roducts."
But is it an OpenBSD-compatibility issue
or does my chipset want to retire?
And the main question of the post:
What are the dashes and the beep?
They occured on an all-Intel machine, with AHCI Intel chipset.
u...@mailo.com [u...@mailo.com] wrote:
>
> But is it an OpenBSD-compatibility issue
> or does my chipset want to retire?
These issues sound like they are related to lack of software support driven by
a lack of programming documentation.
The pciide driver doesn't support your Nvidia chipset. It needs extra
code (specific for this chip) for DMA to work properly.
The driver was targeted towards older systems, it shouldn't be used on any
board that supports AHCI. AHCI has more capabilities including NCQ and will
offer better
to the tty0 screen,
filling the entire screen over time, and scrolling,
and I don't know how many dashes there were in total.
Then the built-in beeper began beeping continuously,
without any accompanying message on the screen.
I started pressing Ctrl+Alt+F2 to switch to tty1,
and the beep stopped on me
On 2020-11-17, Sine Astris wrote:
> I've attached the patch I applied to azalia_codec.c, dmesg, pcidump for
> my audio device, and mixerctl output.
This and your other mail are good reports, please send them to
t...@openbsd.org where people working on those areas are more likely
to see them
Hi,
I wasn't able to adjust the volume of the keyboard bell via
wsconsctl(8), or the volume of /dev/speaker on my ThinkPad X270.
Additionally, the default spkr_source (mix3) doesn't output the beep.
Changing to mix2, sounds the beep and my existing audio seems fine.
# mixerctl
Hello,
On my laptop I have a beep every 2 seconds when the battery is low.
How to disable it ? It's not a BIOS setting.
Thanks.
dmesg:
OpenBSD 5.6-current (GENERIC.MP) #650: Fri Dec 5 09:20:49 MST 2014
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem
does this thing have an azalia(4)? because with at least some, the beep
volume and mute is controlled through the mixer. it should be unmuted
by default, but the volume could be low. but then this also depends on
the codec ... I didn't see a dmesg in this thread. if you do have an
azalia
On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 9:02 AM, Jean-Francois jfsimon1...@gmail.com wrote:
does this thing have an azalia(4)? because with at least some, the beep
volume and mute is controlled through the mixer. it should be unmuted
by default, but the volume could be low. but then this also depends
On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 11:18:50AM +1100, Aaron Mason wrote:
On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 9:02 AM, Jean-Francois jfsimon1...@gmail.com wrote:
does this thing have an azalia(4)? because with at least some, the beep
volume and mute is controlled through the mixer. it should be unmuted
by default
jean-francois wrote:
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
man speaker(4), if you are on i386 or amd64.
Kind regards,
Markus
2010/1/25 Markus Hennecke markus-henne...@markus-hennecke.de:
jean-francois wrote:
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
man speaker(4), if you are on i386 or amd64.
I'm so stupid. Of course it says right on that man page
Le lundi 25 janvier 2010 18:55:21, vous avez icrit :
2010/1/25 Markus Hennecke markus-henne...@markus-hennecke.de:
jean-francois wrote:
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example
with a command or a C program ?
man speaker(4), if you are on i386 or amd64
Am 24.01.10 01:32, schrieb jean-francois:
Hi list,
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
I started to write a little C program thinking there was a beep() functione,
but it seems not
Regards.
how about midiplay(1)?
On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 09:02:47PM +0100, Jean-Francois wrote:
Le lundi 25 janvier 2010 18:55:21, vous avez icrit :
2010/1/25 Markus Hennecke markus-henne...@markus-hennecke.de:
jean-francois wrote:
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example
with a command
2010/1/25 Julian Leyh jul...@vgai.de:
Am 24.01.10 01:32, schrieb jean-francois:
Hi list,
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
I started to write a little C program thinking there was a beep()
functione,
but it seems
On Sun, 24 Jan 2010 01:32:14 +0100 jean-francois
jfsimon1...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi list,
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example
with a command or a C program ?
I started to write a little C program thinking there was a beep()
functione, but it seems
On Sun, Jan 24, 2010 at 12:10:51AM -0800, J.C. Roberts wrote:
On Sun, 24 Jan 2010 01:32:14 +0100 jean-francois
jfsimon1...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi list,
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example
with a command or a C program ?
I started to write a little
Those only work *on the console*, which may not be on the actual
OpenBSD box (because the user may be using serial console
redirection/ssh/whatever. There may still be uses for a program that
produces a PC speaker beep on the machine it runs on.
regards,
--ropers
2010/1/24 Constantine
echo $'\a'
On Sat, Jan 23, 2010 at 4:32 PM, jean-francois jfsimon1...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi list,
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
I started to write a little C program thinking there was a beep() functione,
but it seems
Hi list,
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
I started to write a little C program thinking there was a beep() functione,
but it seems not
Regards.
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
echo
(that's control+v, then control+g)
On 23/01/2010, joshua stein j...@openbsd.org wrote:
Can someone give a hin on how to make the speaker to beep for example with
a command or a C program ?
echo
(that's control+v, then control+g)
or
/usr/bin/printf \a
or
putchar('\a');
C.
On Sun, 13 Sep 2009 09:32:26 +0300 4625 wrote:
4625 escribiC3:
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 05:44:50 +0200 Jesus Sanchez wrote:
If xterm window currently active in X and I'm switch from console
to X by pressing Alt-F9 key, then xterm will beep and display
0~.
I mean Ctrl-Alt-F9
Begin forwarded message:
Date: Sunday, 13 Sep 2009 +0400
From: Jesus Sanchez
To: 4625
Subject: Re: 0~ and beep on switch from console to X.
4625 escribiC3:
On Sat, 12 Sep 2009 05:44:50 +0200 Jesus Sanchez wrote:
If xterm window currently active in X and I'm switch from console
to X
If xterm window currently active in X and I'm switch from console to X
by pressing Alt-F9 key, then xterm will beep and display 0~.
If web browser window currently active there is in X, then he will open
history toolbar.
--
/4625
On Fri, 11 Sep 2009 13:15:55 -0700 (PDT)
4625 4625...@gmail.com wrote:
If xterm window currently active in X and I'm switch from console to X
by pressing Alt-F9 key, then xterm will beep and display 0~.
Nope, when i switch out of X - say with Ctrl+Alt+F2 - Alt+F9 does
nothing for me. (It's
Robert escribis:
On Fri, 11 Sep 2009 13:15:55 -0700 (PDT)
4625 4625...@gmail.com wrote:
If xterm window currently active in X and I'm switch from console to X
by pressing Alt-F9 key, then xterm will beep and display 0~.
Nope, when i switch out of X - say with Ctrl+Alt+F2 - Alt+F9
On Thursday 23 April 2009 02.17.10 Jacob Meuser wrote:
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 09:22:56PM +, Jacob Meuser wrote:
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 01:41:59PM +0200, LEVAI Daniel wrote:
[...]
might work better if you remove beep sources. I mean:
$ mixerctl inputs.mix2_source=dac,sel4,sel6,cd
in mixerctl -a output, nevertheless I've changed every
outputs control's volume to 0 to see which one could be it (no luck). Is
it possible to lower the system beep's volume, so my ears won't bleed by
tomorrow? :)
hopefully this gets you 'beep' controls. please let me know.
beep generators should
this gets you 'beep' controls. please let me know.
beep generators should be considered i/o endpoints, like pins and
converters.
I've applied your diff, and now I have a sel2 control which claims that its
source is 'beep'. However, I can not do anything with it; when muted and zero
the system beep's volume, so my ears won't bleed by
tomorrow? :)
hopefully this gets you 'beep' controls. please let me know.
beep generators should be considered i/o endpoints, like pins and
converters.
I've applied your diff, and now I have a sel2 control which claims that its
Landry Breuil a icrit :
On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 01:19:50PM +0200, Nicolas Letellier wrote:
Hello ports@
I upgraded to 4.3-current (from 4.3-stable) and I installed
audio/beep-media-player and I see it requires esound be launched. Why?
So, I must launch esd before (and esd play a sound
Hello list.
I have a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
help me in a second.
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script
like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to
have the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
Is there a way to do so on OpenBSD 4.0/i386?
I've shuffled through MISC archives and FAQs, but I found nothing
relevant...
Thank you all,
byee,
Manuel
creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
Is there a way to do so on OpenBSD 4.0/i386?
I've shuffled through MISC archives and FAQs, but I found
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 07:53 -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and
I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
\b
--
Ryan Corder [EMAIL PROTECTED
On 4/10/07, Manuel Ravasio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
It depends on your terminal, but you can
at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
Is there a way to do so on OpenBSD 4.0/i386?
I've shuffled through MISC archives and FAQs, but I found nothing relevant...
man speaker(4)
for example,
# echo 'CDEFGAHOC' /dev/speaker
reyk
Manuel Ravasio wrote:
Hello list.
snip
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over.
snip
I usually use:
echo -ne '\a'
Best,
Chris
On 4/10/07, Ryan Corder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 07:53 -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote:
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and
I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 06:16:55PM +0200, Reyk Floeter wrote:
man speaker(4)
for example,
# echo 'CDEFGAHOC' /dev/speaker
cat /bsd /dev/speaker is fun, too, especially if you're
into weird electronic music ;-)
--
stefan
http://stsp.name PGP Key:
a small, trivial task I can't accomplish and I'm sure you guys can
help me in a second.
I'm creating some shell scripts for various administrative purposes, and I'd
really like to add some kind of command at the end of each in order to have
the pc speaker BEEP when the script is over
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 18:52 +0200, Almir Karic wrote:
isn't \b a backspace?
oh yeah, oops. meant to say \a I guess
--
Ryan Corder [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Systems Engineer, NovaSys Health LLC.
501-219- ext. 646
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had
a
On 2007/04/10 19:09, Stefan Sperling wrote:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 06:16:55PM +0200, Reyk Floeter wrote:
man speaker(4)
for example,
# echo 'CDEFGAHOC' /dev/speaker
cat /bsd /dev/speaker is fun, too, especially if you're
into weird electronic music ;-)
likewise 'tcpdump
Great!
Thank you all!
Manuel
man speaker(4)
for example,
# echo 'CDEFGAHOC' /dev/speaker
Get your own web address.
Have a HUGE year through Yahoo! Small Business.
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 07:09:17PM +0200, Stefan Sperling wrote:
cat /bsd /dev/speaker is fun, too, especially if you're
into weird electronic music ;-)
In this case, you should also try madplay (from ports) on kernels
for different platforms, but be sure to use a rate between 1 a 4
kHz.
machines the moving parts often start to wear out. I'm not
familiar with your exact hardware, but many motherboards will emit a
speaker beep if there is a problem. If you have the manual for the
board, try looking up the beep code; you'll need to pay attention to
how often it happens
cooling fans are running;
on older machines the moving parts often start to wear out. I'm not
familiar with your exact hardware, but many motherboards will emit a
speaker beep if there is a problem. If you have the manual for the
board, try looking up the beep code; you'll need to pay attention
On 19/12/05, dimaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'll look in case, but I don't think that it's only hardvare, openbsd is
impact on this, because in past, when my mini-server were running on
linux there were no such beeps...
Why do you think Daniel said wear out? Things wear out over time
(fans
Johan wrote:
Have you checked your PC clock battery?? It could be running low.
Johan
On 12/17/05, *dimaz* [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Brian A. Seklecki wrote:
PC speaker beep (something action on the console?)
Or possibly hardware alarm
On 18/12/05, Brian A. Seklecki [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PC speaker beep (something action on the console?)
Or possibly hardware alarm?
true. therefor check your system/cpu temp in bios, let the system run
for a while in bios-mode and check if your cpu temp is increasing
without any load. Also
Bachman Kharazmi wrote:
On 18/12/05, Brian A. Seklecki [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PC speaker beep (something action on the console?)
Or possibly hardware alarm?
true. therefor check your system/cpu temp in bios, let the system run
for a while in bios-mode and check if your cpu temp
I've installed OpenBSD on my small server, before on server was linux,
and 2-3 times a day my server beeps (3 times)...
What does it mean? And how I can control this beeps?
On Sat, 17 Dec 2005 17:12:58 +0300
dimaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've installed OpenBSD on my small server, before on server was linux,
and 2-3 times a day my server beeps (3 times)...
What does it mean? And how I can control this beeps?
Have you checked your logs for anything out of the
Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse wrote:
On Sat, 17 Dec 2005 17:21:39 +0300
dimaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse wrote:
On Sat, 17 Dec 2005 17:12:58 +0300
dimaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've installed OpenBSD on my small server, before on server was linux,
and
PC speaker beep (something action on the console?)
Or possibly hardware alarm?
~BAS
On Sat, 2005-12-17 at 09:12, dimaz wrote:
I've installed OpenBSD on my small server, before on server was linux,
and 2-3 times a day my server beeps (3 times)...
What does it mean? And how I can control
Brian A. Seklecki wrote:
PC speaker beep (something action on the console?)
Or possibly hardware alarm?
~BAS
On Sat, 2005-12-17 at 09:12, dimaz wrote:
I've installed OpenBSD on my small server, before on server was linux,
and 2-3 times a day my server beeps (3 times)...
What does
Hello,
I've installed 3.7 on a new pc. The motherboard has an onboard very
small speaker.
As soon as 3.7 boots the speaker starts to beep and doesn't stop
anymore.
How can I stop this annoying beep.
I tried: to disable sysbeep (with config), a bios update but these
didn't help.
What else can
On Wed, 28 Sep 2005, Didier Wiroth wrote:
Hello,
I've installed 3.7 on a new pc. The motherboard has an onboard very
small speaker.
As soon as 3.7 boots the speaker starts to beep and doesn't stop
anymore.
How can I stop this annoying beep.
I tried: to disable sysbeep (with config), a bios
To: Didier Wiroth
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: stubid litte speaker beep that doesn't stop
On Wed, 28 Sep 2005, Didier Wiroth wrote:
Hello,
I've installed 3.7 on a new pc. The motherboard has an onboard very
small speaker.
As soon as 3.7 boots the speaker starts to beep and doesn't stop
:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2005 12:59
To: Didier Wiroth
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: stubid litte speaker beep that doesn't stop
On Wed, 28 Sep 2005, Didier Wiroth wrote:
Hello,
I've installed 3.7 on a new pc. The motherboard has an onboard very
small speaker
Hi,
Actually I did!
I'm at point 2. Next find out if there is a newer release available.
I installed the pc few hours ago.
So now, I downloaded the 3.8 sources, and compiled the new kernel a few
minutes ago and rebooted.
Still the continous beep.
So I guess now it is time to use sendbug, isn't
On Wed, 28 Sep 2005 13:53:17 +0200, Didier Wiroth wrote:
Do I follow the etiquette correctly?
I didn't see a dmesg anywhere. That is a guarantee of one of two
things:
a you will be ignored because you look ignorant.
or
b you will be treated to strong language to encourage better behaviour
in the
The problem appears on openbsd_3_7 and openbsd_3_8_base.
The mainboard is a foxconn: 915P7AC-8KRS
Here is the dmesg output:
OpenBSD 3.8 (GENERIC) #0: Wed Sep 28 14:50:49 CEST 2005
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/cvs/OPENBSD_3_8_BASE/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
cpu0: Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU
--- Didier Wiroth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I've installed 3.7 on a new pc. The motherboard has
an onboard very
small speaker.
As soon as 3.7 boots the speaker starts to beep and
doesn't stop
anymore.
How can I stop this annoying beep.
I tried: to disable sysbeep (with config
Hi Didier,
This is not much help I know but I also suffered from the same problem
with 3.8 and interestingly enough it was also a Foxconn board, this time
however sporting a Athlon XP.
The only solution I found was to disconnect the speaker.
Unfortunately the box is currently doing firewall
the speaker starts to beep and
doesn't stop
anymore.
How can I stop this annoying beep.
I tried: to disable sysbeep (with config), a bios
update but these
didn't help.
What else can I try?
thx
didier
Try unplugging the speaker lead from your motherboard.
I'll go out on a limb here and assume
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