Hello,
we have to retire some older "HP ProLiant DL360 Gen9" and want to buy the
current model "HPE ProLiant DL360 Gen10"
I'm unsure if the newer "HPE Smart Array E208i-p" is supported by the ciss
driver
(the old "HPE Smart Array H240ar" in our DL360 Gen9 worked for years like a
charm)
btw.
Checked my usb system on radeon hd 5700 machine and it works fine with 1920
x 1080. So i think i will swap video cards, cuz that computer uses windows
anyway.
2015-02-25 12:54 GMT+03:00 Joseph Oficre :
> Dem, fixed it, and x server started, but in 1024x768 mode. Trying to add
> 1920x1200 mode via
Dem, fixed it, and x server started, but in 1024x768 mode. Trying to add
1920x1200 mode via gtf and xrandr, but no outputs found. Sreen-0, Sreen0,
sreen0, monitor0 etc...what is the name of this device, cuz current xrandr
show me "Screen 0".
Its hdmi, if this information will be helpfull,
Xorg.log
Joseph Oficre wrote:
> I got this with VESA driver enabled:
> [ 1011.000] (WW) checkDevMem: failed to open /dev/xf86 and /dev/mem
> (Operation not permitted)
> Check that you have set 'machdep.allowaperture=1'
> in /etc/sysctl.conf and reboot your machine
> refer t
I got this with VESA driver enabled:
[ 1011.000] (WW) checkDevMem: failed to open /dev/xf86 and /dev/mem
(Operation not permitted)
Check that you have set 'machdep.allowaperture=1'
in /etc/sysctl.conf and reboot your machine
refer to xf86(4) for details
[ 1011.000]
Joseph Oficre said:
> PS: i've made live USB, booted, but first FAST check didnt give me any
> results, just segfault on xorg -configure, need more time for it :c
You have to write xorg.conf yourself. IIRC a Monitor section and
modeline from gtf(1) would suffice.
--
Dmitrij D. Czarkoff
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 1:38 PM, Joseph Oficre wrote:
> BTW, is there someone with nvidia gtx 650 card and some kind of 1920x1200
> resolution? Just to know im not alone in this cruel world..
>
> PS: i've made live USB, booted, but first FAST check didnt give me any
> results, just segfault on xor
BTW, is there someone with nvidia gtx 650 card and some kind of 1920x1200
resolution? Just to know im not alone in this cruel world..
PS: i've made live USB, booted, but first FAST check didnt give me any
results, just segfault on xorg -configure, need more time for it :c
2015-02-22 16:34 GMT+03:
Yeah, i will try live USB to check it all, ty for response!
2015-02-22 12:57 GMT+03:00 Dmitrij D. Czarkoff :
> Joseph Oficre said:
> > Hello, my friends.
> > Can someone tell me, is this hardware will work with OpenBSD 5.6
> [...]
> > 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GK107 [G
Joseph Oficre said:
> Hello, my friends.
> Can someone tell me, is this hardware will work with OpenBSD 5.6
[...]
> 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GK107 [GeForce GTX
> 650] (rev a1)
AFAIK in vesa mode only. No hardware acceleration.
> 01:00.1 Audio device: NVIDIA Corporati
On Feb 22 12:23:29, seran...@gmail.com wrote:
> Interested of Nvidia videocard, I dont need some super 3d support, just
> 1920x1200 resolution.
> 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GK107 [GeForce GTX
> 650] (rev a1)
> 01:00.1 Audio device: NVIDIA Corporation GK107 HDMI Audio Cont
Hello, my friends.
Can someone tell me, is this hardware will work with OpenBSD 5.6
00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corporation Xeon E3-1200 v2/3rd Gen Core
processor DRAM Controller (rev 09)
00:01.0 PCI bridge: Intel Corporation Xeon E3-1200 v2/3rd Gen Core
processor PCI Express Root Port (rev 09)
00:1
On 2012/04/05 22:02, Kostas Zorbadelos wrote:
> Yes, clear. I think I will add R610 to the options. The only remaining
> question is PERC H200 support. It is not mentioned in mfi(4), so should I
> consider it unsupported?
this is an H200:
$ ssh mh3-pl7 dmesg|grep -e Dell -e mpii
bios0: vendor Del
On Thu, Apr 5, 2012 at 21:02, Kostas Zorbadelos wrote:
> The only remaining question is PERC H200 support.
mpii(4) should cover the Dell PERC H200.
Stuart Henderson writes:
Thsnks for the replies.
> I haven't come across any problems with bnx(4). Did you look at
> 2U boxes at all?
>
I am interested mainly in 1U boxes. Reliability is the most crucial
factor because the machines will be deployed in remote places,
geographically distributed.
> So your choice is between hardware which should already work in
> OpenBSD and hardware which (at least the nics) is known not to
> work yet but might work sometime in the future. Nobody here can
> make that decision for you :)
Last time such issues happened, the people involved made sure we
had
On 2012-04-04, Kostas Zorbadelos wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> we are about to engage a procurement procedure of servers. There is a
> high probability to purchase DELL hardware. I want OpenBSD to be
> supported on the hardware. I have 2 broad options
>
> - Go with PowerEdge R410
> - Go with PowerEdge
Dell has an ugly habit of changing components even within the same
model year of hardware. You can't predict how well supported something
is based on "PowerEdge R410" until you have your specific one in front
of you.
On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 1:14 PM, Kostas Zorbadelos wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> we are
Hello all,
we are about to engage a procurement procedure of servers. There is a
high probability to purchase DELL hardware. I want OpenBSD to be
supported on the hardware. I have 2 broad options
- Go with PowerEdge R410
- Go with PowerEdge R620 (latest generation of servers)
The first option h
On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 17:11:06 +0100
Pieter Verberne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> a few months ago I bought a Western Digital extern USB harddisk. It
> worked with OpenBSD for the first x minutes, but stoped working with
> an dmesg-error: Umass0 Phase Error, residue=0
I don't know if it has any rel
2007/11/27, Theo de Raadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Buy a bad device? Why not give a shot at fixing it. It's not hard to
> learn.
>
>
Anyone care to give some reference or links about where to begin
learning to write/fix drivers or what not?
--
Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachme
> a few months ago I bought a Western Digital extern USB harddisk. It
> worked with OpenBSD for the first x minutes, but stoped working with an
> dmesg-error: Umass0 Phase Error, residue=0
>
> reference to earlier post:
> http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2007-08/1215.html
>
> I thin
Hi all,
a few months ago I bought a Western Digital extern USB harddisk. It
worked with OpenBSD for the first x minutes, but stoped working with an
dmesg-error: Umass0 Phase Error, residue=0
reference to earlier post:
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2007-08/1215.html
I think this
On 2007/10/25 08:50, Rodrigo V. Raimundo wrote:
> could the virtualization environment be secure if all guest OSes run in
> userland? (User-Mode Linux, QEMU without acceleration, ...)
Some qemu bugs were specifically mentioned in the paper.
With all this discussion some questions went to me:
what's the hardware needed to do full and secure (para)?virtualization ?
is there some arch with this support ever created?
could the virtualization environment be secure if all guest OSes run in
userland? (User-Mode Linux, QEMU without accelerat
On Mar 30, 2007, at 2:19 AM, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, Mike Erdely wrote:
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, Tasmanian Devil wrote:
The i386 GENERIC.MP kernel runs fine on Intel Macs. You just
need to
enable ACPI with "config -ef bsd.mp" (or on the boot prompt).
Thi
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, Mike Erdely wrote:
> Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> > On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, Tasmanian Devil wrote:
> > > The i386 GENERIC.MP kernel runs fine on Intel Macs. You just need to
> > > enable ACPI with "config -ef bsd.mp" (or on the boot prompt).
> > This is not true. At least it has been r
Mike Erdely wrote:
[...]
> Tas is right. I have my MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo dual booting with OS X
> and OpenBSD (snap around 3/10). I _think_ my installation process was
> this (since I didn't do make release with -current):
> 1. Install 4.0 from the CD.
> 2. Copy an ACPI-enabled bsd.rd to a CDR
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, Tasmanian Devil wrote:
The i386 GENERIC.MP kernel runs fine on Intel Macs. You just need to
enable ACPI with "config -ef bsd.mp" (or on the boot prompt).
This is not true. At least it has been reported that the MacBook Pro
with Core Due 2 processor does
> > Is there anyone working on porting OpenBSD to Intel Apple hardware? Such as
> > the Macbook?
>
> The i386 GENERIC.MP kernel runs fine on Intel Macs. You just need to
> enable ACPI with "config -ef bsd.mp" (or on the boot prompt).
This is not true. At least it has been reported that the MacBoo
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, Tasmanian Devil wrote:
> > Is there anyone working on porting OpenBSD to Intel Apple hardware? Such as
> > the Macbook?
>
> The i386 GENERIC.MP kernel runs fine on Intel Macs. You just need to
> enable ACPI with "config -ef bsd.mp" (or on the boot prompt).
This is not true.
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007, David Given wrote:
> Is there anyone working on porting OpenBSD to Intel Apple hardware? Such as
> the Macbook?
>
> I can't imagine it would be particularly hard; there'd need to be a way of
> loading and running a kernel via EFI, and then tweaking the hardware
> detection.
Scan the freakin' email archives. There are several recent notes
about the laptops, nothing about the AppleTV yet that I've noticed.
I just searched a bit about this Apple TV: It might be necessary to
remove the harddisk to copy OpenBSD on it, but otherwise it could work
(as a server, not as a
Is there anyone working on porting OpenBSD to Intel Apple hardware? Such as
the Macbook?
The i386 GENERIC.MP kernel runs fine on Intel Macs. You just need to
enable ACPI with "config -ef bsd.mp" (or on the boot prompt).
I can't imagine it would be particularly hard; there'd need to be a way of
On 3/29/07, David Given <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is there anyone working on porting OpenBSD to Intel Apple hardware? Such as
the Macbook?
Scan the freakin' email archives. There are several recent notes
about the laptops, nothing about the AppleTV yet that I've noticed.
Greg
Is there anyone working on porting OpenBSD to Intel Apple hardware? Such as
the Macbook?
I can't imagine it would be particularly hard; there'd need to be a way of
loading and running a kernel via EFI, and then tweaking the hardware
detection.
The reason why I ask is that I've been eyeing the new
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