I'm playing around with some perl cgi. I'm trying to use DBD::mysql but
keep getting errors.
There has been an error: install_driver(mysql) failed: Can't load
'/usr/local/libdata/perl5/site_perl/amd64-openbsd/auto/DBD/mysql/mysql.so'
for module DBD::mysql: Cannot load specified object at /usr/lib
On 12/07/17 07:31, Ywe Cærlyn wrote:
I saw AMDs "semi-custom" CPU email form and told them that I wanted a
CPU, that is clockspeed oriented, not cores (might aswell be singlecore
with high HZ), that could be using several instruction macros (combining
two or three), for max virtual clockspeed,
On 9 December 2017 at 09:40, Christian Weisgerber
wrote:
> On 2017-12-08, Darren Tucker wrote:
>
> > If your hardware doesn't have a clock (or the clock is bad) then it can
> > take ntpd a long time to adjust it back to the correct time (it uses
> > adjtime(), which I think adjusts at +/- 10%).
On 2017-12-08, Darren Tucker wrote:
> If your hardware doesn't have a clock (or the clock is bad) then it can
> take ntpd a long time to adjust it back to the correct time (it uses
> adjtime(), which I think adjusts at +/- 10%).
Actually, 5000 parts per million, so 0.5%.
--
Christian "naddy" W
On 9 December 2017 at 01:58, mabi wrote:
>
> I have a new Lanner FW-7526B firewall loaded with OpenBSD 6.2. I must say
> it's a nice small firewall but unfortunately the ntp daemon does not seem
> to manage to set the time correctly with this hardware. The time is off by
> approximately 1:20h and
Mhh thanks, totally forgot about that good old rdate. That did it and now ntp
is happy in sync.
> Original Message
>Subject: Re: NTP issue on Lanner FW-7526B
>Local Time: December 8, 2017 7:22 PM
>UTC Time: December 8, 2017 6:22 PM
>From: dan...@presscom.net
>To: misc@openbsd.o
It is adjusting the time, but your clock is way off, so it try to do it
slowly as to not mess any logs, but if you want to adjust it al at once
and don't care about that for now
rdate -n4 pool.ntp.org
Simple.
On 12/8/17 9:58 AM, mabi wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a new Lanner FW-7526B firewall load
https://store.steoil.com/mineral-oil-pc-kit/
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On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 18:42, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
> They still need air, and you give it to them. We sub the server on liquid...
> Sent from ProtonMail Mobile On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 14:09, Kevin Chadwick
> wrote: > O
They still need air, and you give it to them. We sub the server on liquid...
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On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 14:09, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Fri, 08 Dec 2017 07:26:09 -0500 > I think you mean those round things with
> moving heads in a chassis > with a breathing hole. No,
Hello:
This is -current on a thinkpad x270 amd64. dmesg attached to the bottom.
I am trying to get scipy to work with other modules on python2.7
The problem is that since gfortran is missing, scipy seems to be using
g77, and then:
# pkg_add py-scipy
quirks-2.396 signed on 2017-12-06T16:43:24Z
p
Op 8-12-2017 om 15:07 schreef Jan Kalkus:
For what it’s worth, I’ve noticed Windows frequently will not grab IPv6
addresses via SLAAC.
If I disable IPv6 on the network interface and then re-enable it, then I will
be assigned an IPv6 address.
Jan Kalkus
[snip]
I would recheck my configurati
Hi,
I have a new Lanner FW-7526B firewall loaded with OpenBSD 6.2. I must say it's
a nice small firewall but unfortunately the ntp daemon does not seem to manage
to set the time correctly with this hardware. The time is off by approximately
1:20h and every 2-3 minutes I see the following log en
For what it’s worth, I’ve noticed Windows frequently will not grab IPv6
addresses via SLAAC.
If I disable IPv6 on the network interface and then re-enable it, then I will
be assigned an IPv6 address.
Jan Kalkus
> On Dec 7, 2017, at 23:14, Claus Lensbøl wrote:
>
> Do you know if the Windows
On Fri, 08 Dec 2017 07:26:09 -0500
> I think you mean those round things with moving heads in a chassis
> with a breathing hole. No, they are not resilient to our environment.
I doubt that, we used to put them in police cars and they were fine. We
did get special ones at three times the price an
I think you mean those round things with moving heads in a chassis with a
breathing hole. No, they are not resilient to our environment.
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On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 12:03, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Fri, 08 Dec 2017 03:07:14 -0500 > - UFS2 on FreeBSD supports TRIM. > -
On Fri, 08 Dec 2017 03:07:14 -0500
> - UFS2 on FreeBSD supports TRIM.
> - OpenBSD supports UFS2.
>
> Is anybody using UFS2 with TRIM on OpenBSD?
Have you considered using a high speed HDD or RAID. From the little
information given, your performance requirements don't seem to be that
high?
- UFS2 on FreeBSD supports TRIM.
- OpenBSD supports UFS2.
Is anybody using UFS2 with TRIM on OpenBSD?
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On Tue, Dec 5, 2017 at 08:26, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
> A production obsd is serving 50GB worth of NFS shares and hourly backups on
> two ssds since August, and is
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