On Mon, Feb 24, 2014 at 04:57:23PM +, Martin Brandenburg wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have this chip:
>
> bge0 at pci8 dev 0 function 0 "Broadcom BCM57765" rev 0x10, BCM57765 B0
> (0x57785100): msi, address a8:20:66:47:1f:8b
> brgphy0 at bge0 phy 1: BCM57765 10/100/1000baseT PHY, rev. 4
On Sat, Dec 21, 2013 at 04:55:10PM +0100, Riccardo Mottola wrote:
> Just as a test, in uncommented
>
> #Option "progLcdModeRegs" "true"
> #Option "progLcdModeStretch" "true"
>
>
> to see if they did any difference and behold! it works. We do swap a
> bit with 32MB of ram just by display
On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 11:07:25AM +0100, Riccardo Mottola wrote:
> ..
> vga1 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 "Neomagic Magicgraph NM2070" rev 0x01
> ..
I have one of these in an an old Dell laptop that was given to me. I would
have settled with vesa(4), but none of the resolutions seem to fit the
LCD p
There are many reasons for wanting to mount a CD/DVD, perhaps to restore a
backup or to access files from someone who only just recently made the
transition from floppy.
But for the two most common reasons today..
* Music/Audio discs, containing no filesystem and cannot be mounted.
cdio(1) in ba
On Thu, Dec 06, 2012 at 02:02:09PM +0100, MERIGHI Marcus wrote:
> umass0 at uhub7 port 1 configuration 1 interface 0 "Sony USB Floppy
> Drive" rev 1.10/6.01 addr 3
> umass0: using UFI over CBI with CCI
> scsibus0 at umass0: 2 targets, initiator 0
> sd0 at scsibus0 targ 1 lun 0: ATAPI 0/dir
> I believe henning mentioned somewhere that Apple were adopting an out of
> date PF but I didn't know other companies were.
The Playbook uses QNX.
A lot of their userland utilities were derived from BSD, maybe even the
early CSRG releases.
QNX6 networking stack is from NetBSD, it includes an an
On Fri, Feb 24, 2012 at 04:12:13PM -0700, Duncan Patton a Campbell wrote:
> This is not an old board, but admittedly ATAPI CDs are.
They're still quite common, but this is a problem with the controller,
not the drive.
> there's no evidence of the device in the dmesgs, either.
Hmm?
> OpenBSD 4.9
On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 10:00:52AM +0100, Adriaan wrote:
> A year ago, with a 4.9 snapshot the acpi stuff on that box was
> configured, and both CPUs detected.
For some reason the probe for apm fails on your system in 4.9, so acpi
was allowed to attach.
In later releases, it seems the probe for
On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 11:34:59PM +0100, Adriaan wrote:
> ...
> OpenBSD 5.1 (GENERIC.MP) #187: Sat Feb 11 12:30:14 MST 2012
> apm0 at bios0: Power Management spec V1.2
> acpi at bios0 function 0x0 not configured
> ..
>
> I need the machine right now for testing my new Internet line, but in
> two
On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 03:52:42PM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
> Rather belatedly:
>
> ..
> iPad(0x129f), Apple Inc.(0x05ac)
> ...
>
> Dave
>
> --
> Dave Anderson
>
Okay.. so try this, run make in dev/usb before building.
Index: uaudio.c
On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 06:29:22AM +1030, David Walker wrote:
> Every few minutes I see this on the console ...
> ichiic0: abort failed, status 0x2
> ... followed a minute or so later by ...
> ichiic0: abort failed, status 0x40
> ... rinse and repeat.
>
> dc0 at pci1 dev 1 function 0 "Lite-On PNIC
On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 09:30:44PM -0500, Dave Anderson wrote:
> For the iPhone, yes, but evidently not for the iPad2.
Yes, it will be a manual effort for as long as Apple releases new devices.
> >If you want to use libusb ports (..like gphoto2), you'll need to add similars
> >quirks for the iPad
Yup,
Any new iDevice will show up as uaudio/uhid, dhill@ already committed something
so they'll attach as ugen(4) instead.
If you want to use libusb ports (..like gphoto2), you'll need to add similars
quirks for the iPad2.
You didn't post the product ID.
-Bryan.
On Thu, Nov 10, 2011 at 11:45:06AM +1100, Jonathan Gray wrote:
> > > On 09.11.2011 14:40, Avi Kivity wrote:
> > > > Actually, it looks like an OpenBSD bug. According to the AMD
> > > > documentation:
> > > >> "The current P-state value can be read using the P-State Status
> > > >> Register. The P-
On Wed, Nov 09, 2011 at 08:38:01AM +0100, Walter Haidinger wrote:
> I did run i386 bsd.
> /usr/src/sys/arch/i386/i386/k1x-pstate.c also has
> k1x_acpi_init(cstate, msr);
> in line 193 of 5.0's k1x_init().
> Can you send me the patch below for i386 to test?
>
> Thanks,
> Walter
What?
Apply the
On Wed, Nov 09, 2011 at 03:35:01PM +0100, Walter Haidinger wrote:
> Does the patch fix the following?
>
> I've forwarding the bug report to the Linux KVM developers.
> The response:
The patch in my first email should be enough to avoid the issue, the i386
patch was fine, only the amd64 patch was
On Tue, Nov 08, 2011 at 01:27:37PM -0500, Brynet wrote:
> @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ k1x_init(struct cpu_info *ci)
>
> #if NACPICPU > 0
> msr = rdmsr(MSR_K1X_STATUS);
> - k1x_acpi_init(cstate, msr);
> + k1x_acpi_init(cstate);
Whoops, fixed patch for amd64.
-Bryan
On Mon, Nov 07, 2011 at 03:51:50PM +0100, Walter Haidinger wrote:
> cpu0: AMD Phenom(tm) II X6 1100T Processor ("AuthenticAMD" 686-class, 512KB
> L2 cache) 3.31 GHz
> cpu0:
> FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CFLUSH,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SSE3,CX16,POPCNT
> ...
>
On Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 11:53:25AM -0700, Joe S wrote:
> This isn't a problem and I'm not complaining, I'm just a bit curious
> as apmd didn't save me as much power as I hoped for. I noticed that
> apmd couldn't throttle my cpu in 4.9-RELEASE (amd64). However, since
> March 2011, -CURRENT recognize
On Tue, Oct 11, 2011 at 08:28:28PM +0200, Martin Pieuchot wrote:
> On 11/10/11(Tue) 11:07, Brynet wrote:
> > I'd be interested in testing this, does he plan on submitting it to ports@?
>
> Of course, what a question ;)
I was just wondering if you something that could be t
Antoine Jacoutot wrote:
> mpi has a port of libusb 1.0 which I am actually putting under tests.
I'd be interested in testing this, does he plan on submitting it to ports@?
-Bryan.
One of the first things an MBR does is do a long jump from where the BIOS
loaded it.
The thing is, often you can't trust the BIOS to do the right thing, the x86 in
16-bit real mode uses segmented memory, so you may be at :07C0 or 7C00:
depending on the implementation. If you read the co
> It seems I've [blindly] followed the instructions ...
Hah. Whoops.
> If indeed that is the case, the question is, how do I get gcc-4.x back ?
It would be easier to reinstall, but you may be able to extract the comp set
and pray to santa it works.
-Bryan.
It seems to be from coredump_write(), in kern/kern_sig.c. The printf itself is
conditional though.
Perhaps you're both seeing it when the kernel doesn't have enough resources to
generate a core dump? That makes sense for chrome.
I guess someone figured if they couldn't write the core, make nois
> I actually realised that I had a Edimax EW-7811Un (urtwn(4)), which I
> use all the time on my i386 netbook. Under zaurus/5.0 this turns up as
> a ugen0 :(
For some reason, urtwn* at uhub? isn't in the zaurus GENERIC kernel config.
-Bryan.
Brett wrote:
> I could not find any info on the openbsd site or mailing list
> on how to do this, except for radeon(4) man page, and this posting (for
> a different radeon card):
It's not documented because it's not officially supported, it's replacing a
shipped component with something that's
Sorry Scott, didn't see this, '--disable-kms' is needed now.
oga@ committed DRI/DRM support for r600+ cards, all that work got the DDX
driver all excited.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=130679235018645&w=2
-Bryan.
Jan Stary wrote:
> http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq13.html#audioprob
> If you are having audio problems, provide your `mixerctl -av`
He did, in his first email.. :-\
-Bryan.
Frans Haarman wrote:
> I'm sad to report this did not work.
Sorry, all out of ideas.. perhaps jakemsr@ will see this and shed some wisdom.
-Bryan.
Frans Haarman wrote:
> The built-in bluetooth is not working, neither are the laptop speakers
> or I am just not smart enough :)
OpenBSD's bluetooth drivers are disabled in GENERIC, you can enable it with
config(8)/UKC but it's very unreliable.
The azalia(4) bug could be real, but they're really
On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 03:15:13PM -0400, Scott McEachern wrote:
> Hi Bryan,
>
> I tried the new driver you suggested and with light testing it works
> quite well.
>
> For "standard" apps (firefox, thunderbird, amarok), and mplayer with
> regular def and HD it's just fine. mplayer with 1080p is
On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 05:52:14PM +, iproudlyeat...@gmail.com wrote:
> > So far, 6.14.0 works.. 6.14.1 does not (X server segfaults).
>
> If you are using the power management features (clock gating &
> friends), did you notice any improvement on battery life and/or
> temperature?
DynamicPM
On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 05:52:14PM +, iproudlyeat...@gmail.com wrote:
> > So far, 6.14.0 works.. 6.14.1 does not (X server segfaults).
>
> If you are using the power management features (clock gating &
> friends), did you notice any improvement on battery life and/or
> temperature?
I don't cu
Hi Scott,
I have a Mobility Radeon HD 4200, indeed, xf86-video-ati in base lacks 2D/3D &
XVideo acceleration.
Compiling a newer version of the radeon DDX driver "works for me", trying the
obsolete "radeonhd" driver is also an option (..I found it unstable).
So far, 6.14.0 works.. 6.14.1 does n
Mike Erdely's yaifo project is useful for remote installations.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/yaifo/
http://merdely.wordpress.com/category/tech/yaifo/
http://www.chrysocome.net/dd
-Bryan.
Bryan Chapman wrote:
> Ok. Lets take two.
>
> I have upgraded to the latest snapshot. The single processor kernel
> boots and runs fine. I have included a dmesg from it. When booting
> from the multiprocessor kernel the last line displayed is:
>
> mtrr: Pentium Pro MTRR support
>
>
>
>
Ugh,
http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?lndocid=MIGR-73436
-Bryan.
BIND10 will be written in a combination of Python and C++, not really a
suitable upgrade for OpenBSD's base resolver/nameserver.
Not sure how long BIND9 is going to be maintained by ISC.
-Bryan.
Luis wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> I installed a new machine with OBSD 4.8. For some reason, when I disconnect
> the USB keyboard and connect it again, it does not work anymore. Moreover,
> when I connected on some specific USB sockets it works again. Any clue of
> what could be happening?
>
> Thanks,
>
On 12/04/10 23:09, Clint Pachl wrote:
> All I can say is that I use cwm and don't like interfaces, GTK, gnome,
> or KDE. I highly agree with Patrick.
I also use cwm, but that doesn't means I completely avoid applications
using GTK+ or even Qt, there aren't a whole lot of programs using xlib
or xcb
Hi,
Why are you using xpdf? it's so old and crummy :-).
print/epdfview, which uses the poppler library.
textproc/mupdf, independent renderer, pretty good.
-Bryan.
Hugo wrote:
> As defined by POSIX:
> "Multiple successive slashes are considered to be the same as one slash."
>
> http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap03.html#tag_03_266
I'm sure that Ted is well aware that multiple slashes are allowed by
POSIX, it isn't however what he
On 11/23/10 16:20, R0me0 *** wrote:
> I'm upgraded installed packages with pkg_add -u and recompiling impector
>
> Thank you
My comments were totally unrelated, this will not solve your problem.
-Bryan.
> 16087 6928 6928 1000 3 0x2000180 selectimspector
You dirty dirty voyeur, you.
-Bryan.
Why are you sending this crap here? the inclusion of binary
firmware/microcode in OpenBSD is considered acceptable so long as the
license allows for redistribution.
Hey Fred,
I have an Acer Aspire 5551 with an athn(4), the radio switch is Fn+F3.
On Windows the Wireless LED goes on and off when toggling, but not on
OpenBSD... it does work however, even though there are no visible
indications.
One quirk is that I have to hold down both keys for a few seconds.
Jiri B. wrote:
> Sorry no flash :)
Hello,
The follow was embedded on the page linked by jdixon, near the bottom
you'll find this:
http://s.omniti.net/video/noit-oscon-demo/flash/playlist.xml
The direct link is inside.
Without flash, manually forging for direct links is part of life..
-Bryan.
bofh wrote:
> Ok, when I first learnt how to use unix nearly 20 years ago, one of
> the things I learnt was that a privileged user can break shit, but
> should not cause kernels to hang or crash. That would be considered a
> bug. Only DOS and windows 3.1 do that :)
Unfortunately it's not that bl
Yes, this is a known scam, they modify the max capacity and sell it as a
higher end model.. if you crack it open and attempt to find a datasheet
for the flash chip, you'll probably find it's only between 512M/4G.
If you buy anything from these shady markets, assume you're going to get
swindled.
S
Jona Joachim wrote:
> Are you aware that by sending such useless mails you are transforming
> energy and contributing to global warming?
Oh, well in that case, hello, come here often? ;-)
...Canada, btw.
-Bryan.
Sure, you have some options.
* Run NFS on a Linux system, XFS/JFS filesystem, export it to clients.
* Use a different filesystem, OpenBSD supports FFS/FFS2, EXT2(..3
without journals), ISO9660, FAT(12/16/32), r/o support of NTFS, and
network filesystems (NFS/AFS/Arla).
Finally,
* Port said files
None of the developers are going to ok that patch, it's too short.
TimH wrote:
> I just got a semi-new HP laptop and it fails to boot unless I disable
> acpi. This isn't a big deal in itself, but it seems that it doesn't
> use both cores of the CPU when this is done. Is this normal?
Yes, normal, newer systems lack the legacy Intel MP mappings.. so if you
disabl
Hi,
I don't know how much help it'll be, but have you tried disabling
acpi(4) in UKC? otherwise try disabling and ioapic/mpbios/acpimadt as
APIC may be the cause for the panic, how functional this system will be
afterwards is uncertain.. appears to be additional problems in that log.
-Bryan.
The later versions of QEMU no longer support kqemu at all, was removed.
I've had chats with the maintainer (Todd Fries), but so far it seems
that newer versions of QEMU are just not stable enough yet.. exposing
compiler/optimization bugs and generally just sucking badly.
There is nothing (..notic
"shwegime" wrote:
> I have a cdrom that came with a language course, I can neither mount it
> nor
> "dd" it to an iso image inside openbsd, but it reads fine on my dvd player
> (the ones you use with your tv set). I have not tried it on windows, and
> anyway I would like to be able to listen to
I wrote:
> Well that is indeed quite unfortunate, sorry, but maybe you can send
> acpidump(8) output to dm...@?
>
> 4.7 is near release, can you try a 4.7-beta snapshot?
>
> -Bryan.
One more thought, try updating the BIOS.. it seems Sony has released
updates for your laptop.
http://esupport.son
Dave wrote:
> Unfortunatly that resulted in a system that wouldn't boot.
Well that is indeed quite unfortunate, sorry, but maybe you can send
acpidump(8) output to dm...@?
4.7 is near release, can you try a 4.7-beta snapshot?
-Bryan.
Dave wrote:
> Since I didn't see any "not configured" messages for cbb*, my guess is
> that this is at least partly functional; is that correct? What
> limitations does the "couldn't map interrupt" message imply for WiFi
> or modem use? (There don't seem to be any BIOS options which affec
> I understand there are "USB soundcards" out there not even
> appearing as USB Audio class devices.
Yes there do exist some devices that depend on vendor supplied
drivers, however there may be hope for this device:
http://www.lexiconpro.com/knowledgebase.php?product=7
> Q: Will the Alpha work
Hi,
There is no runtime option to enable AHCI support (..although it would
be nice).
If the BIOS doesn't provide the ability to configure this, your only
recourse is to modify the ahci.c driver and force attach on this
specific device.
Last month I posted a diff for someone else, although it did
> It's a side-effect of this change, resume still works on 64-bit arch.
Hi,
Can resume support be fixed by 4.7? or is it too late?
-Bryan.
Hi Roger,
Not entirely sure what is causing your problems, but there are several
options in your BIOS that are worth investigating.
http://www.supermicro.com/manuals/motherboard/HT2000/MNL-H8DSP-8i.pdf
Plug & Play OS
(might be worth setting this to "No")
KBC Clock Source
(try 8MHz)
S-ATA Mode
Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> How odd that I read this then. Not that I can help in this area.
>
> Not all developers read this list indeed. To make sure your problem is
> reaching the right developer, file a pr, or post to b...@.
>
> -Otto
Whoops,
Sorry. :-)
-Bryan.
Pete Vickers wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for the patch - good idea. However
>
> Since the firmware on the MacBook Air in question does not recognise
> non-OSX (HFS+) USB memory sticks, I could only test this patch by
> applying it on another machine's tree, then 'make release' and
> burning th
Hello,
While you're likely a troll, you may just be some sad religious zealot
ranting on a mailing list.
If you're not fond of vi(1), you may be interested in mg(1).. while it's
not exactly the same as pico or nano, it's not that far off.
Keep it off the lists next time,
-Bryan.
Hi,
Perhaps it's unrelated to your problem, but you could try forcing your
SATA controller into AHCI mode.. maybe you'll see your drive then.
-Bryan.
Index: dev/pci/ahci.c
===
RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/dev/pci/ahci.c,v
retrieving revis
Paul Branston wrote:
> A little more generic in case there is no usermod -p
>
> PASSWORD=$(echo "my_new_password" | encrypt -b 6)
> perl -p -i.bk -e 's/^root:.*?:/root:$PASSWORD:/' /etc/shadow
Wow,
Question: are you even using OpenBSD?
-Bryan.
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> When in doubt, panic. If you can try this and send me the ddb>
> trace, perhaps it will be a clue as to why we are doing a block
> device open.
>
> Ken
Sounds like a plan! :-)
-Bryan.
-
panic: Why are we here?
Stopped at Debugger+0x4: leave
RUN AT L
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> Hmmm. So why is sd0c being opened as a block special device rather
> than a character special device.
>
> Ken
Not sure, seems to be happening just before the root partition is mounted.
Is there anything else I can do to help?
-Bryan.
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> Weird. Try this diff, which should let me know which partition is
> being opened. i.e. why is rawopen different in 4.6 and -current.
> Also, what is your fstab?
>
> Ken
>
> Index: sd.c
> ===
> RCS f
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> Does the diff below suppress the unwanted message?
>
> Ken
>
> Index: sd.c
> ===
> RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/scsi/sd.c,v
> retrieving revision 1.182
> diff -u -p -r1.182 sd.c
> --- sd.c 15 Jan 201
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> Is there a media in the drive?
>
> Ken
>
No, it properly detects a 2880 block (1M) geometry when a floppy disk is
inserted, otherwise it shows that SCSI message.
It doesn't show the message in 4.6.
Thanks. :-)
-Bryan.
> Hi Ken,
>
> The SCSI message remains in the January 23rd snapshot.
Whoops, that would be the January 20th snapshot.
>
> -Bryan
Kenneth R Westerback wrote:
> Being in Australia and confused about what day it is, I should be
> more precise. Make sure the trees you generate test kernels from
> have r1.166 or greater of scsi_base.c. That was the last commit
> from n2k10.
>
> And I think that particular diff should fix the Che
Luis Henriques wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I finally got tired of not using my wireless card on my laptop and decided to
> take a look at the code. I compared the ath OpenBSD code with similar drivers
> on NetBSD and Linux kernels, start adding/correcting the ath code and finally
> got it to work. I am cur
Hi,
You should probably try a -CURRENT snapshot, before reporting problems
you see in 4.6.
Several BIOS updates appear available for your motherboard as well
perhaps one of them will solve the problem, if it's still an issue with
OpenBSD -CURRENT.
http://www.jetway.com.tw/jw/ipcboard_view.asp?pr
Ken wrote:
> As a general note, the source tree is going to be locked in the
> near future for 4.7. There has been a major re-write of the SCSI
> layer internals, and many device drivers were touched. TEST NOW!
>
> Test anything that produces sd, cd, st, etc. devices. All hardware
> and all weird-
Aaron Mason wrote:
> I would recompile PHP and MySQL considering they were compiled for the
> -release kernel and therefore would need to be redone for the -stable
> kernel.
Well that's complete nonsense, there is no benefit to doing this whatsoever.
-Bryan.
Cortex wrote:
> "Broadcom BCM4315" rev 0x01 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 not configured
Unfortunately this does indeed appear to be a BCM4315, looking at your
first email you can see that the product ID is 0x4315.
You can also use pcidump(8) to verify that it is a 4315, AFAIK this
chipset relies on t
Hi,
I know not everyone uses OpenBSD for a desktop OS, but I have been for
nearly 5 years and I'm quite curious about some of your opinions? do you
embrace minimalism or pure aesthetics? are the two mutually exclusive?
When I started using OpenBSD (..around 3.7) I was frequently switching
betwee
Hi,
Cortex wrote:
> 02:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Broadcom Corporation BCM4312
> 802.11b/g [14e4:4315] (rev 01)
BCM4312 *rev 1* should work with bwi(4), the output from "lspci" does
indeed confirm that.. but you'll need to post *OpenBSD* dmesg output
here so we have a chance of figuring thin
Intel's Atom is mostly a continuation of their earlier processor
designs, like the i486 or the Pentium (..with new hair and makeup).
A similarly clocked P3 would be perceivably *faster* then the Atom, so
realistically they just convinced you to buy a very expensive paper weight.
Sorry. :-(
-Brya
Inte's GMA 500 appears to be a rebranded PowerVR chip, no open source X
drivers exist for it.. probably won't ever be.
A lot of embedded devices us them, like the iPhone and practically every
other device you're heard of recently.
Sad, shame on Intel.
-Bryan.
> i'm running 4.6-STABLE, SMP kernel. dmesg attached:
>
> OpenBSD 4.6 (build) #5: *Thu Nov 12 10:28:47 EST 2009*
Update your tree, rebuild the kernel.
There were a few cases where fstat(1) would crash my systems as well.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=125971073002018&w=2
http://www.openbsd.o
Aaron Mason
> On top of that the firmware is a sort of binary
> blob, which will never be used in any OpenBSD system.
Nonsense, binary firmware/microcode images are perfectly acceptable in
OpenBSD, so long as the redistribution terms are clearly defined and
suitable.
Take a look in /etc/firmware.
rhubbell wrote:
> Another sensitive type. Guess there are always a few on every list.
It has nothing to do with sensitivity, we just have an aversion toward
idiots.
-Bryan.
rhubbell the top posting troll wrote:
> Yeah you said that already.
>
> Marco Peereboom wrote:
>> fuck off troll
You have asked your questions, quite impolitely.. many have responded
regardless of this.
Marco has kindly given you some further direction, the 'off' in 'fuck
off' would indicate tha
> Not sure how care plays into this. A simple question that the folks here
> would rather not answer but instead would rather meander about.
Well you're especially chipper, now instead of whining on mailing
lists.. how about you try helping yourself?
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=124414310527
Robert wrote:
> You could subscribe to the source-changes@ mailinglist.
> If you don't like to see all that is happening in -current, you could
> filter the bodys for the tag OPENBSD_4_6 .
>
> - Robert
Apologies, please don't misunderstand, I do read the source-changes
mailing list periodically..
Hi,
Aaron was correct, that chipset is unsupported.. and even if it was, it
may or may not have a supported sensor available.
However, see your dmesg:
> apm0 at bios0: Power Management spec V1.2 (slowidle)
> apm0: AC on, battery charge unknown
> acpi at bios0 function 0x0 not configured
> pcibios
Jason Crawford wrote:
> I subscribe to
> http://flirble.disruptiveproactivity.com/rss/openbsd_stable_src.rss
> and that picked up the change to stable in question. That site also
> offers feeds for changes to ports -stable
> http://flirble.disruptiveproactivity.com/rss/openbsd_stable_ports.rss
Th
Hi,
Here is the change that Henning made to pf in -STABLE, I wasn't even
aware of it.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=124955744915786&w=2
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/sys/net/pf.c.diff?r1=1.655.4.1;r2=1.655;only_with_tag=OPENBSD_4_6
Would it be possible to track commits to -STABLE
> Made the changes to nv_driver.c and built xenocara with the following
>
> # cd /usr/xenocara
> # rm -rf /usr/xobj/*
> # make bootstrap
> # make obj
> # make build
>
> Upon reboot when i use the "nv" driver X now recognizes my card, but
> it goes to a blank screen (just looks like the terminal)
Rodrigo Amorim Bahiense wrote:
> Actually, I'm used to recommend nvidia cards (desk & laptop)
> for most people because they do support most open source systems
> (Linux, FreeBSD, OpenSolaris), which is way better than ati at least.
ATI(..now AMD) releases full NDA-free documentation on their grap
Hi,
>From what I can find, this is a GeForce 7150M / nForce 630M based
chipset.. xf86-video-nv does not have the product ID listed in the
attach structure, this could be due to incompability with the chipset or
maintainer neglegence (..the driver is very rarely updated).
--- xenocara/driver/xf86-
Hi,
After receiving an email from oga@, I checked if the issue was related
to APIC on this system.. it seems so, disabling ioapic+mpbios+acpimadt
fixed the issue (..so did disabling APIC from the BIOS).
I can now get over 1000 FPS from glxgears, even if it isn't a valid
benchmark.
Sorry for the
Brynet wrote:
>> I know this is unrelated, Matthieu.. but are you and Owain working on
>> getting DRI/DRM working on other supported architectures? and fixing
>> the other drivers (..ragedrm/mgadrm/machdrm/etc have been broken since
>> 4.5).
Matthieu Herrb wrote:
> It
instantanous.. otherwise just cp(1) and rm(1).
-Brynet.
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