On Jul 11, 2013, at 4:05 PM, Artem Belevich wrote:
>
> It would probably work for most of the crashes, but will not work in few
> interesting classes of failure. Using in-kernel stack implicitly assumes that
> your memory allocator still works as both the stack and the interface driver
> wil
>
>
> Those sound useful. Just out of curiosity, however, since we're on the
> topic of kernel dumps: Has anyone even looked into the notion of an
> emergency fall-back network stack to enable remote kernel panic (or system
> hang) debugging, the way OS X lets you do? I can't tell you the
the
casualties of making clang default now? Do we need two different versions of
some libraries depending on which compiler is being used?
-- Kevin
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
On Jun 4, 2013, at 7:33 PM, Outback Dingo wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 8:21 PM, Kevin Day wrote:
> If there's anyone out there that would prefer pkgng instead of the old style
> packages, we might be able to get those going too. This is primarily for our
> own int
don't want to add support for a ton of things if nobody is going to use this,
so speak up if you want something!
-- Kevin
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On Apr 8, 2013, at 7:34 PM, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> However, until a bunch of embedded folks come forward and state what they are
> really willing to sacrifice, then we won't really have anything to go on, and
> it will be guessing at what will work for a space that not all of us are
> famil
e old libraries - you don't need to recompile anything if you really
can't. If you're operating things that are extremely risk averse where any
change needs substantial validation before putting it into production, you're
probably
On Feb 13, 2013, at 3:53 PM, Joshua Isom wrote:
> On 2/12/2013 10:20 AM, Kevin Day wrote:
>>
>> I'm not sure if this is the right place to post this, so if you know of
>> anyone who may be interested in this please forward to them. Right now my
>> company (yo
, we'd happily pay for shipping to put
it to good/public use.
-- Kevin
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I'm working on a project that uses State Threads (ports/devel/st). For the
unaware, it's a kinda neat library that implements totally userland threads
with setjmp/longjmp, manually creating stacks and moving the stack pointer
around.
It works well, except for one problem, attempting to get a b
hip.)
For small rooms, microphones are fairly easy to handle and one-way
streams don't require echo cancellation.
As costs for video come down, that might be something to think about
some day, but is not required to allow remote "attendance".
Of cour
or observers. Some are set up for full remote participation
including presentations, questions (via chat) and voting/polling. It
is surprising to me that something is not available for significant
FreeBSD meetings.
By the way, WGs that gave me major issues were SNMP and DNS. SNMP was
dissolved and
g to accomplish
something that comes under the heading of brainstorming in a truly
open environment is a wonderful goal, but really is not efficient.
And, no, I don't expect you to agree.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
_
able about all of this. And when
people start claiming that, by a very strained interpretation of what
appears on the surface to be a clear specification, they are not
violating the standard.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
__
of partitions available on
GPT, tying up one just for GEOM seems like a low price and it moves
the device GEOM out of the realm of FreeBSD unique and subject to
serious issues when/if a disk is shared with some other OS. I have
seen little comment on this and have never seen any argument that that
d where on systems
that had numerous interfaces, though this was more common in the day
of async serial lines and modems.
I'll admit that I have mixed feelings about its practicality today,
though it does not hurt anything, as far as I can tell.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Eng
may not work depending upon the phase
of the moon.
> >From my point of view, I would be more interested into bringing up
> FreeBSD on ARMv7 (ie. Cortex A[89]), rather than any previous, but the
> effort is clearly not the same.
>
> - Arnaud
Kevin
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As per request, forward this message to hackers@.
Original Message
Date: Fri, 08 Jul 2011 14:54:33 +0800
From: Kevin Lo
To: develop...@freebsd.org
Subject: Add xdr_sizeof() support?
Hi,
We've had a function implementation for xdr_sizeof(3), but never
added in libc. N
For a tool that supposedly would suffer from long-term viability, I
have been using it for FreeBSD 5 through 8. I suspect it will work
fine in 9, when I get around to trying it.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
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/msg00025.html
> Thank You
> shivanth
Kevin
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for (dp = readdir(dir); dp; dp = readdir(dir))
> if (dp->d_name[0] != '.' ||
> (dp->d_name[1] != '\0' &&
>
Your patch looks good to me. I'll commit it in a few days if there's
no objection.
Kevin
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they worked around with a much slower
function.
-- Kevin
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On Mar 9, 2010, at 4:27 PM, John Baldwin wrote:
> On Tuesday 09 March 2010 3:40:26 pm Kevin Day wrote:
>>
>>
>> If I boot up on an Opteron 2218 system, it boots normally. If I boot the
> exact same VM moved to a 2352, I get:
>>
>> acpi0: on motherboard
I'm troubleshooting a pretty weird problem with running FreeBSD 8.0 (amd64)
inside VMware ESX/ESXi servers. We've got a wide range of physical servers
running identical copies of VMware and identical FreeBSD virtual machines.
Everything works fine on all of our servers for Windows and Linux VMs
On Mar 6, 2010, at 12:05 AM, Daniel O'Connor wrote:
> On Sat, 6 Mar 2010, Kevin Day wrote:
>> So, it seems that the VMware hypervisor is deactivating cores on the
>> CPU when idle, but FreeBSD itself isn't. Is anyone working on giving
>> FreeBSD's idle l
ne working on giving FreeBSD's idle
loop/scheduler the ability to go into deeper sleep states? It seems this would
have more than just a power savings benefit now.
Intel documentation on Turbo Boost:
http://download.intel.com/design/processor/applnots/320
svn?
> >
> > SVN never has problems "It's powered by FreeBSD ;)"
> >
> > Take a look at your git config. The problem lies there and is very
> > visible. After you are done fixing that re-read the whole email that you
> > posted.
>
> I'd app
asked someone why the code would not work, you are either truly
exceptional (along with the adjectives listed above) or have written
little or no code of your own.
Please either provide reasonable assistance when responding to questions
or don't reply at all. No one likes a smart ass,
--
R. Kev
58
psm0: [GIANT-LOCKED]
psm0: [ITHREAD]
psm0: model IntelliMouse, device ID 3-00, 3 buttons
psm0: config:, flags:0008, packet size:4
psm0: syncmask:08, syncbits:00
<---snip---<
Full verbosed dmesg at http://ms.shit.la/FreeBSD/dmesg.7.txt
--
Regards
Kevin Foo
___
On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 12:11 AM, Kevin Foo wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> Did anyone experience issue with atkbd on 8.0? I encountered issue
> with keyboard and touchpad on HP presario V3400 when trying to upgrade
> from 7.2-RELEASE to 8.0 prior to and on BETA1.The keyboard and
> touchpa
y for what it sounds like you're
trying to accomplish.
Back in the FreeBSD-3.0 days, I was writing a custom driver for an AGP
graphics controller, and setting the MTRR flags for the exposed buffer
was a definite improvement (200-1200% fas
Very nice! Thanks for the good work.
--
Regards
Kevin Foo
On Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 6:18 AM, Oliver Fromme wrote:
> Hello fellow hackers,
>
> Some of you might remember that I'm working on graphics
> support for our /boot/loader. Unfortunately, progress has
> been rather
anything on the order of tens of minutes or hours.
Is the source .tar.gz identical on all your systems?
-- Kevin
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On Nov 27, 2008, at 2:30 PM, Garrett Cooper wrote:
On Thu, Nov 27, 2008 at 12:03 PM, Kevin Day <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just in case anyone needs a real step-by-step guide to getting a
diskless
PXE/NFS boot going, I wrote this up a little while ago.
http://sigsegv.or
On Nov 27, 2008, at 1:44 PM, Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote:
I wouldn't use a sysinstall script.
Set up a file system (say /nfsroot) on an NFS server in your lab.
Just in case anyone needs a real step-by-step guide to getting a
diskless PXE/NFS boot going, I wrote this up a little while ago.
On Nov 20, 2008, at 4:03 AM, Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
This has two problems, but I'm probably missing something:
1) See my original post, re: users of our systems use "dmesg" to find
out what the status of the system is. By "status" I don't mean "from
the point the kernel finished to now", I li
does NOT require -u. If you use -b, UDP is assumed.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone: +1 510 486-8634
Key fingerprint:059B 2DDF 031C 9BA3 14A4
On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 2:56 AM, Anders Nore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 00:00:01 +0200, Kevin Downey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 2:56 PM, Kevin Downey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>
>>> On Thu, Aug 21
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 2:56 PM, Kevin Downey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 6:10 AM, Anders Nore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hello hackers,
>> it's been a great summer for me working with the FreeBSD-project. It has
>> truly been
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 6:10 AM, Anders Nore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello hackers,
> it's been a great summer for me working with the FreeBSD-project. It has
> truly been an educational experience for me and I would like to continue
> working on my project as well as other aspects of FreeBSD
at said, I suspect that my next laptop with be a Mac with either
VMware or Parallels, My wife already runs one and it's pretty nice.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: [EMAIL PRO
> Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 21:26:16 -0700
> From: "Rob Lytle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> Hi Kevin,
>
> The sysinstall dependency problem has existed for 10 years, so I doubt that
> its unique to me. It has occurred in every installation I have ever done.
>
&
es an Intel Core 2 Duo at 2Ghz or thereabout. That is one hell
> of a long compile time. For this request I will just have to wait for
> FreeBSD 10.0.
I have not seen this, but I don't sue sysinstall to install
packages/ports.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Netw
* *
Since 6to4 is asymmetrical, I'm guessing the problem is the route back
to 2002::/16 (6to4) from within ISC's network.
I'll open a ticket with ISC and see if we can figure out what the
problem is together.
-- Kevin
your.org
ted soon.
Many thanks for working on this!
While I greatly appreciate all of the work John Polstra did to create
and maintain cvsup over the years, it will be very nice to be able to
bid it goodbye.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley
We installed a 5.3-RELEASE box back in 2004, and it's been running
pretty hard ever since with no crashes, reboots or anything. We're
about to finally take it down to upgrade the OS soon - are there any
stats anyone wants to see before we do? I know in the past there have
been some "I won
ed to use would have disqualified them from being
"Vista Capable".
So, whether we want it or not, we're getting at least 128MB of video
memory on our servers now. I'd thought about trying to use it for
something, but decided it was
%ebp),%al
0xc5b2e826: arpl %cx,(%eax)
That... doesn't look like it makes any sense.
Am I trashing the stack after memcpy is getting called, or is this
dump corrupted somehow? If any of you were debugging this, how would
you proceed?
-- Kevin
of
site-wide ssh host key distribution.
Regards,
Kevin Way
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Alex Lukin wrote:
> Hi, Kevin!
>
> Please send me your patch, I'll try to help you with development.
> I wold be nice if you can write short message which part of driver
> you work on and which part I'll be.
I just send you the patch, please check your
iver for FreeBSD :)
>
If you're interested, I can send you my patch(against -HEAD).
Kevin
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.0C
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active: -1
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.passive_cooling: 1
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.thermal_flags: 0
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._PSV: 94.5C
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._HOT: -1
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._CRT: 99.0C
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._ACx: -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1
These are correct. During heavy
s unloaded and there are user
programs that have kqueue's with open descriptors from my driver in them, I
don't know how to close things down from the driver side. Any advice or
links would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Kevin
___
freebsd-ha
om
Install Disk #1 and used the same procedure for the sysinstall
part from fixit and no corruption occured.
Pardon me showing up on hackers@ (I ain't one), but I have
to ask
So, when you do this, you are using /stand/sysinstall, or
**/usr**/sbin/sysinstall?
Kevin Kinsey
--
God made th
On 1/18/07, John-Mark Gurney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Kevin Sanders wrote this message on Thu, Jan 18, 2007 at 17:40 -0800:
> Ivan, I'm basically doing something similar, and I have found that
adding
> kqueue support to your kernel module and making ioctl/read/write'
ressed with kqueue api. It was a little daunting
figuring out the kernel module side though.
Kevin
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On 12/12/06, Joerg Sonnenberger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Dec 12, 2006 at 02:30:41PM -0800, Kevin Sanders wrote:
> I'm trying to use KASSERT in my own kernel module and I can't get it
> to assert even with a KASSERT(0, "test panic"). Is there something
I'm trying to use KASSERT in my own kernel module and I can't get it
to assert even with a KASSERT(0, "test panic"). Is there something
else I need to do besides add options INVARIANTS to my kernel config
file. Any clues would be
seems a little
out of date. From what I gather, the situation with the kernel
debugger has changed since he wrote it.
Kevin
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y new to FreeBSD development also, and prefer the speed of a
dedicated box, but recently suffered my first corrupted beyond repair
system.
Kevin
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Dear sirs
I am a freebsd 6.0-stable user. Recently my thinkpad will panic when I
use vmware 3.2.1 and mozilla at sames times. So I think I can send these
info to you. Help you can help me.
thanks you a lot.
kevin.rong
FreeBSD r
ficulty of its reconciliation, if such can
occur
Kevin Kinsey
--
I can hire one half of the working class to kill the other half.
-- Jay Gould
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FreeBSD before mergemaster, it's a huge
improvement on those ugly days.
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Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone: +1 510 486-8634
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eoghan wrote:
Hello
Im having a problem getting mysql (version 4.1.14) to work.
This isn't hackers@ material. See my reply posted to
you and to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Kevin Kinsey
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ros the same with FreeBSD's STAILQ_* macros?
> Regards.
>
> Note: This could have been posted to -current, I wasn't sure
> which mailing list was the best.
Kevin
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We've got a FreeBSD 5.2.1-RELEASE-p1 server that's been up for 460
days now, with pretty heavy use the whole time (70GB+ per day http
traffic, 140 hits/sec, etc).
Before we give it a reboot to upgrade, does anyone want to see any
counters or stats or anything? I ask because it's sometimes
Wilko Bulte wrote:
> http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS8386088053.html
Netsilicon's NS7520 is ARM7TDMI based processor and no MMU.
That would not be a good choice for running FreeBSD :-)
Kevin
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you missed the rest of the thread. /bin/csh is not /bin/tcsh. i have
run into a fairly important compatibility problem brought on by this. later.
.
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David O'Brien wrote:
What is a pure 'csh'?? Please answer in detail. Have you ever looked at
the source code for 4.3BSD 'csh'? What about 'tcsh' source code? Hint,
Christos Zoulas had at CSRG login and was maintaining and enhancing BSD
'csh'. The 4.4BSD 'csh' was Zoulas's work. 'tcsh' is simp
David O'Brien wrote:
1. Why don't you ask about this on the tcsh mailing lists?
I have.
2. OR why don't you send me a patch that fixes the bug?
This behavoir is described in the man page so I thought it was intended.
My thinking was if tcsh wants this fine. It is just not compat with
csh which
Erik Trulsson wrote:
100% compatible with WHAT?!? Remember that even 'classic' csh went
through several versions, and I very much doubt that the last version
was 100% compatible with the first version.
They added some features. Existing functionality was not broken.
__
Ryan Sommers wrote:
How many programs does this incompatability actually break?
Realistically? If it hasn't been a problem in the last 4 years it makes
me wonder if anyone is actually writing or using shell scripts written
for this.
I think it is a mistake to say that just because this is the fi
Richard Coleman wrote:
I think the reality is that most people here would rather deal with a
few csh incompatibilities in order to have a much more featureful shell,
rather than use an ancient shell in order to get bug for bug compatibility.
I humbly suggest that /bin contain csh and tcsh. Is th
>Dan Nelson wrote:
>
> but you're 4 years too late to affect
>the outcome...
I think the problem can still be fixed. Simply put in /bin/tcsh and let
/bin/csh be what it actually is, which is to say /bin/csh. I realize
that will add all of 300kB to the system. Oh and there would also have
to be
Kris Kennaway wrote:
Please raise tcsh compatibility bugs with the tcsh developers.
Well I think that this problem is not so much with tcsh as freebsd. If
tcsh wants to pull this kind of crap, fine.
But I really think it is a mistake for freebsd to put a copy of tcsh in
/bin and call it csh. Fo
>Dan Nelson wrote:
>
> but you're 4 years too late to affect
>the outcome...
I think the problem can still be fixed. Simply put in /bin/tcsh and let
/bin/csh be what it actually is, which is to say /bin/csh. I realize
that will add all of 300kB to the system. And there would also have to
be an
I have (re)discovered that tcsh is not csh although the tcsh man page
falsely asserts backward compatibility. Trying to do a simple read of
multiword variables in tcsh fails yet works find on csh. The tcsh man page
admits as much when one gets to the $< part.
The point is, csh should be the bas
> >On Thu, 16 Sep 2004, Sam wrote:
> >1PB is - what? 2^50 bytes? That looks closer to 2^64 than your
> >figures indicate. I'd imagine an exabyte a year ought to be topping out
> >after 16 years. I'm missing about half-a-dozen orders of magnitude
> >somewhere it seems.
Where on earth would you find
CURRENT? This PR was rated with a severity
of "serious". This functionality would be nice for 5.3-RELEASE.
Thanks,
Kevin
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p. But I am still
learning as much as I can about the kernel... nowhere near the level
required to help.
Kevin
--
"Down with disease, up before the dawn.
A thousand barefoot children, dancin? on my lawn"
-Phish "Down with Disease"
___
anced features) but I am
willing to learn and do what I can.
-Kevin
--
"Down with disease, up before the dawn.
A thousand barefoot children, dancin? on my lawn"
-Phish "Down with Disease"
Script started on Mon Aug 23 16:14:53 2004
/home/kevinb/crash# gdb -k kernel.debug vmcore
is due to the nvidia drivers -- I
upgraded on the 19th and never had a problem before this... that and gl
programs seem to be the cause of both crashes so far.
Kevin
--
"Down with disease, up before the dawn.
A thousand barefoot children, dancin? on my lawn"
-Phis
e better information.
-Kevin
--
"Down with disease, up before the dawn.
A thousand barefoot children, dancin' on my lawn"
-Phish "Down with Disease"
Copyright (c) 1992-2004 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
On Fri, May 14, 2004 at 11:33:49AM -0400, John Baldwin wrote:
> Do 'l *0xc0519a64' in gdb to get the line that it actually faulted on. Since
> this is likely a NULL pointer deref that might help you fix the bug or at
> least find out its cause.
Wow. That's interesting to me. I didn't expect
On Thu, May 13, 2004 at 05:19:39PM -0600, Shawn Webb wrote:
> I can't tell exactly what's going on, but from that output, it seems as
> though it's smbd's fault, not NFS's
How can I dive deeper? Or _CAN_ I dive deeper? Can I identify the
faulting instruction and determine why it's faulting? At
On Thu, May 13, 2004 at 01:16:59PM -0400, Kevin A. Pieckiel wrote:
> One filesystem NFS mounted from another FBSD 4.9 box.
> Samba 3.0.4 is installed and running (AD member server).
> Samba is mapping home directories to the NFS-mounted files.
>
> When accessing a home directory
), the computer
panics and reboots.
NFS support provided via modules, not compiled into kernel.
Gdb output and kernel config follow.
Any ideas why or how to fix?
Kevin
Gdb and backtrace output:
This GDB was configured as "i386-unknown-freebsd"...
panic: page fault
panic messages:
---
uildkernel, the includes in /usr/include aren't used, so the latter
change will actually be overwritten when I do a make installworld.
Thanks,
Kevin
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> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2004 20:08:35 +0100
> From: Tijl Coosemans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> On Fri, 5 Mar 2004 17:58:26 +0100 (MET), Helge Oldach wrote:
>
> > So yes: some machines require a kernel with PNPBIOS even when sound
> > modules can be kldload'ed. I presume these a
here I can find an ISO 9660 filesystem
specification?
This is possible, right?
Thanks,
Kevin
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On Sat, Dec 27, 2003 at 10:53:57AM +0100, Soren Schmidt wrote:
> It seems Kevin A. Pieckiel wrote:
> > I have a Promise FastTrak SATA150 controller with two 120 GB drives
> > that are mirrored. Using 5.1-RELEASE-p10 with sources from Nov 3.
> >
> > I tried to upgrade f
d my kernel config
file SAMSON for the 5.1 kernel. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Kevin
Copyright (c) 1992-2003 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
The Regents of the Univer
d my kernel config
file SAMSON for the 5.1 kernel. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Kevin
Copyright (c) 1992-2003 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
The Regents of the Univer
ser mode and running umount, now it just sits
there and I can't ^C. I have no ideas, this was all
working yesterday!! :-)
Any ideas on what else to check or other helpful hints
would help bunches.
Sorry for the cross-posts. Just not sure where to go
with this one.
Thanks,
Kevin
_
at device 2.0 (no driver attached)
pci2: at device 8.0 (no driver attached)
This is from sources cvs'ed and compiled today (21 Aug 2003).
Any help would be appreciated.
Kevin A. Pieckiel
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me the insight/time I needed to find what the real problem was
had I not noticed my high load average.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Kevin
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.
Thanks much,
Kevin A. Pieckiel
#dmesg
Copyright (c) 1992-2002 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE #0: Mon Dec 16 19:41:03 EST 2002
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John wrote:
- Julian Elischer's Original Message -
It is teh nextthing to look at..
The ptrace interface doesn't extend to coverthreads at all.
We willneed to design somewhole new system..
One posibility is the benedict arnold thread(*), that
talks with the debugger and controlls teh ot
Is it possible (and how, if it is) to control individual threads of a
process under ptrace? If not what does this require, some kind of manual
interaction with the thread library? Some general direction pointing
would be very helpful, thanks.
-kw
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tent of the other questions on
that list, I thought that my question would be more appropriate here.
--Kevin Fogleman
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