I did the second backup again and reattached the disk to my system, the
result was like that:
https://5md.at/l/obcons2 (disk attached but CRC error follows)
But I can mount it correctly.
So I decide to try changing drive enclosure, from as a simple
as not powered Orico 2.5'' to a powered Orico
Stuart Henderson :
> the duid is in the disklabel. if you clone a disk to another, you will clone
> the duid too.
> (it can be edited with disklabel -e).
Beside the useful clarification more than one is elaborating
why we should live with clonable uids?
However, clonable uids come really in h
On 2023-03-25, Jan Stary wrote:
>> and there is a problem in OpenBSD caused by the same UID of the two disks.
>
> 1. Guess what the letters U I D stand for.
> 2. Don't use two disk with the same uid.
the duid is in the disklabel. if you clone a disk to another, you will clone
the duid too.
(it c
>
>> a slight different console output:
>> https://5md.at/l/obcons1
>
> Don't do this. Console output is text - put it into the email,
> don't make people go to a web page to read console output.
Sincerely, I need an hack for copy text from xfce console...
>> and there is a problem in OpenBSD
On Mar 24 17:47:28, my2...@aol.com wrote:
> a slight different console output:
> https://5md.at/l/obcons1
Don't do this. Console output is text - put it into the email,
don't make people go to a web page to read console output.
> I expect there is problem on that disk.
Obviously.
> and there is
Good morning,
I've finally decided to try to find out why a running deamon was showing
up as
"failed" in the daily outputs.
Turns up it's because I had used regex special char in the daemon flags.
In this case it was a brace "{" which was unbalanced and cause rcctl to
fail :
doing rc_check
On 3/25/23 09:33, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2023-03-24, Kaya Saman wrote:
Just responding to this for completeness as I have some more information
on my side
On 3/24/23 07:21, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2023-03-23, Kaya Saman wrote:
Unfortunately I haven't been well for a long time hence
Hello Stuart,
your suggestion worked perfectly, thanks a lot!
Werner
On 3/25/23 17:18, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2023-03-24, Werner Boninsegna wrote:
Hello,
fake /dev/random means I created a file with a string of text such as
"1234567890". This was a workaround t
On 2023-03-24, Kaya Saman wrote:
> Just responding to this for completeness as I have some more information
> on my side
>
> On 3/24/23 07:21, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>> On 2023-03-23, Kaya Saman wrote:
>>> Unfortunately I haven't been well for a long time hence the delay in
>>> upgrade and at f
On 2023-03-24, Werner Boninsegna wrote:
> Hello,
>
> fake /dev/random means I created a file with a string of text such as
> "1234567890". This was a workaround to get the application running.
Yes that's as bad as I thought. While most things in OpenBSD itself
don't use /dev/random or /dev/urand
10 matches
Mail list logo