6.22
# time dd if=input_file of=file_out bs=1024 count=1024000
input_file is 1GB
On OpenBSD box it takes 4min, transfering about 3,3MB/s
On linux 2.6.22 it takes 1min, transfering about 17MB
Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> "Anton Karpov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> People who don't know each other but wears PUFFY, should salute each other.
>> "It's an OpenBSD thing. You wouldn't understand" ;-)
>
> obviously the salute would need to be clearly specified or at least
> set to sensib
On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 10:44:35AM +0100, Jeroen Massar wrote:
| Claudio Jeker wrote:
| > On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 08:56:34AM +0200, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
| >> Hi
| >>
| >> I saw someone at Zurich Central with an OpenBSD t-shirt 2 days ago, I
| wonder
| >> if he's subscribed to this list. I should ha
Performance is around 20 MB/s but requires a modification in
intr_machdep.c... :s I'm ashamed. :x It also requires APIC to be off.
Claudio Jeker wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 08:56:34AM +0200, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
>> Hi
>>
>> I saw someone at Zurich Central with an OpenBSD t-shirt 2 days ago, I
wonder
>> if he's subscribed to this list. I should have stopped him ;-)
>>
>
> Most probably it was me.
Or it could have been Pau
Hi there,
At home, I have a wireless access point which is directly connected to rl1.
To eliminate the access point, I put a wireless PCI card in the machine,
and configured it for hostap mode.
A laptop running Linux is the wireless client. When the client associates
with the ral0 card, the conne
> RFC, anyone? :)
>
> > My coffee had just run out, so no keyboard harmed.
>
> Timo
>
>
I like the idea of T-shirts and stickers "It's an OpenBSD thing. You
wouldn't understand" ;-)
On 2007/07/18 11:18, Kevin Cheng wrote:
>
> if Intel to VIA then you are right that it's better to reinstall
> whole thing. This works for 5 years since BSD 3.1
I don't know, OpenBSD is pretty resilient when moving from
machine to machine (until you start playing with custom kernels).
No KLM devi
thus Peter N. M. Hansteen spake:
"Anton Karpov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
People who don't know each other but wears PUFFY, should salute each other.
"It's an OpenBSD thing. You wouldn't understand" ;-)
obviously the salute would need to be clearly specified or at least
set to sensible defa
"Anton Karpov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> People who don't know each other but wears PUFFY, should salute each other.
> "It's an OpenBSD thing. You wouldn't understand" ;-)
obviously the salute would need to be clearly specified or at least
set to sensible defaults (for Monty Python values of)
> Most probably it was me.
>
> --
> :wq Claudio
People who don't know each other but wears PUFFY, should salute each other.
"It's an OpenBSD thing. You wouldn't understand" ;-)
On Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 08:56:34AM +0200, Karel Kulhavy wrote:
> Hi
>
> I saw someone at Zurich Central with an OpenBSD t-shirt 2 days ago, I wonder
> if he's subscribed to this list. I should have stopped him ;-)
>
Most probably it was me.
--
:wq Claudio
Hi
I saw someone at Zurich Central with an OpenBSD t-shirt 2 days ago, I wonder
if he's subscribed to this list. I should have stopped him ;-)
CL<
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