Any advice regarding these drivers being already available or ported
somewhere, or perhaps any advice for someone to help facilitate the driver
being ported would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks ,
Kevin K.
___
freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing
Any advice regarding these drivers being already available or ported
somewhere, or perhaps any advice for someone to help facilitate the driver
being ported would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks ,
Kevin K.
___
freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing
> Be aware that the RTL8187, RTL8187B and RTL8187L are all different
> chipsets. I believe Linux has two drivers for them, one driver covers
> two
> chips.
I believe it is the RTL8187L chipset. The actual device is an Alfa Network
"AWUS036H" , product information is
http://dplanet.biz/alfa.com/p
> The Ubuntu install is very compelling. I am just wishing that FreeBSD
> was AS compelling in its first install experience. At present it is
> far, far behind.
>
> That does not stop ME from preferring FreeBSD, but it stops many other
> people.
FreeBSD is primarily a server oriented operating
# uname -a
FreeBSD ck.com 7.0-STABLE FreeBSD 7.0-STABLE #1: Tue Jul 15 11:38:41 EDT
2008 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/CK i386
#
Make buildkernel kernconf=CK fails here :
linking kernel.debug
sbp.o(.text+0xd9d): In function `sbp_free_ocb':
/usr/src/sys/dev/firewire/sbp.c:2905: unde
22 e0 b8 00 c0 03 00 0f-22 d8 0f 20 c0 0d 00 00
Ss:eso=90 95 00 00 00 80 fc 00-00 90 fc 00 07 e0 03 00
00 00 00 00 07 d0 03 00-00 00 00 00 3c d9 06 00
BTX halted
The above happens /JUST/ after pressing "enter" at the boot screen when
booting from the
> Can you please try 7.1-PRERELEASE or 6.4-RC2 (just announced today)?
> There have been bootstrap-related changes since 7.0-RELEASE which may
> fix your problem.
I tried 7.1-BETA2 , but unfortunately the same problem happened. I tried
(for the sake of argument) Debian debian-40r5-amd64 , and it
> > I tried 7.1-BETA2 , but unfortunately the same problem happened. I
> tried
> > (for the sake of argument) Debian debian-40r5-amd64 , and it wouldn't
> boot
> > either -- it said "Your CPU does not support long mode, please use a
> 32bit
> > distribution".
>
> This means your processor does not
> Yes, the BTX fault you are getting is from trying to start 64-bit mode
> on a
> CPU that doesn't support 32-bit mode. The latest snapshots should have
> a
> fix where you get a more helpful "Your CPU doesn't do 64-bit" message.
>
> --
> John Baldwin
Thank you all for your prudent help, it is
the servers in question are production systems.
Both systems will be 7.1-PRERELEASE. And I am unable to physically mount
the new server's disk in the old server, unfortunately.
Any help / suggestions is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Hello,
I have been trying to install a FreeBSD 7.2-RELEASE or FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE
implementation.
After finally getting the XEN HVM instance to see the boot disk , I am now
seeing "BTX Halted" error messages right when it tries to boot.
I did some research and this is a known issue with FreeBSD
>I confirm this problem for another server:
>stable 8 amd64 + vlan + carp
>
>Whenever I join a bridge with a vlan interface:
>
>ifconfig bridge0 addm vlan35
>
>The system soon or later freezes.
>
>This time it has happened after 3 days of normal behavior.
>
>No logs, no dump.
This happens to me
> > Try to disable kbdmux before booting. Jump to the loader prompt and
> type:
> >
> > set hint.kbdmux.0.disabled=1
> > boot -v
> >
> Can you try
>
> set hw.ata.atapi_dma=0
>
> from the loader prompt.
>
> It's a long shot but it just might work.
>
> As it's a laptop, you might need to do all
following the instructions to the point
>leads to a running system, automagically,
> or, alternatively
>change the build instructions to show the pitfalls more prominently?
>
> IMHO, when big changes like aout-elf, or, recently, new tool chain tools
> make changes to the bu
the last message to appear is "Entropy harvesting:", that may or
may not be the cause of the hang. It really should continue after a ^C
if that was the issue.
Can you try a ^T to see what is really running? Or, if that does not
tell you, try adding rc_debug="YES" to rc.conf. Thi
;)
> >
> > When you say -stable, I assume that's 8.2-RC3 yes ?
>
> No, that is in a separate branch that is frozen. This won't be in 8.2, we
> would have had to have gotten it in in December to make 8.2.
>
> This is in stable/8.
>
> > I'm not ve
loading) system.
>
> I tend to try different block sizes (starting at bs=8k and working up to
> bs=256k) for sequential benchmarks. The "sweet spot" on most disks I've
> found is 64k. Otherwise use benchmarks/bonnie++.
When FreeBSD updated its random number engine a c
on a little test machine
and have it backup to itself. I might recommend doing this anyway since
you'll want to be able to experiment with configuration and controls
before trying it on your production machine.
--Kevin
___
freebsd-stable@freebs
at properly functioning NCQ (or TCQ) can
assure that the metadata is safely updated so that power loss will never
engender data corruption while enhancing performance. It still will not
save you from losing the data that is in cache and not written, but that
is the extent of the damage.
--
R. Kevi
the UC-San Diego System Energy Efficiency
Lab has presented research that shows that servers save by far the most
power when a process gets in, runs at maximum speed and gets out to
allow the system to sleep. This is clearly the only way to significantly
improve power consumption in servers. If you d
be in the data sheet for the CPU. If
ACPI does not hange it, it runs in a purely automated fashion with no
human intervention available.
I wish I could provide some easy way to detect when it kicks in, but I
don't think there is one. You can force it while monitoring performance.
Try running md5
exactly .125
> > of the original time.
>
> Thanks, I will be using that to try and determine whether it really is
> TCC that makes my machine sluggish under load.
It works to tell you that TCC is doing the job, but does not explain in
any way why your CPU is so hot. I'll be v
ce for any help.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: ober...@es.net Phone: +1 510 486-8634
Last work day before retirement is Ju
4 XZ_5.0
lzma_stream_encoder
Any clues to what i happening would be greatly appreciated!
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
___
freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/fre
On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 7:19 PM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> I'm trying to understand the problems I am having on some systems
> regarding libarchive, lzma, and xz.
> I have an 8-Stable system updated yesterday. As far as I can tell,
> libarchive does include the lzma stuff
> fro
ut that it interferes with the main
graphics system, usually Intel 3000 which is actually a part of the Sandy
Bridge CPU.
Since the Intel chip is also still unsupported by FreeBSD, you will be
limited to VEDA support which is very limited.
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Retired
kob6...@gmail.com
On Jul
On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 11:32 PM, b. f. wrote:
>> On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 7:19 PM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> > I'm trying to understand the problems I am having on some systems
>> > regarding libarchive, lzma, and xz.
>> > I have an 8-Stable system u
:
> http://forums.freebsd.org/archive/index.php/t-21852.html
If it is a 4500, you will have at least minimal graphics support. You should
be able to disable the NVIDIA daughter card on BIOS, but I would not want to
guarantee it.
Good luck!
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Retired
kob6...@gmail.com
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To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
cal. I might be
able to admin such a wiki, but I have no place to put it. But I'm retired,
so I should have time.
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Retired
kob6...@gmail.com
___
freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebs
e it to emit the standard (sub)vendor/(sub)device terminology?
>>
>> Oh, yeah. I hate that too. Would you want them as 4 separate entities or to
>> just rename the labels to 'devid' and 'subdevid'?
>>
>
> If we're going to change it, might a
ber of standalone
graphics cards with the addition of "Optimus", it's easy to get one of
these useless things by accident. I would have if I hadn't been warned
at the last minute.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
__
e about this as GPT looks like the way to go in e future.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
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http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable
To unsubscribe, send an
On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 4:41 PM, Jeremy Chadwick
wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 03:50:15PM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> I just want to check on the status of 4K sector support in FreeBSD. I read
>> a long thread on the topic from a while back and it looks like I might hit
&g
des. Probably around 1993 on an old
SparcStation 1 running SunOS and then only due to a bad assumption I
made when 'newfs'ing it.
Again, thanks for the advice. At very least it will save me a bit of time!
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
_
On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 2:49 PM, Jeremy Chadwick
wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 02:33:27PM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 1:41 PM, Alexander Leidinger
>> wrote:
>> > On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 16:41:24 -0700 Jeremy Chadwick
>> > wrote:
&g
On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 6:02 AM, Alexander Leidinger
wrote:
> Quoting Kevin Oberman (from Tue, 19 Jul 2011 14:33:27
> -0700):
>
>> On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 1:41 PM, Alexander Leidinger
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 16:41:24 -0700 Jeremy Chadwick
Stop in /usr/src/lib/libc.
> *** Error code 1
>
> Stop in /usr/src/lib.
Did you remember to 'make obj'? If you didn't, the library would be
left in the wrong place where 'make install' would not find it.
make obj
make depend (possibly a no-op)
make
make install
-
lect d ifferent bootable partition or my other disk which
is sliced in the traditional
fashion? Can anyone point me to any information on how the boot
process works with GPT?
Thanks!
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
__
2011/8/15 Andrey V. Elsukov :
> On 10.08.2011 07:12, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> I have /boot/pmbr loaded into the PMBR and gptboot into the
>> freebsd-boot partition. I'll
>> admit that I did this by rote and don't understand how these two files
>> interact wi
l give you a disk with a 1G root, 4G swap, 5G var, .5G tmp and
the remainder for usr.. You can adjust these as you feel appropriate.
I would suggest a careful reading of the gpart(8) man page, as well,
just so you understand what is going on. You
drive is just fine for the most part and replacing
it is really a waste of money.
Only you can make the call, but if further bad blocks show up in the
near term, I'll go along with recommending replacement.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
___
in up and everything is fine.
This looks like a bug, but I don't see why the unmounting of an
msdosfs system does not
spin up the drive. It's clearly hanging on some operation that is not
spinning up the drive,
but does block.
Any ideas what is going on? Possible fix?
--
R. Kevin Oberman
On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 1:06 PM, Eli Dart wrote:
>
>
> On 8/28/11 1:06 PM, Bengt Ahlgren wrote:
>>
>> Kevin Oberman writes:
>>
>>> I've run into an odd problem with dismounting file systems on a
>>> Seagate Expansion portable
>>> USB dr
On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 2:48 PM, Jeremy Chadwick
wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 01:29:02PM -0400, David Magda wrote:
>> On Tue, August 30, 2011 11:50, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> [...]
>> > The more I look at this, the more it seems to me that it is an issue
>> >
Jeremy,
I think we are simply not communicating, I guess. You are arguing
point with which I agree.
Comments in line:
On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 4:43 PM, Jeremy Chadwick
wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 04:10:13PM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 2:48 PM, Jeremy
On Thu, Sep 1, 2011 at 2:01 AM, wrote:
> Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
>> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 11:04:43PM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> > ... the standrad does not specify EXACTLY what triggers a
>> > transition from standby to ready (PM2 to PM0). Only that it is
>>
On Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 8:23 PM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 1, 2011 at 2:01 AM, wrote:
>> Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
>>> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 11:04:43PM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>>> > ... the standrad does not specify EXACTLY what triggers a
>>
55.0.0 ssid wrouter0
mode 11g channel 1"
or, to make it cleaner:
ifconfig_wlan0="inet 192.168.200.1/16 ssid wrouter0 mode 11g channel 1"
Will the AP be routed or bridged? If it is bridged, there is no need
for it to have an address.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
hat type of example. Either make it clear that a file system, not a
drive, is the appropriate
application. I am quite aware of this as I just created my first
gjournal file system last night
and was briefly confused by this.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer - Retired
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.c
eel -m 444 info.info.gz info-stnd.info.gz
> texinfo.info.gz /usr/share/info
> ===> include (install)
> creating osreldate.h from newvers.sh
> touch: not found
> *** Error code 127
>
> Stop in /usr/src/include.
> *** Error code 1
>
> Anyone having the same issue?
Chec
ugin configuration has been created strictly in accordance
> with the FreeBSD Handbook. No additional actions required.
> The problem exists for me with 8-STABLE only.
For those who missed it, this is a problem in the Linux emulation. See
the announcement from the the FreeBSD Security Off
Wow. it's 1985 again. O remember those 10/100 hubs. They were a royal pain!
If I remember right, they kept costs down by building in half of a switch.
Traffic from a 10 port to a 100 port was buffered, but there was no
forwarding table and all packets were forwarded to all ports. Total crap!
BTRFS and FreeBSD ZFS.
>>
>
>
> Er... does ext4 guarantee data integrity?
>
> You're not comparing like with like; please do some research on the
> point of ZFS before asserting that they're fair comparisons.
>
> A fair(er) comparison could be ext4 with UFS+soft
and "migrate"
> your kernel config to mimic what's in /sys/{arch}/conf/GENERIC.
Rather than switch to the adaX names, I really, really recommend using
labels. While SATA disks should be OK, there is no guarantee that
either hardware or software changes won't change the ada names
t does
not assure a completely clean system. I would also consider saving the
files in /usr/local/etc after all ports have been removed.That can save a
fair amount of reconfiguration at the slight risk of retaining some old
cruft.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
__
tensively on high latency links (often trans-oceanic) and have never seen
that. I'd find running tcptrace and generating time plots very useful for
looking at this sort of performance issue.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
imitations, but for any use of FreeBSD as a host
system, it's the only game in town.
I suspect that most VB users on FreeBSD use it to get access to a small
number of took on Windows...the ones in Office. It's still better than
either LibreOffice or OpenOffice.org for either documents or p
m, let me know but I need to co-ordinate with
> others
> to upgrade the machine in question.
Not seeing it here on 9-stable. Could it be a display issue? I am
using gnome-terminal with TERM defined as 'xterm'.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, N
he FreeBSD disk.
This works for me, but I suspect that lots of people would prefer
having multiple OSes on a single disk...especially when it's a single
spindle laptop. (I suspect laptops are more commonly dual-boot than
most any other platform.)
As for fdisk and bsdlabel, I'm happy to se
t; then how would internal sector remapping work? ;)
Please remember that some disks are dual-boot. FreeBSD may understand
geom has the backup one block from the last LBA on the disk, but no
other OS is likely to do so.
Unless I am missing something, this should be a non-start
andard like this. It comes back to bite you in the butt all
too often.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
___
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To unsubscribe, se
device? I guess
> I haven't tried that, so I don't know what that would do.
Call me a bit confused, but I thought -B did write an MBR. It always
has seemed to do so for me, at any rate. From man bsdlabel:
"Installing Bootstraps
If the -B o
On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 9:17 AM, Scott Bennett wrote:
> On Sat, 25 Feb 2012 08:56:24 -0800 Kevin Oberman
> wrote:
>>On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 2:27 AM, Scott Bennett wrote:
>>> =A0 =A0 On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 13:34:36 +0700 Erich Dollansky
>>> wrote:
>>>
&g
p;& {
> > __state_remove ${MNT} ${STATE} ${LINE}
> > continue
> > }
> > umount -f ${TARGET} &
> > unset TARGET
> > __state_remove ${MNT} ${STATE} ${LINE}
> > __log "
ificantly broad use after a release. Staying in BETA for long
intervals leaves important features from getting to a large number of
users, so RE has to draw a line somewhere and say, "We are doing a
release". It is now more or less time based, but it is still when ABIs
ven though RE and everyone running current
knew it had big problems. It i also why 5.0 and 5.1 were clearly
marked as "development" releases not for production.
I really hope to never see a release as ugly as 5. 9.0 may have issues
as did 7.0 and 8.0, but for most, it works quite well.
59-1/books/developers-handbook)?
It tells you how to make a good port, how to test it (though I don't
think it has anything on redports, yet), and how to submit it.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
___
freebsd-stable
after review by a ports
committer, the port will be added. The cited section describes exactly
how to go about it. Be sure that it passes portlint(1) before you
submit.
Thanks for you work on this. I'm looking forward to seeing it as a port.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...
hint.p4tcc.0.disabled=1
hint.acpi_throttle.0.disabled=1
This should greatly reduce the large number of "frequencies"
available, but they will be the ones provided by EST.which really do
reduce power consumption. (I put frequencies in quotation marks
because throttling does not really change the
On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 7:26 AM, wrote:
> Kevin Oberman wrote:
>
>> Throttling ... is intended for thermal control, not power
>> management. The power savings will be negligible ...
>
> How can it possibly provide any thermal benefit, if it does not
> reduce power
if_ath.ko: Exec format error
> kldload: can't load /boot/kernel/if_aue.ko: Exec format error
> kldload: can't load /boot/kernel/if_axe.ko: Exec format error
GENERIC already has all of these drivers. Did you buidt a kernel with
no network interfaces? If the kernel is built with the d
home)
and the home partition is GELI encrypted. (I I had hardware crypto
support, I'd encrypt everything.)
The disk does have the protective MBR installed, though it's not
really part of the GPT. (See the "GUID Partition Table" article on
Wikipedia for more information.)
--
R. Kevi
ee user processes running. They are obviously using a bit
of CPU, but you need to find out what those processes might be. Using
top(1) with 'H' to show threads and see what they might be. The
possibilities with what we have now are nearly endless.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
SuperMicro C25BX mother board. The DVD is PATA,
reported on boot (of 8-Stable) as:
acd0: DVDR at ata2-master UDMA66
I seem to recall seeing a thread on this a while back on current, but
I don't seem to find it, now.
Any ideas of how to get around this? Perhaps I need to update to STABLE?
--
R.
gt; What devices am I missing? I am booting from a compact flash ata interface
> on Soekris and PCEngines Alix boards.
ata
ATA_CAM still needs it.
But why are you doing this? 9.0 defaults to use ATA_CAM, so just build
GENERIC. atadisk is not in GENERIC, but both ata and da ar, though da
ode 1
>
> Stop in /usr/src.
> (end of quoted text)
>
> Is this a known problem? This is on RELENG_9 and just a couple hours ago
Do you have 'device ata' in your kernel?
Is 'option ATA_CAM' in it? I don't know how atapi-cam plays with ATA_CAM.
--
R. Kevin
ussed in a few past threads on questi...@freebsd.org .
That's nice, but do you have 'device ata' in the configuration? It is
required, even with ATA_CAM.
Also, the thread states that atapicam is not needed with ATA_CAM. I
don't have atapicam it in my kernel and my
0:00,04 sh /etc/rc autoboot
> 1937 0 S+ 0:00,00 grep rc
> root@blob:/ # uptime
> 0:08 up 33 mins, 1 user, load averages: 0,00 0,00 0,00
> root@blob:/ #
>
> What happens? Why /etc/rc could not finish?
Take a look at
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable
ave attached my dmesg output, a copy of my xorg.conf file, and the output
> of 'pciconf -vl'.
>
> Anyone have any idea of what's going wrong, or what I can do to get X to work
> on this system?
Are you using the KMS driver (WITH_NEW_XORG)?
Can you provide the Xorg.log?
A
On Sun, May 27, 2012 at 10:19 AM, Bob Willcox wrote:
> On Sun, May 27, 2012 at 10:02:42AM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> On Sat, May 26, 2012 at 10:35 AM, Bob Willcox wrote:
>> > Hi All,
>> >
>> > I have a new Intel DH77DF mini-ITX motherboard with a Core
it was
probably prior to the release of 9. I googled around, but could not
find it.
I'd really appreciate it if anyone can point me toward a solution.
Thanks,
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
___
freebsd-stable@freebsd.o
On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 3:29 PM, Adam Vande More wrote:
> On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 4:54 PM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>>
>> I sent a note about this a couple of weeks ago, but have not heard
>> anything. I'm really getting a bit desperate.
>>
>> I have a system t
On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 4:02 AM, Marius Strobl
wrote:
> On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 05:13:44PM -0600, Ian Lepore wrote:
>> On Wed, 2012-05-30 at 14:54 -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> > I sent a note about this a couple of weeks ago, but have not heard
>> > anything. I'
system
and disk speed and I have not actually timed it).and it can be done
without console access or a single-user boot.
Caveats: Systems must be updated from a version the server knows to a
version the server knows; both kernel and world. Major version bumps
may require re-installation of port
On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 9:10 AM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 4:02 AM, Marius Strobl
> wrote:
>> On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 05:13:44PM -0600, Ian Lepore wrote:
>>> On Wed, 2012-05-30 at 14:54 -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>>> > I sent a note abou
On Sat, Jun 9, 2012 at 5:13 AM, Marius Strobl wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 08, 2012 at 10:11:48PM -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 9:10 AM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> > On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 4:02 AM, Marius Strobl
>> > wrote:
>> >> On Wed
e I should look? I saw a couple of threads on current
from others seeing something similar, but could find no resolution.
I have seen a
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
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On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 3:11 AM, Ronald Klop
wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Jun 2012 02:41:58 +0200, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>
>> Since updating my systems to 9-Stable, I am not getting my smartcard
>> reader attached when hot-plugged.
>>
>>> From devd.conf
>>
>>
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 7:53 AM, Ronald Klop
wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Jun 2012 15:50:49 +0200, Warren Block wrote:
>
>> On Fri, 15 Jun 2012, Ronald Klop wrote:
>>
>>> On Fri, 15 Jun 2012 08:01:21 +0200, Kevin Oberman
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 12:13 PM, Ronald Klop
wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Jun 2012 18:40:45 +0200, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>
>> On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 7:53 AM, Ronald Klop
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> On Fri, 15 Jun 2012 15:50:49 +0200, Warren Block
>>> wrote:
&g
or
others it is a losing proposition because a server is rendered
effectively useless for an extended period.
Full disclosure: I have disabled background fsck on most of the
systems for which I am responsible, but not all.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
___
etting "uid_t" errors when my kernel was not compiled with
> > "WITH_CTF" option.
>
> Yes, that would probably be it. The handbook is explicit about
> building with WITH_CTF=1, so I put it in make.conf.
>
> http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/book
ars to be /reliable/. A term I
> never dared dream to apply to wireless networking.
It should like the Atheros 5212 as IBM re-sold this a/b/g card for some
time as the "IBM a/b/g" card. I can believe that other Atheros cards
will fail, but that one, if you can find one, should work fine
gt; > 0.256
> >
> > I'll try a new checkout next.
>
> Your clock looks OK (worst drift from a stratum 2 comparison is 5.313
> seconds).
Minor correction on this. The offset values from 'ntpq -p' are in
milliseconds, so the worst offset is <6 ms. Not great, but
e been a LOT of revisions to portmaster since the gettext
bump, so this may be already addresses, but it was rather painful,
especially on my rather slow laptop.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley Nati
and it has caused a fair bit of trouble when working
with gnome-mount as I can't unmount a ufs device. When the
/dev/ufs/LABEL device is created again on the umount, gnome-mount sees a
new device and immediately re-mounts it.
Can this inconsistency be corrected?
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Ne
> Sender: "J. Hellenthal"
> Date: Sun, 04 Jul 2010 01:55:20 -0400
> From: jhell
>
> On 07/03/2010 16:51, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> > I have run into an odd behavior in 8-stable that I can't see a reason
> > for.
> >
> > If I have a FAT32 forma
> Sender: "J. Hellenthal"
> Date: Sun, 04 Jul 2010 13:58:30 -0400
> From: jhell
>
> On 07/04/2010 12:15, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> >> Sender: "J. Hellenthal"
> >> Date: Sun, 04 Jul 2010 01:55:20 -0400
> >> From: jhell
> >>
k on K8 cores, though.
> If any of the above can be corrected or, at least, documented, before
> release, we stand a little bit better chance of getting the praise
> otherwise well-deserved by FreeBSD... Thanks. Yours,
Documentation in FreeBSD seems quite a bit bette
it is in
> the man page. As someone who's done some release engineering and worked
> with sysinstall on my own project, I can tell you it's a real pain and
> developers in the FreeBSD community deserve courtesy. Most of us work
> on open source for free in o
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