Kevin Chadwick - Wed, 22 April 2020 at 11:01:55
> ID and the company providing Steam (Valve) have always been very good to
> Linux/OpenSource, even releasing binaries for Linux imediately and sometimes
> open sourcing further down the line.
offtopic for openbsd, sorry, but linux "has" many AAA tit
hi,
would it be possible to regenerate the latest snapshots
(amd64, cdn.openbsd.org)? some of the archives show
checksum errors...
thank you.
-f
--
hi,
i am trying to run openbsd on a very new notebook and it kind of works.
i have taken away some space from win10 and created a partition, and the
installation went well. atm i dont want to create a boot menu, so i
just insert a usb key with openbsd installed on it, and i select the
kernel fro
Chris Bennett - Tue, 28 April 2020 at 23:03:32
> Some BIOS's require you to select legacy boot and legacy boot before
> UEFI in order to boot off of a USB. Also might need to turn off boot
> security option, too.
>
> A lot of BIOS's suck nowadays. Who woulda thought that examining the
> BIOS would
Stuart Henderson - Wed, 29 April 2020 at 12:24:50
> The boot loader only has access to what bios/uefi makes available,
> it looks like it isn't setting up your nvme device if you boot from USB
> unless you go through that menu. There isn't much OpenBSD can do about this.
i'll try to make a similar
f.holop - Wed, 29 April 2020 at 14:57:46
> i'll try to make a similar test with some linux live distro to see
> if i get similar results.
I have tested MX linux install ISO that also doubles as a Live distro.
In the end it's apples and oranges because I use the openbsd USB key to
Benny - Tue, 11 June 2019 at 05:43:50
> Something like in xorg.conf or a config file in xorg.conf.d:
>
> Section "InputClass"
> Identifier "NO touch"
> Driver "some driver"
> MatchIsTouchscreen "on"
> Option "Ignore" "true"
> EndSection
this is the next thing i was about
Tobias Fiebig - Sat, 07 May 2022 at 13:18:45
> I also very faintly remember people complaining about similar issues
> with Mac hardware some years ago (non OpenBSD related, though). The
> solution for them back then was soldering together a small plug with
> some resistors to make the board 'think'
Stuart Henderson - Mon, 09 May 2022 at 17:17:57
> Currently, you can either set it manually to low speed
> (hw.perfpolicy=manual, hw.setperf=0), modify the kernel (e.g. with the
> diff below), or use obsdfreqd from packages. The latter is only in
> -current packages not 7.1, but it could be built f
Theo de Raadt - Wed, 11 May 2022 at 18:08:53
> f.holop wrote:
>
> > Stuart Henderson - Mon, 09 May 2022 at 17:17:57
> > > Currently, you can either set it manually to low speed
> > > (hw.perfpolicy=manual, hw.setperf=0), modify the kernel (e.g. with the
> >
10 matches
Mail list logo