On Tue, 2 Jul 2019 10:07:59 +0300
Mihai Popescu wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I keep finding articles about some government bans against some
> hardware manufacturers related to some backdoor for espionage. I know
> this is an old talk. Most China manufacturers are under the search:
> Huawei, ZTE, Lenovo,
I am not sure when this changed since I don't reboot the box often but
halt -p no longer powers off this box. It used to work, now it doesn't.
Any idea what the problem could be?
Thanks,
/jl
On Tue, 7 May 2019 19:02:57 +
Kent Watsen wrote:
> Probably not what the OP is looking for, but `tmux` is my current
> "window manager" of choice ;)
Along those lines I find i3 is the perfect wm companion to tmux :)
/jl
On Tue, 7 May 2019 08:47:18 +0200
Denis Fondras wrote:
> > user-friendly and easy-to-use
> >
>
> Sounds like the exact description of current OpenBSD...
+100
This is exactly why I like and use it.
On Mon, 15 Apr 2019 09:37:05 +0300
li...@wrant.com wrote:
> Thu, 11 Apr 2019 07:50:36 +0000 John Long
> > [...]
> > but they can be slow. They also have a card based on the Silicon
> > Image SiI3114 chipset. I didn't find much info on this one except
> > for Windo
On Sun, 14 Apr 2019 15:35:22 -0400
gwes wrote:
> >> I'll second the LSI Logic/Avago/Broadcom? SAS/SATA controllers.
> >> They run as many disks as I want at full speed. As previously
> >> mentioned they can be quite inexpensive if you buy one relabelled
> >> as (for instance) an IBM card.
> >>
>
On Sun, 14 Apr 2019 14:53:34 -0400
gwes wrote:
> >>
> >>>>> On 2019-04-11, John Long wrote:
> >>>>>> I have a Dell server that was advertised to support 4x3.5 +
> >>>>>> 2x2.5 drives but when I popped it open I found there
On Sun, 14 Apr 2019 11:13:55 - (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2019-04-13, John Long wrote:
> > On Sat, 13 Apr 2019 08:05:29 - (UTC)
> > Stuart Henderson wrote:
> >
> >> On 2019-04-11, John Long wrote:
> >> > I have a Dell server th
On Sat, 13 Apr 2019 08:05:29 - (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2019-04-11, John Long wrote:
> > I have a Dell server that was advertised to support 4x3.5 + 2x2.5
> > drives but when I popped it open I found there are only 4 SATA
> > ports on the motherboard total
Thank you Paul and Johann!
/jl
Thank you!
/jl
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 10:22:14 +0200
Marco Nuessgen wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 07:50:36AM +0000, John Long wrote:
> [...]
> > Can anybody recommend some good 2 or 4 port SATA (internal)
> > expansion cards or a SAS HBA that works well with OpenBSD?
>
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 07:00:15 +0200
Robert wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 07:50:36 +
> John Long wrote:
> > Speaking with Dell, they are recommending their part number PEXSAT32
> > which is a rebadged StarTech product based on the Marvell 88SE9123
> > chipset. From
Hi,
I have a Dell server that was advertised to support 4x3.5 + 2x2.5
drives but when I popped it open I found there are only 4 SATA ports on
the motherboard total. So of the 6 claimed drives, I can actually
only install 3 drives because the stock DVD drive consumes a mobo port.
Speaking with Del
Hi,
I have a server running OpenBSD. It has slots for 4 drives. I have the
OS and web content on one drive and media files on another drive. I
have been running rsync to backup these drives to identically-sized
drives in the same box. Basically 2 drives are used to run the services
(dlna, Samba, h
Hello Nick,
Thanks for your reply. I figured everyone was busy so I played around
trying a few things. I was able to copy /var to a new directory,
unmount -f /var and rename the new directory to /var. So far so good...
Changed my fstab to not mount the filesystems I wanted to delete, and
rebooted
I'm running release instead of stable like I did years ago. Syspatch is
a better solution for me than building from source. I want to change my
disk layout because when I set up this box I was thinking of building
from source like the old days. I want to eliminate some filesystems and
move /var and
On Mon, 2018-11-05 at 11:55 +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2018-11-04, John Long wrote:
> > On Sun, 2018-11-04 at 10:46 +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> > > On Sun, Nov 04, 2018 at 03:57:30AM +0100, Klemens Nanni wrote:
> > > > On Sun, Nov 04, 2018 at 12:
On Sun, 2018-11-04 at 03:57 +0100, Klemens Nanni wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 04, 2018 at 12:41:17AM +0000, John Long wrote:
> > If I use rcctl set to set minidlna's flags to -R it seems it will
> > only
> > allow me to do it when minidlna is enabled. I would like the flags
>
On Sun, 2018-11-04 at 10:46 +0100, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 04, 2018 at 03:57:30AM +0100, Klemens Nanni wrote:
> > On Sun, Nov 04, 2018 at 12:41:17AM +0000, John Long wrote:
> > > If I use rcctl set to set minidlna's flags to -R it seems it will
> > > o
Hi,
I am not understanding how to get rcctl to use the flags in
/etc/rc.conf.local for minidlna
rcctl get minidlna shows
minidlna_flags=NO
even though rc.conf.local has
minidlna_flags=-R
If I use rcctl set to set minidlna's flags to -R it seems it will only
allow me to do it when minidlna is
On Sat, 2018-08-11 at 21:55 -0700, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> I found a viable Plex alternative that runs perfectly on OpenBSD
> called
> 'Serviio'. It does DLNA with on the fly media transcoding / remuxing
> and
> also has an HTML5 media player.
Thanks for the info. I have been us
Hello Peter,
On Wed, 2018-07-18 at 12:40 +, Steiner Peter wrote:
> Hello folks,
>
> we are currently looking for new server hardware compatible with
> OpenBSD 6.3 amd64.
> I couldn't find a compatibility list for current systems.
>
> We'd like to use Skylake based XEONs (e.g. Xeon Silver 410
Hi Marcus,
On Wed, 2018-07-18 at 18:19 +0200, Marcus MERIGHI wrote:
> codeb...@inbox.lv (John Long), 2018.07.18 (Wed) 13:51 (CEST):
> > I have minidlna working fine on OpenBSD. However this doens't help
> > with
> > Roon media software since they don
On Wed, 2018-07-18 at 16:57 +0100, Tom Smyth wrote:
> Hi John,
>
> I would just follow the SAMBA documentation in setting up the share,
> /shared folders,
>
> then on the windows clients you may have to tweak the security
> settings
> in the local security policy manager, (but windows out of
@tom @solene
Thanks guys. I'll look into Samba. I hope it won't turn out to be a
typical Windows nightmare.
Are there any reliable setup guides on the net?
I will basically want to just make a couple of directory trees
available read-only.
Thanks,
/jl
Hi,
I have minidlna working fine on OpenBSD. However this doens't help with
Roon media software since they don't have anything for OpenBSD,
unsurprisingly. Roon doesn't want to support dlna.
I have my Windows foobar2000 appliance roped-off from my LAN because I
don't trust Windows boxes on my net
On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 08:10 -0700, Scott Vanderbilt wrote:
> On 7/2/2018 8:03 AM, John Long wrote:
> > On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 17:18 +0300, IL Ka wrote:
> > > > > What's the appropriate way to let the browser
> > > > > know it should open it in Acrobat
&
On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 08:11 -0700, Scott Vanderbilt wrote:
> On 7/2/2018 8:05 AM, John Long wrote:
> > What userid does httpd run under?
> >
> > I have some kind of permission problem, httpd can't serve some of
> > the
> > content.
>
> ps aux|grep httpd
Thanks again.
/jl
What userid does httpd run under?
I have some kind of permission problem, httpd can't serve some of the
content.
Thank you.
/jl
On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 17:18 +0300, IL Ka wrote:
> >>What's the appropriate way to let the browser
> >> know it should open it in Acrobat
> See "Content-Disposition" header.
> https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Content-Dis
> position
>
> It tells client to download document o
On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 06:27 -0500, ed...@pettijohn-web.com wrote:
> chroot "/var/content"
> server "example.com" {
> listen on * port 80
> listen on :: port 80
> root "/webserver/htdocs"
> directory auto index
> }
Thanks, this works. Actually I pushed things down one level and used
chroot "/var/
On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 06:38 -0500, ed...@pettijohn-web.com wrote:
> On Jul 2, 2018 6:30 AM, John Long wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 06:27 -0500, ed...@pettijohn-web.com wrote:
> > > On Jul 2, 2018 5:58 AM, John Long wrote:
> > > >
> > > &g
On Mon, 2018-07-02 at 06:27 -0500, ed...@pettijohn-web.com wrote:
> On Jul 2, 2018 5:58 AM, John Long wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > I read the man pages for httpd and httpd.conf but I remain
> > clueless.
> >
> > I would like to serve static content (d
Hi,
I read the man pages for httpd and httpd.conf but I remain clueless.
I would like to serve static content (directory listings and contents).
Must I use a chroot for httpd? If so, how do I set it up?
I have my content in /var/content/webserver/.. I would like httpd to
automatically index the
OpenBSD 6.3 (GENERIC.MP) #107: Sat Mar 24 14:21:59 MDT 2018
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 8389017600 (8000MB)
avail mem = 8127692800 (7751MB)
mpath0 at root
scsibus0 at mpath0: 256 targets
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 3.0 @ 0x
On Thu, 2018-06-28 at 09:32 +0300, Manolis Tzanidakis wrote:
> On Wed (27/06/18), Vijay Sankar wrote:
> >
> > Quoting John Long :
> > > I found a lot of PRO/1000 adapters listed in the em driver man
> > > page but
> > > CT version is not included.
&g
I found a lot of PRO/1000 adapters listed in the em driver man page but
CT version is not included.
Does anybody know?
Thanks
/jl
> > Seems to me, after trying to install OpenBSD on a new box, a lot of
> > the helpful in the FAQ is totally AWOL now and I find it hard to
> > get all the info together.
>
> Hi John,
>
> Person came from somewhere and cut out a lot of the useful hardware
> info.
> At least now it's maintainable
Thanks @bryanharris and @bruno
Thanks guys, I will check out the links.
/jl
On Mon, 2018-06-25 at 10:15 -0500, Vijay Sankar wrote:
> Here is my df -h output -- Just as an FYI I was testing some
> workarounds for the samba virusfilter issue and then made some
> mistakes that screwed up KDE etc. So decided to build it from
> scratch
> and have about 5000 packages built
On Mon, 2018-06-25 at 09:25 -0500, Vijay Sankar wrote:
> Quoting John Long :
>
> > Been a while and don't have my other OpenBSD boxes accessible.
> >
> > What are the recommended partitions and appropriate sizes for
> > people
> > who want to track stabl
totally AWOL now and I find it hard to get all
the info together.
/jl
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 25, 2018 at 3:17 PM, John Long wrote:
> > Been a while and don't have my other OpenBSD boxes accessible.
> >
> > What are the recommended partitions and appropri
Been a while and don't have my other OpenBSD boxes accessible.
What are the recommended partitions and appropriate sizes for people
who want to track stable and possibly build the whole ports tree?
Thanks,
/jl
There are two variants of the Fujitsu PRIMERGY TX1310 M3 available here
for about the same price I was paying for the Lenovo m710q. Does
anybody have any comments about these Fujitsu boxes running OpenBSD?
Also, I remember there was a section in the FAQ about setting up an ftp
server on OpenBSD. I
On Wed, 2018-06-06 at 12:10 +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2018-06-05, John Long wrote:
> > I have a Lenovo m710q foobar2000 appliance under Windows 10. I like
> > the
> > box, it's about 1 1/2 as wide as a Lemote Fuloong Mini and about as
> > deep and tall,
I have a Lenovo m710q foobar2000 appliance under Windows 10. I like the
box, it's about 1 1/2 as wide as a Lemote Fuloong Mini and about as
deep and tall, but has slots for two, 2.5 inch drives. I thought about
buying another one to use as a minidlna host under OpenBSD.
Does anybody on the list ha
On Thu, 2018-05-10 at 18:54 -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > Dare I ask what lead to OpenBSD not being affected.
> >
> > Sorry if it is a dumb question but since this hit FreeBSD as well I
> > am
> > wondering
> > what OpenBSD did differently.
> >
> > Was this caught in an audit?
> >
> > I am jus
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 12:05:42PM -0400, Brian B wrote:
> Run an ??ber cheap VM (or a pair for HA) in AWS or Azure and use their
> underlying cloud storage, albeit at a cost premium.
>
> That way you can setup any number of protocols to access the storage.
Thanks, that's actually a _really_ goo
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 02:31:16PM +, Sam Hays wrote:
> 2016-07-20 11:27 GMT+02:00 John Long :
> > Can anybody recommend a good cloud storage provider that has access
> > via sftp or rsync tunneled through ssh? Everything I have found seems
> > targeted at Windows, Linux
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 04:01:21PM +0200, matteo filippetto wrote:
> 2016-07-20 11:27 GMT+02:00 John Long :
> > Can anybody recommend a good cloud storage provider that has access via sftp
> > or rsync tunneled through ssh? Everything I have found seems targeted at
> > Windo
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 01:53:23PM +0200, Morten Liebach wrote:
> Check rsync.net.
That's the type of thing I'm looking for but their prices are totally out of
line with anything I've seen. I can pay 100 bucks a year for 1T of
storage. I can't pay 1,100 bucks a year for 300G of storage.
I'm hopin
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 01:53:20PM +0200, Sol??ne wrote:
> Le 2016-07-20 11:27, John Long a ??crit??:
> >Can anybody recommend a good cloud storage provider that has
> >access via sftp
> >or rsync tunneled through ssh? Everything I have found seems
> >targeted at
&g
Can anybody recommend a good cloud storage provider that has access via sftp
or rsync tunneled through ssh? Everything I have found seems targeted at
Windows, Linux, phones etc. with no platform-agnostic interface.
Thanks.
/jl
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On Mon, Apr 04, 2016 at 04:40:20PM -0600, Nick Bender wrote:
> I wonder if any FORTRAN programmers out there remember the trick of putting
> line numbers after column 72 so the card sort could sort your program back
> into order when you dropped your card deck?
This was not limited to FORTRAN. We
On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 10:50:41AM +0100, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 05:43:06AM +0000, John Long wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 09:48:44PM -0500, Nick Holland wrote:
> > > On 02/23/16 14:42, John Long wrote:
> > > > Is there any ru
On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 09:48:44PM -0500, Nick Holland wrote:
> On 02/23/16 14:42, John Long wrote:
> > Is there any rule of thumb as to how full an ffs filesystem can be without
> > impacting performance or integrity issues?
>
> The people who wrote the code set the limit a
Is there any rule of thumb as to how full an ffs filesystem can be without
impacting performance or integrity issues?
Thanks,
/jl
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Dmitry,
On Thu, Feb 11, 2016 at 10:06:34AM +0500, dmitry.sensei wrote:
> Can you give generic guide to setting up a network in Qemu (OpenBSD)?
> I have one physical re0 interface, which looks to the Internet.
#!/bin/ksh
ifconfig tun0 create
ifconfig tun0 link0
ifconfig tun0 up
ifconfig bridge0 c
Miod, are you ok? Condolences and hoping for the best for you guys.
/jl
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On Sun, Jul 19, 2015 at 09:09:56PM +0200, ludovic coues wrote:
> 2015-07-19 17:03 GMT+02:00 John Long :
> >
> > OpenBSD mips64el runs oustandingly well on the Lemote boxes. See here:
> > http://www.openbsd.org/loongson.html
> >
> > I don't think anybody will
On Sun, Jul 19, 2015 at 05:59:17PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-07-19, John Long wrote:
>
> > OpenBSD mips64el runs oustandingly well on the Lemote boxes. See here:
> > http://www.openbsd.org/loongson.html
>
> Given that only about 2/3 of the ports tree
On Sun, Jul 19, 2015 at 01:51:34PM -0400, Raul Miller wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 19, 2015 at 11:03 AM, John Long wrote:
> > Sun Fire servers are cheap to buy but not to run. A V210 is a 1U box and
> > with dual 1.35 CPUs it is fast enough for desktop use. It's not something
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 09:53:13AM +0100, Graham Stephens wrote:
> Another thing to bear in mind is the pitch of the noise; I find that
> loudish but low-frequency sound (like from 4-inch+ fans) isn't that
> uncomfortable, but the whine from 1U 1 inch fans get unbearable
> REALLY quickly.
I agree
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 11:15:14AM -0500, BSD wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 21:09:30 +0300
> Mihai Popescu wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > I never used a SPARC machine but I recall there are some people on the
> > list doing this.
> >
> > What are the minimum requirements for a "decent" SPARC machin
On Wed, Jun 03, 2015 at 10:31:26AM +1000, Rod Whitworth wrote:
> Microsoft To Support SSH In Windows and Contribute To OpenSSH
>
> Seen on /. this morning (Australia EST)
>
> I hope the contributations are generous..
I hope the contributions are money rather than code...
/jl
On Sun, May 24, 2015 at 12:51:39PM +0530, Jay Patel wrote:
> Blackberry for security? or something else.
BlackBerry has notably fewer exploits than other platforms, especially
Android-anything. I haven't bought a new one recently but the older ones
were actually good phones as in they don't drop c
On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 04:00:30PM -0400, Josh Grosse wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 07:19:25PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> > By looking with "cvs blame sshd_config.5 | grep PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes"
> > and examine the cvs log, you can see that it was added on 2015/01/13.
>
> Blame? Blame?
On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 08:27:03PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-03-12, John Long wrote:
>
> >> By setting PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes accordingly in sshd_config.
> >
> > Thanks, I looked and looked and could not find it in the man page. It
> > appear
On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 07:19:25PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2015-03-12, John Long wrote:
> > On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 04:20:47PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> >> On 2015-03-12, John Long wrote:
> >>
> >> >> You can simply
On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 04:20:47PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-03-12, John Long wrote:
>
> >> You can simply configure HostKey in /etc/ssh/sshd_config.
> >
> > With that done a client can still do pubkey auth with a DSA key. (How) can I
> > stop
On Wed, Mar 11, 2015 at 11:13:20PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-03-10, John Long wrote:
> > But /etc/rc appears to generate all missing key types every
> > startup.
>
> Only if you delete them!
Yes, that's what I said.
> You can simply configure Ho
On Wed, Mar 11, 2015 at 05:45:48PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2015-03-11, John Long wrote:
>
> > I just installed 5.6 on a Sun V210. The console doesn't seem to know how big
> > the terminal emulator screen is. Whether I use cu or minicom too many lines
>
On Wed, Mar 11, 2015 at 10:12:46AM -0600, Abel Abraham Camarillo Ojeda wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 11, 2015 at 10:05 AM, John Long wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I just installed 5.6 on a Sun V210. The console doesn't seem to know how big
> > the terminal emulator screen is. Whet
Hi,
I just installed 5.6 on a Sun V210. The console doesn't seem to know how big
the terminal emulator screen is. Whether I use cu or minicom too many lines
are displayed. For example top loses all the lines until about the 4th task
line. All the CPU, mem stuff etc. rolls off. vi is also unusable
Hi,
What's the reason for generating all the various SSH key types every
startup? Given the source of all the new elliptical crypto I don't want to
use it so I changed the cipher list in sshd_config. But /etc/rc appears to
generate all missing key types every startup.
What problems do I cause by
On Mon, Jan 26, 2015 at 02:28:35PM +0100, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> Unscrew the four screws on the side VGA connector side. Slide the
> logic board out. Unscrew the three black screws that hold the disk
> bracket. The screws are unmarked but they are near R164, C174 and U32.
> You can then slide the d
One of my little friends has a dead drive. Unfortunately it is shoehorned in
there pretty good. Has anybody on the list replaced the disk drive on one of
these and if so would you explain how you did it?
Is anybody using a regular USB stick as a primary disk drive for OpenBSD and
if so how well do
On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 12:26:35PM -0600, Brent Cook wrote:
> Note that a new drift file is not written immediately on start, only after
> the proper frequency adjustment has been determined. That might take a long
> time depending on the stability of your systems's clock (e.g. VMs) and how
> q
On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 12:26:35PM -0600, Brent Cook wrote:
>
> > On Jan 20, 2015, at 9:59 AM, John Long wrote:
> >
> >> LOCALSTATEDIR "/db/ntpd.drift"
> >
> > Thanks, this helps. It was there, just not where I wanted since I install
> > addo
Hi,
On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 08:21:32AM -0600, Brent Cook wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 5:46 AM, John Long wrote:
> > Does portable NTPD use a drift file? I didn't see one in the previous
> > version and a new install of 5.7p1 doesn't seem to have one either. I didn
Does portable NTPD use a drift file? I didn't see one in the previous
version and a new install of 5.7p1 doesn't seem to have one either. I didn't
see any discussion of a drift file in the manpage for ntpd nor for ntpd.conf
in the portable version, though it is mentioned in the man pages for the
O
On Tue, Dec 16, 2014 at 03:10:00PM +, openda...@hushmail.com wrote:
Plonk.
On Thu, Dec 04, 2014 at 10:43:29AM +0100, Peter Hessler wrote:
> On 2014 Dec 04 (Thu) at 07:11:48 + (+), John Long wrote:
> :How much time is necessary to build packages during and for a release? How
> :much time for snapshots? And how often does this need to be done? I'm tr
I had forgotten OpenBSD has SPARC and SPARC64 ports. I don't have any SPARC
boxes, sorry for missing the point here.
If SPARC64 builds become an issue I hope I can help in some way.
/jl
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On Wed, Dec 03, 2014 at 04:36:43PM +, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> On 2014-12-02, Riccardo Mottola wrote:
>
> > I was pkg_add'ing some essential packages on a freshly installed SPARC
> > machine. I noticed that several packages are missing. I thought it was
> > the mirror, but they are mis
On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 03:08:31AM +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> It seems this needs a new driver, here is a quick test that modifies
> an existing one that might work:
snip
Your patch works great. Kermit is talking to the device.
Thank you so much for the help!
/jl
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On Mon, Mar 24, 2014 at 01:23:32PM -0500, Adam Thompson wrote:
> See ucom(4) man page.
> Short answer: /dev/ttyU0
> (ucom? should match up with /dev/ttyU?)
> -Adam
Thank you!
/jl
Jonathan, this looks promising.
David Coppa had said
> > > It should expose a ucom*, e.g.:
> > >
> > > ucom0 at uftdi0 portno 1
> >
The dmesg now shows:
moscom0 at uhub1 port 3 "HP Company HPx9G+ Device" rev 1.10/1.00 addr 2
ucom0 at moscom0 portno 0
How do I relate this to a filename?
Th
On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 02:50:17PM +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 04:33:01PM +0000, John Long wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 03:08:31AM +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> >
> > Thanks. How do I build this?
>
> You need to build and install a new k
On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 04:45:12PM +, Fred wrote:
> On 03/20/14 16:33, John Long wrote:
> >On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 03:08:31AM +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> >
> >Thanks. How do I build this?
> >
> >/jl
> >
> http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html
>
On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 03:08:31AM +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote:
Thanks. How do I build this?
/jl
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David- sorry, I meant to reply to the list, here it is again for public
consumption with the topic threading borked, probably.
On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 04:14:13PM +0100, David Coppa wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 2:31 PM, John Long wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am trying to us
Hi,
I am trying to use a USB device with a Loongson 5.3 stable box.
The line from dmesg for the device is
ugen0 at uhub1 port 3 "HP Company HPx9G+ Device" rev 1.10/1.00 addr 2
and the usbdevs -vd output is
Controller /dev/usb0:
addr 1: high speed, self powered, config 1, EHCI root hub(0x),
Replying to myself:
I found the .kermrc file below in a websearch and modified it to use
/dev/tty00
;
; kermit settings
;
set modem type direct
set port /dev/tty00
set speed 9600
set carrier-watch off
set flow none
set parity none
set block 3
set protocol kermit
; End
Although it connected afte
This is my first try with Kermit and with this hardware on the other end so
I don't know where the problem is.
Kermit does not want to talk to my device either by
kermit -l /dev/cua00 # /dev/cua00 works on this port for cu
# but not for Kermit
kermit -l /dev/tty00
On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 04:37:25PM +0100, za...@gmx.com wrote:
> Are there any significant drawbacks to my adoption of OpenBSD (such
> as OpenBSD being too technical and too difficult, as compared, say,
> to Linux distros)?
One of the things that makes code good and secure is simplicity. That foc
On Wed, Oct 09, 2013 at 12:41:07PM +0100, sbienddr...@googlemail.com wrote:
> Am I being monitored for receiving these emails?
No, you're being monitored for using google, stupid.
Did anybody consider the possibility Theo didn't start this thread? The
email headers looked ok at a quick glance but
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 06:21:56PM -0400, Brad Smith wrote:
> On 10/09/13 6:10 PM, Gregor Best wrote:
> >On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 05:40:19PM -0400, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> >>[...]
> >>Does anyone have a C++ compiler recommendation for OpenBSD?
> >>[...]
> >
> >What about GCC? Clang++'s C++11 support
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 10:49:46AM +0200, Martin Schr?der wrote:
> 2013/9/11 Marc Espie :
> > Second, low hanging fruit.
> >
> > There's so much crappy software and hardware out there that you have to be
> > REALLY paranoid to think the NSA would target us. I mean, come on, there
>
> You think ope
On Thu, Jul 04, 2013 at 11:56:50PM -0400, Thomas Jennings wrote:
[drug / alcohol withdrawal-induced rant elided]
I don't know where you get the idea OpenBSD is involved. I heard a few
interviews including the one here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISXYITh09TA
and she clearly said she has an Appl
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