I did not sent a bug report per say. Just this:
http://openbsd-archive.7691.n7.nabble.com/Fan-spinning-constantly-on-Lenovo-X1C-and-6-6-td375687.html
I upgraded to -current #427 and it seems to be better. I will spend
more time with it before I draw any conclusions.
thanks
On Sun, Nov 3, 2019
On Sat, 2 Nov 2019 15:16:22 -0400
STeve Andre' wrote:
> On 2019-11-02 15:07, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> > On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:04:34PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> On 2019-11-02 11:00, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
> >>> Hello,
> >>>
> >>> What tools do people find useful for w
On Sun, 3 Nov 2019 18:50:56 + (UTC)
Roderick wrote:
> Here is an old system, written in FORTRAN and C, perhaps compiles in
> OpenBSD:
>
> http://www.tustep.uni-tuebingen.de/tustep_eng.html
>
> But I never used it and I am hyppy with TeX.
>
> Rodrigo
>
I'm not sure, but I think if you wri
On Sat, 2 Nov 2019 20:07:39 +0100
Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:04:34PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
> >
> >
> > On 2019-11-02 11:00, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By
> > > writing I mean long
I had to perform an upgrade from the 6.6 CD
after the 6.5 version stopped booting.
Everything is now back to work.
Here is the fresh dmesg.
The only imperfection is :
"Tearfree" X.org configuration is required whereas
it wasn't on my previous OBSD install. YouTube videos are
also very twitchy and
On 2019-11-03 05:15, Stefan Sperling wrote:
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 02:47:16PM -0700, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
Assuming Firefox or chromium on OpenBSD has WebRTC support (havent checked
in a while), talky.io should work. It's a free website that supports WebRTC
chats. I've used it in the past w
Hey,
This should be fixed in current as of r1.199 of src/sys/net/if_vlan.c
Sorry for the inconvenience.
Cheers,
dlg
> On 29 Oct 2019, at 19:49, Zé Loff wrote:
>
>
> Hi all
>
> Some changes in VLAN-related code went into 6.6 and I think some of them
> changed the way the parent interface get
On 2019-11-02 18:29, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
Hi Jordan,
Jordan Geoghegan wrote on Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 05:44:23PM -0700:
I've thought about learning latex and mandoc and all the fancy
tools, but I've just never gotten around to it.
Actually, both mandoc(1) and mdoc(7) are off-topic in this thr
Hello,
Has anyone seen jitter from 0.5ms to 500ms
on PCI-E attached (SR-IOV) Physical function / virtual function
Network interfaces on OpenBSD Machines running on
a KVM Virtual machine type (Q35) ?
any tips for diagnosing what is causing the jitter ?
I have ruled out the driver Ixl by comp
Hello,
from bare metal testing the ixl driver didn't have any jitter, but when IXL card
it was passed through with SR-IOV on a KVM virtual machine
there was jitter,
so i'm thinking the issue is in the virtual machines handling of the
PCI-PCI bridge
I'm assuming based on the above test
the iavf dri
Yes, it is (was) a permission issue.
> -Original Message-
> From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf
> Of Giovanni Bechis
> Sent: Sunday, November 03, 2019 5:22 AM
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: Courier-Imap no longer accepts ssl connections after
On 4/11/19 8:13 am, Raymond, David wrote:
> Thanks for the insight on SSDs -- sounds like there is not much of an
> issue with modern drives.
Well, you're at the mercy of the SSD firmware to "do the right thing"
and move the data around to ensure even wear levelling. Most do.
The fact that you s
On 3/11/19 11:27 pm, Jonathan Drews wrote:
> The woman offering the class uses Skype so I am probably going to have to use
> Windows. I have a laptop with Windows 10 but I hardly ever use it. Windows is
> a big step down in performance when compared to OpenBSD.
> I thought Skype used a protocol
Maybe have a look at Asciidoctor[1]. It's a plain text markup language
and
fast parser/converter with ruby as its sole dependency.
The language is easy to write, very easy to read and doesn't get in
your way. It's similar to Markdown but much more potent, well-rounded
and extensible if necessary
Hi Patrick,
Thanks a lot for your answer. You told me exactly what I was looking for.
I've generated a 32bit EFI grub image and placed it inside an archiso
bootable image,
booted from Arch Linux, grabbed the EFI var, came back to my OpenBSD
installation,
compiled the program you attached and after
I had the fan problem on an X1 5G running linux, but a bios upgrade solved it.
Dave Raymond
On 11/3/19, Josh wrote:
> hi,
>
> I've upgraded from 6.5 to 6.6 on my X1 6G and since then, I am unable
> to find the reason(s) of the high fan spinning.
> Is there a procedure to downgrade to 6.5 or shou
Thanks for the insight on SSDs -- sounds like there is not much of an
issue with modern drives.
Dave Raymond
On 11/3/19, gwes wrote:
> On 11/2/19 4:10 PM, Raymond, David wrote:
>> I recently installed OpenBSD on a Lenovo X1 Carbon with a solid state
>> drive and it works great.
>>
>> My question
Dear Mr. Péter,
Thank you!
> I installed it via cabal, but you need a little workaround, since a W^X
> allowed partition is required for the build There are some articles
> online which I followed and created a cabal directory in /usr/local
> (which is wxallowed) and mounted it in my $HOME as ‘.c
For completeness, I discovered I was having issues with downloading the sources
for the sysupgrade command on my edge firewall also! So it was not limited to
internet servers as first thought.
Since upgrading the 6.6 (had to run sysupgrade 4 times to get it to complete
the downloads), the issue
Hahaha
Thanks Theo, that made me smile.
But you have answered my question perfectly, albeit in a round about way.
Indeed it doesn’t matter what it is called, and would be clearer with a generic
name, as we got caught out by a program calling another program with colliding
name.
For example, Ha
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 03:41:33PM +0100, Josh wrote:
> hi,
>
> I've upgraded from 6.5 to 6.6 on my X1 6G and since then, I am unable
> to find the reason(s) of the high fan spinning.
> Is there a procedure to downgrade to 6.5 or should I just reinstall
> from scratch?
>
> thank you
>
Did you
On Sun, 3 Nov 2019, Jonathan Drews wrote:
I thought Skype used a protocol that allowed other clients to connect to
it then I read the Wikipedia page on Skype. The technology is owned by
Microsoft.
A standard is SIP. Then a solution would be something like:
https://kb.asipto.com/kamailio:sky
Xianwen Chen (陈贤文) [2019-11-03 13:44:20 +0100]:
> Does _pandoc_ work on OpenBSD now?
I can confirm that pandoc works on OpenBSD as I have built it a few
months ago. However, it wasn't a painless procedure.
I installed it via cabal, but you need a little workaround, since a W^X
allowed partition
Here is an old system, written in FORTRAN and C, perhaps compiles in
OpenBSD:
http://www.tustep.uni-tuebingen.de/tustep_eng.html
But I never used it and I am hyppy with TeX.
Rodrigo
On Sun, 3 Nov 2019, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
And finally, the only thing that is seriously wrong with
the "print/texlive" port is how ridiculously large it is.
That is "texlive". Donald Knuths TeX/mf is exactly the opposite to bloat.
Right. Thank you very much!
Ingo Schwarze writes:
> Hello,
>
> Xianwen Chen wrote on Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 04:16:43PM +0100:
>
>> I am interested in giving _groff_ and _gpresent_ a try. I am seasoned
>> LaTeX user. Is there a tutorial that you would recommend to someone like
>> me?
>
> No, i'm no
On 11/2/19 4:10 PM, Raymond, David wrote:
I recently installed OpenBSD on a Lenovo X1 Carbon with a solid state
drive and it works great.
My question is whether OpenBSD addresses the special characteristics
of solid state drives, especially those having to do with longevity
and reliability. I c
> My substitute for _pandoc_ is the _org-mode_ of emacs, which is for some
> people also good for outlining etc.
if i quit using vim some day, it will be for something lightweight so
i'll never run emacs, i guess.
regards
marc
On 2019-11-02 16:10, Raymond, David wrote:
> I recently installed OpenBSD on a Lenovo X1 Carbon with a solid state
> drive and it works great.
yep.
> My question is whether OpenBSD addresses the special characteristics
> of solid state drives, especially those having to do with longevity
> and re
Hello,
Xianwen Chen wrote on Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 04:16:43PM +0100:
> I am interested in giving _groff_ and _gpresent_ a try. I am seasoned
> LaTeX user. Is there a tutorial that you would recommend to someone like
> me?
No, i'm not aware of tutorials (but i generally don't use tutorials,
so may
Hi,
no and yes, I fear.
Le November 3, 2019 2:41:33 PM UTC, Josh a écrit :
>hi,
>
>I've upgraded from 6.5 to 6.6 on my X1 6G and since then, I am unable
>to find the reason(s) of the high fan spinning.
>Is there a procedure to downgrade to 6.5 or should I just reinstall
>from scratch?
>
>thank yo
Dear Mr. Schwarze,
> That said, the obvious answer for the OP is of course the
> "textproc/groff" port (disclosure: which i maintain). The roff(7)
> language and the troff programm is what people in the UNIX world
> always used for writing books and journal articles, and it is very
> much alive e
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 01:44:20PM +0100, Xianwen Chen (陈贤文) wrote:
> Dear Marc,
>
> > I wasn't talking about mandoc but pandoc (https://pandoc.org/): you
> > write most of the things just using markdown format and add latex
> > instructions whenever you want. this way, you keep simple things simp
I also found twice that removed (from ports permanently) packages I had
installed would throw things into a loop that once caused me to run out
of memory or things just kept looping.
^C followed by pkg_delete -i "the offending package" then resuming
pkg_add -u made things much easier.
Overall the
Hello,
I managed to get another server and card with identical hardware
and tested ixl4 on bare metal,
there was no jitter or latency issues with ping times never rising above 0.5 ms
so it looks like issue I orignally reported was
something possibly with the PCI-E subsystem ( PCI-E bridge) and
Op
hi,
I've upgraded from 6.5 to 6.6 on my X1 6G and since then, I am unable
to find the reason(s) of the high fan spinning.
Is there a procedure to downgrade to 6.5 or should I just reinstall
from scratch?
thank you
> -Original Message-
> From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf
> Of Stuart Henderson
> Sent: Sunday, November 03, 2019 7:59 AM
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: Following current - pkg_add update forward depedencies
> don't match question
>
> On
Dear Mr. Chantreux,
> i realized i haven't try on BSD as my desktop remains a linux for the
> moment. sorry i lost the focus because of this very appealing thread.
My substitute for _pandoc_ is the _org-mode_ of emacs, which is for some
people also good for outlining etc.
But I miss _pandoc_.
Y
>I thought Skype used a protocol that allowed other clients to connect
>to it then I read the Wikipedia page on Skype. The technology is owned
>by Microsoft.
Many moons ago you could at least chat with other clients, but you also had to
run Skype itself.
It was more or less remote controlling
Dear Mr. Drews,
> The woman offering the class uses Skype so I am probably going to have to use
> Windows. I have a laptop with >
Skype usually runs well on Linux.
It may run on FreeBSD too, although I have never looked into that.
One trick that I use is to run Skype on my Android phone.
Your
On 2019-11-02, Theodore Wynnychenko wrote:
> I decided to just try updating gettext, so (this is the full output on that
> system):
Well, that's the problem. Partial updates work sometimes but they can't
be relied upon, in particular won't work around some types of restructuring
changes as happe
> Sent: Sunday, November 03, 2019 at 7:51 AM
> From: "Stuart Longland"
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: Skype alternatives for OpenBSD
>
> On 3/11/19 7:35 am, Jonathan Drews wrote:
> > Is there an alternative to Skype that runs on OpenBSD? I looked in
> > http://openports.se/
> > and didn't
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 02:47:16PM -0700, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
> Assuming Firefox or chromium on OpenBSD has WebRTC support (havent checked
> in a while), talky.io should work. It's a free website that supports WebRTC
> chats. I've used it in the past with great success.
The www/nextcloud port
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 10:06:18AM +0100, Patrick Wildt wrote:
> Obiously I missed the attachment.
Could this tool be put into base or ports / pkg_add?
> /*
> * Copyright (c) 2013 Broadcom Corporation
> *
> * Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
> * purpose
hello,
> Does _pandoc_ work on OpenBSD now?
i realized i haven't try on BSD as my desktop remains a linux for the
moment. sorry i lost the focus because of this very appealing thread.
regards
marc
On 03/11/2019 12:44, Xianwen Chen (陈贤文) wrote:
Does _pandoc_ work on OpenBSD now?
Pandoc doesn't work on OpenBSD? This is seriously a bit of a shock.
It is one of the most useful tools I have ever used. If you are writing
any sort of documentation then I *highly* recommend checking it out o
Dear Marc,
> I wasn't talking about mandoc but pandoc (https://pandoc.org/): you
> write most of the things just using markdown format and add latex
> instructions whenever you want. this way, you keep simple things simple
> but you keep the power of latex under the wood.
Does _pandoc_ work on Op
On 2019-11-02, Theodore Wynnychenko wrote:
> Nov 2 07:40:38 host imapd-ssl: ip=[:::127.0.0.1], couriertls:
> /etc/ssl/private/imapd.pem: error:02FFF00D:system
> library:func(4095):Permission denied
This suggests that the uid running Courier-Imap does not have permission
to access /etc/ssl/pr
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
On 03/11/2019 10:55, Frank Beuth wrote:
> Not sure about the original poster but I would be interested in
> any end-to-end encrypted video/audio/chat programs that are
> available.
Have a look at Tox. It might work out for you on a technical level.
On 2019-11-02, Raymond, David wrote:
> I recently installed OpenBSD on a Lenovo X1 Carbon with a solid state
> drive and it works great.
>
> My question is whether OpenBSD addresses the special characteristics
> of solid state drives, especially those having to do with longevity
> and reliability.
Frank Beuth [2019-11-03 11:55:21 +0100]:
> Not sure about the original poster but I would be interested in any
> end-to-end encrypted video/audio/chat programs that are available.
Matrix may be interesting https://matrix.org/
It has ETE chat, but I am not sure about audio/video. It is possible t
> the "print/texlive" port is how ridiculously large it is.
because it comes with the whole distribution. i never tested but
https://tectonic-typesetting.github.io/ seems to fix it by downloading
stuff on demand. however, another problem with tex is performance.
troff is blazing fast. however...
Theodore Wynnychenko wrote:
> Hi (again):
>
> After updating to current yesterday, and then updating all the packages
> (using "pkg_add -vui -Dsnap"), I can no longer connect to the ssl (993) port
> of the courier-imap server running on the system.
>
> Prior to the update, ssl connections were
Hi,
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 02:29:02AM +0100, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> As long as you only *use* macro packages, groff is *much*
> easier to use than LaTeX (not least because the quality of
> documentation of groff is vastly superior to LaTeX, and LaTeX
> documentation is so extremely huge and fragm
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 04:51:48PM +1000, Stuart Longland wrote:
Do you need any video conferencing software (i.e. the group running the
online class is willing to switch to whatever you can get working?), or
do you specifically need Skype?
Not sure about the original poster but I would be inte
> documents, but for my use case, LibreOffice has treated me well. I primarily
> use it for simple things like putting together invoices, writing articles,
> rendering documents to PDF or postscript, and reading .docx files people
> send me.
> I'm sure there's a superior way to do all this,
there
I really like Markdown for actual writing, because its markup for logical
structure is quite low-key and non-distracting, and (unlike *roff or LaTeX)
it also reads pretty well in source form. Tables are fairly annoying,
particularly if I later have to insert a column in mid table.
Use whatever edi
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 10:05:38AM +0100, Patrick Wildt wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 12:08:08AM +0100, Stefano Enrico Mendola wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > my bad, I thought the grepped output was enough.
> > Here's the complete dmesg(8) output. =
> > OpenBSD 6.6 (GENERIC.
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 12:08:08AM +0100, Stefano Enrico Mendola wrote:
> Hi,
>
> my bad, I thought the grepped output was enough.
> Here's the complete dmesg(8) output. =
> OpenBSD 6.6 (GENERIC.MP) #372: Sat Oct 12 10:56:27 MDT 2019
> dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src
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