On April 26, 2018 2:40 PM, Matthieu Guegan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just want to add the X1 Carbon Gen 6th to the list. Same problem when
>
> plug in a thunderbolt device.
>
We should confirm that it's the same bug.
Here's what I did on the T480s:
# pkg_add acpica
$ cp -R /var/db/acpi /tmp
$ iasl -
On 2018-05-01, Stuart Longland wrote:
>> So, what are you after? A magic, secret sysctl, "sysctl
>> rl.work.properly=1" ? Nope, no such thing.
>
> How about rl.tellmewhatsgoingon=1? :-) You know, maybe log something to
> the kernel log when a packet is received, when a packet is transmitted,
>
On 2018-05-01, meg...@r53sound.com wrote:
>
> I'm seeing "acpidump: RSDT entry 3 is corrupt" in my boot messages
> on 6.3/amd64. The motherboard is an ASUS P5Q Pro Turbo with a Q6600.
>
> IIRC, there's a way to extract the table so someone clueful can come-up
> with a workaround for ASUS's failu
On 2018-05-01, IL Ka wrote:
> It is up to you, but I still belive that best solution is to rebuild python
> without of wxneeded.
> 1) It improves security
So you're now on a custom built python and are unable to use standard
pkg_add upgrades to new versions. I'd say that on balance, this is more
Hello everybody,
ok, so here is the symptoms. the thing happens usually during the high
traffic, like when I am trying to watch video on a tv, which is
connected to my home server/router on re0 (it is the local interface).
the video freezes immediately. something like ifconfig re0 down && pfc
Gregory Edigarov writes:
> Hello everybody,
>
> ok, so here is the symptoms. the thing happens usually during the high
> traffic, like when I am trying to watch video on a tv, which is
> connected to my home server/router on re0 (it is the local interface).
>
> the video freezes immediately. some
On 01/05/18 17:59, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> If you go down this route, see if the PCEngines APU2 is a good fit
> for your needs. There are other industrial-type systems but in this case
> many developers have the exact same device, so a lot more people are
> invested in fixing problems found with
On 01/05/18 17:59, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> Oh, one practical thing you could try. "ifconfig rl0 down; ifconfig rl0 up"
> might clear the problem when it occurs. If so, perhaps you can detect it
> happening (e.g. pings failing) from a cronjob and do that as a workaround.
Yeah, that sounds like a
Hello misc,
I have strange problem with mail.
I edit /etc/mail/aliases to set well known aliases like:
# Well-known aliases -- these should be filled in!
root:myn...@mydomain.net
manager:root
dumper:root
Then I run newaliases but mail is still delivered to local user.
I also run makemap -t a
On 01 May 2018, Ivo Chutkin wrote:
(snip)
> I edit /etc/mail/aliases to set well known aliases like:
>
> # Well-known aliases -- these should be filled in!
> root:myn...@mydomain.net
> manager:root
> dumper:root
>
> Then I run newaliases but mail is still delivered to local user.
>
> I also run ma
open...@bgone.net (Ivo Chutkin), 2018.05.01 (Tue) 09:48 (CEST):
> Hello misc,
>
> I have strange problem with mail.
>
> I edit /etc/mail/aliases to set well known aliases like:
>
> # Well-known aliases -- these should be filled in!
> root:myn...@mydomain.net
> manager:root
> dumper:root
>
> Th
On 05/01/18 01:54, IL Ka wrote:
Since /usr/local/ has wxallowed by default (see your /etc/fstab) it works.
Does it affect security?
In theory -- yes, because python can now create WX pages.
True. But I use this solution because:
- root controls what goes in /usr/local
- I mount /home withou
On 01/05/18 19:42, Stuart Longland wrote:
> Yeah, that sounds like a plan, let's see what Charlie Root can tell me
Bingo… that didn't take long.
> + /sbin/ifconfig rl0
> rl0: flags=8843 mtu 1500
> lladdr 00:d0:c9:e0:f4:75
> index 1 priority 0 llprio 3
> media: Ethernet autoselect
- On Apr 30, 2018, at 5:46 PM, Ken MacKenzie k...@mack-z.com wrote:
> Is there a recommended best practice when setting up an environment with
> python
> virtualenv with regards to wxallowed.
I use a specific directory in /usr/local which is very close to your option 2:
# mkdir -p /usr/local
Does anyone in here happens to be running openbsd 6.3 in some machine
which has a N7260 wifi card? I have problems with mine (thinkpad
x240), and since it only happens on openbsd as far as I can tell, I
was wondering if it is some kind of driver problem. I tested ubuntu
16.04, which uses version 17
Hi,
I have two 5TB disks, which I want to set up as mirrored using RAID 1
through softraid(4). But after attaching the disk using bioctl(8), the
disk appears with 2TB, not 5TB.
How can I get the correct size for the softraid device?
The disks are wd0 and wd2, and disklabel shows:
# /dev/rwd0c:
On Mon, Apr 30, 2018 at 01:07:00PM +, Rudolf Sykora wrote:
> Hello misc,
>
> I am (on 6.3, amd64) repeatedly getting these messages every now and then:
Not knowning about the exact details, I know we had issues (in RHEL6) at
work with some mice continually detaching and attaching. I believe i
On Tue, May 01, 2018 at 02:36:49PM +0200, Håkon Robbestad Gylterud wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have two 5TB disks, which I want to set up as mirrored using RAID 1
> through softraid(4). But after attaching the disk using bioctl(8), the
> disk appears with 2TB, not 5TB.
I can imagine you have some old soft
> I can imagine you have some old softraid metadata lying around. Did you
> try to wipe any existing metadata from the RAID partitions before
> attaching it?
>
Thanks! That did the trick.
Best regards,
—Håkon
Hi,
(fyi)
I had a similar problem in the beginning of this year.
It is basically gone right now (snapshots/amd64), and only occurs when
I switch from X to the console and back combined with mouse
movements/events while on the console.
As you stated, it does not seem to have any negative effect oth
>
> So you're now on a custom built python and are unable to use standard
pkg_add upgrades to new versions. I'd say that on balance, this is more
> likely to *reduce* your security.
I built it from ports, so I can update it using standard port update
procedure.
Since packages are built from port
On Tue, May 01, 2018 at 06:09:59PM +0300, IL Ka wrote:
> >
> > So you're now on a custom built python and are unable to use standard
>
> pkg_add upgrades to new versions. I'd say that on balance, this is more
> > likely to *reduce* your security.
>
>
> I built it from ports, so I can update it u
> while there are Python modules which rely on W|X.
Yes, but I do not use them.
I only run Python and Django.
I am aware of the fact that my python is not compatible with some modules,
and I am ok with it since I do not need them.
> use ports instead of pkg_add to get Python binary without W|X
T
Leonid Bobrov wrote:
> I have a plan how to completely get rid of wxallowed mount option,
> but I am not yet skilled to fix W|X ports, especially the ones
> written in C++ (I've started learning C++ recently).
Is that like
"I have a plan to build a flying car, but I don't
yet have any meta
I power my flying car with flying monkeys...
I think the best answer from all this comes back to, at least for python 3,
switching over to the built in venv in python3.
Other than that the symlink to a location in /usr/local for venv is another
option for python 2 or packages that need to wxallow
On Tue, May 01, 2018 at 04:22:50PM +, Ken MacKenzie wrote:
> I power my flying car with flying monkeys...
>
No need to, I am free as a bird, I can power my flying car
with my flying wings. Oh, wait, I don't have wings...
Anyway, nice joke, but I feel myself embarrasing.
On 1.5.2018 г. 13:23 ч., Marcus MERIGHI wrote:
open...@bgone.net (Ivo Chutkin), 2018.05.01 (Tue) 09:48 (CEST):
Hello misc,
I have strange problem with mail.
I edit /etc/mail/aliases to set well known aliases like:
# Well-known aliases -- these should be filled in!
root:myn...@mydomain.net
ma
Had the same issue with a TP-LINK TG-3269
https://www.tp-link.com/en/products/details/cat-11_TG-3269.html
On high loads it started to show the watchdog timeout.
It just used another adapter but there is clearly a bug with this one.
Elias.
2018-05-01 6:08 GMT-03:00 Anthony J. Bentley :
> Gregory
On Tue, 01 May 2018 21:04:19 +0300, Ivo Chutkin wrote:
> Restarting smtpd did it.
>
> I did not know I have to restart smtpd in order to get it working after
> change in alias.
You need to restart smptd if you are using a file-based table for
aliases. If you use a db instead of file you don't n
Hi Tom,
i think i am able to reproduce your problem on -current:
# sh /etc/netstart em0
# route -n show -inet
default192.168.2.1UGS00 - 8 em0
192.168.2/24 192.168.2.100 UCn10 - 4 em0
192.168.2.1link#1
On Tue, May 1, 2018 at 6:16 AM, Daniel Camolês wrote:
> Does anyone in here happens to be running openbsd 6.3 in some machine
> which has a N7260 wifi card? I have problems with mine (thinkpad
> x240), and since it only happens on openbsd as far as I can tell, I
> was wondering if it is some kind
On Mon, Apr 30, 2018 at 04:46:49PM +, Ken MacKenzie wrote:
> Is there a recommended best practice when setting up an environment with
> python
> virtualenv with regards to wxallowed.
>
> My typical workflow is under my home directory I have a
> dev/language/project/.venv type structure. I guess
On Tue, 01 May 2018 13:09:27 -0600, "Todd C. Miller" wrote:
> You need to restart smptd if you are using a file-based table for
> aliases. If you use a db instead of file you don't need to restart.
Actually, you don't need to restart smtpd for file-based tables if
you run newaliases instead of m
On 01/05/18(Tue) 21:28, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> [...]
> So what you are doing seems fragile to me. It may sometimes work
> due to order of configuration, timeouts, whatever, i'm not sure.
It can work if the ARP entry, what Ingo called the /32 is created
before you add your /23.
> But once part o
Hello Ingo, Martin,All,
I think you hit the nail on the head, (I was too busy looking at the
routing table (and forgot the fundamental principle of longest prefix
match)
so if I have a static arp entry before adding in the
(more specific than the connected route) i should be OK
just to explain
Hi, Ken.
Did you noticed that you are spending much more time
with setting up your env every time you want to run your
python apps than with programming itself?
No offense but I think this is not normal.
Ve.
On Thu, Apr 26, 2018 at 2:40 PM, Daniel Melameth wrote:
> The man page defines this as "States can match packets on any
> interfaces." I understood this to mean that state created on one
> interface would automatically create state, or allow a related match,
> on another interface, but this is no
Not exactly. For starters right now I am getting to know OpenBSD as a
platform
so at this point is more about evaluating if and how to alter my workflows
to
better fit with the platform.
Next off though is in general with python code I do consider it important to
think about what the deployment wi
Hello List,
i have a new graphics card in my desktop. Its a AMD Radeon RX 480. As
far as I understand the specs this is a polaris GPU. I used wsfb because
the normal radeon driver does not work yet with this modern graphics card.
I installed OpenBSD (6.3 GENERIC.MP#19 amd64) in the UEFI mode s
39 matches
Mail list logo