On 16 September 2015 at 00:39, YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
>
>
> Can you try
>
> http://yasuoka.net/~yasuoka/BOOTX64.EFI
>
> this and "machine test" on boot prompt? It will show
>
> 0 blocksize=512
>
> like this. Disk number and blocksize.
>
Yup - that's what I get:
http://i.imgur.com/9rpEGnP.j
> On Sep 16, 2015, at 00:40, Markus Rosjat wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> just a simple question, is it possible to install a 5.7 on a soekris 4501?
I don't know about the 4501, but the 5501 works fine. Any chance you grabbed
the 64 bit image by mistake?
Devin
4801 worked fine for me until it died (hardware failure)
On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 8:35 AM, Devin Reade wrote:
>> On Sep 16, 2015, at 00:40, Markus Rosjat wrote:
>>
>> Hi there,
>>
>> just a simple question, is it possible to install a 5.7 on a soekris 4501?
>
> I don't know about the 4501, but th
rosjat wrote:
> stuck on the entry point msg.
You need to create a boot.conf file with a couple of commands. Read
this:
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq6.html#PXE
The contents of the file will likely need to be as follows:
stty com0 115200
set tty com0
The default baud rate is 9600 -- s
Darren Tucker [dtuc...@zip.com.au] wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> I've got a pcengines APU running a recent snap (upgraded via bsd.rd),
> and it doesn't seem to cleanly unmount the root filesystem on reboot,
> always claiming "/mnt was not properly unmounted". Any ideas ideas why?
>
Sometime before 5.8 r
On 2015-09-16, Devin Reade wrote:
> I don't know about the 4501, but the 5501 works fine.
Also, lunch was okay. Since we are talking about totally different
things.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
Denis Fondras writes:
> On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 07:28:48AM +0200, Remi Locherer wrote:
>> Strange notation with "-". Never seen such an output from "routei show" or
>> "netstat -rn" command.
>
> Guess it is a rdns.
There is indeed one set.
>> You don't have a default route set for IPv6.
>
> I
On 2015-09-16, Adam Jeanguenat wrote:
> rosjat wrote:
>> stuck on the entry point msg.
>
> You need to create a boot.conf file with a couple of commands. Read
> this:
>
>http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq6.html#PXE
>
> The contents of the file will likely need to be as follows:
>
>stty com0 11
Em 16-09-2015 15:01, Mark Carroll escreveu:
> Maybe there's a better way to specify default routes, but that one sure
> seems to work.
My CPE sometimes won't give me a default route through SLAAC. I'm not
sure you're using it, but I presume you are. The only way I have to kind
of assure a default r
On 2015-09-16, Mark Carroll wrote:
> Maybe there's a better way to specify default routes, but that one sure
> seems to work.
The standard method is to add it to /etc/mygate.
Stuart Henderson writes:
> On 2015-09-16, Mark Carroll wrote:
>> Maybe there's a better way to specify default routes, but that one sure
>> seems to work.
>
> The standard method is to add it to /etc/mygate.
Aha! Of course, it looks like the installer already put my IPv4 one in
there. Adding my
When I first install OpenBSD there is a phase where I choose file sets
like base57.tgz which it then downloads and untars. Then for upgrades I
can check out the CVS tree and build and install the patch branch or
whatever.
One thing that isn't yet clear to me is what one has to do with the
other. F
On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 09:27:25PM +0100, Mark Carroll wrote:
> When I first install OpenBSD there is a phase where I choose file sets
> like base57.tgz which it then downloads and untars. Then for upgrades I
> can check out the CVS tree and build and install the patch branch or
> whatever.
>
> On
On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 09:27:25PM +0100, Mark Carroll wrote:
> When I first install OpenBSD there is a phase where I choose file sets
> like base57.tgz which it then downloads and untars. Then for upgrades I
> can check out the CVS tree and build and install the patch branch or
> whatever.
>
> On
Josh Grosse writes:
> The filesets are built when you make a release. See FAQ 5.4, and the
> release(8) man page.
Aha, thank you, that all makes sense. I should have also figured this
from reading the last paragraph of http://www.openbsd.org/stable.html
-- Mark
Hello,
I am currently having issues compiling BIND 9.10.3 (released by ISC this week
to correct for DoS vulnerabilities), on my OpenBSD 5.7 test machine. I am
running the OpenBSD 5.7 release build with the 14 errata patches successfully
applied and with the userland also rebuilt.
I can succes
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 1:48 AM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> Sometime before 5.8 release, a 4 second pause was removed from the shutdown
> path. This must have been giving your USB disk time to finish before the
> reset.
>
Interesting, was that in the rc scripts or the kernel?
> Have you tried s
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 02:03:01AM BST, Research wrote:
> Hello,
Hi,
> I am currently having issues compiling BIND 9.10.3 (released by ISC
> this week to correct for DoS vulnerabilities), on my OpenBSD 5.7
> test machine. I am running the OpenBSD 5.7 release build with the
> 14 errata patches s
Darren Tucker [dtuc...@zip.com.au] wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 1:48 AM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> >
> > Sometime before 5.8 release, a 4 second pause was removed from the shutdown
> > path. This must have been giving your USB disk time to finish before the
> > reset.
> >
>
> Interesting, was
yeah basically :-P
but the hint with the version of the image seems to be the right thing
to check. I had the image laying arround since earlier this yeah when I
set up a 6501 so this should be a 64bit image and if I remember right
4501 is only capable of 32bit. So I'll give it a try with a 32
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