Steve Roome wrote:
> > Can these newer drives, based on the IC-35L0?0-chipset, also be used
> > with TCQ enabled in FBSD? (? is 2, 4 or 6 depending on whether the
> > drive has 20, 40 or 60 GB capacity).
>
> I've got one of these :
>
> ad0: 39266MB [79780/16/63] at ata0-master UDMA66
>
> If I
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "Eugene L. Vorokov" writes:
: I'm going to implement a small improvement to a KLD system. I want linker
: file not to be loaded at all when all modules inside it fail to load for
: some reasons. I think that would be logical behaviour. Does anyone think
: that such c
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Terry Lambert writes:
: Are you sure it's not just a CMD640 IDE controller? They are
: known to have issues; Linux has a patch... FreeBSD used to, but
: I think it got yanked out, or was just turned off by default.
The CMD640 had many DMA corruption bugs. Many are
On Mon, 3 Sep 2001, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Similarly, there are a number of bugs in the TCP sockets as
> well; specifically, there's a problem with all sockets being
> treated as being in the same collision domain, when doing
> automatic port assignment. This limits you to 65535 oubound
> TCP c
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 07:20:30PM +0200, Niek Bergboer wrote:
> Can these newer drives, based on the IC-35L0?0-chipset, also be used
> with TCQ enabled in FBSD? (? is 2, 4 or 6 depending on whether the
> drive has 20, 40 or 60 GB capacity).
I've got one of these :
ad0: 39266MB [79780/16/63] at
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 07:08:44PM -0500, Mike Meyer wrote:
> Kevin Way <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> types:
> > I'm quite sure that Mr. Sinz wasn't suggesting that telnet smtp://localhost
> > should do something useful. Nor do I consider his idea "lazy". I do think
> > that he was suggesting, and I concu
Leo Bicknell wrote:
>
> On Mon, Sep 03, 2001 at 06:01:04PM -0600, Ronald G Minnich wrote:
> > you do know that API just layed off (almost) all their alpha people,
> > right?
> >
> > alpha is dead. Thank compaq any time.
> >
> > ron (who owns 112 Compaq Alpha boxes, and 16 API CS20s)
>
> No I did
Hello,
| Yes. Please go and find the NeTraMet package on the web - it should
NeTraMet is in the ports so you don't have to search it
on the web: /usr/ports/net/NeTraMet/
--
Mit freundlichen Gruessen,
Marco Wertejuk - mwcis.com
Computer/Internet/Security-Services
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [
Kevin Way <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> types:
> > If you're really lazy and want to be able to do:
> > telnet smtp://localhost
> > I suggest you look into this relatively new invention called
> > '/etc/services' and read some manual pages. You'll find you can do
> > something quite similar, and much
Deepak Jain wrote:
>
> Is there a way to provide functionality similar to ip flow cache stats on a
> FreeBSD router?
>
> Let me clarify, I am talking about being able to easily see groupings of
> traffic go through a FreeBSD box. So if a downstream customer is being
> attacked, a simple
Is there a way to provide functionality similar to ip flow cache stats on a
FreeBSD router?
Let me clarify, I am talking about being able to easily see groupings of
traffic go through a FreeBSD box. So if a downstream customer is being
attacked, a simple table in realtime [or near real-t
> If you're really lazy and want to be able to do:
> telnet smtp://localhost
> I suggest you look into this relatively new invention called
> '/etc/services' and read some manual pages. You'll find you can do
> something quite similar, and much saner.
I'm quite sure that Mr. Sinz wasn't s
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 05:24:50PM -0400, Leo Bicknell wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 02:19:06PM -0700, Ulf Zimmermann wrote:
> > Last night I setup dot1q tagging again on another machine and had
> > the same problem. Looking into packets sent down the trunk, I saw
> > that VLAN 1 wasn't tagged
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 02:19:06PM -0700, Ulf Zimmermann wrote:
> Last night I setup dot1q tagging again on another machine and had
> the same problem. Looking into packets sent down the trunk, I saw
> that VLAN 1 wasn't tagged (I assume the dot1q spec tells so that
> VLAN 1 packets aren't tagged,
Got a question for the people who worked on the support. All my
experience is under 4.3-Release/-Stable/4.4-RC3. A while back
when I wanted to use dot1q tagging, it seems to work fine with
the expection that I wasn't able to get VLAN 1 (default VLAN) to
work.
Last night I setup dot1q tagging agai
On Sun, Sep 02, 2001 at 09:55:03AM -0700, David O'Brien wrote:
> The PIM Evolution, http://www.ximian.com/products/ximian_evolution/,
> does not run on FreeBSD. The authors have made a change so that it will.
> However, we would like to know if FreeBSD is the odd-man-out, or if the
> authors were
> > NAME
> > amd - automatically mount file systems
> > ...
> > DESCRIPTION
> > Amd is a daemon that automatically mounts filesystems whenever a file or
> > directory within that filesystem is accessed. Filesystems are automati-
> > cally unmounted when they appear to be quies
Niek Bergboer wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I posted this message on -questions, and since I got no reply I've
> assumed that it's technical enough to post here on -hackers.
>
> Since FBSD 4.3-RELEASE, tagged command queuing is supported for IBM
> DTLA and DPTA IDE drives. However, the newer "Deskstar GXP
On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
>
> Which reminds me, Adrian still oves us his story about ref :-)
Yeah, the REAL one...
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>
>
> apart from the numerical value, yes, looks good.
Ok, please find the final patch attached. Dare I say that it looks really
ugly?
I'm looking forward for your comments.
-Maxim
>
> Poul-Henning
>
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
> >
> >--%--multipart-mixed-bounda
Hi,
I posted this message on -questions, and since I got no reply I've
assumed that it's technical enough to post here on -hackers.
Since FBSD 4.3-RELEASE, tagged command queuing is supported for IBM
DTLA and DPTA IDE drives. However, the newer "Deskstar GXP" drives
also support TCQ according to
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Nate Williams writes:
>> TRW supported a lot of the early
>> 386BSD/FreeBSD effort, back before Walnut Creek CDROM threw
>> in and had us change the version number from 0.1 to 1.0 to
>> make it a bit easier to sell.
>
>*Huh* That's revisionist history if I've ever
> > What is the file system that uses VT_TFS in vnode.h? Is it still available
> > on FreeBSD? Thanks.
>
> Julian added it for TRW Financial Services; the first public
> reference machine for 386BSD (which later became FreeBSD and
> NetBSD) was ref.tfs.com.
So far so good. ref died an ugly hor
On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Maxim Sobolev wrote:
> > [neither Maxim Sobolev nor Brent Verner wrote]
> > In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Brent Verner writes:
> > >#include
> > >
> > >I've done a /cursory/ look over how this v_tag is used. I'm not sure
> > >this is a simple/clean as you propose, since th
On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Maxim Sobolev wrote:
> > The places which inspect v_tag will have to be changed to use
> > strcmp() then...
>
> I think that we can add a new vnode flag, say VCANLOCK, so that each
> particular VFS can set it if it supports locking, which should allow
> to remove pre-defined
It's that time again! I'm in the process of preparing the August, 2001
FreeBSD monthly status report, and as such am interested in seeing
submissions in much the same style as previous months. Generally, this
means about one paragraph of text per project describing events that have
occured sinc
Tried to install complete source tree via sysinstall and it
always fails on scontrib with unexpected EOF. And it seems
several of the chunks are not the usual 240640 bytes in size.
Checked several of the FTP servers:
-r--r--r-- 1 1006 1006 231335 Sep 2 04:23 sbin.ab
-r--r--r-- 1 1006 1006
>
> Hi Maxim,
>
> Perhaps you meant:
> diff -d -u -r1.154 vnode.h
> --- sys/vnode.h 2001/08/27 06:09:55 1.154
> +++ sys/vnode.h 2001/09/04 15:21:25
> @@ -175,6 +175,7 @@
> /* open for business 0x10 */
> #defineVONWORKLST 0x20 /* On syncer work-list */
> #define
What strikes me in this thread is that a lot of people are stupid and lazy
and want FreeBSD's kernel (or libc) to do stupid things with URLs the same
way you can throw a URL anywhere in Windows and have it mean something.
Here's some news for you: It shouldn't, and probably won't, happen.
If y
apart from the numerical value, yes, looks good.
Poul-Henning
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
>
>--%--multipart-mixed-boundary-1.97537.999617732--%
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
>> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobol
Hi Maxim,
Perhaps you meant:
diff -d -u -r1.154 vnode.h
--- sys/vnode.h 2001/08/27 06:09:55 1.154
+++ sys/vnode.h 2001/09/04 15:21:25
@@ -175,6 +175,7 @@
/* open for business 0x10 */
#defineVONWORKLST 0x20 /* On syncer work-list */
#defineVMOUNT 0x40
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
> >>
> >> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Brent Verner writes:
> >> >
> >> >I've done a /cursory/ look over how this v_tag is used. I'm not sure
> >> >this is a simple/clean as you propose, since this is used in the
> >> >IS_LOCKING_VFS ma
> All of this started with the quest for URIs being useable everywhere.
It's a stupid quest, for reasons others have pointed out.
> > When this isn't possible or
> > reasonable, it's not only difficult but *wrong* to abstract.
>
> I never said this was trivial. We (which includes me) tried to s
Hello,
I'm going to implement a small improvement to a KLD system. I want linker
file not to be loaded at all when all modules inside it fail to load for
some reasons. I think that would be logical behaviour. Does anyone think
that such change would break something ?
Regards,
Eugene
To Unsubsc
Charlie Root wrote:
>
> > What I was trying to say is that there is no reason that I should care
> > if the file is local or not.
>
> You do need to know if the file is local or not. You need to know
> for security. You need to know because files behave differently on
> different machines. You n
On 04-Sep-01 Michael Sinz wrote:
> Sansonetti Laurent wrote:
>>
>> > Anyway, the point is that a file that I can access should be a file I
>> > can access via VI or MORE or EMACS or GREP or any other tool without
>> > having those tools each having FTP and HTTP and SSH support built in to
>> > t
Sansonetti Laurent wrote:
>
> > Anyway, the point is that a file that I can access should be a file I
> > can access via VI or MORE or EMACS or GREP or any other tool without
> > having those tools each having FTP and HTTP and SSH support built in to
> > them. The OS should handle it.
>
> Yes,
> What I was trying to say is that there is no reason that I should care
> if the file is local or not.
You do need to know if the file is local or not. You need to know
for security. You need to know because files behave differently on
different machines. You need to know because file structures
> Anyway, the point is that a file that I can access should be a file I
> can access via VI or MORE or EMACS or GREP or any other tool without
> having those tools each having FTP and HTTP and SSH support built in to
> them. The OS should handle it.
Yes, this should be nice. There's a similar p
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Maxim Sobolev writes:
>>
>> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Brent Verner writes:
>> >On 04 Sep 2001 at 10:36 (+0200), Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
>> >|
>> >| Assignment:
>> >|
>> >| The v_tag element in struct vnode is a debugging aid, but unfortunately
>> >| it is
>
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Brent Verner writes:
> >On 04 Sep 2001 at 10:36 (+0200), Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> >|
> >| Assignment:
> >|
> >| The v_tag element in struct vnode is a debugging aid, but unfortunately
> >| it is implemented in a way which means that adding a filesystem mean
John Polstra wrote:
>
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Kris Kennaway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Anyone else think this patch from NetBSD is worthwhile?
>
> Yes yes yes yes yes! That's 5 votes in favor of it already. :-)
Add in another 50 here (the number of machines here that produ
Terry Lambert wrote:
>
> David O'Brien wrote:
> > > > Well, since it didn't, I might as well explain the problem here too.
> > > > There are at least two major problems with VIA chips:
> > >
> > > [data curruption on VIA KT133/133A systems by pushing PCI and memory bus]
> > >
> > > Are you sure a
Paul Chvostek wrote:
>
> On Fri, Aug 31, 2001 at 02:15:09PM -0400, Michael Sinz wrote:
> >
> > I too have been hoping for (and building internal tools) that work
> > this way. I really wish you could just do:
> >
> > open("nfs://server.name.dom/directory/file.txt")
>
> NAME
> amd - a
Chris Costello wrote:
>
> On Friday, August 31, 2001, Michael Sinz wrote:
> > I too have been hoping for (and building internal tools) that work
> > this way. I really wish you could just do:
> >
> > open("nfs://server.name.dom/directory/file.txt")
> >
> > and have it work. That would be
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 02:27:00PM +0200, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> >I've done a /cursory/ look over how this v_tag is used. I'm not sure
> >this is a simple/clean as you propose, since this is used in the
> >IS_LOCKING_VFS macro, as well as in union_subr.c...
>
> Well, that is just too bad, b
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Brent Verner writes:
>On 04 Sep 2001 at 10:36 (+0200), Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
>|
>| Assignment:
>|
>| The v_tag element in struct vnode is a debugging aid, but unfortunately
>| it is implemented in a way which means that adding a filesystem means
>| modifying th
On 04 Sep 2001 at 10:36 (+0200), Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
|
| Assignment:
|
| The v_tag element in struct vnode is a debugging aid, but unfortunately
| it is implemented in a way which means that adding a filesystem means
| modifying the definition in .
|
| Convert the v_tag to an "const char *
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Hello,
Since I recompiled my system and kernel (4.3-RELEASE) I can't use ipnat ipf
and ipfstat:
#ipnat
/dev/ipnat: open: Device not configured
#ipf -Fa -f /etc/ipf.rules
open device: Device not configured
ioctl(SIOCIPFFL): Bad file descriptor
open device: Device not configured
2:ioctl(add/inse
Problems started since yesterday and last time I modified community and
other things few weeks ago.
When I try to cfgmaker, it displays the same errors.
- Original Message -
From: "Kelvin Ng Chee Hoong" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Chojin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL
Do your community string correct ? Do you change community string
recently ? Do you configure [Target] tag in mrtg.conf point to correct
MIB ?
Chojin wrote:
>Hello,
>
>Since yesterday, when I do /usr/local/bin/mrtg /usr/local/etc/mrtg/mrtg.cfg
>It says:
>SNMP Error:
>no response received
>
Hello,
Since yesterday, when I do /usr/local/bin/mrtg /usr/local/etc/mrtg/mrtg.cfg
It says:
SNMP Error:
no response received
SNMPv1_Session (remote host: "127.0.0.1" [127.0.0.1].161)
community: "TMRTGCHO"
request ID: 1484981548
PDU bufsize: 8000
Luigi Rizzo wrote:
>
> > Did you have opportunity to play with the soft interrupt
> > coalescing we discussed?
>
> Did this message just leak to a mailing list, or would you
> be able to expand this (or pass a pointer to mailing lists
> where this was discussed) ?
Ignore the man behind the curt
Assignment:
The v_tag element in struct vnode is a debugging aid, but unfortunately
it is implemented in a way which means that adding a filesystem means
modifying the definition in .
Convert the v_tag to an "const char *" and have the filesystems put
their name in there instead.
The v_tag has
Julian Elischer wrote:
> > > What is the file system that uses VT_TFS in vnode.h? Is it
> > > still available on FreeBSD? Thanks.
> >
> > Julian added it for TRW Financial Services; the first public
> > reference machine for 386BSD (which later became FreeBSD and
> > NetBSD) was ref.tfs.com. TRW
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 11:37:39AM +0800, Igor Podlesny wrote:
[snip]
>
> Screen is a nice thing, I agree. Just one drawback is (Ctrl-A)*N
> consoles (i.e., when you use screen at local console, than log in
> into another box and run screen there. Local screen will see catch
> Ctrl-A and you're f
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