Find them ! Thx !
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 10:41 AM, ron minnich wrote:
> Sorry, /sys/src/9/omap/beagle
>
> ron
>
>
--
С наилучшими пожеланиями
Жилкин Сергей
With best regards
Zhilkin Sergey
I configured my mobile phone to share all it's connectivity (gprs,
wifi) via usb, i.e., act as a usb router (including a dhcp server).
When I attach it to a linux machine, dmesg says:
usb 2-2: new high speed USB device using ehci_hcd and address 14
cdc_acm 2-2:1.6: This device cannot do calls on
It seems usbd is not getting the descriptors it needs.
You may try running usbd -dd to see which requests
have problems.
We could try to see how to proceed then, depending
on what's going on.
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 3:21 PM, Thorben Krueger
wrote:
> I configured my mobile phone to share all it's
Ok, when I reboot (I don't know how to reset usdb) and run usb/usbd -dd I get:
...
usb/usbd: /dev/usb/ep5.0 starting
usb/usbd: opendev 0x60b90 /dev/usb/ep5.0
usb/usbd: /dev/usb/ep5.0: no port information
usb/usbd: /dev/usb/ep5.0: ports 2 maxpkt 64
What now?
On 13 October 2010 15:31, Francisco J B
kill usbd, yes, it's not supported. I mean, if you kill it and it fails,
the man page says that you are not supposed to do that. But do it anyway :)
Then, usb/usbd -dd
and see what happens.
BTW I assume that you are not using a usb kbd/mouse to execute such commands.
If you are, then we can set u
wow, this produces an incredible amount of text... typing it is not an
option... let me see if I can figure something out
On 13 October 2010 15:57, Francisco J Ballesteros wrote:
> kill usbd, yes, it's not supported. I mean, if you kill it and it fails,
> the man page says that you are not suppos
See attached debug log. (Transfered via USB pendrive from the plan9
machine, so at least that part seems to work)
On 13 October 2010 16:04, Thorben Krueger wrote:
> wow, this produces an incredible amount of text... typing it is not an
> option... let me see if I can figure something out
>
> On 1
Addendum: My phone also exposes some block devices via usb, although
they only become mountable when I flip a software switch in the phone
(which I didn't).
Maybe that accounts for some of the output
On 13 October 2010 16:33, Thorben Krueger wrote:
> See attached debug log. (Transfered via USB p
http://plan9.bell-labs.com/wiki
I get "Object not found"
As an experiment, I rebooted, attached my phone, waited a minute and
ran usb/ether -dd. The output is attached and in many respects similar
to the one produced by usbd.
On 13 October 2010 16:39, Thorben Krueger wrote:
> Addendum: My phone also exposes some block devices via usb, although
> they o
Let's proceed off list, to save traffic.
Iirc eric made something to report these things to the correct people.
There's a group called 9nag on google groups that it uses.
Cpurc on sources disables notes for a few processes including
listen(8) – to save them from being killed when system runs out of
memory. This, however, has a side effect: spawned services like
sshserve inherit the bits from listen, thus missing notes about rc
exits and waiting forever, causing the
Ah... alright.
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 8:57 AM, Jacob Todd wrote:
> Iirc eric made something to report these things to the correct people.
> There's a group called 9nag on google groups that it uses.
>
raw proceedings posted www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
http://9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf:
The requested URL /iwp95e.pdf was not found on this server.
2010/10/13 erik quanstrom :
> raw proceedings posted www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
>
>
--
Hugo
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 01:14:00PM -0400, erik quanstrom wrote:
> raw proceedings posted www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
>
typo?
~$ wget www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
--2010-10-13 19:33:46-- http://www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
Resolving www.9fans.net... 68.236.190.109
Connecting to www.9fans.net|68.236.190.109
Correct URL seems to be:
http://iwp9.org/iwp95e.pdf
On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 13:14:00 -0400, erik quanstrom
wrote:
> raw proceedings posted www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
>
--
Ori Bernstein
http://www.iwp9.org/iwp95e.pdf
should work for you ...
On Oct 13, 2010, at 10:26 AM, hugo rivera wrote:
> http://9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf:
> The requested URL /iwp95e.pdf was not found on this server.
>
> 2010/10/13 erik quanstrom :
>> raw proceedings posted www.9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf
>>
>>
>
>
>
Thanks.
2010/10/13 Jeff Sickel :
> http://www.iwp9.org/iwp95e.pdf
>
> should work for you ...
>
> On Oct 13, 2010, at 10:26 AM, hugo rivera wrote:
>
>> http://9fans.net/iwp95e.pdf:
>> The requested URL /iwp95e.pdf was not found on this server.
>>
>> 2010/10/13 erik quanstrom :
>>> raw proceedings
Ron's changes emulate the following linux/cnk calls:
[4] {"write", sys_write, 3, {.i = -1}},
[5] {"cnkopen", sysopen, 2, {.i = -1}},
[24]{"getuid", cnkgeteuid, 0, {.i = -1}},
[45]{"cnkbrk", cnkbrk, 1, {.i = -1}},
For folks interested in more info on the πp portion of Noah's Osprey talk,
Anant's thesis is available online: http://proness.kix.in/misc/πp-v2.pdf
-eric
I guess I do not understand how 9p doesn't support pipelining. All
requests are tagged and can be dealt with between client and server in
any order right?
On Wednesday, October 13, 2010, Eric Van Hensbergen wrote:
> For folks interested in more info on the πp portion of Noah's Osprey talk,
> An
They came out kind of fuzzy, I think it's because of the bright light
from outside behind us.
http://jfloren.net/IWP9group1.jpg
http://jfloren.net/IWP9group2.jpg
2010/10/13 David Leimbach :
> I guess I do not understand how 9p doesn't support pipelining. All
> requests are tagged and can be dealt with between client and server in
> any order right?
two issues (at least):
1) concurrently sent requests can be reordered (they're serviced in separate
thread
thanks for the snap shots. what a great venue.
brantley
On Oct 13, 2010, at 6:22 PM, John Floren wrote:
> They came out kind of fuzzy, I think it's because of the bright light
> from outside behind us.
>
> http://jfloren.net/IWP9group1.jpg
> http://jfloren.net/IWP9group2.jpg
>
FYI,
Skip thinks the video on this link is Eris Discordia based on certain
patterns.
http://www.tentonhammer.com/node/14218
As you'll see from my talk or paper, the beagleboard
doesn't work yet because it doesn't have real
ethernet and usb isn't working on the omap35 yet,
so even the kludge of ethernet over usb won't work.
hi all,
thanks for the response. i also went through geoff's paper.
so, in summary, it looks like while beagleboard port is close to be
ready, it is not going to be too attractive to run plan9 (from
price/speed/device-support point). am i right?
dharani
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 3:59 PM, wrote:
hi,
if i am right, charles was planning to give a session on inferno
roadmap or something in the 5th plan9 workshop. did it happen?
sorry if i am wrong.
thanks
dharani
2010/10/13 roger peppe
> 2010/10/13 David Leimbach :
> > I guess I do not understand how 9p doesn't support pipelining. All
> > requests are tagged and can be dealt with between client and server in
> > any order right?
>
> two issues (at least):
>
> 1) concurrently sent requests can be reorder
Oh please, don't make me think about the Dorian-Gray-Syndrom.
All these patterns are haunting me lately...
>
> 2) you can't pipeline requests if the result of one request depends on the
> result of a previous. for instance: walk to file, open it, read it, close
> it.
> if the first operation fails, then subsequent operations will be invalid.
>
Given careful allocation of FIDs by a client, that can be d
hi all,
i am just posting a question that has been in my mind for a while.
to me, it looks like 64-bit computing has caught up very well. even
smaller processors like atom supports 64-bit instruction set.
on the contrary, while plan9 supported 32-bit processors ahead of
other OSes, it is yet to
ppc64 and amd64 support exists. the ppc64 port is partial and is
available publically. It is my understanding that the amd64 is
partial and available to those who ask. Things which are missing are
devices and other bits to make it actually useful, but the core
changes for 64-bit support are in p
you were wrong. but perhaps he'll answer anyways.
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 4:09 PM, Tharaneedharan Vilwanathan
wrote:
> hi,
>
> if i am right, charles was planning to give a session on inferno
> roadmap or something in the 5th plan9 workshop. did it happen?
>
> sorry if i am wrong.
>
> thanks
> d
I've consumed the Kool-Aid and now believe that ARM is the proper
future for Plan 9. With Gumstix, you can get USB, DVI, audio, storage,
ethernet, wifi, 3G, all in one tiny little box, for under $200, and
with increasingly improving Plan 9 support (certainly better than
amd64, which I used--it was
> if i am right, charles was planning to give a session on inferno
> roadmap or something in the 5th plan9 workshop. did it happen?
i was asked to do it some time ago, but it wasn't in the schedule,
and i didn't notice that until too late.
Wish I was there guys! Have a great time.
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 6:44 PM, Brantley Coile wrote:
> thanks for the snap shots. what a great venue.
> brantley
>
> On Oct 13, 2010, at 6:22 PM, John Floren wrote:
>
>> They came out kind of fuzzy, I think it's because of the bright light
>> from outs
It was a great workshop. More than once I heard someone mention that
it was "the best IWP9 they'd attended". What was interesting was that
I heard the exact same sentiment last year ... guess we get better by
the year.
And, I got to let the smoke out of an ethernet switch WITHOUT setting
off any f
Great! I'll need to start the whining, um I mean budget request with
my boss early to avoid the last minute rush.
-joe
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:18 PM, ron minnich wrote:
> It was a great workshop. More than once I heard someone mention that
> it was "the best IWP9 they'd attended". What was inte
I don't remember anybody mentioning it, is there a Plan 9 tool to submit
a dynamic DNS request to a DNS server like BIND? I use the feature in
a very limited fashion, but I don't want to re-invent something that
has already been done.
++L
Plan 9'on ARM makes a lot of sense to me. I still think x86 is
worthwhile though.
On Wednesday, October 13, 2010, John Floren wrote:
> I've consumed the Kool-Aid and now believe that ARM is the proper
> future for Plan 9. With Gumstix, you can get USB, DVI, audio, storage,
> ethernet, wifi, 3G,
> I guess I'm trying to imagine how specifically you could pipeline, not the
> general ways in which pipelining will fail with 9P.
Well as it turns out, I got inspired by the discussions of
streaming and implemented one approach in Inferno on the
plane on the way back home. Unfortunately, my
I don't remember anybody mentioning it, is there a Plan 9 tool to submit
a dynamic DNS request to a DNS server like BIND?
I used to have P9 ssh to the BIND host and run the magic command that let
you update the ddns database (nsupdate?).
A new addition from Stephen Jones!
http://jfloren.net/eric.jpg
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 6:22 PM, John Floren wrote:
> They came out kind of fuzzy, I think it's because of the bright light
> from outside behind us.
>
> http://jfloren.net/IWP9group1.jpg
> http://jfloren.net/IWP9group2.jpg
>
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