door handles
None of the Taymor levers are quite right. So I went looking, and I found some of what I'm looking for. Short list: (top pick) 1. Omnia 762, plus privacy bolt. I love it but holy shit that's expensive @ ~US$180ea! https://www.omniaindustries.com/product/762/ 2. Rocky Mountain Hardware's "BELLA" lever, included in door set, price unknown, distributor/retailer unknown. https://www.rockymountainhardware.com/products/door-hardware/handles/levers/door-levers/bella-lever-l150 3. Emtek (an Assa Abloy company)'s "Spencer" Lever. Price unknown. Lots of local retailers. https://emtek.com/passage-privacy-levers/spencer-brass-lever 4. Schlage/Dexter J-series "Dover" lever. Price: cheap. Local availability unknown. https://www.schlagecanada.com/en/home/products/J40DOVFFF.html# 5. Schlage/Dexter "Jazz" level. Price: cheapish. Local availability unknown. https://www.schlagecanada.com/en/home/products/F40JAZFFF.html# (bottom pick) 6. Weslock "Bristol" or "Bristol UL" http://weslock.com/product/bristol-2/ or http://weslock.com/product/bristol-ul-2/
Re: Cannot start conversation using talk
Thank you, Steve. I was able to get talk to work by properly configuring /etc/resolve.conf as well as the hosts file. Ben Raskin.
Re: Purging a wifi connection
Thanks, I will give that a try. On 2/21/20, Stuart Henderson wrote: > On 2020-02-21, Raymond, David wrote: >> I have a problem when I have two wifi services available, say, a hotel >> wifi and my cellphone hotspot. Suppose I put the hotel wifi in my >> hostname.xxx file and run sh /etc/netstart and I don't like the >> results. Removing the hotel wifi from the hostname file, replacing it >> with my hotspot wifi, and rerunning sh /etc/netstart results in the >> computer trying to connect with the hotel wifi again, even though this >> connection is no longer in the hostname file. If I then reboot the >> computer and rerun sh /etc/netstart, it connects with the hotspot wifi >> as desired. >> >> My question is whether there is a way to purge the non-desired wifi >> connection without rebooting the computer. >> > > netstart doesn't wipe existing config, it only runs through line by > line and adds to it. > > Guessing you use "join" for the wifi network config? > > You can either run "ifconfig xxx -join network" at the command line > to remove just that network, or you can add "-joinlist" to the top of > hostname.xxx if you just want it to clear and recreate the whole list. > > > -- David J. Raymond david.raym...@nmt.edu http://physics.nmt.edu/~raymond
Re: Cannot start conversation using talk
On Wed, 19 Feb 2020 21:01:10 +0100 KatolaZ wrote: > On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 07:13:48PM +, b...@0x1bi.net wrote: > > > Do you have a correct entry with the machine hostname (full > > > hostname(1) output) in /etc/hosts? > > > > I don't. What should the entry look like? Should the hostname point > > to 0.0.0.0? > > It should point to 127.0.0.1 Could it also point to the net address of the computer, like 192.168.100.2? I ask because I might let others talk via my talk server. SteveT Steve Litt February 2020 featured book: Thriving in Tough Times http://www.troubleshooters.com/thrive
Re: Cannot start conversation using talk
On Wed, 19 Feb 2020 15:48:00 + (UTC) b...@0x1bi.net wrote: > I verified the output of rcctl and inetd is running. > > Ben Raskin. > Hi Ben, Here's what I did on my Void Linux computer to get talk working: * Configured xinetd to work * Make sure xinetd has an entry for talk[1] * As my normal user, (slitt), ssh slitt@192.168.100.2 * Started talkd * From inside that ssh session, talk root@192.168.100.2 * At that point I receive "waiting for your party to reply" * I go to a root terminal, and it's asking me to reply. I reply, but using the IP address, not my hostname. * At that point, the two can talk at their convenience. Notice on the command line, I used the IP address, not the hostname. Notice that what was in hostname really didn't matter. I couldn't change /etc/hostname to fqdn because it busted a bunch of other stuff, and I'm not good enough at nsd/unbound to get "mydesk" point to 192.168.100.2. Didn't matter, I used the IP address on the command line. [1]: /etc/xinetd.d/talk below: === service ntalk { flags = REUSE socket_type = dgram wait= yes user= root server = /usr/bin/talkd log_on_failure += USERID disable = no } SteveT Steve Litt February 2020 featured book: Thriving in Tough Times http://www.troubleshooters.com/thrive
Re: Purging a wifi connection
On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 02:10:49PM -0700, Raymond, David wrote: > I have a problem when I have two wifi services available, say, a hotel > wifi and my cellphone hotspot. Suppose I put the hotel wifi in my > hostname.xxx file and run sh /etc/netstart and I don't like the > results. Removing the hotel wifi from the hostname file, replacing it > with my hotspot wifi, and rerunning sh /etc/netstart results in the > computer trying to connect with the hotel wifi again, even though this > connection is no longer in the hostname file. If I then reboot the > computer and rerun sh /etc/netstart, it connects with the hotspot wifi > as desired. > > My question is whether there is a way to purge the non-desired wifi > connection without rebooting the computer. > Hi David, In cases like this, I typically don't update my hostname.xxx file and instead run `ifconfig` by hand. For example to remove ESSID foo: ifconfig -join foo Or to remove all known networks: ifconfig -joinlist The `ifconfig` manpage explains this. Regards Tim
Re: Purging a wifi connection
On 2020-02-21, Raymond, David wrote: > I have a problem when I have two wifi services available, say, a hotel > wifi and my cellphone hotspot. Suppose I put the hotel wifi in my > hostname.xxx file and run sh /etc/netstart and I don't like the > results. Removing the hotel wifi from the hostname file, replacing it > with my hotspot wifi, and rerunning sh /etc/netstart results in the > computer trying to connect with the hotel wifi again, even though this > connection is no longer in the hostname file. If I then reboot the > computer and rerun sh /etc/netstart, it connects with the hotspot wifi > as desired. > > My question is whether there is a way to purge the non-desired wifi > connection without rebooting the computer. > netstart doesn't wipe existing config, it only runs through line by line and adds to it. Guessing you use "join" for the wifi network config? You can either run "ifconfig xxx -join network" at the command line to remove just that network, or you can add "-joinlist" to the top of hostname.xxx if you just want it to clear and recreate the whole list.
FDE: converting passphrase to usb key
I currently have FDE installed using a passphrase, but would like to update this to using a usb key. Is this possible? Or, should I just wipe/re-install? Thanks.
Purging a wifi connection
I have a problem when I have two wifi services available, say, a hotel wifi and my cellphone hotspot. Suppose I put the hotel wifi in my hostname.xxx file and run sh /etc/netstart and I don't like the results. Removing the hotel wifi from the hostname file, replacing it with my hotspot wifi, and rerunning sh /etc/netstart results in the computer trying to connect with the hotel wifi again, even though this connection is no longer in the hostname file. If I then reboot the computer and rerun sh /etc/netstart, it connects with the hotspot wifi as desired. My question is whether there is a way to purge the non-desired wifi connection without rebooting the computer. -- David J. Raymond david.raym...@nmt.edu http://physics.nmt.edu/~raymond
Re: Openiked site
On 2020-02-21, 赵斌 wrote: > Hello misc list > openiked site:https://www.openiked.org/ can not access for long time.Will > be fix it or not?Thank you > No idea, but it is still available at https://www.openbsd.org/openiked/
Openiked site
Hello misc list openiked site:https://www.openiked.org/ can not access for long time.Will be fix it or not?Thank you
Re: pass 'password manager' problem
Do you have a ~.gnupg/gpg.conf ? Pass works fine for me. Shadrock Uhuru wrote: > [-- text/plain, encoding 7bit, charset: utf-8, 6 lines --] > > running 'pass username' returns > "gpg: Sorry, we are in batchmode - can't get input", > am i missing a piece of software or setting ? > > shadrock > > [-- application/x-pkcs7-signature, encoding base64, 67 lines, name: smime.p7s > --] -- OpenPGP Key Fingerprint: BB5A C2A2 2CAD ACB7 D50D C081 1DB9 6FC4 5AB7 92FA
Re: Server 5 SSD/best practice
On 2020-02-21, Nick Holland wrote: > On 2020-02-20 11:22, Oliver Marugg wrote: >> Hi >> >> I’ve got a Supermicro 5028D desktop server with 5 identical SATA SSDs, >> there is no HBA no RAID card in. The purpose of the server is intended >> as web/smtp and some vmm vms (os plus /home & /var storage). >> What are your suggestions or best practices configuring the device >> arrangement (eg. sofraid(4), bio(4),bioctl(4) OS 2x on 2x ssd raid1, >> data 3xssd raid5 or 1x single ssd for OS and 4x ssd raid5/10 or better >> ideas)? You came in a bit late with the question (i.e. after you already had the hardware!). IMHO there's little use for RAID5 these days. The advantage is "more storage from a given number of drives". But that can more easily be fixed by using larger drives which are easier to recover in the event of failure. I'm not sure what level of support softraid has for stacked disciplines (it doesn't have direct RAID10 support). The boot loader only supports RAID 1 and crypto, so you will either want RAID 1 on the boot drives, or boot from USB stick etc. I think the only options that really make sense for OpenBSD are 2-drive RAID1 for main OS, and then either 2-drive RAID1 for data, plus a single drive for an extra copy of important things (I hesitate to use the word 'backup' for something in the same machine, but sometimes it can be helpful to have something that is easier to restore than your actual backups ;) - though for such a setup I would have gone with HDD rather than SSD for the 5th drive - or 3 single drives for data. > set it up as you need it... > If you think your description is anything close to specific for specific > recommendations, you need to get out more. Everything you said could > vary in demand by many orders of magnitude, except for the model number > the server...a curious thing to be specific about. > > E-mail is one of those things that's really hard to get a good backup > of, as it changes minute by minute and is considered fairly important, Dovecot replication (dsync) does a pretty good job of this actually. I think it's a much better idea than trying to backup mailboxes on an active system. Either run periodically to alternative storage on the same machine, or preferably to a different machine (preferably in a different building). > so I'd consider a three disk RAID1 for the mail store, as a disk system > failure invariably means "lost data", even with frequent backups. > Three disk RAID1 gives you a simple disk structure that can tolerate > a disk failure and still provide redundancy. (some people will tell > you that RAID1 is only two disks. These people are wrong, but often > include HW RAID controller makers. Three disk RAID1 examples are in > the man pages). Since these are SSDs and apart from random hardware failures (which aren't *so* common) the main failure mode is doing too many writes. So with three disk RAID1 the main thing you end up doing with 3 mirrored SSDs is wearing out three drives rather than two with writes at the same rate. The other risk is data corruption (either on the bus or on storage either over time - "bit rot" - or firmware bugs etc). softraid doesn't have anything to help with this (even for detection, let alone figuring out which copy of the data, if any, is correct). > As for the rest...it's a matter of how much space you need and how > much down time you can tolerate, and how you are set up to deal with > that downtime. And I'm assuming you aren't combining external and > internal services on one box. I suspect that's a bad assumption. > > And even after much careful analysis it's a bit of a guess. > Sometimes you guess wrong. So keep your design flexible and be > willing and able to say, "Well, this isn't working, let's rebuild > it with the knowledge we now have". This idea that you have to have > the perfect build the first time out is ... well, just wrong. yep :)
pass 'password manager' problem
running 'pass username' returns "gpg: Sorry, we are in batchmode - can't get input", am i missing a piece of software or setting ? shadrock smime.p7s Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
Re: Server 5 SSD/best practice
On 2020-02-20 11:22, Oliver Marugg wrote: > Hi > > I’ve got a Supermicro 5028D desktop server with 5 identical SATA SSDs, > there is no HBA no RAID card in. The purpose of the server is intended > as web/smtp and some vmm vms (os plus /home & /var storage). > What are your suggestions or best practices configuring the device > arrangement (eg. sofraid(4), bio(4),bioctl(4) OS 2x on 2x ssd raid1, > data 3xssd raid5 or 1x single ssd for OS and 4x ssd raid5/10 or better > ideas)? > > many thanks > -oliver > set it up as you need it... If you think your description is anything close to specific for specific recommendations, you need to get out more. Everything you said could vary in demand by many orders of magnitude, except for the model number the server...a curious thing to be specific about. E-mail is one of those things that's really hard to get a good backup of, as it changes minute by minute and is considered fairly important, so I'd consider a three disk RAID1 for the mail store, as a disk system failure invariably means "lost data", even with frequent backups. Three disk RAID1 gives you a simple disk structure that can tolerate a disk failure and still provide redundancy. (some people will tell you that RAID1 is only two disks. These people are wrong, but often include HW RAID controller makers. Three disk RAID1 examples are in the man pages). As for the rest...it's a matter of how much space you need and how much down time you can tolerate, and how you are set up to deal with that downtime. And I'm assuming you aren't combining external and internal services on one box. I suspect that's a bad assumption. And even after much careful analysis it's a bit of a guess. Sometimes you guess wrong. So keep your design flexible and be willing and able to say, "Well, this isn't working, let's rebuild it with the knowledge we now have". This idea that you have to have the perfect build the first time out is ... well, just wrong. Nick.
Re: strongSwan cannot install IPsec policies on OpenBSD
On 2020-02-20, Peter Müller wrote: > Hello openbsd-misc, > > is anybody out there running strongSwan as an IPsec client for a net-to-net > connection > on an OpenBSD machine? > > If so, I would be very grateful to know which steps are necessary in order to > successfully > route traffic through this n2n connection and what your ipsec.conf file (and > other ones, > if necessary) looks like. > > Sorry for bringing this up again, but I am out of ideas now and packaging > strongSwan > for OpenBSD would not make sense if it could not be used properly. :-) > > Thanks again for any advice on this. > > Best regards, > Peter Müller > > strongSwan is packaged because it covers for some deficiencies in the tools in base and works in some use cases (say, single machine connecting to a VPN which needs EAP for authentication), that is a good enough use case that it makes sense to package it. I don't know how I could make it clearer than I already did in the package description and pkg-readme file about the state of support - you really want something else for lan-to-lan on OpenBSD.
Re: setxkbmap cannot completely set compose key
Dear Nils Ola, Ingo, and other OpenBSD users, Tusen takk! >> > I forgot to report maybe an important piece of information. I use scim >> > to type in Chinese. I use the default xdm. Here is my .xsession: >> > >> > export LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 >> > >> > export XMODIFIERS=@im=SCIM >> > export GTK_IM_MODULE="scim" >> > export QT_IM_MODULE="scim" >> > scim -d >> > >> > setxkbmap -layout us -variant dvp -option compose:ralt >> > >> > exec dbus-launch /usr/X11R6/bin/fvwm >> > >> > I was going to ask my questions one by one so that I will not flood >> > the email list with all my questions. But the scim question is the >> > following. >> > >> > Quite the opposite of my compose key problem, I am not able to >> > activate scim (by ctrl + space) on normal GUI programs (firefox, >> > libreoffice, xpdf, keepassxc, emacs-gtk etc). >> > >> > But but but, I am able to activate scim on xterm and type Chinese there. I have not yet tried to recompile xterm. I played around with my .xsession file. I found out that if I do not run scim -d , I will be able to type Norwegian accents on xterm. The settings of XMODIFIERS, GTK_IM_MODULE, or QT_IM_MODULE did not impact this. This means that the culprit is **scim**. Could other **scim** users of OpenBSD share your experiences? Could you use **scim** without a problem? Yours sincerely, Xianwen
Re: strongSwan cannot install IPsec policies on OpenBSD
On 20.2.2020. 18:47, Peter Müller wrote: > Hello openbsd-misc, > > is anybody out there running strongSwan as an IPsec client for a net-to-net > connection > on an OpenBSD machine? > > If so, I would be very grateful to know which steps are necessary in order to > successfully > route traffic through this n2n connection and what your ipsec.conf file (and > other ones, > if necessary) looks like. > > Sorry for bringing this up again, but I am out of ideas now and packaging > strongSwan > for OpenBSD would not make sense if it could not be used properly. :-) > > Thanks again for any advice on this. > > Best regards, > Peter Müller > Maybe stupid question... can you use isakmpd on openbsd box and strongswan on that other box ? i have working configuration for site-to-site setup and it's working quite well ..
Re: ahci issue corebooted X220 does not recognise usb or stata
You should be reporting these to coreboot, not here. On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 02:34:40PM +0100, Thomas Meulendijks wrote: > Hi OpenBSD Mailing list, > > I am trying to install Openbsd via the install66.fs on a Thinkpad X220 > [amd64] with coreboot. > I have the problem that it does not recognize any USB or SATA device may it > be storage or peripherals like a keyboard, except for the boot USB. > I tried with external USB storage, multiple different internal SSD's, > multiple USB keyboards, but sysctl does not show anything and dmesg does not > give a message when plugged in or out. > I also tried with the grub and seabios payloads but it did not make a > difference. > Coreboot and payloads are compiled at master and agenst the latest stable > version but it did not make a difference. > coreboot Master version is 4.11-1189. > > When I look at dmesg I see ahci failed, I know you guys will need to see my > dmesg but since I can't save it to a drive [read problem above] > and the installation fs only has ftp to communicate to the web as far as I > can see and I don't know how to set up a ftp server, I am at a loss of how to > get it out. > Maybe I am missing something? > > A part of dmesg I think may be helpful that I typed over: > > > em0 at pci0 dev 25 function 0 "Intel 82579LM" rev 0x05: msiem0: The EEPROM > Checksum Is Not Valid > em0: Unable to initialize the hardware > ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 "Intel 6 Series USB" rev 0x05: apci 2 int 19 > ehci0: reset timeout > ehci0 init failed, error=13 > > ehci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 "Intel 6 Series USB" rev 0x05: apci 2 int 18 > ehci1: reset timeout > ehci1 init failed, error=13 > "Intel QM67 LPC" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 0 not configured > ahci0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 "Intel 6 Series AHCI" rev 0x05: msi, unable > to reset controller > "Intel 6 Series SMBus" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 3 not configured > "Intel 6 Series Thermal" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 6 not configured > > > I hope this is enough info and would greatly appreciate it if anyone could > help me out! > > Greetings, > > Thomas > >
Re: ahci issue corebooted X220 does not recognise usb or stata
On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 02:34:40PM +0100, Thomas Meulendijks wrote: > Hi OpenBSD Mailing list, > > I am trying to install Openbsd via the install66.fs on a Thinkpad X220 > [amd64] with coreboot. > I have the problem that it does not recognize any USB or SATA device may it > be storage or peripherals like a keyboard, except for the boot USB. > I tried with external USB storage, multiple different internal SSD's, > multiple USB keyboards, but sysctl does not show anything and dmesg does not > give a message when plugged in or out. > I also tried with the grub and seabios payloads but it did not make a > difference. > Coreboot and payloads are compiled at master and agenst the latest stable > version but it did not make a difference. > coreboot Master version is 4.11-1189. > > When I look at dmesg I see ahci failed, I know you guys will need to see my > dmesg but since I can't save it to a drive [read problem above] > and the installation fs only has ftp to communicate to the web as far as I > can see and I don't know how to set up a ftp server, I am at a loss of how to > get it out. > Maybe I am missing something? The Thinkpad X220 works with its original BIOS so the problem is with your coreboot and not with OpenBSD. coreboot fails to properly report something (most probably some of the ACPI or SMBIOS information is wrong) and because of that every PCI access seems to fail. Most probably pci0 is not setup correctly. We can't help you here, you changed your BIOS with something that is not quite right. You should reach out to coreboot. > A part of dmesg I think may be helpful that I typed over: > > > em0 at pci0 dev 25 function 0 "Intel 82579LM" rev 0x05: msiem0: The EEPROM > Checksum Is Not Valid > em0: Unable to initialize the hardware > ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 "Intel 6 Series USB" rev 0x05: apci 2 int 19 > ehci0: reset timeout > ehci0 init failed, error=13 > > ehci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 "Intel 6 Series USB" rev 0x05: apci 2 int 18 > ehci1: reset timeout > ehci1 init failed, error=13 > "Intel QM67 LPC" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 0 not configured > ahci0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 "Intel 6 Series AHCI" rev 0x05: msi, unable > to reset controller > "Intel 6 Series SMBus" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 3 not configured > "Intel 6 Series Thermal" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 6 not configured > > > I hope this is enough info and would greatly appreciate it if anyone could > help me out! > > Greetings, > > Thomas > -- :wq Claudio
ahci issue corebooted X220 does not recognise usb or stata
Hi OpenBSD Mailing list, I am trying to install Openbsd via the install66.fs on a Thinkpad X220 [amd64] with coreboot. I have the problem that it does not recognize any USB or SATA device may it be storage or peripherals like a keyboard, except for the boot USB. I tried with external USB storage, multiple different internal SSD's, multiple USB keyboards, but sysctl does not show anything and dmesg does not give a message when plugged in or out. I also tried with the grub and seabios payloads but it did not make a difference. Coreboot and payloads are compiled at master and agenst the latest stable version but it did not make a difference. coreboot Master version is 4.11-1189. When I look at dmesg I see ahci failed, I know you guys will need to see my dmesg but since I can't save it to a drive [read problem above] and the installation fs only has ftp to communicate to the web as far as I can see and I don't know how to set up a ftp server, I am at a loss of how to get it out. Maybe I am missing something? A part of dmesg I think may be helpful that I typed over: em0 at pci0 dev 25 function 0 "Intel 82579LM" rev 0x05: msiem0: The EEPROM Checksum Is Not Valid em0: Unable to initialize the hardware ehci0 at pci0 dev 26 function 0 "Intel 6 Series USB" rev 0x05: apci 2 int 19 ehci0: reset timeout ehci0 init failed, error=13 ehci1 at pci0 dev 29 function 0 "Intel 6 Series USB" rev 0x05: apci 2 int 18 ehci1: reset timeout ehci1 init failed, error=13 "Intel QM67 LPC" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 0 not configured ahci0 at pci0 dev 31 function 2 "Intel 6 Series AHCI" rev 0x05: msi, unable to reset controller "Intel 6 Series SMBus" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 3 not configured "Intel 6 Series Thermal" rev 0x05 at pci0 dev 31 function 6 not configured I hope this is enough info and would greatly appreciate it if anyone could help me out! Greetings, Thomas