: XaQti Corp. XMAC II Gigabit PHY, rev. 2
Any suggestions on reducing the interrupt load to the previous levels?
Thanks...
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/
Operating Systems and Network Analyst | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
California State Polytechnic University
DIAGNOSTIC
if (scd-sc_in_rep_size != cc)
printf(%s: bad input length %d != %d\n,USBDEVNAME(sc-sc_dev),
scd-sc_in_rep_size, cc);
#endif
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/
Operating Systems and Network Analyst
rawdev=0xd02
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/
Operating Systems and Network Analyst | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
California State Polytechnic University | Pomona CA 91768
and configuring explicit OpenBSD serial
console support, but still nothing showed up when I connected to the remote
management console interface. The only thing I haven't tried is physically
connecting to the local serial port on the hardware itself.
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http
that yet.
Anyway, just to clarify my understanding, is it expected in 5.0 to be
able to boot softraid root without a custom kernel or using -a? If so,
what am I doing wrong?
Thanks...
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/
Operating Systems and Network Analyst
and dynamically figure out the root happened after the 5.0
freeze.
Something to look forward to in 5.1 :). Thanks again...
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/
Operating Systems and Network Analyst | hen...@csupomona.edu
California State Polytechnic University
problems
you see in 4.6.
After updating the bios I booted the latest 4.6-current kernel, which still
had the problem, so I submitted a bug.
Thanks much for the help...
--
Paul B. Henson | (909) 979-6361 | http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/
Operating Systems and Network Analyst | hen
I'm trying to setup ospf on a trunk interface. I've had it configured
and working fine on a regular interface for quite some time, and now am
trying to add another neighbor on a trunk interface, and it just shows
the interface as down:
# ospfctl show i
Interface AddressState
On Sun, Jun 03, 2012 at 11:04:53AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
Did you create the trunk interface *before* or *after* starting ospfd?
I have seen ospfd get the wrong state on interfaces created after startup,
iirc sometimes ifconfig down+up helps, sometimes you need to restart
ospfd.
The
On Sun, Jun 03, 2012 at 05:12:19PM +0200, Claudio Jeker wrote:
Is this after a reload of the config or does this also happen when you
restart ospfd?
It was after a config reload, after following Stuart's suggestion to
restart ospfd everything's working great :). Maybe it would be worth a
note
I'm looking at a supermicro SuperServer 5017A-EF for openbsd purposes,
it's got an Intel atom S1260 SoC, Marvell 88SE9230 SATA, and i350AM2 dual
gig interfaces.
It looks like i350 support shipped in 5.2, and I'm pretty sure the
Marvell chip is AHCI compliant, so I'd think that would be ok, but
On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 11:25:50PM +0100, Sebastian Benoit wrote:
Don't buy this one (yet). The Marvell 88SE9230 SATA does not work.
i know cause i have one ;-)
Arg, disappointing, but I'm glad I thought to check before buying :). Do
you know if anybody's working on it? So much for standard
On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 11:25:50PM +0100, Sebastian Benoit wrote:
Don't buy this one (yet). The Marvell 88SE9230 SATA does not work.
i know cause i have one ;-)
Hmm, looks like support was added in FreeBSD back in June 2012:
On Sat, Nov 16, 2013 at 11:34:15AM +0100, Sebastian Benoit wrote:
sorry, i mispoke, i meant 5015A-* and they dont have a dedicated ipmi port.
Oh, yah, I've actually got one of those, it's been working great. I was
actually planning on replacing it with this newer one, which supports
more memory
On Sat, Nov 16, 2013 at 12:27:08PM +0100, Carsten Larsen wrote:
Maybe just buy the previous model 5015A-*? I have been running one of
those for some years now and it works like a charm. From their website I
see it has reached End-of-Life though.
I've actually got one of those, as you say,
On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 08:42:50PM -0800, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
It's very old. This patch did not make it into the driver and I have
no idea if those chips work through some other change, or not. Likely
not. These older chips must be really buggy pieces of shit if you have
to disable NCQ.
On Sat, Nov 16, 2013 at 12:15:19PM -0800, Paul B. Henson wrote:
sorry, i mispoke, i meant 5015A-* and they dont have a dedicated ipmi port.
Oh, yah, I've actually got one of those, it's been working great. I was
actually planning on replacing it with this newer one, which supports
more
I was recently looking for a low-power small form factor box and was
initially thinking of the supermicro SuperServer 5017A-EF, which seemed a
good fit. Unfortunately, the fairly new atom SoC in that box isn't currently
supported, nor is the crappy not-quite-AHCI Marvell sata controller. So,
I'm
From: Bryan Vyhmeister [mailto:br...@bsdjournal.net]
Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 9:46 PM
I have lots of X9SCL-F, X9SCL+-F, X9SCM-F, X9SCI-LN4, X9SCI-LN4F,
X9SCM-iiF boards running OpenBSD in production. Both network interfaces
work flawlessly.
Cool, thanks much for the info.
Although
From: Stuart Henderson
Sent: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 3:54 AM
One thing to note, which may be irrelevant, but may be very important,
is which CPUs support AES-NI - the LGA1155 Pentium/i3 don't.
Yeah, you've got to bump up to a much more expensive Xeon to get that :(.
Thanks for the heads
On Wed, Nov 20, 2013 at 12:35:35PM -0800, 'Bryan Vyhmeister' wrote:
From looking at Supermicro's CSE-510-203B page, it says 65W TDP and
every CPU I've mentioned below except for the Xeon E3 1220 (80W) and
Xeon E3 1230v2 (69W) fall below this.
Hmm, I guess I was actually looking at the
From: 'Bryan Vyhmeister' [mailto:br...@bsdjournal.net]
Sent: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 1:51 PM
Very interesting. There is some ambiguity in the specs. Looking at the
SC510L-200B chassis which is what's included with the SYS-5017C-LF
system you linked to, it also says 65W TDP.
Well, it
On Wed, Nov 20, 2013 at 10:16:05PM -0500, Ted Unangst wrote:
The ipmi driver is disabled by default because it does bad things on
some systems. If you don't go out of your way to enable it, the not
configured line is all you'll see.
That's what I was going to say, but you beat me to it ;).
On Fri, Nov 22, 2013 at 01:09:36PM -0600, J. Lewis Muir wrote:
I don't see it that way. Huckleberry Finn is a book, and I don't need
to read it unless I want to. The spamd(8) man page is a man page I need
to read in order to understand how to use spamd.
Let me fix that for you:
The
I've got a box with one Intel 82574L based ethernet port and one 82579LM
based ethernet port. One will be hooked up to a 50Mbps wan link, the
other trunked at gigabit speed to a cisco switch (both routing the wan
link, routing some internal vlans, and providing some services).
Both the 82574L and
I've got a supermicro X9SCL-F board with ipmi support, and I'm trying to
use it for the serial console. It shows up as a third com port. After
booting the latest install cd, I run the usual stty com2 115200 and
set tty com2, and then boot. The kernel messages show up fine, and
then the output just
but then userland
borks it. The SOL port works fine as a console when I boot linux on the
box, so either there's an openbsd bug with it or linux must be
implementing some workaround for a problem.
Thanks anyway...
Paul B. Henson(hen...@acm.org) on 2013.11.24 00:16:52 -0800:
I've got a supermicro X9SCL-F
On Sun, Nov 24, 2013 at 04:13:27PM -0500, Jiri B wrote:
Supermicro IPMI is crap. Use normal serial console and add a power strip
which you can manage via ethernet to poweroff/power cycle the server.
Well, I can't say it's the greatest implementation ever, but arguably it
doesn't seem much
On 11/24/2013 2:00 PM, Theo de Raadt wrote:
Well, I can't say it's the greatest implementation ever, but arguably it
doesn't seem much worse than on my Sun or IBM servers.
[...]
You just cannot compare this to what Sun did, by (almost always) using
a seperate ethernet port. Probably still
On Sun, Nov 24, 2013 at 12:16:52AM -0800, Paul B. Henson wrote:
com2 at isa0 port 0x3e8/8 irq 5: ns16550a, 16 byte fifo
com2: console
[...]
root on rd0a swap on rd0b dump on rd0b
erase ^?, werase
Every time, it wedges up at this spot. The console still works for
kernel messages though
On Sun, Nov 24, 2013 at 04:10:23PM -0800, Paul B. Henson wrote:
I suppose the installer kernel could be fixed the same way, but at least
for this initial install it's not worth it, I'll just install with the
kvm head, fix the installed kernel, and then go serial from there.
Actually
On Mon, Nov 25, 2013 at 12:09:33PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
How come freebsd dynamically detects the correct irq, but openbsd has it
hardcoded?
linux and freebsd kernels use acpi to configure isa serial ports, openbsd
uses static allocations.
Ah, ok; now that I know what's going
On Mon, Nov 25, 2013 at 04:30:36PM +0400, Alexander Pakhomov wrote:
Both should not load CPU a lot. But that doesn't mean they wouldn't.
Write here if notice intense interrupts CPU load. My OpenBSD 5.4 amd64
laptop fail to handle 2 MB/s wifi due to some drivers issues (they
load CPU up to
On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 03:51:23PM -0800, Gabriel Kuri wrote:
I am running obsd 5.4 as my NAT router. I decided to setup a second obsd
box and run carp between the two for the external NATed interface (facing
the ISP). After I setup everything and switched pf to NAT using the address
on the
I'm trying to get a L2TP VPN working using npppd; I think I'm most of the
way there but packets just aren't quite flowing. I'm not sure why, but I
think I might be missing something or misunderstanding something with pf.
I've got ipsec=YES and isakmpd_flags=-K in rc.conf.local, and
From: YASUOKA Masahiko
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2014 8:46 PM
set skip on pppx0 needs to be improved because npppd may use pppx1,
pppx2 ...
Once I've got things working, I'm probably going to want to have more
explicit rules rather than skipping; if I understand correctly I can just
use
From: YASUOKA Masahiko
Sent: Thursday, February 27, 2014 5:44 PM
In L2TP/IPsec, transport mode IPsec is used instead of tunnel mode.
This means enc(4) is not used. And de-capsulated L2TP packets are
received on the same interface which receives IPsec packet.
Hmm, that's not what I'm
According to the npppd.conf man page:
pool-address address-range | address-mask [for dynamic | static]
Specify the IP address space that is pooled for this IPCP
setting. The address space can be specified by address-range
(e.g.
After getting the basic functionality of an L2TP VPN working with npppd,
I tried turning on the l2tp-require-ipsec option, as that seemed
desirable; I don't really want an l2tp session set up that's not
encapsulated in ipsec.
However, with that option on, the attempted VPN connection doesn't seem
I'm currently setting up an L2TP VPN with npppd. I've got the VPN piece
working, and can send packets between the client and the openbsd box
running the vpn. However, I'm currently using ospfd for routing between
the rest of the network and the openbsd box, and it doesn't seem to be
pushing routes
On Fri, Feb 28, 2014 at 01:54:13PM -0800, Jeff Goettsch wrote:
That's a known bug:
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=npppdapropos=0sektion=0manpath=OpenBSD+Currentarch=i386format=html#end
Ah, I see; I hadn't actually looked at the npppd man page, only the
npppd.conf man page. The
On Sat, Mar 01, 2014 at 11:23:01AM +0900, YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
I'm not sure whether it works. Can you try it by static route?
A static route on the network on the other side of the openbsd box? I'm
sure that would work; when I try to ping a box out in the network from
the vpn client, I can
On Sat, Mar 01, 2014 at 12:56:16PM +0900, YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
Currently the parser needs to surrounding the address-mask with double
quote like below:
pool-address 10.128.120.0/24
Ah, yes; that's much better:
2014-03-01 15:59:13:INFO: ipcp=IPCP pool dyn_pool=[10.128.120.0/24]
On Sat, Mar 01, 2014 at 01:48:06PM +0900, YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
on the other side? Right now it looks like the client is setting a
route to 10.0.0.0/8 across the tunnel, that should actually be
10.128.0.0/16, would setting the netmask in npppd-users fix that remote
route? Can I set the
On Sat, Mar 01, 2014 at 07:41:10PM +0900, YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
I could repeat the problem. ospfd seems not to be able to use routes
set by npppd. The problem seems to be come from pppx(4)'s behavior of
its link state.
Using tun(4) instead of pppx(4) avoid the problem.
If I switch
From: YASUOKA Masahiko
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2014 1:48 AM
framed-ip-netmask in npppd-user to set the netmask of the route to
the PPP link. But it is not to set the client netmask (on iPhone).
AFAIK to set the client netmask, DHCP inform can be used.
Hmm, I thought the VPN client
From: YASUOKA Masahiko
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2014 3:20 AM
% ospfctl show fib | grep 128
*56 10.128.120.0/24 127.0.0.1
*56 10.128.120.213/3210.0.0.1
Interesting, not only does it show a /24 route, it looks like it has it
marked as valid. Is this with pppx
I set up an L2TP VPN with npppd recently using pppx, and other than some
routing issues with ospfd it works great. I'm trying to add a second VPN
connection, but that doesn't seem to work using pppx.
With this config:
interface pppx0 address 10.128.120.1 ipcp IPCP_admin
interface pppx1 address
up in ifconfig for the clients, which I guess led
me to believe I didn't have to do anything special to use pppx1 in the
npppd config.
Thanks, and sorry for the noise.
On Wed, Mar 19, 2014 at 02:29:35PM -0700, Paul B. Henson wrote:
I set up an L2TP VPN with npppd recently using pppx, and other
After successfully setting up an L2TP VPN with npppd and pppx, I tried
to add a second VPN subnet with a different authentication base. I was
working remotely, and after starting npppd in debug mode:
bash-4.2# npppd -d
2014-03-19 14:41:50:NOTICE: Starting npppd pid=32407 version=5.0.0
2014-03-19
On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 10:22:51AM +0900, YASUOKA Masahiko wrote:
pppx will be fixed.
Great :). This is a known bug then? Should I just keep an eye on the
changelog for mention of pppx changes to tell when it's safe to try
again?
You can use tun(4) instead if you want to use multiple
From: YASUOKA Masahiko
Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2014 9:44 PM
Should I just keep an eye on the changelog for mention of pppx
changes to tell when it's safe to try again?
Sorry I cannot understand the point of this question.
Sorry to be confusing; I switched to tun because of this bug,
From: Jonathan Gray
Sent: Thursday, March 20, 2014 3:36 AM
The following diff prevents the panic here:
Interesting, given the XXX, it seems somebody was already a little
suspicious of this section :).
From a cursory glance, it seems pppx_dev_lookup is supposed to return data
about a
I'm about to build a server with a supermicro X11SSL-F motherboard and a
Xeon E3-1240L v5 processor. The SATA ports should be AHCI compliant, and
it looks like the i210-AT ethernet is supported by the em driver, so I
think everything should work ok. But it's pretty new stuff, so I wanted
to check
On Mon, Mar 28, 2016 at 03:06:39PM -0400, Sonic wrote:
> If I wait long enough the install will finally finish booting but the
> keyboard (no ps2 ports) doesn't work.
Could I trouble you to be more specific as to the duration of "long
enough" :)? I think my patience ran out after about 15-20
On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 10:46:15PM -0400, Sonic wrote:
> The IPMI is part of Dell's iDRAC stuff and the only thing I've found
[...]
> may be the iDRAC license level as well, anything above the "basic"
> level, providing a limited feature set, requires purchasing a license
Eeew. We've got some HP
On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 03:34:25PM -0400, Sonic wrote:
> Ahha! Who would have thought... com0 was the ticket. Thanks much!
Sweet, glad to hear you got it working. Usually the IPMI SOL comes after
the physical serial ports, I've never seen it be the first one. But hey,
it's Dell :).
Maybe now
I just put together a new server with a Supermicro X11SSL-F motherboard
and a Xeon E3-1240L v5 processor, and was trying to install openbsd 5.8
on it. The install cd freezes while booting after it probes the USB 3
devices:
>>> xhci probe won
xhci0 at pci0 dev 20 function 0 "Intel 100 Series xHCI"
On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 04:55:05PM -0400, Sonic wrote:
> Unfortunately that option isn't available for me. The IPMI SOL on this
> Dell stops forwarding the console once the system boots.
The usb keyboard should still work when the bootloader is running,
that's being handled by the BIOS. You just
I just installed 5.9 on a Supermicro X11SSL-F board, and tried to enable
the ipmi driver. During boot, it shows:
ipmi0 at mainbus0: version 2.0 interface KCS iobase 0xca2/2 spacing 1
iic0: skipping sensors to avoid ipmi0 interactions
ipmi0: get header fails
ipmi0: no SDRs IPMI disabled
ipmi at
On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 07:06:41PM -0400, Sonic wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 6:15 PM, Paul B. Henson <hen...@acm.org> wrote:
> > stty com1 115200
> > set tty com1
>
> Yes, tried that with no luck, SOL still stops forwarding. The box does
Hmm, that sounds brok
On Mon, Oct 10, 2016 at 09:43:56PM -0300, R0me0 *** wrote:
> Did you adjust advskew value on the machine you want to be Backup ?
Yes, the backup has an advskew of 5 and the primary an advskew of 1. As
I mentioned, when I first configured the interfaces by hand the two
systems properly negotiated
Arg, I'm still having issues with the carp demote counter. I disabled
ospfd for now, but something is still changing it. After a reboot
without ospfd, the counter is changing between 0 and 1:
bash-4.3# ifconfig -g carp
carp: carp demote count 1
bash-4.3# ifconfig -g carp
carp: carp demote count
On Fri, Oct 14, 2016 at 01:27:42PM -0700, Paul B. Henson wrote:
> Arg, I'm still having issues with the carp demote counter. I disabled
> ospfd for now, but something is still changing it. After a reboot
> without ospfd, the counter is changing between 0 and 1:
Ah, I tracked it do
On Tue, Oct 11, 2016 at 08:44:05AM +0200, mxb wrote:
> Master-Backup setup with pfsync in place, means that you synchronize
> states between boxes. Then Master is rebooted, it becomes out-of-sync
> then it comes to states. So until it is in sync with Backup (which
> became Master after reboot),
I'm setting up a second router that's going to sit next to an existing
one and become a redundant failover system. The current one is in
production, and I've been converting some of the existing LAN subnets on it
to use carp interfaces and making them primary and the new box
secondary. I also set
On Wed, Oct 12, 2016 at 08:37:59AM +0200, mxb wrote:
> But as R0me0 stated, you should probably re-check your configuration.
The configuration checked out. I rebooted a few more times, and I
couldn't reproduce the problem. I still have no idea why the carp
demotion counter was set to 2 the first
I'm trying to compile openldap from ports under 6.1, and running it
fails with the error:
slapd:/usr/local/lib/libicuuc.so.12.0: /usr/local/lib/libicudata.so.12.0
: WARNING: symbol(icudt58_dat) size mismatch, relink your program
I see there was some dicussion of this back around April, but no
On Wed, Aug 02, 2017 at 05:37:40PM -0700, Paul B. Henson wrote:
> I'm trying to compile openldap from ports under 6.1, and running it
> fails with the error:
>
> slapd:/usr/local/lib/libicuuc.so.12.0: /usr/local/lib/libicudata.so.12.0
> : WARNING: symbol(icudt58_dat) size mismat
On Thu, Aug 03, 2017 at 05:33:15PM -0400, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> It is well known issue.
>
> https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc=149271724912565=2
>
> It seems to be benign at least for my use case.
Yah, I saw that discussion from back in April, but then it just stopped
with no resolution.
On Mon, Jul 10, 2017 at 07:34:11AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> Feel free to try it, I believe the required patch to force MDB_WRITEMAP
> is still in there..but I don't think there were any major changes upstream
> since the last attempt so I wouldn't hold out too much hope for it working
>
On Wed, Aug 09, 2017 at 09:06:19AM +0200, Markus Rosjat wrote:
> this is more an info then a problem though since it seems to work.
> When I use the slap tool like slapcat I get a size mismatch warning like
> this
Heh, we were just talking about that:
mdb has been disabled in the openldap port since it looks like
2015/02/16, I was wondering if anyone has tried it since then to see if
maybe the issues with it have been resolved? The other backends are
deprecated upstream, it would be nice to get mdb working under openbsd.
I'm going to try
On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 06:31:34PM -0400, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> My understanding is that ipmi driver used by ipmitool is disabled
> intensionally due to the security problems. IPMI pose a grave security
> risk.
IPMI on the SP is available whether or not the openbsd driver is enabled
or in
> From: Ted Unangst
> Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2017 8:50 PM
>
> i'm afraid i won't make a very good ipmi maintainer, but i think i applied the
> patch in the right spot.
Cool, thanks; much appreciated.
> From: Theo de Raadt
> Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2017 8:41 PM
>
> If you want it working, you will need to get it fixed. On all
> machines, so that we can renable it.
I definitely don't want to be one of those entitled people demanding work
from developers without providing anything that you
I noticed back when I upgraded to 5.9 the ipmi driver stopped working,
it just said:
ipmi0: get header fails
ipmi0: no SDRs IPMI disabled
I found the following post at the time which appeared to point out the
issue and suggest a fix:
On Sat, Aug 05, 2017 at 12:35:24AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> The ports@ list is a better venue for ports-related queries,
> please see this: https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-ports=150157643516239=2
Ah, ok, thanks for the pointer.
> This is not preventing programs from running.
Hmm, I
On Fri, Nov 24, 2017 at 11:08:25AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> > booted under openbsd. The umb driver doesn't support accessing the card
> > directly for debugging and diagnostics?
>
> Correct, you can't get at those from OpenBSD atm.
That's a bummer; guess you wouldn't care too much if
I'm trying to get an LTE card working in MBIM mode with the umb device
driver, but it just keeps saying "SIM not initialized PIN required". The
SIM isn't PIN locked, as far as I know the SIM has no PIN. I've tested
the card and SIM under linux on the exact same system and was able to
get it
On Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 04:45:59PM +, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> I believe the second scenario would need /dev/mem access making it a
> larger change than it first appears (config with a new option could
> possibly save the original kernel file and compare the two kernel
> files).
Ah, I didn't
I have a pcengines APU 3 system, which has both USB3 and USB2 ports:
ehci0 at pci0 dev 18 function 0 "AMD Hudson-2 USB2" rev 0x39: apic 4 int 18
ehci1 at pci0 dev 19 function 0 "AMD Hudson-2 USB2" rev 0x39: apic 4 int 18
xhci0 at pci0 dev 16 function 0 "AMD Bolton xHCI" rev 0x11: msi
The USB2
I was wondering if anybody is successfully running openbsd on pcengines apu
boards? I have one of their APU3 series, specifically a apu3b4 with OpenBSD
6.2 on it but I can't get the USB2 EHCI ports functioning correctly (for one
thing, they don't detect a hot plugged device), I'm not sure if it's
> From: Bryan Everly
> Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2017 2:46 PM
>
> I'm running my primary firewall at home on an apu2...
Cool. Have you ever tried using an internal Mini PCI card in it?
> From: Base Pr1me
> Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2017 2:08 PM
>
> I run 5 apu2 devices with no problems. I don't have any apu3 devices ... yet.
Thanks for the feedback. Do you by any chance have any USB type Mini PCI cards
installed internally? I initially noticed the issue with a mini PCI LTE
> From: Eike Lantzsch
> Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2017 3:12 PM
>
> here: APU2C4 with one SATA drive of 6TB and one 4TB via USB3 and an
Hmm, I didn't think the apu2 had USB3, but double checking the specs I see
it does. My friend that said he had an APU2 must actually have an original
APU, as
On Tue, Nov 28, 2017 at 08:03:05PM -0800, Paul B. Henson wrote:
> The EHCI ports seem to work fine under Linux, including the LTE modem
> when attached to them, so this seems to be an issue with openbsd, not
> faulty hardware per se.
I tested FreeBSD on this box as well, it detected
> The card is a Sierra Wireless MC7455; to get it working with the umb
Looking at the source code, I see that there's an workaround for the
EM7455 card, something about requiring an "FCC Authentication" command?
>From what I understand the MC7455 is the same as the EM7455 other than
form factor,
> From: Marko Cupac
> Sent: Monday, December 4, 2017 3:54 AM
>
> I have just ordered one APU3b4, as I wanted to test mobile provider as
> a backup link. I see it probably won't be any good as OpenBSD router
> (yet), but at least I'll be able to test and give feedback.
Assuming you're planning to
I've got a box with an LTE cellular modem in it whose purpose is to provide
a backup connection to the Internet if the hardwire service goes down. It's
running OSPF to connect to the rest of the network, and the only time any
traffic should go over the cellular link (which is slower and bandwidth
On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 08:37:43AM +, Roderick wrote:
> Commenting out the line "/usr/libexec/reorder_kernel &" at the
> end of rc?
>
> I suspect it is not forseen not to benefice of KARL.
No, actually, if the hash of the kernel is different than expected, the
reorder_kernel aborts and
I'm trying to get the subject card to work under OpenBSD 6.2; it works
fine under Linux so I know the card itself and its SIM etc are correctly
configured and functional.
The card is set to MBIM mode, and I'd like to use the umb driver rather
than the umsm driver as not to have to muck with PPP.
On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 06:50:30AM +0100, Sebastien Marie wrote:
> When it did that, it uses the object (I didn't recall the exact name)
> with the previous mentioned array, with *default* configuration. So the
> previous modification done with config(8) is cleared.
Yeah, I figured that out
I just updated a server to 6.2; unfortunately this box has an oddball
SOL com2 on irq10 so I need to run 'config -e' on the kernel to update
it and make the serial console work. I noticed afterwards in the boot
messages it was complaining about kernel reordering failures, and
thinking I was fixing
On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 02:01:56PM -0700, Theo de Raadt wrote:
> If someone wants to solve this fully there have been some proposals
> for keeping track of the instruction sequence, and attempting to
> reapply it upon each relink in the build directory. There just hasn't
> been any scripting
On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 09:49:37AM +, Dimitris Papastamos wrote:
> This is what I do in rc.shutdown to handle this case:
>
> /usr/bin/printf "disable inteldrm*\nquit\n" | /usr/sbin/config -ef /bsd
> /bin/sha256 -h /var/db/kernel.SHA256 /bsd
Cool, thanks for the suggestion; that should be
> From: Martin Pieuchot
> Sent: Thursday, December 7, 2017 3:18 AM
>
> Which issue are you having?
Sorry, there was more context in an earlier thread. Basically, I have a pc
engines APU3 board which has AMD Hudson-2 EHCI USB ports on it. If devices are
plugged in when the system boots and the
On Sat, Dec 02, 2017 at 10:40:14PM +1000, Douglas Ray wrote:
> On the APU3a4 the internal USB headers were broken.
> I had email from pcengines (March 2017) saying this would
> be addressed in the APU3b series., but we went for APU2.
I have a APU3b series, they fixed the incorrect pinout on the
I'm trying to port some quirks for AMD USB chipsets from other operating
systems to OpenBSD to hopefully resolve issues I am having with the pc
engines APU3 EHCI ports, as they seem to work fine on those systems.
I've got a pretty rough draft of one of them, which disables low-power
mode during
> From: Marko Cupac
> Sent: Wednesday, December 6, 2017 2:47 AM
>
> ...which suggests some Sierra Wireless modems, none of which are
> available for purchase in the country I live in.
I've got the MC7455, which I believe is basically the same as the EM7455.
Presumably this might be one of the
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