Thank you for the assistance.
On 29/01/2025 08:34, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2025-01-29, Ben Short wrote:
Interestingly when I look for easy-rsa in the following location:
https://www.mirrorservice.org/pub/OpenBSD/7.6/packages/amd64/
I only see easy-rsa-3.1.1.tgz which is what I have instal
Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> If the trackpad is handled by the ubcmtp(4) driver but isn't recognized
> as clickpad, configure a bottom area (see wsmouse(4), wsconsctl(8), and
> wsconsctl.conf(5)):
>
> # wsconsctl mouse.tp.edges=0,5,10,5
>
Many thanks. A variation of this solved the issue. For some
Do you find something harmful in sharing a dmesg for your laptop?
Thank you.
I was working on spinning up a new system that uses p5-rex and found some
breakage here too. I thought my install was borked! Thanks for the heads up,
for now, I'll rebuild that port locally for that system so it can spin up.
Thanks! <3
Original Message
From: Stuart Henderson
Hi Martin,
I used a Dell Intel X540/I350 Dual Port 10GB BASE-T + Dual Port 1GB
BASE-T NDC (Network Daughter Card) in a Dell PowerEdge R730 server under
OpenBSD 7.3 and it worked perfectly.
Best regards,
Gábor
2025.01.29. 23:16 keltezéssel, Martin írta:
I need recommendations for good worki
On 2025-01-30 11:27, Claudio Jeker wrote:
httpd uses simple content-type of text/plain for txt files.
It does not include a charset so the browser will probably default to
utf8
so if the text files are not in utf8 encoding then the browser will not
display them correctly.
From my understanding
On 2025-01-30, Andrew Hewus Fresh wrote:
> If I may quote a private message from sthen@:
>> little heads-up, snaps with new perl are out [...] if you're using
>> things with compiled perl extensions then you probably want to hold
>> off updating until new packages are built.
>> (spamassassin and r
I have a folder with several standalone .txt files on my webserver.
I expect these to be displayed as such. But when opening them
in the browser, either locally (from the same machine) or from
remote, several characters such as accents and em dashes get
replaced by other characters.
Where could
httpd serves the file as is, and advices the client with
a Content-Type header. It is then entirely up to the client
(typicaly a browser) to display what the server has served.
On Jan 30 09:30:16, sylv...@saboua.me wrote:
>
> I have a folder with several standalone .txt files on my webserver.
> I
At this point is maybe suggestable you specify the clients you
are using to access these files to see in case how to troubleshoot
the client encoding / font problem.
Jan 30, 2025 10:52:10 Jan Stary :
> httpd serves the file as is, and advices the client with
> a Content-Type header. It is then en
You could also remove the BOM from the source file using something like tr(1)
On Thu, 30 Jan 2025, at 10:02, Dan wrote:
> At this point is maybe suggestable you specify the clients you
> are using to access these files to see in case how to troubleshoot
> the client encoding / font problem.
>
> Ja
httpd uses simple content-type of text/plain for txt files.
It does not include a charset so the browser will probably default to utf8
so if the text files are not in utf8 encoding then the browser will not
display them correctly.
>From my understanding it is not possible to configure a charset in
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