‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday 30 July 2020 22:37, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> Rupert Gallagher [r...@protonmail.com] wrote:
>
> > No, I am not using USB.
>
> your dmesg didn't make it to the list because you are attaching a text file
> and attachments are not allowed on misc.
>
> plea
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday 30 July 2020 22:36, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> Rupert Gallagher [r...@protonmail.com] wrote:
>
> > No, I am not using USB.
>
> rsync between disks should be very fast.
Right.
> you are going from the sata to the nvme ?
No. It is SATA to SATA, using a
| Well then, I guess I just stop switching around between different login
sessions
What about avoiding Ctrl+Alt+F1 (and ... F5 wich is X) and use ... +F2,
+F3, etc.?
You could still miss some settings, I am not sure.
I wonder if /etc/fbtab is able to support multiple tty entries and manage
them e
On Fri, Jul 31, 2020 at 3:15 PM wrote:
> Use multiple interfaces, one per site to connect with. Overhead isnt really
> present, its just routing and hashes at that point.
> (I’ve had no issues doing site to sites in this fashion, has been working
> great for months)
I was picturing 3 wgx interf
Use multiple interfaces, one per site to connect with. Overhead isnt really
present, its just routing and hashes at that point.
(I’ve had no issues doing site to sites in this fashion, has been working great
for months)
> On Jul 31, 2020, at 10:43 AM, Sonic wrote:
>
> The need is for site-to
The need is for site-to-site vpns (multiple client sites to one server
site), 3 vlans each.
>From a management point of view it might be better to use 3 wireguard
interfaces on all of the routers (wg0, wg1, wg2). But I'm not sure if
that adds overhead, and if so how much.
Basically, is it better to
Hi Theo,
thank you for your reply. Well then, I guess I just stop switching
around between different login sessions ;)
Nils
Am 31.07.2020 um 16:08 schrieb Theo de Raadt:
I'm not sure what can be done about it.
/etc/fbtab's first role is to give access to subsystems, but it's
second more i
I'm not sure what can be done about it.
/etc/fbtab's first role is to give access to subsystems, but it's
second more important role is to *take them away* later.
Unfortunately there is nothing "keeping state" about previous access
conditions, as well it is quite unclear if reverting to previous
So I would not need to deal with USB printers anymore, I got a thermal
printer with an ethernet port. I communicate with it by ESC/POS over
UDP to port 9100.
Dear all,
logging in and out changes the owner of the /dev/drm0 file, so that one
loses hardware acceleration in X when additionally logging in and out on
a console. Here's what I do:
1) Boot Openbsd and log into X with xenodm. Ownership of /dev/drm0:
$ ls -l /dev/drm0
crw---
Hello guys,
Thanks for suggestions.
Tweacking sysctl
net.inet.udp.recvspace=131072
net.inet.udp.sendspace=131072
solved the problem.
Test between routers that started to drop packets over 10Mbit, now run
test at 100Mbit with less than 1% drops (over 50% before).
I run the folowing test:
A
On 2020-07-29, Rubén Llorente wrote:
> Thank you for the advice. I will search for those ones and see what I can
> find.
>
> I still need to solve the printer issue. So far it looks like receipt
> printers use very simple interfaces. Somebody engineered ppd files for Zjian
> printers for Linux,
Can you post your pf.conf...
If ur not using much filtering try pfctl -d to diasble pf and repeat
testing
Run top -S to see if sofnet is at 100%
On Thursday, 30 July 2020, Ivo Chutkin wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I run small ISP. All routers and firewalls run OpenBSD.
>
> Reticently, client
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