Ulf Brosziewski ulf.brosziewski at t-online.de writes:
I have written two patches that provide these options (I'm using them
on an Acer V5-131 netbook with OpenBSD 5.6/amd64, the clickpad hardware
and firmware is identified as Elantech Clickpad, version 4, firmware
0x461f02). There is,
On Jan 14, 2015 7:57 AM, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
Mike Larkin has been slow at informing the world, despite my prodding.
Probably started working on something else cool...
So.. I am going to take it upon myself to sing praise to him, and
hopefully he'll let me off
Mike Larkin has been slow at informing the world, despite my prodding.
Probably started working on something else cool...
So.. I am going to take it upon myself to sing praise to him, and
hopefully he'll let me off lightly!
Over the last two months Mike modified the amd64 kernel to follow the
On Jan 13, 2015, at 9:15 AM, William Orr w...@worrbase.com wrote:
Hey, any interest?
On 12/12/2014 08:29 PM, William Orr wrote:
Hey,
On some macbook airs, the function keys have different functionality when the
Fn key is pressed. I've added an additional munge function to handle these
Hey, any interest?
On 12/12/2014 08:29 PM, William Orr wrote:
Hey,
On some macbook airs, the function keys have different functionality when the
Fn key is pressed. I've added an additional munge function to handle these
particular cases.
Thanks,
William Orr
Index: sys/dev/usb/ukbd.c
Here's a patch to switch the drift file from an unscaled frequency
offset to ppm. The latter format is compatible with that of ntp.org.
This allows easy switching between ntpd daemons. (I asked PHK and
ntimed will probably not have a drift file at all.)
Old drift files are handled
On 01/14/2015 02:03 AM, Alexey Suslikov wrote:
Ulf Brosziewskiulf.brosziewskiat t-online.de writes:
I have written two patches that provide these options (I'm using them
on an Acer V5-131 netbook with OpenBSD 5.6/amd64, the clickpad hardware
and firmware is identified as Elantech Clickpad,
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 08:57:09PM -0700, Theo de Raadt wrote:
Mike Larkin has been slow at informing the world, despite my prodding.
Probably started working on something else cool...
So.. I am going to take it upon myself to sing praise to him, and
hopefully he'll let me off lightly!
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 11:38 PM, Mike Larkin mlar...@azathoth.net wrote:
i386 is next, but that requires a PAE paging model and compatible CPU.
I've got the PAE mode booting but it's not ready for prime time yet.
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 11:36 PM, Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 11:38 PM, Mike Larkin mlar...@azathoth.net wrote:
i386 is next, but that requires a PAE paging model and compatible CPU.
I've got the PAE mode booting but it's not ready for prime time yet.
Hmm,
Wonderful strategy.
ok deraadt
Here's a patch to switch the drift file from an unscaled frequency
offset to ppm. The latter format is compatible with that of ntp.org.
This allows easy switching between ntpd daemons. (I asked PHK and
ntimed will probably not have a drift file at all.)
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2015 19:36:58 +0100
From: Christian Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
Here's a patch to switch the drift file from an unscaled frequency
offset to ppm. The latter format is compatible with that of ntp.org.
This allows easy switching between ntpd daemons. (I asked PHK and
The kernel default has been changed so that machines (with lids)
will suspend automatically if the lid is closed.
The installer no longer asks the question (which in 5.6 defaulted to
yes).
This choice will allow suspend/resume to be tested improved even
further. It is already prompting some
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 23:24, Raf Czlonka wrote:
While looking into the above I have also noticed that login.conf(5) is
machine-dependent, even though it is identical an *all* architectures -
it is only different on alpha where the timestamp is off by one second
(or two characters):
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 23:24, Raf Czlonka wrote:
While looking into the above I have also noticed that login.conf(5) is
machine-dependent, even though it is identical an *all* architectures -
it is only different on alpha where the timestamp is off by one second
(or two characters):
On Sat, 10 Jan 2015 19:39:19 -0800
Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, 5 Jan 2015, Helg wrote:
The man page for LOCK(9) says that if the kernel option LOCKDEBUG is
enabled, additional facilities are provided to assist in determining
deadlock occurrences.
I created a
On Fr, 2014-11-28 at 03:42 +1100, Joel Sing wrote:
On Thu, 27 Nov 2014, Manuel Schoelling wrote:
[...]
I also noticed that libtls is currently supporting SOCK_STREAM (TLS)
connections only. Is the support of SOCK_DGRAM (DTLS) connections within
the scope of this library and would patches
Ignore this diff for now, it is not correct.
- todd
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2015 21:27:25 +0100
From: Christian Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
Mark Kettenis:
Does this in any way force a write of the drift file or are you
relying on ntpd deciding that it has a better estimate of the
drift somewhere in the next year?
ntpd always updates the
Hmm, I guess we could skip the compatibility handling completely
and just let ntpd re-discover the drift. Starting with an adjustment
scaled by 1e-6 is essentially the same as starting with 0 on a newly
installed machine.
Heh. Sounds plausible.
Smaller diff.
Wouldn't work the other
Patches are now available for 5.5 and 5.6 which fix libevent.
5.5 errata 20 and 5.6 errata 15:
Fix CVE-2014-6272 in libevent 1.4 event buffer handling. OpenBSD
base uses it for the programs: cu tmux ftp-proxy httpd ldapd relayd
tftp-proxy tftpd
Links:
http://www.openbsd.org/errata55.html
On 2015-01-13, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
Hmm, I guess we could skip the compatibility handling completely
and just let ntpd re-discover the drift.
Heh. Sounds plausible.
Smaller diff.
I started with 2.679024e-05 in ntpd.drift and pretty soon got this:
adjusting clock
Hi,
I've noticed this issue for sometime now. I was hoping one
of the Xorg updates would fix it, so finally I decided to
read some man pages, specifically sessreg.
Evidently the Xservers path is not correct (or has changed)
in OBSD's install. No longer found at:
Currently pms and the wsconscomm module of the synaptics driver offer a
somewhat limited support for Elantech clickpads with hardware version 4.
Above all, I missed the options of performing click-and-drag operations
with two fingers and of using a soft button area for the emulation of
right
Hi all,
While browsing through '/etc', I have stumbled upon ldomd(8) rc.d(8) script:
/etc/rc.d/ldomd
and two entries referring to it:
- one in rc(8):
start_daemon ldomd sshd snmpd ldpd ripd ospfd ospf6d bgpd ifstated
- and one in rc.conf(8):
ldomd_flags=NO # for normal use:
On Jan 13 07:02:30, schwa...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
CVSROOT: /cvs
Module name: src
Changes by: schwa...@cvs.openbsd.org2015/01/13 07:02:30
Modified files:
lib/libc/stdio : fgetln.3 fgetwln.3 fopen.3 fputs.3 funopen.3
printf.3 tmpnam.3
Log
Hi,
When the connection to a TCP syslog server fails or the TCP connection
terminates, try to reconnect after an increasing timeout.
ok?
bluhm
Index: usr.sbin/syslogd/syslogd.c
===
RCS file:
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