Best guess the problem is selinux on the fedora side.
Try setting it to permissive and if that solves the problem.
If that does solve the problem you need to analyze what to change in
selinux not just leave it at permissive. Sorry I forget the exact commands
but they can be found with a quick g
Thanks for all the responses but it seems an alternate solution presented by
another user in a direct reply is to use python3 - m venv. Basically using the
venv built in to python3 as opposed to the legacy method of py-virtualenv that I
typically only have to use for older python 2 code bases.
Th
I happen to like python and will be the first I reach for for many simple or
even some bigger tasks. Nothing against those other languages. I actually have a
special place in my heart for perl, but with the perl 5 vs 6 thing I wonder on
the longer term future of the language.
Honestly I need to ge
Not to disagree but if using python3 -m venv in home works and home is not
mounted as wxallowed is there still a security issue with this workflow?
Granted at this point talking about a development workstation and not a server.
So while I am at it I guess I should ask is what you are saying more
So I recently picked up a Lenovo T440 for a good price to use as my OpenBSD road
warrior and replace the aging Toshiba I was using. Everything works but 2
things:
1. Bluetooth of course
2. Resume from suspend on lid close
I am writing because of number 2. For now I have disabled suspend on lid cl
Theo also sent me a message to disable TPM as well as the fingerprint reader in
the BIOS. Compiling so I haven't rebooted to try it yet. But will, thank you.
Ken
On Sat, May 05, 2018 at 12:54:03PM -0300, Daniel Bolgheroni wrote:
> On Sat, May 05, 2018 at 03:14:32PM +0000, Ken M wrote:
Maybe this should go to ports@ but not sure I am near there yet.
So I am trying to compile the latest ardour on 6.3, got through compiling
rubberband and aubio and now well I am stuck here:
[200~./waf configure --boost-include=/usr/local/include
Setting top to : /home/s
:52PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2018-05-06, Ken M wrote:
> > Maybe this should go to ports@ but not sure I am near there yet.
>
> ports@ is a much better place for this type of question.
>
> > So I am trying to compile the latest ardour on 6.3, got through comp
Thank you. After many of the things I have read about OpenBSD being "overhyped"
online I thought this was a real interesting case that most of the industry gets
slapped with this the other day and OpenBSD is all fine and dandy.
I am glad to get the quantification as to why.
Ken
On Thu, May 10, 2
I will probably have to duck and run for suggesting javascript as the answer
here...
But for the most part the modern industry standard to make pages scale well
across many devices and screen orientations is to use a responsive design
library, most notably bootstrap.
Ken
On Fri, May 18, 2018 at
owsed with js disabled I would think it would be this one.
Ken
On Fri, May 18, 2018 at 03:08:25AM +0200, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi Ken,
>
> Ken M wrote on Thu, May 17, 2018 at 08:50:53PM -0400:
>
> > I will probably have to duck and run
> > for suggesting javascript as the
Been looking around and can't find the answer to this question. If I missed it
in some obvious place please excuse me.
Anyway I am curious if sndio can support multiple simultaneous cards, either
identical or different, particularly multiple standards compliant USB audio
interfaces. Basically I am
On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 07:56:31AM +0200, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> On Sun, May 20, 2018 at 06:49:25PM -0400, Ken M wrote:
> > Been looking around and can't find the answer to this question. If I missed
> > it
> > in some obvious place please excuse me.
> >
>
I noticed runit is in the ports, looking at the runit website I see instructions
for OpenBSD installation but they are many versions back. Does anyone use runit
as a replacement init system on their OpenBSD installs in the list?
Experiences and possibly a source for more current information on the
I want to ask the question of why? And why this way? I think if you want docker
like functionality, just add docker to openbsd. The best way to do so is to add
a lightweight linux into vmm and connect to that docker daemon. Alpine or
Rancher are probably the best bet for that.
I say nothing on the
rabbit-hole.
>
> Thomas
>
>
> On 24 May 2018 at 12:51, Ken M wrote:
> >
> > I want to ask the question of why? And why this way? I think if you want
> docker
> > like functionality, just add docker to openbsd. The best way to do so is
> to add
> > a lig
I know Bluetooth support was pulled, but I was wondering if there was any new
information about it being rekindled in some fashion. My primary interest is the
bluetooth audio side.
If there is or isn't I would be interested in helping to make it happen. Not
sure I am the best person to code it, b
It happens right after these 2 lines:
error: [drm:pid0:ivybridge_set_fifo_underrun_reporting] *ERROR* uncleared fifo
underrun on pipe A
error: [drm:pid0:intel_cpu_fifo_underrun_irq_handler] *ERROR* CPU pipe A FIFO
underrun
After those display the system seems to hang for about 30-40 seconds
bef
The subject is the problem:
node -v
bash: /usr/local/bin/node: Cannot allocate memory
I am on current, last grabbed the snapshot last Friday I think.
Plenty of swap and memory available
vmstat
procsmemory pagedisk traps cpu
r s avm fre flt re
On Wed, Jun 06, 2018 at 09:10:59PM -0400, Thomas Frohwein wrote:
>
> I run ksh. Doubt that bash is the cause though...
> Might wanna check if you have the same problem with ksh.
>
I tried in sh before submitting and got the same problem, I just tried ksh and
the same. Sorry for omitting that I t
So just to eliminate the off variable I updated my snapshot. Updated packages,
etc, etc
And now node works fine...
Ken
On Wed, Jun 06, 2018 at 09:28:39PM -0400, Ken M wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 06, 2018 at 09:10:59PM -0400, Thomas Frohwein wrote:
> >
> > I run ksh. Doubt that ba
I posted this before, and the first time around it was pointed out I had out of
date firmware, that was addressed. Anyway I am on current, the last snapshot I
grabbed was from 6-9. These 2 errors persist in my dmesg:
error: [drm:pid0:ivybridge_set_fifo_underrun_reporting] *ERROR* uncleared fifo
u
My thought was just to add the line
-powersave
in the file, just like I had added it to an iconfig commandline. Hostname.if man
pages don't specify anything about it that I can see.
Was my thought a stupid thought?
Ken
On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 04:53:21PM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> hostname.if(5) has this:
>
> "Any lines not matching these packed formats are passed directly to
> ifconfig(8)."
>
After reading the manpage again for hostname.if last night I spotted the way it
suggests to put uptions at the
On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 11:30:42PM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> If powersave is enabled, you'll see "powersave on (XXms sleep)" on the
> ieee80211: [...] line.
>
> If powersave is disabled (which is the default), nothing special is printed.
>
Good to know, thank you.
Ken
Branching off from the CPU and X paths of analysis, have you made sure network
performance is not a factor in all this?
A tact also in the browser, is use the inspect tools to see the response time of
the request pieces. IF it is at all network related that my yield some
information.
Ken
On Wed,
I will beat others to the punch and say you were looking for Ubuntu not OpenBSD.
OpenBSD is plenty easy to use, but the type of easy to use you describe with a
full desktop environment is not the target.
However installing gnome is simple enough. Several sites exist describing it. I
am guessing f
OK, so confession 1, I am a long time bash user
confession 2 all of my ksh experience is on solaris
However in a when in Rome moment I am realizing how much I like ksh in openbsd,
but one minor thing. I don't like how much clear ends up in my history file. So
I am wondering what I can do to suppre
Thanks all for not making me feel like I opened a flame war can of worms.
I think the ignore dups solution is probably the most sensible for my purposes
from what I have read from all the responses.
Thank you.
Ken
> Check out HISTCONTROL[1] and ignorespace in particular. Adding something
> along the lines to your ~/.kshrc should do the trick:
>
> HISTCONTROL=ignorespace
> bind -m '^L'='^U clear^J^Y' # note the intentional space before clear
>
> [1] https://man.openbsd.org/ksh#HISTCONTROL
Actually this
Figuring there are a good amount of members on this list that are also on
Lobste.rs.
Anyway I was hoping to get an invite to create an account there if someone
could.
Thank you,
Ken
Thank you
Ken
So I did something careless and stupid. Don't get me started but I really messed
up the group ownership of /usr by carelessly running a command not paying
attention. Yes I know, my stupidity.
Can anyone shoot me a quick list of what group should own what under /usr.
Sorry and thank you.
If it ma
I am backing up my config info right now and then will try that route, thank you
Sent from my iPad
> On Sep 2, 2018, at 10:52 AM, Solène Rapenne wrote:
>
> Le 2018-09-02 16:21, Ken M a écrit :
>> So I did something careless and stupid. Don't get me started but I really
On Sun, Sep 02, 2018 at 10:46:44AM -0500, ed...@pettijohn-web.com wrote:
>
> On Sep 2, 2018 9:55 AM, Ken M wrote:
> >
> > I am backing up my config info right now and then will try that route,
> > thank you
> >
> > Sent from my iPad
> >
> > >
OK so now that I have been saved from my stupidity, let's try to prevent more
stupidity.
$ df -h
Filesystem SizeUsed Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/sd0a 1005M245M710M26%/
/dev/sd0h 62.9G 21.7G 38.1G36%/home
/dev/sd0d 3.9G302K3.7G 0%
On Sun, Sep 02, 2018 at 10:53:36AM -0700, Chris Bennett wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 02, 2018 at 04:16:57PM +0000, Ken M wrote:
>
> You can only do this if /usr/ports is directly after /usr.
> Use disklabel sd0 to get the positions.
>
> However, if /usr/ports is big enough and it
On Mon, Sep 03, 2018 at 03:59:07AM +0200, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi Ken,
>
> How exactly to distribute space among partitions really depends on what
> you want to use the machine for. The disk you are showing above can be
> called terribly small nowadays (though i admit that i used disks in
> pro
On Mon, Sep 03, 2018 at 06:11:24PM -0500, ed...@pettijohn-web.com wrote:
>
> This obviously isn't the officially recommended way to do it, but it works
> here.
>
> I put everything in my $HOME and use symlinks to trick the build system into
> thinking it's in /usr/ports, etc. Thus, no need to f
On Tue, Sep 04, 2018 at 10:06:52AM -0700, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
>
> Just move /usr/ports back to /usr and remount /dev/sd0g as /usr/local
A perfectly reasonable suggestion, something I thought about. I kind of want to
tweak this and learn a little bit to make things better so I am going to give
As a follow up I did manage to get everything sorted out. Redid the disk labels
and used newfs and well in single user mode had to use ed to cleanup the fstab.
After that booting bsd.rd to reinstall sets and then a restore from backup on a
usb I made of what I would be hitting and all seems well. W
Just curious how many of you use openbsd to run your own personal email server?
Do you find it a hassle to manage in any way?
I know openbsd is perfectly fine for a mail server, don't get me wrong the
question is more about is it worth it to do yourself. Specifically I will
probably be doing it th
On Sat, Sep 08, 2018 at 11:32:00AM -0400, Jay Hart wrote:
> Ken,
>
> I've run my own email server for 15 years now I think. I stick with Linux for
> email server,
> OpenBSD for routing/firewall. I personally find this is the best of both
> worlds...
>
> Just my 35 cents...
>
> Jay
>
Dare I a
On Sat, Sep 08, 2018 at 10:55:40AM -0700, jungle Boogie wrote:
> Ken,
>
> Just curious, are you using pf to filter out the bad websites for you kids?
> I find that to be more challenging for our older daughter to not stumble
> into the bad stuff and not the wholesome sites like openbsd.org, which
On Sat, Sep 08, 2018 at 05:54:18PM +0200, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> On 09/08/18 17:23, Ken M wrote:
>
> If you've never run a mail server before but are familiar with OpenBSD,
> please do go the OpenBSD route.
>
> Setting up and running a mail service involves learning
This is related to my mail server thread, but in googling about openbsd on vultr
I have seen some comments here and there about issues with the default image on
vultr and to use a custom image or iso instead of what they have. Some of these
seem dated and related to older versions of openbsd. My qu
On Sat, Sep 08, 2018 at 08:36:01PM +0100, Chris Narkiewicz wrote:
> On 08/09/2018 19:55, Ken M wrote:
> What kind of issues? I'm curious. Can you pls provide a reference?
>
Without digging them up I did a quick google on openbsd issues vultr. It pulled
some things I saw befor
On Sat, Sep 08, 2018 at 09:22:01PM -0300, Friedrich Locke wrote:
> if you demand for performance, FreeBSD + Qmail-ldap is THE way to go.
>
> my 1 cent.
>
Performance is a priority, but not my first priority. In fact I think that is
why I have started becoming a convert to openbsd.
Although I do
On Sun, Sep 09, 2018 at 08:49:26AM +, Tim Jones wrote:
> Ken,
>
> Putting all the OpenBSD evangelists to one side, there are two things to say.
>
> First, like me, you might use OpenBSD for many things. And like me, you might
> come to the conclusion that using OpenBSD for mail is not one of
On Sun, Sep 09, 2018 at 10:08:39AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> Scanning for troubling words is not going to work without being able to
> see the email itself for context. Whether it's automated scanning or
> reading the mails yourself there are still privacy issues. Plus whatever
> monitoring
On Sun, Sep 09, 2018 at 11:24:38AM -0500, Ed Ahlsen-Girard wrote:
>
> While you should not take technical advice on mail servers from me,
> I've raised two kids to adulthood with a 17 year old to go, and had
> almost 200 foster children.
>
> The impedance mismatch you have with the missus is mor
On Sun, Sep 09, 2018 at 05:46:40PM +0100, Kaya Saman wrote:
>
> Maybe your ISP has option for "Parental Control"?? I know these days it is a
> big concern so many do offer this type of service
>
>
> Just a thought??
>
As I mentioned we use OpenDNS for the home internet, which handles all
c
On Sun, Sep 09, 2018 at 05:49:31PM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> In a nutshell, monitoring email is concentrating on what is really
> likely to be one of the less problematic areas. The others, which IMO
> are MUCH more likely to be involved if any problems do occur, are less
> amenable to th
On a side note to this whole chain. My wife and I had another conversation about
this, and I think we are on the same page that there is no win in monitoring
their email. So I think I can stay out of the mail server business for now,
which I like.
I pointed our how her dad was a cop and what happe
On Sun, Sep 16, 2018 at 09:05:33AM +0300, ?? wrote:
> I deploy my django app using uwsgi and venv in my home dir
> uWSGi starts on its default port and httpd server uses this port
> to handle my app requests. Everything just like in the official manual of
> uwsgi.
>
Don't kno
I am following -current and use openbox if it matters for my window manager.
xscreensaver is started by openbox, anyway when I try to lock, well this is what
I see:
$ xscreensaver-command -lock
xscreensaver-command: locking not enabled.
>From what I understand form the xscreensaver document that
On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 08:20:18PM -0900, Philip Guenther wrote:
> If xscreensaver decides it can't do locking, then when started it should
> write to stderr why it thinks that. Does openbox capture the stderr of the
> processes that it starts to some file you can review? If not, then stop
> xscr
On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 11:07:55AM +, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> Given the permissions you showed, the most likely reason would be if
> /usr/local is mounted with the "nosuid" flag.
>
>
That was the issue, fixed that and locking works perfectly, thank you.
If I may a quick side question s
On Sat, Sep 22, 2018 at 02:51:43AM +0100, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
> /, /usr, and /usr/X11R6 definitely contain programs that need setuid, and
> /usr/local
> is likely to in many cases. Other partitions generally don't, so you can
> mount them
> with "nosuid".
>
> While on the subject of mount
Can anyone make a recommendation for the best usb wifi dongle to use with
OpenBSD.
Criteria
(in order)
1. good range
2. good speed
3. low profile/small size
I realize priority 3 is typically going to compromise the first 2 priorities, so
I guess I am looking for a balance.
Thank you
Ken
On Sat, Sep 22, 2018 at 12:37:22PM -0500, Edgar Pettijohn III wrote:
>
>
> https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=152381830319718&w=2
>
Thank you, I just went right ahead and ordered it as it hit all the marks. Much
appreciated.
Ken
I just installed the latest snapshot and when I run a pkg_add it doesn't find
anything as it is trying to look in 6.4 for packages.
$ uname -r
6.4
Not sure if this is an issue in the latest snapshot or I stupidly missed some
information.
So I am working on a bit of an experiment. I have a debian sid guest in vmm.
xrdp is installed as is the pulse audio module for xrdp so that it can see the
xrdp output in the mixer. I can connect just fine till I try to get sound out.
Remmina wouldn't work with sound so to have more control I tried
On Sat, Oct 27, 2018 at 10:15:45AM +0200, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 26, 2018 at 07:49:16PM -0400, Ken M wrote:
> >
> > xfreerdp /sound:sys:sndio,dev:/dev/audio /v:host
> ^^
>
> If this is the sndio device name, it should
On Sat, Oct 27, 2018 at 07:23:05PM +0200, David Coppa wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Here's what I've done:
>
> 1) Install libsndio on the Linux guest (I've used
> http://www.sndio.org/sndio.tar.gz)
>
> 2) Compile this alsa plugin on the Linux guest:
> https://github.com/Duncaen/alsa-sndio
>
> 3) Copy lib
On Sat, Oct 27, 2018 at 08:51:43PM +0200, David Coppa wrote:
>
> Have you installed the alsa-plugins package?
So being wary and maybe we take this off list because the problem is not openbsd
related, it is debian related and openbsd is receiving the audio fine.
In debian the alsa-plugins are act
OK found the problem, the compiled sndio bridge was in the wrong place. Found
the right place.
And the reason I post here to the group again is sndio plus vmm is awesome.
Truth is reading about sndio was my main reason for even trying out OpenBSD.
Perhaps that is an odd reasons to some, but for m
So I am sure I am missing something stupid. Just the first time I have tried a
midi controller with openbsd.
So the device shows in the dmesg
a hexdump shows I am receiving sounds
but in lmms even with a device set to receive midi, nothing happens.
And yes sound is coming from lmms.
I am guessin
As an alternative could I cat rmidi0 to midithru0?
I will look into patching lmms as well.
Sent from my iPad
> On Nov 4, 2018, at 9:22 AM, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
>
>> On Sat, Nov 03, 2018 at 02:26:59PM -0400, Ken M wrote:
>> So I am sure I am missing something stupid. Jus
On Sun, Nov 04, 2018 at 03:22:23PM +0100, Alexandre Ratchov wrote:
> IIRC, the lmms sndio-midi backend lacks the "device chooser dialog",
> so it uses "default" as midi device, which translates
> "midithru/0". Your controller is probably "rmidi/0", so lmms doesn't
> use it.
>
> You could workaroun
Example:
https://fastly.cdn.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots/packages/amd64/compton-0.1_beta2p2.tgz:
ftp: SSL write error: handshake failed: error:1404C044:SSL
routines:ST_OK:internal error
signify: gzheader truncated
Basically all my packages are showing this after a doas pkg_add -uUvVm
Chec
On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 08:29:02AM +0200, Timo Myyrä wrote:
>
> There was some error in libssl which has been already fixed.
> I did cvs up in /usr/src/lib/libssl and 'make install' in there to fix it.
> Also
> the HTTP mirrors should work too while new snapshot is made.
>
> timo
Thank you, tha
On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 09:24:10AM +0100, Martin Sukany wrote:
> Hi,
>
> you'd fix this by defining PATH variable in your crontab, or specify the
> full path to python3 interpreter instead using env.
>
> M>
>
>
As the others said, and to expand, it is probably from the shebang line of your
pyt
On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 09:36:45AM +0100, Markus Rosjat wrote:
> as daniel also suggested I will try the the PATH crontab approach and this
> is because scripts with a full path in the shebang seem to run anymore on
> 6.4
>
> regards
>
Yeah just checked my scripts I was referring to (they are fo
On Sat, Nov 17, 2018 at 10:42:57PM +0100, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi Martin,
>
> Martin Sukany wrote on Sat, Nov 17, 2018 at 09:13:15PM +0100:
>
> > I want to migrate OpenBSD 6.4 (stable) from VM to bare metal. I see, as
> > usual, two options:
> >
> > 1) install everything from scratch
> > 2) c
Has anyone gotten this working?
Just trying it as an experiment.
I installed using qemu, serial console is working but when I boot through vmctl
the console shows a supervisor read error, page not found which from what I read
is indicative of bad memory. In qemu it boots fine though. Not sure wha
On Tue, Nov 20, 2018 at 06:40:50PM -0800, Philip Guenther wrote:
>
> Not supported yet. There will be some sort of announcement when it works.
>
>
> Philip Guenther
OK thank you. I was figuring it was me because I have gotten pretty much most of
the main Linux distros to work. In fact the only
On Sat, Dec 01, 2018 at 01:19:00PM -0600, Adam Thompson wrote:
> PROBLEM STATEMENT: driving FluidSynth from a MIDI controller produces ~1/4sec
> delay between keypress and sound.
>
> NARRATIVE:
>
> I finally got Qsynth working under Xfce (it freezes X under twm!) so I can
> control fluidsynth i
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