$ fswebcam
--- Opening /dev/video0...
Trying source module v4l2...
/dev/video0 opened.
No input was specified, using the first.
Adjusting resolution from 384x288 to 320x240.
Error starting stream.
VIDIOC_STREAMON: Invalid argument
Unable to use mmap. Using read instead.
--- Capturing frame...
Timed
I got curious so I looked at the man page. It seems to me one could
authenticate a location i.e. folder/directory based on this part.
> A location section may include most of the server configuration rules except
> alias, connection,hsts, listen on, location, tcp and tls.
V/r,
Bryan
Sent
You may find this helpful:
https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-arm&m=149507490119056&w=2
On 9/16/17, tec...@protonmail.com wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Can someone with knowledge of OpenBSD's HTTPD please tell me how to properly
> set up a password protected directory and where you found ALL of the
> informat
On Fri, Sep 15 2017, Lea Chescotta wrote:
> I'm trying to build Firefox from the -release ports tree in a -stable system,
> and python, a dependency, is giving me the following error:
>
> configure: error: cannot run C compiled programs.
>
> Searching about the error in the net, i have found this
Hello,
Can someone with knowledge of OpenBSD's HTTPD please tell me how to properly
set up a password protected directory and where you found ALL of the
information to do so. I am really struggling to find enough information within
the man pages to even make it work corrctly. I want to love t
I'm trying to build Firefox from the -release ports tree in a -stable system,
and python, a dependency, is giving me the following error:
configure: error: cannot run C compiled programs.
Searching about the error in the net, i have found this mailing list archive
http://openbsd-archive.7691.n7
On 2017/09/15 19:45, Andreas Krüger wrote:
> I see that. But it still does not answer the question why the option to set
> them through sysctl was removed. Why would you suddenly not be allowed to set
> the max size with sysctl, what is the reason behind that choice taken in the
> 4.9 release.
I see that. But it still does not answer the question why the option to set
them through sysctl was removed. Why would you suddenly not be allowed to set
the max size with sysctl, what is the reason behind that choice taken in the
4.9 release.
> Den 15. sep. 2017 kl. 13.34 skrev Stuart Henderso
Sorry for that, I'll try to figure it out until next time.
--
Lubos
2017-09-15 19:32 GMT+02:00 Theo Buehler :
> On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 05:16:15PM +, Lubos Boucek wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've found a few typos in www/faq, diff below.
>
> Fixed, thanks!
>
> Unfortunately, your patch was
On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 05:16:15PM +, Lubos Boucek wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've found a few typos in www/faq, diff below.
Fixed, thanks!
Unfortunately, your patch was mangled, so I had to make the changes
manually. I think it's because you have some kind of wrapping of long
lines enabled.
Hello,
I've found a few typos in www/faq, diff below.
Regards,
Lubos Boucek
Index: current.html
===
RCS file: /cvs/www/faq/current.html,v
retrieving revision 1.852
diff -u -p -r1.852 current.html
--- current.html 13 Sep 2017 13:32
2017-09-15 14:48 GMT+02:00 Niels Kobschaetzki :
> Hi,
>
> today I wondered if I need anacron on my laptop. cron(8) states in the man
> page in the section "Daylight Saving Time and other time changes":
> "If time has moved forward, those jobs that would have run in the interval
> that has been ski
Hi,
today I wondered if I need anacron on my laptop. cron(8) states in the man page
in the section "Daylight Saving Time and other time changes":
"If time has moved forward, those jobs that would have run in the interval that
has been skipped will be run immediately."
Does that mean anacron is
Ok, I got it to work. Strangely, it required closing my browser down and
starting it again. I can't think why that would have caused an 'Access Denied'
error but it's gone now. Who knows.
> On September 15, 2017 4:06:37 AM GMT+02:00, "tec...@protonmail.com"
> wrote:
>>Hello,
>>
>>I"m using 6
The permissions on directories are fine. I have achieved this before with no
problems, but it was on 5.7 / 5.8 / 5.9.
Is this a bug introduced by changing the chroot? I mean I'm following the
creators own slides on this, except for the fact I have disabled the chroot in
mines.
Thanks for read
On 2017-09-14, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> -w1M works for me
> -
> Andreas Kr??ger [a...@patientsky.com] wrote:
>> I do manage to read the manual, but let me clarify this. I am not
>> allowed to set a buffer larger than 256KB with iperf:
>>
>> $ uname -a
>> OpenBSD odn1-fw-odn1-01 6.0 GENERIC.MP#0 a
As I said i've been using tlsdate to set time initially before running ntpd
- this resolves most of the aforementioned issues and quite often being out
of reach of public time-servers due to network restrictions.
On 15 September 2017 at 23:23, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2017-09-15, Maksym Sher
On 2017-09-15, Maksym Sheremet wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Sep 2017 23:46:14 +1200
> Joel Wirāmu Pauling wrote:
>
>> Run NTPd on the hypervisor and NTP client In VM. Run ntpdate at boot before
>> starting NTPd on the client to ensure the stepping is not too far off
>> first.
>
> What is the reason to run
On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 12:24:32PM +0200, Joel Carnat wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Initially comparing I/O speed between FreeBSD/ZFS/GELI and
> OpenBSD/FFS/CRYPTO, I noticed that there were a huge difference between
> plain and encrypted filesystem using OpenBSD. I ran the test on a 1
> vCore/1GB RAM Vultr VP
That works too -
On 15 September 2017 at 21:28, Maksym Sheremet
wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Sep 2017 23:46:14 +1200
> Joel Wirāmu Pauling wrote:
>
> > Run NTPd on the hypervisor and NTP client In VM. Run ntpdate at boot
> before
> > starting NTPd on the client to ensure the stepping is not too far off
Hi,
Initially comparing I/O speed between FreeBSD/ZFS/GELI and
OpenBSD/FFS/CRYPTO, I noticed that there were a huge difference between
plain and encrypted filesystem using OpenBSD. I ran the test on a 1
vCore/1GB RAM Vultr VPS, running OpenBSD 6.2-beta. I had / configured in
plain FFS and /ho
On Thu, 14 Sep 2017 23:46:14 +1200
Joel Wirāmu Pauling wrote:
> Run NTPd on the hypervisor and NTP client In VM. Run ntpdate at boot before
> starting NTPd on the client to ensure the stepping is not too far off
> first.
What is the reason to run ntpdate on boot? The "-s" flag of ntpd(8) sets ti
Is ntpd daemon running on the guest?
# rcctl check ntpd
Are there any error messages for ntpd in /var/log/daemon?
On Thu, 14 Sep 2017 13:34:10 +0200
Aaron Marcher wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have a weird problem on my OpenBSD server. It is a virtualized guest
> under QEMU-KVM. Apperently time man
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