Correction 5 fd's
I have 3 serials, one socket and one proprietary high speed thingy (less
than 1kb per read, once every millisec).
My strategy is to have each fd read into a bit of shared memory, post a
"got something" semaphore and return. You do it with 5 little if()
paragraphs (error handl
Quoth Muli Ben-Yehuda:
> Ok, since I hit it in one, here's another gotcha free of charge - with
I looked at the docs, thought - "hmmm... no xen0 and xenU, weird, let's
look at the Makefile... Ah - here they are, the references to xenU and
xen0, everything is as it used to be..."
Hehe. Thanks!
>
Ira Abramov wrote:
is there a DBA in the house?
I got a dump out of a working site via phpMyAdmin, it's a MySQL 4.1
server, the text fields with Hebrew strings are all marked "collate
utf8_unicode_ci" in the schema, and indeed when browsing the tables via
phpmyadmin with UTF-8 as the page encod
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 09:12:44AM +0300, Marc A. Volovic wrote:
> Quoth Muli Ben-Yehuda:
>
> > More details please... with xen3 we switched to a single kernel for
> > both dom0 and domU, the -xen kernel. Are you passing
> > 'KERNELS=...-domU' perchance? I wouldn't expect that to work.
>
> Duh! I
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 08:20:20AM +0300, Marc A. Volovic wrote:
> Quoth Marc A. Volovic:
>
> > I use Xen with Debian (woody, sarge and etch) with not problem whatsoever.
> > The dom0 is etch, domUs are a mix, all very very small (sub 60MB).
>
> That is - xen 2.4. All my attempts to build xen 3 s
Marc A. Volovic wrote:
Quoth Marc A. Volovic:
I use Xen with Debian (woody, sarge and etch) with not problem whatsoever.
The dom0 is etch, domUs are a mix, all very very small (sub 60MB).
That is - xen 2.4. All my attempts to build xen 3 so far fail - I can not
seem to be able to buil
On 14/06/06, Daniel Feiglin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
OK. Checking the file descriptors after receiving an event is not
exactly polling in the I/O sense - but that's academic.
I actually have about 4 file descriptors, one running flat out, and the
others at serial line rates.
Do you mean you
Quoth Marc A. Volovic:
> I use Xen with Debian (woody, sarge and etch) with not problem whatsoever.
> The dom0 is etch, domUs are a mix, all very very small (sub 60MB).
That is - xen 2.4. All my attempts to build xen 3 so far fail - I can not
seem to be able to build a xenU kernel correctly. Grrr
OK. Checking the file descriptors after receiving an event is not
exactly polling in the I/O sense - but that's academic.
I actually have about 4 file descriptors, one running flat out, and the
others at serial line rates.
I think that we can close this thread.
Thanks all.
Daniel
Gilad Ben
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 12:16:44AM +0300, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> I will not defend the Xen build system, but FC is one of the platforms
> (RHEL is another) that Xen can actually live with. So far I cannot say
> the same about, say, SuSE (never heard of anyone who managed to have a
> working netw
Quoth Oleg Goldshmidt:
> I will not defend the Xen build system, but FC is one of the platforms
> (RHEL is another) that Xen can actually live with. So far I cannot say
> the same about, say, SuSE (never heard of anyone who managed to have a
> working network in a SuSE domU - has anyone here made
Quoting Ira Abramov, from the post of Wed, 14 Jun:
>
> However, when I import it to a MySQL 5.0 server, the text is read in as
> though it was ASCII. when I browse a table in phphMyAdmin I do get the
> page marked UTF-8, but the text is broken down to double-bytes as if I
I found this post after
I can't remember
exactly which versions but there was definitely a problem with
PhpMyAdmin's dump of UTF-8 text. Hebrew for example came out IIRC as
s. If you have command line access, the fix is easy. Use
mysqldump and the unicode text is exported correctly, and imports
perfectly from t
is there a DBA in the house?
I got a dump out of a working site via phpMyAdmin, it's a MySQL 4.1
server, the text fields with Hebrew strings are all marked "collate
utf8_unicode_ci" in the schema, and indeed when browsing the tables via
phpmyadmin with UTF-8 as the page encoding I read the Hebrew
Quoting Gil Freund, from the post of Tue, 13 Jun:
> >
> >However, it still won't explain how the net link between my host and my
> >guest was a puny 20KB/sec, less than half of my cable uplink at home!
>
> What NIC do you use? What driver? What does ethtool say?
> Is the switch smart enough to rep
Hello,
For the record, SORBS once blocked our mail server due to a spam bounce
generated when our spam filter discarded a message. We had to turn
off all such bounces, so now senders who send mail which is classified
by mistake as spam don't get any warning and their mail is silently
discarded.
"Marc A. Volovic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> And that goes to show that flash attracts flash :-)...
I am sorry, I use FC4 on x86_64 on my home machine, and flash is one
thing that is repelled because there is no x86_86 player for
Linux... ;-)
> Speaking of which - whoever among you people is
On 6/13/06, Ira Abramov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Quoting Gilad Ben-Yossef, from the post of Tue, 13 Jun:
However, it still won't explain how the net link between my host and my
guest was a puny 20KB/sec, less than half of my cable uplink at home!
What NIC do you use? What driver? What does e
Hi All.
Hi-Tech company in
Haifa (Matam) is searching for people who can occupy the following
possitions. Please redirect questions, comments, or CVs to me directly
(save the list). Thanks.
Ez.
QA Personnel:
Qualifications
· Experience in software testing
On Tuesday, 13 בJune 2006 18:33, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 13, 2006 at 06:00:39PM +0300, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
> > The Fedora Core line is a non production distribution *by design*.
> I heard a talk at USENIX last week[1] where Pixar's VP of Technology
> mentioned that their new movie
Quoth Gilad Ben-Yossef:
> Marc A. Volovic wrote:
>
> I wrote an email saying the same thing (although the word "orchideae"
> was missing from it for some reason ;-) and then decided Ira knew better
> already.
Must have been an oversight. I know (by dint of deduction) that you 'havem.
> The Fe
Hi,
Would like a recommendation for free easy to learn/use animation software.
--
Regards.
David Harel,
==
Home office +972 77 4422234
Fax:+972 77 4422234
Cellular: +972 54 4534502
Snail Mail: Amuka
D.N Merom Hagalil
13802
On Tue, Jun 13, 2006 at 06:25:55PM +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Not to rub it in for anyone (hi Ira), even as I'm writing this email
> we're running a Windows XP installation inside a XEN VM running on
> Debian.
Which CPU and where did you buy it?
And for the sake of technical accuracy (not
Marc A. Volovic wrote:
Quoth Shachar Shemesh:
Not to rub it in for anyone (hi Ira), even as I'm writing this email
we're running a Windows XP installation inside a XEN VM running on Debian.
Rub, rub!
Which windows? which Xen? Which CPU?
Xen 3.0.2. I had to apply a patch so that t
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Any trouble? ANy tricks?
Lots of both, I'm afraid. A lot of them had to do with the fact that the
debian package did not contain the files needed for running with hardware
emulation (non para virtualization).
We're
Suppose your eyesight is failing you and you are going to a clinic to
have your eyes fixed by laser.
If they find that you have retinal degradation in your eyes, you deny
this and insist upon getting laser - what should an ethical clinic do?
Should this answer be any different if the clinic are don
On Tue, Jun 13, 2006 at 06:41:37PM +0300, Marc A. Volovic wrote:
> Speaking of which - whoever among you people is responsible for Xen's build
> system should be compelled to use FC.
That would be the Cambridge folks. They've proven remarkably resistant
to attempts to fix it.
Cheers,
Muli
=
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Any trouble? ANy tricks?
Lots of both, I'm afraid. A lot of them had to do with the fact that the
debian package did not contain the files needed for running with
hardware emulation (non para virtualization).
We're not over all of them, but we got the basic technol
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006, Marc A. Volovic wrote:
Quoth Shachar Shemesh:
Not to rub it in for anyone (hi Ira), even as I'm writing this email
we're running a Windows XP installation inside a XEN VM running on Debian.
Rub, rub!
Which windows? which Xen? Which CPU?
Any trouble? ANy tricks?
==
Quoting Gilad Ben-Yossef, from the post of Tue, 13 Jun:
> >Not that I am casting the first stone, but anyone using FC as a production
> >machine should have his orchideae removed.
> >
>
> The Fedora Core line is a non production distribution *by design*.
calm down, will you? it's not a production
Quoth Shachar Shemesh:
> Not to rub it in for anyone (hi Ira), even as I'm writing this email
> we're running a Windows XP installation inside a XEN VM running on Debian.
Rub, rub!
Which windows? which Xen? Which CPU?
M
--
---MAV
Marc A. Volovic [EMAIL
Quoth Muli Ben-Yehuda:
> Pixar's VP of Technology mentioned that their new movie "Cars" was
> rendered on a farm of x86-64 Linux machines running ... you guessed it
> ... Fedora Core.
And that goes to show that flash attracts flash :-)...
Speaking of which - whoever among you people is responsib
On Tue, Jun 13, 2006 at 06:00:39PM +0300, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
> The Fedora Core line is a non production distribution *by design*.
Since when has this ever stopped a customer from actually using it in
exactly that capacity. I heard a talk at USENIX last week[1] where
Pixar's VP of Technology
Hi all,
Not to rub it in for anyone (hi Ira), even as I'm writing this email
we're running a Windows XP installation inside a XEN VM running on Debian.
Shachar
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word "un
Quoth Gilad Ben-Yossef:
> The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single "oy."
And it continues with numerous other pitiful cries, groans, ejaculations
and grimaces!
--
---MAV
Marc A. Volovic [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Swiftouch, LTD
Quoth Gilad Ben-Yossef:
> Marc A. Volovic wrote:
> >Quoth Ira Abramov:
> >>Today I installed a similar setup on a faster machine, host is FC4,
> >Not that I am casting the first stone, but anyone using FC as a production
> >machine should have his orchideae removed.
> The Fedora Core line is a non
Marc A. Volovic wrote:
Quoth Ira Abramov:
Today I installed a similar setup on a faster machine, host is FC4,
Not that I am casting the first stone, but anyone using FC as a production
machine should have his orchideae removed.
I wrote an email saying the same thing (although the word "o
Quoth Ira Abramov:
> Today I installed a similar setup on a faster machine, host is FC4,
Not that I am casting the first stone, but anyone using FC as a production
machine should have his orchideae removed.
> guest is RHEL4, and the speed is frightfully slow. I thought I had an
> NFS problem but
Quoting Ira Abramov, from the post of Tue, 13 Jun:
>
> also rsync pulls files at a crappy 15-20KB per second from the host to
> the guest, which is a really low speed.
>
> no iptables, AFAIK no traffic shaping. what am I missing?!
oh, for completeness: VMwareTools are installed, I am working wit
Howdie guys!
Last week I installed VMware server for another happy customer. As you
may recall from an earlier post, it's a porting farm, the Host is a
Centos4, and the guessts are RH7.2, 7.3, RHEL3 and another Centos4. all
four VMs mount /home from an NFS export on the host, and all is fine.
Tod
On 11/06/06, Oded Arbel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, 2006-06-11 at 10:23 +0200, Elazar Leibovich wrote:
> Are you quite sure this is necessary?
> In debian, you just 'apt-get upgrade' can't you immitate it with RH?
That's possibly the main reason Debian takes so long to release a new
vers
Daniel Feiglin wrote:
Thanks. The URL does not really answer my question, but I poked around a
bit on kernel-traffic.org.
My impression is, that select(3p) uses an internal event queue which
means that it is being triggered with a semaphore when a new event arrives.
Can anyone confirm or say
Thanks. The URL does not really answer my question, but I poked around
a bit on kernel-traffic.org.
My impression is, that select(3p) uses an internal event queue which
means that it is being triggered with a semaphore when a new event
arrives.
Can anyone confirm or say otherwise? (Or at the
On Tuesday 13 June 2006 08:39, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> Hi Shachar,
> Both Spamhaus and SORBS are *not* listing IP's on the basis of bounces,
That was exactly Shachar's point.
You wrote:
> >> Hi Shachar,
> >> Spamhaus and SORBS routinely list yahoo, google, hotmail, tiscali and
> >> other
On Tue, Jun 13, 2006 at 09:41:38AM +0300, Daniel Feiglin wrote:
> Hello folks!
>
> Can someone supply an RTFM describing the kernel implementation of this
> API (other than reading the source code).
>
> In particular, is it interrupt driven (as I always thought) or does it
> use some sort of po
On Tue, 2006-06-13 at 10:12 +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> > BTW, Baruch Siach also configured our main server (sendmail) not to
> > relay out bounce messages from our clients' servers that relay out to
> > the world through us since these are about 99% spam bounces.
Hi Shachar,
You are correct that not bouncing at all is not good. In fact we do relay
bounces except for customers who have no spam protection of their own.
Your suggestion to filter bounces is good.
- yba
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2006 10:12:06 +0300
F
Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> Hi Shachar,
> Both Spamhaus and SORBS are *not* listing IP's on the basis of bounces,
It's good to know that there are some RBLs you can use.
> only on the basis of actual spam received, which happens occasionally,
> despite the generally good policing efforts that gma
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