Yes, I'm correct. I must be migrate to another BSD which have not SPAM user
and have responsible user and up2date document.
*The final question:*
Does the boot loader of OpenBSD ( first step of booting OpenBSD that
display boot> ) can boot other partiotions OS with boot command like *boot
hd0a:/xyz
> Does the boot loader of OpenBSD ( first step of booting OpenBSD that
> display boot> ) can boot other partiotions OS with boot command like *boot
> hd0a:/xyz* ?
> cheers.
man 8 boot on amd64 box:
DESCRIPTION
The main purpose of this program is to load the system kernel while
dealing w
On Tue, 30 Jun 2015 09:13:25 +0200
Carlos Fenollosa wrote:
Moved to misc as this is borderline, even for there.
> I am a Linux user, I found some difference between the systems which is not
> in the FAQ, I thought it could be useful to add a line about it. Period. If
> that difference is better
On 06/30/15 04:22, Mohammad BadieZadegan wrote:
> Yes, I'm correct. I must be migrate to another BSD which have not SPAM user
> and have responsible user and up2date document.
Please do.
you are not correct.
You created a boot.ini file. Nowhere under "Windows 7" is boot.ini
mentioned. You made u
On Mon, Jun 29, 2015 at 3:55 PM, Peter Hessler wrote:
> On 2015 Jun 29 (Mon) at 15:29:57 +0200 (+0200), Mattieu Baptiste wrote:
> :Hi,
> :
> :I'm running a setup where my gateway (a PC Engines APU with
> :-current/amd64) have two rdomains :
> :
> :rdomain 0 :
> :- re0 : internal interface (IP 192.
The method in the OpenBSD docs is a no extra tools required method. BCDedit
makes it even easier.
1) Install Windows 7/8 on an MBR disk. GPT should work but requires more
effort.
2) As part of 1) create a partition for OpenBSD
3) Use OpenBSD fdisk to change partition type to A6, install on that
4)
Hello,
I have been helping a friend getting access to native IPv6 connectivity
at home, using OpenBSD, and have been running into a few problems. It
would be nice to hear input from any developers on this.
The setup looks like this: We are supposed to get a default route on the
outside interface
I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want to
suspend I'll type zzz. I haven't found a way to turn this off.
--
Credit is the root of all evil. - AB1JX
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 2:38 PM, Alan Corey wrote:
> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
> as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want to
> suspend I'll type zzz. I haven't found a way to turn this off.
>
> --
> Credit is the root of all evil.
> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend.
> As far as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature".
This is a full operating system, and cannot be exhaustively
documented. I doubt you trawled every single manual page to come to
that determination. Seems a bit unkind. It
On 6/30/15, Alan Corey wrote:
> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
> as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want to
> suspend I'll type zzz. I haven't found a way to turn this off.
$ sysctl | grep suspend
machdep.lidsuspend=1
to un-suspend,
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 2:42 PM, Adam Van Ymeren wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 2:38 PM, Alan Corey wrote:
>> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
>> as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want to
>> suspend I'll type zzz. I haven't found a w
sysctl machdep.lidsuspend=0
wiil disable suspending when closing the laptop.
Machine should resume when opening the laptop or pressing the power button.
If not should could have some problems with acpi but for folks to help you
out you need to provide a lot more details.
-luis
On Tue, Jun 30, 2
On 2015 Jun 30 (Tue) at 14:45:16 -0400 (-0400), Adam Van Ymeren wrote:
:Also the installer prompts you if you want this behaviour, so its
:hardly undocumented.
not in -current.
--
"Do not meddle in the affairs of wizards, for you are crunchy and good
with ketchup."
> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
> as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want to
> suspend I'll type zzz. I haven't found a way to turn this off.
One more thing to add.
Since we moved to lid-suspend by default, we have received more
repo
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 07:38:50PM BST, Alan Corey wrote:
> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
> as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want to
> suspend I'll type zzz.
Documented it is - https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=142108042300724
> I
A lot of people worked very hard to add this "feature",
because most people wanted it.
Search the archives
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015, at 02:38 PM, Alan Corey wrote:
> I didn't ask it to do that and I don't know how to unsuspend. As far
> as I'm concerned this is an undocumented "feature". If I want
Hello,
after upgrading to snapshot from june 29th on my sun blade 100 (sparc64)
X fails to start.
...
[39.465] (II) MACH64: Driver for ATI Mach64 chipsets
[39.470] (WW) VGA arbiter: cannot open kernel arbiter, no multi-card
support
[39.472] (**) MACH64(0): Depth 24, (--) framebuffer b
Yes it was harsh, but I still don't know how to resume and I didn't
appreciate having to do an unclean shutdown by holding down the power
button for 10 seconds. Neither the apm or acpi man pages says how to
resume (or mentions lid), I guess it depends on the hardware. I've
been using OpenBSD sinc
Alan, stop behaving like a cry baby.
Hi,
I ran into an issue where I lost the partition information on my
MacBook Air this afternoon despite not making any choices in fdisk.
I had previously setup my mid 2012 MacBook Air to dual boot with OS X
and OpenBSD/amd64 current but lost access to the OpenBSD partition
when I enabled file vault
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 04:28:52PM -0400, Alan Corey wrote:
> Yes it was harsh, but I still don't know how to resume and I didn't
> appreciate having to do an unclean shutdown by holding down the power
> button for 10 seconds. Neither the apm or acpi man pages says how to
> resume (or mentions lid
> everyone has different needs of course, but in my 15+
> years of openbsd usage both on desktop and servers i
> needed to build ports exactly hand, give or take> times.
Same experience my end too with OpenBSD. I have had a couple very rare
occasions in a long time that something may have needed
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