hi,
with the command 'procmap pid', I often/always get ?VNODE? instead of
the actual filename. My question is, whether this is on purpose because
on similary BSDs (pmap on NetBSD) , I don't get ?VNODE? but the actual
filename. Any ideas what went wrong?
$ doas procmap 1
hi,
my notebook had a hiccup: it suddenly hanged and stoped working.
I had firefox, cwm+X11, emacs (terminal) and a few tmux sessions open.
The snapshot is from Monday, 24.08. I also checkoud out the sources and it
is selfcompiled.
Here is what I can see in my /var/log/messages before the
Hi,
I am trying to accomplish this: Connect a laptop (OpenBSD 5.7, road-warrior)
with IPSec/VPN tunnel to an OpenBSD server. The laptop is sitting in different
networks who all do NAT, the server has a static IPv4 address. The goal is
to route all the traffic from the laptop to the server, e
On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 10:53:26AM +0200, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> If it doesn't work, try to use the other mic:
>
> mixerctl record.adc-0:1_source=sel
> mixerctl record.adc-2:3_source=sel
> mixerctl record.adc-4:5_source=sel
Setting mixerctl to sel2 worked:
mixerctl record.adc-0:1_source=sel
I found this
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2010-12/0057.html
but aucat seemed to have changed, at least for me, I
can't follow the explanation.
I am running a Thinkpad x220i and I am pretty sure that
my microphone is supported but I tried a lot of different
settings with mi
On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 10:01:56AM +0200, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 27, 2015 at 04:47:56PM -0400, Stefan Berger wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > i have some trouble, configuring my audio devices: I want to
> > record with my internal microphone (Thinkpad x220i) or/
Hi,
i have some trouble, configuring my audio devices: I want to
record with my internal microphone (Thinkpad x220i) or/and my headphones
with aucat, but I can't configure it according to FAQ because
the output from mixerctl is somehow, different.
inputs.dac-0:1_mute=off
inputs.dac-0:1=153,1
hello,
at [1], I read something about 'Sigtramp separation' within
the W^X transition. I only know that this sigtramp-page (?) is
used to jump back into the kernel when a signal arrives.
My question is, what exactly is this signal trampoline?
Why do I need it?
Why was it on the Stack
On Sat, Sep 27, 2014 at 07:30:45AM +0100, OpenBSD Europe wrote:
> > Hi folks,
> >
> > I just noticed that in Germany "Lehmanns" (see OpenBSD's order-site)
> > already accepts pre-orders for OpenBSD 5.6-release.
> >
> > Guess what I just did :-)
> >
> > My little contribution to the project along wi
On Sat, Sep 13, 2014 at 10:18:31PM +1000, Brett Mahar wrote:
> On Fri, 12 Sep 2014 21:15:59 -0400
> Steve Litt wrote:
>
> | Hi all,
> |
> | Has anyone gotten qemu to install a Linux vm on OpenBSD5.5, 64bit?
>
> Hi Steve,
>
> There's a readme that is installed when you install the qemu package,
On Sat, Aug 23, 2014 at 08:15:23PM +0200, Peter J. Philipp wrote:
> However I have a different problem. I use firefox over ssh to another
> user on the same system. I do this because I don't want a would-be
> attacker to get to sensitive files such as my ssh keys. Now this setup
> runs pretty go
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