Hi Pedrag,
On Sat, 02 Nov 2019 05:45:08 +0100,
Predrag Punosevac wrote:
>
> Martijn van Duren wrote:
>
> > On 10/24/19 2:25 PM, Claudio Jeker wrote:
> > >
> > > OK claudio@
> > >
> > I'll commit this soon-ish based on claudio's OK, but if at all
> > possible I would like to ask the people
On 2019-10-29, List wrote:
> I think what causes the problem is rspamd which uses JITs. These JITS
> break W^X. If you enable rspamd etc on boot by (rcctl enable ...). And
> reboot..
This is incorrect. rspamd uses luajit (on arches where it's available),
but it is not a requirement that every
On 2019-11-01, Theodore Wynnychenko wrote:
> Hello
>
> I just updated a system to current the other day.
>
> OpenBSD 6.6 GENERIC.MP#411 amd64
>
> The last time I updated was probably 2-3 months ago.
>
> Anyway, when I went to updated packages (also following current/snapshots),
> I got a
> -Original Message-
> From: owner-m...@openbsd.org [mailto:owner-m...@openbsd.org] On Behalf
> Of Stuart Henderson
> Sent: Saturday, November 02, 2019 4:12 AM
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: Following current - pkg_add update forward depedencies
> don't match question
>
>
Hi (again):
After updating to current yesterday, and then updating all the packages
(using "pkg_add -vui -Dsnap"), I can no longer connect to the ssl (993) port
of the courier-imap server running on the system.
Prior to the update, ssl connections were working without an issue.
Now, when
Hello,
What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean long
form such as novels and technical books, including plot and character
development, outlining, and formatting for publishing (not all the same
application necessarily)
I have found a number which boast Linux
On 2019-11-01, Chris Bennett wrote:
> NO. You need to use pkg_add -u -Dsnap.
Normally when pkg_add doesn't have a full path to the package directory
(e.g. PKG_PATH=http://mirror/pub/OpenBSD/6.6/packages/amd64/)
it constructs it from a hostname in PKG_PATH or a partial path in
/etc/installurl. To
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 09:24:05AM -, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2019-11-01, Chris Bennett wrote:
> > NO. You need to use pkg_add -u -Dsnap.
>
> Normally when pkg_add doesn't have a full path to the package directory
> (e.g. PKG_PATH=http://mirror/pub/OpenBSD/6.6/packages/amd64/)
> it
> 2. nov. 2019 kl. 16:00 skrev Oliver Leaver-Smith :
>
> What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean
> long form such as novels and technical books, including plot and character
> development, outlining, and formatting for publishing (not all the same
>
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 08:32:50AM +0100, Mischa wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Not sure if this is on my side, setting, or if something has changed with
> tmux or top redrawing of the terminal.
> I am using tmux, over mosh, on one of my jump hosts to connect to other
> hosts. In some of the windows I
For me OpenOffice works and of Focus Writer. I “won” NaNoWriMo using focus
writer.
On Saturday, November 2, 2019, Oliver Leaver-Smith
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean
> long form such as novels and technical books, including plot and
On 2019/11/02 05:04, Chris Bennett wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 09:24:05AM -, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> > On 2019-11-01, Chris Bennett wrote:
> > > NO. You need to use pkg_add -u -Dsnap.
> >
> > Normally when pkg_add doesn't have a full path to the package directory
> > (e.g.
hello,
> You can't go wrong with LibreOffice. I've written thousands of pages over
> the years with it. It may be too "heavy" for some, but for me, if I'm doing
> something too complex for vi or mousepad, I just fire up LibreOffice.
to me there is no such thing that is too complex for the unix
[not subscribed, please Cc, thanks.]
> OpenBSD 6.6 (RAMDISK_CD) #294: Sat Oct 12 11:29:03 MDT 2019
> dera...@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/RAMDISK_CD
> real mem = 3219439616 (3070MB)
> avail mem = 3151642624 (3005MB)
> mainbus0 at root
> bios0 at mainbus0: date 10/13/06,
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 10:35:36PM +0100, Jonathan Drews wrote:
> Is there an alternative to Skype that runs on OpenBSD? I looked in
> http://openports.se/
> and didn't see anything. I want to take online classes nad need a video
> conferencingsoftware. --Kind regards,Jonathan
It depends what
On 2019-11-02 11:00, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
> Hello,
>
> What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I
> mean long form such as novels and technical books, including plot and
> character development, outlining, and formatting for publishing (not all
> the same
I recently installed OpenBSD on a Lenovo X1 Carbon with a solid state
drive and it works great.
My question is whether OpenBSD addresses the special characteristics
of solid state drives, especially those having to do with longevity
and reliability. I can't find anything written on this. Linux
>>> On 2 Nov 2019, at 19:17, STeve Andre' wrote:
On 2019-11-02 15:07, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:04:34PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
/usr/bin/vi
>>> You obviously never wrote a book.
>>> At least not with the requirements OP asked for. >
>> Actually, I am,
Hi Folks,
A friend of mine gave me an Asus X250TA to use as a low-power home
server.
I don't want to waste any of the two USB2 ports for an USB-Ethernet
adaptor,
but I'd like to use the integrated wifi module instead.
After launching fw_update(1) using an USB tethered connection,
the firmware
Hi,
a bit off-topic, but a Rust-LibreSSL crossover:
It seems that many people have written Rust crates for libtls. And
most (or all) of them haven't been updated for years.
I talked to the owner of libtls and libtls-sys and he assigned
ownership of his libtls crates to me. Yesterday I
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:04:34PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
>
>
> On 2019-11-02 11:00, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean
> > long form such as novels and technical books, including plot and character
> >
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:16:22PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
>
>
> On 2019-11-02 15:07, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> > You obviously never wrote a book.
> > At least not with the requirements OP asked for. >
>
> Actually, I am, right now. I've found that "formatting" is an
> annoyance, when
You might try lyx. This is a front end for latex. You can write
without worrying about formatting and come back to that later. Also,
when you do the formatting, you don't have to worry about niggling
details as in word and its clones. Just declare chapters, sections,
etc.
Lyx is an OpenBSD
[not subscribed, please Cc, thanks.]
> OpenBSD 6.6 (GENERIC.MP) #304: Sat Oct 12 11:18:21 MDT 2019
> dera...@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC.MP
> real mem = 3219472384 (3070MB)
> avail mem = 3145039872 (2999MB)
> mpath0 at root
> scsibus0 at mpath0: 256 targets
>
[not subscribed, please Cc, thanks.]
> OpenBSD 6.6 (GENERIC) #298: Sat Oct 12 11:06:10 MDT 2019
> dera...@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
> real mem = 3219472384 (3070MB)
> avail mem = 3145138176 (2999MB)
> mpath0 at root
> scsibus0 at mpath0: 256 targets
> mainbus0
Hi Jordan,
Jordan Geoghegan wrote on Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 05:44:23PM -0700:
> I've thought about learning latex and mandoc and all the fancy
> tools, but I've just never gotten around to it.
Actually, both mandoc(1) and mdoc(7) are off-topic in this thread.
You cannot use either for writing a
Mr. Hansteen what are your thoughts on Texlive?
On Sat, Nov 2, 2019 at 9:16 AM Peter Nicolai Mathias Hansteen <
pe...@bsdly.net> wrote:
>
>
> > 2. nov. 2019 kl. 16:00 skrev Oliver Leaver-Smith :
> >
> > What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I
> mean long form such
On 2019-11-02 15:07, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:04:34PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
On 2019-11-02 11:00, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
Hello,
What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean long
form such as novels and technical books,
> What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean
> long form such as novels and technical books, including plot and character
> development, outlining, and formatting for publishing (not all the same
> application necessarily)
>
Hi,
Not sure for plot and characters.
[...]
> My question is whether OpenBSD addresses the special characteristics
> of solid state drives, especially those having to do with longevity
> and reliability. I can't find anything written on this. Linux has
> certain means for addressing this issue, such as fstrim as well as
> various
Is there an alternative to Skype that runs on OpenBSD? I looked in
http://openports.se/
and didn't see anything. I want to take online classes nad need a video
conferencingsoftware. --Kind regards,Jonathan
On 2019-11-02 13:18, Chris Bennett wrote:
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:16:22PM -0400, STeve Andre' wrote:
On 2019-11-02 15:07, Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
You obviously never wrote a book.
At least not with the requirements OP asked for. >
Actually, I am, right now. I've found that "formatting"
[not subscribed, please Cc, thanks.]
Me's retiring the R40 in its current capacity, so let me wind up a
couple of things:
There was nothing wrong with the CMOS battery; the seller gave me the
impression that the machine had been used recently, but menow suspects
that quite not to be the case,
Hi,
my bad, I thought the grepped output was enough.
Here's the complete dmesg(8) output. =
OpenBSD 6.6 (GENERIC.MP) #372: Sat Oct 12 10:56:27 MDT 2019
dera...@amd64.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/amd64/compile/GENERIC.MP
real mem = 2056568832 (1961MB)
avail mem =
On 2019-11-02 15:54, Marc Chantreux wrote:
hello,
You can't go wrong with LibreOffice. I've written thousands of pages over
the years with it. It may be too "heavy" for some, but for me, if I'm doing
something too complex for vi or mousepad, I just fire up LibreOffice.
to me there is no
On 2019-11-02 11:00, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
Hello,
What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I mean long
form such as novels and technical books, including plot and character
development, outlining, and formatting for publishing (not all the same
application
Assuming Firefox or chromium on OpenBSD has WebRTC support (havent
checked in a while), talky.io should work. It's a free website that
supports WebRTC chats. I've used it in the past with great success.
On 2019-11-02 14:35, Jonathan Drews wrote:
Is there an alternative to Skype that runs on
Hello,
What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing I
mean long form such as novels and technical books, including plot and
character development, outlining, and formatting for publishing (not all
the same application necessarily)
I agree with the majority of people
On Sat, Nov 02, 2019 at 03:00:28PM +, Oliver Leaver-Smith wrote:
> Hello,
>
> What tools do people find useful for writing on OpenBSD? By writing
> I mean long form such as novels and technical books, including plot
> and character development, outlining, and formatting for publishing
> (not
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