Dear Peter and all,
I could find a fix/hack for the BIOS boot problem as described.
I did not manage to file a bug report for it yet though.
After successfully installing I now have more problems such as
- zzz (suspend) and (hibernate) not working (see bug report [1])
- function keys for screen
Hi again.
Just a quick update.
After adding some "bogus" partitions 0 to 2 in front of openbsd paritition 3
the BIOS no longer hangs with disklabel data. I can now install, boot and run
OpenBSD from SSD on SATA.
$ doas fdisk sd0
Disk: sd0 geometry: 31130/255/63 [500118192 Sectors]
Hello again.
Thank you Peter for your feedback and describing the steps that
seem to have solved your problems so long time ago.
To be hontest, at this point in time I feel a bit reluctant to test
with two disks attached mSATA and SATA, I would rather focus
just on one disk attached via SATA.
F
> 22. mar. 2019 kl. 07:16 skrev Peter Nicolai Mathias Hansteen
> :
>> Dear Peter, can you remember more details how you got OpenBSD to work on that
>> Clevo W840-SU by any chance? Did you use SSD or HDD for the booting disk?
>
> I considered it fairly obvious that I wanted the fastest one (the
> 21. mar. 2019 kl. 22:55 skrev fink...@dismail.de:
>
> Dear Peter and all.
>
> Unfortunately I celebrated to early it seems. :-/
>
> In my last post I described a hack in which I let the OpenBSD partition
> start at "sector 0" in order to avoid BIOS hangup.
>
> When I now tried this way of se
Dear Peter and all.
Unfortunately I celebrated to early it seems. :-/
In my last post I described a hack in which I let the OpenBSD partition
start at "sector 0" in order to avoid BIOS hangup.
When I now tried this way of setup with a SSD disk instead of HDD,
after a succesful install, OpenBSD b
Dear Peter and all,
> I believe both should be doable using openbsd's fdisk (available I think from
> the bsd.rd
> installer image), try escaping to the shell from the installer, possibly
> fdisk -e and
> keep the man page handy. I *think* what I did back then was set the all parts
> to size
>
On Wed, Mar 20, 2019 at 08:17:51AM +, fink...@dismail.de wrote:
> In your blog post [1] you describe installing OpenBSD on your then (2017) new
> silver colored laptop, a (Multicom) Clevo U831 with dmesg [2].
>
> In the post you also mention your previous (2014) black colored laptop, a
> Cle
Dear Peter,
thank you for your reply.
> Odd. I vaguely remember having to set the BIOS to look at the SSD (which
> OpenBSD sees as sd1) but
> IIRC I only booted the machine from a USB drive once, for the initial install.
>
> The only obvious points I see are that you’re pointing to the wrong dm
> 19. mar. 2019 kl. 20:59 skrev fink...@dismail.de:
>
> I'm trying to run OpenBSD on a Clevo W840SU laptop. After a successful install
> and starting the machine the BIOS hangs. That is, when the booting drive is
> connected via SATA/mSATA. When connected via USB, it works just fine.
Odd. I vagu
> Is your BIOS set to RAID for the HDD? If so try setting it to AHCI in the
> BIOS.
Nope, it is set to AHCI as the documentation attached to my original post
describes.
On March 19, 2019 7:59:49 PM UTC, fink...@dismail.de wrote:
>Dear Community.
>
>
>I'm trying to run OpenBSD
Dear Community.
I'm trying to run OpenBSD on a
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