Re: flash on OpenBSD!
On Wed, Aug 01, 2007 at 11:55:51PM -0400, Nick Guenther wrote: > (this would be ports@ but it's something many people would care about, I > think) there is a gnash-0.8.0 port in -current. please use that is you are interested in such things. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] SDF Public Access UNIX System - http://sdf.lonestar.org
flash on OpenBSD!
(this would be ports@ but it's something many people would care about, I think) I'm reporting that I've got Gnash-0.8 (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/) working on OpenBSD. It's really choppy and doesn't work right on everything, but it's pretty close. In >60% of cases it's workable (and you can shutdown anyone who tries to tell you OpenBSD can't be a desktop system). Tonight I was reminded of gnash it and decided to try it. `pkg_add -iv gnash` indeed installed it, but youtube and even weebls-stuff.com was very broken. My friend told me that the version installed was *really* old. So I pkg_delete'd that and boldly just downloaded the source from a GNU mirror. `./configure` was unhappy with me, spitting a bunch of errors. it wanted a bunch of libs I didn't have. One of of them was the render; it gave an option "--enable-renderer=agg" to make it use this alternate renderer and since I'd noticed that agg had been installed when I first pkg_add'd it i used that. Then it was still unable, and wanted me to disable klash (which is some kind of KDE crap interface to it I suppose). I built it and installed it, but the firefox plugin was in the wrong place so I had to move that too. So, the full sequence of commands I used: $ sudo pkg_add -iv agg $ #[download gnash-0.8.0 from your favourite GNU mirror] $ tar zxvf gnash-0.8.0.tar.gz $ cd gnash-0.8.0 $ ./configure --enable-renderer=agg --disable-klash $ sudo make#I don't know if sudo is needed here $ sudo make install $ mkdir ~/.mozilla/plugins $ sudo mv ~/.firefox/plugins/* ~/.mozilla/plugins $ mozilla-firefox youtube.com #make sure this actually restarts mozilla in mozilla you can check the URL about:plugins to see what it knows about gnash. -Nick
Re: Laptop death...
On 8/1/07, Floor Terra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Are you asking why someone who spends so much time helping others > (probably you too, you use OpenBSD right?) does not get a "real" job?! Really, the question comes down to: Should a core openbsd hacker have to pay for the machine they do openbsd work on? Now, this person may have a work computer, but that's for the paying work. This person may have his personal computers, but those are for his personal use. If he or she does so much work as to need a dedicated computer (and Theo will definitely speak up, if someone like myself asks for a "dedicated openbsd hacking laptop"), who are you to question that? Seriously. -- "This officer's men seem to follow him merely out of idle curiosity." -- Sandhurst officer cadet evaluation.
Re: microphone on OpenBSD 4.1 | How to...?
On Thu, Aug 02, 2007 at 04:57:32AM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hello everybody, > > I tried to configure a microphone on OpenBSD 4.1 but it seems I'm too dumb > to get it working. > > I've read the FAQ (well the manpages where not that helpfull about it) and > configured the settings like descriped: > > inputs.mic.mute=on > inputs.mic.preamp=on > inputs.mic.source=mic0 > record.source=mic > record.volume=255,255 > record.volume.mute=off > record.mic=0 > record.mic.mute=off you muted the mic input? usually you can mute an input and still recdord it. I think whether this really works is somewhat hardware/ driver dependent. at any rate, unmute this until you get something, then try muting it. probably record.mic should not be 0. that looks like a monoaural volume control. > All I get if I do dd if=/dev/audio of=myvoice.raw is some scrambled sound. > Sounds like the background noise on every Audiodevice just much louder. > > I'm sure I miss something but I don't figure out what it is. well, the auvia devices I have don't record at all. most likely there is just some input switched with some output, since I have to plug my speakers into the mic jack to get audio. still haven't figured that out yet. anyway, if the above suggestions don't help, I would also suggest trying a different encoding, like slinear_le and using /dev/sound instead of /dev/audio. mulaw is emulated on auvia. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] SDF Public Access UNIX System - http://sdf.lonestar.org
microphone on OpenBSD 4.1 | How to...?
Hello everybody, I tried to configure a microphone on OpenBSD 4.1 but it seems I'm too dumb to get it working. I've read the FAQ (well the manpages where not that helpfull about it) and configured the settings like descriped: inputs.mic.mute=on inputs.mic.preamp=on inputs.mic.source=mic0 record.source=mic record.volume=255,255 record.volume.mute=off record.mic=0 record.mic.mute=off All I get if I do dd if=/dev/audio of=myvoice.raw is some scrambled sound. Sounds like the background noise on every Audiodevice just much louder. I'm sure I miss something but I don't figure out what it is. My audiodevice is a auvia0. I tried to play a littlebit with the settings but maybe I fucked something up... audioctl -a && mixerctl -a Output: name=VIA VT8233 version= config=auvia encodings=ulinear:8,mulaw:8*,alaw:8*,slinear:8*,slinear_le:16,ulinear_le:16*,slinear_be:16*,ulinear_be:16* properties=full_duplex,mmap,independent full_duplex=0 fullduplex=0 blocksize=4800 hiwat=13 lowat=1 monitor_gain=0 mode= play.rate=48000 play.channels=1 play.precision=8 play.encoding=mulaw play.gain=127 play.balance=32 play.port=0x0 play.avail_ports=0x0 play.seek=0 play.samples=0 play.eof=0 play.pause=0 play.error=0 play.waiting=0 play.open=0 play.active=0 play.buffer_size=65536 record.rate=48000 record.channels=1 record.precision=8 record.encoding=mulaw record.gain=191 record.balance=32 record.port=0x1 record.avail_ports=0x7 record.seek=0 record.samples=24000 record.eof=0 record.pause=0 record.error=0 record.waiting=0 record.open=0 record.active=0 record.buffer_size=65536 record.errors=0 outputs.master=199,199 outputs.master.mute=off outputs.mono=255 outputs.mono.mute=on outputs.mono.source=mixerout outputs.headphones=255,255 outputs.headphones.mute=on outputs.bass=255 outputs.treble=255 inputs.speaker=255 inputs.speaker.mute=off inputs.phone=191 inputs.phone.mute=on inputs.mic=191 inputs.mic.mute=on inputs.mic.preamp=on inputs.mic.source=mic0 inputs.line=191,191 inputs.line.mute=on inputs.cd=191,191 inputs.cd.mute=off inputs.video=191,191 inputs.video.mute=on inputs.aux=191,191 inputs.aux.mute=on inputs.dac=191,191 inputs.dac.mute=off record.source=mic record.volume=255,255 record.volume.mute=off record.mic=0 record.mic.mute=off outputs.loudness=off outputs.spatial=off outputs.spatial.center=0 outputs.spatial.depth=0 outputs.surround=255,255 outputs.surround.mute=on outputs.center=255 outputs.center.mute=on outputs.lfe=255 outputs.lfe.mute=on outputs.extamp=off The only thing wich happens is that the noise gets reduced (but not away) if I say something into the microphone. But the words I speak wont get recorded. It would be great if somebody could point me to my misstake and tell me how to get it working. :) Kind regards, Sebastian
Re: ppp logging?
On Thursday 26 July 2007, J.D. Bronson wrote: > At 06:33 AM 07/26/2007, J.D. Bronson wrote: > >I am running 4.1-STABLE and having issues with ppp logging. > > > >I created /var/log/ppp.log and nothing will log to it > >when ppp runs (userland pppoe). > > > >My ppp.conf file contains the normal stuff: > > > >default: > > set log Phase Chat IPCP CCP tun command > > set redial 5 1 > > set reconnect 5 1 > > > >att: > > set device "!/usr/sbin/pppoe -i hme0" > > set mtu max 1492 > > set speed sync > >... > >... > > > >It appears to be logging to /var/log/daemon > >(thanks to daemon.info -> /var/log/daemon in syslog.conf) > > > >but not ppp.log > > > >What am I missing to log stuff to ppp.log?? > > > >-JD > > I did just add this to syslog.conf: > > !ppp > *.* /var/log/ppp.log > > > and now, I get logging in ppp.log but ONLY on reboot/shutdown. > It will not log anything on startup - and all my logging in > /var/log/daemon for ppp is now only shutdown as well. > > Startup is NOT getting logged > > Help? > > -JD hi JD, Having stuff duplicated in /var/log/daemon is normal due to the message type and notice level. The addition your syslog.conf file is just telling syslog to *also* log to /var/log/pp.log anything that matches "ppp" Having startup messages not show up in /var/log/ppp.log is not normal. I suspect either you're not starting ppp properly or you've got permissions hosed on the log files. How are you starting ppp? (hopefully through /etc/rc.local). # start ppp echo ' ppp' ppp -auto att echo '.' Though it's a wicked thing to do (loss of logs), as root try: # cd /var/log # rm daemon # rm ppp.log # touch daemon # touch ppp.log # reboot When rebooted, in both your /var/log/daemon and /var/log/ppp.log you should see ppp reading it's config file, establishing a connection and so on. -jcr
Re: Laptop death...
Are you asking why someone who spends so much time helping others (probably you too, you use OpenBSD right?) does not get a "real" job?! Floor Terra On 1-aug-2007, at 23:14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: This is really bad that your laptop is dead.. but I personally always wonder how it can be that such over- qualified person can't even earn enough money for a laptop?! I mean it's not a airplane... I'm not a super hacker but I was able to get money to buy a pretty PowerBook5,7 when I needed it... What's wrong with you guys?! :) ..or maybe it's a religious question not to get a "real" job.. Really interesting, I don't mean that we must not help each other of-course. Happy hacking, On 7/28/07, Tobias Weingartner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi all, I hate doing this, but I'm in a tiny bit of a bind. I'm in need of a new laptop. My old IBM T40p is slowly giving up the ghost after 5+ years of faithful service. As this is my main terminal to hack on and do everything I do on a computer, it's impending doom will significantly affect me. I've looked at the options available, and there really are not that many. I know that there are *lots* of laptops out there that would work, but I am somewhat particular in what I get next. At the current time I'm looking at buying: 26238YU - T60P CD/2.0 1GB 100GB 14.1" SXGA+ DVDR WLS BT DOS Rough Price: $1,645.99 - $1,878.99 Along with this comes taxes and shipping, etc. Unfortunately my current financial situation is that I can only afford to spend $400-$500 dollars on this. Is there anyone out there that could help me out with the rest? Thanks a lot, --Toby.
Re: Laptop death...
On Wed, 1 Aug 2007, Miod Vallat wrote: SNIP Miod (who has a dayjob which allows him to afford a new laptop every few months, but nobody's making old iron based laptops anymore) I should go out in the garage, oops it's not built yet, and make you a nice "portable" wood case for a Plextor. :-) Then you can have a foot rest when you're working on your laptop. diana
Re: regular user can't login in with xdm
On 01/08/07, Ingo Schwarze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > You changed 'xdm_flags="NO"' to 'xdm_flags=""' in /etc/rc.conf(8), > didn't you? At least that's the standard way to enable xdm(1). And all this time I have been editting /etc/ttys :P You learn something new every day. -- Best Regards Edd --- http://students.dec.bournemouth.ac.uk/ebarrett
Re: Laptop death...
> This is really bad that your laptop is dead.. > > but I personally always wonder how it can be that such over-qualified person > can't even earn enough money for a laptop?! I mean it's not a airplane... > I'm not a super hacker but I was able to get money to buy a pretty > PowerBook5,7 when I needed it... > > What's wrong with you guys?! :) I am an OpenBSD developer, and I know Tobias. I have a pretty good grasp of how much time he spends on OpenBSD, as opposed to family life or other, non-computing, real life issues. Even though my area of work and Toby's are pretty orthogonal and we don't happen to talk much about code (because we are working on pretty different areas), I know he's a skilled person and his advice is always good to hear. So, even though his day job might be able to pay for a new laptop, I don't really care about this when he is asking for help getting a new one. I know what's he's being capable of, and - as far as I am concerned - this is more than I need to know to decide to jump in and give some help. Miod (who has a dayjob which allows him to afford a new laptop every few months, but nobody's making old iron based laptops anymore)
Re: Laptop death...
On Thursday, August 2, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > This is really bad that your laptop is dead.. It is unfortunate that it happened now. The timing sucks. > but I personally always wonder how it can be that such over-qualified person > can't even earn enough damn money for a laptop?! I mean it's not a > airplane... I'm not a super hacker but I was able to get money to buy a > pretty PowerBook5,7 when I needed it... Ahh, I shouldn't respond... I really shouldn't. Seriously, I tend to buy my own way most places. Unfortunately, this time lady luck decided to abandon me at a rather inconvenient time. My financial resources (yes, I have a job) were busy fixing other things. As such, my dead laptop will basically mean that I would not have had access to a hacking laptop for roughly 2-3 months. This would be ok except for the fact that several of us have been having mini hackathons on a weekly basis, and I'd like to keep going to them (and being more productive than a pop/food server). [rest snipped] --Toby.
Re: Laptop death...
On Thu, Aug 02, 2007 at 12:59:03AM +0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > This is really bad that your laptop is dead.. > > but I personally always wonder how it can be that such over-qualified person > can't even earn enough damn money for a laptop?! I mean it's not a > airplane... I'm not a super hacker but I was able to get money to buy a > pretty PowerBook5,7 when I needed it... At the risk of feeding the troll... Here's a guy that works for free on a free operating system that many thousands of individuals, and many companies, use for their desktop, infrastructure, and public-facing servers. If the computer this guy is using is in trouble, I'm very happy to help as I can to get him a new one. Look at the commits for toby@, and I think you'll find it was worth sending him a little money. > What's wrong with you guys?! :) Look in a mirror when you ask that! :) Really, it's in our own interest to support these people. -- Darrin Chandler| Phoenix BSD User Group | MetaBUG [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://phxbug.org/ | http://metabug.org/ http://www.stilyagin.com/ | Daemons in the Desert | Global BUG Federation
Re: Laptop death...
This is really bad that your laptop is dead.. but I personally always wonder how it can be that such over-qualified person can't even earn enough money for a laptop?! I mean it's not a airplane... I'm not a super hacker but I was able to get money to buy a pretty PowerBook5,7 when I needed it... What's wrong with you guys?! :) ..or maybe it's a religious question not to get a "real" job.. Really interesting, I don't mean that we must not help each other of-course. Happy hacking, On 7/28/07, Tobias Weingartner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I hate doing this, but I'm in a tiny bit of a bind. I'm in need of a > new laptop. My old IBM T40p is slowly giving up the ghost after 5+ > years of faithful service. As this is my main terminal to hack on and > do everything I do on a computer, it's impending doom will significantly > affect me. > > I've looked at the options available, and there really are not that many. > I know that there are *lots* of laptops out there that would work, but I > am somewhat particular in what I get next. At the current time I'm > looking > at buying: > > 26238YU - T60P CD/2.0 1GB 100GB 14.1" SXGA+ DVDR WLS BT DOS > Rough Price: $1,645.99 - $1,878.99 > > Along with this comes taxes and shipping, etc. Unfortunately my current > financial situation is that I can only afford to spend $400-$500 dollars > on this. Is there anyone out there that could help me out with the rest? > > > Thanks a lot, > > --Toby.
Re: Laptop death...
This is really bad that your laptop is dead.. but I personally always wonder how it can be that such over-qualified person can't even earn enough damn money for a laptop?! I mean it's not a airplane... I'm not a super hacker but I was able to get money to buy a pretty PowerBook5,7 when I needed it... What's wrong with you guys?! :) ..or maybe it's a religious question not to get a "real" job.. Really interesting, I don't mean that we must not help each other of-course. Happy hacking, On 7/28/07, Tobias Weingartner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I hate doing this, but I'm in a tiny bit of a bind. I'm in need of a > new laptop. My old IBM T40p is slowly giving up the ghost after 5+ > years of faithful service. As this is my main terminal to hack on and > do everything I do on a computer, it's impending doom will significantly > affect me. > > I've looked at the options available, and there really are not that many. > I know that there are *lots* of laptops out there that would work, but I > am somewhat particular in what I get next. At the current time I'm > looking > at buying: > > 26238YU - T60P CD/2.0 1GB 100GB 14.1" SXGA+ DVDR WLS BT DOS > Rough Price: $1,645.99 - $1,878.99 > > Along with this comes taxes and shipping, etc. Unfortunately my current > financial situation is that I can only afford to spend $400-$500 dollars > on this. Is there anyone out there that could help me out with the rest? > > > Thanks a lot, > > --Toby.
Re: Laptop death...
On Wed, Aug 01, 2007 at 06:57:53PM +0100, The King of Norway wrote: > Apologies for reviving an old post. If anyone is interested, there's a > discussion on this topic at the OpenBSD Journal. > http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20070727210751 Thanks for all of the donations! We've gotten enough to get a laptop: http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20070727210751&mode=expanded -ME
Re: regular user can't login in with xdm
Hi, ambrosehuang ambrose wrote on Wed, Aug 01, 2007 at 03:46:16PM +0800: > When I finished installing the OpenBSD 4.1 on my thinkpad > T43, I changed the "xdm_config="NO" to "xdm_config="" " in the > /etc/rc.conf.local, You changed 'xdm_flags="NO"' to 'xdm_flags=""' in /etc/rc.conf(8), didn't you? At least that's the standard way to enable xdm(1). > but as a regular user I can't login in with xdm, > it said "incorrect login" on the login window of xdm; > as root I can login, Perhaps you have a german keyboard connected but no "XkbLayout" configured for your keyboard(4) in /etc/X11/xorg.conf(5), and your user password contains one of the characters "Y" or "Z", while your root password doesn't? Of course, that's just guesswork, you could as well have different problems - but wrong keyboard layout is indeed notorious for preventing xdm login.
Re: regular user can't login in with xdm
On 01/08/07, ambrosehuang ambrose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, guys, When I finished installing the OpenBSD 4.1 on my thinkpad > T43, I changed the "xdm_config="NO" Why? I have never needed to. Dees it work without? -- Best Regards Edd --- http://students.dec.bournemouth.ac.uk/ebarrett
Re: Laptop death...
The King of Norway wrote: 26238YU - T60P CD/2.0 1GB 100GB 14.1" SXGA+ DVDR WLS BT DOS Rough Price: $1,645.99 - $1,878.99 Paypal sent. -- Jack J. Woehr Director of Development Absolute Performance, Inc. [EMAIL PROTECTED] 303-443-7000 ext. 527
Re: Laptop death...
Apologies for reviving an old post. If anyone is interested, there's a discussion on this topic at the OpenBSD Journal. http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20070727210751 The article includes Paypal details. Sean. Tobias Weingartner wrote: Hi all, I hate doing this, but I'm in a tiny bit of a bind. I'm in need of a new laptop. My old IBM T40p is slowly giving up the ghost after 5+ years of faithful service. As this is my main terminal to hack on and do everything I do on a computer, it's impending doom will significantly affect me. I've looked at the options available, and there really are not that many. I know that there are *lots* of laptops out there that would work, but I am somewhat particular in what I get next. At the current time I'm looking at buying: 26238YU - T60P CD/2.0 1GB 100GB 14.1" SXGA+ DVDR WLS BT DOS Rough Price: $1,645.99 - $1,878.99 Along with this comes taxes and shipping, etc. Unfortunately my current financial situation is that I can only afford to spend $400-$500 dollars on this. Is there anyone out there that could help me out with the rest? Thanks a lot, --Toby.
Re: regular user can't login in with xdm
* ambrosehuang ambrose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [070801 09:53]: > Hello, guys, When I finished installing the OpenBSD 4.1 on my thinkpad > T43, I changed the "xdm_config="NO" to "xdm_config="" " in the > /etc/rc.conf.local, but as a regular user I can't login in with xdm , > it said "incorrect login" on the login window of xdm ; as root I can > login , but I can get my shell profile /root/.bash_profile used ( > the PS1 variable I set in the .bash_profile didn't take effect). I > search the maillist archive , and find similar problem in OpenBSD 2.8, > but no answer. Does anyone know how to solve this problem ? > Turn off xdm. Boot the machine and try logging in as the user in question. If that works, try running startx next. These steps may yeild some more illuminating information to help you diagnose the problem. Jim
Re: Firewall, high interrupt load, is this a driver problem (dc) ?
On 7/31/07, Henning Brauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > numbers above are from 4.1. -current should behave significantly better. > Have hardware recommendations changed at all? Any specific north/southbridges or NICs person should be looking at? thanks, aaron
Re: Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
On 8/1/07, vladas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 8/1/07, Peter N. M. Hansteen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > vladas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > > > Did you try AnonCVS? Works (around 30th) for me. > > > > cvs works, but if you build the system yourself, you're not actually > > testing snapshots anymore. I think that's what OP wanted to do. > > Install snapshots fresh, report if there's breakage. > > Point taken. My bad. > Correct, I wanted to test the latest snapshot and some packages ;). And sometimes there are modifications in snapshots that should be tested. >From http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=118056376719177&w=2 "The most recent i386 snapshot contains 45 modified files which are not yet commited." So compiling from checked out souirce, wouldl never test these not yet committed "experimental" features. [snip] =Adriaan=
Re: OT: mail retrieval software
On Tue, Jul 31, 2007 at 09:59:23PM +0100, poncenby wrote: > Grateful if anyone could recommend a mail retrieval program which does > not require a local SMTP service like fetchmail does. How about fetchmail? (with procmail / maildrop / whatever) poll mailserver protocol imap service 993: username "mcbride" there has password "mekmitasdigoat" is mcbride here fetchall ssl mda "/usr/local/bin/procmail -d %T"
regular user can't login in with xdm
Hello, guys, When I finished installing the OpenBSD 4.1 on my thinkpad T43, I changed the "xdm_config="NO" to "xdm_config="" " in the /etc/rc.conf.local, but as a regular user I can't login in with xdm , it said "incorrect login" on the login window of xdm ; as root I can login , but I can get my shell profile /root/.bash_profile used ( the PS1 variable I set in the .bash_profile didn't take effect). I search the maillist archive , and find similar problem in OpenBSD 2.8, but no answer. Does anyone know how to solve this problem ?
Re: carp: knocked out by adding cables?
Claudio Jeker wrote: On Wed, Aug 01, 2007 at 08:00:26AM -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote: here is a quick clarification of the cabling switch 1A---switch 2 \--B--/ where making connection B caused the drama. switch 1 is a nice managed switch and switch 2 is a random POS. is this the expected behavior with carp when a cabling topology like this comes up sans trunking, etc? clues about what happened would be great. You created a loop in the L2 broadcast domain and because carp is using multicast for the hellos you had a nice network meltdown (maybe your managed switch was realizing that and blocked the traffic). timo, i don't have STP enabled. dunno much about it besides that i don't use it :). ah, thanks for clearing that up, claudio. that was my guess: the carp multicasts got looped. cheers, jake
Re: Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
vladas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Did you try AnonCVS? Works (around 30th) for me. cvs works, but if you build the system yourself, you're not actually testing snapshots anymore. I think that's what OP wanted to do. Install snapshots fresh, report if there's breakage. Other lazy bastards tend to just U)pgrade between snaps. -- Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.datadok.no/ http://www.nuug.no/ "Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic" delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.
Re: Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
Adriaan wrote: On 8/1/07, Peter N. M. Hansteen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Adriaan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: There are no X installation file sets for i386 snapshots. Don't slashdot it just yet. I think we can be reasonably sure that even on i386, OpenBSD 4.2 will ship with installable X binaries. For one reason or the other the x* parts did not get built or at least did not make it onto the FTP servers. I'd wait a few days and enjoy the new, improved ones when they do appear. I regulary test binary snapshots and packages. I just wanted to report something like I did with http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=118550373919943&w=2 .Just wondered if they could be related, or whether it was a mirroring issue. With the dependency of some packages on the expat XML parser f in xbase42.tgz, you really cannot some install somel binary snaphots packages when xbase42.tgz isn't there =Adriaan= Aaahhh! That's why i cannot install bash under snapshot! --Heinrich
Re: Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
> With the dependency of some packages on the expat XML parser f in > xbase42.tgz, you really cannot some install somel binary snaphots > packages when xbase42.tgz isn't there Did you try AnonCVS? Works (around 30th) for me.
Re: carp: knocked out by adding cables?
thus Jacob Yocom-Piatt spake: i was redoing some ethernet cabling in the office and made 2 connections between 2 switches before i pulled one connection. shortly after plugging in the second cable the pair of webservers that use carp sans preemption got "confused", causing a failover to the backup machine. here is a quick clarification of the cabling switch 1A---switch 2 \--B--/ where making connection B caused the drama. switch 1 is a nice managed switch and switch 2 is a random POS. is this the expected behavior with carp when a cabling topology like this comes up sans trunking, etc? clues about what happened would be great. cheers, jake Since 'A' is a managed switch: What about STP (Spanning Tree, 802.1D), is it enabled? Is 'A' the root bridge (should be, if it's the only one)? Timo
Re: carp: knocked out by adding cables?
On Wed, Aug 01, 2007 at 08:00:26AM -0500, Jacob Yocom-Piatt wrote: > i was redoing some ethernet cabling in the office and made 2 connections > between 2 switches before i pulled one connection. shortly after > plugging in the second cable the pair of webservers that use carp sans > preemption got "confused", causing a failover to the backup machine. > > here is a quick clarification of the cabling > > switch 1A---switch 2 > \--B--/ > > > where making connection B caused the drama. switch 1 is a nice managed > switch and switch 2 is a random POS. > > is this the expected behavior with carp when a cabling topology like > this comes up sans trunking, etc? clues about what happened would be great. > You created a loop in the L2 broadcast domain and because carp is using multicast for the hellos you had a nice network meltdown (maybe your managed switch was realizing that and blocked the traffic). -- :wq Claudio
carp: knocked out by adding cables?
i was redoing some ethernet cabling in the office and made 2 connections between 2 switches before i pulled one connection. shortly after plugging in the second cable the pair of webservers that use carp sans preemption got "confused", causing a failover to the backup machine. here is a quick clarification of the cabling switch 1A---switch 2 \--B--/ where making connection B caused the drama. switch 1 is a nice managed switch and switch 2 is a random POS. is this the expected behavior with carp when a cabling topology like this comes up sans trunking, etc? clues about what happened would be great. cheers, jake
Re: Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
On 8/1/07, Peter N. M. Hansteen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Adriaan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > There are no X installation file sets for i386 snapshots. > > Don't slashdot it just yet. I think we can be reasonably sure that > even on i386, OpenBSD 4.2 will ship with installable X binaries. For > one reason or the other the x* parts did not get built or at least did > not make it onto the FTP servers. I'd wait a few days and enjoy the > new, improved ones when they do appear. > I regulary test binary snapshots and packages. I just wanted to report something like I did with http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=118550373919943&w=2 .Just wondered if they could be related, or whether it was a mirroring issue. With the dependency of some packages on the expat XML parser f in xbase42.tgz, you really cannot some install somel binary snaphots packages when xbase42.tgz isn't there =Adriaan=
Re: OT: mail retrieval software
Hi, > Grateful if anyone could recommend a mail retrieval program which does > not require a local SMTP service like fetchmail does. >From the fetchmail man page : -m | --mda (Keyword: mda) You can force mail to be passed to an MDA directly (rather than forwarded to port 25) with the --mda or -m option. Best regards, Charles Longeau
Re: OT: mail retrieval software
On Tue, Jul 31, 2007 at 09:59:23PM +0100, poncenby wrote: > Grateful if anyone could recommend a mail retrieval program which does > not require a local SMTP service like fetchmail does. >From 'man fetchmail': -m | --mda (Keyword: mda) You can force mail to be passed to an MDA directly (rather than forwarded to port 25) with the --mda or -m option.> ... snip rest of description ...
Re: sudo/env_keep/pkg_add
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> so spake Stuart Henderson (stu): > Does anyone feel it would be useful to add PKG_PATH to the > default env_keep for sudo? Otherwise there are going to be an > awful lot of "pkg_add is broken" posts... Since that is OpenBSD-specific I don't think it makes sense to hard-code it into sudo. However, we can certainly add it to the default sudoers file. - todd
Re: Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
Adriaan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > There are no X installation file sets for i386 snapshots. Don't slashdot it just yet. I think we can be reasonably sure that even on i386, OpenBSD 4.2 will ship with installable X binaries. For one reason or the other the x* parts did not get built or at least did not make it onto the FTP servers. I'd wait a few days and enjoy the new, improved ones when they do appear. - P -- Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.datadok.no/ http://www.nuug.no/ "Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic" delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.
Missing x*42.tgz installation file sets from i386 binary snapshots
There are no X installation file sets for i386 snapshots. >From ftp.openbsd.org . - 100767 Jul 31 14:03 INSTALL.i386 22354 Jul 31 14:03 INSTALL.linux 1019 Jul 31 14:03 MD5 42575374 Jul 31 14:03 base42.tgz 6208870 Jul 31 14:03 bsd 6258748 Jul 31 14:03 bsd.mp 5064469 Jul 31 14:03 bsd.rd 5181440 Jul 31 14:03 cd42.iso 44404 Jul 31 14:03 cdboot 2048 Jul 31 14:03 cdbr 3012608 Jul 31 14:03 cdemu42.iso 2949120 Jul 31 14:03 cdrom42.fs 78810553 Jul 31 14:03 comp42.tgz 1240527 Jul 31 14:03 etc42.tgz 1474560 Jul 31 14:03 floppy42.fs 1474560 Jul 31 14:03 floppyB42.fs 1474560 Jul 31 14:03 floppyC42.fs 2608726 Jul 31 14:03 game42.tgz 203 Jul 26 04:05 index.txt 7660968 Jul 31 14:03 man42.tgz 2292928 Jul 31 14:03 misc42.tgz 52928 Jul 31 14:03 pxeboot There are X file sets for amd64: 79894 Jul 31 14:03 INSTALL.amd64 804 Jul 31 14:03 MD5 [snip] 2292863 Jul 31 14:03 misc42.tgz 52916 Jul 31 14:03 pxeboot 13392534 Jul 26 09:06 xbase42.tgz 78273 Jul 26 09:06 xetc42.tgz 35579383 Jul 26 09:06 xfont42.tgz 11237299 Jul 26 09:06 xserv42.tgz 2547144 Jul 26 09:06 xshare42.tgz --- For sparc and sparc64, the situation is similar, the 64 bits arch has X file sets, while the 32 bit arch has not ;) =Adriaan=
Re: OT: mail retrieval software
I highly recommend mail/fdm On 31/07/07, Andy Hayward <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 31/07/07, poncenby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Grateful if anyone could recommend a mail retrieval program which does > > not require a local SMTP service like fetchmail does. > > Try 'getmail'. > > -- ach
sudo/env_keep/pkg_add
Does anyone feel it would be useful to add PKG_PATH to the default env_keep for sudo? Otherwise there are going to be an awful lot of "pkg_add is broken" posts...
keynote.{1,3,4,5}
old link does not work -.Pa http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~keynote +.Pa http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~angelos/keynote.html -- giovanni