This is why I love misc@.
And Francois: If I had known a few days ago what Reyk just said, I would
have noted it. I should probably go back and edit my blog post. I spent 4
or 5 hours myself trying unsuccessfully bridge it. I had it working once in
-CURRENT in October, but never could figure it ou
My vps at RamNode does this as well. It has ever since I moved there in
2015. It doesn't seem to cause any harm. I wasn't curious enough to run it
down to a root cause but if someone else knows, I'm interested in the story.
On May 13, 2017 21:55, "Hrishikesh Muruk" wrote:
> I see the following
In summary: There are 3 people who have been quite vocal about getting a
POWER port recently. None of them are developers with the knowledge or
resources to port it.
Big thread from late last year:
https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=147680858507662&w=2
A follow-up (late December 2016):
https://m
Has anyone messed with the Interface Masters Niagara cards on OpenBSD? This
family of cards has a passive bypass mode (electromechanical relays that
turn the two ports into, essentially, an ethernet coupler when something
goes wrong or power fails) but otherwise presents as a bog-standard 2-port
In
A very select few security-focused plugins are worth keeping around, like
WordFence. Every plugin, theme and add-on is additional attack surface, and
some popular plugins and themes have a horrifying track record with regard
to security. WordPress core has gotten a lot better recently, but there ar
Also, this seems like something that, depending on where the destination
servers are, could be handled easily with PF by itself, or with the help of
relayd, with a lot less hassle.
On Tue, Jun 6, 2017 at 11:23 AM, Maximilian Pichler wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 6, 2017 at 11:06 AM, Marko Cupać wrote:
>
First result on Google for "relayd example" seems to be pretty thorough.
https://calomel.org/relayd.html
On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 7:51 AM, Marko Cupać wrote:
> On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 12:05:10 -0500
> Ax0n wrote:
>
> > Also, this seems like something that, depending on
On dual-booting:
I have set up Windows/OpenBSD dual-boot quite a few times. Windows 7 and
Windows 10 instructions are all about the same, and the information in the
FAQ on multi-booting has enough info to get you started.
https://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#Multibooting
First, always have good
I'm generally not a fan of it, either, but sometimes the (l)users need
tools we don't like. So.
1) Run it over TLS only, so that usernames, passwords and other sensitive
data doesn't go across in the clear.
2) Lock it down to access only from trusted IP addresses (you can do this a
variety of ways
I'm having trouble booting OpenBSD 6.1-Release in vmm on recent snapshots.
I can boot an amd64 bsd.rd and do the install, but the resulting disk image
aborts silently (or hangs with no console output) with the subject line
above the only hint of what happens, found in daemon.log, and "vm_resetcpu:
seems that might not be the best
plan.
On Thu, Jun 15, 2017 at 1:40 AM, Mike Larkin wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 14, 2017 at 10:25:43PM -0500, Ax0n wrote:
> > I'm having trouble booting OpenBSD 6.1-Release in vmm on recent
> snapshots.
> >
> > I can boot an amd64 bsd.rd and
I have two laptops that dual boot Windows due to some proprietary software
I need for amateur radio programming (okay, and Steam on occasion). Part of
my usual upgrade process is to make a new openbsd.pbr and put it on the
Windows partition every time. I've checksummed this file a number of times
b
does pkg_add tor
does rcctl enable tor
does rcctl start tor
Welcome to your new onion relay node. It will relay and it will also listen
on port 9050 as a socks proxy for local applications.
On Jun 25, 2017 10:41, "nicehat" wrote:
> I'm looking for some good links on setting up a OBSD based Tor
You'll find little official support on the lists for problems you have due
to the hypervisor, but I've found that OpenBSD works great in VirtualBox.
You can't get VirtualBox Guest Additions working, but judging from the
popularity of this post I wrote almost 8 years ago, and the comments on it,
thi
What happens if you try jcs' intel_backlight utility?
https://devhub.io/repos/jcs-intel_backlight_fbsd
Take note of the machdep.allowaperture=3 change you need to make to
sysctl.conf (requires a reboot).
On Sat, Jul 22, 2017 at 5:09 PM, Michel Behr wrote:
> Hi - I'm trying to connect my Lenovo
As one who uses Lumina on a daily-driver OpenBSD laptop, I just fire up a
terminal and "doas halt -p" (or reboot, etc) when I'm ready to shut the
system down. You could likely add a nopassd rule to doas.conf so your user
account can run shutdown, and make a launcher or script for Lumina.
On Mon, J
>From your dmesg, my first suggestion would be to look at the cause of
what's filling up / and /home (per the snippet from your dmesg pasted below
my response). Next, I'd upgrade to a supported release (OpenBSD 6.1) and
fully update it with syspatch, then try nmap again. If it persists, try
again u
I have a virtually identical setup on my primary laptop (i5 540M, 8GB RAM)
running amd64 and my netbook (Atom N455, 2GB RAM) running i386. The
difference in RAM usage on boot is something around a dozen megabytes. You
won't notice this. The only good reason to run i386 is if your system
doesn't sup
hing off the
ground?
TIA-
ax0n
and at the boot> prompt. There's an RTC BIOS diagnostic error
before the kernel loads. At the UCK prompt, the cursor is glitching and the
keyboard is unresponsive. External keyboard isn't helping.
Photos here, if it matters: https://imgur.com/a/iL6T0
On Thu, Sep 21, 2017 at 7:22 PM,
;m just out of ideas, so additional suggestions are
welcome.
On Fri, Sep 22, 2017 at 12:09 PM, Dave Voutila wrote:
> Ax0n,
>
> That RTC error seems to come from a system dependent startclocks()
> function, but it was modified in August by jcs@ removing the logic
> that would even print
Frequently -- several times per hour when I'm actively doing stuff on my
laptop, the network hangs for perhaps 30-60 seconds. This coincides with
athn0 timeout messages on the console. I don't have much data to back up my
claim that it feels like it's more frequent since the upgrade to 6.2, but
it
You didn't really make a great case for the newer awk, either. Is there a
good reason to use the 2012 release from upstream? If so, you could submit
a diff and explain the benefits.
On Oct 19, 2017 12:15 AM, "Niels Kobschaetzki"
wrote:
> On 19. Oct 2017, at 06:23, flipchan wrote:
>
> Yeah blin
d with the VMM_DEBUG macro, but I don't know how to do
that. I do not see VMM_DEBUG in the GENERIC config, and just a few ifdefs
in the code.
I'd like to gather more info to provide a more complete bug report. Ideas?
--ax0n
On Sat, Jun 23, 2018 at 5:56 AM, Christian Barthel wrote:
> I am having the same problem after installing "010_intelfpu" on OpenBSD
> 6.3 stable. If you revert back, does it work for you again?
>
The only vmm(4) capable machine I have is running -CURRENT, so no reverting
syspatches.
> I think
On Sat, Jun 23, 2018 at 6:10 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> See https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-bugs&m=152960299009667&w=2 for
> a patch you could test.
> (raw patch: https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-bugs&m=152960299009667&q=raw)
>
FWIW, that patch didn't apply cleanly to a fresh pull of the tree from
Gi
On Sat, Jun 23, 2018 at 3:54 PM, Ax0n wrote:
>
> FWIW, that patch didn't apply cleanly to a fresh pull of the tree from
> GitHub. I know it's not OFFICIALLY -CURRENT for realsies but it's what I
> have been using on this laptop for months. It sounds like it was probabl
00/1.02 addr 3
video0 at uvideo0
umass0 at uhub2 port 2 configuration 1 interface 0 "Generic USB2.0-CRW" rev
2.00/38.82 addr 4
umass0: using SCSI over Bulk-Only
scsibus2 at umass0: 2 targets, initiator 0
sd1 at scsibus2 targ 1 lun 0: SCSI0 0/direct
removable serial.0bda01385163882000
When I'm dd-ing images (e.g. flashing SD Cards for raspberry pi), I
occasionally use pv from packages to do the file reading e.g.
pv armv7.img | doas dd bs=1M of=/dev/rsd1c
pv will send the file/device contents to stdout as fast as it can read it,
and dd will read stdin to write the file to disk
wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 26, 2018 at 08:22:08AM -0500, Ax0n wrote:
> > Finally got around to recompiling again. Sorry for the noise between the
> > two VM start attempts -- I suspended it to head to the office.
> >
> > OpenBSD 6.3-current (GENERIC.MP) #1: Tue Ju
attempted to set invalid bits in xcr0
vmm_free_vpid: freed VPID/ASID 1
On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 4:56 AM, Ax0n wrote:
> I don't have another box to run these on, but with Hexdump, it looks like
> these two particular VMs are:
> OpenBSD 6.1-current (GENERIC) #54: Fri Apr 14 13:
On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 9:05 PM, Man Hobby wrote:
> Hi,
>
> What is the opinion of employers about OpenBSD?
>
As a hiring manager, I see OpenBSD experience on a resume as a sign that
one likely has a firm grasp of UNIX. Several of my employers have used it
for mission critical work such as appli
I'm hoping someone on-list has actually gotten this to work and can point
out where I'm going wrong.
I've been trying for months off and on to get this to work. I have a
feeling I just don't understand the documentation for meta-data (
https://github.com/reyk/meta-data ) though I see at least one
I created that article. My guess is your hardware doesn't support VMX/EPT.
Please post the full output of dmesg.
On Jul 16, 2018 05:26, "Rudolf Sykora" wrote:
Hello,
please, is there some good (easy to follow, up to date)
tutorial about how to set up a linux distribution
under virtual machine
On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 6:24 AM, Ax0n wrote:
> I created that article. My guess is your hardware doesn't support VMX/EPT.
>
> Please post the full output of dmesg.
>
Also, try, as root, running vmd in verbose debug mode, e.g.
doas vmd -dvvv
And then post the output of that as well.
On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 4:56 AM, Rickard von Essen <
rickard.von.es...@gmail.com> wrote:
> It looks like cloud-init in the VM can't even reach 169.254.169.254. Does
> it have routing to get there? Is there a fw blocking the calls from the VM
> to 169.254.169.254?
>
I don't think so. This is my pf
On Mon, Jul 16, 2018, 19:39 Walt wrote:
>
> I'm not sure what would be useful for when we are the target of an
> attack. It seems to me that when the attack is going on, our bandwidth is
> so saturated that I'm not sure what we can do except to wait it out or to
> pay our provider to help mitiga
On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 4:30 PM, Reyk Floeter wrote:
> https://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html#r20180613b
>
> I can respond in more details when I’m back online later this week.
>
> Reyk
>
>
Thanks, Reyk. I missed that in the -CURRENT docs. Indeed, this clause seems
to work, as far as httpd star
) which appears to be
maintained by several of the original OwnCloud developers.
--ax0n
On Sat, Aug 4, 2018, 19:00 Sijmen J. Mulder wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've installed OpenBSD 6.3 on a Pentium III machine alongside existing
> installations of Windows 95 and Windows NT 4 by manually setting up a
> partition in the fdisk step and using the suggested disklabel
> configuration. As recom
On Sun, Aug 5, 2018 at 5:02 AM Sijmen J. Mulder wrote:
> Success!
>
> Unfortunately NT4 predates the BCD but I managed to do something
> similar by adding the following line to C:\boot.ini:
>
> C:\openbsd.pbr="OpenBSD"
>
> I still wonder why it wouldn't boot from the partition directly but at
>
On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 9:41 AM Ax0n wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 4:30 PM, Reyk Floeter wrote:
>
>> https://www.openbsd.org/faq/current.html#r20180613b
>>
>> I can respond in more details when I’m back online later this week.
>>
>> Reyk
>&g
Do you have anything in your .tmux.conf?
On Wed, Dec 2, 2015 at 6:42 AM, Ted Unangst wrote:
> When i push home at a ksh prompt in xterm, the cursor goes to the
> beginning of
> the line. When i do the same in tmux, nothing happens.
>
> TERM in xterm is xterm. TERM in tmux is screen.
>
> How do i
I've been able to run most *AMP stuff on OpenBSD/nginx/php_fpm. I've not
tried librenms before, but the major hurdle for chroot is usually the
mariaDB socket. I overcome this by setting up mariadb to bind to localhost
and setting up a user on 127.0.0.1 to force a TCP connection instead of
sockets.
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man1/ex.1?query=vi
â¨*literal next*â©Escape the next character from any special meaning. The
â¨literal nextâ© character is usually â¨control-Vâ©.
This does the trick for me:
/^V
On Fri, Feb 5, 2016 at 12:13 PM, ÐÑÑÑÑ ÐÑÑоми
A quick thought... are you extracting src.tar.gz into /usr (like you to
with ports.tar.gz)? On a few occasions, I've done this (instead of making
sure I'm in /usr/src first as I should) and had system binaries get
clobbered. When I've accidentally done this in the past, I do get a bunch
of abort tr
instead of reading the FAQ.
>
> Right. Let’s pretend that this didn’t happen, shall we?
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> > On Nov 15, 2017, at 8:54 PM, Ax0n wrote:
> >
> > A quick thought... are you extracting src.tar.gz into /usr (like you to
> > with ports.tar.gz)? On
I use xloadimage from ports. Grok the man page. Several useful CLI flags.
On Nov 25, 2017 3:06 PM, "x9p" wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a good/safe and light image viewer? Was used to eog, but it has
> too many "vfprintf %s NULL" in messages. gimp is too big and good for play
> with images, In need o
Slightly related, I have a CanoScan LiDE 100 that used to work great with
OpenBSD, using either ScanImage or simple-scan. It's detected, but sometime
around OpenBSD-5.6 it stopped working. I use it infrequently enough, and I
have enough computers that I usually just give up and have my wife use her
I use ls -lu and find -atime quite frequently. I've also been using OpenBSD
as a desktop (with all the insane disk activity of a browser cache, temp
files, git, etc) while doing absolutely nothing special using SATA SSD
drives. I'm running Softraid crypto on one, running without softraid on the
oth
I have a Motorola ML900 which seems to be running OpenBSD with X and
WindowMaker just fine. Every few hours it gets a group of errors within the
span of a few seconds (about 1 second between them in /var/log/messages)
Apr 4 04:30:01 luggy /bsd: iwi0: fatal firmware error
Apr 4 05:17:37 luggy /bs
On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 3:37 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
> Is this a purely cosmetic issue or does it actually prevent your
> wifi connection from working?
>
> These looks like potentially harmless errors which happen during
> association.
> Does the driver recover from these errors automatically?
I initially noticed it when I hopped in a video room on Discord in Firefox
and folks could see me and I could hear them, but Discord got no audio. It
turns out, nothing gets any audio. sysctl has audio and video recording
enabled, and pledge/unveil has been tweaked just a little for firefox to
pick
ncing needs. I'd love to help test patches for
the integrated mic should someone attempt to tackle it. I'm not much of a
software developer, though, and don't have much to add aside from testing.
Ty,
--ax0n
I have a nice microphone attached to a USB sound device, but I'd like to
rely on my computer's built-in line out for speakers from the same program
(e.g. Audacity, Firefox). It feels like sndio might have some way to let
programs use snd/0.play and snd/1.rec, or a way to make snd/1 the default
devi
I have a SunFire T2000 that I originally installed 6.1 on. I set up LDOMs
way back in May 2017. I kept all of the domains up to date until OpenBSD
6.6. After that, LDOMs would no longer work. The system would not boot
unless I reverted back to the single domain default using
bootmode config="factor
I had been running #1471 since December 5th without issue, and this week
upgraded to the latest snapshot (#1567) after which some apps such as
Firefox won't run. They display "msyscall a8000 error" followed by a
core dump. dmesg(1) shows a bogus syscall. I did ensure that I had properly
sysmerged
On Thu, Dec 28, 2023, 11:00 Stuart Henderson
wrote:
Not sure how much core dumps will help, but if you can try running
the binaries with problems with LD_DEBUG set in the environment (to
anything) and capture output (e.g. using script(1) as it will likely be
copious) that might give clues.
I'll
On Fri, Dec 29, 2023, 11:21 Theo de Raadt wrote:
> Then your machine is not -current, not by a long shot.
>
> We moved to libc.so.98.0 on Dec 12.
>
> At least two rounds of new packages have shown up since then.
>
> I do believe there are circumstances where pkg_add fails to update
> library pack
On Fri, Dec 29, 2023 at 7:33 PM Stuart Henderson
wrote:
> Pity, without the deletes a transcript of a run of pkg_add -u -v
> might have shown why the packages didn't get updated. They should have,
> and in most cases they do.
>
Here's the pkg_add -uiv output that I saved while removing stuff
I suppose I'll ask here since it seems on-topic for this thread. Let me
know if I shouldn't do this in the future. I've been testing vmm for
exactly a week on two different snapshots. I have two VMs: One running the
same snapshot (amd64, Oct 22) I'm running on the host vm, the other running
amd64 6
.00% pflogd
58764 root 100 2052K 7524K idle wait 0:01 0.00% slim
On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 10:47 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 07:36:48PM -0500, Ax0n wrote:
> > I suppose I'll ask here since it seems on-topic for this thread. Let me
> > know if
0% pflogd
2894 root 20 948K 3160K sleep poll 0:00 0.00% sshd
85054 _ntp 20 668K 2316K idle poll 0:00 0.00% ntpd
On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 2:09 AM, Mike Larkin wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 11:07:32PM -0500, Ax0n wrote:
> > Thanks for the update, m
ht the
results of my testing were relevant to misc@.
On Wed, Oct 26, 2016 at 7:15 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 26, 2016 at 06:36:25PM -0500, Ax0n wrote:
> > I'm running vmd with the options you specified, and using tee(1) to peel
> it
> > off to a file while I can
In talking to some folks at SpiderOak few months ago, their technical
co-founder said that the ability to get Go 1.6+ and Electron working on
OpenBSD are the major technical hurdles to getting Semaphor (which is a
privacy-friendly, security-minded collaborative platform one might compare
to Slack o
Can we see the contents of /etc/pkg.conf and/or your $PKG_PATH variable
from inside root's session?
On Wed, Nov 2, 2016 at 6:48 PM, Chris Huxtable wrote:
> OpenBSD Community,
>
> I upgraded my OpenBSD router from 5.9 to 6.0 by clean install and copied a
> number of my old configs to the new inst
org/%m/
> installpath += http://openbsd.cs.toronto.edu/%m/
> installpath += http://athena.caslab.queensu.ca/%m/
>
> # echo $PKG_PATH
>
> PKG_PATH is empty as I use pkg.conf
>
> On Nov 3, 2016, at 3:43 PM, Ax0n wrote:
>
> Can we see the contents of /etc/pkg.conf and/or y
My advice: If you really want the performance boost and you think a recent
snapshot will provide it, make sure your backups are good and test the
snapshot on comparable hardware as best you can. I usually restore the dump
to a similar system, then boot from a snapshot bsd.rd and choose "Upgrade",
a
"Nobody in their right mind would use OpenBSD for that."
That's how literally all of the projects I've used OpenBSD for have started.
On Nov 9, 2016 2:39 AM, "Martin Schröder" wrote:
> 2016-11-09 9:06 GMT+01:00 ludovic coues :
> > I would say big data.
> >
> > Stackexchange have a pair of SQL
thing I should look out for? To be honest, this is my first experience
installing anything onto an SSD so I'd be welcome to accept any pointers
specific to OpenBSD. Searching misc@ for as long as I've been subscribed
hasn't yielded any solid input on this.
TIA!
--ax0n
2016 at 09:14:51AM -0600, Ax0n wrote:
> >> I just purchased a SanDisk SSD for my daily-driver laptop which has been
> >> running -CURRENT well. I'm considering going with FDE and a fresh
> >> snapshot
> >> install, adding my packages then copying over what I
also using
softraid crypto) so I suppose if it burns up in a year it's not really that
big of a problem.
On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 10:33 AM, Marc Peters wrote:
> Am 11/16/16 um 17:07 schrieb Ax0n:
> > I'm less concerned about swap, and more concerned about how a fully
> > enc
Self-explanatory. I went to approve my post to bugs@ and got this. Looks
like it lapsed earlier this week.
http://imgur.com/QzYSjS8
The first command will create a new virtual drive device ( sd2 perhaps?)
and you'll want to create your softraid crypto volume on that device, not
on sd0.
Note that I've never tried this, and that the bootloader might need some
additional help after you have the striped softraid encrypted.
On Mon
I'm guessing the default route a.k.a. gateway already exists, and you're
trying to add another, duplicate route. What's the output of the following
command before and after you do the route add?
netstat -rn -finet
On Tue, Dec 13, 2016 at 2:51 PM, Jyri Hovila [iki.fi]
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> a brief fo
For now, you may want to use the "nopass" keyword and set up
highly-restrictive rules. The last matching rule determines the action
taken, so you can have more general rules up top, and more specific ones
that don't require a password toward the end. For example, my wireless
network manager script
mber 2016 at 09:21, Ax0n wrote:
> > In -CURRENT, doas.conf has a "persist" keyword that will only prompt once
> > per session. This isn't available in OpenBSD 6.0, but should work when
> 6.1
> > is released. Here's a fairly minimal rule that would allow wheel
This was my hack.
http://www.h-i-r.net/2016/04/pretty-wordpress-permalinks-under.html
tl;dr:
1) ln -s index.php posts
2) null out "security.limit_extensions" in the php_fpm config, restart FPM.
Beware the potential abuses of this.
3) Set up an explicit location clause for "/posts*" that uses the f
One thing to note with FDE: power the system down completely whenever the
system is unattended. If someone steals it while it's powered on or
suspended, the disk is completely accessible to the system without a
password. There are a number of plausible attacks even if you are logged
off or have a s
Until I really wanted to mess with vmm(4) late last year (thus requiring me
to move to a more portly i5 laptop), my daily driver was a Toshiba NB305,
on which I've run OpenBSD since 2011. It still comes out to play whenever I
need excellent battery life and/or a light carry load-out. Everything fro
First: Great work, everyone. Tons of ground got covered.
vmm seems to not be respecting the "owner" directive until after I shut the
VMs down. It's completely plausible I'm doing something wrong. I haven't
messed with vmm in -CURRENT since mid-January. I'm using 6.1-RELEASE right
now.
On the host
in vm.conf and then doing
a reload will start a previously disabled VM.
using "vmctl load ${configfile}" is also handy for creating one-off
configuration clauses for VMs you want to start ad-hoc.
I'm still trying to figure out how VM ownership works.
On Fri, Apr 14, 2017 at 11:00
I guess this is the thread where I mention that most of the OpenBSD FTP
mirrors' login motd banner say you can buy 6.1 on CD. Not really a big
deal, but mirror maintainers might want to adjust it.
On Sat, Apr 15, 2017 at 8:37 PM, Edgar Pettijohn
wrote:
> On 04/15/17 20:28, Friedrich Locke wrote:
I'm using slim as the Display Manager on 6.1-RELEASE on my main laptop,
with Lumina for the time being as my DE. I just added the following to the
end of /etc/slim.conf and it does auto-login for me. Frustratingly, "log
out" immediately logs me back in instead of prompting. If you're okay with
that
boot.
On Tue, Apr 18, 2017 at 11:12 PM, Ax0n wrote:
> I'm using slim as the Display Manager on 6.1-RELEASE on my main laptop,
> with Lumina for the time being as my DE. I just added the following to the
> end of /etc/slim.conf and it does auto-login for me. Frustratingly, "l
Preface: I'd like to know what I can do to get some more detail about this
before firing off a sendbug. I can't reliably replicate it, but I can
guarantee it will happen to me repeatedly with just a bit of normal
computing use.
On my old 2006-era MacBook (MacBook2,1), I decided I'd finally upgrade
FWIW, about 5 years ago, my wife bought me a Toshiba NB305 that came with
Windows 7 Starter, which I tried to use. I'm okay with Windows when I need
to use it, but Starter edition might as well be a Windows kernel with IE
and almost no customization available. I do need Windows to program my ham
ra
Possibly related, I did have an http-only httpd exhibit similar behavior
after running for about 5 days. httpd processes were running, but port 80
was wholly unresponsive. I attempted to find a way to grab a core from the
processes, but I couldn't figure it out. I had to get the sites back up and
I acquired a Dell Latitude D610 (including docking station, expansion-bay
HDD and a bunch of other accessories) from a friend. I've been running
OpenBSD on it since around the time 5.6 came out. I'm running 5.7-RELEASE
with all patches applied.
The screen (perhaps only the backlight) won't come ba
lynx was in the base distribution for quite some time. I occasionally used
it to fetch http files (as opposed to getting wget from packages and using
that).
I've found that ftp(1) is quite sufficient for most of the things I need to
to as far as a CLI client for quickly grabbing files via ftp/http
I'd just try cranking up most of those xx,xx lines to 255, one at a time,
until your speakers emit something audible.
I'd start with the ones named "Master" because of reasons.
mixerctl outputs.master=255
mixerctl outputs.master.slaves=255
I know when I'm playing stuff on VLC, inputs.dac affects
I'm working on a project with a local group that involves running a bunch
of systems in Ad-Hoc mode to form a mesh network. I was hoping to join my
daily driver to the mesh, but I'm not seeing any way to get Ad-Hoc/IBSS
mode enabled on athn(4) or any of the USB (urtw, urtnw, run) WiFi adapters
I ha
I mis-understood your first post, Teng. The .iso image confused me and I
thought you were trying to write to optical media.
It sounds like you needed to simply mount the USB removable mass storage to
/mnt. Oddly enough, I can't find a directly relevant entry for this in the
OpenBSD FAQ to link to
I've got a Toshiba NB305 netbook that's been my daily-use laptop for more
than 6 years now. The last fresh install I did was OpenBSD 4.9-RELEASE in
early May 2011. I've been quite happy with how it works, and I've been
doing bsd.rd upgrades and M:Tier binary updates ever since.
There is a lot of s
Thank you very much, all! Giving it a shot now.
On Sat, Sep 3, 2016, 16:35 Juan Francisco Cantero Hurtado
wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 03, 2016 at 03:12:53PM -0500, Ax0n wrote:
> > I've got a Toshiba NB305 netbook that's been my daily-use laptop for more
> > than 6 years now.
On Sun, Jan 16, 2022 at 4:46 PM Stuart Henderson
wrote:
> Do both ix0 and ix1 break, or just ix1?
>
> One important difference visible in dmesg is that ix starts using MSI-X.
>
Some time ago, I noticed that ix1 isn't usable. I don't think it even shows
up in ifconfig -a on OpenBSD 6.7. I didn't
cd /dev && doas sh MAKEDEV sdX (or whatever the base device name is).
man 8 MAKEDEV for more info on that
On Sun, Jun 23, 2024 at 6:59 AM Anon Loli wrote:
> ...
> problem with the computer detecting the drives (they aren't in /dev at
> all, but
> dmesg is reading them OK),
>
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