> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mark Murray writ
es:
> : > I don't know either. However, it might be because of permission
> : > problems. It will return EINVAL when it can't open the apm file for
> : > write. Maybe a devfs related issue?
> :
> : I don't have devfs on this system yet.
>
> Od
Some time ago somebody tried to fix "\ No newline at end of file" bug in diff
and seems that he had not reached the target - the diff is still broked,
however in a slightly different way (tested both with 4-stable and 5-current).
See:
http://people.freebsd.org/~sobomax/config.h.orig
http://peopl
> : > I don't know either. However, it might be because of permission
> : > problems. It will return EINVAL when it can't open the apm file for
> : > write. Maybe a devfs related issue?
> :
> : Hmm, it may not be using the right perms during make_dev perhaps.
>
> Hmmm, they look good to me.
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mark Murray writes:
: > I don't know either. However, it might be because of permission
: > problems. It will return EINVAL when it can't open the apm file for
: > write. Maybe a devfs related issue?
:
: I don't have devfs on this system yet.
Odd that. That's t
> I don't know either. However, it might be because of permission
> problems. It will return EINVAL when it can't open the apm file for
> write. Maybe a devfs related issue?
I don't have devfs on this system yet.
M
--
Mark Murray
Join the anti-SPAM movement: http://www.cauce.org
To Unsubscr
> > : zzz/apm -z gives me "apm: ioctl(APMIO_SUSPEND): Invalid argument"
> >
> > I noticed this with the first SMPNG kernel I tried. The newer one
> > this problem disappeared. Don't know why it would matter, but I may
> > have missed a commit while in new mexico.
>
> It may be a kernel/world s
Mike Smith wrote:
>
> >
> > Doesn't Oracle run MUCH better when given raw block disk devices to store
> > data on?
>
> Oracle wants to cache it's own data, it doesn't want the buffer cache
> behind it.
Yes, now it's all coming back. It's amazing how much you can forget in
the space of a decad
Greg Lehey wrote:
>
> FWIW, I was never happy with the removal of block devices either. I
> was shouted down with "can you point to any one use they are?", to
> which I replied "just because I don't know of one doesn't mean there
> isn't one, or that there will never be one in the future". This
On Tue, Sep 05, 2000 at 08:30:48AM -0700, Peter S. Housel wrote:
> > [Alexander, I'm Cc:ing you on this just in case you have heard of
> > anyone else having similar problems with Aureal cards with recent
> > -currents]
Sorry, I couldn't respond any earlier. I was out of business for a
while.
>
On Tue, Sep 12, 2000 at 06:11:20PM +0200, Niels Chr. Bank-Pedersen wrote:
> Hmm, how about those of us doing buildworlds/buildkernels on
> one (nfs)server for subsequent installworlds/installkernels
> on multiple other machines?
Use the `make reinstall' target with KERNEL_KO set to the name of th
On Tue, Sep 12, 2000 at 06:28:05PM -0700, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> > I'm also not sure where the rumors about a FreeBSD 4.1.5 got started
> > since I'd certainly never planned on such a thing, that, I think,
4.1.1 rather than 4.1.5 please.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "un
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 05:41:46PM -0600, Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "Andrey A. Chernov" writes:
> : Is there any progress in mtree fixing process?
>
> It hasn't been high on my list. I'd be happy to review patches,
> however.
Here it is:
--- usr.sbin/mtree/mtree.c.ori
>
> I have two questions. Recently, I started seeing the message:
> module sn already present!
> when dhclient runs on my sn device. What causes this?
It's caused by the 'sn' driver's module being called 'sn' rather than
'if_sn'. The code in ifconfig that tries to autoload modules for
I have two questions. Recently, I started seeing the message:
module sn already present!
when dhclient runs on my sn device. What causes this?
Second, on both my sn card and my aue cards are installed I get:
WARNING: Driver mistake: repeat make_dev("bpf0")
What do these mean?
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "Andrey A. Chernov" writes:
: Is there any progress in mtree fixing process?
It hasn't been high on my list. I'd be happy to review patches,
however.
: I think there is acceptable solution, in following steps:
:
: 1) Return mtree defaults.
: 2) Add -L
: 3) Add ${
Is there any progress in mtree fixing process?
I think there is acceptable solution, in following steps:
1) Return mtree defaults.
2) Add -L
3) Add ${MTREE_FOLLOW_LINKS} to mtree calls (which expands to nothing in
old systems, so we not broke anything in the transition process)
4) Add
MTREE_FOLL
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Matthew Jacob
>writes:
> : I would imagine an overall architecture doc. Sort of like what
> : Jordan just did for sysinst (e.g.).
>
> Then he should ask for an architecture doc rather than being so snippy
> and snide about "actual documentation."
Probably, but
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Warner Losh wrote:
>In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Julian Elischer writes:
>: Someone once mentionned an actual
>: document but I've been unable to find it.
>: Was it my imagination?
>: (and if so, why isn't there one?)
>
>What do you mean actual document? man pages are actu
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Matthew Jacob
writes:
: I would imagine an overall architecture doc. Sort of like what
: Jordan just did for sysinst (e.g.).
Then he should ask for an architecture doc rather than being so snippy
and snide about "actual documentation."
Warner
To Unsubscribe: sen
Ben Smithurst wrote:
> Bruce Evans wrote:
>
> > On Sat, 9 Sep 2000, Ben Smithurst wrote:
> >
> >> After poking around a bit with remote GDB, this seems to be caused by a
> >> stray IRQ 7, since irq == 7, ir == ithds[irq] == NULL, ir->foo == BOOM.
> >>
> >> The attached rather crude patch has "f
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Julian Elischer writes:
> : Someone once mentionned an actual
> : document but I've been unable to find it.
> : Was it my imagination?
> : (and if so, why isn't there one?)
>
> What do you mean actual document? man pages a
Bruce Evans wrote:
> On Sat, 9 Sep 2000, Ben Smithurst wrote:
>
>> After poking around a bit with remote GDB, this seems to be caused by a
>> stray IRQ 7, since irq == 7, ir == ithds[irq] == NULL, ir->foo == BOOM.
>>
>> The attached rather crude patch has "fixed" the problem for now, but
>> doe
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Julian Elischer writes:
: Someone once mentionned an actual
: document but I've been unable to find it.
: Was it my imagination?
: (and if so, why isn't there one?)
What do you mean actual document? man pages are actual documents.
What kind of document do you want?
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Garrett Wollman writes:
: It's required if we ever get around to supporting secure set-id shell
: scripts. (I think this was the rationale for originally introducing
: it.) It also helps when bogus programs refuse to read from the
: standard input.
I'd like to see
On 14-Sep-00 at 05:37, Poul-Henning Kamp ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> >You think adding a hack to every program to support "-" to mean
> >stdout/stdin is better?
>
> The majority of these programs could be handled by adding knowledge
> of "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3).
>
> At the same time
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 04:53:54PM -0400, Garrett Wollman wrote:
> (Probably easier, actually, but I don't know AWK well enough to
> actually implement it.)
awk -F: '$0 ~/^(#|$)/ {next}
{print "#define\tUID_" toupper($1) "\t" $3}' ${PASSWD} > ${.TARGET}
--
Jos Backus _/ _/_
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Warner Losh writes:
>In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> John Baldwin writes:
>: Warner Losh wrote:
>: > In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> John Baldwin writes:
>: > : It may be a kernel/world sync problem. Although I don't know why the ioctl
>: > : argument would suddenly
< It would only take a small amount of Makefile magic to fix
> this... something like:
> perl -ne 'split(/:/); print ("#define\tUID_", uc($_[0]), "\t", \
>$_[2], "\n");' ${PASSWD} >${.TARGET}
Oh, I forgot to point out -- this would be easy to do in AWK a
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Garrett Wollman writes:
: < said:
: > Hmmm, they look good to me. Maybe Mark's system doesn't have group
: > operator at gid 5. That's one bad thing about the new DEVFS: it
: > appears to enshrine things like this in the kernel...
:
: It would only take a small am
< said:
> Hmmm, they look good to me. Maybe Mark's system doesn't have group
> operator at gid 5. That's one bad thing about the new DEVFS: it
> appears to enshrine things like this in the kernel...
It would only take a small amount of Makefile magic to fix
this... something like:
PASSWD?=
At 11:48 AM +0200 9/14/00, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
>I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err}
>and /dev/fd is bogus. It looks like something which happened
>"because we can" more than something which has a legitimate need.
>
>If anything I would propose we ditch it...
I thi
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> John Baldwin writes:
: Warner Losh wrote:
: > In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> John Baldwin writes:
: > : It may be a kernel/world sync problem. Although I don't know why the ioctl
: > : argument would suddenly become invalid. Maybe it passes in a struct ucred,
: > :
Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> John Baldwin writes:
> : It may be a kernel/world sync problem. Although I don't know why the ioctl
> : argument would suddenly become invalid. Maybe it passes in a struct ucred,
> : which changed in size just before the SMPng commit?
>
> I do
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> John Baldwin writes:
: It may be a kernel/world sync problem. Although I don't know why the ioctl
: argument would suddenly become invalid. Maybe it passes in a struct ucred,
: which changed in size just before the SMPng commit?
I don't know either. However, it m
Hi,
I made KLD module of ip6_fw. Please review it.
http://www.imasy.or.jp/~ume/ipv6/FreeBSD/ip6_fw-kld-5C.diff for 5-CURRENT
http://www.imasy.or.jp/~ume/ipv6/FreeBSD/ip6_fw-kld-41R.diff for 4.1-RELEASE
Thanks,
--
Hajimu UMEMOTO @ Internet Mutual Aid Society Yokohama, Japan
[EMAIL PROTECT
Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mark Murray writes:
> : > In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Warner Losh wri
> : tes:
> : > : 2) APM is now broken. It worked after the ACPI integration,
> : > :but after the SMPNG stuff neither apm -z nor the BIOS keys
> : > :
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, John Baldwin wrote:
> Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> > In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Peter Pentchev writes
> >
> > I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err} and /dev/fd
> > is bogus. It looks like something which happened "because we can" more
> > than so
Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Peter Pentchev writes
> :
> >On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:12:10AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
> >> I've never thought of a use for fdescfs...
> >
> >Well.. just a trivial example - imagine a program which takes a filename
> >as an argument
Well, it's time I learned about the rather cryptic newbus stuff...
So where are the best docs to read on it.?
Ones that give an overview?
"UTSL" and "See man 9 {cryptic function name}" are not the
answers I'm looking for...
Someone once mentionned an actual
document but I've been unable to
Garrett Wollman wrote:
> [/dev/stdin] also helps when bogus programs refuse to read from the
> standard input.
Or if you want to read more than one file, one of which is standard input.
e.g.
gzip -dc oldlogs.*.gz | cat /dev/stdin todays-log | log-analyzer ...
Of course that will work with "-"
MIT's Technology Licensing Office has given me the OK to distribute
rsa_eay.c, so it will now be available from cvsup3.freebsd.org (aka
freebsd.lcs.mit.edu).
-GAWollman
--
Garrett A. Wollman | O Siem / We are all family / O Siem / We're all the same
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | O Siem / The fires of f
< said:
> I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err} and /dev/fd
> is bogus. It looks like something which happened "because we can" more
> than something which has a legitimate need.
It's required if we ever get around to supporting secure set-id shell
scripts. (I think th
I just realized this may be a difference due to a between -current and
-stable, so I've moved discussion to -current to check. Apologies if
this was the wrong thing to do.
On Wed, 13 Sep 2000, Mike Meyer wrote:
> It then fails to install for me with the error messages:
>
> /tmp/sv001.tmp/setup.b
Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err} and /dev/fd
> is bogus. It looks like something which happened "because we can" more
> than something which has a legitimate need.
I strongly disagree. I actually have a script that I use daily which requi
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Robert Withro
w writes:
>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>:- The majority of these programs could be handled by adding knowledge of
>:- "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3).
>
>Suppose I *want* a filename called "-"? My tough luck, huh?
./-
Very few programs understand
Poul-Henning Kamp writes:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Ben Smithurs
> t writes:
> >Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> >
> >> I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err} and /dev/fd
> >> is bogus. It looks like something which happened "because we can" more
> >> than something whic
Johnny Eriksson wrote:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> > :- The majority of these programs could be handled by adding knowledge of
> > :- "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3).
> >
> > Suppose I *want* a filename called "-"? My tough luck, huh?
>
> Could you settle for "./-"?
>
I think any "magic"
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> :- The majority of these programs could be handled by adding knowledge of
> :- "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3).
>
> Suppose I *want* a filename called "-"? My tough luck, huh?
Could you settle for "./-"?
> Robert Withrow -- (+1 978 288 8256)
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Title:
Mehr Effizienz
und Erfolg mit den besten Marketing-Praxis-Checklisten
Liebe Marketingverantwortliche
Stellen Sie sich vor, Sie müssten bis morgen um 10.00 Uhr ein
erfolgsversprechendes Messekonzept präsentieren.
Oder kreative Ideen für die nächste Direct-Mail-Aktion und bis
in
zw
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
:- The majority of these programs could be handled by adding knowledge of
:- "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3).
Suppose I *want* a filename called "-"? My tough luck, huh?
I *like* /dev/stdin. It's orthogonal!
--
Robert Withrow -- (+1 978 288 8256)
[EMAIL PROTECTE
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 02:37:06PM +0200, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
[snip]
> The majority of these programs could be handled by adding knowledge
> of "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3).
>
> At the same time I would really love if we implemented "|.*" to mean
> "do an popen(3)" instead.
Heh, and
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Ben Smithurs
t writes:
>Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
>
>> I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err} and /dev/fd
>> is bogus. It looks like something which happened "because we can" more
>> than something which has a legitimate need.
>
>You think ad
Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> I must admit that I think in general that /dev/std{in,out,err} and /dev/fd
> is bogus. It looks like something which happened "because we can" more
> than something which has a legitimate need.
You think adding a hack to every program to support "-" to mean
stdout/std
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Joel M. Baldwin wrote:
> okI give up!
>
> I've been getting this error for ages when doing a
> 'make depend' on the current tree and up to now
> I've just done a 'make -k' to get it to work.
>
> Whats the final solution so I don't have to do this?
>
> What stupid thing
Leif Neland wrote:
> How is that done?
> Will gdb not attach to init, or will init not let gdb attach?
The kernel won't let GDB attach. Look at the code for ptrace()...
/* can't trace init when securelevel > 0 */
if (securelevel > 0 && p->p_pid == 1)
On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 10:48:20AM -0400, Brian A. Seklecki - Stargate Industries, LLC
- NOC wrote:
> You're running vmware sucsessfully in --current?
Yes. -current from August 18th, and I'm running the vmware2-2.0.2.621 port.
Installing Win98 took about 4 hours though -- most of that was wh
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Peter Pentchev writes
:
>On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:12:10AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
>> I've never thought of a use for fdescfs...
>
>Well.. just a trivial example - imagine a program which takes a filename
>as an argument; imagine yourself trying to pipe somet
Hi ...
I'm running a current machine of 12 Sept although this problem
also occured on a current of a few days earlier ...
This only happens when using the IPv6 IPSec code during the day,
it is readily reproduceable.
If during the day I load the racoon daemon and load keys and
establish a IPSec
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:12:10AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
> I've never thought of a use for fdescfs...
Well.. just a trivial example - imagine a program which takes a filename
as an argument; imagine yourself trying to pipe something into it -
passing /dev/fd/0 as a filename to process wou
I've never thought of a use for fdescfs...
--
__--_|\ Julian Elischer
/ \ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
( OZ) World tour 2000
---> X_.---._/ presently in: Perth
v
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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okI give up!
I've been getting this error for ages when doing a
'make depend' on the current tree and up to now
I've just done a 'make -k' to get it to work.
Whats the final solution so I don't have to do this?
What stupid thing have I missed somewhere along the line.
===> gnu/usr.bin/per
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