Thanks a lot, I'll be waiting for the next snapshot. Here are few additional steps that I tried so far;
-I tried a new installation from scratch from the latest snapshot available, didn't help. -I wanted to try booting OpenBSD by turning the ACPI off, however, the laptop's BIOS has absolutely NO option on ACPI/Power/Suspend/Resume, etc. -I reduced the "heavyness" of the hardware in the BIOS; disabled a lot of stuff (Such as ODD, Webcam, CardReader, Bluetooth, NetBoot, USB 3.0). -HP Support page for HP 250 G5 Notebook had "Important BIOS Update" and an important harddisk firmware update, - so I fetched them both and updated, then done an another fresh installation, still, nothing has changed. I'll be waiting for the next snapshot - to be able to send you further details on the issue. Many thanks, Best, Özgür. On Tue, Sep 27, 2016 at 1:05 PM, Mike Larkin <[email protected]> wrote: > On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 08:37:23PM +0300, Özgür Kazanççı wrote: > > Today I bought a brand new HP 250 G5 laptop. > > > > It has a humble, basic hardware configuration; > > > > Intel® Celeron® Processor N3060 (2M Cache, up to 2.48 GHz) > > 4 GB RAM, 500 GB HDD > > > > This is a new model HP laptop, made for basic Internet and Office needs. > > > > I installed OpenBSD 6.0. Getting kernel panic during the boot. :( > > > > I must say that OpenBSD would be a perfect choice for me on this laptop. > > But unfortunately, it seems it has troubles with the hardware of this PC. > > > > The details are attached, > > > > Many thanks in advance for your valuable efforts on making OpenBSD even > > better! > > > > And please let me know whatever you'd need, whatever I could do for you > to > > investigate the problem. > > > > Kindest Regards. > > I just committed a change that will print the type of operation region > that is failing. Please wait for the next snapshot and try a new kernel. > It will still fail, but it should at least give us more info. > > -ml >
