I don't know who to contact about this, so I'm hoping some people subscribed
to this list have commit access. I found some spelling errors in passwd(1)
manpage. I have RELENG_4 installed. Here's the output of diff -u:
--- /usr/src/usr.bin/passwd/passwd.1Wed Mar 1 04:20:07 2000
+++ passwd.1
Greetings campers,
Mergemaster first made its appearance as a port two years ago tomorrow,
and became part of the FreeBSD source tree last October 20th. Lots of
things have changed since the original version of the program (or
script, whatever), and there are some proposals on the board f
Marc Tardif writes:
> [ snip ]
> > > 1. What are wd0[a-h] used for?
> > For wd0sN[a-h] where N is number of first slice recognized
> > as FreeBSD slice
> >
> If I understand correctly, wd0[a-h] will be the same as wd0s3[a-h] in a
> situation where DOS is on first slice, Linux on second and FreeBS
[ snip ]
> > 1. What are wd0[a-h] used for?
> For wd0sN[a-h] where N is number of first slice recognized
> as FreeBSD slice
>
If I understand correctly, wd0[a-h] will be the same as wd0s3[a-h] in a
situation where DOS is on first slice, Linux on second and FreeBSD on
third, right? But what if the
Marc Tardif writes:
> What is the FreeBSD naming convention for devices of disk slices and
> labels? Considering my system is installed on the first partition of
> /dev/wd0 (non-dedicated), these are the block-device interfaces I
> have to my disk:
>
> wd0 wd0cwd0fwd0s1 wd0s1c
On Sat, Sep 16, 2000 at 06:13:04PM -0400, David Bein wrote:
> Does anyone know which key is the PNC key on a typical keyboard?
> This is the key which with sysctl machdep.enable_panic_key=1 should force
> a panic. Earlier today I found my machine wedged and had to power cycle
> to get unstuck.
Hi ...
Does anyone know which key is the PNC key on a typical keyboard?
This is the key which with sysctl machdep.enable_panic_key=1 should force
a panic. Earlier today I found my machine wedged and had to power cycle
to get unstuck. So for future reference, this will be very handy info.
Tha
What is the FreeBSD naming convention for devices of disk slices and
labels? Considering my system is installed on the first partition of
/dev/wd0 (non-dedicated), these are the block-device interfaces I
have to my disk:
wd0 wd0cwd0fwd0s1 wd0s1cwd0s1fwd0s2
wd0awd0d
On Sat, Sep 16, 2000 at 03:06:06PM -0400, John DeBoskey wrote:
> #define LINK_MAX32767 /* max file link count */
Looking at /usr/include/ufs/ufs/dinode.h, which seems to describe
the format of the on-disk inode I see that di_nlink is a int16_t,
for which the largest positive va
Hi,
Ok, no laughing folks. I've run up against an
application (which I do not have control over) that
wants to create more than 32k directories in a
directory.
in syslimits.h I find:
#define LINK_MAX32767 /* max file link count */
which I think is what I'm running up
On Sat, 16 Sep 2000, David Malone wrote:
> > It is possible to get interface lists on earlier versions (and I hope
> > still current versions) using the ioctl interfaces described in Stevens.
> > See also ifconfig.c source from various versions of FreeBSD :-).
>
> I think Garret suggested that
using Brian's post since I don't have the original around ...
On Sat, Sep 16, 2000 at 03:49 +0100, Brian Somers wrote:
>
> [ attribution missing, is it Poul-Henning Kamp's text? ]
>
> > The majority of these programs could be handled by adding
> > knowledge of "-" as a magic filename to fopen(3
> It is possible to get interface lists on earlier versions (and I hope
> still current versions) using the ioctl interfaces described in Stevens.
> See also ifconfig.c source from various versions of FreeBSD :-).
I think Garret suggested that the ioctl method was deprecated?
I wrote some code j
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