On today's build, got the following:
cc -O -pipe -DLIBC_RCS -DSYSLIBC_RCS -I/usr/src/lib/libc/include
-I/usr/src/lib/libc/../../include -DLIBC_MAJOR=5 -D__DBINTERFACE_PRIVATE
-DINET6 -I/usr/obj/usr/src/lib/libc -DPOSIX_MISTAKE
-I/usr/src/lib/libc/../libc/locale -DBROKEN_DES -DPORTMAP -DDES_BU
On Wed, Sep 05, 2001 at 11:21:06PM -0400, Mike Barcroft wrote:
> I think it can safely be said that you're rebooting too much. The
> process can be simplified to:
> make world
> make kernel
> mergemaster
> reboot
For -current I would suggest a slight modification to this -- to make
sure everythi
At Wed, 5 Sep 2001 15:50:31 -0700,
Steve Kargl wrote:
>
> Linux netscape appears to be having problems with
> the kernel's linux compatibility module.
>
> troutmask:kargl[202] uname -a
> FreeBSD troutmask.apl.washington.edu 5.0-CURRENT FreeBSD 5.0-CURRENT\
> #0: Fri Jul 27 16:04:55 PDT 2001
>
>
Hi
I just updated my source tree from a fresh install
then i tried to make world and got the following error:
sh /usr/src/tools/install.sh -c -s -o root -g wheel -m 555 config
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/sbin
cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/kbdcontrol; make obj; make depend; make all; make
install
/
Known issue.
The problematic file has been temporarily unconnected from build.
On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 12:16:01AM -0800, Beech Rintoul wrote:
> On today's build, got the following:
>
> cc -O -pipe -DLIBC_RCS -DSYSLIBC_RCS -I/usr/src/lib/libc/include
> -I/usr/src/lib/libc/../../include -DLIBC_M
Jordan Hubbard wrote:
> Are you guys on crack? Scheme is just a dialect of LISP, where "LISP"
> could also just as easily be any one of MacLisp, InterLisp, Franz
> Lisp, Common Lisp or one of many other possibilities. The very
> acronym lacks specific meaning without an additional qualifier.
>
On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 12:43:59PM +0900, Katsushi Kobayashi wrote:
> I believe the name iLink is not popular in outside of Japan.
AFAIK that is Sony's name for it.
Mark
--
Mark Santcroos RIPE Network Coordination Centre
http://www.ripe.net/home/mark/ New Pr
As reported in this list by several people, you may be seeing that
your PS/2 mouse is not detected after the recent ACPI update.
This seems to be caused by ACPI in some BIOS assigns IRQ 12 (mouse
interrupt) to both the PS/2 mouse device node and the system reserved
resource node.
To see if this
On Wed, Sep 05, 2001 at 11:51:07AM -0400, Jonathan Chen wrote:
> A complete dmesg from a verbose boot with both the successful and failed
> attempts would be a good start. It would also be useful to know what card
> you're using.
The card is a Lucent wavelan. I haven't tried this with another
On Wed, 5 Sep 2001, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "David O'Brien" writes:
> >>
> >> Use DEVFS and it will work.
> >
> >Then it needs to be backed out. This is the first thing that does not
> >work w/NODEVFS and I don't believe the Project has agreed that absolutly
>
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Bruce Evans writes:
>This was decreed but not agreed to. I don't use devfs and don't plan
>to use it until it works at least as well as specfs (if this is
>possible). I have noticed about 10 minor bugs in it despite only running
>it to test it every 6 months or s
This commit breaks the build of amd:
> obrien 2001/09/05 09:54:21 PDT
>
> Modified files:
> usr.sbin/amd Makefile.inc
> usr.sbin/amd/include newvers.sh
> Log:
> Try to determine the OS version and architecture for what is being built
> vs. the building machine.
>
>
On Thu, 6 Sep 2001, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Bruce Evans writes:
> >This was decreed but not agreed to. I don't use devfs and don't plan
> >to use it until it works at least as well as specfs (if this is
> >possible). I have noticed about 10 minor bugs in it de
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Jim Bryant writes:
: I doubt if the bootloader will ever change from FORTH, but if it
: does, I suggest LISP as the preferred choice on a short-list of
: potential replacements.
It would make it very cool junior kernel hacker task to use lisp in
the boot loader...
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Toshihiko
ARAI-san writes:
: By the way, alias of firewire was i.LINK and IEEE1394, but the FreeBSD
: people selected it as firewire?
"FreeBSD" hasn't selected a name, but lots of folks here call it
firewire. I'd be strongly inclined to use the same name that NetB
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mark Santcroos writes:
: On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 12:43:59PM +0900, Katsushi Kobayashi wrote:
: > I believe the name iLink is not popular in outside of Japan.
:
: AFAIK that is Sony's name for it.
IT is. Firewire is Apple's name.
Warner
To Unsubscribe: send mail
Thanks Yokota-san for tracking down the problem.
> As reported in this list by several people, you may be seeing that
> your PS/2 mouse is not detected after the recent ACPI update.
>
> This seems to be caused by ACPI in some BIOS assigns IRQ 12 (mouse
> interrupt) to both the PS/2 mouse device
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
you write:
>In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Jim Bryant writes:
>: I doubt if the bootloader will ever change from FORTH, but if it
>: does, I suggest LISP as the preferred choice on a short-list of
>: potential replacements.
>
>It would make it very cool junior kernel
On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 09:55:17AM -0600, Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mark Santcroos writes:
> : On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 12:43:59PM +0900, Katsushi Kobayashi wrote:
> : > I believe the name iLink is not popular in outside of Japan.
> :
> : AFAIK that is Sony's name for it.
> > $ size scheme
> >textdata bss dec hex filename
> > 6134244763480 69298 10eb2 scheme
>
> Is that statically-linked? I'm curious to know the size of the bootloader
> forth footprint. The loader is about 150k, so I'm sure you could probably
> fit a nice Schem
On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 04:58:28PM +0200, Harti Brandt wrote:
> It happens to work if I build amd in /usr/src. If I have /usr/obj/...
You can guess how I tested it... ;-)
My reference box's build failed last night in libc. I'm updating it now
so I can fix this.
--
-- David ([EMAIL PROTECTED]
[Moved to -current, BCC'd to -hackers]
Eugene L. Vorokov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello,
>
> I updated from -current yesterday, ran "make world; make kernel KERNCONF=X"
> and went to bed. When I rebooted with fresh kernel this morning, I noticed
> something strange:
>
> vel@bugz:/usr/src #
+ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Warner Losh wrote:
> : By the way, alias of firewire was i.LINK and IEEE1394, but the FreeBSD
> : people selected it as firewire?
> "FreeBSD" hasn't selected a name, but lots of folks here call it
> firewire. I'd be strongly inclined to use the same name that NetBSD
> use
On Thu, 6 Sep 2001, Jonathan Lemon wrote:
>>It would make it very cool junior kernel hacker task to use lisp in
>>the boot loader...
>Seriously now, don't we have better things to spend our time and
>energies on than re-implementing code that already works?
But, if we rewrite the bootloader in
On 06-Sep-01 Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 05, 2001 at 02:47:28PM -0700, John Baldwin wrote:
>>
>> Yes, you can trace indiviudal processes though, using 'trace ', and I'm
>> more curious about the traces of the Mozilla processes.
>
> Ok, here it is:
>
> db> ps
> pid proc addr
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Toshihiko ARAI writes:
: > : By the way, alias of firewire was i.LINK and IEEE1394, but the FreeBSD
: > : people selected it as firewire?
:
: > "FreeBSD" hasn't selected a name, but lots of folks here call it
: > firewire. I'd be strongly inclined to use the same n
Hmm ..
thought i should update my current machine 2 hours ago, cvs´d a tree, made
and installed it. Reboot. Got:
Sep 6 21:33:48 bert postfix[15838]: fatal: could not find any active network
interfaces
With the previous binary, a 4.3 CD binary, a then newly compiled postfix and
postfix-curren
On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 04:05:16PM +0200, Nick Martens wrote:
> I just updated my source tree from a fresh install
> then i tried to make world and got the following error:
>
> sh /usr/src/tools/install.sh -c -s -o root -g wheel -m 555 config
> /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/sbin
> cd /usr/src/usr
From: Hellmuth Michaelis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: postfix fails to start
Date: Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 09:46:15PM +0200
> Hmm ..
>
> thought i should update my current machine 2 hours ago, cvs´d a tree, made
> and installed it. Reboot. Got:
>
> Sep 6 21:33:48 bert postfix[15838]: fatal: coul
On Thu, 6 Sep 2001 21:46:15 +0200 (METDST), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Hellmuth Michaelis) said:
> Sep 6 21:33:48 bert postfix[15838]: fatal: could not find any
> active network interfaces
I'm having a similar experience here.
--
Michael D. Harnois bilocational bivocational
On Fri, 7 Sep 2001 03:49:38 +0300, Giorgos Keramidas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> ifconfig output please ?
On the bad kernel, an ifconfig shows that the network card for my
outside interface has an ipaddr of 0.0.0.0. When I try to run dhclient
manually on the interface it says "dc0: not found
Hi,
I'm in the middle of trying to debug a java problem
and have found something I don't quite understand.
Basically, __getcwd() is returning errno 20, Not
a directory. man getcwd doesn't list ENOTDIR so I
started looking in the sources and found kern/vfs_cache.c:
if (vp-
Hi...
I am trying to build net-snmp port on -CURRENT but don't have enough luck
with it.
Here's the error message on my system:
--
cc -DINET6 -O -pipe -march=pentiumpro -Dfreebsd5 -I. -I../.. -I. -I./../..
-I./../../snmplib -I./.. -I.. -c host/hr_storage.c -fPIC -DPIC -o
host/.libs/hr_storage.l
From the keyboard of Giorgos Keramidas:
> Hmm ..
>
> thought i should update my current machine 2 hours ago, cvs´d a tree, made
> and installed it. Reboot. Got:
>
> Sep 6 21:33:48 bert postfix[15838]: fatal: could not find any active network
interfaces
>ifconfig output please ?
Nothing has
You are not supposed to call __getcwd() directly.
Poul-Henning
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "John W. De Boskey" writes:
>Hi,
>
> I'm in the middle of trying to debug a java problem
>and have found something I don't quite understand.
>
> Basically, __getcwd() is returning errno 20, Not
>a
From the keyboard of Hellmuth Michaelis:
> From the keyboard of Giorgos Keramidas:
>
> > Hmm ..
> >
> > thought i should update my current machine 2 hours ago, cvs´d a tree, made
> > and installed it. Reboot. Got:
> >
> > Sep 6 21:33:48 bert postfix[15838]: fatal: could not find any active ne
Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
>
> You are not supposed to call __getcwd() directly.
Yes, but it would be an excellent junior-kernel-hacker task to make it work
in all cases, ie: manually searching parent directories. netbsd does this,
as does linux, and if we're going to emulate the linux getcwd(2)
"John W. De Boskey" wrote:
>The really annoying aspect to this is that it doesn't
> happen everytime, and happens more often when in a nfs
> mounted directory vs. a local directory.
Yes, this is expected due to __getcwd(2) being incomplete.
NFS expires the directory nodes after about 10 min
On 07-Sep-01 Julian Elischer wrote:
>
> Here is a hack to remove the 20 or so warning messages from if_ie.c
>
> Most of them are due to the supply of volatile pointers to bcopy and
> bzero.
>
> I do the following to produce macros that call bzero and bcopy, but
> don't produce
> warning messa
Actually I just discoverd that you can do:
int function (volatile const *);
(I guess you say you will not writ eto it, but that it may change of its
own volition at times)
anyhow setting this in bcopy would remove a heck of a lot of warnings
in the kernel.
On Thu, 6 Sep 2001, John Baldwin wrot
I've just updated the ACPI CA components to the latest Intel release.
You can read the release notes on Intel's website
(http://developer.intel.com/technology/iapc/acpi).
In addition, I've changed the default ACPI initialisation to the full,
recommended-by-the-standard set of passes over the na
* Mike Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [010906 22:57] wrote:
>
> I've just updated the ACPI CA components to the latest Intel release.
> You can read the release notes on Intel's website
> (http://developer.intel.com/technology/iapc/acpi).
>
> In addition, I've changed the default ACPI initialisation
> > Outstanding issues:
> >
> > - The ACPI timecounter does not work on some ALi chipsets.
> > - ACPI mode results in some PCI devices not being configured
> >by the BIOS.
>
> Any chance this will fix the problem with sound (pcm) that I
> mailed you about earlier?
I don't think so; I'm fa
Terry Lambert wrote:
>
> > unknown: can't assign resources
> > unknown: at port 0x378-0x37f on isa0
> > unknown: can't assign resources
> > unknown: at port 0x3f8-0x3ff on isa0
> > unknown: can't assign resources
> > unknown: at port 0x2f8-0x2ff on isa0
> > unknown: can't assign resourc
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]> you
write:
>Hi...
>
>I am trying to build net-snmp port on -CURRENT but don't have enough luck
>with it.
>Here's the error message on my system:
>
>--
>cc -DINET6 -O -pipe -march=pentiumpro -Dfreebsd5 -I. -I../.. -I. -I./../..
>-I./../../snmplib -I./.. -I.. -c host/h
Pete Carah wrote:
> > Known problem... see the -current archives.
It *is* a known problem.
> > You are attaching twice: once because of ACPI, and again
> > because of the "hints". You need to comment the entries
> > out of your hints file to make them not get attached twice.
It's just not thi
The new acpi version apparently fixed my panic (I didn't change any
other configs, and things now boot, apparently correctly, on the A7V
board.) (and it keeps time right :-)
--
Copyright (c) 1992-2001 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 199
It seems Mike Smith wrote:
>
> Outstanding issues:
>
> - The ACPI timecounter does not work on some ALi chipsets.
> - ACPI mode results in some PCI devices not being configured
>by the BIOS.
Power off on some VIA based boards (Epox8kta3 etc) doesn't work (reboot).
Suspend on some VIA base
> K6-2-450, bus running at 95mhz, Acer 1541 (A? B?)
>
> All works fine with the new ACPI _except_ the clock; the time of day
> advances about twice as fast as it should, and I get LOTS of
> calcru negative time and time went backwards messages.
We've seen this before; the Acer Aladdin X clocks a
> > > Show us a suitable LISP interpreter, then.
> >
> > $ cd ~/lang/Scheme/tinyscm-1.27
> > $ size scheme
> >textdata bss dec hex filename
> > 6134244763480 69298 10eb2 scheme
>
> Is that statically-linked? I'm curious to know the size of the bootloader
> for
On 06-Sep-01 Mike Smith wrote:
>> K6-2-450, bus running at 95mhz, Acer 1541 (A? B?)
>>
>> All works fine with the new ACPI _except_ the clock; the time of day
>> advances about twice as fast as it should, and I get LOTS of
>> calcru negative time and time went backwards messages.
>
> We've seen
> I personally, don't have enough time to hack the code for now (sorry),
> but I think that newly added `placeholders' code causes the problem
> for my first impression.
Yes; this is something that I'm not happy about. It looks like these
resources are being badly abused by vendors as "hints" fo
Here is a hack to remove the 20 or so warning messages from if_ie.c
Most of them are due to the supply of volatile pointers to bcopy and
bzero.
I do the following to produce macros that call bzero and bcopy, but
don't produce
warning messages when called with volatile arguments.
typedef void
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