This is probably something stupid I'm doing, but I can't see it right this
second.
Trying to build xenocara from sources pulled from
anon...@anoncvs3.usa.openbsd.org:/cvs
as of about 60 minutes before sending this email message gives me
cc -O2 -pipe -I/usr/xenocara/lib/freetype/include
-I/u
On May 13, 2013, at 9:47 PM, Scott McEachern wrote:
>>
>> *** Error 1 in lib/freetype (:37 'type1.o': @cc -O2 -pipe
>> -I/usr/xenocara/lib/freetype/include -I/usr/xenocara/lib/freetype/...)
>> *** Error 1 in lib/freetype (Makefile:36 'build')
>> *** Error 1 in lib (:48 'build')
>> *** Error
On May 13, 2013, at 11:54 PM, Maurice Janssen wrote:
>> *** Error 1 in /usr/xenocara (Makefile:35 'build')
>>
>> Any hints as to what I'm doing wrong?
>
> Are you using make in parallel (-j) mode? If so, please try without -j
I'm doing a simple make build (after a make bootstrap && make obj)
> What is the revision of the file? Any sticky tags/dates?
>
> rev should be 1.1.1.2
You are on to something... cvs up -PAd should remove all tags, no? It didn't.
When I moved t1load.h out of the way and re-updated I got a different version.
Grumble... I think it's time to refresh all my sourc
On May 14, 2013, at 1:56 PM, Ted Unangst wrote:
>> You are on to something... cvs up -PAd should remove all tags, no? It
>> didn't.
>
> Yes, it should. No, it doesn't. There's a bug somewhere in cvs.
*nod* Trashing the source and fetching from scratch showed a few things
stuck at older tags
On May 14, 2013, at 2:07 PM, patrick keshishian wrote:
>
> and none of those files were locally modified? Do you have the output
> of "cvs up -PAd" in regard to those specific files?
There was no output. I have exactly one modified file in my xenocara tree.
It's not in the lib subdir. I have
Tor Houghton writes:
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 07:59:17AM -0800, David Newman wrote:
>
> > > Well, if you want to prevent someone from accidentally connecting to your
> > > network, yes.
> >
> > WEP keys can be captured is less than one minute:
>
> This fact is immaterial in context of m
"Pedro de Oliveira" writes:
> Hello,
> Someone on IRC just posted this link http://www.delilinux.de/oksh/ , seems
> like someone ported OpenBSD ksh to Linux and licensed it under GPLv3. Isn't
> this a license violation?
See /usr/src/bin/ksh/LEGAL.
People can do just about whatever they want w
Miod Vallat writes:
> But some parts of OpenBSD's ksh are BSD-licensed files, which did not
> come from pdksh initially.
That's not what /usr/src/bin/ksh/LEGAL states, but I didn't look
further. OK, looking I see that alloc.c and mknod.c have copyrights.
> Relicensing these files under GPLv3
"Unix Fan" writes:
> This really does suck... While we as users appreciate developers hard work,
A majority rely on -STABLE for updated and secure 3rd party software..
Really? You have statistics? I'd be curious to see how many run
stable vs. old releases vs. current.
> Why even have a -CU
Ingo Schwarze writes:
> > and the early versions (say, OpenBSD 3.0)
>
> Hey, Nick! Stop making people feel so old,
> winter is depressive time anyway...;)
3.0 is not old! I have one copy of 2.3 still in its shrink wrap
left on my shelf :-)
// marc
> but when i try to translate them into configure files, i run into a problem
> with the hostname.gif file:
Not surprising as the hostname.xxx files do NOT use ifconfig syntax.
This seems to fool lots of people. Do not look at the ifconfig
man page. Look at the hostname.if man page where it
Marco Peereboom writes:
> > -Nix Fan. (Fvwm, IMHO is ugly..)
>
> Fluxbox is fugly, fvwm is awesome.
>
> this discussion is very useful!
cwm (with the changes I've made :-) is looking nicer and nicer! I hope
to see these changes in the tree, soon.
// marc
"Brad Tilley" writes:
> performed from the OpenBSD 4.2 install CD. I'll send it to the one
> 'ISO Certified' company that agreed to examine it. If they cannot
You keep throwing around the 'ISO Certified' tag as if it had some
special meaning. Certified to what standard? It makes a difference.
Diana Eichert writes:
> On Wed, 9 Jan 2008, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> > run H.323 and you can experience much of that same pain again
> > and more besides :-)
>
> (now we digress)
>
> give me X.25 any day, instead of this new fangled ISDN technology.
Yeah, X.25 with a triple-X pad (X.
Deanna Phillips writes:
> But for Linux binary emulation? No way. If you want that, run
> Linux. What kind of people run Linux binaries on OpenBSD,
> anyway? Don't give me that "I need Flash", since I spent months
> of my life working on Gnash for OpenBSD just so you wouldn't
> have to use
Deanna Phillips writes:
> ; Do something about it
> ; Use another OS
> ; Complain
>
> Which are you doing?
None of the above. I ignore flash. My comment was only to point out
that gnash is not the best example to show why Linux emulation isn't
needed. Oh, I ignore Linux emulation, too.
Chris writes:
> I am after a software that would allow me to view photos from my
> digital camera which I usually mount in /mnt/camera. I tried from the
Depends upon the camera. If your camera looks like a USB mass storage
device then mount /dev/sdwhatever and use the display command from
Image
> Actually, this is the part of the discussion that interests me. Is
> threading
> a doomed hope on OpenBSD, a model of utilizing multiple cores which the
> developers have zero interest supporting? Has the work on libc_r and the
> like
> been abandoned completely?
libc_r is gone, rep
> For the sake of new folks it may be wise to put a .cvsignore in
> our /usr/src tree to prevent unintended cosequences of using the (also
> suggested) prune switch on cvs (-P).
-P will only remove EMPTY directories that cvs knows about. Putting
xenocara (or in my case zenocara and ports) i
sonjaya writes:
> Also default minimac is only 1 ethernet how to add another ethernet
> can support in minimac and openbsd.
Yes. My web/mail server is a mac mini. The only problem was finding
a usb ethernet that worked. I had to try three of them before I found
one supported. This one wor
Matthew Szudzik writes:
> > doesn't support firewire. I don't know if the built in wireless works
> > as I've never tried it. It is recognized by the kernel:
> >
> > ath0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Atheros AR5424" rev 0x01: apic 2 int 17 (
irq 11)
>
> Atheros AR5424 wireless devices are
> servers with services running we want public. Why should I allow
> someone to ping my dns server?
If I'm having problems resolving a host address that is supposed
to be handled by your server one of the first things I'll do is
see if I have general connectivity to your server. I'll ping it
"C. L. Martinez" writes:
> Oops .. I would say under OpenBSD 4.0
Not -w, but -v -v. I'm guessing the font you use makes -vv look like -w.
// marc
"Greg Thomas" writes:
> > > mount -t ext2fs /dev/rwd1c /mnt
> >
> > mount -t ext2fs /dev/wd1i /mnt
>
> How do you know it's i?
FAQ 14.1 says:
Devices without a disklabel: If a device does not currently have an
OpenBSD disklabel on it but has another file system (for example, a
disk wi
> bge1 - Internal Interface, 192.168.0.1
> sk0 - Management Interface, 192.168.0.36
These are on the same network. From your ifconfig:
bge1inet 192.168.0.1 netmask 0x broadcast 192.168.255.255
sk0 inet 192.168.0.36 netmask 0xffc0 broadcast 192.168.0.63
I suspect that will
> up giftunnel 212.182.166.172 64.71.128.81
> up inet6 2001:470:1F01:::1AE1 2001:470:1F01:::1AE0 prefixlen 128
> !route add -inet6 default 2001:470:1F01:::1AE0
Mine looks like this (and it works just fine)
- hostname.gif0 -
tunnel 208.201.244.208 208.201.234.221
inet6 alias
> and when I use mailstats(8) (mailstats -C ~/.procmaillog) it says
Wrong program. mailstats(8) is part of sendmail. The program you
want is mailstat (no man page), installed in /usr/local/bin as part
of the procmail package. But you knew that.
> located" I also tried the "mailstat" command
> i would like to configure my UPS device for openbsd. But i am unsure
> whether it is supported by any of openbsd port's ups programs. Is
> there anyone that would allow to handle it under openbsd ?
Yes and no.
> uhidev1 at uhub3 port 1 configuration 1 interface 0
> uhidev1: American Power
> > >Also take a look at the OpenBSD section because you'll have
> > >to recompile the kernel to make it work.
>
> That's incorrect, use config -e and you can disable uhid* without
> changing to an unsupported kernel configuration.
1) The kernel config need not change.
2) disable uhid* would
> uhidev-patch:
> "don't match APC products (all of them are UPS's)"
>
> This isn't:
> http://www.amazon.co.uk/APC-Keyboard-mouse-adapter-Type/dp/BC120J
Yep. You're correct. However, that didn't exist when the patch was
created. The patch comes from friend and dates back maybe 3 year
Exal de jesus Garcia Carrillo writes:
> .forward on openbsd?, I have tryed with "|IFS=' ' && exec /usr/bin/procmail
> -f- || exit 75 #exal" but doesn't work.
/usr/bin/procmail? The port/package installs procmail in /usr/local/bin
// marc
> This same issue however has stopped me from getting 4.0 to install on
> an intel core duo mac mini as well.
$ sysctl hw
hw.machine=i386
hw.model=Genuine Intel(R) CPU 1300 @ 1.66GHz ("GenuineIntel" 686-class)
hw.ncpu=2
hw.byteorder=1234
hw.physmem=1040629760
hw.usermem=1040621568
hw.pagesize=
> So, question is - how is it possible? It looks like something I'm
> missing. I don't know how, but it looks like all www date is written
Order is important. It looks like you mounted /var/www before /var
in which case /var/www is hidden. /etc/fstab must be in the order
that you want filesyst
> is this the way that it always is for configuring /etc/hostname.if
> files? basically take the ifconfig command and put everything after
> the interface name into the /etc/hostname.if file?
Not quite. The format is sometimes different. There is a hostname.if(5)
man page that should describe
Diana Eichert writes:
> Since I've never used a USB ethernet NIC, I usually live in the 1Gb / 10Gb
> world, I thought I'd ask here for chipset recommendations.
It took me three tries to get one that worked. The winner was made
by linksys. The current version of the D-Link DUB-E100 does not
w
Jonathan Gray writes:
> Just about anything you can buy should work. The MosChip MCS7830
> ones (ie syba usb ethernet) being the only exception that comes to mind.
The current rev of the D-link DUB-E100 does NOT work. At least it
did't with code as of about the middle of last month.
// marc
> gnash looks very cool, but as of right now, it still can't play strongbad
> email, nor google video.
gnash (last tried was their cvs version as of about 1 month ago)
would play maybe 30% of the flash I ran into on my amd64. It
has a long way to go to become usable. If enabled I found that
Frank Denis writes:
> Well, I see two ways of having flash work with native apps:
And these methods work on my hppa box? Or my Sparc64 box? Or on
any non-i386/amd64 box?
// marc
Adam writes:
> Why does fopen()ing a directory for reading succeed instead of failing
> with EISDIR? This has the possibly unexpected consequence of letting
I believe it is so things like "grep -r regex *" work.
// marc
Peter Matulis writes:
> I am having difficulty finding documentation on how to set up a memory
> file system from beginning to end. I keep reading about /tmp and swap
> and docs that presume certain steps have been accomplished (disklabel).
I suspect your difficulty is in expecting it to be
> My main question is the device it uses. The man page has the
> device /dev/sd0b. This needs to be set up somewhere. Still, I see
> that people use "swap" in its place instead.
Swap is the b partition in a generic kernel (and most other kernels,
too). Use of "swap" in fstab just simplif
frantisek holop writes:
> so what's up with these dick measurements?
I think you got that part just right :-)
Expecthing cyl * head * sec/cyl to come up with the number of actual
sectors on the disk is your problem. Modern disk don't have a fixed
number of sec/track. They use Zone Bit Recordi
I found it highly amusing that as a result of runnig the latest spamd
in greylisting mode with this change
Make spamd include the HELO/EHLO identification string sent by
the connecting hosts in the tuple key when greylisting. catches
a few more bogus hosts and will let us trap based on HELO
Bob Beck writes:
> > etc. Oops. Somehow the white entry for the mailing list host was lost.
>
> No that indicates that you have messed up. you are showing
Of course I messed up. Didn't mean to imply otherwise!
> me output of an old spamdb command and claiming to be running the new
> i don't think you can modify attachments with config(8), but
You can. Or you can build a custom kernel. My box finds my SATA
drive before my ATA drive though I use the ATA drive as wd0. My
kernel config has:
wd1 at pciide? flags 0x
wd0 at pciide? flags 0x
wd* at pcii
> I follow current and it seems to me strange that xenocara is under
> /usr/src. I have my src tree in /usr/src and xenocara in
> /usr/src/xenocara. So when I update my src tree with cvs it seems that
Strangeness is a matter of personal choice. You do not have to
put xenocara under /usr/src, i
"Kian Mohageri" writes:
> I see no reason a host should receive any response at all when it is trying
> to talk to a host that doesn't exist or a port that isn't actually listening.
Traceroute.
// marc
> Still curious how they would work on, say, /var/mysql or /var/postgresql,
> but I can play with this on my own.
> Has anyone already tried? Care to comment?
FWIW I run softdep on ALL partitions except / and /var and have for
many years. I exclude /var because on a crash I want the best chan
"Jean-Daniel Beaubien" writes:
> If you want to use an APC UPS you might need to compile nut from ports (or
> download and compile the latest version).
Or use apcuspd. Last time I got the source from sourceforge it just worked.
./configure --enable-usb
make
sudo make install
neko[marc]#
"Bruce Bauer" writes:
> You nailed it down!
> After boot>-s, examining the dmesg shows the SATA drive is wd0 and the
> former wd0 is wd1 and the former wd1 is wd2. Now if my thinking is
> correct, all I should have to do is edit fstab to reflect the changed
> drive positions and the system sh
> for FILE in *jpg; do
> NEW=$(echo $FILE | sed -e 's/\.jpg$/_thumb.jpg/')
> mv "${FILE}" "${NEW}"
> done
There is no need for echo and sed. OpenBSD sh and ksh support
${var%suffix} which evaluates to the contents of var less the suffix.
for f in *.jpg; do mv $f ${f%.
Maurice Janssen writes:
> >Is there anyway to _not_ get these extra sets as part of
> >following stable? I don't know that it hurts anything, but I have no
> >use for them on the system and would like to keep it as minimalistic as
> >possible.
>
> I'm sure it's possible to modify the tr
I've some old Sun SPARC equipment that must go. There are two
conditions for the taking, though:
1) You must take all of it
2) I'm not going to ship it (I'm in the SF bay area)
Even though I won't ship it, it is currently boxed for shipment
in two boxes: #1: 25 x 25 x 21 inches, 57 lbs
> Most definitely, -A is normally the only way to see alias info. Just
> wanted to let you know about the /32 mask for aliases.
???. Perhaps I missed some earlier context, but -A is not the only way
to see alias info.
$ ifconfig msk0
msk0: flags=8843 mtu 1500
lladdr 00:16:cb:a7:52
> When my machine boots, I see:
>
> "Cyclades Cyclom-Z" rev 0x01 at pci1 dev 9 function 0 not configured
>
> So the OS/driver does see the card.
You have that backwards. The OS does see the card, thus the message.
The "not configured" part means the OS is not configured with a driver
snowcrash+openbsd writes:
> > You've got the source. Why not read it and figure out the answer for
> yourself?
>
> Source being available is true for just about everything, now, isnt't it?
Well, I see you quoted from a private message I sent, and a selected
quote at that. While noting tha
> Burroughs Computers essentially went out of business because their
> computers refused to do illegal operations while IBM's computers
> very happily did all sorts of illegal stuff.
Way off topic here... Burroughs became part of Unisys and the
architecture that "refused to do illegal operati
> Does OpenBSD = UNIX? Or, does OpenBSD = Unix? (or unix or unix-like or etc.)
You are the first person I've seen to makes a distinction between unix,
Unix, and UNIX and imply that the distinction has any meaning.
// marc
> Some time ago I tried to submit a bug report through sendbug
> but couldn't get it through. I didn't investigate much but IIRC
> it was because the hostname of the box wasn't valid (missing MX records
> or whatever) and the receiving smtp daemon discarded the message.
Standard anti-spam acti
Antti Harri writes:
> > Standard anti-spam action these days.
> [rest snipped]
>
> Maybe so, but I find it very strange for sendbug's server to have
> such restrictions. I even didn't get any errors back.
You find it strange that a site with a well known address and thus
a magnet for spam w
Jeff Simmons writes:
> all out of date, and the link to the cvs list is broken. Anyone know of any
> uptodate compilations?
$ host -ttxt google.com
google.com descriptive text "v=spf1 include:_netblocks.google.com ~all"
$ host -ttxt _netblocks.google.com
_netblocks.google.com descriptive text "
I notices that majordomo now gives this warning when running the
digest command:
$* is no longer supported at /usr/local/lib/majordomo/digest line
305.
I assume it started when perl was updated to 5.10.0. As one who
dislikes perl enough to have never learned it a clue as to what it
means
On Nov 25, 2008, at 1:00 PM, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
Then again, majordomo is long dead and has a bad license.
Perhaps it is not worth so much effort, and the time might be better
spent migrating to something else... mlmmj comes to mind...
Thanks for that idea. Somehow I missed mlmmj last time
Zbigniew Baniewski writes:
> > ldconfig -SP /usr/bin /usr/sbin /usr/local/bin /usr/local/sbin
> > /usr/X11R6/bin
>
> Just tried the sequence - can't see any difference, unfortunately.
Not suprising as the firefox binary is not in any of the given
paths.
// marc
Hey Tas...
I'm trying to bring a second mini on line and am having a problem
that I don't recall how I worked around the first go around. Perhaps
you can apply a clue bat!
I hooked up a monitor and keyboard, installed a CD created
from the latest snapshot, and was happy to see it boot OpenBSD
as
Otto Moerbeek writes:
> On Thu, Apr 24, 2008 at 09:28:55PM -0700, Marco S Hyman wrote:
> > Alas, my joy was short lived: once the bsd.rd is running the
> > USB keyboard isn't recognized. I'm sitting at the (I)nstall,
> > (U)pgrade, or (S)hell? prompt a
> > CWM doesn't support Xinerama.
>
> It doesn't. It will. Xinerama is useful. Ditto EWMH.
Ehh? I ran Xinerama. I ran CWM. It worked. CWM saw my
dual screen as one big screen. For just about everything
I wantede to do that was good enough.
// marc
Peter_APIIT writes:
> I very disappointed with this forum because no one willing to help me.
It is not a web forum, it is a mailing list.
No one on the list has any obligation to help you. If you want
support figure out your budget then call one of the commercial
organizations listed at http:/
"Dongsheng Song" writes:
> OpenBSD execute /usr/bin/newsyslog every hour, where newsyslog
> archived logs to ?
Did you think to read the man page for newsyslog? It mentions
a file called newsyslog.conf. Hmmm, a configuration file. I
wonder what's in it. Oh, the man page also says SEE ALSO...
I wrote...
> Did you think to read the man page for newsyslog? It mentions
> a file called newsyslog.conf. Hmmm, a configuration file. I
> wonder what's in it. Oh, the man page also says SEE ALSO...
> newsyslog.conf(5).
O ops... Our man page does not have the SEE ALSO entry (it should,
IMHO
Fred Snurd writes:
> I have been looking at sed to insert non-printable characters into text
> files. The sed(1) manpage states that I should be able to insert'
> octal values by preceding the three character octal value with a backslash.
The only place the word "octal" shows up in the sed ma
What is the status of the Mac Mini? I saw some messages and patches
regarding the mini flowing by a week or three ago but didn't own one
at that time so wasn't paying attention. Are the patches in CVS?
Thanks,
// marc
> Yes, works really fine on my mini. :-) Last time I installed a
Thank you. The goal is to have the mini replace my dying sparc64
as a web server. Small, low power draw, quiet: I like that.
// marc
> Some recent CD: The 4.0 release CD and snapshots from Nov. 12, 2006 or
> later should boot fine, a few snapshots between that didn't work. You
> don't need a -current boot CD to install a -current (or snapshot) file
> set.
The CD I tried was a home grown snapshot of -current from October
Tha
> Ah, yes, booting from CD. Maybe I was really a little bit lucky with
> that because it worked quite well here right from the beginning. ;-)
I'm not being so lucky :-(
> Boot Camp: No, it's not required, it works fine with a usual
> OpenBSD-only configured internal harddisk, at least with
>
"Tasmanian Devil" writes:
> > Well, at least theoretically, one could just replace the install script
> > by one that does whatever you want it to, without asking any questions.
>
> Maybe that's easier than building an ACPI enabled bsd.rd?
No, building an ACPI enabled bsd.rd was quite easy.
"Tasmanian Devil" writes:
> Hmm... sounds like I shouldn't update my source tree (it's still from
> Nov. 12, 2006). I had no crashes at all here so far.
Are you running stock Nov. 12, 2006 or that code plus patches?
As for creating a bsd.rd that works with the mini...
The easiest way to do tha
Miod Vallat writes:
> > I've a config file that works, but I'm still tweaking it. When I'm
> > finished I'll post it. The biggest issue is that option SMALL_KERNEL
> > cant be used with the ACPI devices so, to make space, you have to
> > remove many of the unused devices. I wound up removi
gdb says:
(gdb) target kvm bsd.3.core
#0 0xd037e8dd in dumpsys () at /sys/arch/i386/i386/machdep.c:2650
2650if ((error = (*dump)(dumpdev, blkno,
(gdb) bt
#0 0xd037e8dd in dumpsys () at /sys/arch/i386/i386/machdep.c:2650
#1 0xd037e55c in boot (howto=256) at /sys/arch/
I've got a reproducable crash on my Mac mini (intel). Sources are as
of 30 Nov. No, I'm not running a generic kernel because a generic kernel
doesn't run on the mini. And the keyboard doesn't work in ddb so getting
more info is difficult at best.
Here are photos of two different crashes. The f
peter dunaskin writes:
> > > My configuration:
> >You forgot spamlogd
> I did not, it starts automatically when spamd_grey is enabled in
Oh. Sorry. I didn's see it in your ps grep. I see it with the same
ps grep on my system.
dumbcat[root]# ps aux | grep spamd
_spamd 14450 0.0 0.1 9
82 matches
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