On Jul 1, 2004, at 20:03, Igor Shmukler wrote:
Hello,
Sorry for intrusion.
This is not really what original argument was about.
I am curious, do you (or someone else) knows what exactly was changed
in Tiger in regards to fine-grained locking.
I did not make to WWDC and I could not find any technic
On Jun 30, 2004, at 23:33, Q wrote:
On 30/06/2004, at 4:40 PM, Chris Zumbrunn wrote:
On 30. Jun 2004, at 3:01, Alasdair Lumsden wrote:
[snip]
Darwin still uses a Mach kernel design, although Apple has made some
significant modifications to its implementation to reduce message
passing overhead and
On Jul 1, 2004, at 5:28, Eitarou Kamo wrote:
Hi Q and all,
Q wrote:
The portions of the FreeBSD kernel that Apple have adopted can be
found as part of the XNU project (the darwin kernel) from Apple's
Opensource website
http://www.opensource.apple.com/darwinsource/
The CVS tags should still be int
On Jul 1, 2004, at 7:27, Eitarou Kamo wrote:
Hi Q,
Q wrote:
My curiosity is that the FreeBSD and NetBSD license are left.
And should those licenses are kept after porting?
Yes the original license and copyright notices are all kept intact,
it's one of the requirements of virtually every opensource
On Saturday, February 28, 2004, at 09:52 AM, grinder wrote:
I want to create a small kernel module which logs the socket
operations.
So in my module i have a socket structure, and i want to know
which process (thread) owns it. But the socket structure isn't
contains any reference to the process
On Monday, January 19, 2004, at 08:53 AM, Stuart Pook wrote:
The documentation for send(2) says
If no messages space is available at the socket to hold the message
to be
transmitted, then send() normally blocks, unless the socket has been
placed in non-blocking I/O mode. The select(2) call m
I read the original message too quickly...
On Tuesday, Jan 14, 2003, at 23:01 US/Pacific, Justin Walker wrote:
All of this depends on how 'ifconfig' and the kernel cooperate in
interpreting address/mask pairs.
Normally, I would expect that you do the following when adding
'ali
All of this depends on how 'ifconfig' and the kernel cooperate in
interpreting address/mask pairs.
Normally, I would expect that you do the following when adding
'aliases':
if the alias IP address is on the same subnet as an
existing address for this interface, use the
netmask 255.25
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