Hi,
I have an Asus A6JE laptop which has an Intel T5600 CPU. It is
currently configured as i386
with CPUTYPE=prescott. But after reading wikipedia, I get the idea
that I have slightly
underconfigured my box, i.e. that a better configuration is possible.
dmesg says (7.0-release):
CPU: Intel(R) C
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 09:45:40AM +0200, Rene Ladan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an Asus A6JE laptop which has an Intel T5600 CPU. It is
> currently configured as i386
> with CPUTYPE=prescott. But after reading wikipedia, I get the idea
> that I have slightly
> underconfigured my box, i.e. that a be
2008/7/25 Roland Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 09:45:40AM +0200, Rene Ladan wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have an Asus A6JE laptop which has an Intel T5600 CPU. It is
>> currently configured as i386
>> with CPUTYPE=prescott. But after reading wikipedia, I get the idea
>> that I hav
2008/7/25 Rene Ladan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> 2008/7/25 Roland Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 09:45:40AM +0200, Rene Ladan wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I have an Asus A6JE laptop which has an Intel T5600 CPU. It is
>>> currently configured as i386
>>> with CPUTYPE=prescott. But aft
cpu1: on acpi0
ACPI Warning (tbutils-0243): Incorrect checksum in table [SSDT] - 77, should be
2C [20070320]
coretemp1: on cpu1
est1: on cpu1
p4tcc1: on cpu1
Maybe some amd64 configuration is possible, since it the cpu has AMD features?
not maybe but indeed.
___
i read the graid3 manual and http://www.acnc.com/04_01_03.html to make
sure i know what's RAID3 and i don't understand few things.
1)
"The number of components must be equal to 3, 5, 9, 17, etc.
(2^n + 1)."
why it can't be say 5 disks+parity?
2) "-r Use parity component for r
Hello,
1. I don't see such a thing on the weblink you gave (acnc)
In my opinion, this rule is pure nonsense, as raid 3 just use a
separate drive to store stripe parity. You just need at least 3
drives, one for parity, 2 for data. you can do raid 3 with how many
drives you want.
2. because the rai
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 11:16:02AM +0200, Rene Ladan wrote:
> >>> CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 CPU T5600 @ 1.83GHz (1828.77-MHz
> >>> 686-class CPU)
> >>> Origin = "GenuineIntel" Id = 0x6f6 Stepping = 6
> >>> Features=0xbfebfbff
> >>> Features2=0xe3bd
> >>> AMD Features=0x2010
> >>
Hello,
I am buying hardware for a FreeBSD server and me and my friend argue about
whether or not to by ECC RAM for the server. It is a HP ProLiant ML110 G4
machine and currently it has 2 x 512 HP DDR2 ECC memory.
My friend says buying ECC memory is not wise, because we would not profit from
it s
$ whoami
wmoran
$ mkdir test2
$ sudo chown daemon:daemon test2
$ sudo chmod 6777 test2
$ ls -lah | grep test2
drwsrwsrwx 2 daemon daemon 512B Jul 25 07:40 test2
$ touch test2/testfile.empty
$ ls -lah test2
total 8
drwsrwsrwx 2 daemon daemon 512B Jul 25 07:41 .
drwxr-xr-x 59 wmoran whee
On Behalf Of Norberto Meijome
>On Thu, 24 Jul 2008 17:42:04 -0700
>Chuck Swiger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Try something like this on the webserver or client machine:
>>
>> # tcpdump -ttt -q -n -A tcp port 80
>
> Excellent, thanks Chuck.
> I haven't got access to the server, and the client
Nejc Škoberne wrote:
4. If there is non-ECC memory installed, how does FreeBSD recognizes
(corrects?)
memory errors?
By crashing or corrupting data, of course. Not doing this is what ECC
is for :)
Kris
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Nejc Škoberne wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am buying hardware for a FreeBSD server and me and my friend argue about
> whether or not to by ECC RAM for the server. It is a HP ProLiant ML110 G4
> machine and currently it has 2 x 512 HP DDR2 ECC memory.
>
> My friend says buying ECC memory is not wise, be
4. If there is non-ECC memory installed, how does FreeBSD recognizes
(corrects?)
memory errors?
it's not OS job, but hardware.
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Give me the output of 'mount' please.
Thanks
Subhro
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 5:15 PM, Bill Moran
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> $ whoami
> wmoran
> $ mkdir test2
> $ sudo chown daemon:daemon test2
> $ sudo chmod 6777 test2
> $ ls -lah | grep test2
> drwsrwsrwx 2 daemon daemon 512B Jul 25 07:4
In response to Subhro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Give me the output of 'mount' please.
In the example detailed below:
$ mount
/dev/ad4s1a on / (ufs, local)
devfs on /dev (devfs, local)
/dev/ad4s1e on /tmp (ufs, local, soft-updates)
/dev/ad4s1f on /usr (ufs, local, soft-updates)
/dev/ad4s1d on /var (u
Hello
I try to setup a FreeBSD PXE bootable rescue image.
I'm aware of the rescue mode on Disc1 on every FreeBSD CD. My goal is to
setup a non interactive session.
Boot via PXE, set a root password depends on the mac address, start ssh
and allow remote login.
Adrian Steinmann showed somethi
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 08:42:54AM -0400, Michael Powell wrote:
> Nejc ?koberne wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > I am buying hardware for a FreeBSD server and me and my friend argue about
> > whether or not to by ECC RAM for the server. It is a HP ProLiant ML110 G4
> > machine and currently it has 2 x
Michael Powell wrote:
[snip]
>>
>> 1. So, what would you base your decision on? Is getting ECC worth losing
>> 1GB of non-ECC memory?
Oh - and the other criterion I forgot to mention. If the box in question is
only being used by 1 or 2 people and can have downtime to fix defects
whenever you wan
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Bill Moran wrote:
| $ whoami
| wmoran
| $ mkdir test2
| $ sudo chown daemon:daemon test2
| $ sudo chmod 6777 test2
| $ ls -lah | grep test2
| drwsrwsrwx 2 daemon daemon 512B Jul 25 07:40 test2
| $ touch test2/testfile.empty
| $ ls -lah test2
| to
In response to Greg Larkin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Bill Moran wrote:
> | $ whoami
> | wmoran
> | $ mkdir test2
> | $ sudo chown daemon:daemon test2
> | $ sudo chmod 6777 test2
> | $ ls -lah | grep test2
> | drwsrwsrwx 2 daemon daemon 512B Ju
Erik Trulsson wrote:
[snip]
>
> No, non-ECC RAM cannot detect or correct any errors at all. (Old
> parity-RAM could detect, but not correct, single-bit errors.)
Actually quite true. The old parity bit functionality that was removed from
RAM and then called "non-ECC" actually migrated to the memor
If you can afford it, always buy the ECC. Saves your bacon more often
than not in the long run.
My Mac Pro personal desktop has it. It developed an issue in one of
the sticks. The system detected that many errors were getting
corrected, and disabled the whole stick. Sure I lost 2GB
Hi friends,
I have a motherboard for Intel Core2Duo CPU using the Q35 chipset.
How can I read out the speed of the Fan's connected to the Motherboard and
control the speed?
I would like to do that from console and later directly in my application.
I tried to find something in sysctl but without su
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 09:28:11AM -0400, Michael Powell wrote:
> Erik Trulsson wrote:
> [snip]
> >
> > No, non-ECC RAM cannot detect or correct any errors at all. (Old
> > parity-RAM could detect, but not correct, single-bit errors.)
>
> Actually quite true. The old parity bit functionality that
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 03:44:12PM +0200, Vonarburg, David wrote:
> Hi friends,
> I have a motherboard for Intel Core2Duo CPU using the Q35 chipset.
> How can I read out the speed of the Fan's connected to the Motherboard and
> control the speed?
You can read it with the sysutils/mbmon port. I don
I just setup a new server with 7.0-RELEASE and saw the following lines
for the fist time when booting the system:
Setting hostuuid: 2231232f-4000--2333-aafbb88a88ca.
Setting hostid: 0x89e3310b.
What exactly are those for? Is it a unique string based on my hardware
based on a certain component
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 04:26:21PM +0200, Sandra Kachelmann wrote:
> I just setup a new server with 7.0-RELEASE and saw the following lines
> for the fist time when booting the system:
>
> Setting hostuuid: 2231232f-4000--2333-aafbb88a88ca.
> Setting hostid: 0x89e3310b.
>
> What exactly are t
2008/7/25 Roland Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 09:45:40AM +0200, Rene Ladan wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have an Asus A6JE laptop which has an Intel T5600 CPU. It is
>> currently configured as i386
>> with CPUTYPE=prescott. But after reading wikipedia, I get the idea
>> that I hav
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 06:03:46PM +0200, Rene Ladan wrote:
> Hmm, according to CPU pages the T5600 is 64-bit capable (see
> http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview.aspx?catid=29&threadid=2067695&enterthread=y&STARTPAGE=2),
> but according to the 7.0 hardware notes it is not:
> ...
>
> * Intel P
This strikes me as a noob question but in 10 years of
freebsd, I've never wrapped my brain around it and
it seems to be causing me problems this time.
I have many aliases on many servers. Some services
listening on an alias address seem to return the packets
out the alias address as shown in nets
I am using a Dell Latitude D520 with the GENERIC kernel on FreeBSD 7.0.I am not
able to fully utilize all of the devices available on this model. However, the
most concerning issue is the Dell Wireless 350 Bluetooth Internal Card. I am
not able to find the device or the device name on the boot l
Chris Pratt wrote:
I'm now setting up a bind server in which the third alias
is the address for incoming DNS queries. It appears
it's responding but even though the queries come in
on the third alias, they "go out" through the "primary"
address or more specifically, the packet count is
increment
On Jul 25, 2008, at 10:12 AM, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Chris Pratt wrote:
I'm now setting up a bind server in which the third alias
is the address for incoming DNS queries. It appears
it's responding but even though the queries come in
on the third alias, they "go out" through the "primary"
addr
Several 6.2 systems are about to be upgraded to
FreeBSD6.3. They run bind which also must be upgraded to the new
patched version.
Should I wait to build the new bind port until after the
systems are upgraded or does it matter?
Thank you.
Martin McCormick WB5AGZ Stillwate
On Jul 25, 2008, at 11:32 AM, Martin McCormick wrote:
Several 6.2 systems are about to be upgraded to
FreeBSD6.3. They run bind which also must be upgraded to the new
patched version.
Should I wait to build the new bind port until after the
systems are upgraded or does it matter?
Chuck Swiger writes:
> Either way, you should not wait to update bind. :-)
It's like 72 hours away.:-)
On Monday, I will actually do the cvs-based upgrades for
all the systems in question and will also upgrade bind so that
when they are rebooted, bind only has to go down for one time.
If
Steve Franks wrote:
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 4:56 PM, Kevin Kinsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Steve Franks wrote:
I must be missing something obvious. About 25% of my dependencies
fail to install with errors like:
"install-info: /usr/local/info/dir: empty file"
"pkg-add: command 'install-info
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 10:12 AM, Matthew Seaman
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Chris Pratt wrote:
>
>> I'm now setting up a bind server in which the third alias
>> is the address for incoming DNS queries. It appears
>> it's responding but even though the queries come in
>> on the third alias, they "
Hello
On freebsd7.0, my crontab sends many mails about its jobs.
I want crontab not to send these mails
How can I do that ?
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On Jul 25, 2008, at 4:05 PM, David Allen wrote:
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 10:12 AM, Matthew Seaman
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Chris Pratt wrote:
I'm now setting up a bind server in which the third alias
is the address for incoming DNS queries. It appears
it's responding but even though the que
Yavuz Maslak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On freebsd7.0, my crontab sends many mails about its jobs.
>
> I want crontab not to send these mails
>
> How can I do that ?
This is somewhat of a FAQ; see:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2004-March/038638.html
--
Sahil Tandon
Hi
I ve got 6.3 stable database server. Can i directly upgrade my server from
6.3 to 7.0
*default release=cvs tag=RELENG_6
*default release=cvs tag=.
and also may i add ZFS to my server if such kind of update succsessfull. is
it possible or not and advantage and disadvantage.
--
Share n
You should not do the upgrade, though you can. ZFS is still
experimental on FreeBSD though you can certainly use zfs pools on your
existing system.
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On Friday 25 July 2008, tethys ocean wrote:
> I ve got 6.3 stable database server. Can i directly upgrade my server
> from 6.3 to 7.0
Sure. Be prepared to rebuild and/or reinstall all your ports/packages and
follow the other guidelines in src/UPDATING and other documentation.
> *default release
tethys ocean wrote:
Hi
I ve got 6.3 stable database server. Can i directly upgrade my server from
6.3 to 7.0
*default release=cvs tag=RELENG_6
*default release=cvs tag=.
and also may i add ZFS to my server if such kind of update succsessfull. is
it possible or not and advantage and disadvan
Hi guys,
Have a question regarding top PRI and the renice command
extract from top
PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZERES STATETIME WCPU
COMMAND
17269 brahama 1 960 5932K 5300K select 30:55 0.00%
perl5.8.8
Ok...what are the values of PRI? for insta
k
Hi
I ve got 6.3 stable database server. Can i directly upgrade my server from
6.3 to 7.0
yes.
anyway - if your server works fine - why?
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