Divan Santana:
> I would expert my NFS client uid 67 to be mapped to the remote NFS
> server and presented as 1000 therefore permission should be granted to
> write?
Did you forget to send SIGHUP to mountd(8) to make it re-read
exports(5)?
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
Christian Schulte:
> Hmm. Why not give up on i386 and make that i686 instead (Pentium Pro)?
> What I mean by this. Rename the current i386 to i686 by compiling it for
> i686
"i386" is the name of the architecture. OpenBSD doesn't run any
longer on actual 80386 CPUs. I forgot what the minimum is
Thomas:
> - the 2nd stage bootloader in the softraid volume, the man page says
> "in the storage area oft he softraid volume".
The start of /usr/src/sys/dev/softraidvar.h holds a number of defines
that relate this. It might be worth looking into the installboot(8)
source how this is actually use
Robert B. Carleton:
> I see FreeBSD tar(1) does support pax. I hadn't caught that yet... I
> guess I need to catch up on my FreeBSD reading.
FreeBSD uses tar(1) and cpio(1) from the libarchive project.
You can get those on OpenBSD by installing the libarchive package,
the utilities are called bs
"Robert B. Carleton":
> Unfortunately, the FreeBSD pax command lacks the pax format supported by
> OpenBSD. I'm backing up paths that exceed the limits of ustar, so I'm
> looking at alternatives.
Use FreeBSD's tar(1).
> I realize I could just use the various versions of tar or cpio, but I
> pref
Jan Stary:
> > As I'd rather not switch to vim, I'd be very grateful for any tips
> > concerning the display of umlauts in vi.
>
> vi can't do it.
There's a port and package of nvi-2.2.1, which is a close relative
of the base system nvi that has been extended with wide character
support.
--
Ch
Jan Stary:
> > > > > Why did you have your crypto volume as an 'i' partition?
> > > > Why? Because it says so in the manual, what do you mean??
> > > In what manual does it say to create an 'i' partition specificaly?
> > https://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#softraidCrypto
>
> Does anyone know w
Anon Loli:
> That doesn't defent againts the mirror host itself being malicious.. like
> HELLO
> what are we talking about??
The AnonCVS mirror concept dates from a time when people didn't think
mirrors would be malicious. It does not provide any guarantee of
integrity.
--
Christian "naddy" W
Katherine Mcmillan:
> Just for clarity, does anyone know what "Unix-like operating systems"
> would be affected by this?
None. TLDR: The build process of the backdoor explicitly aborts
on platforms other than Linux x86-64.
As the maintainer of the archivers/xz port, I took a look at the
build s
"Theobald, Gerd":
> C Germany
> P Baden-Wuerttemberg
> T Nuremberg
> Z D-90411
Nuremberg is not in Baden-Wuerttemberg.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
Hrvoje Popovski:
> I would like to revert only if_em.c rev. 1.369, but would like to leave
> TSO stuff if_em.c rev. 1.370 and if_em.h rev 1.81.
>
> is this somehow possible?
$ cd /sys/dev/pci
$ cvs diff -kk -r1.369 -r1.368 if_em.c | patch -p0
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
Otto Moerbeek:
> http://man.openbsd.org/octrtc seems to suggest EdgeRouter does not have
> an RTC. A dmesg should give more certainty.
I think the original poster is aware of this.
If I understand correctly, he expects that on reboot the system
clock is restored to the last value from before the
Marc Chantreux:
> I the same mood: I realized recently that no implementation of awk
> seems to implement quantifiers which is really desapointing.
Awk uses EREs, so if by quantifiers you mean {n,m}, then awk most
certainly supports this.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
Marc Chantreux:
> But is there another good reason for BRE to be still alive?
> (perfomance, simplicity, or anything else).
I think it is mostly for historical reasons, but note that BREs are
not a strict subset of EREs: BREs allow back-references, EREs do
not.
The GNU project turned BREs and ER
not jacinda ardern:
> I saw something about a new intel microcode coming out (subject line) for a
> goofy new bug somebody found. Do you guys package that up into the fw_update
> (firmware.openbsd.org) magic or does it only come via the oem's bios updates?
Whatever Intel releases.
Yesterday th
Stephan Somogyi:
> aarch64 packages-stable has historically been available; for 7.4 it's
> populated for only for amd64, i386, and sparc64 on cdn.openbsd.org and
> assorted mirrors.
>
> Is there an ETA for 7.4 aarch64 packages-stable?
Uh, right. They were delayed because of a problem with the m
"Daniele B.":
> I went to my Mac (SSH -V: OpenSSH 6.9p1 LibreSSL 2.1.8) and launched
> ssh-keygen produced for my my user a nice RSA key. I grabbed it and I
> went on my
> cloud server (SSH -V: OpenSSH 9.2p1 OpenSSL 3.0.9) and appended it in
> my .ssh/authorized_keys.
While RSA _keys_ are still s
WATANABE Takeo:
> I am using nsd, which runs by default on OpenBSD 7.2 amd64.
> To update the zone file after changes have been made.
>
> As far as I could find, restarting the host seems to be
> the only way to update the zone information.
nsd-control(8)
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
Paul de Weerd:
> Indeed, `sysctl kern.securelevel=-1` allows entering DDB with `sysctl
> ddb.trigger=1`. (Yes, I am logged in over serial, and that works
> well). That was not clear from the ddb manpage, nor from the
> securelevel manpage
It's in sysctl(2):
DBCTL_TRIGGER (ddb.trigger)
Theo de Raadt:
> That was in 2022. Lots of people will have machines without new BIOS.
I have the latest firmware and the ccp(4) RNG returns nothing but 0.
> I wonder if our kernel should have similar code to enable the registers.
I tried that yesterday to no effect... but I'm not certain that
Andrew Daugherity:
> This happened when I ran 'pkg_add -u' after upgrading an i386 system
> from 7.2 to 7.3:
> Error: curl-8.0.1 exists in two non-comparable versions
> Someone forgot to bump a REVISION
> It seems that it succeeded in the end, but what happened? Is there a
> 7.3-stable curl pkg
Christian Weisgerber:
> I built a kernel with an instrumented driver. Unfortunately, no
> entropy is provided:
FWIW, it appears to work on the SoftIron OverDrive 1000:
ccp: rng 058f9dad
ccp: rng f0a495ba
ccp: rng a757bdf7
ccp: rng 31b21d19
ccp: rng d1ce1c78
ccp: rng 863c9199
--
Chr
Christian Weisgerber:
> ccp(4) attaches, so presumably it is used as a source of entropy.
> Whether the hardware actually provides random output, I don't know.
I built a kernel with an instrumented driver. Unfortunately, no
entropy is provided:
ccp: rng
ccp: rng 00
Jan Stary:
> Does OpenBSD use any hardware RNG on the PC Engines APUs?
ccp0 at pci0 dev 8 function 0 "AMD 16h Crypto" rev 0x00
ccp(4) attaches, so presumably it is used as a source of entropy.
Whether the hardware actually provides random output, I don't know.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
sewn:
> hi, i've recently switched to ksh and i've been very annoyed by the
> horizontal scroll feature (happens when a commmand is longer than the
> terminal's width) is there anyway to disable this feature? i would
> prefer
> to see the whole command, like in bash or ash.
That's just the way t
David Rinehart:
> After 7.2 install, I see this include file:
>
> /usr/X11R6/include/X11/bitmaps/xsnow
>
> Just curious - With xsnow removed, is this file used for anything?
Well, you could use it for something, e.g.:
$ xsetroot -bitmap /usr/X11R6/include/X11/bitmaps/xsnow
--
Christian
"vitmau...@gmail.com":
> My /var/log/daemon regarding the issue:
> mountd[91001]: Refused mount RPC from host 192.168.1.4 port 57264
The client's mount request didn't come from a reserved port, i.e. <1024.
OpenBSD's mountd(8) does not accept this.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
On 2022-11-20, Reuben mac Saoidhea wrote:
>> It is a builtin, so it is documented inside ksh.
>
> i think the 4.3BSD manual allowed for example `man while' for `man sh'?
FreeBSD has a builtin(1) man page that attempts to list the csh(1)
and sh(1) builtins and points to the respective man pages:
"Richard Ulmer":
> I find this behaviour unexpected:
>
> $ printf foo | less --no-init | xxd
> : 666f 6f1b 5b41 1b5b 4b foo.[A.[K
>
> less prints ANSI escape codes for 'cursor up' and 'erase in line' at the
> end of my message.
I cannot reproduce this.
$ printf foo |
Andre Smagin:
> There is possibly one more use case for "bit-perfect". I have a small
> collection of surround sound (5.1, 4.1, quad, etc) recordings extracted
> from various DVDs, SACDs, and other sources.
Yup.
I even have a commercially released DTS-CD lying around somewhere,
which is basically
On 2022-08-10, Tomasz Rola wrote:
>> DUMP: Date this dump completed: Tue Aug 9 13:51:01 2022
>> DUMP: Average transfer rate: 36530 KB/s
>>
>> That is far below the read-write speed of a modern SATA drive.
>
> Ok. But what is a theoretic speed limit for this device?
The data sheet claims 2
Kenneth Gober:
> Are you certain that dump(8) is the big bottleneck here? My recollection
> is that restore(8) is significantly slower, so of course if restore(8) is
systat's default vmstat display shows you the time spend in disk
accesses. Typical figures during the dump-restore run were 1.0 f
On 2022-08-08, Lucian Popescu wrote:
> lucian-pc# cdio cdplay
> track 1 'a' 0200/00018053 1%
>
> From another terminal I issue the following command to play the next
> song:
>
> lucian-pc# cdio next #exit code is 0
>
> However this does not work. Can I use next and prev with cdplay? The ma
Moving 9TB with dump|restore from an old hard disk to a bigger one
reminded me again that dump(8) is, well, slow:
DUMP: 9104433830 tape blocks
DUMP: Date of this level 0 dump: Sat Aug 6 16:36:52 2022
...
DUMP: Date this dump completed: Tue Aug 9 13:51:01 2022
DUMP: Average transfer ra
On 2022-08-08, Federico Giannici wrote:
> What I really miss is multiline editing of current (very long) commands
> (ksh simply horizontally "scrolls", showing only a part of the command
> line).
>
> I know that in standard ksh this functionality is activated with "set -o
> multiline", but und
On 2022-05-26, Nick Holland wrote:
>> i'm looking for a way to reproduce -O flag in bsdtar/gtar using tar
>> or pax but i didn't find one.
>
> Sounds like you are trying to send tar output (or input) to
> stdin/stdout.
No, to extract a file to stdout.
OpenBSD's tar(1) or pax(1) can't do this.
Ian Darwin:
> It doesn't take that long to learn ed from the "bottom line" of vi,
ed(1) is much like an interactive version of sed(1). Which is no
coincidence. If you know the basics of sed(1), ed(1) is straightforward.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.
i...@tutanota.com:
> I know how to use vi, but ed just draws the line.
Here's just the book for you:
Michael W. Lucas, Ed Mastery
https://mwl.io/nonfiction/tools#ed
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
On 2021-12-18, "Richard Ulmer" wrote:
> This works nicely, but one thing is missing: The volume keys on my
> Laptop (ThinkPad T450) don't change the volume when the USB sound card
> is used. They work when the internal sound card is used, but I don't
> recall ever configuring this. There has to b
Jan Stary:
> I don't think it's lpr's fault, so this might not even be the list,
> for lpr just sends what it gets (except wrapping it in the cf, df files
> of the lpr protocol, right?), but I would still like to know:
Exactly. lpr/lpd is just a transport protocol.
> is it that gv can somehow i
Karel Gardas:
> installed snapshot on amd64 week or so ago to see how it is working. It's
> #195 from Aug 23. During the past few days I've checked from time to time
> with sysupgrade (with or without -s) but it always claimed I'm on the latest
> snapshot.
BTW, I use this to check the date of the
Goetz Schultz:
> I would go the other way and check tomorrows date. If it is "01", then I
> know today is the last of this month:
>
> date --date="tomorrow" +%d
> 02
That's not OpenBSD.
$ date --date="tomorrow" +%d
date: unknown option -- -
usage: date [-aju] [-f pformat] [-r seconds]
[
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
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
Jan Stary:
> 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?
The Gude mouseCLOCKs were discontinued years ago, so I don't think
you could buy any udcf(4) hardware even if you wanted to, and udcf
is liter
Peter J. Philipp:
> Would OpenBSD be interested in a daemon that gets nameserver information from
> pppoe0 and passes this nameserver information to resolvd(8)? Currently there
> is no way to do that, so a userland daemon that uses a bpf device to spy on
> pppoe(4) may be worthwhile to write? Is
Look guys, it's simple.
If you want IPv6 (SLAAC) autoconfiguration, you set "inet6 autoconf"
for that interface. slaacd(8) will then automatically handle things.
If you want IPv4 (DHCP) autoconfiguration, you set "inet autoconf"
for that interface. dhcpleased(8) will then automatically handle
t
On 2021-06-06, Avon Robertson wrote:
> reposync: host key verification failed - see
> /var/db/reposync/known_hosts
>
> The same error was then recorded in my log on the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and
> 6th of June. The above known_hosts file does not exist on this machine.
> The FILES section of reposync(1)
"Peter N. M. Hansteen":
> $ Crash Annotation GraphicsCriticalError: |[0][GFX1-]: glxtest: libpci
> missing (t=0.395391) [GFX1-]: glxtest: libpci missing
>
> firefox runs, so it's not fatal. I suspect it's a misclassified
> dependency in the package (build vs runtime).
FWIW, I see the same warnin
Tom Smyth:
> if you were to have a 1MB file or a database that needed to read 1MB
> of data, i
> f the partitions are not aligned then
> your underlying storage system need to load 2 chunks or write 2
> chunks for 1 MB of data, written,
You seem to assume that FFS2 would align a 1MB file on an
Tom Smyth:
> just installing todays snapshot and the default offset on amd64 is 64,
> (as it has been for as long as I can remember)
It was changed from 63 in 2010.
> Is it worth while updating the defaults so that OpenBSD partition
> layout will be optimal for SSD or other Virtualized RAID env
Jordan Geoghegan:
> --- /tmp/bad.txt Wed Apr 14 21:06:51 2021
> +++ /tmp/good.txt Wed Apr 14 21:06:41 2021
I'll note that no characters have been lost between the two files.
Only the order is different.
> The only thing that changed between these runs was me using either xargs -P 1
> or -P 2.
Erling Westenvik:
> I can ssh FROM any OpenBSD box INTO iSH on my iPhone, and once
> authenticated I can ssh back from there to the OpenBSD box or to any
> other OpenBSD or Linux box, but! -- From iSH itself (ie. "directly" from
> my iPhone) I can only successfully ssh to Linux boxes; if I ssh fro
On 2021-01-17, "Nicola Dell'Uomo" wrote:
> after upgarding packages from 3.507 to 3.509 in -current, libreoffice
> crashes when it starts.
This should be fixed with the next amd64 packages snapshot, which
will appear sometime on Monday (UTC).
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
On 2021-01-08, Jan Stary wrote:
> How do I install a font that has glyphs for those symbols?
> Is there anything for that in ports?
The Dejavu font that is included by default covers IPA. It's
unlikely that you need to install anything else. And if you do,
just install the Noto fonts and be do
On 2021-01-07, John McGuigan wrote:
> httpd's regex is based on Lua's, the following site will help you figure it
> out:
Or, you know, the patterns(7) man page.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
Steve Williams:
> I hesitate to send this because perhaps I'm just too impatient, but then
> again, perhaps not. This is not critical/time sensitive.
>
> I just thought I'd check if there a problem with the current packages folder
> from the mirrors?
No, the amd64 package builds have been sligh
On 2020-10-24, Mihai Popescu wrote:
> Is there a way to interface LPD directly with GUI apps like Chromium,
> mupdf, etc? I mean just to print from GUI menu Print.
Those print menus _should_ offer the option to print to lpr. They
traditionally did. If they don't now, then this is worth examini
On 2020-10-14, Fernando Gont wrote:
> Set the VL to 30', and the PL to 15'. You could even set the VL to 15',
> and the PL to 7.5', if necessary.
How does this influence the lifetime of privacy addresses?
Even with rad(8)'s defaults, I already need to specify an originating
non-privacy addres
On 2020-10-05, Roderick wrote:
> The source of my confusion with FreeBSD:
> /usr/include/x86/_types.h contains:
>typedef __int32_t __time_t;
>typedef int __int32_t;
$ fgrep time_t /usr/include/x86/_types.h
typedef __int64_t __time_t; /* time()... */
typedef __int32_t
On 2020-10-05, "Peter N. M. Hansteen" wrote:
> I hadn't looked in a while, but it amazes me that FreeBSD still has
> 32-bit time_t.
Only on FreeBSD/i386. On all other architectures, time_t is int64_t.
See src/sys/*/include/_types.h.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na.
On 2020-09-24, Jan Stary wrote:
> This is 6.8-beta/amd64 on a Dell Latitude E5570 (dmesg below).
> iwm stopped working, saying
>
> iwm0: hw rev 0x200, fw ver 34.0.1, address e4:a4:71:40:21:08
> iwm0: fatal firmware error
> iwm0: could not remove MAC context (error 35)
I've been
On 2020-08-27, Andreas Menge wrote:
> I try to wrap my head around why the FAQ
> (https://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#softraidFDEkeydisk) says that one
> should create a backup of the keydisk with bs=8192 and skip=1.
>
> From the FAQ:
>
> # dd bs=8192 skip=1 if=/dev/rsd1a of=backup-keydisk.i
On 2020-08-19, Doug Moss wrote:
> I think the problem in lcdproc is in the code from this file (port.h)
> https://github.com/lcdproc/lcdproc/blob/master/server/drivers/port.h
>
> I am out of my depth with this code. I have never even seen these
> calls 'outb' and 'inb'
You're saying this as if y
"Whiskey T.":
> My datacenter installed OpenBSD 6.7 on a new machine:
>
> # uname -a
> OpenBSD machine name 6.7 GENERIC.MP#182 amd64
>
> # which gcc
> which: gcc: Command not found.
> configure:3711: checking whether the C compiler works
> configure:3733: ccconftest.c >&5
> ld: error: cann
On 2020-08-01, Roderick wrote:
> It is not documented in 4.4BSD. I suppose this is not original BSD?
Public service announcement: The original BSD repository can be
browsed here (converted from SCCS):
https://svnweb.freebsd.org/csrg/
Wanna know what those hippies at Berkeley really did?
You can
"Theo de Raadt":
> Johan Mellberg wrote:
> > and https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/6.3/amd64/SHA256.sig
> > (Canada, as I like to take them from different sources). I then ran:
>
> The format of the .sig files was changed in a very small way, intentionally,
> way back then. You are hitting t
On 2020-07-14, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
>> > After system update I found lots of 'old' libraries versions
>> > and possibly binaries from previous releases.
>>
>> If you need to ask, just don't remove them. Those files eat no bread,
>> and in some situations, some of the libs may still be in use.
>
On 2020-06-17, Lévai, Dániel wrote:
> I'm trying to run a script whenever I get a new IP address from my ISP over
> pppoe0. They disconnect me occasionally and the router reconnects then, eg.:
> /bsd: pppoe: GENERIC ERROR: RP-PPPoE: Child pppd process terminated
> /bsd: pppoe0: received unexpect
On 2020-06-05, Roderick wrote:
>> I'd think that a degausser would also erase the servo tracks which will make
>> the disk irrevocably unusable. If that's what you want then just drill holes
>> through the disk - it's quicker.
>
> Or perhaps to put it on an induction cooktop?
I always keep a vat
On 2020-06-02, "Darren S." wrote:
> I'm dealing with a VPS on KVM with the disk having been recently
> expanded from 50 >> 80 GB.
>
> Disklabel shows reasonable total sectors:
>
> # disklabel sd0
> total sectors: 167772160
> boundstart: 64
> boundend: 115330635
The upper boundary is still set t
On 2020-06-01, Justin Noor wrote:
> Has anyone ever filled a 4TB disk with random data and/or zeros with
> OpenBSD?
Yes.
> How long did it take?
I don't remember. Hours.
At a plausible 100 MB/s write speed it will take 11 hours.
> What did you use (dd, openssl)? Can you share the command tha
On 2020-05-20, Christer Solskogen wrote:
> Is that possible?
umount, dump, newfs, mount, restore
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
On 2020-05-11, Stuart Longland wrote:
> BSD came from the US (University of California), but most of today's
> implementations have been very significantly changed since then.
BSD built on top of AT&T UNIX, which came from Bell Labs in New Jersey.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
On 2020-04-23, Ian Darwin wrote:
> So: I was able to newfs, mount, and use an OpenBSD partition which
> disklabel called 'a' and which had no trace of an fdisk partition around it.
>
> As Allan pointed out, this is not for booting from - none of those
> fdisk partitions looks very healthy.
bios
On 2020-04-11, Nikita Stepanov wrote:
> Wine for OpenBSD?
At hackathons, we typically ask the French developers to pick out
a wine from the menu, but they are pretty reluctant to take on this
responsibility.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
On 2020-03-13, "Peter J. Philipp" wrote:
> Any developer working on a riscv port and willing to share their unofficial
> work for possible future collaboration?
I think I'd have heard by now if somebody was, so I'll go out on a
limb and say no, nobody's working on a RISC-V port.
--
Christian "
On 2020-03-02, Marc Chantreux wrote:
> i felt dumb reading this as i gave a try to the mandoc man. but i just
> double checked:
>
> man mandoc|col -b|grep -w col
>
> gives me nothing.
$ man mandoc|col -b|grep -w col
to col(1) -b instead.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
Marc Chantreux:
> > > * is there a way to ask man to deliver pure (non-formatted) text ?
> > Pipe its output through "col -b".
>
> what is the gain of using col over fmt ?
It's the designated tool for the job. That fmt also happens to
replace sequences character1-backspace-character2 with chara
Marc Chantreux:
> * is there a way to ask man to deliver pure (non-formatted) text ?
Pipe its output through "col -b".
> * is there a way to introduce a | in vi macros?
Yes, by prefixing it with a ^V character. To enter ^V in vi's input
mode, press control-V twice.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisg
Xianwen Chen (陈贤文):
> I forgot to report maybe an important piece of information. I use scim
> to type in Chinese. I use the default xdm. Here is my .xsession:
>
> export LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8
>
> export XMODIFIERS=@im=SCIM
> export GTK_IM_MODULE="scim"
> export QT_IM_MODULE="scim"
> scim -d
I s
On 2020-02-05, Janne Johansson wrote:
>> # /etc/hostname.vlan101
>> description 'WLAN attached untrusted hosts'
>> inet 192.168.156.0/24 255.255.255.0 vlandev run0
>
> VLANs and wifi sounds like a non-starter.
Yep, if you're building your access point with OpenBSD.
More generally, though, any A
Denis, I suspect the fundamental problem is that you don't understand
what VLANs are. There should be a lot of articles about this topic
on the net; maybe somebody here can recommend a good one.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
On 2020-02-03, Denis wrote:
> Some hosts should be limited in internet access and/or local access or
> simply be restricted in some way because they are untrusted.
>
> I'm looking for a possibility to isolate untrusted inside LAN using any
> approach applicable. How do people isolate undesirable
On 2020-01-30, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
> All you're doing is benchmarking the speed of iperf on that machine.
I vaguely remember a thread somewhere that concluded that one of
these network benchmark tools degenerated into a benchmark of
gettimeofday(2), which apparently is very cheap on Linux an
On 2020-01-30, livio wrote:
> I am unable to achieve decent throughput with a 1 GigE interface
> (Intel I210) on OpenBSD 6.6. When running iperf3 I get around 145Mbit/s.
I get more than 30 Mbytes/s over SSH (!) to an APU2.
$ scp -caes128-...@openssh.com
/usr/ports/distfiles/texlive-20190410-te
On 2020-01-08, Nick Holland wrote:
> Weird stuff happens when Softdeps are working as designed.
To put it simply: Meta-data writes are delayed.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
On 2020-01-08, "lu hu" wrote:
> are these real issues?
No.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
On 2019-12-20, "Theo de Raadt" wrote:
> well you missed out
>
> for 6.5 onwards, all you had to was type
>
> sysmerge
> sysupgrade
I think that was intended to read
syspatch
sysupgrade
> for 6.6 onwards you'll only need sysupgrade
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber
On 2019-12-08, Stefan Hagen wrote:
> I was browsing around and noticed that there are no files for the SGI
> platform on the mirrors.
OpenBSD/sgi has been discontinued. No 6.6 release was built.
The mips64 CPU architecture remains alive on the octeon platform.
> SGI is mentioned in the 6.6/RE
Dieter Rauschenberger:
> This was serveral years ago before Libressl was invented. Now I wanted
> to decrypt the docs with:
>
> openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -d < FOO.aes256 > FOO
>
> This did not work. The password did not work anymore.
The default message digest function used for key derivation ch
Christer Solskogen:
> > With UEFI and PXE I have successfully netbooted
> > * amd64 (Thinkpad X1C5) with BOOTX64.EFI after bluhm@'s recent
> > bootdev_dip fix
>
> Is that already in current?
Yes, it was committed five days ago.
> I now tried having bsd.rd in tftp root
> directory, and BOOTX.E
On 2019-12-01, Christer Solskogen wrote:
> I've tried sanboot for iso, but it fails. I *can* get BOOTX64.EFI to start,
> but it cant find bsd.rd (perhaps BOOTX64.EFI requires tftpd?),
No "perhaps". BOOTX64.EFI uses TFTP to load the kernel, just like
pxeboot does.
With UEFI and PXE I have succes
On 2019-11-15, Roderick wrote:
>> ed is included in the ramdisk, but if your use case is using vi to fix a
>
> I imagine, it is there for using it in scripts.
Interestingly enough, the installer itself does not use ed, as far
as I can tell.
* I pretty regularly use ed to perform some configurat
On 2019-10-18, Nam Nguyen wrote:
>> Since 'q' is unused in nvi, I have this in my .nexrc:
>> map q !}fmt
>
> I just wanted to add that you can Ctrl-v Enter to produce the ^M at the end.
> This way it inputs and executes the command for you.
>
> It could be like this if you want it to press Enter
On 2019-10-18, cho...@jtan.com wrote:
> I didn't know [how] ! took movement commands. Thanks. I'll have a play
> with that one.
>
> It's not quite M-q (it's M not C) but I'm using vi after all.
Since 'q' is unused in nvi, I have this in my .nexrc:
map q !}fmt
Close enough to emacs's M-q.
--
On 2019-09-06, Andreas Kusalananda Kähäri wrote:
>> read x; while [ "$x" != [abc] ]; do echo "Not a, b or c"; break; done
>
> The shells in the OpenBSD base system do not support matching regular
> expressions with that syntax. You may have been thinking of bash,
Just to head off crazy rumors:
On 2019-08-16, Jan Stary wrote:
>> Does that mean openrsync tries to mmap() the entire file?
>> The machine only has 256MB of memory, but it does transfer
>> a test file of 300MB, so that can't be it.
>
> I forgot about 1GB swap, so that's why it works
> for files up to around 1.2G, but not large
On 2019-07-13, "Jonathan Drews" wrote:
> Hi Folks: I need some recommendations on what brand of printers will
> work
> with Ghostscript (Postscript). The cartridges for my 15 year old HP
> Deskjet have gotten too expensive. I know Xerox makes some
> Postscript printers. Are there any other manuf
On 2019-07-11, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Quite likely. I'm so clueless that right now, i can't even seem to get
> Compose to work even though i'm sure i had it working in the past.
I use "setxkbmap -option compose:ralt" and compose works as expected
for me in xterm.
Zwölf Boxkämpfer jagen Viktor
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