Ronald Dahlgren [ronald.dahlg...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I have a PC Engines apu6b4 that is acting up during the installation
> process. I want to see if this group has any insight before I try an RMA
> with the seller.
>
> entry point at 0x8100100PC Engines apu6
This should be an FAQ entry
In various places, netstat/mbuf.c does stuff like this against the hiwat value:
printf("%u/%lu mbuf %d byte clusters in use"
" (current/peak)\n",
mclpools[i].pr_nout,
(unsigned long)
mclpools[i].pr_hiwa
i
Gustavo Rios [rios.gust...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi folks!
>
> I have a simple question: how many cores does OBSD support ?
>
There's various hard-coded limits at something like 64-128 cores (depending on
architecture)
Depending on your application, a useful number of cores is somewhere betwee
Kapetanakis Giannis [bil...@edu.physics.uoc.gr] wrote:
> Has anyone tried these HUNSN mini pcs/routers with multiple interfaces?
>
> I'm thinking of getting one for home routing. Does it work with OpenBSD?
> (dmesg?)
>
> Performance? Will it route/firewall at 1Gbps? Intel N100 seems to be low on
huh, after i migrated nat fw from 82599 (ix) with LRO on (default) to
a CX4121A (mcx) flashed to latest nvidia firmware and now i'm getting
900mbps on single tcp throughput (endpoints still using lro on
em and ix) and very consistently getting close to the full 1gbps
thruoghput on single tcp conne
j...@openbsd.org [j...@openbsd.org] wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 11, 2024 at 10:42:32AM -0800, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> > huh, after i migrated nat fw from 82599 (ix) with LRO on (default) to
> > a CX4121A (mcx) flashed to latest nvidia firmware and now i'm getting
> > 900mbp
Steve Williams [st...@williamsitconsulting.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My pcengines APU system died on me catastrophically. It's my primary
> router / email / web server.
>
> First, I built a Raspberry Pi 4b system with a USB wired NIC and went to
> restore my backup from Google using rclone only to
Christoff Humphries [christ...@sogonsecurity.com] wrote:
> Just ordered this from eBay after looking at jcs??? list again:
> - Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon 7th Gen i7-8565U 16GB RAM 512GB SSD 14" FHD Touch
> 2019
>
> Woot, back to OpenBSD as a daily driver again and looking forward to helping
> wit
Denis Fondras [open...@ledeuns.net] wrote:
> Le Wed, Sep 28, 2022 at 04:55:51PM +0200, Erik van Westen a ?crit :
> >
> > Have a look at shop.opnsense.com, they might have something.
> >
>
> The DEC6xx/7xx/8xx are not fully supported by OpenBSD.
> I don't know about the bigger boxes but being bas
Samuel Jayden [samueljaydan1...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi again,
>
> Just for the record:
> I've downgraded to OpenBSD 7.2 (reinstalled) and everything is working like
> a charm again.
> I don't know what is wrong with 7.3 but ipi interrupt rate is too much and
> somehow OpenBSD performance is too ba
Stuart Henderson [stu.li...@spacehopper.org] wrote:
> On 2023-06-05, Kastus Shchuka wrote:
> > Next I tried -fno-fixup-gadgets, and that made a radical difference:
>
> Not entirely a surprise, we have seen this a few times now.
> Usually it is fine, but has quite bad effects on some programs,
> h
Valdrin MUJA [valdrin_m...@outlook.com] wrote:
> Hello Misc,
>
> I run OpenBSD 7.3 as L3 firewall under VMware. I have some rdr-to rules.
>
> Here System information:
> cpu15: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6338 CPU @ 2.00GHz, 1995.63 MHz, 06-6a-06
> I know CPU cores are not at too important at the moment
Salim Shaw [salims...@vfemail.net] wrote:
> OpenBSD is a server/router/network service OS, it's not designed for
> desktops. OpenBSD is the pre-eminent platform for Firewalling,
> IPsec, IPv6.
> Trying to shove OpenBSD onto the desktop is the ultimate case of
> square peg/round hole.
>
Salim, tha
Sebastian Neuper [pha...@gmx.de] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I can't figure out what causes this panic. Second time
> I see this. I think I have to replace the NIC or the disk.
> Can anyone point me in the right direction?
>
> uvm_fault(0xd6c73184, 0xb5cbd000, 0, 3) -> e
> kernel: page fault trap, code=0
Alfonso S. Siciliano [alfi...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm trying to study the concurrency and the parallelism of OpenBSD.
> Fortunately SMP is supported on my platform, amd64.
> Where can I find documentation about what components are been
> parallelized? (queue, stack, etc.)
>
No such document
?? ?? [don.na...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> May I try to build and install a new kernel with that fix, or to wait for a
> new snapshot?
> Thank you.
>
That depends on your preference.
Stuart Henderson [s...@spacehopper.org] wrote:
>
> Important con here if you're talking about running it on OpenBSD is that
> this is not a primary platform for them. I think it's safe to say that
> far fewer people will be running BIRD on OpenBSD than will be running
> OpenOSPFd on OpenBSD.
>
I
Carlos,
We are now on OpenBSD 5.3 and going forward. Please try that first.
carlos albino garcia grijalba [genesi...@hotmail.com] wrote:
> i have read on archives but too many opinions on this subject since 4 and many
> of them are saying to restart server, restart process, wait to be fixed a big
Drugs are not good for your brain.
Justin Lindberg [zx5...@yahoo.com] wrote:
> You need to be shot to death.
>
>
> - Original Message -
> From: Richard Thornton
> To: Justin Lindberg
> Cc:
> Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2013 4:09 AM
> Subject: Re: From the military propaganda department
>
carlos albino garcia grijalba [genesi...@hotmail.com] wrote:
> ok problem of mine again i run again on a fast solution since i have just
> seen that there have been a lot of changes on uvm lets go 4.8 -> 4.9 -> 5.0
> -> 5.1 -> 5.2 -> 5.3 ant thanks this is actually an aswer will do that and
> le
carlos albino garcia grijalba [genesi...@hotmail.com] wrote:
> it is a server on production m a little concerned about fail after upgrade
> from 4.8 to 5.3 has some services on it
Just upgrade to 5.3, pkg_add -r, and fix the fallout from ports changes. Read
the faq/current.html too
carlos albino garcia grijalba [genesi...@hotmail.com] wrote:
> ok let u know what happen thank u very much actually u are the only folk that
> answer all my other mails have been kicked by the way where do i have to send
> mail to know why my laptop has to be rebooted so that the fan work on the
Andy [a...@brandwatch.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> We're really looking forward to improvements in ALTQ too.
>
> And we are /really/ hoping that the queues can either be shared across
> interfaces (so your WAN downstream bandwidth doesn't have to be sliced
> up and divided up across all the internal i
Stuart Henderson [s...@spacehopper.org] wrote:
>
> It may well be a problem if you're using medium/large altq buffers
> or if you raise net.inet.ip.ifq.maxlen too high..
While I don't disagree in concept (by definition, using sysctl maxlen=
big would create a large buffer), I think in implementat
I'm trying to use ldom on a few sun fire t1000s. The host system
tells me "ERROR: Physical resources required by LDoms configuration: openbsd
not available. Falling back to default set" after I "ldomctl download" and
then "reset -c" at ALOM.
I upgraded from factory 2005 firmware to this one
ftp:/
Otto Moerbeek [o...@drijf.net] wrote:
>
> There's a bug somewhere that computes the left-over memory for the
> primary wrong.
>
> Take the mem printed by OpenBoot (8064M), subtract the mem taken by
> your guests and assign that to the primary.
>
> primary {
> memory ..
> }
>
This seems t
mxb [m...@alumni.chalmers.se] wrote:
> I benefit from it as well :)
> Using vether with ospfd on top of it is fare more stable than using gre or
> plain gif.
>
How are you connecting vether to something else? IPsec? Care to share your
config?
I noticed some interesting messages upon resume for a thinkpad t410. It is
running X and has been through 20 suspend/resume cycles since the last reboot.
error: [drm:pid2:i915_hangcheck_hung] *ERROR* Hangcheck timer elapsed... GPU
hung
error: [drm:pid3:init_ring_common] *ERROR* failed to set ren
bwi is incomplete due to a lack of vendor documentation
there may be improvement in dragonflybsd that is worth porting over, or
you may get lucky, stick the PCI device ID for your card into the bwi
driver, and see that it otherwise works...
your best bet may be to buy a better supported mini-pcie
Stuart Henderson keeps old kernels around at
ftp://sym.spacehopper.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/i386/oldkern/
To help narrow down what change might have caused this, try and figure out
the newest kernel that still works properly.
Jeff Ross [jr...@openvistas.net] wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Tonight I upda
Laurence Rochfort [laurence.rochf...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm looking for advice on what the best bet for well supported
> non-intel hardware would be. Doesn't have to be lightning fast, but
> being able to run a modern browser at reasonable rate is a must.
>
Some people with your ta
Riccardo Mottola [riccardo.mott...@libero.it] wrote:
>
> Furthermore, you will learn that a lot of code has become buggy: it
> is quite linux-x86 orientend and will break more or less the more
> you deviate. If you take care and report bugs (or patch yourself)
> you will get further.
>
Hey, afte
Robert Blacquiere [rob...@blacquiere.nl] wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 25, 2013 at 05:43:36PM +0800, Alan Cheng wrote:
> > I can't access www.openbsd.org right now.
> > http://www.downforeveryoneorjustme.com/www.openbsd.org shows it's down.
> >
> It is taken down by NSA secret agents? Or just bgp flapping
Andy [a...@brandwatch.com] wrote:
>
> I appreciate that you may be frustrated by the existence of bad advice
> on the internet. And as someone who is continually learning and only
> wants to do things right, could you instead of saying that he's an
> idiot who knows nothing, please provide some
Nick Holland [n...@holland-consulting.net] wrote:
> On 07/02/2013 11:44 AM, noah pugsley wrote:
> >More wrong? Maybe so. My point was that both are and either way it's
> >inconsistent.
>
> not anymore. new text, as of last night:
>
> >Processors
> >
> >All CPUs compatible with the Intel 80486 or
Thomas Jennings [thomas.jennings...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Dear OpenBSD developers and users:
>
> Happy 4th of July.
Thomas,
I don't understand why you make such a breach of OpenBSD list etiquette. We
all know these posts belong on tech@, not misc@
Please behave yourself better next time.
openda...@hushmail.com [openda...@hushmail.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Anybody have any thoughts on Snort vs Suricata?
>
Code quality is going to be a big question with the new one, as it always has
been with Snort (does running this utility open up a new attack vector on your
network)
> Also, how
Lionel Hutchence [lionel.hutche...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Dear "Thomas,"
>
> Plagiarise much lately?
>
> http://www.trollaxor.com/2013/07/why-i-abandoned-openbsd-and-why-you.html
>
Stop giving Grant so much attention. He's too busy wishing that OpenBSD,
FreeBSD, NetBSD and Dragonfly would merge in
Evgeniy Sudyr [eject.in...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> BOX1 dmesg:
> cpu0: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5620 @ 2.40GHz, 2400.45 MHz
> cpu1: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5620 @ 2.40GHz, 2400.09 MHz
> cpu2: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5620 @ 2.40GHz, 2400.09 MHz
> cpu3: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5620 @ 2.40GHz, 2400.09 MHz
> cpu
h...@riseup.net [h...@riseup.net] wrote:
>
> On the other hand XTerm is an old code and memory hog that relies on X
> toolkit and supports features you'll find nowhere thus will never need
> (like Tektronix).
>
Xenocara is the classic X tree, as much as possible. Any replacement for
xterm needs
Pascal Stumpf [pascal.stu...@cubes.de] wrote:
> >
> > Replacing GCC is no trivial task, but Bitrig already did it.
>
> "Did it" aka "now rely on packages to build base, some of them with a
> non-free license".
>
Well they are working on a BSD-licensed toolchain, with mcpp, elftoolchain,
libc++
Erling Westenvik [erling.westen...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> physical disks:
> sd0a: 64 + N-64
> sd1a: 64 + N-64
> RAID 1 volume:
> sd2a: 64 + 64 + N-128
> CRYPTO volume:
> sd3a: 64 + 64 + 64 + N-196
>
> The space wasted on large disks is negligible but I would really like to
> know at which
Hermes Ojeda Ruiz [hermes@gmail.com] wrote:
> I've used the Soekris brand. http://soekris.com/, but they are a little
> expensive. (In M?xico taxes are a big problem).
>
> In two months I'll test ALIX appliances:
> http://pcengines.ch/alix.htm
>
> They are cheaper, but I don't know about thei
You can't debug relayd without attaching to all of the processes (you must use
multiple simultaneous gdb sessions)
Bogdan Andu [bo...@yahoo.com] wrote:
> ok,
>
> I checked out relayd -current, compiled with debug symbols, launched gdb
> and attached to pfe pid :
>
> pwd: /usr/src/usr.sbin/relay
Gilbert Sanford [gilbertz@gmail.com] wrote:
> You're welcome. Since the OpenBSD documentation is clear and precise,
> any cloud of confusion must be a product of my own defective thinking.
> So I keep going back to the documentation (I stay off Google for
> OpenBSD research) to push it in and
Joe Holden [li...@rewt.org.uk] wrote:
> That is the EJTAG port (debug.. single stepping the cpu etc) AFAIK (haven't
> tested yet as I don't have the appropriate kit handy)
>
There is no need to flash the on-board chip unless you want to replace the
bootloader.
Supporting the USB isn't that hard,
Francois Ambrosini [francois.ambros...@famb.info] wrote:
> After upgrading from the July 25 to the August 24 snapshot (amd64), I started
> getting "re0: watchdog timeout" messages from the system when sending files
> via
> re0. This seems to be caused by MSI being enabled in sys/dev/pci/if_re_pci.
Alexander Polakov [p...@sdf.org] wrote:
> * Ed Ahlsen-Girard [130903 16:18]:
> > Has anyone else noticed that some fonts are not displaying the right
> > character? Some substitutions, some blanks?
>
> Yes. http://reddit.com/r/programming looks like this in firefox:
> http://plhk.ru/trash/rdit-fo
The NSA has some good tools. I'd give them a call. Their contact info:
9800 Savage Rd Fort Meade, MD 20755
(301) 688-6524
Kasper Adel [karim.a...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> A bit off topic but i was looking for a way/tool that could crawl through
> a mailing list/news archives and try to fi
Jiri B [ji...@devio.us] wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 18, 2013 at 01:37:49AM -0500, patric conant wrote:
> > http://www.open-zfs.org/wiki/Announcement
> >
> > It supposed to be open-er. I didn't find a license, thought it might be of
> > mild interest.
>
> bitrig (OpenBSD fork) has ongoing work to intergr
Paolo Aglialoro [paol...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Considering that OpenBSD is implementing fuse, cannot then ZFS be included
> just like package/port (using fuse infrastructure as in linux) to
> circumvent licence issues?
Yeah, if you want your filesystem to be some huge monster slow bloated
piece of s
Joe Gidi [j...@entropicblur.com] wrote:
> Support for the RdRand instruction was added to i386 and amd64 a year ago
> (see http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=134808609318790&w=2 ), but recent
> events have called its trustworthiness into question:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RdRand
> https://p
Jan Stary [h...@stare.cz] wrote:
> Since some time ago, the text console seems to be very slow.
>
> if I stay in the xterm window, it takes forever.
>
> This is happening in both the text console and an xterm,
> with or without running tmux (so I don't think it's tmux's fault).
>
> Why is this a
Jan Stary [h...@stare.cz] wrote:
>
> On Sep 23 14:50:44, ch...@nmedia.net wrote:
> > Without a dmesg, Xorg.log, and those sort of things,
> > how can anyone possibly give you a clue?
> >
> > With KMS and such, there are major changes
> > which may impact some hardware more than others.
>
> This
Paul de Weerd [we...@weirdnet.nl] wrote:
>
> Probably the updates to your (now graphical) terminal. Time is spent
> updating the frame buffer. Consider it a feature: you can now
> (better) read along with what's happening ;)
>
> A workaround is to start processes that produce lots of output in
Kevin Chadwick [ma1l1i...@yahoo.co.uk] wrote:
> > Under X, KMS performance should be faster on a lot of
> > hardware. The whole point of KMS is to bring modern, better
> > supported drivers to OpenBSD (and get rid of the crappy X
> > security model).
>
> I hope that's true but I think the most im
Roelof Wobben [rwob...@hotmail.com] wrote:
> Why change card. Its almost new and on FreeBSD and many linux distros the card
> is working well.
>
Linux uses Nouveau, FreeBSD uses the pathetic binary-only user-mode driver.
Nouveau may be an option for OpenBSD if someone ports it, the binary-only d
John Tate [j...@johntate.org] wrote:
> It would help if you told me how to do this...
Fuck your whining.
alexey.kurin...@gmail.com [alexey.kurin...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi. I want to buy some single board (arm cpu) computer for
> installing open bsd and run services NAT, vpn, webserver,
> etc... Primary experiments for work and fun.
> Hours of googling and reading. I found many deviceses, many of it's
Daniel Ouellet [dan...@presscom.net] wrote:
> Anyone every got their hands on one of SuperMicro 1U server with the
> X9SBAA-F board in it.
>
> I wish I could find a dmesg for it if that exists somewhere.
>
> If you have, how is the 1x Realtek RTL8201N PHY (dedicated IPMI)s
> working out for you?
openda...@hushmail.com [openda...@hushmail.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My OpenBSD VPS is taking way too long to complete certain tasks. Is there a
> way to stress test my system to find out if it's working the way it should?
>
> I'm suspecting my ISP is having trouble with their hardware or KVM setup,
Martin Schr?der [mar...@oneiros.de] wrote:
> 2013/10/8 Kyle R W Milz :
> > I guess if the NSA has coerced with CSIS or whatever the Canadian
> > equivalent is then there might be cause for worry there (quite likely as
> > we parrot almost everything the US does).
>
> YYCIX is subject to canadian l
Otto Kurunczi [otto.kurun...@gmail.com] wrote:
> -vo sdl works but the playback is tearing and skipping.
> That's why I built a xorg.xonf file and added:
> Option "AccelMethod" "sna"
> Option "TearFree" "True"
>
> The CPU % is low so the issue must be with the video driver/setting.
> Is everything
Remco [re...@d-compu.dyndns.org] wrote:
> Otto Kurunczi wrote:
>
> First of all, your attachments were removed (information needs to be inline).
>
> > I am new with OpenBSD, installed 5.3. Modified xorg.conf too.
> > Mplayer cannot play videos as there is no Xvideo
> > support for my video card.
Bryan Chapman [br...@honeypoocakes.net] wrote:
>
> Oct 10 03:28:21 mystic /bsd: error: [drm:pid0:si_init_microcode]
> *ERROR* si_cp: Failed to load firmware "radeon-pitcairn_pfp"
> Oct 10 03:28:21 mystic /bsd: error: [drm:pid0:si_startup] *ERROR*
> Failed to load firmware!
>
> Is there another pl
If they have PCI-Express slots, 10G ethernet isn't a problem.
If they have supported SATA or SCSI controllers, storage isn't an issue.
Dell's RAID controllers tend to be well supported under OpenBSD
Friedrich Locke [friedrich.lo...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Is anyone running OBSD 5.3 on Dell R*** seri
Jonathan Gray [j...@jsg.id.au] wrote:
> There is only very basic shadowfb support for ivy bridge graphics
> in 5.3. To use opengl/xv and co you need to be using 5.4 or -current.
>
> SNA will not yet work, do not use it.
I'm starting to think my problem with shm not working has to do
with my ins
Maxime Villard [m...@m00nbsd.net] wrote:
> Hi,
> just a news, if you are interested:
>
> https://www.google.com/about/appsecurity/patch-rewards/
>
> Cool
Yeah, OpenBSD and developers could have gotten a lot of payments over
the years.
i'd imagine that putting 'www.facebook.com' in your hosts file will do it,
unless the browser ignores /etc/hosts
you could always use the url filtering mechanism of relayd combined
with pf redirects, but if people really want to bypass it, they'll
do proxyies (via ssh even) or remote desktop or vp
Darren Spruell [phatbuck...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I don't have a great deal of experience with SSD disks but was spec'ing
> some systems to use them. We'd be doing RAID on the hosts and I'd prefer
> to have something supported by bio(4) for volume management. Do SSDs
> have any impact on ability to d
I wrote up a guide for all you fascists to exercise your power with relayd.
Here's the early, unedited version:
http://www.nmedia.net/chris/url.blacklist.txt
Stefan Wollny [stefan.wol...@web.de] wrote:
> Hi there!
>
> In the last days I had an interesting and educational thread here on
> misc@
James Shupe [jsh...@hermetek.com] wrote:
> On 10/21/2013 9:08 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> > I wrote up a guide for all you fascists to exercise your power with
> > relayd.
> >
> > Here's the early, unedited version:
> >
> > http://www.nmedia.ne
Chris Cappuccio [ch...@nmedia.net] wrote:
>
> Anyways this also triggers a bug in the URL filtering mode of
> relayd. The symptom is long HTTP sessions hanging (Youtube, file
> downloads, ...) It may be fixed in -current. If you are using 5.3 or
> 5.4, you'll want to gra
A B [damnitiwantm...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hello everyone
>
> I?m having very slow transfers on stock 5.3 with the TP-LINK tg-3468 gb
> pci-e nic.
>
> re0 at pci3 dev 0 function 0 "Realtek 8168" rev 0x06: RTL8168E/8111E
> (0x2c00), apic 2 int 17, address f8:1a:67:04:2f:48
> rgephy0 at re0 phy 7: RT
Can you send a dmesg from 5.4-current please?
A B [damnitiwantm...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Thank you for your response.
>
> I tried with 5.4-current just updated with no luck. (re.c rev 1.145)
>
> Is there anything else to try? Should I write to tech@?
>
> Thanks!
This is a real shot in the dark, it should only work if your
BIOS has screwed interrupt routing for the realtek, but, try
changing the MSI exclusion in /usr/src/sys/dev/pci/if_re_pci.c
change PCI_PRODUCT_REALTEK_RT8101E to PCI_PRODUCT_REALTEK_8168
as in:
if (PCI_VENDOR(pa->pa_id) != PCI_V
Pedro Federico [pedfre...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Andy, did you finally get that server? If so, is OpenBSD running fine?
>
> I am interested in that server too.
>
I have some Xeon 55xx with intel C6xx chipsets. Works fucking awsome.
noah pugsley [noah.pugs...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Ethernet. Stated differently, an ethernet nic is not a modem.
Mr. Pugsley, an ethernet NIC includes a Modulator and Demodulator for
any of 10BaseT, 100BaseTX, 1000BaseT, 1BaseThingies, fiber versions
of the same, and so on.
Of course, it's not a
sven falempin [sven.falem...@gmail.com] wrote:
> My laptop has <> BIOS.
> What do you recommend to get openBSD on it ?
>
Damn, someone should port over the GPT stuff from Bitrig.
That's half the problem solved right there.
Andy Lemin [a...@brandwatch.com] wrote:
> Hi, sadly OpenBSD does not boot with the latest Ivy Bridge EP (E5-2637v2)
> with 'Power Technology' in the supermicro BIOS set to 'Max Performance', on
> both 5.4 release and the snapshot dated Nov 3rd;
>
This is a bug that needs to be fixed.
>
>
> H
Jan Lambertz [jd.arb...@googlemail.com] wrote:
> the ARC-1224-8I ist quite intresting for my purpose, but not listed as
> supported by openbsd, but on the areca website there is sourcecode for a
> driver...
> http://www.areca.com.tw/support/s_openbsd/openbsd.htm
> Anyone tried that yet ?
Newer Are
Jan Lambertz [jd.arb...@googlemail.com] wrote:
> http://www.areca.com.tw/support/s_openbsd/openbsd.htm
> Anyone tried that yet ?
If someone can get Areca to agree to the BSD license terms, the
newer card support can probably be included in the OpenBSD tree.
That'd be nice. Maybe you could contact
Stuart Henderson [s...@spacehopper.org] wrote:
> On 2013-11-08, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> > Jan Lambertz [jd.arb...@googlemail.com] wrote:
> >> http://www.areca.com.tw/support/s_openbsd/openbsd.htm
> >> Anyone tried that yet ?
> >
> > If someone can get Areca
Andy [a...@brandwatch.com] wrote:
> Hi back in the office now.
>
> On Thu 07 Nov 2013 20:54:20 GMT, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> >Andy Lemin [a...@brandwatch.com] wrote:
> >>Hi, sadly OpenBSD does not boot with the latest Ivy Bridge EP (E5-2637v2)
> >>with 'Po
Andy [a...@brandwatch.com] wrote:
> Hi Chris,
>
> Yea that makes sense, as you say its pretty trivial and a divide by zero
> check is a common coding practice...
>
> I will try again as I only tried 'Max Performance' but it might mean until
> this is fixed we cannot enable 'Turbo+' at all.
>
> W
Paolo Aglialoro [paol...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> just tried today on a sparc64 T1000 running 5.4 release the card, but,
> unfortunately, sli(4) cannot configure it as dmesg says:
>
> pci0 at vpci0
> "Emulex LPe11000" rev 0x02 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 not configured
> "Emulex LPe11000" rev 0
Adam Thompson [athom...@athompso.net] wrote:
>
> Well, you could - perhaps - flip this on its head. Instead of changing BGP,
> what about forcing one router to be the master (via advbase/advskew),
> advertising a lower BGP preference (probably by using both localpref for
> iBGP and path prependin
your controller isn't supported.
unless it has i2o mode, try something else
Ricardo Augusto de Souza [ricardo.so...@cmtsp.com.br] wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
>
> I have an IBM 3550 with SAS disks and Adaptec ServeRAID 8k controller
> and I AM NOT able to install openBSD on it.
>
> Installation didn't fin
40ff mem
> 0xcce0-0xccff,0xcafe-0xcaff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci2
> aac0: Enable Raw I/O
> aac0: Enable 64-bit array
> aac0: New comm. interface enabled
> aac0: [ITHREAD]
> aac0: ServeRAID 8k-l , aac driver 2.0.0-1
>
>
>
> -Mensagem original
Mike Hammett [openbsd-m...@ics-il.net] wrote:
> Why worry about HTTPS? What's to gain?
>
> Job's Twitter is very promising.
>
Aside from getting exploited by the latest OpenSSL bug (ok, LibreSSL has
done a great job lowering this probability!), the other big benefit is
that crappy providers an
Hrvoje Popovski [hrv...@srce.hr] wrote:
> if you're feeling brave enough and you can test/experiment
> with pf you can download openbsd kernel with experimental MP support
> from here http://kosjenka.srce.hr/~hrvoje/zaprocvat/smpfbsd
>
> SHA256 (smpfbsd) =
> e95e94190a0e52de7690b3278cfab1498581708
Edgar Pettijohn [ed...@pettijohn-web.com] wrote:
>
> Don't know why it works, but em1 works. I guess I'll rewrite my config files.
>
This shouldn't be an acceptable solution to you. Unless the port is physically
damaged, you should figure out what's going on. Tcpdump is a great start.
Chris
Leonid Bobrov [mazoc...@disroot.org] wrote:
> Hi, dear OpenBSD community.
>
> Please forgive me for drama I made earlier at mailing list and
> IRC channel. I am not a troll, I promise, I want to contribute to
> OpenBSD in any way I can, please give me a chance.
>
This is the internet. Nobody rem
Tommy Nevtelen [to...@nevtelen.com] wrote:
> >
> > Any ideas ?
>
> Sorry, nope.
>
> But I don't think that there is support for any Intel NICs above 10G.
>
That's the whole point of ixl, to support these NICs. Tony, it's appropriate
to start with a full dmesg and a report to b...@openbsd.org.
Is there any archive of serial console bootable images (w/virtio support)
for Linux or other OSes to boot under vmd?
Mike Larkin [mlar...@nested.page] wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 12, 2019 at 05:37:04PM -0700, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> > Is there any archive of serial console bootable images (w/virtio support)
> > for Linux or other OSes to boot under vmd?
> >
>
> You mean installer im
Mike Larkin [mlar...@nested.page] wrote:
>
> Still not sure I understand what you're after. Basically all Linux installers
> can do this, you just need to add console=ttyS0,115200 to the kernel command
> line. I don't think there are any installers that have this change already
> made.
>
I thin
Anatoli [m...@anatoli.ws] wrote:
>
> I've seen extremely slow HDD performance in OpenBSD, like 12x slower than on
> Linux, also no filesystem cache, so depending on your HDD with scp you may
> be hitting the max throughput for the FS, not the network.
>
12x slower? That's insane. What are you ta
gwes [g...@oat.com] wrote:
>
> What is the rated transfer rate of the SSD you're using to test?
> SATA 3 wire speed is 6G/sec and realistically 500MB/sec raw rate
> is near the top.
>
> Anything over that is an artefact probably from a cache somewhere.
>
He's using NVMe with its own DRAM cache,
gwes [g...@oat.com] wrote:
>
> That doesn't answer the question: if you say
> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda (linux) /dev/rsd0c (bsd) bs=64k count=100
> what transfer rate is reported
>
totally agree, Anatoli could you please compare ?
> That number represents the maximum possible long-term fi
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