# Vacation almost over Our Easter vacation is almost over. On Monday we'll have to go to work again. Originally I wanted to write here something during my free days, but simply I didn't. We decided to visit our parents and travel by car. Of course we hit a major traffic jam when we had only about 60 km left to our destination. And after that I missed a highway exit and had to retry. As my wife does not drive I was pretty exhausted when we arrived - it is about 800 km to my parents' house and another maybe 170 to my wife parents'. We came back home this Thursday - exhausted again, although no real traffic jam this time - only some slow downs here and there. Nevertheless yesterday was a lazy day. I saw on twitter that OpenBSD 7.1 came out, so I fired up the Aspire 3690 and did a sysupgrade. Everything went smoothly, but then I could not open chromium, its window just did not appear. As I do not have anything important on this machine I just deleted ~/.config/chromium and it worked again. Did the same for NetSurf and that browser also started working again. I know I previously messed up the config of NetSurf, but it was not important to fix it. Then I realized that I can install rust on OpenBSD. Not with rustup, but there is a package. And it is fairly recent containing version 1.59.0 (the current version is 1.60.0 from April 7). OK, so I could learn rust on this machine. Shall I go with vi for editing source code? Are there some lightweight GUI editors that this old laptop could run? In a reddit discussion I found the following options: * leafpad: based on GTK, no syntax highlighting, single file * featherpad: based on Qt5, supports syntax highlighting for a few select languages and tabbed editing of multiple files * nedit: Motif/X11 editor, supports syntax highlighting that can be extended for new languages, tabbed editing * scite: based on GTK, syntax highlighting can seemingly be extended using language property files, tabbed editing None of them supports rust syntax out of the box, but nedit and scite can be extended. And they all run fast on this old box. I think I have everything for the first steps in rust on OpenBSD. For my notes I chose simple hand-crafted html that I upload to my VPS.