On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 10:57:42PM -0700, Greg Thomas wrote:
> I thought Paul's advice only applies if I was trying to figure it out
> before rebooting? I'd already rebooted before sending my first email.
OK, did the free space come back in df after reboot? If so, then it's
programs having open
I thought Paul's advice only applies if I was trying to figure it out
before rebooting? I'd already rebooted before sending my first email.
On Tue, Aug 3, 2021 at 10:40 PM Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 12:39:54PM -0700, Greg Thomas wrote:
>
> > I'm definitely suffering from f
On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 12:39:54PM -0700, Greg Thomas wrote:
> I'm definitely suffering from filesystem corruption on root. I had
> rebooted last night with no change.
>
> I have no options for mounting root.
>
> grits# cat /etc/fstab
> 16a27b4b4549ce04.b none swap sw
> 16a27b4b4549ce04.a / ffs
Damien Miller:
> CVSROOT: /cvs
> Module name: src
> Changes by: d...@cvs.openbsd.org2021/08/02 17:38:27
>
> Modified files:
> usr.bin/ssh: scp.1 scp.c
> usr.bin/ssh/scp: Makefile
>
> Log message:
> support for using the SFTP protocol for file transfers in scp, via a
On 8/3/2021 11:57 AM, beebeet...@posteo.de wrote:
> The router works fine most of the time -- except that it stops
> working every one and a half day, and I have to reset the modem
> for it to work again.
In my experience with my ISP (Comcast in the US), I note the following:
When the lladdr chan
On 7/12/2021 4:16 PM, Mike wrote:
> On 7/12/2021 3:12 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
>> On Sun, Jul 11, 2021 at 04:11:39PM -0400, Mike wrote:
>>> I run NUT on OpenBSD to monitor a Cyperpower UPS. The UPS plugs into
>>> the OpenBSD box via a USB connection.
>>>
>>> OpenBSD 6.8, I had no problems, everythin
Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> Stuart Henderson:
>
> > > I don't have any practical experience with nmea(4), but I'd like
> > > to draw attention to ldattach(8)'s -t option. Unless your receiver
> > > offers a pulse per second signal, you are limited to a very jittery
> > > timestamp from the se
I'm definitely suffering from filesystem corruption on root. I had
rebooted last night with no change.
I have no options for mounting root.
grits# cat /etc/fstab
16a27b4b4549ce04.b none swap sw
16a27b4b4549ce04.a / ffs rw 1 1
16a27b4b4549ce04.k /home ffs rw,nodev,nosuid 1 2
16a27b4b4549ce04.d /t
Stuart Henderson:
> > I don't have any practical experience with nmea(4), but I'd like
> > to draw attention to ldattach(8)'s -t option. Unless your receiver
> > offers a pulse per second signal, you are limited to a very jittery
> > timestamp from the serial telegram, mirroring udcf's fundamenta
I also suspected that it is a filesystem corruption.
Do you have `async` mount option on your root?
Sebastien Marie wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 10:03:44AM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
> > df shows you how much data you can write to an fs, while du shows the
> > disk usage of files it can find
(Resending, as I forgot to include the mailing list itself)
> On Aug 1, 2021, at 3:37 AM, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> It is always good to include dmesg when reporting a problem.
>
> An outline of the wireguard and other network config would be
> useful too. If you can give instructions to repr
Hi all,
Me again on some DHCP-related issues...
So I started using OpenBSD as my home router around two weeks ago,
running openBSD 6.9. It obtains its IP address from the ISP via
DHCP. The setup is pretty simple, just the following two lines in
my hostname.if file:
lladdr random
inet autoconf
Hi,
I have been able to join Jitsi and Zoom using Firefox on OpenBSD.
To join Zoom meetings with FireFox from OpenBSD, please change
"OpenBSD" to "FreeBSD" or any other OS that supports Zoom in
general.useragent.override of about:config.
Also.
Set kern.audio.recording and kern.video.recording t
On 2021-08-02, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> I don't have any practical experience with nmea(4), but I'd like
> to draw attention to ldattach(8)'s -t option. Unless your receiver
> offers a pulse per second signal, you are limited to a very jittery
> timestamp from the serial telegram, mirroring
On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 10:03:44AM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote:
> df shows you how much data you can write to an fs, while du shows the
> disk usage of files it can find. If it can't find a file (because
> it's been deleted), it won't account for it. But if it's been deleted
> and still held open
df shows you how much data you can write to an fs, while du shows the
disk usage of files it can find. If it can't find a file (because
it's been deleted), it won't account for it. But if it's been deleted
and still held open by some process, it would still consume disk
space.
So it looks like a
grits# df -h
Filesystem SizeUsed Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/sd0a 986M936M162K 100%/
/dev/sd0k 57.7G 23.7G 31.1G43%/home
/dev/sd0d 3.9G 10.0K3.7G 0%/tmp
/dev/sd0f 5.8G1.1G4.4G21%/usr
/dev/sd0g 986M234M
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 06:38:32PM +0200, Jan Stary wrote:
>Hello,
>
>playing with ntpd a bit, I am looking for a working
>nmea or udcf sensor. Can people please recommend
>an easy to use device known to work?
I use a Garmin GPS 18x with ntpd. Works fine, just make sure you flash
it with the late
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