Looks like, it's the same message 2nd time, lets add more insomniac fun bits.
Who am I kidding, you'll figure the spelling without reading help. Oh, wait,
has anyone tried any product from this company? And I have another question,
Wikipedia: Kontron AG
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kontron]
H
Sat, 25 Jun 2016 09:03:05 +1000
> On Fri, 24 Jun 2016 06:32:33 +0300
> li...@wrant.com wrote:
>
> > Fri, 24 Jun 2016 12:10:11 +1000
> > > On Fri, 24 Jun 2016 04:30:39 +0300
> > > li...@wrant.com wrote:
> > > >
> > > > What is more important is the level of engineering information
> > > >
Sat, 25 Jun 2016 01:46:47 +0200 arrowscr...@mail.com
> Too much noise folks.
> Hardware discussion does not belong to misc@. Please try go to other
> mailing list, maybe people in openbsd-arm will like this hardware
> related discussion, but not here. Thanks.
Hahaa, now we're talking. Open a can
Fri, 24 Jun 2016 23:30:37 + (UTC) Christian Weisgerber
> On 2016-06-24, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> >> Walking on the wild side, I suppose something could be done with a
> >> switch and vlans.
> >
> > Yeah, but now your switch is using ten times the power of your router.
>
> There are sm
On Fri, 24 Jun 2016, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
On 2016-06-24, "Jacob L. Leifman" wrote:
Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU?
Not really. You could add more ports with a mini-PCIe dual/quad
NIC, but you would have to build your own case.
As there are two USB ports, any USB-
On Fri, 24 Jun 2016 06:32:33 +0300
li...@wrant.com wrote:
> Fri, 24 Jun 2016 12:10:11 +1000
> > On Fri, 24 Jun 2016 04:30:39 +0300
> > li...@wrant.com wrote:
> > >
> > > What is more important is the level of engineering information
> > > available from the manufacturer (PC Engines) web site i
Sat, 25 Jun 2016 01:23:25 +0200 Christian Weisgerber
> David Vasek:
>
> > As there are two USB ports, any USB-attached ethernet adapter should work.
> > With a powered USB hub, probably a number of them. Am I right?
>
> If you are desperate enough.
>
> There's a dual axen(4) adapter in one p
Too much noise folks.
Hardware discussion does not belong to misc@. Please try go to other mailing
list, maybe people in openbsd-arm will like this hardware related discussion,
but not here. Thanks.
On 2016-06-24, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>> Walking on the wild side, I suppose something could be done with a
>> switch and vlans.
>
> Yeah, but now your switch is using ten times the power of your router.
There are small managed switches that have a size and power profile
similar to any dumb desk
David Vasek:
> As there are two USB ports, any USB-attached ethernet adapter should work.
> With a powered USB hub, probably a number of them. Am I right?
If you are desperate enough.
There's a dual axen(4) adapter in one package:
https://www.startech.com/Networking-IO/usb-network-adapters/USB-
On Fri, 24 Jun 2016 06:32:33 +0300
li...@wrant.com wrote:
> Fri, 24 Jun 2016 12:10:11 +1000
> > On Fri, 24 Jun 2016 04:30:39 +0300
> > li...@wrant.com wrote:
> > >
> > > What is more important is the level of engineering information
> > > available from the manufacturer (PC Engines) web site i
> On Fri 24.Jun'16 at 12:46:48 +, Dahlberg, David wrote:
> > Am Freitag, den 24.06.2016, 11:45 + schrieb C. L. Martinez:
> >
> > > I would like to deploy/setup a PKI under OpenBSD for my home lab.
> > > Searching about this topic, I think the best option is to use
> > > customized openssl/l
Fri, 24 Jun 2016 14:37:20 -0700 Chris Cappuccio
> Jacob L. Leifman [jac...@bitwise.net] wrote:
> > Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU? Alternatively, is
> > there a comparably robust and OpenBSD supported low-wattage platform
> > with at least 4 (and preferrably 5-6) NICs?
>
> It
Ted Unangst [t...@tedunangst.com] wrote:
> Jacob L. Leifman wrote:
> > Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU? Alternatively, is
> > there a comparably robust and OpenBSD supported low-wattage platform
> > with at least 4 (and preferrably 5-6) NICs?
>
> Walking on the wild side, I supp
Jacob L. Leifman wrote:
> Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU? Alternatively, is
> there a comparably robust and OpenBSD supported low-wattage platform
> with at least 4 (and preferrably 5-6) NICs?
Walking on the wild side, I suppose something could be done with a
switch and vlans.
On 2016-06-24, "Jacob L. Leifman" wrote:
> Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU?
Not really. You could add more ports with a mini-PCIe dual/quad
NIC, but you would have to build your own case.
The APU2 is at a very sweet price/performance spot *if* it fits
your requirements.
> Alt
Jacob L. Leifman [jac...@bitwise.net] wrote:
> Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU? Alternatively, is
> there a comparably robust and OpenBSD supported low-wattage platform
> with at least 4 (and preferrably 5-6) NICs?
>
It has two mini pci-e slots. Syba and others make a mini pci-
Is it possible to add more wired NICs to the APU? Alternatively, is
there a comparably robust and OpenBSD supported low-wattage platform
with at least 4 (and preferrably 5-6) NICs?
Thank you.
On 24 Jun 2016 at 13:37, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> li...@wrant.com [li...@wrant.com] wrote:
> >
> > 1)
li...@wrant.com [li...@wrant.com] wrote:
>
> 1) How do the APU systems go as pricing to comparable systems from
> other similar (industrial class, desktop enclosure) manufacturers?
>
The pricing direct from PC Engines is roughly 2x to 3x the cost
of certain cheap, popular ARM boards. It's on par
bytevolc...@safe-mail.net [bytevolc...@safe-mail.net] wrote:
>
> In addition, the clips for the mSATA/mPCIe slots, given that the use of
> metallic screw points would improve grounding to the devices and would
> be a lot more robust and resilient against vibration; with screw posts,
> there is the
On Fri 24.Jun'16 at 12:46:48 +, Dahlberg, David wrote:
> Am Freitag, den 24.06.2016, 11:45 + schrieb C. L. Martinez:
>
> > I would like to deploy/setup a PKI under OpenBSD for my home lab.
> > Searching about this topic, I think the best option is to use
> > customized openssl/libressl scr
On 24/06/16 14:45, C. L. Martinez wrote:
Hi all,
I would like to deploy/setup a PKI under OpenBSD for my home lab. Searching
about this topic, I think the best option is to use customized openssl/libressl
scripts, but it colud be very hard to keep for certifcate requests,
revocations, etc.
Hi all,
I would like to deploy/setup a PKI under OpenBSD for my home lab. Searching
about this topic, I think the best option is to use customized openssl/libressl
scripts, but it colud be very hard to keep for certifcate requests,
revocations, etc.
Any suggestion about what can be better op
I am running an OpenBSD 5.9 box as a firewall/router on a Comcast cable
connection. My box has 2 interfaces: em0 on external network (cable modem)
and em1 on internal network. I have applied all available patches for 5.9.
For ipv6 I'm running wide-dhcpv6 package to get a non-temporary address on
On Fri, Jun 24, 2016 at 1:49 AM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> The APU2 is a 4 core system while the APU1 is 2 core. The APU1 is actually
> marginally faster at "openssl speed", per-core. The APU2 has USB3, better
> ethernet. It also has an integrated CPU/chipset, which practically translates
> to lowe
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