Hello,
On systems without an internal clock, I'm trying to understand how
OpenBSD makes a rough time estimation from the previous file system
state, immediately after a reboot.
It seems to be related to inittodr(9) in kern_time.c (seems to be MI in
6.9; earlier octeon releases would say "No TOD c
2014-05-07 18:28 GMT+02:00 Chris Cappuccio :
> Donovan Watteau [tso...@gmail.com] wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Is there a way to force the disabling of flow control on em(4)?
>>
>> Henning said (http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=123003276308084&w=2):
>> &g
Hi,
Is there a way to force the disabling of flow control on em(4)?
Henning said (http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=123003276308084&w=2):
> flow control is enabled on openbsd whenever the peer supports it; done
> in the autonegotiation phase. there is no button to turn it off. why
> should there
On Sat, 3 May 2014, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 4:39 AM, Donovan Watteau wrote:
> * noac: a leftover, but removing it doesn't fix the problem.
>
> * ac: required for our use case.
>
>
> How is that possible when you also set &qu
On Tue, 29 Apr 2014, Philip Guenther wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 8:17 AM, Donovan Watteau wrote:
> > I have various mountpoints from a NetApp NFS server with I use on
> > OpenBSD/amd64 5.5.
> >
> > $ grep nfs /etc/fstab
> >server:/vol/foobar /vol/fooba
Hello,
I have various mountpoints from a NetApp NFS server with I use on
OpenBSD/amd64 5.5.
$ grep nfs /etc/fstab
server:/vol/foobar /vol/foobar nfs
noauto,rw,nodev,nosuid,noatime,noexec,nfsv3,tcp,soft,intr,noac,-x=300,-t=1000,acregmin=3,acregmax=5,-r=65536,-w=65536
0 0
(and some other mo
Hello,
We'd like to deploy OpenBSD on some Dell C5220 and Dell C6220 servers,
for a high-traffic website.
However, the C5220 has some unconfigured components in dmesg [1], and
the C6220 has even more of them [2].
Are they crucial for the machines to operate accurately? By 'accurately',
I mean w
On 09/13/13, Nick Holland wrote:
> On 09/13/13 06:44, Donovan Watteau wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Am I right thinking that sudo in base is still vulnerable to
> > CVE-2013-1776 for those who enable tty_tickets?
> >
> > BTW, I was thinking about the following u
On Thu, 12 Sep 2013 13:43:21 -0700, "Todd C. Miller" wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Sep 2013 20:59:08 -0400, "Michael W. Lucas" wrote:
>
> > I've noticed that the sudo on OpenBSD seems to have !ttytickets set by
> > default. In other words, I authenticate sudo once on, say, ttyp4, and
> > all of my login se
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