Pieter Verberne wrote:
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq9.html#Interact says I should
use fedora_base for Linux emulation but compat_linux(8)
says I should use redhat_base. What is your advice?
Use fedora_base, it contains much newer linux components than the
redhat_base package.
smonek wrote:
How to clear kern msg buffer (dmesg output ) without restart system
Turn computer off.
Breathe out calmly for a few minutes.
Turn computer on.
Paul Irofti wrote:
I'm sorry I don't understand what you're pointing at, the mainbus?
No, I'm talking about all the screwed up characters in your dmesg:
acpi @t mainbus0 not configured
^ should be an a
c0u0 at mainbus0
^ should be a p
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 fufction 0 Intel 82805G/GL
Stephan A. Rickauer wrote:
CVE-2007-0493: If recursion is enabled, a remote attacker can
dereference a freed fetch context causing the daemon to abort / crash.
CVE-2007-0494: By sending specific DNS query responses with multiple
RRSETS attackers could cause BIND to exit abnormally.
Is
Mark Zimmerman wrote:
I almost didn't submit this because there were no outright failures, but
then I noticed that with acpi enabled, the hw.setperf sysctl is missing.
Without acpi, it is present and works properly.
This is because the traditional EST mechanism is currently disabled
when ACPI
Mark Zimmerman wrote:
You will notice the sucky DMA of the Jetway board in all of them.
...
wd0a: aborted command, interface CRC error reading fsbn 671456 of 671456-0
(wd0 bn 5571281; cn 5527 tn 1 sn 2), retrying
wd0: transfer error, downgrading to Ultra-DMA mode 4
wd0(pciide1:0:0): using
Passeur wrote:
Also I would like the PC to actualy shut down when I do shutdown -h now
instead of having to press the power button. This option is supported but
disabled by default as far I have read, but how to enable it ?
Use the -p option, as it says in shutdown(8). Or read and edit
Rich Dunkle wrote:
How can I disable the SpeedStep feature in OpenBSD 4.0 ?
You can't, yet.
The machine hangs during cpu0 checks:
...
cpu0: unknown Enhanced SpeedStep CPU, msr 0x0b280b2886000b28
cpu0: using only highest and lowest power states
cpu0: Enhanced SpeedStep 2933 MHz (1340
Frank Bax wrote:
...
2) is this a problem:
cpu0: unknown Core FSB_FREQ value 0 (0x41c8)
...
cpu0: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 CPU 6300 @ 1.86GHz (GenuineIntel 686-class) 1.87
GHz
This is one of the newer Intel Core 2 CPU's, with 266 MHz FSB. There
is support for those in -current, but it didn't
Sebastian Neuper wrote:
Hi. With OpenBSD 4.0, I encounter a wrong line wrapping
in the text-terminals.
...
So I looked through all the changes and noticed the new jump
scroll feature for vt220 introduced in OpenBSD 4.0 and corrected
in OpenBSD Current. My computer is a 200MMX with a 2,5GB
Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
wd0d: device timeout reading fsbn 234162112 of 234162112-234162239 (wd0
bn 235334857; cn 14648 tn 233 sn 58), retrying
wd0: soft error (corrected)
Maybe dying disks?
i must second this suggestion. almost every time i've seen these IDE timeout
messages, it means that
Maxim Bourmistrov wrote:
vmstat -m reports negative value for UVM amap Requests.
...
=== UVM amap 87670 8352K 28908K157284K-20682868430 0
16,32,64,128,256,512,1024,2048,4096,8192,16384,32768
That is just a 32 bit signed integer wrapping around, probably because
your machine has been
Stephen Schaff wrote:
Yesterday it inexplicably went dark.
...
wd0(pciide1:0:0): timeout
type: ata
c_bcount: 65536
c_skip: 0
pciide1:0:0: bus-master DMA error: missing interrupt, status=0x21
wd0d: device timeout reading fsbn 234162112 of 234162112-234162239 (wd0
bn 235334857;
Vim Visual wrote:
Logging as su and without X running I get
1280pgm 30 1280 768
Unable to open /dev/mem: Operation not permitted
You must run this before securelevel gets raised.
3d 1920 1440 is one mode I don't want to use; you have to overwrite
one of them like that
I guessed that one
Vim Visual wrote:
...
vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel 82852GM AGP rev 0x02: aperture at
0xd800, size 0x800
wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (80x25, vt100 emulation)
Intel 82852GM AGP rev 0x02 at pci0 dev 2 function 1 not
Vim Visual wrote:
I cannot afford to have a non-functional (I know this is an
exaggerated statement) production laptop for longer than, say, a few
hours. As a matter of fact I am reinstalling GNU/Linux right now
because I HAVE to work this evening (the installation and set up takes
~20 min)
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
I'm might be compleetly wrong, but isn't the 915resolution-0.5.2.tgz
package what Vim needs? That's already ported, precompiled and tested
on a variety of harware using that chipset.
I've asked him several times now to post the exact problems he is having
using the port.
Vim Visual wrote:
I plan to install o'bsd 4.0 on a fujitsu siemens laptop which has a
screen of 1280x768 pixels. With GNU/Linux this was always a pain and I
had to manually patch the VBIOS because otherwise only 1024x768 are
recognised.
I would like to ask around whether somebody has such a
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
Can you still use 11/915resolution on a device that says Driver not
configured?
...
vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 Intel 82945GM Video rev 0x03: aperture
at 0xd020, size 0x1000
wsdisplay0 at vga1 mux 1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
wsdisplay0: screen 1-5
Greg Mortensen wrote:
Have a look at the LE565 with (IIRC) 4*1Gb ...
It does (4 x Realtek 8169). The dmesg that I posted earlier is from a
LE-565.
According to the Commell specs, those are actually 4x Realtek 8110S.
ivorob wrote:
Within my notebook I have internal modem. How Can I force to work my
modem? Is it possible?
Almost always, these notebook modems are soft modems. This means
that the modem functionality (connection, protocols, error-correction,
etc) is implemented completely in a closed-source,
Bryan Vyhmeister wrote:
...
(--) SAVAGE(0): 1280x600 TFT LCD panel detected and active
(--) SAVAGE(0): - Limiting video mode to 1280x600
(--) SAVAGE(0): Found 13 modes at this depth:
[10f] 320 x 200, 70Hz
[112] 640 x 480, 60Hz, 72Hz, 75Hz, 85Hz, 100Hz
[115] 800 x 600, 60Hz, 72Hz,
ICMan wrote:
Try the following modelines:
Modeline 1280x600 77.82 1280 1344 1480 1680 600 601 604 626
Modeline 1280x600 76.04 1280 1336 1472 1664 600 601 604 626
Modeline 1280x600 75.00 1280 1336 1472 1664 600 601 604 626
If they don't work with the VESA driver, look up the
edgar mortiz wrote:
trying to build mod_python on OpenBSD 3.7 with the following configuration.
Python 2.4 (source build) --disabled-share
Apache 2.0.59 --enable-so
mod_python 3.2.10 --with-apxs
OpenBSD comes with Apache 1.3.29, so you should try mod_python 2.7.1
instead. A quick test here
Czes3aw Liebert wrote:
my h/w is:
hp/comapq proliant 8000:
- 8x Xeon 550MHz
- 8GB ram
- compaq array controller 4250ES
- 1x intel 82558b lan
- 1x intel 82559 lan
- 8x 18GB scsi u160
Try to get at least a dmesg and post it here, see:
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#getdmesg
Alec Berryman wrote:
I just tried to contact Intel about the Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG
firmware, but my email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (the suggested
contact in iwi(4)) bounced because it's now invalid. Does anyone know
the new official contact point?
I don't know anyone at Intel, but you might
Darrin Chandler wrote:
XP and all other versions of Windows set the clock to local time,
whereas OpenBSD sets it to GMT/UTC.
It's probably better to say all non-braindead OSes set the clock to
UTC. ;)
That said, if Jason just runs config -ef /bsd and sets the timezone
properly, his problem
Brian Curtis wrote:
I was reviewing the changelog for OpenBSD-current and came across the
following:
Disable Speedstep and p4tcc setperf mechanisms on SMP systems.
This was done because the current setperf implementation isn't
smp-safe. Fixing this is a rather large undertaking, however;
Sevan / Venture37 wrote:
I have just installed the 4.0-beta snapshot noticed a error message
when booting GENERIC.MP
cpu1: unknown i686 model 1, can't get bus clock
the machine is a old IBM PC 365, dual p-pro. the machine was previously
running 3.9-STABLE without any such errors.
Can you
Will H. Backman wrote:
The console on OpenBSD 3.9 release doesn't seem to log unknown username
or failed login attempts anywhere.
See this commit:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/etc/syslog.conf#rev1.14
Make the default syslog.conf not make the console and root logins
unusable when
Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote:
an alternative to this procedure would be to scan through the CSV file to
determine how many array entries i would need, realloc it all at once, then go
back through the CSV file again to read the data into the array.
Try starting with a reasonable number of lines,
Toni Mueller wrote:
-
#include iostream.h
int main(){ cout Hello World! endl; return 0;}
-
Compiling it goes like this:
$ c++ testit.cc
/tmp//cch21612.o(.text+0x1c): In function `main':
: undefined reference to `endl(ostream)'
http://saba.island.nu/openbsd/Xorg.0.log.txt
First of all, are you sure your screen is really 1440x900? The driver
thinks not:
(II) I810(0): Display Info: LFP (local flat panel): attached: TRUE,
present: TRUE, size: (1280,800)
...
(II) I810(0): Lowest common panel size for pipe B is 1280 x
vladas wrote:
making all in programs/Xserver/Xext/extmod...
make: don't know how to make /usr/include/stdarg.h. Stop in
/usr/Xbld/xc/program
s/Xserver/Xext/extmod.
*** Error code 2
You probably don't have the compiler installed at all. Did you install
comp39.tgz? If not, see section 4.10
Alexey E. Suslikov wrote:
Camellia was certified as the IETF standard cipher (Proposed
Standard) for SSL/TLS cipher suites (RFC4132) and IPsec (RFC4312).
Source:
https://info.isl.ntt.co.jp/crypt/eng/camellia/source_s.html
Hmm, isn't the notice on that page incompatible with the BSD license?
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
We notice that the upcoming OpenBSD 3.9 still uses gcc 3.3.5.
Is the gcc 3.3 branch still a supported product for the gcc people, and this
a
fix that slipped through the cracks in their usual maintenance process?
I have no idea if the 3.3 branch is actively maintained
d 269330400 wrote:
I recently installed OpenBSD 3.8 (I haven't received my 3.9 CD in the
mail yet), and am having problems getting X to work (among other
things).
It's a Dell Inspiron 1300 notebook w/ Integrated Intel Media
Accelerator 900 Graphics (Intel 915GM). The full dmesg is below.
Oliver Peter wrote:
A race condition exists in sendmail's handling of asynchronous signals.
A remote attacker may be able to execute arbitrary source code with the
privileges of the user running sendmail, typically root.
Excuse my question - I don't want to attack our loved project but does
Chris Paul wrote:
Now, after creating slice a, the OpenBSD disklabel does not do the math
for me. It give me the same beginning offset as for wd0a. So I then: did
the math (added all the offsets created the partitions), but now it
won't boot (it just goes ahead and boots XP).
Show us
Joel Gudknecht wrote:
The netmask is 255.0.0.0 and yes, it's a speedtouch. What part would
you recommend reconfiguring? I had a look at the web-interface and
nothing jumped out that I should have changed. I'm trying to avoid
having to mess with pppoe in userland if at all possible.
Try this
Constantine A. Murenin wrote:
I know it's kind of early, but is OpenBSD/i386 going to run peacefully
on the yesterday-announced Apple MacBook Pro, or for that matter the
iMac with Intel Code Duo processor? :-)
Probably, once you donate a few of them to the OpenBSD developers. ;)
[demime 1.01d
Reeann Zhang wrote:
Do you have driver of Broadcom BCM5721 Gigabit Ethernet Controllers for
openBSD 3.6
The card is not detected when installing.
Try updating to 3.7 or 3.8, this should at least detect the card. You
might have some problems with the link detection though. (At least,
this
On 2005-10-26 at 23:52:52 Mattieu Baptiste wrote:
just resumed my work on i386-laptop.html after vacation, and I noticed
we don't have any reports on the IBM/Lenovo Thinkpad X41.
It's not an X41, but I want to give some feedback on new IBM/Lenevo T
Series (T43 2668 in my case).
Just FYI, see
Theo wrote:
Hi there, i was searching info on installing openBSD on the x41 when i saw
your
reply in an
mailinggroup(http://www.mail-archive.com/misc@openbsd.org/msg09090.html). I
am
wondering if you know if this is going to be possible, I just got the feeling
from the message that
On 2005-09-29 at 12:19:12 Waldemar Brodkorb wrote:
... just rocks :}
On an X41, there are still some problems, though. I've not been able
to get the onboard Broadcom BCM5751M interface working, it always
reports 'no carrier'. Also, the X41 supposedly always comes with the
Intel 2915 wireless
On 2005-09-29 at 20:37:11 Marcus Glocker wrote:
I am soon receiving a IBM Thinkpad X40 to use it with OpenBSD-current. As
I don't really want to have an Ultrabase, I am wondering if it's possible
to boot OpenBSD with a USB-CDROM. Any experiences?
I had no problems booting OpenBSD 3.7
On 2005-09-25 at 20:56:19 Jeff Roach wrote:
mount -t cd9660 -r /dev/cd0a /mnt/cdrom and variations using cd0c and
/cdrom
I get an error message either saying device not configured or Invalid
argument
---snip---
Sep 25 12:59:46 puffy /bsd: cd0(atapiscsi0:0:0): Check Condition
(error 0x70) on
On 9/16/2005 at 05:47:29 Jeffrey Roach wrote:
Can anyone tell me why I don't receive mail from the list? I receive only
my own posts. My preference is set to receive it daily.
Probably because you're using Hotmail, which filters out anything not
approved by Microsoft? :) Just check your junk
On 2005-08-18 at 00:46:39 Dave Feustel wrote:
With most notebooks it is possible to secure the hard disk against
unauthorized access with the aid of a password.
See the atactl(8) manpage, in particular the sec* commands. However,
I don't believe these harddisks actually encrypt all data on
On 2005-06-15 at 17:17:30 kevin wrote:
I was downloading GNU gcc on a machine and when I looked over
after the download, the screen was writing:
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy
It's probably just your screensaver, don't panic. :P See
On 2005-05-21 at 16:02:46 Michael wrote:
This is when I check again, and yes, /etc/rndc.key
is there but /usr/sbin/named again tells me that it
is not there.
Read the named(8) manpage; it uses a chroot to /var/named by default.
Put your rndc.key file in /var/named/etc, and you should be ok.
On 2005-05-16 at 17:45:29 Kaj Mdkinen wrote:
I connect to my firewall with putty. How can I get rid of messages
like these from appearing in my ssh terminal session? These appeared
twice a second so it is wery hard to work with the console. (It was
obviously someone trying to get access to
On 2005-05-08 at 20:40:53 GV wrote:
/usr/sbin/apachectl: /etc/rc.conf.local[90]: .: /etc/rc.conf.local: Too
many
open files
Maybe you copied /etc/rc.conf to /etc/rc.conf.local, edited some
stuff, but forgot to remove these last few lines:
local_rcconf=/etc/rc.conf.local
[ -f
53 matches
Mail list logo