Josh Grosse jggimi.homeip.net> writes:
>
> On Sat, Sep 19, 2015 at 10:35:07AM -0500, Amit Kulkarni wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > How are you guys able to build userland? I double-checked that the
> >
> >
http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/~checkout~/src/Makefile?rev=1.125&content-type=text/p
registration. But this problem doesn't exist with the old Linux
>> based firewall. I can also see a lot of other NAT entries in the state table
>> with the old public IPv4 address. Is there a feature of pf to delete all NAT
>> entries with the no longer existing public IPv4 on
> On 07.02.2019, at 14:21, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> On 2019-02-06, Patrick wrote:
>> My nat rule use the parenthesis and all other devices behind the
>> firewall works fine. I think it’s more a specific issue with the SPA112.
>> I have also set the ruleset optim
0 0 146527095 0 0
I will try to have a maintenance window for the upgrade.
Thanks for the help,
Patrick
Am 04.11.2014 um 23:22 schrieb Hrvoje Popovski :
> out of curiosity, could you post netstat -i
>
> if you can, why don't you up
3 is still the best which is getting the
highest speeds.
Add system tweaks in sysctl.conf & disabling PF
Use other versions of OpenBSD 32Bit / 64Bit.
Best Regards,
Patrick
GB
>
> *What i have tried (This all had no results)*
> Upgrade the virtual machine hardware.
> Forward the network cards from pci slots to the VM
> Different ethernet adapters, VMXNET3 is still the best which is getting the
> highest speeds.
> Add system tweaks in sysctl.conf & disabling PF
> Use other versions of OpenBSD 32Bit / 64Bit.
>
> Best Regards,
>
> Patrick
>
>
--
Met vriendelijke groet,
*Patrick Koreneef*
T: +316-40951631
E: patr...@natpnk.nl
Met vriendelijke groet,
*Patrick Koreneef*
T: +316-40951631
E: patr...@natpnk.nl
On 30 August 2015 at 23:28, Patrick wrote:
> "So upgrade righ now."
> I am currently runnig 5.8
>
> "What does "download a test bin" mean, exactly?"
> A 1000mb.bin wi
le more packets/second? How can I
check for this?
If I connect a client system directly to the dedicated system, the response
times are better.
Thanks for your help,
Patrick
Have you considered a PowerPC-based machine? They run at lower
frequencies, using less power. Might be something to consider.
Something like an old beige PowerMac 6200 or something from that era.
In Vancouver, we have a Mac consignment shop that always has old
machines like this. Maybe you have som
'm tossing this item and getting me
another non-Samsung equivalent.
TIA,
--patrick
[1] SAMSUNG|SH-S182M
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16827151136
[2]
OpenBSD 4.0-stable (GENERIC) #0: Wed Dec 13 02:11:04 PST 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compi
I recently configured urxvt to use an Xft font, specifically
LucidaTypewriter. I noticed after doing so that font rendering is
extremely slow -- Page-Down'ing a manpage takes 25% of the CPU,
whereas using the Fixed font uses 0% of the CPU. Also, when conky is
configured to use an Xft font, it uses
g release or the video card.
Anyone else experience similar issues? If not, does
anyone know whether an "ATI Rage 128 Pro" video card
is DPMS capable? I couldn't find my answer using google.
Since there are so many posts of X{,org}.0.log out on
the net, searching using the "
file and restarting X seems to
have done the trick.
I don't understand why though, since 'xset q' was
reporting that DPMS was enabled prior to this change.
Cheers
--- patrick ~ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> This may just be a problem with my
I just finished installing OpenBSD 4.0 on a
machine of mine. After installation first
thing I did was to get some ports installed.
First post was PostgreSQL. Running 'make build'
failed with an error pointing in configure
script. I looked at it to see if it was the
patch process that messed up o
Thanks for the insightful info. Yes, as another
user had suggested privately, I was running
memtest86 since pretty much my post last night
(early morning).
Thus far 16 passes, running almost 17 hours and
no errors. Although, I know, and as you pointed
out, no errors doesn't really rule out bad me
Greetings,
This is on a 4.0 test system. I'm preping it
to move over a 3.9 system. It was cvs updated
to -rOPENBSD_4_0 and new kernel then system
built.
Noticed that /var/log/failedlogin grew from 0
bytes to 304304 bytes.
I couldn't find much about the file. Some googling
brings some AIX relat
his art work very much! Though I
don't yet have a clue as to what it may be about =P
Keep up the great work everyone!
--patrick
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
inistrative users (as the
respond to my archive-index command states).
Help? :-)
--patrick
[1]
http://lists.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/mj_wwwusr?&user=&passw=&list=GLOBAL&func=help&extra=archive
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Hi all,
Just wanted some comments on this pf.conf design. Mostly,
I am hoping a second pair of eyes to spot any major over-sight
on my part. I've not tested this set-up, yet! Just some
scratch-pad design/brain-storming.
Thanks :-)
--patrick
# Pseudo PF design:
#
# I'm preparing
place the
drive before upgrading.
Thanks in advance,
--patrick
[1] http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=108121869925371&w=2
OpenBSD 3.7-stable (GENERIC) #0: Mon Aug 1 19:32:49 PDT 2005
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
cpu0: AMD Sempron(tm) Processor 26
erface containing
destination host address?
Any thoughts on the matter are appreciated!
--patrick
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
for my servers on $dmz_if using brconfig. Though I think this
is very hokey as far as solutions go. I'm monitoring to see
if I see any instances of the issue or any other side-effects
thereof.
--patrick
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
New (old/used) toy I picked up :-)
I've not had much time to play with this thing yet. Just
finished installing 3.9 on it and got it to boot.
Just a few notes before I forget, as I'll probably not
have a chance to mess with this thing 'til next week.
The mobo might be faulty/flaky, as I had a ha
Just a thought, but in accordance with FAQ section 5.5
"Building X" (http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq5.html#Xbld)
Shouldn't the patch instruct user to cd in /usr/Xbld to
perform the "make build"?
Best regards,
--patrick
Patch for 002_xorg.patch :-)
e installed video and sound
cards from this server. Hence, no keyboard is attached
at the moment either.
Since I suspect something might be wrong with mobo, I
didn't go further with testing/trouble-shooting it.
--patrick
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
***
dadsbox $ ls -l .xshutdown
-r1 root wheel 0 Jan 3 11:11 .xshutdown
dadsbox $ mv .xshutdown /tmp
dadsbox $ echo ":-)"
:-)
Assuming, of course, that /tmp and /home are
one partition.
--patrick
ucing this excellent
and free product!
--patrick
--- Daniel Ouellet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> Just a quick feedback on this. Not a complain at all for pass order
> either. Just read it as an improvement and good comments please!
>
> I got an updates in m
Can someone share some information on the support of the qualcom gobi 2000 mini
pci express card in openbsd?
Kind regards
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 03:14:30PM +0200, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Tue, May 09, 2017 at 09:47:14PM +0200, Michele Curti wrote:
> > On Tue, May 09, 2017 at 09:36:02PM +0200, Michele Curti wrote:
> > > On Tue, May 09, 2017 at 10:20:03AM +0200, Michele Curti wrote:
> > > > Hi all, I tried to upgrad
;
>
> if there are any interest in this box i'm willing to donate it for
> development ..
>
>
Are you following my Twitter or what? ;) I just posted a picture
of that board, arrived on the doorsteps today. I'll be having a
look.
Patrick
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 10:08:13PM +0300, valerij zaporogeci wrote:
> 2017-08-14 10:21 GMT+03:00, Alex Naumov :
> > Hello,
> >
> > there is one enthusiast, who wants to make it possible:
> > http://openbsd-archive.7691.n7.nabble.com/Working-on-support-for-Pinebook-td318562.html
> >
> > I don't know
Tell us about the webmail…. ;)
Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 27, 2017, at 5:41 AM, leo_...@volny.cz wrote:
>
> *curses* this pos webmail poop hid from me that that was a private msg,
> so I sent to the list. grrr!
>
> another reason to drop the matter, though :/
>
>--schaafuit.
>
certificate stores are equal & that hashing an
appropriate algorithm is becoming non standardized in the event that the
certificate is not a trusted root.
Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 29, 2017, at 8:23 AM, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
>
>> Clean up the EC key/curve configuration handli
I’ve read that SHA1 can be brute forced however why Mozilla Firefox forces a
ECDH is misunderstood if attempting to negotiate for example RSA
In my experience sea monkey can authenticate correctly against an apple
key-chain however Firefox returns cipher suite errors
Regards
Patrick
> On
orities is often
unnecessary & may exacerbate the complex knob patching Ted is attempting
simplify.
Regards
Patrick
I got this working last night.
It appears the certificate was being created incorrectly that certificate
authority is unwanted & that the SSL client extension is needed.
Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 30, 2017, at 4:36 PM, Patrick Dohman
> wrote:
>
>
>> Because they c
-f mbr -iy wd1 #write default macppc mbr to disk
> 6) newfs -t msdos wd1i
my guess is this step screws your process. You are running into an
endianess issue. Your DELL is little endian while MacPPC is bigendian
and OpenBSD assumes native endianness on file-systems (I am pretty
sure I'
ing casual
>assessments.
>
>If you feel you can trim it down, you're welcome to remove code you deem
>unnecessary and submit patches to the tree.
Those of us who have a bloaty mainstream browser with Javascript enabled can
read the whole exchange at
https://www.reddit.com/r/Amd/comments/7u54d3/lisa_su_we_are_ramping_production_of_gpus/dtkcysq/?context=3
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
native refresh
rate that support the MST mode (two virtual panels at 1920x2160), while its
longer brother, the V7900, can do SST mode.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Sat, 28 Apr 2018, at 11:00, Joe Gidi wrote:
> > On Wed, Apr 25, 2018 at 10:49:53AM -0400, Joe Gidi
Their mirror appears to resolve correctly here in St Paul MN USA.
Incidentally why are there no African mirrors aka Kenya etc?
Regards
Patrick
> On May 8, 2018, at 2:27 PM, ropers wrote:
>
> On 8 May 2018 at 19:12, Leonid Bobrov wrote:
>
>> but in my country (Ukraine)
I bought myself a Kensington Slimblade mouse the other day,
it is a trackball mouse with 4 buttons and scrolling features.
It mostly works out of the box, but openbsd seems to only detect
two of the buttons, leaving me without a middle click. I'd like to find
a way to program the two other butto
On 05/14, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> Would you mind to run
> $ xinput --test /dev/wsmouse
> in an X terminal, press each button once, grab the output,
> and post it here?
Output:
motion a[0]=1364 a[1]=907
button press 4
button release 4
motion a[0]=1365
motion a[0]=1367
motion a[0]=13
On 05/14, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> Hi Patrick,
>
> thanks for the infos. I'm afraid you're out of luck, it seems
> that this device would need vendor-/model-specific extensions
> in our HID-mouse driver. It only announces two "regular" buttons,
> so our d
I've been using a 3rd gen x1 carbon for half a year now and havent had any
problems
OpenBSD 6.3-current (GENERIC.MP) #33: Mon May 7 18:59:05 MDT 2018
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 8261529600 (7878MB)
avail mem = 8003121152 (7632MB)
mpath0 at
functioning the system will no longer be
able to boot.
Workaround: A platform level change has been identified and may be implemented
as a workaround for this erratum."
Please not I’m not affiliated with the vendor...
Regards
Patrick
> On May 20, 2018, at 5:30 AM, Axel Rau wrote:
>
Is this a laptop you're dealing with? Vendor firmwares tend to enforce a
whitelist of permitted cards for the internal mini-PCI(e) slot.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 23 May 2018, at 13:46, Chris Bennett wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 07:43:09AM +, Antal Is
In that case, are the Chromium updates in current worth attempting to backport
to stable? Or are the stable builds safer than the backported Firefox builds
throughout the six months or so that they remain frozen?
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Mon, 11 Jun 2018, at 06:56, Theo
Not to put too finer point on it but the FAQ asks you to send the dmesg output
as plain text in the body of an email to @dmesg, with some comments in the
subject. External links are not very helpful.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Fri, 15 Jun 2018, at 07:33, Guillaume DUALÉ
You can get a pretty good refurbished 3th gen thinkpad x1 carbon under 900$.
I've baught two on ebay over the last year,
Post the contents of /var/log/Xorg.0.log
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 00:20, Максим wrote:
> fw_update was among the first commands after the install process :-)
> hardware acceleration definitely works.
>
> --
>
>
> 20.06.2018, 10:
Also, in the about:flags page in Chromium, try enabling the 'Override software
rendering list' (#ignore-gpu-blacklist) setting.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 01:28, Patrick Harper wrote:
> Post the contents of /var/log/Xorg.0.log
>
> --
It's using the framebuffer driver in EFI mode, so you're getting a resolution
native to the monitor but no acceleration. Try making an xorg.conf file in
/etc/X11/ with the following contents:
Section "Device"
Identifier "drm"
Driver "intel&q
I beg to differ, on my setup at least, the full GMaps in Chromium runs silky
smooth as intended. This is a Cayman (radeon) graphics card driving a 4K
monitor through dual 1920x2160 signals (hooray xrandr). I've never tried Intel
graphics though.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.co
Module FvwmWinList
+ "" Nop
+ "Banner" Module FvwmBanner
+ "ScrollBar" Module FvwmScroll 50 50
+ "Background"Module FvwmBacker
+
HP EliteBook 745 G2?
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 09:01, Thomas Frohwein wrote:
> No AMD laptop recommendations in this day and age? Also buying used or
> refurbished laptops on eBay is a security risk from the outset - ask
> yourself how well you
No drm support for Kaveri in OpenBSD 6.3. There is support in current now so
6.4 should work better when it arrives.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 14:03, Johan Mellberg wrote:
> Hmm. I have that one and there’s something fishy with the graphics, when
X200 is a bad idea, Core 2 Duos will never get microcode updates for Spectre
bugs.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Thu, 21 Jun 2018, at 08:30, flipchan wrote:
> I got the x200 with libreboot and openbsd
>
> On June 19, 2018 10:47:24 AM UTC, Kaya Saman wrote:
> >
On Fri, Jul 27, 2018 at 08:33:27AM +0200, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 26, 2018 at 09:33:43PM +0200, MiKi wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I installed OpenBSD 6.3 in a MacBook Air 6.1 everything works fine but
> > except the wireless card.
> >
> > It have a Broadcom BCM4360 802.11ac (rev3) card, th
#x27;t support the onboard ethernet yet. On the
EspressoBin we do support the ethernet controller, but the connected
switch is a mess that I don't dare to support. Got other stuff to do.
Though I am working on partial EspressoBin support for the upcoming
Turris Mox.
That said, if 32-bit ARM is OK look at the Clearfog Base. If you're
willing to spend a bit more, SolidRun has nice 64-bit machines. But
on those we still need to write the ethernet driver.
Patrick
On Mon, Aug 27, 2018 at 01:49:47PM +0200, Karel Gardas wrote:
> On Sun, 26 Aug 2018 15:52:48 +0200
> Patrick Wildt wrote:
>
> > On the MacchiatoBin we don't support the onboard ethernet yet. On the
> > EspressoBin we do support the ethernet controller, but the conn
Please note a Broadcom BCM5751 was added to facilitate NAT.
[patrick@database ~]$uptime
10:50AM up 42 days, 8 mins, 1 user, load averages: 0.09, 0.06, 0.06
[patrick@database ~]$doas pfctl -si
doas (patrick@database) password:
Status: Enabled for 42 days 00:08:33 Debug: err
State
e of
the files. So that will be a helpful source for us. Otherwise we
will have to collect them ourselves.
For ARM there's still one commit left so that we can supply per-
board NVRAM files more easily. In essence: We're working on it!
Patrick
The effort to support Chromium and Firefox (sans ESR) on OpenBSD akin to
Windows/macOS/'Linux' has not happened.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Sun, 12 Apr 2020, at 16:49, Raymond, David wrote:
> My problem with iridium is that it is based on an older version of
>
I mean that all Chromium releases are made available for OpenBSD-stable
(excluding the previous release at any given time, as with all existing port
maintenance).
My understanding of -current is that it is meant for testing, not usage.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Sun, 12
I'm puzzled that you thought my statements were a complaint.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Sun, 12 Apr 2020, at 22:30, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Patrick Harper wrote:
>
> > I mean that all Chromium releases are made available for OpenBSD-stable
> >
ough for you to get by on this forum
without scrutiny.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Thu, 23 Apr 2020, at 18:06, zeurk...@volny.cz wrote:
> "Groot" wrote:
> > I've tried and failed to create more than 16
> > partitions on OpenBSD. First of all
> Medoesn't a care a flying fsck about what is "trendy".
Is this the most ironic sentence ever posted on here? Dubiously censoring an
expletive with a common 'Unix' utility isn't motivated by some sort of desire
to feel like a part of the righteous ones? Come on.
e change to support multiple cameras in one
device. You can try this diff, let me know if this works on both
of your machines.
Patrick
diff --git a/sys/dev/usb/uvideo.c b/sys/dev/usb/uvideo.c
index d33e3079acd..da00d0d3d0d 100644
--- a/sys/dev/usb/uvideo.c
+++ b/sys/dev/usb/uvideo.c
@@ -510,6 +510
Judging by the dmesg there is at least one unoccupied PCIe slot that could
accommodate an adapter such as a Silverstone ECWA2-LITE.
This would allow you to use Mini-PCIe cards that normally go in laptops,
including all of the iwm(4) devices.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Sat
-l /sbin/iked*
> -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 436584 Jun 15 20:42 /sbin/iked
> -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 436584 Jun 15 20:42 /sbin/iked.66
> -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 448744 May 7 12:52 /sbin/iked.67
> gateway$ date
> Tue Jun 16 12:51:13 EDT 2020
> gateway$ doas /etc/rc.d/iked stop
> iked(ok)
> gateway$ doas cp -p /sbin/iked.67 /sbin/iked
> gateway$ doas /etc/rc.d/iked start
> iked(ok)
> gateway$ doas ipsecctl -sa
> FLOWS:
> No flows
>
> SAD:
> No entries
> gateway$ date
> Tue Jun 16 12:51:54 EDT 2020
> gateway$ ls -l /sbin/iked*
> -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 448744 May 7 12:52 /sbin/iked
> -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 436584 Jun 15 20:42 /sbin/iked.66
> -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 448744 May 7 12:52 /sbin/iked.67
>
>
> >> My guess is that it is simple and I don't think about it properly, but I
> >> am hitting a road block trying to figure it out.
> >>
> >> I am a bit at a lost and any clue stick would be greatly appreciated.
> >>
> >> Thanks
> >>
> >> Daniel
> >>
> >
> > - Tobias
> >
>
Hi,
thanks for the detailed input. But there's one thing missing: The
log output of the daemon. It'll probably end up somewhere in /var/log/
daemon or /var/log/messages or so.
Since you see no SA or Flow at all, iked maybe hasn't successfully
created them at all, and for that we need to see what iked complains
about, which it probably did in the log files.
Best regards,
Patrick
On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 02:11:21PM -0400, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
>
>
> On 6/16/20 1:35 PM, Patrick Wildt wrote:
> > On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 01:09:32PM -0400, Daniel Ouellet wrote:
> >> Hi Tobias,
> >>
> >> I put below the full configuration and the
on 0.0.0.0:500, but the policy will
only match if the IP address match to the one specified as "local".
Patrick
> On Jun 23, 2020, at 11:31 AM, Tom Smyth wrote:
>
> But newerversions of kvm / linux kernels are unaffected
> By the bug fyi
Sounds like FUD.
B.T.W where is Boba’s ride?
Regards
Patrick
> On Jul 19, 2020, at 5:44 PM, Tom Smyth wrote:
>
> Im not sure what you mean?
I can has all your VM’s in carbonite.
Regards
Patrick
Can you post your /etc/rc.conf.local ?
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Fri, 14 Aug 2020, at 17:21, Justin Muir wrote:
> Wondering whether anyone has experience with Logitech USB speakers?
>
> Plugged in mine, did the rcctl rsnd/0 thingi from multimedia FAQ:
> # rcct
On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 09:59:29PM +0200, Dani Deni wrote:
> Hello,
>
> trying to find a low powered single board computer with two gigabit LAN for
> router purposes.
>
> already checked the https://www.openbsd.org/arm64.html page, but google
> doesn't brings up any arm64 based SBC with 2 gigabit
Hi,
we recently found that the switch to constant-time AES has quite a heavy
impact on IPsec performance. But since according to CVS that was part
of OpenBSD 6.2 already, it's probably something else.
https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/d223d7cb85c1f2f705da547a0134b949655abe6a
Patric
o support. I recently received mine. As long as the SG-1100 uses
a recent (as in 2017/2018) U-Boot it should be possible to support
that hardware once the Turris Mox support got better.
That said, I would assume that the USB 3.0 ports work already and the
the WAN port should do as well. The eMMC is not yet supported. If I
had one I could have a look.
Patrick
Does your ISP implement authoritative DNS?
Do you suspect a UDP issue?
Is a managed (switch) involved? Has duplex ever been an issue?
Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 18, 2019, at 1:03 PM, Radek wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I have two testing gateways (6.5/i386) with site-to-side VPN b
Hello,
On 08/19, Oliver Marugg wrote:
> I am preparing switching my desktop from another OS to OpenBSD. Is anyone
> using an Evoluent USB Wired Mouse (C/4 or 4 small) with OpenBSD? Or any
> other great ideas about an ergonomic mouse working with OpenBSD?
Most mouses should work, though I remember
Do you consider memory an issue?
What is the speed of your memory?
Unix load average can occasionally be deceiving.
What make of Ethernets are you running?
Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 19, 2019, at 5:28 AM, radek wrote:
>
> Hello Patrick,
>
>> Does your ISP implement authoritat
yption keys, and
users are urged to remain current with all manufacturer updates.
Read:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/zakdoffman/2019/08/15/critical-new-bluetooth-security-issue-leaves-your-devices-and-data-open-to-attack/
And: https://knobattack.com/
And if your "manufacturer" has EOLed
text switches & interrupts doing while the VPN is up & traffic
is flowing?
vmstat -w 4
What is your memory high water mark during a peak traffic?
vmstat -m
Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 21, 2019, at 12:34 AM, radek wrote:
>
> Hello Patrick,
> I am sorry for the late reply.
>
nly & can no longer execute
things like storage or virtualization.
The OpenBSD O.S includes all the user-land tools such as ping & top in addition
to a standardized precompiled kernel.
Regards
Patrick
.
>
>
> On Thu, 22 Aug 2019 19:12:55 -0500
> Patrick Dohman wrote:
>
&
SP?
Do you have an alternate DNS server you can test against? Are you using your
ISP’s DNS?
Perhaps the new OpenBSD unwind package is worth investigating ;)
]Regards
Patrick
> On Aug 25, 2019, at 1:31 PM, Radek wrote:
>
> Hello Patrick,
>
>> In my opinion your net5501’s system ca
What motivates me to stay on OpenBSD is that I want the free desktop concept to
work. This system + Arcan + GNOME-like interface seems, to me, like an
compelling way to get there. I hope I can shoehorn this project into my life
and then reality in some fashion.
--
Patrick Harper
paia
e daemon seems to
continue running), whereas it should display the gdm greeter. Whether or not
this is a byproduct of the staff class settings I don't know.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
I'm using 6.5-stable including the binary package updates.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Tue, 17 Sep 2019, at 14:21, Patrick Harper wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> For a while this file has instructed a new login class to be added to
> the end of /etc/login.conf, as per
Adding an empty line at the end of login.conf fixed my problem.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Tue, 17 Sep 2019, at 14:21, Patrick Harper wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> For a while this file has instructed a new login class to be added to
> the end of /etc/login.conf,
ful reload or the following syntax error:
httpd[35299]: parent_sig_handler: reload requested with SIGHUP
httpd[35299]: /etc/httpd.conf:20: syntax error
httpd[35299]: no actions, nothing to do
Regards
Patrick
partitions without a software device.
For example:
$cat /etc/fstab
/dev/wd0a /home ffs rw,nodev,nosuid 1 2
/dev/wd0d /home/Backups/ ffs rw,nodev,nosuid 1 2
The device naming may take some massaging to work...
man fstab & disklabel for more info.
Regards
Patrick
is
loaded, but in 6.5 and prior 3D-accelerated stuff was usable. Cayman should be
fine with 8 million pixels.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019, at 13:12, Jeff wrote:
> On Sat, 19 Oct 2019 17:59:41 +0200
> Federico Giannici wrote:
>
> > On 2019-
Hi, All:
I am new to OpenBSD; I recently installed 6.5 on a Dell Inspiron 6000
and upgraded to 6.6 yesterday. Suspend did not work in 6.5 and still
doesn't in 6.6.
What is the best way for me to go about debugging this issue? So far,
I have checked:
- dmesg for ACPI wake devices
- syslog for susp
I can confirm that switching to EXA made GNOME usable. This'll only work up to
Northern Islands cards/IGPs though.
Guess I'll be holding off of a GPU upgrade for a while longer.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Thu, 31 Oct 2019, at 13:47, Patrick Harper wrote:
> I
lso, the firmware repository does not contain any .nvram file, which
> > makes me doubteven more that the problem is related to something
> > partially supported.
> >
> > Any ideas? Best regards
> > Stefano
Hi,
all of the SDIO connected chips need an NVRAM, which can not be provided
by the firmware image, since it really is a per-device setting. So one
could start collecting them, but I'm not sure if that would lead to
covering most of the machines. Maybe we could cover at least those that
complained...
Anyway, it looks like your NVRAM is stored in a specific EFI variable,
like it is on some other x86 machines, and since we unfortunately have
no support for reading EFI variables yet, you will need to use Linux for
retrieving the file.
mount -t efivarfs efivarfs /sys/firmware/efi/efivars
cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram-74b00bd9-805a-4d61-b51f-43268123d113
/some/external/stick/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
I have attached a program that converts that text file into the nvram
file:
cc -o nvram nvram.c
./nvram brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt brcmfmac43340-sdio.nvram
And that's the file you can then put into /etc/firmware to finally use
your bwfm(4) device!
Patrick
On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 10:05:38AM +0100, Patrick Wildt wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 03, 2019 at 12:08:08AM +0100, Stefano Enrico Mendola wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > my bad, I thought the grepped output was enough.
> > Here's the complete dmesg(8) output. =
o have a look at suspend/resume at one of the next OpenBSD
hackathons.
For the screen backlight I have come up with a diff, but it's not yet
ready to be committed, as it should be done in a different fashion.
Still, I have attached the diff if you want to give it a go.
Patrick
diff
Hi,
I'll be playing around with DragonflyBSD Hammer2 (and multiple offsite
backups) for a home NAS over the next few weeks. I'll probably do a
presentation about the experience at the Montreal BSD user group
afterwards. It does not require as many ressources as ZFS or BTRFS, but
offers many
Hey,
Since I'm getting off-list questions from more than one person,
I'll post here as well.
On 11/15, Patrick Marchand wrote:
> I'll be playing around with DragonflyBSD Hammer2 (and multiple offsite
> backups) for a home NAS over the next few weeks. I'll probably do
Hello,
On 11/15, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> Patrick Marchand wrote:
> > I'll be playing around with DragonflyBSD Hammer2 (and multiple offsite
> > backups) for a home NAS over the next few weeks. I'll probably do a
> > presentation about the experience
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