Sorry, my mistake in wording. I am indeed wanting to
follow -stable here. Replace all my uses of 'world'
below with 'build' and the same questions apply.
I was following http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#Bld
which appears to be a superset of the link you sent.
--
Ron McDowell
San Antonio T
Ron McDowell wrote:
I'm relatively new to OpenBSD but have been working with FreeBSD for 15+
years and AT&T/USL before that.
Welcome.
Rebuilt the kernel, reboot, build World, reboot.
make clean && make depend && make install is used for kernels, and make
build is used for userland. I do not
On 2010-03-02, Ron McDowell wrote:
> I'm relatively new to OpenBSD but have been working with FreeBSD for 15+
> years and AT&T/USL before that.
>
> I have installed OpenBSD i386 v4.6 via a boot floppy and ftp.
> Installed the src and sys tarballs.
> Rebuilt the kernel, reboot, build World, reboot
Hi,
We've got three HP DL 320 G6 servers running the exact same 4.6
installation on the exact same USB stick.
Two of these are running fine, not a single hickup while one of them
has died on us twice with this message.
umass0: BBB reset failed, IOERROR
sd0 detached
scsibus0 detached
uma
If you will follow exactly this manual
http://www.openbsd.org/stable.html then no problem for sure.
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 9:04 AM, Ron McDowell wrote:
> Sorry, my mistake in wording. B I am indeed wanting to
> follow -stable here. Replace all my uses of 'world'
> below with 'build' and the same
My script builds the 4.6-release and 4.6-stable pulled 1/26. It chokes
on 2 copies of 4.6-stable pulled today.
As I've said, I don't care about the error at this point, I want to know
how the build process works. Restating my question:
Does 'make build' install each subdirectory as it trave
On 2/03/2010, at 1:40 PM, Rob Sheldon wrote:
> On Sat, 27 Feb 2010 18:19:57 +0100, "Claus Niesen"
> wrote:
>> I'm trying to figure out the best way to setup a home file server. I
> have
>> a 700MHz Celeron with 512MB RAM (maxed out), a gigabit network adapter
> and
>> 1.5TB hard drive along with
[Not sure if netiquette on this list says trim off excess stuff or leave
it on...I'm leaving it on here this time. --rcm]
Scott McEachern wrote:
Ron McDowell wrote:
I'm relatively new to OpenBSD but have been working with FreeBSD for 15+
years and AT&T/USL before that.
Welcome.
Rebuilt the
Oh so, then post your script. And looks like you may be interested in
this too http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=release&sektion=8
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 10:15 AM, Ron McDowell wrote:
> My script builds the 4.6-release and 4.6-stable pulled 1/26. B It chokes on
2
> copies of 4.6-stable
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En esta Era de cambios dramaticos en el mundo de los negocios, las
Asistentes tienen mas retos que nunca. Se espera que usted haga lo que
sea necesario para mantener el
On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 03:15:30AM -0600, Ron McDowell wrote:
> My script builds the 4.6-release and 4.6-stable pulled 1/26. It
> chokes on 2 copies of 4.6-stable pulled today.
>
> As I've said, I don't care about the error at this point, I want to
> know how the build process works. Restating m
Hey all
Please don't dismiss me because what I have been doing is unsupported untill
you've read a little, I do realise you do far too much for too little as it is
and when I make enough money I'll hopefully become a donator and regular
merchandise/cd buyer.
Whilst the subject of firefox on curre
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 11:44 AM, wrote:
> Hey all
>
> Please don't dismiss me because what I have been doing is unsupported
untill
> you've read a little, I do realise you do far too much for too little as it
is
> and when I make enough money I'll hopefully become a donator and regular
> merchand
Hello,
this is my first post on this list. I'm using OpenBSD for some weeks
now. I read around thousand pages about OpenBSD in the last months and
I'm happy to continue doing so. Unfortunately I've problems going on:
I'd like to run a local djbdns server that creates a TLD inside my LAN.
1)
Hi,
# tinydns-conf tinydns dnslog /etc/tinydns 127.0.0.1
# ./add-ns straz 172.16.144.132
# ./add-host candle.straz 172.16.144.129
Your authoritive NS is running on 127.0.0.1 but dnscache is
forwarding to:
# echo "172.16.144.129" > /etc/dnscache/root/servers/straz
Perhaps it should forward to 12
And I thought I was expected to be inconsistent. ;)
Anyhow, I was upgrading from the Feb 2, to the most recent snapshot, and
fsck is coming up with a problem on one of my partitions. I can probably
get it working ("fix" is such a strong word) with `fsck -fy` but my real
concern is if the drive is
I bought a replacement supermicro motherboard off fleabay that has dual
Opteron 250 @2.4GHz. The cpus have passive heatsinks, it is in a supermicro
2U chassis with 4 front fans. After a couple of minutes of running at
essentially idle (I was in single user mode reconfiguring /etc/fstab to
com
* Jeff Ross [2010-03-02 16:59]:
> I bought a replacement supermicro motherboard off fleabay that has
> dual Opteron 250 @2.4GHz. The cpus have passive heatsinks, it is in
> a supermicro 2U chassis with 4 front fans.
do you have the air shroud? this plastic thing that forms a "tunnel"
over the he
On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 07:50 -0800, "J.C. Roberts"
wrote:
> And I thought I was expected to be inconsistent. ;)
>
> Anyhow, I was upgrading from the Feb 2, to the most recent snapshot, and
> fsck is coming up with a problem on one of my partitions. I can probably
> get it working ("fix" is such a st
Henning Brauer wrote:
* Jeff Ross [2010-03-02 16:59]:
I bought a replacement supermicro motherboard off fleabay that has
dual Opteron 250 @2.4GHz. The cpus have passive heatsinks, it is in
a supermicro 2U chassis with 4 front fans.
do you have the air shroud? this plastic thing that forms a
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 15:53, Jeff Ross wrote:
> Opterons are new to me. B Have I already damaged the CPU? B I can get an
> couple of active CPU heatsinks to replace the passive ones but if that chip
> is already damaged I'd rather lose some more time and return the
motherboard
> while I still can
Quoting "J.C. Roberts" :
> And I thought I was expected to be inconsistent. ;)
>
> Anyhow, I was upgrading from the Feb 2, to the most recent snapshot, and
> fsck is coming up with a problem on one of my partitions. I can probably
> get it working ("fix" is such a strong word) with `fsck -fy` but
On 2010-03-02, Ron McDowell wrote:
> My script builds the 4.6-release and 4.6-stable pulled 1/26. It chokes
> on 2 copies of 4.6-stable pulled today.
>
> As I've said, I don't care about the error at this point, I want to know
> how the build process works. Restating my question:
>
> Does 'mak
On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 11:27:50 -0500 "Brad Tilley"
wrote:
> > What I really want to do here is understand *why* some portion of
> > the disk has become unreadable?
>
>
> cd /bad_partition && dd if=/dev/zero of=big_file.zero bs=512
> conv=sync,noerror
>
> Let it run until it finishes. That won't
On Tue, 2 Mar 2010 10:44:38 + (GMT) trustlevel-...@yahoo.co.uk
wrote:
> Hey all
>
> Please don't dismiss me because what I have been doing is unsupported
> untill you've read a little, I do realise you do far too much for too
> little as it is and when I make enough money I'll hopefully becom
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 8:06 AM, wrote:
...
> I've seen the smart system report errors and have had them become
> true a few times, but far more often I've seen the damn things report
> "No proble, Boss" and then died a little later...
I seem to recall a USENIX paper from google (perhaps for the
On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 03:15:30AM -0600, Ron McDowell wrote:
> My script builds the 4.6-release and 4.6-stable pulled 1/26. It
> chokes on 2 copies of 4.6-stable pulled today.
>
> As I've said, I don't care about the error at this point, I want to
> know how the build process works. Restating m
On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 11:06:46 -0500 and...@msu.edu wrote:
> Quoting "J.C. Roberts" :
>
> > And I thought I was expected to be inconsistent. ;)
> >
> > Anyhow, I was upgrading from the Feb 2, to the most recent
> > snapshot, and fsck is coming up with a problem on one of my
> > partitions. I can pr
I installed OpenBSD 4.6 on an Intel SR1630HGP server that has an Intel
S3420GPLC board. There are three network interfaces on the server: one
card, and two on the motherboard.
The card is recognized:
em0 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 "Intel PRO/1000 MT (82574L)" rev 0x00: apic
8 int 16
(irq 11), addr
Ah, I didn't know about that command, here it is:
# pcidump
Domain /dev/pci0:
0:0:0: Intel unknown
0:5:0: Intel unknown
0:8:0: Intel unknown
0:8:1: Intel unknown
0:8:2: Intel unknown
0:8:3: Intel unknown
0:16:0: Intel unknown
0:16:1: Intel unknown
0:25:0: Intel unknown
0:26:0: Intel unkn
On 3/2/2010 12:32 PM, Marc Espie wrote:
No, it's more complicated than that. It obviously installs mk stuff, then
include, then it builds libs and install them, then it builds everything
else and installs it.
It's not a complicated bootstrap procedure like in freebsd land, it assumes
you alread
On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 01:17:09PM -0600, Bryan wrote:
> On 3/2/2010 12:32 PM, Marc Espie wrote:
> >
> >No, it's more complicated than that. It obviously installs mk stuff, then
> >include, then it builds libs and install them, then it builds everything
> >else and installs it.
> >
> >It's not a c
On 3/2/2010 1:22 PM, Otto Moerbeek wrote:
ugh is ee bad scripting habits.
what happens if /usr/obj or one of the other dirs does not exist?
-Otto
I know Otto... I didn't write it for production purposes... yes, I'd
screw the pooch mightily if those directories did not exis
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 11:17 AM, Bryan wrote:
> On 3/2/2010 12:32 PM, Marc Espie wrote:
>>
>> No, it's more complicated than that. It obviously installs mk stuff, then
>> include, then it builds libs and install them, then it builds everything
>> else and installs it.
>>
>> It's not a complicated
Anyone taken a look at these patches? I'm curious if there's security
implications to this.
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
-Bryan
On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 01:17:09PM -0600, Bryan wrote:
> #!/bin/sh
>
> cd /usr/obj
> rm -rf *
> cd /usr/xobj
> rm -rf *
> cd /usr/build
> rm -rf *
> cp /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/conf/GENERIC.MP .
> config -s /usr/src/sys -b . GENERIC.MP
> make clean && make depend && make && make install
Never *ever
On Tuesday 02 March 2010 13:35:23 J.C. Roberts wrote:
> On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 11:06:46 -0500 and...@msu.edu wrote:
> > Quoting "J.C. Roberts" :
> > > And I thought I was expected to be inconsistent. ;)
> > >
> > > Anyhow, I was upgrading from the Feb 2, to the most recent
> > > snapshot, and fsck is
On 3/2/2010 1:40 PM, Marc Espie wrote:
Never *ever* write this, even for your own purposes.
#! /bin/sh
set -e
cd /usr/obj&& rm -rf *
cd /usr/xobj&& rm -rf *
cd /usr/build&& rm -rf *
cp /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/conf/GENERIC.MP .
config -s /usr/src/sys -b . GENERIC.MP
make clean&& make depend&
pcidump -v and complete dmesg will be more useful for developers
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 8:07 PM, Ross Davis wrote:
> Ah, I didn't know about that command, here it is:
>
> # pcidump
> Domain /dev/pci0:
> B 0:0:0: Intel unknown
> B 0:5:0: Intel unknown
> B 0:8:0: Intel unknown
> B 0:8:1: Intel unkn
> That's why I don't get paid the big bucks... :) I will make the changes,
> so I don't have to pull my hair out later...
I can't stress enough how important it is to prevent things, especially
computers, from causing severe loss of hair.
Miod
or just to use sendbug to pcidump, dmesg, and acpidump
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Tomas Bodzar wrote:
> pcidump -v and complete dmesg will be more useful for developers
>
> On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 8:07 PM, Ross Davis wrote:
>> Ah, I didn't know about that command, here it is:
>>
>> # pcidump
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=sendbug&sektion=1&format=html
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 5:11 PM, Gleydson Soares
wrote:
> or just to use sendbug to pcidump, dmesg, and acpidump
>
> On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Tomas Bodzar
wrote:
>> pcidump -v and complete dmesg will be more useful
Thank you, here they are:
# pcidump -v
Domain /dev/pci0:
0:0:0: Intel unknown
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: d130
0x0004: Command: Status ID: 0810
0x0008: Class: 06 Subclass: 00 Interface: 00 Revision: 11
0x000c: BIST: 00 Header Type: 00 Latency Timer: 00
Anyone taken a look at these patches? I'm curious if there's security
implications to this.
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
I can't say, but based on pass experience I would say that if the
patches were god and pass upstream without any security issue that they
would be part
On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 08:09:58PM +, Miod Vallat wrote:
> > That's why I don't get paid the big bucks... :) I will make the changes,
> > so I don't have to pull my hair out later...
>
> I can't stress enough how important it is to prevent things, especially
> computers, from causing severe
On Tue, 2 Mar 2010, Bryan Irvine wrote:
Anyone taken a look at these patches? I'm curious if there's security
implications to this.
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
-Bryan
Did you search the misc or openssh-unix-dev list archives before you
posted?
diana
hi,
the second onboard interface:
0:25:0: Intel unknown
0x: Vendor ID: 8086 Product ID: 10ef
is the lat
OpenBSD 4.7-beta (GENERIC.MP) #0: Tue Mar 2 09:31:32 CST 2010
root@:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 3478753280 (3317MB)
avail mem = 3379195904 (3222MB)
mainbus0 at root
bios0 at mainbus0: SMBIOS rev. 2.6 @ 0xcf79c000 (83 entries)
bios0: vendor Dell Inc. version "1.3.6" da
On Mon, 1 Mar 2010, Dave Anderson wrote:
>On Mon, 1 Mar 2010, Brynet wrote:
>>Maybe you can try using acpi? by disabling apm in UKC or via config(8)?
>
>Given the various mentions recently on this list, I should have thought
>of trying that even though it's not (to me) an obvious connection. I'l
Thanks to everyone on-list and off- for their hints; snide remark
silently ignored. Today the entire build went fine using the same
scripts as yesterday... Tomas asked to see my scripts, here they are.
Note that /usr/obj is symlinked to /Stash/Sources/obj, and /usr/src is
symlinked to /Stash
On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 08:40:47PM +0100, Marc Espie wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 01:17:09PM -0600, Bryan wrote:
> > [...]
>
> #! /bin/sh
> set -e
> cd /usr/obj && rm -rf *
> cd /usr/xobj && rm -rf *
Stupid question: Is that even necessary before building a kernel
on i386?
I know mac68k/m68
Hi,
First you need to understand the "big picture":
Dnscache will run on your server (.132) and listen on your network
interface; this address will be known to your clients as the "dns server
ip".
Then you have tinydns running on the same server, but on lo0 and
listening to 127.0.0.1. It will
id use asr-disable in ofw to disable the second fc hba for now.
dlg
On 02/03/2010, at 12:56 AM, Pete Vickers wrote:
> Hei,
>
>
> Upon booting either 4.6-RELEASE or 4.7-BETA on my SunFire 880 causes the
> kernel it to 'see' twice the correct number of physical disk. Further if I
> install the o/s
On Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 4:56 PM, Aaron Mason
wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 4:17 AM, Andres Salazar
wrote:
>> On Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 11:10 AM, Bret S. Lambert
>> wrote:
...
> Setting the controller to AHCI would give OpenBSD access to NCQ where
> available, but the driver would also have to b
Dave wrote:
> Unfortunatly that resulted in a system that wouldn't boot.
Well that is indeed quite unfortunate, sorry, but maybe you can send
acpidump(8) output to dm...@?
4.7 is near release, can you try a 4.7-beta snapshot?
-Bryan.
I wrote:
> Well that is indeed quite unfortunate, sorry, but maybe you can send
> acpidump(8) output to dm...@?
>
> 4.7 is near release, can you try a 4.7-beta snapshot?
>
> -Bryan.
One more thought, try updating the BIOS.. it seems Sony has released
updates for your laptop.
http://esupport.son
On Tue, 2 Mar 2010 10:28:39 -0800
"J.C. Roberts" wrote:
> On Tue, 2 Mar 2010 10:44:38 + (GMT) trustlevel-...@yahoo.co.uk
> wrote:
>
> The short answer is painfully simple; if you're running OpenBSD as your
> desktop/laptop and you have a clue, then run just -current.
>
Your right, I must fo
On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 23:06 +, trustlevel-...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
> I've read a few times you should buy the cd because theo and close
> friends do
> a level of code audit before release. I imagine with many people running
You should buy the CDs because that's the way the project
makes most of i
Escuela Sistimica Argentina presenta:
Clase -Taller
"Hipnosis Ericksoniana"
===
y Supervisisn de casos clmnicos
===
Coordina: Lic. Claudio DES CHAMPS
==
SOLVED!
The "make" command (==> tinydns) didn't run correctly.
Jan wrote:
Hello,
this is my first post on this list. I'm using OpenBSD for some weeks
now. I read around thousand pages about OpenBSD in the last months and
I'm happy to continue doing so. Unfortunately I've problems going on:
Could someone throw a clue stick? I've read the man pages for netstat
and route, and I am still not clear what the output of netstat -r
means exactly in OpenBSD. What does "Link" refer to exactly? It seems
that many, if not most man pages do not describe utility output much.
Hi Theo,
That is great news!
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 8:13 PM, Theo de Raadt
wrote:
>> I'm planing to get a Dell R610 with single Xeon 5570
>> (since it's the only supporting the 5570)
>> and and dual Intel PRO/1000 ET for routing/pf.
>>
>> I jumped on this
>> http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=
> > I've read a few times you should buy the cd because theo and close
> > friends do
> > a level of code audit before release. I imagine with many people running
>
> You should buy the CDs because that's the way the project
> makes most of its money. It is what allows Theo to have
> food clothing
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 4:30 PM, Hugo Villeneuve
wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 08:40:47PM +0100, Marc Espie wrote:
>> On Tue, Mar 02, 2010 at 01:17:09PM -0600, Bryan wrote:
>> > [...]
>>
>> #! /bin/sh
>> set -e
>
>> cd /usr/obj && rm -rf *
>> cd /usr/xobj && rm -rf *
>
> Stupid question: Is that
> #!/bin/sh -x
>
> ver="46stable"
> VER="OPENBSD_4_6"
> root="/Stash/Sources"
> DESTDIR=/
Is this necessary or desirable? I ask because it is my impression
that on NetBSD, DESTDIR="/" and DESTDIR unset is used to
discriminate between a "full installation", including /etc and
what we're trying to
> > #!/bin/sh -x
> >
> > ver="46stable"
> > VER="OPENBSD_4_6"
> > root="/Stash/Sources"
> > DESTDIR=/
>
> Is this necessary or desirable? I ask because it is my impression
> that on NetBSD, DESTDIR="/" and DESTDIR unset is used to
> discriminate between a "full installation", including /etc and
> I could live in a tent and be happy,
>
>
Now that would be a server rack jpg worth watching.
Especially in windy Calgary.
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 5:17 PM, nixlists wrote:
> Could someone throw a clue stick? I've read the man pages for netstat
> and route, and I am still not clear what the output of netstat -r
> means exactly in OpenBSD. What does "Link" refer to exactly?
It refers to a network interface at the lowest
* 10 - 11 PP4Q.
*
PP PPPPP(PP.P"P!P/: QP8P=P0P=QP>P2QP5 P4P8QP5P:QP>QP0 P8
P3P;P0P2P=QP5 P1QQP3P0P;QP5QQ, QP?P5QP8P0P;P8QQQ P?P>
P=P0P;P>P3P>P2P>PP2P0P=
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 10:27 PM, Ron McDowell wrote:
> the $ver $VER and $ROOT are my own. For $DESTDIR, see
> http://openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#Bld section 5.3.5:
>
> Make sure all the appropriate directories are created.
>
> # cd /usr/src/etc && env DESTDIR=/ make distrib-dirs
>
> As a newbie
On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 10:27 AM, Andres Salazar wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I dont have obj on ram, or /tmp . Iam using make build.
Use gentoo?
> Thank you
>
> Andres
>
> On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 5:48 AM, Marc Espie wrote:
>> On Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 11:02:37AM -0600, Andres Salazar wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
I have set up a nfs server on one i386 machine in my local network. I can
mount the share from all other machines, that happen to be amd64.
I did the same setup on the amd64 machines, and when I try to mount the
share on the i 386 machine or on the other amd64 machines , I get the
message:
I am trying to replace mysql with postgresql on my openbsd + apache +php
server.
I need to install postgresql from source, as I need special options, and the
latest version.
I am runnning openbsd 4.5, php 5.2.8 from packages,
postgresql-8.4.2 from source. All dependencies from packages.
Postgre
> I can't get postgresql to work with php with the chrooted environment.
Error output? Logs, etc? Attempting to connect to the /var/www/tmp socket
and seeing if that works? You're giving us "OMG I have a problem!!!"
without giving us much of a chance to help.
Hell, it's php, so are your programs
Hi, I'm new to this mailing list.
You know the openbsd binpatch framework (
http://openbsdbinpatch.sourceforge.net/ ).
And I'm using it and it is very nice. but, it is more usefull if there
is Makefile generator.
So, I made Makefile generator for the binpatch framework.
the attached file autugen.p
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