> Also, before blaming netgraph, which may well be to blame, could it be
> that you have interference from some other source that's making things
> bad? The exactly every other packet being dropped does seem to be a
> big clue.
I have ruled out interference as a contributor to these results.
M
FYI: The error described below is fully fixed by moving from 1.10.2.4 to
rev. 1.22 of traverse.c. It is the change from 1.21 -> 1.22 which
restores the ability to do a backup again.
Thanks!
Dw.
On Sat, 29 Jun 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Not sure if I should blame current - but see the er
On Friday, 5th July 2002, Martin Blapp wrote:
>This problem still persists. On my Laptop a ACCTON MiniPCI
>100Mbit card does make this output. Then I loose my network
>connection. Only a ifconfig down/up of the interface helps.
Are you running -current? I did a quick (but safe) hack in -stable
Sorry to cross post this, I want it in the archives.
[discussion on using mulitilink acrsss wireless cards deleted]
I have done similar, using two IP channels and with mpd as the
"one2many"
basically, assign real IP addresses to the 4 cards, on 2 separate
10.x.x.x/30 networks then open ksock
Hi,
> Are you running -current? I did a quick (but safe) hack in -stable hoping
> that people would test -current and report back. Nobody did.
Yes, I'm running CURRENT.
> If you are running -current, I will be able to make the error message go
> away, but that will not solve any hang problem
Hi all,
Sorry to cross post this, but I'm having problems getting this card
working under FreeBSD. It works under Windows XP and I've had reports
of it working on RedHat 7.3.
I'm trying to get a wireless card going in a desktop machine. The
wireless card is a ORiNOCO Wireless LAN PC Card The PC
One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
support to do this (In the past That is how I did this).
The machiine has 1 CD drive
:
:One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
:power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
:
:I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
:support to do this (In the past That is how I did this).
:The machiine has 1
Julian Elischer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
> power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
>
> I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
> support to do this (In the past
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 02:08:27PM -0700, Matthew Dillon wrote:
...
> :power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
> :
> :I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
for what matters, sometimes I managed to recover the disk by just
dd'ing a zer
Hi,
Just thought I'd check here, I haven't had much luck on -stable. Is this
information helpful or do I need to get my remoted gdb stuff working to
give useful info? It would be nice to see any ata issues ironed out
before the point release. There still seem to be a decent number of
people ha
Julian Elischer wrote:
> One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
> power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
>
> I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
> support to do this (In the past That is how I did t
this is not a 'reformat'
what I want to do is an old-fashionned refomat/verify where the controller
writes new track headers etc.
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, John Nielsen wrote:
> Julian Elischer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
> >
Luigi Rizzo wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 02:08:27PM -0700, Matthew Dillon wrote:
> ...
> > :power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
> > :
> > :I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
>
> for what matters, sometimes I managed to reco
> this is not a 'reformat'
>
> what I want to do is an old-fashionned refomat/verify where the controller
> writes new track headers etc.
>
You want to follow terry's advice then.
Ken
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Julian Elischer wrote:
> One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
> power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
>
> I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
> support to do this (In the past That is how I di
On Montag, 8. Juli 2002 23:46, Kent Stewart wrote:
> Julian Elischer wrote:
> > The machiine has 1 CD drive and no floppy..
^^
> All of the manufacturers have a program that will do that. Many of
> them even produce a bootable floppy. Check their support web pa
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
>
> Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
> with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
> e.g. SCSI.
This is an urban ledgend..
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe fr
I hate to bother the list, but after lots of searching I haven't found this
out - maybe I missed something obvious :
I have 8 scsi CDRs in a netserver 5 case, need to burn a number of CDs.
I haven't seen anything in the ports that will do multi CDRs.
So does anyone know of a program. On the oth
Julian Elischer wrote:
> On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
> > Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
> > with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
> > e.g. SCSI.
>
> This is an urban ledgend..
That SCSI disks don't use random inter-r
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 02:53:20PM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
>
> >
> > Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
> > with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
> > e.g. SCSI.
>
> This is an u
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Julian Elischer wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
>
> >
> > Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
> > with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
> > e.g. SCSI.
>
> This is an urban ledgend..
Which part
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Julian Elischer wrote:
> > On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
> > > Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
> > > with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
> > > e.g. SCSI.
> >
> > This is an
Robert Klein wrote:
> On Montag, 8. Juli 2002 23:46, Kent Stewart wrote:
>
>>Julian Elischer wrote:
>>
>>>The machiine has 1 CD drive and no floppy..
>>>
> ^^
>
>
>>All of the manufacturers have a program that will do that. Many of
>>them even produce a bo
> One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
> power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
>
> I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios doesn't have any
> support to do this (In the past That is how I did this).
> The machiine ha
This is a solicitation for submissions for the May 2002 - June 2002
FreeBSD Bi-Monthly Development Status Report. All submissions are due by
July 19, 2002. Submissions should be made by filling out the template
found at:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/news/status/report-sample.xml
Submissions mus
Julian Elischer wrote:
> this is not a 'reformat'
>
> what I want to do is an old-fashionned refomat/verify where the controller
> writes new track headers etc.
The thing is, just about all IDE drives more than a few GB or so do 'track
writing' and have no fixed sectoring or sector positioning.
:> > Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
:> > with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
:> > e.g. SCSI.
:>
:> This is an urban ledgend..
:
:No - it's SCSI Specs.
:A SCSI Disk is required to savely finish the started sector even
:on powerl
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Peter Wemm wrote:
> Julian Elischer wrote:
> > this is not a 'reformat'
> >
> > what I want to do is an old-fashionned refomat/verify where the controller
> > writes new track headers etc.
>
> The thing is, just about all IDE drives more than a few GB or so do
> 'track wri
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 04:40:04PM -0700, Matthew Dillon wrote:
>
> :> > Julian got struck by lightning; perhaps he will now stick to disks
> :> > with built-in lightning rods (e.g. not succeptible to this failure),
> :> > e.g. SCSI.
> :>
> :> This is an urban ledgend..
> :
> :No - it's SCSI Spe
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Peter Wemm wrote:
> The thing is, just about all IDE drives more than a few GB or so do 'track
> writing' and have no fixed sectoring or sector positioning. ie: each time
> you write a single sector to a track, it does a read-modify-write of *THE
> ENTIRE TRACK*. This is wh
On Monday, 8 July 2002 at 14:46:29 -0700, Kent Stewart wrote:
> Julian Elischer wrote:
>
>> One of my FreeBSD development boxes had a hernia last week when it lost
>> power while writing to disk. The drive wrote out garbage to a track.
>>
>> I want to reformat the drive, (low level) but the bios
Nowadays, what with the price of fast memory at such low levels, I'm
buying more memory than I really need, just because it's *so* cheap, the
price has gone up before, and it's possible (maybe likely) that next
year's popular new app will need the memory. I'm probably not alone in
doing this. It
> "John" == John Kozubik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Also, before blaming netgraph, which may well be to blame, could it
>> be that you have interference from some other source that's making
>> things bad? The exactly every other packet being dropped does seem
>> to be a big clue.
John>
Julian Elischer wrote:
> According to the specs I had access to at Whistle they were pretty much
> the same low level device with different interface logic.
> The ATA drives I have seen had a format capacity
> just like their scsi cousins, just hard to find.
Actually, if you read through the thre
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 09:30:04PM -0400, Chuck Robey wrote:
> Nowadays, what with the price of fast memory at such low levels, I'm
> buying more memory than I really need, just because it's *so* cheap, the
> price has gone up before, and it's possible (maybe likely) that next
> year's popular new
> For most cards, there's no workaround. For a few cards, it's rhumored
> that you can hack the firmware (DLink is one I've heard mentioned).
Thank you. I have heard of and witnessed these problems in the past with
Lucent cards. Do you know if Cisco Aironet cards exhibit the same
behavior ?
On Tue, 9 Jul 2002, Erik Trulsson wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 09:30:04PM -0400, Chuck Robey wrote:
> > Nowadays, what with the price of fast memory at such low levels, I'm
> > buying more memory than I really need, just because it's *so* cheap, the
> > price has gone up before, and it's poss
On Monday 08 July 2002 09:30 pm, Chuck Robey wrote:
| Nowadays, what with the price of fast memory at such low levels, I'm
| buying more memory than I really need, just because it's *so* cheap, the
| price has gone up before, and it's possible (maybe likely) that next
| year's popular new app will
Howdy,
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Mike Silbersack
> Sent: Tuesday, 9 July 2002 10:53
> To: Peter Wemm
> Cc: Julian Elischer; John Nielsen; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: offtopic: low level format of IDE drive.
>
> [snip]
>
Matthew Dillon wrote:
> I've had direct experience with this. Seagate drives will indeed lose
> up to two sectors if you are writing during a power loss... and this
> is *GOOD* for the industry.
You went to "Men In Black II" this weekend, didn't you?
Do you have "Conspiracy Theorist
Chris Knight wrote:
> Does anyone have a detailed list of which SCSI drives do track writes
> rather than sector writes?
All the broken ones.
-- Terry
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Chuck Robey wrote:
> Nowadays, what with the price of fast memory at such low levels, I'm
> buying more memory than I really need, just because it's *so* cheap, the
> price has gone up before, and it's possible (maybe likely) that next
> year's popular new app will need the memory. I'm probably n
On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
> > Does anyone have a detailed list of which SCSI drives do track writes
> > rather than sector writes?
>
> All the broken ones.
Could you be a little more specific? :-)
--
Kris Kirby, KE4AHR | TGIFreeBSD... 'Nuff said.
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | I
"Chris Knight" wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Mike Silbersack
> > Sent: Tuesday, 9 July 2002 10:53
> > To: Peter Wemm
> > Cc: Julian Elischer; John Nielsen; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: Re: offtopic: low le
Erik Trulsson wrote:
> Minimal amount of swap possible: No swap at all of course.
> Minimal swap if you want to be able to catch core dumps: Physical RAM
> size + 64K
> Minimal amount of swap you need: Depends on what you are doing,
> doesn't it?
>
> You don't need to configure any swap at all
Kris Kirby wrote:
> On Mon, 8 Jul 2002, Terry Lambert wrote:
> > > Does anyone have a detailed list of which SCSI drives do track writes
> > > rather than sector writes?
> >
> > All the broken ones.
>
> Could you be a little more specific? :-)
Hard drive selection has always been an exclusion se
Howdy,
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Peter Wemm
> Sent: Tuesday, 9 July 2002 12:44
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: offtopic: low level format of IDE drive.
>
> [snip]
> > Does anyo
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
David Gilbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: For most cards, there's no workaround. For a few cards, it's rhumored
: that you can hack the firmware (DLink is one I've heard mentioned).
All Prism 2 and 2.5 (and now 3) based cards can do this. At least
w
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Wayne Pascoe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: I'm trying to get a wireless card going in a desktop machine. The
: wireless card is a ORiNOCO Wireless LAN PC Card The PCI->PCMCIA
...
: wi0: watchdog timeout
Missing interrupts.
: I have found that IRQ 5 is
> "John" == John Kozubik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> For most cards, there's no workaround. For a few cards, it's
>> rhumored that you can hack the firmware (DLink is one I've heard
>> mentioned).
John> Thank you. I have heard of and witnessed these problems in the
John> past with Lucen
Nachricht von Tina weitergeleitet von uns:
Unser Funchat ist wieder online kannste ja
mal reinschauen ich bin auch immer drin.
ok bis später
deine TINA
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Thus spake Terry Lambert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Erik Trulsson wrote:
> > Minimal swap if you want to be able to catch core dumps: Physical RAM
> > size + 64K
I've caught many core dumps with swap == RAM. Am I just getting
lucky, or am I losing 64K of the image?
> Crash dumps good.
I beg to dif
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Terry Lambert writes:
> Julian Elischer wrote:
> > According to the specs I had access to at Whistle they were pretty much
> > the same low level device with different interface logic.
> > The ATA drives I have seen had a format capacity
> > just like their scsi cou
:Thus spake Terry Lambert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
:> Erik Trulsson wrote:
:> > Minimal swap if you want to be able to catch core dumps: Physical RAM
:> > size + 64K
:
:I've caught many core dumps with swap == RAM. Am I just getting
:lucky, or am I losing 64K of the image?
:
:> Crash dumps good.
:
:
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