Here' a longer recording of me surviving in Road to Vostok running on #OpenBSD:
https://spectra.video/w/gizmkeE8zARi2kTe8mYW9U
It's in early access, but has been very stable. You need a decent CPU/GPU able to run Vulkan for this.

Here' a longer recording of me surviving in Road to Vostok running on #OpenBSD:
https://spectra.video/w/gizmkeE8zARi2kTe8mYW9U
It's in early access, but has been very stable. You need a decent CPU/GPU able to run Vulkan for this.

Join me for a live stream of the atmospheric survival FPS "Road to Vostok" (early access version) running on #OpenBSD in 37 minutes (23:00 UTC) at:

Mark Kettenis has added #OpenBSD/arm64 support for the new hw.blockcpu sysctl, classifying CPU types based on device-tree and ACPI CPPC information.
kettenis@ modified src/sys/arch/arm64/*: Add hw.blockcpu support for arm64. Here we classify CPU cores based on their "capacity". This a concept borrowed from the device tree standard that indicates the nominal performance of a CPU core. For ACPI machines we use similar information from ACPI's Collaborative Processor Performance Control (CPPC). If performance is less than 30% of the fastest cores in the same we classify them as L. Between 30% and 80% we classify them as E.
And above 80% we classify them as P. The CPU capacity is communicated to userland though kstat(4).
ok deraadt@, jca@
In addition to using kstat(1) on your machines, kettenis@ tested the following machines:
@playonbsd Replay can now be viewed at the same address:


Will stream Western- and Lovecraftian-themed soulsborne demake Tombwater from OpenBSD at 23:00 UTC:

The replay is now at: https://spectra.video/w/qT9FLNDp9Sk8usPMh5uvvk

Like hard sci-fi, indie gaming, and OpenBSD? Join me live to explore the Rings of Saturn at 22:00 UTC today:

Part 3 of exploring the post-nuclear wasteland formerly known as the USA in Fallout, on OpenBSD via fallout1-ce... Today March 4, at 23:00 UTC (very soon):
