On Tue, Feb 18, 2003 at 08:55:03AM +0100, Pierrick Brossin wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I saw many stuff about acpi in dmesg since I changed to 5.0
> So I assume it's newer than APM.
>
> # man zzz
>
> --
> APM(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual APM(8)
>
> NAME
> apm, z
Hi!
I saw many stuff about acpi in dmesg since I changed to 5.0
So I assume it's newer than APM.
# man zzz
--
APM(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual APM(8)
NAME
apm, zzz - control the APM BIOS and display its information
[..]
--
How do I make my laptop sus
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Darren Pilgrim writes:
>I can understand the usefulness of preventing modifications applying to
>mounted partitions, and I can see the logic in unliaterally preventing
>them, but preventing modifying slice table and disk label entries for
>unmounted portions of t
Hi everyone,
Just cvsuped from RELENG_5_0 to CURRENT and now the system panics when I
try to log in to gnome. It's a different process every time, but it
seems to be things that use file locks (my home dir is NFS mounted).
NFS access by programs that don't acquire locks seems to work okay.
Here
Hi
I turned softupdates back on recently. This panic is very repeatable:
turn off the computer without shutting down. It panics shortly
after the background fsck starts. The kernel and world are recent
and in sync:
[brane-dead] ~ # uname -a
FreeBSD brane-dead.digs.iafrica.com 5.0-CURRENT FreeB
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Terry Lambert wrote:
> First, I just have a slight editorial comment, about cheating on
> Polygraph.
Terry,
This is not the place to start a long discussion about our
Polygraph testing methodology, but I have to say, with all due
respect, that many of your statements
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 04:03:13PM -0500, Alexander Kabaev wrote:
> Just committed /usr/src/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c v1.76 should fix that.
>
> --
> Alexander Kabaev
Thank you Alexander, this solved the uic problem.
Regards,
Jiawei Ye
--
"Without the userland, the kernel is useless."
hi:
I figured since raidframe was in FreeBSD, it would be a good chance to
try it. I've already used vinum and ccd. I run it in Vmware. I
remember seeing that raidframe is still work in progress. Maybe
something is wrong with my setup. Or maybe it's broken ATM and I
should give it a shot later.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Joerg Wunsch writes:
Darren Pilgrim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The above practices have worked fine for a long time in 4.x and still do
even in 4.7p4, which is on this same machine.
Get Matthew N. Dodd's patch at:
ftp://ftp.jurai.net
On 2003-02-18 00:02, Wiktor Niesiobedzki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 11:47:32PM +0100, Wiktor Niesiobedzki wrote:
> There is an obvious mistake in patch (or change in ip_fw2.c should
> be considered).
> [...]
> --- sys/kern/uipc_socket.c 2003/02/17 22:37:58 1.144
>
Did anyone experience SMP kernel crashed at reboot?
On my Tyan Tiger 230T motherboard, when I type "reboot",
it crashed very often, typically after it printed
"Waiting (max 60 seconds) for system process `vnlru' to stop...".
David Xu
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubs
On Tue Feb 18, 2003 at 12:19:35AM +, Bruce Cran wrote:
>
> ACPI power management on Asus motherboards with the VIA chipset seems to
> be quite broken. On my A7V333 I can use mode 1 (CPU off), 2 and 3
> report AE_NOT_FOUND and 4 dumps the cpu registers, while power-off on
> shutdown reports an
Thus spake David Leimbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I have been looking into helping with the C99 conformance stuff and I wondered if
>the
> following would be helpful?
>
> http://posixtest.sourceforge.net/
>
> I am sure some of you knew about this... I guess I wonder if a link on the C99 web
>pa
Thus spake Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/libstdc++.so: undefined reference to `fabsl'
> *** Error code 1
>
> Our libm doesn't seem to support long double at all, yet our libstdc++
> requires long double support. It seems to correctly detect the
> absence
Thus spake Jacques A. Vidrine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 04:40:48PM +1100, Tim Robbins wrote:
> > I disagree. It's safe to use rand() in games and in certain kinds of
> > simulations when you don't care that the distribution isn't quite
> > uniform,
>
> Safe, maybe. But I thin
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Aaron Wohl wrote:
> In 4.7 I found pkg_version -c usefull to get a list of commands to update
> /usr/ports. I noticed -c was removed in 5.0... what replaced it? How do
> folks keep thier /usr/ports up to date now.
/usr/ports/sysutils/portupgrade works very nicely. Just upgr
In 4.7 I found pkg_version -c usefull to get a list of commands to update
/usr/ports. I noticed -c was removed in 5.0... what replaced it? How do
folks keep thier /usr/ports up to date now.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the messag
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 06:03:08PM -0500, The Anarcat wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I've been experimenting quite a bit with the new ACPI stuff from
> 5.0-release. I can reliably hang my box using acpiconf -s 3, both from
> X and the console. In X, upon wakeup, the screen is trashed with color
> strips. In
Howdy all,
I have a situation on my FreeBSD 5.0-CURRENT #7: Thu Jan 23 14:12:15 CST 2003 box.
After the box has been up for approx 15 days with X running, X suddenly 'freezes' and
the
root window becomes corrupt (looks distorted and getting eaten away). I can swtich to
the
Virtual Console and ba
Christian Gusenbauer wrote:
Hello!
Using a kernel from last friday, I'm not able to get /dev/smb
working. I've added these options to my kernel config:
device smbus device intpm device alpm
device ichsmb device viapm device amdpm
device
Hello!
I've been experimenting quite a bit with the new ACPI stuff from
5.0-release. I can reliably hang my box using acpiconf -s 3, both from
X and the console. In X, upon wakeup, the screen is trashed with color
strips. In the console, I can actually get some interaction back, but
the whole thin
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 11:47:32PM +0100, Wiktor Niesiobedzki wrote:
[...]
There is an obvious mistake in patch (or change in ip_fw2.c should
be considered).
Cheers,
Wiktor Niesiobedzki
===
RCS file: sys/kern/uipc_socket.c,v
retri
Hi,
During my firewall configuration I noticed strange behaviour of ipfw option
uid.
ip_fw2.c:1513
#if __FreeBSD_version < 500034
#define socheckuid(a,b) ((a)->so_cred->cr_uid == (b))
#endif
if (cmd->opcode == O_UID) {
match =
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Joerg Wunsch writes:
>Darren Pilgrim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> The above practices have worked fine for a long time in 4.x and still do
>> even in 4.7p4, which is on this same machine.
>
>Get Matthew N. Dodd's patch at:
>
>ftp://ftp.jurai.net/users/winter/patc
Darren Pilgrim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The above practices have worked fine for a long time in 4.x and still do
> even in 4.7p4, which is on this same machine.
Get Matthew N. Dodd's patch at:
ftp://ftp.jurai.net/users/winter/patches/geom-foot.patch
(Hint: sysctl kern.geom.allow_foot_shoot
"Matthew N. Dodd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My only outstanding issue is that I can't suspend if an application
> is holding /dev/dsp or /dev/audio open.
Can you suspend from within graphics mode? I can't seem to do that,
neither with APM nor with ACPI. In some case, i've seen four
horizonta
>
> Can you explain how fuswintr() and suswintr() work on sparc64's? They
> seem to cause traps if the user counter is not mapped, and I can't see
> where the traps are handled. ia64/trap.c has a comment about where these
> traps are handled, but has dummies for fuswintr() and suswintr() so the
On Sun, 16 Feb 2003, Julian Elischer wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Bruce Evans wrote:
>
> > On Sun, 16 Feb 2003, Julian Elischer wrote:
> >
> > > In addupc_intr, if the increment cannot be done immediatly, the addres
> > > to increment the count for is stored and the increment is done later at
> >
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Jake Burkholder wrote:
> Apparently, On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 05:35:09PM +1100,
> Bruce Evans said words to the effect of;
> > ... Also, ast() doesn't
> > have access to the frame, and there is no macro like CLKF_PC() for
> > general frames. This probably doesn't matter
On 2003-02-17 11:47, "Paul A. Mayer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There were some ATA complaints, (don't recall exactly what though it
> was clear that there were read errors), when attempting to boot the
> system off the HD.
Were they "fsbn" errors? The disk that caused the following in my
/var/
Just committed /usr/src/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c v1.76 should fix that.
--
Alexander Kabaev
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
even with this configuration (see below) in place (with no application to
catch the diverted packets), I can still pass packets through that should
match the divert rule. If I change the divert rule to:
00150 divert ip from any to any
then I can still send and receive packets through the b
I'm running 5.0-p1, cvsupped yesterday. I've just gone back to
5.0-RELEASE from -CURRENT because I found applications had started
crashing quite a lot. I rebuilt the world, kernel and all my applications. Because
I could do with the disk space back from the src, doc and ports
directories, I sta
--En cette belle journée du lundi 17 février 2003 12:11 -0700
-- "M. Warner Losh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> écrivait :
| In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
| Mathieu Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
| : This does not answer to the question :)
|
| p4 changes -m 10
| Change 25340 on 2003/02/
Dag-Erling Smorgrav writes:
> Andrew Gallatin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > You might be able to get some idea of what's happening by enabling KTR
> > and tracing everything, then dumping the trace buffer at your
> > breakpoint.
>
> Of course, the KTR-enabled kernel fails to crash.
>
>
Jonathan Lemon wrote:
> In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]> you write:
> >Alex Rousskov wrote:
> >One issue I have with Polygraph is that it intentionally works
> >for a very long time to get worst case performance out of caches;
> >basically, it cache-busts on purpose. Then the test runs. This
> >seem
Andrew Gallatin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You might be able to get some idea of what's happening by enabling KTR
> and tracing everything, then dumping the trace buffer at your
> breakpoint.
Of course, the KTR-enabled kernel fails to crash.
*sigh*
but I bet it'll segfault like nobody's busin
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Mathieu Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: This does not answer to the question :)
p4 changes -m 10
Change 25340 on 2003/02/17 by importer@updater 'Import at Mon Feb 17 11:05:36 P'
...
importer is the magic behind the scenes.
Warner
To Unsubscribe:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]> you write:
>Alex Rousskov wrote:
>One issue I have with Polygraph is that it intentionally works
>for a very long time to get worst case performance out of caches;
>basically, it cache-busts on purpose. Then the test runs. This
>seems to be an editorial comment on en
Hello!
Using a kernel from last friday, I'm not able to get /dev/smb working. I've
added these options to my kernel config:
device smbus
device intpm
device alpm
device ichsmb
device viapm
device amdpm
device nfpm
device smb
Andrew Gallatin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You might be able to get some idea of what's happening by enabling KTR
> and tracing everything, then dumping the trace buffer at your
> breakpoint.
Hmm, how do I dump the KTR buffer from DDB? I've done it before, but
it's ages ago and I don't remembe
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "M. Warner Losh" writes:
>In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>: In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "M. Warner Losh" writes:
>: >In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>: >Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>: >: Taka
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: "M. Warner Losh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: > In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: > Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: > : So you're duplicating a large amount of existing, work
"M. Warner Losh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> : So you're duplicating a large amount of existing, working code just so
> : you can avoid answering questions from confused users? Or are there
> : any ac
Alex Rousskov wrote:
> Polygraph is relatively easy to setup on FreeBSD for standard tests,
> using two PCs. Testing with more PCs, with non-standard workloads,
> and/or on a regular basis requires writing scripts and can get pretty
> evolved (which let's us sell a pre-configured appliance that doe
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
: In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "M. Warner Losh" writes:
: >In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: >Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: >: Takahashi Yoshihiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: >: > I have had s
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Takahashi Yoshihiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: Peter Wemm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
:
: > I can understand if you do not like to call your cbus hardware "ISA"
: > devices, but also consider that on most pc-at hardwar
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "M. Warner Losh" writes:
>In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>: Takahashi Yoshihiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>: > I have had some questions like "Does PC98 have ISA bus?" or "Why PC98
>: > uses ISA driver?"
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: Takahashi Yoshihiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: > I have had some questions like "Does PC98 have ISA bus?" or "Why PC98
: > uses ISA driver?". To clear these questions and problems, I think
: > that add
I have been looking into helping with the C99 conformance stuff and I wondered if the
following would be helpful?
http://posixtest.sourceforge.net/
I am sure some of you knew about this... I guess I wonder if a link on the C99 web page
is appropriate under resources and links.
Also in my attemp
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
> >Hi,
> >
> >It seems that disklabel is currently broken on -current. In `read' mode it
> >reports incorrect information about disk layout:
>
> Don't use the "-r" option and you will be ok.
Thank you Poul for you
On Thu, Feb 13, 2003 at 04:36:20PM -0800, Scott Long wrote the words in effect of:
> - Benchmarks and performance testing - Having a source of reliable and
>useful benchmarks is essential to identifying performance problems
>and guarding against performance regressions. A 'performance tea
Hi,
This is a simple proposal to add support for NT MD4 password hashes to
crypt(3).
NT MD4 password hashes are more insecure than the standard FreeBSD MD5
based password crypt or the much more stronger blowfish based
encryption. Why are you/we so nut to use NT password hashes? The answer
is v
> Maybe it's ok, do you know whether stg/ncv kernel modules work as they
> should be?
ticso> No - I just can say that they got build on my system.
ticso> I can't test either, because I don't have such cards.
Ah, ok, thank you. Anybody in this list knows?
-- -
Makoto `MAR' Matsushita
To Unsubs
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 11:37:11PM +0900, Makoto Matsushita wrote:
>
> ticso> What about some uncommon ISA scsi controllers like stg and ncv?
> ticso> Both are available as a module.
>
> Maybe it's ok, do you know whether stg/ncv kernel modules work as they
> should be?
No - I just can say that
c++ -O2 -pipe -fno-builtin -march=k6-2 -g -I/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/gperf/../../
../contrib/gperf/lib -I/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/gperf -o gperf bool-array.o gen-per
f.o hash-table.o iterator.o key-list.o list-node.o main.o new.o options.o read-l
ine.o trace.o vectors.o version.o hash.o getopt.o getopt
OK, after the weekend I'm here again.
Those are the contents of my configuration files:
1) /etc/exports
/localhome -maproot=0beta
2) /etc/fstab
/dev/ad0s1b noneswapsw 0 0
/dev/ad0s1a / ufs rw 1 1
/de
We (at least, I) don't know exactly that which options and/or drivers
can be picked out from the kernel for kern.flp... maybe it's chance to
find out all of them.
jhay> What about moving the slip driver (sl) to the drivers floppy? I know its
jhay> not much, but it is enough to make things fit on
ticso> What about some uncommon ISA scsi controllers like stg and ncv?
ticso> Both are available as a module.
Maybe it's ok, do you know whether stg/ncv kernel modules work as they
should be?
-- -
Makoto `MAR' Matsushita
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-c
Dag-Erling Smorgrav writes:
> Andrew Gallatin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Can you look at the registers and match $ra with a line number using
> > addr2line or gdb? (sorry, forgot if ddb can even look at registers)
>
> Uh, I know *where* it stops since I added the call to Debugger() in
Andrew Gallatin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Can you look at the registers and match $ra with a line number using
> addr2line or gdb? (sorry, forgot if ddb can even look at registers)
Uh, I know *where* it stops since I added the call to Debugger() in
the first place. The problem is figuring ou
Dag-Erling Smorgrav writes:
> Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Any suggestions as to how I can figure out who used that block of
> > memory before it was allocated to the ess driver?
>
> I threw in a call to Debugger(), but...
>
> mtrash_dtor(0xfc7b6000, 8192, 0
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dag-Erling Smorgrav writes:
> > Then how are we supposed to initialize devices which don't already
> > have a label?
> That is the only valid use of "-r", and it should be implicit in that case.
Thanks for the clarfication; I thought you
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dag-Erling Smorgrav writes:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
>> > It seems that disklabel is currently broken on -current. In `read' mode it
>> > reports incorrect information about disk layout:
>> Don't use the "-r"
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
> > It seems that disklabel is currently broken on -current. In `read' mode it
> > reports incorrect information about disk layout:
> Don't use the "-r" option and you will be ok.
Then how are we supposed to initiali
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
>Hi,
>
>It seems that disklabel is currently broken on -current. In `read' mode it
>reports incorrect information about disk layout:
Don't use the "-r" option and you will be ok.
Poul-Henning
>root@notebook# disklabel -r ad0s1
--
Poul-Henni
Dag-Erling Smorgrav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Any suggestions as to how I can figure out who used that block of
> memory before it was allocated to the ess driver?
I threw in a call to Debugger(), but...
mtrash_dtor(0xfc7b6000, 8192, 0)
here's the culprit!
Stopped at 0xfc
OK, I've played around with my kernel trying to figure out what causes
this. The one thing I know is that it disappears if I leave pcm out
of my kernel, but I don't think pcm is the culprit. Since the address
at fault is constant, I've added code to mtrash_[cd]tor() which calls
db_print_backtrace
Hi,
It seems that disklabel is currently broken on -current. In `read' mode it
reports incorrect information about disk layout:
root@notebook# disklabel -r ad0s1
# /dev/ad0s1c:
type: unknown
disk: amnesiac
label:
flags:
bytes/sector: 512
sectors/track: 63
tracks/cylinder: 240
sectors/cylinder: 15
Bernd Walter wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 16, 2003 at 11:20:13PM +1100, Alastair D'Silva wrote:
> > I've had a weird problem since installing 5-CURRENT on my gateway,
> > traffic originating from the gateway is fine, as is UDP from the
> > unregistered network behind it, however, TCP traffic from the
> > u
Makoto Matsushita wrote:
> riccardo> Is this stuff really needed on a boot floppy? Maybe we can leave
> riccardo> only I486_CPU? What about removing also device eisa and/or bpf?
> riccardo> (I'm just curious, don't expect to be an expert :-)
>
> The bpf is required for DHCP client. We cannot r
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 04:40:48PM +1100, Tim Robbins wrote:
> I disagree. It's safe to use rand() in games and in certain kinds of
> simulations when you don't care that the distribution isn't quite
> uniform,
Safe, maybe. But I think it still shouldn't be used.
See my posting of two years ago:
* Hajimu UMEMOTO <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-02-08 00:29 +0900]:
> > On Thu, 6 Feb 2003 19:33:10 -0500
> > David Rhodus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> david> On one machine that rsync start's on, I get this from netstat.
> david> tcp6 0 0 *.873 *.*
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 17:39:55 +1100, Tim Robbins wrote:
> > variant (which generates bad quality ones), the only problem remains is
> > first value monotonically increased with the seed.
>
> Here's an interesting picture of that: http://people.freebsd.org/~tjr/rand.gif
>
Nothing surprising h
Le 2003-02-16, Chris BeHanna écrivait :
> Do you use cvs2p4? How about going in the other direction (from your
> local branches back to the trunk?)
VCP is also a nice solution for moving changes across CVS and Perforce
repositories. I use it to update a read-only CVS pserver view of a
project th
A busy day, saw myself, jon and Jeff working on varous tasks.
We have the meat of signal delivey to threads in place (work by Jon and
Jeff) though there may be soem corner cases to work out.
We ahve also reapplied David Xu's patches (with soem minor exceptions
in the profiling code that I amstill
There were some ATA complaints, (don't recall exactly what though it was
clear that there were read errors), when attempting to boot the system
off the HD. I don't recall "medium error" there, and have not seen it
in fsck_ffs booted from the live cd. The sector numbers I'm seeing seem
to be i
Thus spake Paul A. Mayer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I'm presently running fsck_ffs from a live cd. It fsck'ed / with some
> complaints about an unreadable sector. It's now on /var and reporting
> vast, vast numbers of sectors as unreadable, with "UNEXPECTED SOFT
> UPDATE INCONSISTENCY". I've not
Hi,
Makoto Matsushita schrieb:
Note that both devices cannot load as a kernel module at this time;
removing these devices means that we cannot use them for installation.
what about moving legacy drivers (like EISA) to a kern_legacy.flp?
bye,
--
--- -
On Sun, Feb 16, 2003 at 09:05:49PM +0100, Hartmann, O. wrote:
>
> Hello.
>
> My question is very simple.
>
> Does FreeBSD, either 4.7/4.8 or 5.0 support SecureRPC, especially SecureNFS?
> I found the keyserv facility, installed the databases and read some note
> in mknetid(8):
>
> -n netid_file
H. I think that my 5.0R installation has self destructed.
Background:
* 60GB toshiba disk with two active OS partitions (win2k, freebsd)
booted with ranish
* Freebsd partition has 4 slices, swap (ca. 2GB), root (250MB), var
(250MB), usr (ca. 6GB), other msdosfs partitions are occassionally
On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 06:42:45PM +0900, Makoto Matsushita wrote:
>
> riccardo> Is this stuff really needed on a boot floppy? Maybe we can leave
> riccardo> only I486_CPU? What about removing also device eisa and/or bpf?
> riccardo> (I'm just curious, don't expect to be an expert :-)
>
> The
On Sun, Feb 16, 2003 at 11:20:13PM +1100, Alastair D'Silva wrote:
> I've had a weird problem since installing 5-CURRENT on my gateway,
> traffic originating from the gateway is fine, as is UDP from the
> unregistered network behind it, however, TCP traffic from the
> unregistered network is dropped
riccardo> Is this stuff really needed on a boot floppy? Maybe we can leave
riccardo> only I486_CPU? What about removing also device eisa and/or bpf?
riccardo> (I'm just curious, don't expect to be an expert :-)
The bpf is required for DHCP client. We cannot remove it, or cannot
network instal
Gang,
I got the following on my -current machine (recompiled around 23:00 PST)
with my home-directory across NFS and gnome2 busy filling memory when
logging in. The previous kernel had the extra protection before starting
init(8). Related? :-)
athlon% sudo more info.0
Good dump found on device /
On Sun, Feb 16, 2003 at 09:03:59PM +0900, Makoto Matsushita wrote:
> If you are serious about this, attached below is a current kernel
> configuration file for kern.flp kernel named BOOTMFS (attention: it is
> only just for boot floppy, not GENERIC nor default installed kernel).
> machine i
Takahashi Yoshihiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have had some questions like "Does PC98 have ISA bus?" or "Why PC98
> uses ISA driver?". To clear these questions and problems, I think
> that adding separated cbus driver is better way.
So you're duplicating a large amount of existing, working
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dag-Erling Smorgrav writes:
>The clock on my ASUS P5A still runs at double speed unless I have
>debug.acpi.disable="timer" in loader.conf (as it has for as long as
>we've had ACPI support). Do any ACPI wizards have any suggestions as
>to how I could track down the c
oh yeah I also tried line 2319 as lduw as well (my guess)
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Julian Elischer wrote:
>
> anyone have an answer?
> Index: sparc64/sparc64/exception.S
> ===
> RCS file: /home/ncvs/src/sys/sparc64/sparc64/exception.S
anyone have an answer?
Index: sparc64/sparc64/exception.S
===
RCS file: /home/ncvs/src/sys/sparc64/sparc64/exception.S,v
retrieving revision 1.59
diff -u -r1.59 exception.S
--- sparc64/sparc64/exception.S 26 Jan 2003 03:38:30 -
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Takahashi Yoshihiro wrote:
> These are completely different. All PC-98 machines don't have "ISA"
> devices and buses at all, but a little old PC-AT machines have "ISA"
> buses. And, even if the PC-AT machine does not have "ISA" buses, it has
> "PCI-ISA" bridge.
This is seman
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Peter Wemm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I can understand if you do not like to call your cbus hardware "ISA"
> devices, but also consider that on most pc-at hardware there are no "ISA"
> devices either.
These are completely different. All PC-98 machines don't have
92 matches
Mail list logo