I've been running powerd for a while. Been running it on an ASUS
B202. It brought my freq down to 100mhz when I checked on it.
Stopping powerd brought the freq up to 1600, and restarting powerd
brought it back to 100mhz eventually.
You might need to load an ACPI module for your system. Mine w
On 11/18/09, Mario Pavlov wrote:
> oh yes, I got what you meant now
> true, I used /usr from the server because I wanted to have all my ports
> available to the client. Is there a nice way to install ports only in the
> diskless distribution ?
>
> thank you.
>
> Regards
> Mario
Just like any oth
On 11/16/09, Mario Pavlov wrote:
> indeed you get bonus points if you firewall yourself :)
> and of course this is not the first time I do that so my score is pretty
> good
> however my favourite is to forget about net.inet.ip.forwarding when I
> upgrade routers with many clients :)
>
> Tim, than
On 11/16/09, Mario Pavlov wrote:
> Hi,
> it turned out I was stupid enough to misconfigure the kernel...I forgot that
> I had left the IPFIREWALL options turned on and as you know it's default to
> deny so once the kernel initializes ipfw it blocks everything including NFS
> so that was the whole
Please compare my working configuration to yours to check. I found
lots of odd problems in your post and I thought it'd be best to just
run with this clean slate.
Network config:
One low-power PC Engines ALIX board running as the NFS server, with
a microdrive partitioned off for it's own syst
On Thu, May 14, 2009 at 9:12 AM, James Tanis wrote:
> I have a FreeBSD v7.0 box it has two Intel Pro/1000 NICs, the one in
> question is:
>
> em1: port
> 0x2020-0x203f mem 0xd806-0xd807,0xd804-0xd805 irq 19 at
> device 0.1 on pci4
>
> what we get after boot is:
>
> em1: flags=894