On Fri, Aug 13, 2021 at 11:02:20PM -0700, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 11, 2021 at 03:09:09PM -0700, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Since the recent Mesa update to 21.1.5 I have been experiencing a partial
> > hang
> > in X. It is t
On Wed, Aug 11, 2021 at 03:09:09PM -0700, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Since the recent Mesa update to 21.1.5 I have been experiencing a partial hang
> in X. It is triggered mostly while browsing in qutebrowser (which is the most
> graphically intensive program on my desk
Hi,
Since the recent Mesa update to 21.1.5 I have been experiencing a partial hang
in X. It is triggered mostly while browsing in qutebrowser (which is the most
graphically intensive program on my desktop). When this happens, the display
freezes but the cursor can be moved and it even changes shap
I apologise for not following up. I relocated my UPS and a Pi is acting as the
NUT server now, running several devices. As a result I am unable to easily
connect my main OpenBSD desktop to test. However I am setting up another machine
and will have a chance to test the fix soon.
I am still running
>On 2021-02-04, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
>> I'm trying to debug the systat utility for learning purposes. I
>> enabled
>> -g -O0 in the Makefile, and built it in /usr/src/usr.bin/systat. It
>> builds and runs fine. However, gdb cannot insert any breakspoints. I
I notice now that the code from systat is mapped to very low memory
addresses unlike my own programs. I think that's why I am getting
errors. Curious how this is happening.
>From: Anindya Mukherjee
>Sent: February 4, 2021 3:59 PM
>To: misc@openbsd.org
>Subject: gdb issue
>
Hi,
I'm trying to debug the systat utility for learning purposes. I enabled
-g -O0 in the Makefile, and built it in /usr/src/usr.bin/systat. It
builds and runs fine. However, gdb cannot insert any breakspoints. I'm
on a very recent snapshot and everything is fully patched.
I set kern.global_ptrac
>On 2021-02-03, tilikoom wrote:
>>
>> Hello - sorry if this is the wrong support channel for this - I am
>> quite new to \ this stuff. I cannot mount a samba share in a LAN with
>> usmb. The binary \ successfully parses my .usmb.conf but then drops
>> me into some sort of assembly \ prompt that s
ndya
From: Otto Moerbeek
Sent: January 23, 2021 12:17 AM
To: Anindya Mukherjee
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Understanding memory statistics
On Sat, Jan 23, 2021 at 04:40:06AM +0000, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
> Thanks for the explanation! I noticed during my earlier investigation
> th
Hi, it seems that gstreamer1-plugins-good-1.18.3 has an issue in file:
/usr/local/lib/gstreamer-1.0/libgstossaudio.so. Attemting to load it
causes the following error:
gst-plugin-scanner:/usr/local/lib/gstreamer-1.0/libgstossaudio.so:
undefined symbol '_oss_ioctl'
Running the most current snapshot
Otto Moerbeek
Sent: January 22, 2021 12:01 AM
To: Anindya Mukherjee
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Understanding memory statistics
On Thu, Jan 21, 2021 at 10:38:59PM +0000, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just to follow up, I was playing with allocating memory from a test
>
fflush(stdout);
current+= increment;
}
}
}
printf("100%%\nRead done. Press Enter... ");
getchar();
if(munmap(result, mapSize) == -1)
{
perror(NULL);
penbsd/src/blob/d098acee57f5a5eacb13200c49034ecb8cbd8c29/usr.bin/top/machine.c#L70
However, I think the RES parameter also takes into account shared memory
mappings. This can explain why it is often higher than SIZE,
particularly for large programs.
Anindya
From: Anindya Mukherjee
Sent: January 12, 2021 3:22 PM
To
Hi,
When you start Firefox with a new profile, and before restoring any
files, can you browse the web normally?
If that works then it might be better to just copy the places.sqlite
file to the new profile folder, and install add-ons and such manually
in the new profile.
Anindya
Moerbeek
Sent: January 10, 2021 11:42 PM
To: Anindya Mukherjee
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Understanding memory statistics
On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 09:34:49PM +, Anindya Mukherjee wrote:
> Hi, I'm trying to understand the various numbers reported for memory
> usage from to
, where can I find documentation about the classification for
memory pages (active, inactive, wired, etc.)? I suspect some digging
around in the source in order, but could use some pointers.
I hope these make sense and are not too pedantic. Looking forward to
comments from the experts, thanks!
Anindya Mukherjee
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