On Wednesday 04 May 2016 19:44:32 Roger wrote: > >That long piece of Belden Cat5e managed to survive a 112 mph wind in > > 2010 that took down 3 40 yo pines, all our privacy fence, 50 square > > feet of shingles off the roof, a couple shingles off the shop > > building and flying debris damaged some siding & guttering. And the > > cable still functions right now. > > > >Knowing what that cable has been through, I haven't a clue why it > > still is, but 400 MiB have passed since the lathes box was last > > rebooted, and ifconfig says zero errors of any kind. > > > >So this place is wired, but its all 100mbit stuff. Checking this > > boards manual, it says gigabit. So its the external stuff that > > predates this board that is the speed limit. I'll see if I can find > > a gigabit switch as a start to upgrading to a gigabit. That would > > allow gigabit to this device > > I tend to use non-metallic conduit to encase my low-voltage wires, > especially when running wire outside the house, or exterior areas. > (ie. Underground.) > > This house though, I merrily ran CAT-6 on the underside of the house > within the crawl space which is protected by cement block walls and a > cement slab. No need for non-metallic conduit, except for strapping > the multiple cables to something for support. If you are not using > teflon coated wire, non-metallic conduit is the preferred method. And > if upgrading or repairing, just yank and pull new wire. > > CAT-5e is almost as good as CAT-6, and you maybe able to acheive > Gigabit speeds, but from the sounds of it, you'll be really lucky. > Either way, you'll likely fair much better with Gigabit ethernet cards > and Gigabit routers. > > >Back on topic, it seems I cannot run saned as a background daemon, > > but I can't find where its disabled. I found a debug log that > > apparently is being generated by saned, and here are the results of > > the last attempt to start it: > >=========================== > >May 4 00:53:43 coyote saned[21234]: saned (AF-indep+IPv6) from > > sane-backends 1.0.22 starting up May 4 00:53:43 coyote > > saned[21234]: do_bindings: [1] bind failed: Address already in use > > May 4 00:53:43 coyote saned[21234]: do_bindings: [0] bind failed: > > Address already in use May 4 00:53:43 coyote saned[21234]: > > do_bindings: couldn't bind an address. Exiting. May 4 00:53:43 > > coyote saned[21234]: FATAL ERROR; bailing out, waiting for > > children... May 4 00:53:43 coyote saned[21234]: bail_out: all > > children exited ============================ > >So thats a very non-informative log. :( How do I make it tell me > > what addresses fail? > > Shrugs. Be glad that it's open source, and you can grep the source > code? I see you found commenting a line within the dll.conf made the > network sane method work. Sounds like the same stumbling block I > encountered a decade or more ago. Dropped or tapped a hole into the > firewall? Ghosted saned process? > > Oh, and beer typically doesn't have sugar. Although micro brewers > tend to add a little just after bottling and prior to capping; for > boosting the yeast or natural carbonation just after capping. The > sour taste at the bottom of the bottle is supposedly this sugary > mixture, now very sour. As such, the bottom 1/4-1/2 inch of the > bottle is suppose to be typically spilled by the drinker. > FYI Roger, a chemistry lesson as it applies to diabetics, the alcohol in the beer is turned into sugar (from whence it came) by everyones liver, at a quite efficient rate of production. which explains the reference to near beer, Miller64 is about 2.7%, and even so I can still see each one on a glucose test strip. That excess glucose/sugar is eliminated by the kidneys, so we "recycle the coffee" about 2x as often as a normal person would. That sugar's damage to the kidneys is just one of the life threatening effects of diabetes. So we take metformin & live 20 years longer, but its a bit hard on the GI tract, so we spend 10 of that 20 on the throne. It seems to turn sugary stuff into a very efficient laxative.
More than you wanted to know I expect. :) > -- > Roger > http://rogerx.freeshell.org/ Cheers, Gene Heskett -- "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene> -- sane-devel mailing list: sane-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sane-devel Unsubscribe: Send mail with subject "unsubscribe your_password" to sane-devel-requ...@lists.alioth.debian.org