Recently one of the FreeBSD machines where I work has been crashing on a
semi-regular basis, once or twice a day. The dmesg for the machine is at
the bottom of this post. These crashes started very recently, less than
a week ago. Before that, the machine had been very reliable (several 100
day upt
On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 05:46:11PM -0700i, Wes Peters wrote:
> Patrick Seal wrote:
> >
> > On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 01:35:11PM -0800i, Don Wallwork wrote:
> > > RealPort CardBus Ethernet 10/100 (RBE-100).
> > >
> > > I'll give the xe driver a try.
> >
> > Dont even try, Cardbus (32-bit) isn't sup
Patrick Seal wrote:
>
> On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 01:35:11PM -0800i, Don Wallwork wrote:
> > RealPort CardBus Ethernet 10/100 (RBE-100).
> >
> > I'll give the xe driver a try.
>
> Dont even try, Cardbus (32-bit) isn't supported by FreeBSD yet.
You haven't been looking into 4.0, have you?
--
On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 04:46:02PM -0700, Warner Losh wrote:
>
> I just got an odd crash:
>
> Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
> fault virtual address = 0x8
> fault code = supervisor read, page not present
> instruction pointer = 0x8:0xc01d16ac
> stack pointer
> On Wed, 15 Mar 2000, Sheldon Hearn wrote:
>
> > And you're forgetting that, as I said in my original reply, people with
> > 56K modems usually benefit from hardware compression over their link
> > anyway.
>
> But you're defeated by your own argument, as according to you the image
> doesn't com
I just got an odd crash:
Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
fault virtual address = 0x8
fault code = supervisor read, page not present
instruction pointer = 0x8:0xc01d16ac
stack pointer = 0x10:0xc031e704
frame pointer = 0x10:0xc031e70c
code segm
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> dannyman writes:
: or is there some way i can config things to keep da0 on the ncr and da1 on the
: aha?
You can look at the LINT kernel for ways to hardwire these devices.
Warner
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I'm trying to (finally) upgrade my DEC HiNote Laptop from 2.2.8 to 3.4 by
doing just a clean install. I can do all the hard disk stuff and select
the installation method, but as soon as it starts unpacking "bin" it
hangs. I thought it might be a networking problem and even tried
installing from
Can I step in here for a moment? I'm not going to gzip the
ISO images. Please just live with it. End of discussion. :-)
- Jordan
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In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mark Newton writes:
: "pccardc dumpcis" says it wants IRQ 6, so I've made sure that that
: was included in the list of IRQs in pccard.conf. It's still unable
: to allocate I/O space, though: card insertion yields:
:
:pccard: card inserted, slot 0
:wi0: No
On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 01:35:11PM -0800i, Don Wallwork wrote:
> RealPort CardBus Ethernet 10/100 (RBE-100).
>
> I'll give the xe driver a try.
Dont even try, Cardbus (32-bit) isn't supported by FreeBSD yet.
I made the mistake of buying that exact card :P
--
-
Scott Mitchell wrote:
>On Tue, Mar 14, 2000 at 04:14:50PM -0800, Don Wallwork wrote:
>> Hi-
>>
>> I found a linux driver for my Xircom PCMCIA ethernet card at:
>> http://pcmcia.sourceforge.org/
>
>Which card was that? All of the recent Xircom PCMCIA cards are supported
>by the xe driver in 3.x
On Tue, Mar 14, 2000 at 04:14:50PM -0800, Don Wallwork wrote:
> Hi-
>
> I found a linux driver for my Xircom PCMCIA ethernet card at:
> http://pcmcia.sourceforge.org/
Which card was that? All of the recent Xircom PCMCIA cards are supported
by the xe driver in 3.x
> Are there any pointers avail
- Original Message -
From: "Eric D. Futch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 15, 2000 8:58 PM
Subject: Re: Why not gzip iso images?
> I think people are forgetting that you do not necessarily need to download
> the entire ISO image in order to make a fr
I think people are forgetting that you do not necessarily need to download
the entire ISO image in order to make a fresh install of FreeBSD. Back
when I started using FreeBSD somewhere around version 2.1, I remember
donwloading the boot floppies, then installing the whole deal over FTP,
all on a
I will attest to that, as I have several Solaris-x86 machines, some on
2.6. and some on 2.7, all running the DEC cards in 100T-FDX mode like a
champ. As some are news servers, they run 20-30mpbs constantly almost
24/7 without a hitch, so they work well under Solaris. Guess it was
dumb to as
Arnout Boer wrote:
> But for the ISO images... IS it a problem to gzip
> them
> They take less space on the master site and the mirror
> sites and they take less bandwidth!
But, how much would the ISO be able to be compressed? The source is
already a split, compressed tarball, for example.
That's not spurprising. When I tried it, Solaris 2.6 x86 didn't support
full-duplex 100Base-TX on very many devices. The DEC tulip cards were one of
the few that had drivers that supported full-duplex.
Charles
-Original Message-
From: Howard Leadmon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunda
> * Paul Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [000315 06:14] wrote:
[snip snip]
> ~ % ftp ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/release/i386/ISO-IMAGES/
> Connected to wizard.freesoftware.com.
> ...
> ftp> get 3.4-install.iso
> local: 3.4-install.iso remote: 3.4-install.iso
> 227 Entering Passive Mode (209,1
>
>
> On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 14:43:27 GMT, Paul Robinson wrote:
>
> > If you save 20Mb, over a reliable 56Kb modem, you've saved them somewhere
> > in the region of one and a half hours... I think you guys are too used to
> > your broadband... :)
>
> And you're forgetting that, as I said in my o
On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 03:54:54PM +0200, Sheldon Hearn wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 14:43:27 GMT, Paul Robinson wrote:
>
> > If you save 20Mb, over a reliable 56Kb modem, you've saved them somewhere
> > in the region of one and a half hours... I think you guys are too used to
> > your broa
"Adam Crawford" writes:
>> Read the Linux source and find out how it talks to the card
>>
>> Read the FreeBSD source for an equivalent device
>>
>> Write the FreeBSD device.
>>
>> Simple! :)
>
>
>If there was source for an equivalent device, why would i need to write
>another one? :)
>
I assume D
On Thu, Mar 16, 2000 at 12:59:13AM +1030, Mark Newton wrote:
> I'll attach the output of pccardc dumpcis.
Blurgh. Maybe I'll attach it this time.
- mark
--
Mark Newton Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (W)
Network Engineer Email: [EMAIL PRO
Paul Robinson wrote:
> I think this saving shows a little respect
> and concern for the less fortunate home user stuck with a 56K modem paying
> $x/hour where x can be anywhere between 0.5 and 5...
Sorry, can't resist.
Given (my) local call rates, if I started downloading the 3.4 ISO image
and di
-On [2315 15:35], [EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>On Wed, 15 Mar 2000, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
>
>> Seriously though, there's no reason not to have the ISOs up in
>> compressed format though. I guess given a choice between _only_
>> compressed o
On Wed, 15 Mar 2000, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> Seriously though, there's no reason not to have the ISOs up in
> compressed format though. I guess given a choice between _only_
> compressed or _only_ uncompressed I think uncompressed is better,
> but if the space is available it would be nice t
I'm trying to get a WaveLAN/IEEE Turbo (Silver) card working on a
two month old -current system using the ISA bus card which comes
with the PCMCIA WaveLAN unit.
"pccardc dumpcis" says it wants IRQ 6, so I've made sure that that
was included in the list of IRQs in pccard.conf. It's still unable
> -Original Message-
> From: Paul Robinson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 15 March 2000 14:55
> you're still leaving the guy with the modem sat
> there for around 45 minutes...
But given that he has probably been sat there for 2.5 days already, is that
a major problem?
Rich
--
Ric
* Paul Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [000315 06:14] wrote:
> On Wed, 15 Mar 2000, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
>
> > And not that much even with that:
> >
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 bright staff 647815168 Dec 28 19:23 3.4-install.iso
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 bright staff 625839147 Dec 28 19:23 3.4-install.iso.gz
On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 14:55:14 GMT, Paul Robinson wrote:
> But you're defeated by your own argument, as according to you the image
> doesn't compress very well
No, you're not reading the thread properly. Someone else (who doesn't
have the same bandwidth limitations that you and I do) said it do
On Wed, 15 Mar 2000, Sheldon Hearn wrote:
> And you're forgetting that, as I said in my original reply, people with
> 56K modems usually benefit from hardware compression over their link
> anyway.
But you're defeated by your own argument, as according to you the image
doesn't compress very well,
On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 14:43:27 GMT, Paul Robinson wrote:
> If you save 20Mb, over a reliable 56Kb modem, you've saved them somewhere
> in the region of one and a half hours... I think you guys are too used to
> your broadband... :)
And you're forgetting that, as I said in my original reply, peop
On Wed, 15 Mar 2000, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> And not that much even with that:
>
> -rw-r--r-- 1 bright staff 647815168 Dec 28 19:23 3.4-install.iso
> -rw-r--r-- 1 bright staff 625839147 Dec 28 19:23 3.4-install.iso.gz
I never thought I'd see the day that when considering sizes of downlo
* Luigi Rizzo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [000315 05:34] wrote:
> > On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 13:42:11 +0100, Arnout Boer wrote:
> >
> > > But for the ISO images... IS it a problem to gzip
> > > them
> >
> > Well, I can think of at least one problem. Think of the extra disk
> > space folks would need fo
> On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 13:42:11 +0100, Arnout Boer wrote:
>
> > But for the ISO images... IS it a problem to gzip
> > them
>
> Well, I can think of at least one problem. Think of the extra disk
> space folks would need for the gunzip step. :-)
and compression ratio would not be that much.
On Wed, 15 Mar 2000 13:42:11 +0100, Arnout Boer wrote:
> But for the ISO images... IS it a problem to gzip
> them
Well, I can think of at least one problem. Think of the extra disk
space folks would need for the gunzip step. :-)
> They take less space on the master site and the mirror
>
After reading the announcement...
Congratulations to the FreeBSD community
another milestone!
A great OS...
But for the ISO images... IS it a problem to gzip
them
They take less space on the master site and the mirror
sites and they take less bandwidth!
Shouldn't be a problem I think!
Less
* Danny Howard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [000315 02:21] wrote:
> hi. i have a production system with an ncr0 SCSI controller that's pretty
> weak. I would like to add an adaptec, which comes in as ahc0. The problem is
> that when I add the ahc0 in to the system, it comes up ahead of the ncr0, and
> s
Warner Losh wrote:
>
> The xe driver is close to working with current as it is. There is a
> minor problem with the pccard layer that I've not had the time to
> commit.
>
I am waiting for the xe driver working with current for updating
FreeBSD on my laptop, so... go Warner! :-)
-- JMA
*
+[ Adam Crawford ]-
|
| 'lo everyone
|
| I was wondering if there was drivers around for a telsat card,
| I know there is linux drivers, located on ftp.ihug.com.au/pub/satnet/linux
| (i think)
| also ment to be on ftp.ihug.co.nz but ive yet to be ab
> Read the Linux source and find out how it talks to the card
>
> Read the FreeBSD source for an equivalent device
>
> Write the FreeBSD device.
>
> Simple! :)
If there was source for an equivalent device, why would i need to write
another one? :)
Cheers for the advice Gary & Daniel
All i nee
hi. i have a production system with an ncr0 SCSI controller that's pretty
weak. I would like to add an adaptec, which comes in as ahc0. The problem is
that when I add the ahc0 in to the system, it comes up ahead of the ncr0, and
so the system disk is labeled da1, and .. well .. there are ways t
On 15-Mar-00 Adam Crawford wrote:
> Whats involved in doing it myself?
Read the Linux source and find out how it talks to the card
Read the FreeBSD source for an equivalent device
Write the FreeBSD device.
Simple! :)
---
Daniel O'Connor software and network engineer
for Genesis Software - h
> >If not, will the linux drivers work or be able to port them across?
> >
>
> no, yes - but you'll either have to do it yourself or find someone
> who's interested in doing the port.
Whats involved in doing it myself?
*starts the 'wouldnt have a clue where to start' questions*
Regards,
Ad
"Adam Crawford" writes:
>'lo everyone
>
>I was wondering if there was drivers around for a telsat card,
>I know there is linux drivers, located on ftp.ihug.com.au/pub/satnet/linux
>(i think)
>also ment to be on ftp.ihug.co.nz but ive yet to be able to log on to that
>server :)
>
>Is there fbsd dri
'lo everyone
I was wondering if there was drivers around for a telsat card,
I know there is linux drivers, located on ftp.ihug.com.au/pub/satnet/linux
(i think)
also ment to be on ftp.ihug.co.nz but ive yet to be able to log on to that
server :)
Is there fbsd drivers?
If not, will the linux driv
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