RAID0 is called that because zero is what you'll recover if you lose a
disk. This is amazingly dangerous, and you're going to have a bad time.
Do a backup, then restore from backup.
On 2024 Apr 06 (Sat) at 22:43:05 +0200 (+0200), Kirill A. Korinsky wrote:
:Folks,
:
:I'm looking for a way to
Hello
i have 1 DELL Latitude E4300 that had OBSD 7.3 working correctly, but i
decided to do a clean installation of 7.5 deleting everything on it with a
live cd linux; then tested 7.5 and it says NO disk.
After that i tested Linux, NetBSD, FreeBSD all them where installed
without a problem; But,
Kirill A. Korinsky writes:
> Folks,
>
> I'm looking for a way to migrate to different layout some OpenBSD systems.
>
> So, questions:
> 1. Has anyone done something like this before?
> 2. Do you have any instruction or that to expect?
Yes. What to expect? There is a very good chance data will be
Hi Sturt,
on Sat, 6 Apr 2024 12:02:24 - (UTC)
Stuart Henderson wrote:
> sysupgrade -n
> rm /home/_sysupgrade/{x,game}*.tgz
> reboot
That's right.
I did not read the "man" very carefully about "syspgrade".
It was a good learning experience. Thank you.
> Though I wouldn't bother unless
Hi Rubén,
on Sat, 6 Apr 2024 12:12:00 +
Rubén Llorente wrote:
> An option I can think about is downloading the upgrade kernel and
> booting from it, instead of using sysupgrade. The upgrade process will
> let you select which sets you want to install and which ones you want
> to exclude.
On Sat, 06 Apr 2024 23:14:39 +0200,
Peter Hessler wrote:
>
> RAID0 is called that because zero is what you'll recover if you lose a
> disk. This is amazingly dangerous, and you're going to have a bad time.
>
> Do a backup, then restore from backup.
>
I was totally misslead. I mean that I have
Hi everyone,
The most common way to upgrade OpenBSD is to use "sysupgrade".
However, I do not want to install certain packages (e.g. game).
# When the host is built, it is not installed, because the
Is there any way to upgrade to fulfil these wishes?
I wrote "/auto_upgrade.conf" and
I tried
sysupgrade -n
rm /home/_sysupgrade/{x,game}*.tgz
reboot
Though I wouldn't bother unless very constrained on storage space.
A lot of time has been wasted by developers over the years when people
have not installed xbase (or worse, installed an old one but not updated
it) and run into problems with
Running -current on my router and finally (after years) decided to move
into using ipv6.
I added "inet6 autoconf" to hostname.em0 (also has "inet autoconf") and I
get a link local address:
=
# ifconfig em0
em0:inet6 fe80::2132:31ff:fe0b:7ea4%em0 prefixlen 64
An option I can think about is downloading the upgrade kernel and
booting from it, instead of using sysupgrade. The upgrade process will
let you select which sets you want to install and which ones you want to
exclude.
In practice, I think you are better off just installing all the sets and
After upgrading to 7.5 amd64 -stable (and all ports updated) I get
these messages in /var/log/messages. This is with bash from ports
inside tmux over SSH:
tmux: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
bash: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
multitail: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
vim: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
tmux:
On Sat, Apr 6, 2024, at 10:09 AM, Sonic wrote:
> I'm on Comcast (Xfinity) in the US.
Your setup will be specific to your ISP. I'm on AT Fiber, which uses SLAAC
for the WAN interface and DHCPv6-PD for internal interfaces. I do the latter
with dhcpcd.
A quick search indicates Xfinity uses DHCPv6
Folks,
I'm looking for a way to migrate to different layout some OpenBSD systems.
All of them has RAID0 and as far as I think I may something like this:
1. Remove second disk from RAID.
2. Build a new RAID0 on the second disk.
3. Make desires layout on the second RAID.
4. dump | restore
5. Boot
On Sat, Apr 6, 2024 at 8:10 AM Sonic wrote:
>
> Running -current on my router and finally (after years) decided to move into
> using ipv6.
> I added "inet6 autoconf" to hostname.em0 (also has "inet autoconf") and I get
> a link local address:
> =
> # ifconfig em0
OpenBSD natively supports IPv6 addressing via static configuration and
SLAAC. We do not have a DHCPv6 client in base, so currently you have to
use a package for that.
On 2024 Apr 06 (Sat) at 13:01:31 -0400 (-0400), Sonic wrote:
:That works - I didn't realize I needed to install a package to
Someone with pull at UPC^W ziggo^W vodafone^W liberty global could potentially
get that situation improved.
On 6 April 2024 19:04:52 CEST, Peter Hessler wrote:
>OpenBSD natively supports IPv6 addressing via static configuration and
>SLAAC. We do not have a DHCPv6 client in base, so currently
Дана 24/04/06 02:42PM, Eivind Eide написа:
> tmux: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
> bash: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
> multitail: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
> vim: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
This happens in OpenBSD when a program passes NULL pointer to *printf family of
functions. The bug reports
That works - I didn't realize I needed to install a package to have ipv6
work with OpenBSD.
Thank you.
On 2024-04-06, Страхиња Радић wrote:
> Дана 24/04/06 02:42PM, Eivind Eide написа:
>> tmux: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
>> bash: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
>> multitail: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
>> vim: vfprintf %s NULL in "%.*s"
>
> This happens in OpenBSD when a program passes NULL pointer to
Дана 24/04/06 06:04PM, Stuart Henderson написа:
> The fact that these all started hitting this with the same printf string
> (including tmux, which is in base) makes me wonder if it's coming from a
> library, the most likely being libcurses which was updated between 7.4
> and 7.5 (which all of
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