ointed to by rwl.
The name argument specifies the name of the lock, which is used
as the wait message if the thread needs to sleep.
which seems to indicate to my naive reading that it might be possible.
I note that my understanding of "busy lock" would lead me to think that
wou
l; } \
> 2>&3 | tee /var/log/build/buildsys.out.log; } \
> 3>&1 | tee /var/log/build/buildsys.err.log 1>&2
Thanks, Delan (and Nigel, off list, for the parentheses example).
--
Joel Rees
Well, after posting this
On Mon, Jan 18, 2016 at 10:09 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Trying to put some scripts together so I can set an update going one
> night, check it in the morning, reboot, and finish the update while
> I'm at work.
>
> So I want to do something like
>
>
ksh), but a
simple test with
ls /nonexisting > >(tee mylog) 2>&1
fails with
ksh: syntax error: `> ' unexpected
Any suggestions appreciated. Cluebats, too.
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
erk.
And Stuart reminded me, off list, that I had forgotten to mention that
the code depends on calling bc with the "-l" option, for the "library"
power of e function I'm using below.
I'm just not with it today.
On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 5:19 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
Oh, neverr mind. Sorry about the noise.
On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 4:23 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Given the following code,
>
>
> define vc(vs,t,r,c) {
> return vs * (1-e(-t/(r*c)));
> }
>
> scale = 5;
> vs = 120;
> r = 60;
> c = .0
ect answers mixed in with the messages about
unimplemented (operations?).
I get the messages whether I type it in by hand or copy/paste it from my blog.
Is this known behavior?
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
ad and install a snapshot.
>
Thanks. Glad I didn't need to do the snapshot upgrade this time. (And
thanks to Dan for helping me remember what installing a snapshot
means. My mind seems to be going south a lot lately.)
--
Joel Rees
Rants are free:
http://free-is-not-free.blogspot.jp/
; *** Error 2 in gnu/usr.bin (:48 'realinstall')
> > *** Error 2 in gnu (:48 'realinstall')
> > *** Error 2 in . (:48 'realinstall')
> > *** Error 2 in /usr/src (Makefile:82 'build')
Right now I'm doing a lot of guessing.
Was the con
#18 0x1cc5a247d90e in _rthread_start (v=Variable "v" is not available.
> ) at /usr/src/lib/librthread/rthread.c:145
> #19 0x1cc53e33649b in __tfork_thread () at
/usr/src/lib/libc/arch/amd64/sys/tfork_thread.S:75
> #20 0x in ?? ()
>
>
> --
> Jeremie Le Hen
> j...@freebsd.org
>
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
On Thu, Dec 31, 2015 at 3:19 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 31, 2015 at 3:22 AM, Alexey Suslikov
> wrote:
>> ropers gmail.com> writes:
>>
>>> It says here <http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#SendDmesg> that one
>>> should not send dmesg
ached
sd1 detached
scsibus4 detached
umass0 detached
cdce0 at uhub1 port 1 configuration 1 interface 0 "ZTE,Incorporated
ZTE WCDMA Technologies MSM" rev 2.10/f0.8b addr 3
cdce0: address 2a:cb:00:c3:27:00
umass0 at uhub1 port 1 configuration 1 interface 2 "ZTE,Incorporated
ZTE WCDMA Technologies MSM" rev 2.10/f0.8b addr 3
umass0: using SCSI over Bulk-Only
scsibus4 at umass0: 2 targets, initiator 0
sd1 at scsibus4 targ 1 lun 0: SCSI2 0/direct
removable serial.19d21405A1ZTED00
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Michael McConville wrote:
> Joel Rees wrote:
>> Daniel Ouellet wrote:
>> > > Secondly, this whole thread should have ended long ago.
>> >
>> > So why you keep it going then.
>> >
>> > Let it die please
&
nd there
against multiple mirrors. You're going to have to be really valuable
to the NSA or some other well-funded group in your area for them to be
able to filter every mirror you can find.
If you need to, go to a random netcafe or other place and check from there, too.
--
Joel Rees
Be ca
ppropriate
long information lines just from the last pkg_add .
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
On Sat, Dec 5, 2015 at 5:56 PM, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 05, 2015 at 05:40:00PM +0900, Joel Rees wrote:
>> About a week ago, I was trying to get cvs up to current, and I tried to do
>> a sysmerge in my sleep after make build in src.
>>
>> When I realiz
ssume that login.conf was the last thing it needed to do? (And maybe
that I must have done something other than ctrl-c?)
Or can I just cvs up current now and hope that anything that might not have
gotten picked up last week gets picked up now, or do I need to do some
digging with mtree and/or some other to
error from Lilo about the key file being corrupt and I suspect
> it's related to this limit. The original position of the file was
> probably OK, the new file got made in an unreachable position.
>
[...]
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is
stance
http://marc.info/?t=14455900961&r=1&w=2
--
Joel Rees
be thorough until I learn more about things.
And have the computer running all night to finish the builds.
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 11:15 PM, Christian Weisgerber
wrote:
> On 2015-10-21, Joel Rees wrote:
>
>> Is fsync an appropriate way to flush writes to the disk device? In the
>> FreeBSD code, it is
>>
>> i = ioctl(fd, DIOCGFLUSH);
>
> Dunno, but I'd ch
or deleted
partitions.\n"
<< "You should reboot or remove the drive.\n";
platformFound++;
#endif
On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 11:06 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Okay, here's my current set of diffs for gptfdisk:
> -
>
(__FreeBSD_kernel__) || defined
(__APPLE__)
+#if defined (__FreeBSD__) || defined (__FreeBSD_kernel__) ||
(__OpenBSD__) || defined (__APPLE__)
// Darwin (Mac OS) & FreeBSD: disk IOCTLs are different, and there is
no lseek64
#include
#define lseek64 lseek
-----
Very lightly tested, but it seems to be functional, to some degree.
-- Joel Rees
y continue to use old or deleted
partitions.\n"
<< "You should reboot or remove the drive.\n";
platformFound++;
#endif
I'm not seeing any equivalent to DIOCGFLUSH in the openbsd headers.
grep FLUSH /usr/include/sys/* seems to mostly turn up tty stuff.
--
Joel Rees
I'm a newbie, such a newbie.
The project I took a fresh git pull from:
http://sourceforge.net/p/gptfdisk/code/ci/master/tree/
My clueless first post to their list:
http://sourceforge.net/p/gptfdisk/mailman/message/34557302/
--
Joel Rees
Sometimes being an old codger and an newb at the same time is fun.
Sometimes, not
On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 5:25 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> I have a 3 part problem.
>
> The first part is the parallel SCSI to USB adapter shown at the end of
> this dmesg. Can I expect it to function under some set of appropriate
> conditions?
Well, I checked with
hexdump -C /dev/
dapter" rev 2.00/1.10 addr 3
umass0: using SCSI over Bulk-Only
scsibus4 at umass0: 2 targets, initiator 0
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
sd1 at scsibus4 targ 1 lun 0: SCSI2 7/optical
removable
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
[repeats until unplugged]
umass0: Invalid CSW: status 255 > 2
sd1 detached
scsibus4 detached
umass0 detached
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
2015/10/20 6:29 "Christoph R. Murauer" :
>
> Hello !
>
> I readed the FAQ 4.8 about partioning my drive but have a little problem
> of understanding.
>
> The machine has 32 GB physical RAM,
Wow. Way cool.
> the disc is a 256 GB SSD
That's not shabby, either.
> (yes, I know,
> I should not use s
th occurring in a statically declared function)
I'd still want some sort of a pointer to the file it came from, and a
pointer to the bug report filed for it and any discussion on the mailing
lists that occured concerning the code in question.
Otherwise, I'm judging the reporter more severely than whoever wrote the
code.
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a stream of text
flowing from the past into the future.
arger purpose, providing a reliable sandbox, I'm going to see
whether chroot would allow me to use a non-login user as proxy user
for the stupid (pardon my French) bloated web browsers.
On Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 8:29 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Thank you, Dan, Ben, and Frank. I see that I have left out
Is there anything that can be done to get HDMI video functioning on this HP
Pavilion 10 10-f015au? (dmesg below)
After switching several times between virtual consoles with X11 running, it
will begin to mostly mirror the laptop display on the HDMI device (a
Toshiba Regza TV). It will be missing te
Ahem. Dmesg below. (Sorry about that.)
On Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 8:29 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Thank you, Dan, Ben, and Frank. I see that I have left out some
> important information:
>
> user2 is specified as a non-login class of user in /etc/login.conf,
> auth=reject: shell=/sbin/n
Thank you, Dan, Ben, and Frank. I see that I have left out some
important information:
user2 is specified as a non-login class of user in /etc/login.conf,
auth=reject: shell=/sbin/nologin, and has a default shell of
/sbin/nologin in /etc/passwd .
On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 5:41 PM, Joel Rees wrote
"right" by setting up ssh with public-key
authentication to do the user switch?)
(Or go all out and set up chroot to run an instance of X11 and firefox? ;-/
)
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a stream of text
flowing from the past into the future.
e log entry before the next one starts. And you may want to
deliberately kill the process before the shutdown process does the final
sync.
And don't forget to remove things before you put the thing into production.
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a stream of text
flowing from the past into the future.
expect everyone who is required to report certain things to be able to
run a current version of the Adobe PDF viewer. Or, if there is a
community supported pdf viewer that allows "filling out electronic pdf
forms". I'm not yet aware of it.)
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
nored by
anyone who doesn't care about what I am sure was the result of trying to
carry a non-GENERIC kernel forward.
2015/08/04 20:10 "Stuart Henderson" :
>
> On 2015-08-04, Joel Rees wrote:
> > Thought login was freezing after the welcome message, beacause there
wa
It occurred to me just now to take a diff on the dmesgs:
On Mon, Aug 10, 2015 at 4:02 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Is it unusual/unreasonable to install, not update, from a snapshot bsd.rd?
>
> If installing from a snapshot bsd.rd is not too unreasonable, does
> everyone doing that edit /
play0
pms0 at pckbc0 (aux slot)
wsmouse0 at pms0 mux 0
pms0: Elantech Touchpad, version 3, firmware 0x354f00
pcppi0 at isa0 port 0x61
spkr0 at pcppi0
umass0 at uhub0 port 1 configuration 1 interface 0 "TOSHIBA External
USB 3.0" rev 3.00/0.00 addr 2
umass0: using SCSI over Bulk-Only
scsibus2 at umass0: 2 targets, initiator 0
sd1 at scsibus2 targ 1 lun 0: SCSI4
0/direct fixed serial.0480a20050121000929C
sd1: 476940MB, 512 bytes/sector, 976773168 sectors
uvideo0 at uhub1 port 4 configuration 1 interface 0 "Generic HP
Webcam-50" rev 2.00/5.26 addr 2
video0 at uvideo0
vscsi0 at root
scsibus3 at vscsi0: 256 targets
softraid0 at root
scsibus4 at softraid0: 256 targets
root on sd0a (c910159e72666593.a) swap on sd0b dump on sd0b
--
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
ke this. Reread the manual
pages , just to get your creative juices flowing.
du -S /var/*
will tell you which subdirectories of /var are good candidates for moving
off /var .
Virtualizing the problem child is also good, if you don't need to test the
old stuff on some actual piece of hardware, but playing with your
partitions is good practice, too.
--
Joel Rees
Thanks for the comments.
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 5:43 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> I did a cvs update yesterday (-rOPENBSD_5_7, previous update toward the end
> of June) in the middle of network problems.
>
> Updated src and then ports and then xenocara. Took from about eight in the
> m
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 6:22 PM, Kapetanakis Giannis
wrote:
> On 04/08/15 11:43, Joel Rees wrote:
>>
>> I did a cvs update yesterday (-rOPENBSD_5_7, previous update toward the
>> end
>> of June) in the middle of network problems.
>>
>> Updated src and then p
hings, but I thought I'd ask how unusual this kind of
behavior between building the kernel and the userland is.
I'll post the dmesg from the GPT kernel, at least, before I start the
build. I erased the non-GPT kernel without getting a dmesg, but I can build
it again if someone tells me I sho
2015/08/04 6:24 "dan mclaughlin" :
>
> On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 21:17:12 +0900 Joel Rees wrote:
> > I try a cvs update on xenocara and it just sits there for over an hour
> > and then tells me I have a broken pipe.
> >
> > cvs log seems to yield the same beh
ough all the modules?
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
2015/07/31 15:33 :
>
> everyone on the carousel? why not rework the trust model.
Okay, I'll play.
What threat models do we want to address
uhm,
at the library level?
2015/07/31 9:15 "Joel Rees" :
>
> 2015/07/31 6:49 "Vadim Zhukov" :
> >
> > [...]
>
> >
> > Well, I see four scenarios:
> >
> > 1. Using the defaults supplied with OpenBSD only. Typical for
home/personal use.
> >
> >
s to do
them right. Until the cash cow dies, anything we try now is likely to be
wrong.
With that caveat, try your ideas on your own system. You'll need to add
some scripts of your own to extend what sysmerge and other tools do. Post
to the list about how it works for you over the next year or s
2015/07/31 8:34 :
>
> Congrats to raising another time wasting topic for a public commentary.
>
Do you mean that CAs, certificates, and how they are handled are topics
that don't need talking about?
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a
Which is preferred, newfs_ext2fs or mke2fs from the e2fsprogs package?
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a stream of text
flowing from the past into the future.
uspicion is free, but it doesn't help without understanding.
> Please help. Very urgent.
Get answers to the first questions first.
The other questions don't make sense without answers to the first questions.
If it's urgent, that's all the more reason to start with questi
ertised, but maybe
I'm not looking in the right places nowadays.)
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
On Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 2:08 AM, Christian Weisgerber
wrote:
> On 2015-07-20, Joel Rees wrote:
>
>[...]
> Being "willing to take a small hit on performance or
> price" does not magically will such alternatives into existence;
> it just makes you sound delusional.
nly a small hit on much of what I do. RAM and hard disk
speed make up for quite a bit.
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well:
http://reiisi.blogspot.jp/2011/10/conspiracy-theories.html
2015/07/10 22:12 "Oliver" :
>
> Hello,
>
> On Tue, 09 Jun 2015, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > > > entry point at 0x1000160 [7205c766, 3404, 24448b12, 1080a304]
> > > > > == At this point the system reboots. No further messages.
> > > >
> > > > Your kernel is probably too large. A limitation in th
I see, now, how my post was misinterpreted.
2015/07/09 9:26 "Joel Rees" :
>
> Hmm. Should have looked at the contributions page before I posted. I
> was reading "Gold" and thinking "Iridium".
A corporate contribution of between 25,000 and 50,000 (the Gold
Hmm. Should have looked at the contributions page before I posted. I
was reading "Gold" and thinking "Iridium".
On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 8:40 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Since Jorge broached the subject, I have a couple of armpits I'd like to
> air.[1]
>
> I a
they interact from a very broad perspective.
I sympathize with the board. There is no correct response that I can
see from where I'm sitting.
Beyond that, the board doesn't need armchair quarterbacks.
I just wish Microsoft had given us (the community, as well as the
project) more time.
-
On Sun, Jul 5, 2015 at 4:12 PM, Jan Stary wrote:
> On Jul 04 07:21:48, joel.r...@gmail.com wrote:
>> > On Fri, Jul 03, 2015 at 07:29:08PM +0900, Joel Rees wrote:
>> >> On Fri, Jul 3, 2015 at 3:05 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
>> >> > One thing is to try 'ZZ
et stuck, I'll probably set GPT aside for several months and
focus on getting the WIFI on this thing running. In fact, if someone
would tell me that what I'm trying to do isn't supported yet, I'd be
happy to work on the WIFI first. I'd like to be able to access the net
from
o not install boot menu to MBR
> 5) Use BCDedit on Windows, add the OpenBSD partition
> 6) (optional, Windows 8) set boot menu to classic mode
>
--
Joel Rees
do, including compiling the OS, etc. At least, it's not
the bottleneck on this netbook, or any other hardware I currently
have. I have fundamental disagreements with USB, but it works for
now.)
Joel Rees
Not sure how much use posting the results of this will be at this
point, but, for the record --
On Fri, Jul 3, 2015 at 7:43 PM, Theo Buehler wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 03, 2015 at 07:29:08PM +0900, Joel Rees wrote:
>> On Fri, Jul 3, 2015 at 3:05 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
>> > One th
On Fri, Jul 3, 2015 at 3:05 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 03, 2015 at 11:45:44AM +0900, Joel Rees wrote:
>> FWIW, I just tried shutting the lid on this netbook, to see what would
>> happen.
>>
>> Disks went quiet quickly enough to assume it was sleep and no
irst.
Lots of unsupported fun on it. Hopefully, I'll be able to make some
time for something useful next week.
(I'd almost say that when I bought this box about a month and a half
ago, I should have gone for an older box, but I need the motivation to
dig in. :)
--
Joel Rees
FWIW, I just tried shutting the lid on this netbook, to see what would happen.
Disks went quiet quickly enough to assume it was sleep and not hibernate.
I waited maybe a minute, then opened the lid. No response. On keyboard
activity, i could hear the disks spin up.
Tried ssh from outside, but I
s more information about how
and where things are not working for you -- error messages that you may
have to copy into your mail by hand, etc.
--
Joel Rees
> > On Jun 27, 2015, at 6:51 PM, James Hartley wrote:
> >
> > Read the FAQ.
> >
> > http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4
An idle mind is the devil's workshop.
On Sun, Jun 14, 2015 at 11:54 PM, Mike Burns
wrote:
> On 2015-06-14 16.46.53 +0200, Max Power wrote:
>> Only the group is changed.
>> But why the owner is remained the same [root]?
>> On OpenBSD, I can not get root:root ?
>
> No:
>
> $ grep ^root /etc/group
>
I try
pkg_add -u tiff
and get this:
Package tiff-4.0.3p2 found, matching insecure tiff-<4.0.4beta
Does that mean there is an update, but that it's being held back
because of an unfixed vulnerability?
--
Joel Rees
My memories of Debiandora are fading slightly, but, ...
2015/06/15 8:53 "Rick Hanson" :
>
> From the linux su man page:
>
> > This version of su uses PAM for authentication, account and session
> > management. Some configuration options found in other su
> > implementations, such as support for a
9:00 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
>> besides take it back to the store, I mean.
>>
>> I have it booted on a USB stick. The internal drive appears to be
>> unpartitioned when I do a disklabel -- only c partition reported. fdisk
>> does report it as EFI GPT.
>>
>>
2015/06/12 14:10 "ertetlen barmok" :
>
> as root I tried on OpenBSD 5.7:
>
> # cpan Padre
> ... after many unneeded messages (I don't know why aren't they only shown
in "verbose mode")
>
> MDOOTSON/Alien-wxWidgets-0.67.tar.gz
> ./Build install -- OK
> PLAVEN/Padre-1.00.tar.gz
> Has alr
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 11:16 PM, Alexey Suslikov
wrote:
> Joel Rees gmail.com> writes:
>
>> Care to point me in a general direction in the source tree? ports or
>> src, for instance?
>
> Well, I was hacking around src/sys/dev/pci/if_ral_pci.c and
> friends.
>
&
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 8:35 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 8:19 PM, Alexey Suslikov
> wrote:
>> Joel Rees gmail.com> writes:
>>
>>>
>>> When I touch the trackpad while running xfce4, the console and the
>>> dmesg fill up with
Okay, I took the bait.
On Sat, Jun 6, 2015 at 6:29 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> I'm not sure what your question is, or even if you have one.
>
> On Fri, Jun 5, 2015 at 6:58 PM, ertetlen barmok
> wrote:
>> Hello!
>>
>> http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-c
line with "\ " as the last
two characters before the newline as a continued line?
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Look first in your own heart,
and ask yourself if you are not your own worst enemy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well.
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 7:51 PM, Alexey Suslikov
wrote:
> Joel Rees gmail.com> writes:
>
>>
>> From my dmesg:
>>
>> "Ralink RT3290" rev 0x00 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 not configured
>> "Ralink Bluetooth" rev 0x00 at pci2 dev 0 function 1
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 8:19 PM, Alexey Suslikov
wrote:
> Joel Rees gmail.com> writes:
>
>>
>> When I touch the trackpad while running xfce4, the console and the
>> dmesg fill up with
>>
>> pms0: not in sync yet, discard input (state n)
>
> It is
>From my dmesg:
"Ralink RT3290" rev 0x00 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 not configured
"Ralink Bluetooth" rev 0x00 at pci2 dev 0 function 1 not configured
(I have no interest in bluetooth, but, ...)
Full dmesg below
--
Joel Rees
OpenBSD 5.7-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Thu M
--
But I have no idea what variables to monkey with. Well, I can
completely turn the touchpad off with
synclient TouchPadOff=1
;-)
Any suggestions appreciated.
--
Joel Rees
OpenBSD 5.7-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Thu May 28 06:12:04 JST 2015
r...@phool.my.domain:/usr/src/sys/arc
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 10:15 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Checked in openbsd 5.6.
>
> 2015/05/31 23:38 "Joel Rees" :
>>
>> I have a home directory buried one deep in a directory owned by a
>> non-login user:
>>
>> /home
>> /home/bubble
>>
Checked in openbsd 5.6.
2015/05/31 23:38 "Joel Rees" :
>
> I have a home directory buried one deep in a directory owned by a
> non-login user:
>
> /home
> /home/bubble
> /home/bubble/userA
>
> where /home/bubble is owned by user/group bubble, with read and s
(zone temperature)
hw.sensors.acpiac0.indicator0=On (power supply)
hw.sensors.acpibat0.volt0=10.80 VDC (voltage)
hw.sensors.acpibat0.volt1=12.41 VDC (current voltage)
hw.sensors.acpibat0.current0=0.00 A (rate)
hw.sensors.acpibat0.amphour0=2.26 Ah (last full capacity)
hw.sensors.acpibat0.amphour
I built the userland with a GENERIC kernel. Then I looked at the dmesg and
realized I had wanted the GENERIC.MP kernel.
I'm going to re-build userland anyway, but how different is the resulting
userland?
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a stre
gh 16 and low sixteen randomized and the middle
32 backwards sequential, just to really throw the unwary attacker off
the trail? ;-/
--
Joel Rees
Be careful when you look at conspiracy.
Look first in your own heart,
and ask yourself if you are not your own worst enemy.
Arm yourself with knowledge of yourself, as well.
fingerprints. Is there a way?
l sent an inquiry to professor Suzuki about the fingerprints, but have
received no response yet
--
Joel Rees
2015/05/20 17:28 "David Coppa" :
>
> On Wed, May 20, 2015 at 9:00 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
> > besides take it back to the store, I mean.
> >
> > I have it booted on a USB stick. The internal drive appears to be
> > unpartitioned when I do a disklabel -- o
1 configuration 1 interface 0 "I-O DATA DEVICE, INC.
Optical Storage Device" rev 2.00/1.18 addr 2
umass1: using ATAPI over Bulk-Only
scsibus3 at umass1: 2 targets, initiator 0
cd0 at scsibus3 targ 1 lun 0: ATAPI 5/cdrom
removable serial.04bb022601B049B5
uvideo0 at uhub1 port 4 configu
disklabel by hand and copying the file system over by hand?
(I have opened up an empty "simple" partition on the disk already.)
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
All is a stream of text
flowing from the past into the future.
erk. I should keep my hands away from the keyboard when I have a head cold.
On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 8:16 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> FWIW,
>
> [...]
>
> in Japan and (IIRC) the US, there is wire transfer, which is more or
> less as Jason describes, and electronic transfer,
ransfer, which is much more
reasonably priced, particularly if you keep more than JPY 300,000 or
so (USD 3000 or so) in the bank.
> --
> Those who do not understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.
>
(One of these days, I want to be so condemned, as long as someone is
paying me
;
> $ echo /usr/X11R6/bin/*wm*
> /usr/X11R6/bin/cwm /usr/X11R6/bin/fvwm /usr/X11R6/bin/twm
>
> --patrick
> [...]
Switch back to the virtual console you ran startx from after you try the
menu items and read the messages waiting there for you.
(Of course, I was confused until yesterday, too
ou encounter too many build issues you're not able to
> deal with, you should give some trust to the people who know what they're
> doing, and just use the stable packages from mtier (which, of course,
> managed to build that firefox esr version afaict)
>
> Landry
>
>
On Mon, Apr 6, 2015 at 9:04 PM, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Mon, 6 Apr 2015 15:19:57 +0900
> Joel Rees wrote:
>
>> I'm using XFCE4 okay. It's a bit heavy, but I can use it, with patience.
>>
>> (I need to check my X11 configuration.)
>>
>> But fvwm,
iguration.)
But fvwm, the "default" window manager, is no lighter than XFCE4.
I just looked for window managers with
# cd /usr/ports
#make search key="window manager"
and got a lot of responses. I can't recommend any yet for Japanese. I
need to try some of them first. :-)
(
On Apr 4, 2015 7:26 PM, "Joel Rees" wrote:
>
> After about six hours
More like eight hours.
Just finished a re-compile without the room fan and got to the same
error. (No overheating, either, with one less drive.)
> with a room fan aimed at the computer to keep it from over
ves on the ITExpress on a single channel, master/slave.
I've unplugged the western digital drive, and the system is much more
stable. I haven't tried starting a new build of firefox that way yet.
Should I post a dmesg without the WDC drive?
On Sat, Apr 4, 2015 at 7:26 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
>
On Sat, Apr 4, 2015 at 12:54 PM, dan mclaughlin wrote:
> On Sat, 4 Apr 2015 09:08:35 +0900 Joel Rees wrote:
>> On Apr 4, 2015 8:33 AM, "Oriol Demaria" wrote:
>> >
>> > My problem got worse. So I tried finally to install the 2nd of April
>> snapsh
be
responsible about this kind of thing as a weak point to attack. And destroy.
Yeah, it's sort of inconvenient that openbsd doesn't support firewire. Sort
of, but, ... .
Anybody interested in a project to start re-flashing BIOSses with openbsd?
:-/
Joel Rees
Computer memory is jus
this attack? I mean not tool themself,
> I mean vector of attack.
Are you talking about the "physical possession" vector or the software
attack surface made obvious by certain virtualization/emulation projects?
Joel Rees
Computer memory is just fancy paper,
CPUs just fancy pens.
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