Thanks all for your answers.
I did think that i had checked everything before posting something on the
mailing list, but missed the current faq.
Arnoud
On Saturday, November 10, 2018 23:32 CET, Zé Loff wrote:
>
> On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 04:00:53PM -0500, Arnoud Otten wrote:
> > Startx does
On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 10:42:57PM -0600, Andrew wrote:
> Personally I use spectrwm, so I can't speak for other the wm's. In my
> case, all I had to do was:
>
> $> cp .xinitrc .xsession
> $> chmod +x .xsession
>
> ... and it "just worked" as expected :-)
You were lucky to not have something inte
On 11/10/18 19:29, Chris Bennett wrote:
On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 11:36:17PM +0100, Solene wrote:
This is normal. Look at 26th October https://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html
The suid was removed to prevent bad things to happen. Use xenodm instead of
startx.
I have switched to using xenodm.
On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 11:36:17PM +0100, Solene wrote:
> This is normal. Look at 26th October https://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html
>
> The suid was removed to prevent bad things to happen. Use xenodm instead of
> startx.
>
I have switched to using xenodm. I am also think I screwed up somet
Theodore Wynnychenko wrote:
> So, to do this, I edited the appropriate terminal line in /etc/ttys to a
> custom
> entry defined in /etc/gettytab; then added an entry to /etc/gettytab, using
> 'lo:' to point to a ksh script which (basically) looks at the input given to
> getty, and if it contains
You don't say how you updated to current. If you updated without a snapshot,
it is possible you got caught up in a strange malloc change.
it is also possible that some unveil / pledge things have broken your
strange usage case, for instance maybe "lo" doesn't work anymore due to
changes. You can
Hello
I just updated to -current. It had been about 2-3 months since I last updated.
I have been doing so since (about) 5.9 or so.
Anyway, way back then, I wanted to be able to login on a local serial terminal
without entering a password (yes, I know that there may be disagreement about
the wis
Hi,
Awesome! Thanks for the pointer to cron! I never knew the @reboot
existed :)
Cheers,
Steve W.
On 10/11/2018 3:22 PM, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
On 2018-11-10, Steve Williams wrote:
I have a script that I would like run after all the network is
configured, daemons started, etc.
I l
This is normal. Look at 26th October https://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html
The suid was removed to prevent bad things to happen. Use xenodm instead of
startx.
Le 10 novembre 2018 22:00:53 GMT+01:00, Arnoud Otten a
écrit :
>Startx doesn`t work anymore on my Lenovo W520.
>I had a working X se
On 2018-11-10, Steve Williams wrote:
> I have a script that I would like run after all the network is
> configured, daemons started, etc.
>
> I looked at rc.local, but am not sure what is actually started after the
> rc.local runs.
Let's take a look at /etc/rc:
...
[[ -f /etc/rc.local ]] &&
Startx doesn`t work anymore on my Lenovo W520.
I had a working X setup with Mate on 6.4 stable. Then i did an upgrade to 6.4
current, snapshot from 5 Nov, and couldn`t start X anymore.
Did a fresh install with that snapshot, and found out, root could start X.
Upgrade to snapshot from 9 Nov did n
Hi,
I have a script that I would like run after all the network is
configured, daemons started, etc.
For example, it does a file system check on a large externally attached
drive that isn't always there. It is not auto mounted. If the system
goes down unexpectedly, I don't want the boot to
On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 08:29:02AM +0200, Timo Myyrä wrote:
>
> There was some error in libssl which has been already fixed.
> I did cvs up in /usr/src/lib/libssl and 'make install' in there to fix it.
> Also
> the HTTP mirrors should work too while new snapshot is made.
>
> timo
Thank you, tha
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