MJ [m...@sci.fi] wrote:
>
> On 16 Jan 2014, at 20.24, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> >
> > Block traffic with specific ciphers from traversing the network? That's
> > sci.fi
> >
>
> You?re right again - this stuff is futuristic but could potentially be
>
Nicolai [nicolai-om...@chocolatine.org] wrote:
>
> As for your point, there's a lot of interest in and support for NaCl.
> For example, Curve25519 is now in a bunch of stuff like OpenSSH, Tor,
> Chromium and DNSCurve. Salsa20 and ChaCha20 are getting big. It's
> happening. Now that people are m
Kevin Lyda [ke...@ie.suberic.net] wrote:
>
> It's a lot easier to ask for $X/year if there's a plan for X to reduce.
>
Yeah, right. That's how things work, right? Your family spends less each year,
your work spends less each year, your government, they certainly spend less
each year. And OpenBSD
MJ [m...@sci.fi] wrote:
>
> On 18 Jan 2014, at 04.33, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> >
> > Why is there this effort to convince us to do less?
> >
>
> I do not propagate such a train of thought; only said that if you want
> corporate funding then be prepared to detail your costs and justify each and
Eduardo Meyer [dudu.me...@gmail.com] wrote:
> hello,
>
> I am doing some basic testings on the above mentioned scenario and I am
> stuck on some limits which I consider to be very low: I cannot get more
> than 27Kpps and 200Mbit/s routing performance without starting to loose
> packets.
>
> Syste
Eduardo Meyer [dudu.me...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> I will try
> ftp://ftp.openbsd.org//pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/sparc64/install55.iso right
> now. Other than simply running it is there anything else I should look at,
> or any new command line tool to play around?
>
Nope. All improvements here are goin
Jan Lambertz [jd.arb...@googlemail.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> i'm currently looking for a openbsd compatible hw-raid solution. i ended up
> with areca. openbsd lists a number of supported devices. sadly nothing that
> can be found on the areca website. relevant openbsd supported products seem
> to be e
Marcus MERIGHI [mcmer-open...@tor.at] wrote:
>
> "OpenBSD ist in finanziellen Noeten" => "OpenBSD is in financial
> trouble":
> http://www.heise.de/open/meldung/OpenBSD-ist-in-finanziellen-Noeten-2088205.html
>
> "OpenBSD ist gerettet" => "OpenBSD is saved"
> http://www.heise.de/open/meldung/Unix
Gabriel Marchi [gabrielmar...@bsd.com.br] wrote:
> Hi all,
> Has anybody tested Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet Adapter with
> OpenBSD 5.4 amd64 and OpenBSD -current? Network doesn't work at Dell vostro
> 5470.
>
Gabriel,
Can you post your FULL dmesg from this box and OpenBSD 5.5-bet
Christian Weisgerber [na...@mips.inka.de] wrote:
> http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/csec-used-airport-wi-fi-to-track-canadian-travellers-edward-snowden-documents-1.2517881
>
> If you didn't know already, this is your cue to look up ifconfig(8)'s
> "lladdr random".
>
And when you visit the US, Can
L. V. Lammert [l...@omnitec.net] wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, davy wrote:
>
> > Can I do a 4.1 -> 5.4 in one shot?
> >
> Nope. One version at a time, .. though the better solution would be to do
> a fresh install and copy data.
>
I don't see why everyone recommends "install one version at a time
L. V. Lammert [l...@omnitec.net] wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, davy wrote:
>
> > Can I do a 4.1 -> 5.4 in one shot?
> >
> Nope. One version at a time, .. though the better solution would be to do
> a fresh install and copy data.
>
What I'm recommending isn't really an upgrade so much as using the
Giancarlo Razzolini [grazzol...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I've used rdomains, but not for this. In this case I would use mpath and
> pf only. I really do not see the need for using rdomains in this case.
> It introduces too much complexity for a simple thing.
>
That's nice. But what about the problem?
L. V. Lammert [l...@omnitec.net] wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> > I don't see why everyone recommends "install one version at a time".
> >
> It's not a recommendation, it is reality. Each upgrade is based on the
> previuos
Kenneth Westerback [kwesterb...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> And, surprise!, boot blocks do change. 5.5 will be an example as things are
> rearranged and unified.
>
But you can still use old bootblocks to run the new kernel as a bootstrap
You don't get the proper random seed functionality until you up
Brad Smith [b...@comstyle.com] wrote:
> On 06/02/14 12:45 PM, L. V. Lammert wrote:
> >On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> >
> >>I don't see why everyone recommends "install one version at a time".
> >>
> >It's not a recommendati
Chris Bennett [chrisbenn...@bennettconstruction.us] wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 06, 2014 at 11:56:05AM -0600, L. V. Lammert wrote:
> > On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> >
> > > What I'm recommending isn't really an upgrade so much as using the old
> >
Laurence Rochfort [laurence.rochf...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I just updated to 5.4-patch and everything is working fine except for
> Chromium-proprietary, which now has a lot of lag when entering text
> into the url/search bar and when playing back videos.
>
> Does anybody have any suggest
Dennis den Brok [d.den.b...@uni-bonn.de] wrote:
> Hello misc@,
>
> I am considering getting a ThinkPad T61 or T500 to run OpenBSD on.
> My main concern is the noise level: I'd prefer the fan not to run
> at all during text editing and web browsing. Can anyone comment
> on that? Are there other
Alan Corey [alan01...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I wasn't too concerned until I discovered the machine wouldn't boot,
> comes up to ERR M or something like that. I put a kernel and a copy
> of boot in place from /usr/mdec but it still comes up and just says
> loading then nothing. Do I need to do instal
Alan Corey [alan01...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I'm at 5.2. Booting from a 5.4 install image I mounted my / as /mnt
> then my /usr as /mnt2. Then I did:
>
> /mnt2/mdec/installboot -n -v /mnt/boot /mnt2/mdec/biosboot /dev/wd0c
> and get: Bad system call
>
> There's a /mnt/boot in place copied from /mnt2
David Vasek [va...@fido.cz] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I would like to ask you. Does anybody have a real life experience with a few
> TB large encrypted vnd(4) image which hosts a filesystem which is
> intensively written to and read from? In such a setup where the host device
> is a 4k-byte sector drive
David Vasek [va...@fido.cz] wrote:
> On Mon, 24 Mar 2014, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> >Keep in mind, vnd emulates 512 byte sectors because that's the default
> >disklabel
> >that it uses
>
> (You probably mean a disktab, not a disklabel.) I am aware of it. As
Matt Carey [cvstealth2...@yahoo.com] wrote:
> I'm trying to track down the source of what is causing output errors on vlan
> interfaces for 2 separate physical systems. ?For example when looking at
> netstat between 2 different runs the values are always incrementing:
>
> #
> netstat -s -f inet -I
Emilio Perea [epe...@walkereng.com] wrote:
> When using the latest snapshot, some ssh clients are unable to connect.
> I don't know whether this is due to a problem with the client or the
> server, but hope someone can point me in the right direction. If it is a
> server problem, I will of course s
Chris Bennett [chrisbenn...@bennettconstruction.us] wrote:
>
> X is also built in.
> Gee, base is so insecure!!
>
X is a security disaster
nobody [openbsd.as.a.desk...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> -
> 1)
> If I search for "openbsdfoundation" on:
>
> - Facebook
> - Twitter
> - Youtube
> - Instagram
> - Flickr
> - Slideshare
> - etc..
>
> I get ZERO results regarding the topic.
>
I was thinking, maybe
Bob Eby [eby...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> This seems to indicate you're using the AGPL version 9.06
> ghostscript from the Artifex site? Is that correct?
> Is AGPL compatible with OpenBSD ports?
>
> I just wonder why not use the AGPL version 9.07 or 9.10?
> Seems odd you stick to the version GNU (no
noah pugsley [noah.pugs...@gmail.com] wrote:
> You know Chris, if you grew a beard..nmedia.net/bsdsexy? wopsexy?
> Maybe a sexy developer calendar can help with the donations...
>
Perhaps a swimsuit calendar? I'll volunteer for the cover!
Maybe a collaboration with Wu-Tang for the music trac
David Vasek [va...@fido.cz] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> the new installboot(8) wipes the disk label on a 4k-byte/sector drive - a
> valid disk label becomes binary zeros after
> /usr/sbin/installboot -r /mnt sd4
>
> To be more precise, the "boot sector" (the first 512 bytes) gets installed,
> but the dis
Stuart Henderson [s...@spacehopper.org] wrote:
>
> PCEngines APU are faster and more capable (also support amd64), also
> pretty cheap. I don't have one but various other developers do. This has
> had some bios problems but is getting there and has a big advantage of
> being able to use much bette
noah pugsley [noah.pugs...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I was going to get one of these:
> http://www.nextwarehouse.com/item/?1182700_g10e and just turn a 4gb ram
> model into a workstation. Alas I couldn't find any evidence of a driver
> existing...Of course at that price I might as well just get an atom b
Peter J. Philipp [p...@centroid.eu] wrote:
> pciide0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 "Intel 8 Series SATA" rev 0x05: DMA
> (unsupported), channel 0 configured to native-PCI, channel 1 configured to
> native-PCI
This is why IDE mode is so slow - pciide doesn't actually support your
controller.
Here's
Martijn Rijkeboer [mart...@bunix.org] wrote:
> The system is working since I can install and run Ubuntu 14.04 AMD64
> without problems.
>
> Any suggestions on how to fix this?
>
Ubuntu (server) 14.04 supports UEFI so it's hard to tell what you are seeing
here.
Perhaps you could explain what ha
Tekk [t...@parlementum.net] wrote:
> Is OpenBSD capable of booting from pure UEFI yet? This basically translates
> to "Is there a UEFI capable bootloader" since I don't have secure boot or
> anything turned on. I'm rather happy not having to deal with the bios at the
> moment so having to turn l
> The question is two-fold: In one way I'm asking about things that
> OpenBSD will currently run on, and in the other just asking about
> what's available for hardware regardless of whether OpenBSD will
> currently run on it.
>
In general, MIPS like Cavium Octeon is BE, supported and currently
sh
J Sisson [sisso...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I have some questions regarding the EdgeRouter 8 port (not the POE or
> PRO, and obviously not the LITE model, as it's already supported).
>
> I was curious if the relevant developers have had a chance to get
> their hands on one of these, and if so, how simi
Giancarlo Razzolini [grazzol...@gmail.com] wrote:
> My gut feeling when I first read your message was that you're joking.
> But, since it was a subtle joke, I got suspicious. Better to safe than
> sorry. Anyway, I hardly believe the post is real. If they *at least*
> offered to proof it, by exploit
Donovan Watteau [tso...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a way to force the disabling of flow control on em(4)?
>
> Henning said (http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=123003276308084&w=2):
> > flow control is enabled on openbsd whenever the peer supports it; done
> > in the autonegotiation phas
Donovan Watteau [tso...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> Yes, but I want to explicitly configure flow control, not speed or
> duplex. AFAIK this can't be forced with mediaopt. And forcing
> speed/duplex doesn't have any effect on the status of flow control.
Try it.
Daniel Ouellet [dan...@presscom.net] wrote:
>
> SuperServer 5037MC-H12TRF
> http://www.supermicro.com/products/system/3U/5037/SYS-5037MC-H12TRF.cfm
>
Looks like this is like a lot of the other X9 series SuperMicro motherboards
and is supported just as well as they are (pretty well)
> I was also
ha...@sdf.org [ha...@sdf.org] wrote:
> > Hi folks!
> >
> > I wonder if OBSD supports 50Gbe network cards. And what is the cable
> > standard to support such data transfers ?
> >
> > Thanks.
> >
> > --
> > The lion and the tiger may be more powerful, but the wolves do not perform
> > in the circus
>
Brad Smith [b...@comstyle.com] wrote:
> Only bnxt and mcx support 50. Intel chips that do are 800 series, beyond ixl.
>
Oh and bnxt does support multiple queues I was wrong in that last email.
Avon Robertson [avo...@xtra.co.nz] wrote:
> Hello misc@,
>
> Earlier today an AMD host I have froze again. I ssh'd into the host
> and retrieved the output from dmesg, /var/log/messages, and
> /var/run/dmesg.boot.
>
> I found nothing of note in $HOME/.local/share/xorg/Xorg.0.log.
>
> At the time
Here's a thread where people are seeing similar hangs on similar hardware under
Linux:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=108900
"VERIFIED WONTFIX" because the kernel driver is probably closer to the issue,
not Mesa
here's another: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=201957
Avon Robertson [avo...@xtra.co.nz] wrote:
>
> Greetings Chris and misc@,
>
> As suggested above by Chris?
> 1. Downloaded radeondrm-firmware-20181218.tgz to ~/download/.
> 2. # rm -fr /etc/firmware/amdgpu/*
> 3. # tar -C /etc -xzvf ~/download/radeondrm-firmware-20181218.tgz
>
> The machine has b
Emiel Kollof [em...@kollof.nl] wrote:
>
> Also happens to me on amdgpu/navi10 (even after downgrading the
> firmware to the 6.8 ones):
>
This appears to be a totally different failure than found by Avon. It's
also on a different class of hardware.
My suggestion to try an older firmware was base
Emiel Kollof [em...@kollof.nl] wrote:
> Chris Cappuccio schreef op do 21-10-2021 om 07:56 [-0700]:
>
> > This appears to be a totally different failure than found by Avon.
> > It's also on a different class of hardware.
>
> Is it? The errors seem very similar. Als
The pciide driver doesn't support your Nvidia chipset. It needs extra
code (specific for this chip) for DMA to work properly.
The driver was targeted towards older systems, it shouldn't be used on any
board that supports AHCI. AHCI has more capabilities including NCQ and will
offer better performa
u...@mailo.com [u...@mailo.com] wrote:
> The article:
> https://eklitzke.org/the-cult-of-dd
>
> The content of the article:
>
> The Cult of DD
> Mar 17, 2017
> You'll often see instructions for creating and using disk images on Unix
> systems making use of the dd command. This is a strange progra
u...@mailo.com [u...@mailo.com] wrote:
>
> But is it an OpenBSD-compatibility issue
> or does my chipset want to retire?
These issues sound like they are related to lack of software support driven by
a lack of programming documentation.
Chris Narkiewicz [he...@ezaquarii.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Does anybody run OpenBSD on Starlabs Lite Mk IV laptop?
>
> https://starlabs.systems/pages/labtop-mk-iv
>
> I'm considering buing it as an everyday carry, but could not
> find any stories in a blogosphere.
>
> Starlabs staff told me that t
Atticus [grobe...@gmail.com] wrote:
> It isn't just SIP. You will need to set up NAT traversal and make sure RTP
> traffic can pass as well. Setting up a STUN server and configuring the
> clients to use it should aid in the NAT portion. The RTP traffic should be
> fine as long as pf is being statef
You should ask about this on Inkscape forums first
Freddy Fisker [f...@freddyfisker.dk] wrote:
> There has for some time been a problem with the line spacing in version
> 1.1.1p1 of Inkscape.
>
> In a text the first two lines has one line spacing, and the next lines has
> the double line spacing.
holy crap, rather than maintain the drivers and net80211 layer, they are just
building compat for the linux version?
i guess this approach seems very rational for something as large as amdgpu...
stefan, your commits help to demystify more 802.11 chips and system for me.
over the years, hundreds o
readahead [readah...@protonmail.com] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm currently considering purchasing a HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Plus.
> The machine is to be used mostly as a home NAS (OpenBSD, softraid(4)
> encryption and Samba).
>
> Is this a right machine to run OpenBSD on? Can you please shar
is anyone trying to use an older radeondrm card with current?
i just moved my SSDs into an amd64 box with a radeon 8570 card and everything
seems to work, glxgears works fast...
...until i start firefox or chrome, and pull up, say, youtube's
video-image-laden front page, then the browser window
Patrick Harper [paia...@fastmail.com] wrote:
> In Chrome, try logging on to chrome://flags and enable #ignore-gpu-blocklist.
>
> Make sure hardware acceleration is enabled in the settings as well.
What's going on here is that GL seems to work, then it breaks when I hit some
condition. Also, once
Patrick Harper [paia...@fastmail.com] wrote:
>
> I also notice the BIOS version is out of date by some margin, 3.50 is
> from 2013 but 3.96 was built two years ago.
>
Upgrading to 3.96 fixes the issue, whatever it was. This is
the first time in a long time that a BIOS upgrade actually
solved an
Chris Cappuccio [ch...@nmedia.net] wrote:
> Patrick Harper [paia...@fastmail.com] wrote:
> >
> > I also notice the BIOS version is out of date by some margin, 3.50 is
> > from 2013 but 3.96 was built two years ago.
> >
>
> Upgrading to 3.96 fixes the issue, wha
Mihai Popescu [mih...@gmail.com] wrote:
> > Hrvoje Popovski wrote:
> > It would be great that em(4) have multiqueue support, that box with veb(4)
> > and >"parallel forwarding" diff on tech@ would kick ass :)
>
> I've seen many hardware projects like this, where they say it is open
> design and f
Just wanted to mention that Myricom myx NICs, which are totally
obsolete (Myricom was absorbed into Google), are much more reliable
under OpenBSD than under FreeBSD with Myricom's own driver. The
OpenBSD myx can run at full tilt for 700+ days without resetting
the NIC, whereas FreeBSD has to const
j...@entropicblur.com [j...@entropicblur.com] wrote:
> https://mntre.com/media/reform_md/2022-06-20-introducing-mnt-pocket-reform.html
>
> Looks like a fun little machine, and they claim OpenBSD support is "in
> development." I'm curious, have they contributed any code or resources to
> make OpenB
RJ45 [r...@slacknet.com] wrote:
> ok but...
>
> ifconfig vlan100 vlan 100 vlandev vr2
> ifconfig: SIOCSETVLAN: Device busy
>
> I cannot use the same vlan name and I need an unique name because
> I must runa a dhcp server on vlan.
> If I have t ocreate a new vlanName for each vr1 vr2 and vr3
> how
Joe S [js.li...@gmail.com] wrote:
>
> What's really frustrating here are the network admins I work with that
> are trying to migrate from ipsec vpns to MPLS because it's "easier"
> and "just as secure".
>
> Yaargh.
>
Typical networking idiots. Some telcos sell an "MPLS IP VPN" service which is
Rod Whitworth [glis...@witworx.com] wrote:
>
> I have no experience with either BUT I do know that the Viking just
> "looks like" a Realtek NIC to OpenBSD. That was done to make the
> provision of drivers unnecessary.
How do you provision the ATM PVC and ADSL characteristics without a driver to
Jan Stary [h...@stare.cz] wrote:
>
> Does disabling the unused devices (audio, lpt, ...)
> make any difference in power consumption?
>
> GENERIC doesn't mention any acpi* so I guess I need to use APM.
> Given that there is no hw.setperf, what are my options?
>
What, 1 watt usage from that CPU i
I typically use the configuration files and asterisk command line.
Andres Salazar [ndrsslz...@gmail.com] wrote:
> I would like to ask the OBSD community if someone can recommend me a good
> supported interface for Asterisk on OBSD.
>
> I have heard that FreePBX is really a pain to configure bec
w...@xoono.net [w...@xoono.net] wrote:
> pciide0 at pci0 dev 2 function 1 "Acer Labs M5219 UDMA IDE" rev 0x20: DMA
> (unsupported), channel 0 configured to compatibility, channel 1
> configured to compatibility
> pciide0: channel 0 ignored (other hardware responding at addresses)
> pciide0: chann
yes
Anathae Townsend [atowns...@nucleus.com] wrote:
> the following pf.conf fragment allows ssh connections from the outside world
>
> to my firewall
>
> pass in on egress proto tcp from any to egress port ssh keep state \
> (max-src-conn 10, max-src-conn-rate 4/20, overload flush global)
>
Have you tried different disks? The AHCI driver works really well with "AHCI
1.1" and "AHCI 1.2" on intel chipsets, at least in my experience.
Mihai Popescu B.S. [mihai...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a DELL Precision 370 workstation and BIOS allows me to select
> the SATA behaviour mo
Hi,
It's my birthday, so I decided to release a little rewrite of flashdist that
I've been working on.
It addresses the two major shortcomings of flashdist (in light of the fact that
an 8GB usb key costs $20 now)
First, it installs a _complete_ OpenBSD system, that runs in read-only (or
read-
here is the key error message. it means your whole ahci disk has disappeared
(and anything you can still run is happening from cache.)
--
ahci0: stopping the port, softreset slot 31 was still active.
ahci0: failed to reset port during timeout handling, disabling it
--
likely a reboot will fix it
Christopher LILJENSTOLPE [soek...@cdl.asgaard.org] wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> Any thoughts as to how to get around this - it's only been up for a few
> days. Rebooting my home router every 24 hours is not spouse endearing
> behavior :)
>
port over some workarounds from dragonfly, or just f
Remco [re...@d-compu.dyndns.org] wrote:
> Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> > here is the key error message. it means your whole ahci disk has
> > disappeared (and anything you can still run is happening from cache.)
> >
> > --
> > ahci0: stopping the port, softreset
John Tate [j...@johntate.org] wrote:
> I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
> and my little mistakes.
>
Hi John,
It's actually spelled "narcissism".
Chris
John Tate [j...@johntate.org] wrote:
> I think I've found a bug in the OpenBSD crowd. They bug the hell out of me
> and my little mistakes.
>
You also think facebook is narcissistic because...no negativity is allowed.
http://johntate.org/node/29
Perhaps it's time for the aspiring novelist/philo
Upgrade to OpenBSD 5.0 before you dig too far. If you still have problems after
that, consider swapping hardware to see if the problems go away.
co...@tetrachina.com [co...@tetrachina.com] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> OpenBSD 4.1 as firewall crashed sometimes recently everyday ,and the
> debug messag
some of these usb sticks come with a piece of software that will set them back
to being normal usb sticks without hidden cdroms
j...@bitminer.ca [j...@bitminer.ca] wrote:
> I have an Iomega Prestige 1TB disk, "USB 3.0 up to 5Gbit/s",
>
> OpenBSD 4.9 (GENERIC.MP) #794: Wed Mar 2 07:19:02 MST 201
OpenBSD has its own mechanism to mitigate high interrupt load that is already
enabled in the bge and em drivers.
Neither bge nor em are 10G cards.
??? [chipits...@gmail.com] wrote:
> am I right that OpenBSD does NOT use device polling like FreeBSD or
> Linux (called "NAPI") do ?
> any r
Otto Moerbeek [o...@drijf.net] wrote:
>
> There are several way to speedup fsck which are available now:
>
> - Use larger block and fragment sizes when doing a newfs, of course
> this requires rebuilding the file system
Is there any sort of rule-of-thumb for this now that 1TB drives are "cheap"
how about this scenario:
1. tar cvf /tmp/etc.tar /etc
2. mount_mfs -s 20M swap /etc
3. tar xvf /tmp/etc.tar -C /
Jiri B [ji...@devio.us] wrote:
> scenario:
> =
>
> * mkdir /proto_etc
> * cp -Rp /etc/* /proto_etc
> * mkdir /pre_etc
> * cd /pre_etc
> * for i in boot.conf rc ttys passwd mas
Stuart Henderson [s...@spacehopper.org] wrote:
>
> On this type of system I just do "rw;vi /whatever;ro" where rw/ro are simple
> shell scripts that run "mount -uw /" and "mount -ur /" respectively, I don't
> usually find this a problem.
>
> Or you could use a wrapper which does similar and commi
It anyone wants to go right to Lemote and start selling on Amazon or direct in
your area, they were priced at $280/ea in 10 qty about 2 years ago.
So they're probably much cheaper now. And it sounds like they ship in single
qty now, too.
Johan Beisser [j...@caustic.org] wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 27,
George Steel [li...@netglue.co] wrote:
>
> When writing to the disk(s), the whole system becomes incredibly slow
> until the write operation has finished. I've used dd to make 10GB files
> and then timed simple operations like ls and compared this to other
> OpenBSD servers I've got with single SA
;> because the wait is unbelievable compared to a much lower spec machine.
> >> Perhaps this is to be expected with a relatively cheap RAID controller?
> >> and I'd be better off just attaching separate disks and doing softraid.
> >> If I cat the 10GB file to /d
Ted Unangst [t...@tedunangst.com] wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 11, 2012, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> > There's also an issue with dirty buffers getting eaten up, but that is
> > prominent on slow devices, and you'd be WAITing in buf_needva in that case.
>
> I don't
Geoff Steckel [g...@oat.com] wrote:
> I didn't follow the thread all the way back, so forgive me if this has
> been covered. I'm betting that the disk subsystem & RAID controller
> combination are choking on queued metadata writes. Some of the questions
> are aimed at the user, and some at people w
Jason McIntyre [j...@cava.myzen.co.uk] wrote:
>
> right. but is there any reason to discourage people from running it when
> they please, or do we just expect it to be done automatically after
> upgrade?
>
> i ask because we need to watch how we word this. we could reasonably
> assume that people
Benny Lofgren [bl-li...@lofgren.biz] wrote:
>
> (For example, I'd love to see Jeff Robertson's and Kirk McKusick's
> work on soft update journaling that went into FreeBSD 9 in OpenBSD
> as well. Had I the time I'd look into it myself (it's a *lot* of work
> from what little I've seen of it, but no
Kevin Chadwick [ma1l1i...@yahoo.co.uk] wrote:
>
> I'm very careful with what I let the almost constantly full of exploits
> phone have access to (a network being as strong as it's weakest link).
>
There were rumors in the last 20 years of firmware being loaded on phones to
provide an anonymous,
Scott McEachern [sc...@blackstaff.ca] wrote:
> On 02/29/12 03:52, Remco wrote:
> >If the file on your file system is
> >/var/nginx/html/who_is_online.php, a daemon chrooted to /var/nginx
> >will see it as /html/who_is_online.php. If the daemon chrooted to
> >/var/nginx should really see /var/nginx/
Mo Libden [m0lib...@mail.ru] wrote:
>
> now this is intriguing.
> AFAIK, classical vfork was invented in earlier BSD to avoid expensive
> duplication of a parent process in case all the child does is launch of
> other executable. SysV solved it with CoW, BSD came up with vfork.
>
> Now, how come
Ariane van der Steldt [ari...@stack.nl] wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 08:42:43PM +0200, Martijn Rijkeboer wrote:
> > After upgrading my AMD64-current installation to the latest snapshot it
> > crashes on boot with an uvm_fault.
> >
> > Message:
> >
> > starting network
> > uvm_fault(0x
Christian Weisgerber [na...@mips.inka.de] wrote:
> Gilles Chehade wrote:
>
> > > http://mosh.mit.edu/
> >
> > "Moreover, TELNET had some good things going it for a local-echo mode and
> > a well-defined network virtual terminal. Then SSH came along and added
> > minor
> > enhancements like co
The newer chips are mostly supported in the athn driver but only in 802.11a/g
modes.
Alan Corey [ab...@devio.us] wrote:
> I was shopping for Atheros cards to use with the athn driver but
> down in caveats section of the man page it says "The athn driver
> does not support any of the 802.11n capab
Mike Erdely [m...@erdelynet.com] wrote:
>
> FYI: For a test, I added "foo" with useradd(8) and "bar" with adduser(8):
> # grep -E "(foo|bar)" /etc/master.passwd
> foo:*:1002:1002::0:0::/home/foo:/bin/ksh
> bar:*:1003:1003::0:0:bar:/home/bar:/bin/ksh
>
> Looks like useradd does the rig
The suggestion on this thread are interesting. But tcpdump -n is pretty
manageable over a modem link and shows you exactly what you want to know, not
just a summary of it.
Alan Corey [ab...@devio.us] wrote:
> I'm on a modem, so there's only about 3 K/sec anyway, but is there
> anything that'll
There's no real bug here, it's just a misunderstanding.
If you setup "vlan1" with a vlan ID of 1 then OpenBSD will tag the packets
and expect them to be tagged.
Many switches expect vlan ID 1 to be untagged. To match this behavior
in OpenBSD, put the IP address on the parent interface and not on
Thank you. This helped me to figure out that installboot was clobbering
the MBR on the vnd images because of the type in the disklabel.
After reviewing arch/i386/stand/installboot/installboot.c I realized
that installboot assumes any vnd device is the same as a floppy and just
starts writing th
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