I would suggest you run an fsck on the filesystem and see if there are
any problems.
Filesystems may be considered "required" for the system to function and
be mounted read-only when problems are detected, to prevent further
problems from developing while allowing the system to run.
Bob
On
On 2/19/21 4:09 PM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
Hi Bob!
On 2/19/21 7:47 AM, Bob McGowan wrote:
The kernel prints a bunch of normal type lines, then panics because it can't
find the root
device. It also reports a list of partitions it can find. The only disks are
the ram
On 2/19/21 8:13 AM, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Fri, Feb 19, 2021 at 2:12 AM Bob McGowan wrote:
Hello,
I have a B&W G3 which I have upgraded to 1G RAM. It also has an Adaptec
SCSI controller I added to use with a 32G LVD SCSI disk. It also has
the original SCSI 9G SCSI disk on which I
Hello,
I have a B&W G3 which I have upgraded to 1G RAM. It also has an Adaptec
SCSI controller I added to use with a 32G LVD SCSI disk. It also has
the original SCSI 9G SCSI disk on which I've been able to install OSX
10.4.2, initially.
It has since upgraded to 10.4.11, if that is useful t
Gaudenz Steinlin wrote:
On Thu, Jan 31, 2008 at 12:50:23PM -0800, Bob McGowan wrote:
Well, the primary advantage to rolling your own is that you can customize the kernel for your
hardware.
Generic kernels include drivers for all sorts of things, most of which you
don't have.
Thi
dware.
Generic kernels include drivers for all sorts of things, most of which
you don't have.
This can reduce the size of the kernel, which can translate into faster
operations, as well as reduced space needed to hold it (and the modules
you build, if any).
Thanks,
Amit
--
B
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