I have a rackmount server that has a dual port onboard 82546EB card.
I've googled and seen this card apparently active with other users but
I seem to only get checksum errors.
[0.194129] Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Driver - version 7.3.15-k2-NAPI
[0.194234] Copyright (c) 1999-2006 Intel Co
(please CC me when replying)
I just got a motherboard with the dual nic marvell chipset onboard.
Splendid board save for the driver issue I'm having :) I'm currently
using 2.6.19-gentoo-r4 which doesn't have any forcedeth patch applied, a
vanilla kernel seems to give the same results. This board
I've a quick question before I start digging through patches between .12
and .13-rc3, /dev/input/mice (usb mice) stopped yielding data. dmesg
indicates removal/re-insertion of the device but no driver registers and
nothing comes from /dev/input/mice.
I have rc-3 on other machines and the mous
It seems that 2.6.12-rc1 introduced an ALSA bug generating an oops for a
null pointer.
codec_semaphore: semaphore is not ready [0x1][0x300300]
codec_read 0: semaphore is not ready for register 0x2c
Unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at virtual address
printing eip:
c01d7746
I would also appreciate the return of good resolution. Blocky mouse
startup moves make graphic editing rather difficult. No mouse movement
until I have moved my finger a significant distance then the mouse all
of a sudden jumps a dozen pixels before it "smoothly" glides along.
I would also lo
use a minimum resolution until you detect motion then switch to high
resolution.
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What does one need to do to:
a) put tapping back in, and
b) fix the severe jerkiness with small movements
Thanks
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PMTU bug -- or better said, bad firewall admin who blocks all ICMP.
http://blue-labs.org/clue/mtu-mss.php
-david
David Brownell wrote:
I'm seeing a problem with TCP as accessed through KMail (SuSE 9.2, x86_64).
But oddly enough, only for sending mail, not reading it; and not through
other (reading)
It looks like you don't have 'lo' configured, i.e. your 127.0.0.1 interface.
David
Michal Margula wrote:
>Hello!
>
>My friend told me to noticed you about problems I had with 2.4.x line of
>kernels. I started up from 2.4.3. Under heavy load I was getting
>messages from telnet, ping, nmap "No bu
BTW, you ONLY need to echo 1 > /proc../sysrq if you use a distribution
that puts a 0 there on init.
By default the kernel initializes with '1'.
David
>>>I compiled it, and the sysrq is definitely in the config. No doubt at
>>>all. I also use make mrproper and config again before dep and actual
Quite positive it's the right map file. I used -m and specified the
exact file.
David
Jeff Garzik wrote:
>David Ford wrote:
>
>> >>EIP; c01269f9<=
>>Trace; c01b1021
>>Trace; c01b1c43
>>Trace; c01b2643
>>Trace; c0137fc0 <_
2.4.5-ac8 has a brokenness about it.
sshd stalled in [down] with the following, subsequent sshd attempts
which needed a tty resulted in D state the same as the first:
invalid operand:
CPU:0
EIP:0010:[]
Using defaults from ksymoops -t elf32-i386 -a i386
EFLAGS: 00010086
eax: 001
Is there an example somewhere of this?
David
>You can push a BPF (LPF) filter expression onto a LISTEN socket that checks
>every incoming packet using SO_ATTACH_FILTER.
>
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Mor
Alrighty. That eliminates the patch. I'll rewrite the ixj.c according
to this. ixj.c will be a large patch due to the numerous revisions, I
don't know how well it can be broken up into small pieces. Do you want
small pieces still? The ChangeLog shows all the fixes for the
revisions. Ther
s with unit!=PHONE_UNIT_ANY
+ *
+ * May 12 2001 David Ford, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
+ * brought kernel version up to date with CVS, minor changes
*/
+#if LINUX_VERSION_CODE < 0x020400
+#include
+#endif
#include
#include
#include
@@ -23,13 +29,16 @@
#inc
I simply crontab an ECN off period for five minutes every hour and flush
the mail queue.
David.
Holger Lubitz wrote:
>"H. Peter Anvin" wrote:
>
>>I suspect that the main way to get this thing fixed is to make sure
>>ECN is enabled on the server side; for example, we have turned on ECN
>>on ker
Second time around, I didn't evoke any interest the first time.
I reported it back on Mar/27. It is still an almost daily problem
requiring a reboot. Mozilla gets stuck in down_write_failed. This time
I'm sure it's not reiser's fault.
# uname -r
2.4.3-pre8
mozilla-bin D C781849C 0 21055
Ok, here's the trace, this time it didn't die on me.
mozilla-bin D CDC1779C 0 6530 1(NOTLB) 6533
Call Trace: [] [] [] []
[] [] []
[] [] [] [] []
[] [] []
[] [] []
[scsi_queue_next_request+62/248] [__scsi_end_request+327/340]
[scsi_io_
Lately I've been having to reboot every few days due to D state
processes, always mozilla so far. When I exit mozilla it doesn't always
cleanly shutdown, sometimes processes are left behind. I'll post what I
have and if I'm lucky I'll follow up with a backtrace on the pids. Last
time I tried a
Otto Wyss wrote:
> > No, the correct answer is if you want a reliable recovery then run your disks
> > in non write buffered mode. I.e. turn on sync in fstab.
> >
> You probably haven't tried to use sync or you would have noticed the
> performace penalty. I think nobody really considers sync an
Otto Wyss wrote:
> > I had a similar experience:
> > X crashed , hosing the console , so I could not initiate
> > a proper shutdown.
> >
> > Here I must note that the response you got on linux-kernel is
> > shameful.
> >
> Thanks, but I expected it a little bit. All around Linux is centered
> aro
a) not all drivers are created equal
b) esd should check the return value anyway
-d
Doug Ledford wrote:
> David Ford wrote:
> >
> > Actually you probably upgraded to a non-broken version of esd. Stock esd -still-
> > writes to the socket without regard to return valu
Actually you probably upgraded to a non-broken version of esd. Stock esd -still-
writes to the socket without regard to return value. If the write only accepted
2098 of 4096 bytes, the residual bytes are lost, esd will write the next packet at
4097, not 2099. esd is incredibly bad about err che
2.4.2-ac4
Undo partial loss 208.179.59.2/5432 c1 l1 ss2/2 p1
Undo loss 208.179.59.2/5432 c2 l0 ss2/2 p0
Undo loss 208.179.59.2/25 c2 l0 ss2/2 p0
Undo partial loss 208.179.59.2/22 c1 l3 ss2/2 p3
Undo loss 208.179.59.2/143 c2 l0 ss2/3 p0
simple debug messages, or is someone (andy/dave) interested
2.4.3-pre3
richh12557 0.0 0.7 5096 1704 pts/10 D04:32 0:00 ./egg
idaho
richh12558 0.0 0.0 00 pts/10 Z04:32 0:00 [egg
]
richh12560 0.0 0.7 5096 1704 pts/10 S04:32 0:00 ./egg
idaho
# ps -eo args,wchan|grep egg
./egg idaho down
[egg ] do_exi
Alan Cox wrote:
>> I run Reiser on all but /boot, and it seems to enjoy corrupting my
>> mbox'es randomly.
>> Using the old-style Reiser FS format, 2.4.2-pre1, Evolution, on a CMD640
>> chipset with the fixes enabled.
>> This also occurs in some log files, but I put it down to syslogd
>> crashing
Chris Mason wrote:
>
> On Thursday, February 01, 2001 02:16:43 PM -0200 Rik van Riel
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> About the system hanging completely, I wonder if it goes
>> away by pressing sysrq-S (sync all disks). If it does,
>> maybe Reiserfs was blocking all the pages in the inactive
How about a simple patch to the top level makefile that checks the gcc
version then prints a distinct message ..'this compiler hasn't been approved
for compiling the kernel', sleeping for one second, then continuing on. This
solution doesn't stop compiling and makes a visible indicator without fo
> image=/boot/bzImage
> label=linux
> append="root=/dev/ide/host0/bus0/target0/lun0/part1 vga=3845"
root=/dev/ide/host will work the same as root=/dev/hda... in pre-devfs
-d
--
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and
talents. Thomas Jefferson
The
My apologies...my internic data isn't updated, http://208.179.0.18/VM/
-d
--
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and
talents. Thomas Jefferson
The good thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from. Andrew S.
Tanenbaum
-
To unsubscr
"Michael J. Dikkema" wrote:
> I went from 2.4.0 to 2.4.1 and was surprised that either the root
> filesystem wasn't mounted, or it couldn't be read. I'm using devfs.. I'm
> thinking there might have been a change with regards to the devfs
> tree.. is the legacy /dev/hda1 still /dev/discs/disc0/pa
John Jasen wrote:
> On Thu, 1 Feb 2001, Peter Samuelson wrote:
>
> > [Michael J. Dikkema]
> > > > I went from 2.4.0 to 2.4.1 and was surprised that either the root
> > > > filesystem wasn't mounted, or it couldn't be read. I'm using devfs.. I'm
> > > > thinking there might have been a change wi
Chris Mason wrote:
> Sorry, can't seem to resolve stuph.org. What is kreiserfsd doing during when the
>system is waiting for more ram? With JOURNAL_MAX_BATCH set to 100, kreiserfsd will
>end up responsible for sending log blocks/metadata to disk and freeing the pinned
>buffers.
>
> -chris
(
My apologies...my internic data isn't updated, http://208.179.0.18/VM/
-d
--
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and
talents. Thomas Jefferson
The good thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from. Andrew S.
Tanenbaum
-
To unsubscr
ther this is with no swap space allocated... And the question is why does
> the oom handler not get triggered?
>
> Ed Tomlinson
>
> David Ford wrote:
>
> > (Chris, changing JOURNAL_MAX_BATCH from 900 to 100 didn't affect
> > anything).
> >
> > Ok, hav
(Chris, changing JOURNAL_MAX_BATCH from 900 to 100 didn't affect
anything).
Ok, having approached this slightly more intelligently here are [better]
results.
The dumps are large so they are located at http://stuph.org/VM/. Here's
the story. I boot and startx, I load xmms and netscape to eat aw
"Maciej W. Rozycki" wrote:
> On Wed, 31 Jan 2001, Alan Cox wrote:
>
> > > Does Linus or anyone object to raising the ksmg buffer from 16K to 32K?
> > > 4/5 systems I have now overflow the buffer during boot before init is
> > > even launched.
> >
> > Thats just an indication that 2.4.x is current
Alan Cox wrote:
> > > AFAIK, this hasn't ever been true. I have never had to specifically
> > > enable it at run time.
> >
> > I was suspicious of that in the old doc but thought I'd leave it in...
> > Should have asked for feedback on it, but you caught it anyway, thanks!
> >
> > Here's a patch
Mhm. Is it worth the effort to make a dependancy on the CPU type for SMP?
-d
Stephen Frost wrote:
> * David Ford ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > A person just brought up a problem in #kernelnewbies, building an SMP
> > kernel doesn't work very well, current is undefined
A person just brought up a problem in #kernelnewbies, building an SMP
kernel doesn't work very well, current is undefined. I don't have more
time to debug it but I'll strip the config and put it up at
http://stuph.org/smp-config
-d
--
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of t
Jonathan Earle wrote:
> > On Sun, 28 Jan 2001 11:35:50 +, David Ford wrote:
> > > AFAIK, this hasn't ever been true. I have never had to specifically
> > > enable it at run time.
> >
> > I was suspicious of that in the old doc but thought I
The one LInus posted plus his addendum for the ll_rw_blk.
http://blue-labs.org/patches/ps-hang.patch
-d
Jens Axboe wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 29 2001, David Ford wrote:
> > kernel 2.4.0-ac12
> >
> > # ps -eo user,pid,args,wchan|egrep "imap|update|procmail&qu
kernel 2.4.0-ac12
# ps -eo user,pid,args,wchan|egrep "imap|update|procmail"
root 7 [kupdate]get_request_wait
david 627 imapdget_request_wait
david 752 procmail -f linu down
david 761 procmail -f linu down
david 799 procmail -f linu down
david 8
"Jeremy M. Dolan" wrote:
> +Note that previous versions disabled sysrq by default, and you were required
> +to specifically enable it at run-time. That is not the case any longer.
AFAIK, this hasn't ever been true. I have never had to specifically enable it at
run time. There are certain distr
Ulrich Drepper wrote:
> Pierre Rousselet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > for me :
> > make CFLAGS='-O2 -I. -D_GNU_SOURCE'
> > compiles without any patch. is it correct ?
>
> Yes. RTLD_NEXT is not in any standard, it's an extension available
> via -D_GNU_SOURCE.
Ok, how about we all tag Richar
Fail if a configuration line has EXECUTE
modprobe.
+Updated by David Ford 27-JAN-2001: Added RTLD_NEXT define
*/
#include
@@ -221,6 +222,10 @@
#define AC_MKNEWCOMPAT 8
#define AC_RMOLDCOMPAT 9
#define AC_RMNEWCOMPAT 10
+
+#ifndef RTLD_NEXT
It is important to note that when I hit the magic key and rebooted (SUB), a
split second before it rebooted, a stalled 'lspci' snapped back to life and
printed out my expected data.
-d
--
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and
talents. Thomas Jefferson
d?
I have an ATI Rage LT Pro AGP-133 according to lspci.
-d
J Sloan wrote:
> Sorry, there was no xmms involved here -
>
> The behavior occurred while playing unreal tournament.
>
> But at least the sound card was in use, FWIW -
>
> jjs
>
> David Ford wrote:
>
>
Unfortunately klogd reads /procerg.
So the following is a painstakingly slow hand translation, I'll only print
the D state entries unless someone asks otherwise.
Prior to this:
XMMS is running playing star wars mpeg. (regular user) (frozen)
TOP is running (regular user) (frozen)
Linus Torvalds wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, David Ford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> >
> >We've narrowed it down to "we're all running xmms" when it happend.
>
> Does anybody have a clue about what is different with xmms?
At the time I had temporary access to my notebook and had a mismatched System.map
file :S
-d
Linus Torvalds wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, David Ford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >I can quickly and easily duplicate it on my notebook by playing music or
> >
We've narrowed it down to "we're all running xmms" when it happend.
-d
J Sloan wrote:
> Just for the record, the system where I saw the problem
> has only ext2 -
--
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and
talents. Thomas Jefferson
The good thing about
The system will then grind the harddrive solid for about 25-30 minutes then
everything will go silent.
The brokenness is that the OOM code never activates.
-d
Ed Tomlinson wrote:
> David Ford Wrote:
>
> >Since the testN series and up through ac12, I experience total loss of
> >c
Ion Badulescu wrote:
> On Sat, 27 Jan 2001 08:01:14 +0000, David Ford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Does Linus or anyone object to raising the ksmg buffer from 16K to 32K?
> > 4/5 systems I have now overflow the buffer during boot before init is
> > even launched.
I'm looking for some authoritative comparisons and discussions of the
current network stacks in *BSD and Linux. I.e. NET4 in Linux and
whatever is most current in *BSD.
_PLEASE_ no flaming, no causing flamewar, nadda.
I am writing an article for Linux.com and I am attempting to debunk
longstan
-I is what is read directly off the drive, -i interprets it. IIRC, it's been
this way for a while..or it's just that I've used 2.4 for a while :) In any
case, it's byte swap issue. WD becomes "WDC AC" would become "DW CCA" , i.e.
"WD", "C ", and "AC" etc.
-d
Shawn Starr wrote:
> This is wha
PCI: No IRQ known for interrupt pin A of device 01:00.0. Please try
using pci=biosirq.
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: ATI Technologies Inc Rage 128 RF
(prog-if 00 [VGA])
Subsystem: ATI Technologies Inc: Unknown device 0008
Flags: bus master, stepping, 66Mhz, medium devsel, lat
I can quickly and easily duplicate it on my notebook by playing music or
mpegs in xmms. It may take a few minutes but it's guaranteed.
xmms stalls flat on it's face and anything accessing /proc stalls. If I get
the time to do it, I'll take a gander at it with kdb.
I have no patches applied to
Does Linus or anyone object to raising the ksmg buffer from 16K to 32K?
4/5 systems I have now overflow the buffer during boot before init is
even launched.
--- linux/kernel/printk.c~Fri Jan 26 18:50:28 2001
+++ linux/kernel/printk.c Fri Jan 26 23:59:31 2001
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
#include
Since the testN series and up through ac12, I experience total loss of
control when memory is nearly exhausted.
I start with 256M and eat it up with programs until there is only about
7 megs left, no swap. From that point all user processes stall and the
disk begins to grind nonstop. It will co
"Randal, Phil" wrote:
> James Sutherland wrote:
>
> > Except you can't retry without ECN, because DaveM wants to do
> > a Microsoft and force ECN on everyone, whether they like it
> > or not. If ECN is so wonderful, why doesn't anybody actually
> > WANT to use it anyway?
>
> And there's the rub.
"Michael B. Trausch" wrote:
> I've kinda been watching the ECN discussion there, and I have 2.4.0 and
> noticed that after I'd installed it, I couldn't get to my favorite search
> engine (Dogpile.com). I'd assume they don't support it either, because
> when I "echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn
Matti Aarnio wrote:
> I think they are separate problems.
> The first is power-management suspend/resume issue, and possibly
> PCMCIA problem at software re-insert of card (which never was taken
> out *physically*).
>
> If I pull the cardbus card out, make sure the "dhcpcd eth0" has
>
Matti Aarnio wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 23, 2001 at 10:48:16AM +0000, David Ford wrote:
> > The three cardbus cards are slightly different in numerous ways. For
> > them they normally fault with an APM event, an eject/insert cycle via
> > software will reset hem and a link down/
> > Do the tulip driver updates address the increasingly common NETDEV timeout
> > repots?
>
> In general you can answer this yourself by reading
> drivers/net/tulip/ChangeLog.
>
> I don't see increasingly common timeout reports.. with which hardware?
> They are likely on the newer LinkSys 4.1 car
Linus Torvalds wrote:
> The ChangeLog may not be 100% complete. The physically big things are the
> PPC and ACPI updates, even if most people won't notice.
>
> Linus
>
>
>
> pre10:
> - got a few too-new R128 #defines in the Radeon merge. Fix.
> - tulip driver update from Je
If it makes the kernel do Bad Things, the kernel needs to be fixed.
-d
Shawn Starr wrote:
> This is not a kernel bug, This is a bug in the XFree86 TrueType rendering
> extention. This has been discussed on the Xpert XFree86 mailing list. There
> is a fix in the works (depends on the TrueType fo
Rainer Mager wrote:
> > Would this be an SMP IA32 box with glibc 2.2? I have two such boxen
> > showing exactly the same behaviour, although I can't reproduce it at will.
>
> Close, it is actually an SMP IA32 box with glibc 2.1.3. But you've now
> convinced me to not upgrade glibc yet ;-)
Upgra
Mark I Manning IV wrote:
> Tabs are 8 characters so NO tabs should be used in ANY source file what
> so ever. There are some silly people that insist on hitting the tab key
> when they should really be hitting the SPACE key (and for your info Linus
> PI is EXACTLY 3... ish :)
If one is intellig
Brad Felmey wrote:
> On Fri, 19 Jan 2001 03:53:32 +, you, David Ford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> wrote:
>
> >So you can't fault John for personally effecting a policy similar to what
> >ORBS does en masse.
>
> Of course I can. A bad implementation is a bad
dean gaudet wrote:
> the reason, gag puke, is for doing things such as sending "activity"
> progress -- like a line at a time or whatever to indicate that the CGI is
> there and still working.
I understand the gagging on this and generally I agree. I do appreciate having
the ability to do this
Brad Felmey wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Jan 2001 18:19:31 -0500, you, "John O'Donnell"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, wrote:
>
> >Maybe you don't understand.
>
> No, John, it's quite obvious that it's _you_ who does not understand.
> You've saved yourself some spam and pissed off a good deal of the
> kernel list
Bill Crawford wrote:
> In connection with connection failures using recent kernels, it often
> seems to be related to ECN being enabled.
>
> PIX firewalls seem to interpret the ECN option header as a source
> route header (that's what it's logged as).
>
> I got bitten by this at work ;ยท(
Cisc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I can be a little more specific on this point. Netscape with
> kernel 2.4.0 _does_ connect/download at a few local (New Zealand)
> web sites (maybe 10% of those I've tried). I can't download
> from _any_ distant site. It doesn't die, it just doesn't function
> properly.
Has this issue been addressed? When I delete something large..say a
mozilla cvs tree, rm will stall for about 10-30 seconds every few
minutes in wait_on_buffer.
It's an IDE drive, nothing fancy on the system, it's a standard pII w/
256 megs, about 50megs free. 'sync' also stalls similarly.
Ide
David Santinoli wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 12, 2001 at 07:53:14PM -0800, Rob Landley wrote:
> > If I do the dd line in the title under 2.4.0 I get an
> > out.txt file of 591 bytes.
> And it's the same under 2.2.x, too.
>
> > dd says it completes happily even when copying from
> > random. 0+100 records
Christoph Rohland wrote:
> What do you think about "vmfs"? This probably reflects its nature
> better than swapfs.
That sounds applicable and pretty good.
-d
-- ---NOTICE
-- fwd: fwd: fwd: type emails will be deleted automatically.
"There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds
> It is a filesystem which lives in RAM and can swap out. SYSV shm and
> shared anonymous maps are still build on top of this (The config
> option only disables the part not needed for this).
>
> I am quite open about naming, but "shm" is not appropriate any more
> since the fs does a lot more tha
Christoph Rohland wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The appended patch (additional to my read/write support patch) makes
> the shm filesystem configurable and renames it to the more sensible
> name swapfs. Since the fs type "shm" is quite established with 2.4 I
> register that name also.
Now...is this shared mem
Rob Landley wrote:
> If I do the dd line in the title under 2.4.0 I get an
> out.txt file of 591 bytes.
It isn't broken, you have no more entropy. You must have some system
activity of various sorts before you regain some entropy. Moving the mouse
around, hitting keys, etc, will slowly add mor
> > strangely, same thing with 2.4.0 this afternoon. it was not unlike
> > what we saw in test 12. /var/log/messages sheds no light, and BRB
>
> What's BRB?
big red button?
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> pretty darned impressive :-). Another oddity that someone else
> already reported: the ipv6 module shows a reference count of -1.
a ref count of -1 means the module decides when to unload.
-d
begin:vcard
n:Ford;David
x-mozilla-html:TRUE
url:www.blue-labs.org
adr:;;
version:2.1
email;i
"Udo A. Steinberg" wrote:
> "Udo A. Steinberg" wrote:
> >
> > The very strange stuff is umount at reboot:
> >
> > umount: none busy - remounted read-only
> > umount: /: device is busy
> > Remounting root-filesystem read-only
> > mount: / is busy
> > Rebooting.
Are you using devfs and do kernel t
Matthias Juchem wrote:
> On Wed, 10 Jan 2001, Richard Torkar wrote:
>
> > I do not have any PPP, and no kdb installed on that machine, neither do I
> > have procinfo. Shouldn't it say N/A or not found instead of the above? The
> > ppp part is not true ;-).
>
> > Other thing I thought about was t
Just a friendly reminder, the cs46xx driver only works if it's compiled
as a module. If it's static, it never gets activated on boot.
-d
begin:vcard
n:Ford;David
x-mozilla-html:TRUE
url:www.blue-labs.org
adr:;;
version:2.1
email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
title:Blue Labs Developer
note;q
Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
> > kernel BUG at vmscan.c:452!
> > invalid operand:
>
> Does reiserfs patch changes vmscan.c ?
>
> If so, whats in line 452 of mm/vmscan.c of 2.4.0 reiserfs tree?
reiserfs doesn't touch mm/vmscan.c.
the line is: del_page_from_inactive_clean_list(page);
-d
> -- -
Why not use the limits from instead?
-d
Chris Mason wrote:
> On Wednesday, January 10, 2001 02:32:09 AM +0100 Marc Lehmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >>> EIP; c013f911<=
> > Trace; c013f706
> > Trace; c0136e01
>
> The buffer reiserfs is sending to filldir is big enough for
> the
Rik van Riel wrote:
> On Sun, 7 Jan 2001, John O'Donnell wrote:
>
> > Only on my company's e-mail server. My company typically gets "zero"
> > emails from outside the US. If I get a piece of spam (sorry they are
> > typically from outside the US), I just block the entire .com.br domain.
> > I g
On Mon, 8 Jan 2001, Andrew Morton wrote:
> Obviously, something changed between 2.2.14 and more current
> kernels which broke pump. I don't believe it's a driver change
> because it also affects the 3c90x driver. I don't have a theory
> as to why this affects the 3com NICs though. But I'm assum
On Mon, 8 Jan 2001, Andi Kleen wrote:
> Who says that it names a device? It names interfaces.
> There are good reasons to have names for ifas, and I see no really good
> convincing reasons not to put these names into the interface name space.
> (in addition it'll save a lot of people a lot of grie
Every once in a while I have a very frustrating problem develop. All tty
handling stops. Packets flow in and out of the machine fine, but anything
with a tty halts. I don't know exactly what is happening but I have found
that killing the last user that logged in (all his processes) usually fixe
Patrick Mau wrote:
[...]
> And here's the question:
> I would like to collect statistics for eth0:0 but obviously the
> pakets are only counted for the real interface. If I had enough time
> and knowledge, how should I implement paket counters for aliased
> interfaces ?
>
> PS: Am I right that it
Alan Cox wrote:
> > Um, what about people running their box as just a VLAN router/firewall?
> > That seems to be one of the principle uses so far. Actually, in that case
> > both VLAN and IP traffic would come through, so it would be a tie if VLAN
> > came first, but non-vlan traffic would suffe
Matthias Juchem wrote:
> Why can't I assume that perl is installed? It can be found on every
> standard Linux/Unix installation.
No it can't. Perl isn't on any of my distributions as part of the standard
installation.
> My script is intended for the one who likes to provide bug reports but is
On Mon, 8 Jan 2001, Chris Wedgwood wrote:
> Bind knows about multiple virtual interfaces; but we can also have
> multiple addresses on a single interface and have no virtual
> interfaces at all.
>
> I doubt bind knows about this nor handles it.
>
>
>
> OK, I'm a liar -- bind does handle this.
On Sun, 7 Jan 2001, Keith Owens wrote:
> If the module controls its own unloading via a can_unload routine
> then the user count displayed by lsmod is always -1, irrespective of
> the real use count.
Maybe lsmod can show a blank for the field and (auto unload). That'd
probably draw a lot l
On Sun, 7 Jan 2001, Matthias Juchem wrote:
> I guess if you use a development version the above returns nothing. If I'm
> right, a pre-release libc was recommended for use with 2.2.0 (I'm not
> sure).
Here is a random idea.
get the pathname of the library(ies) then this sed expression:
sed \
'
On Sun, 7 Jan 2001, Chris Wedgwood wrote:
> Virtual IP interfaces in the form of ifname: (e.g. eth:1) IMO
> should be deprecated and removed completely in 2.5.x. It's an ugly
> external wart that should be removed.
>
> That said, if this was done -- how would things like routing daemons
> and bin
The only way to _assume_ a printer is online is to attempt a dummy poll for
information. Again note that this is a strong assumption as only some new printers
return data for a poll, and legacy printers control of the data port are undefined.
The poll btw needs to be done in userspace because pr
Recently, about test 12 I believe, I started experiencing stalls.
I believe it has to do with VM pressure but I'm not sure.
What happens: 5-60 second instant dead stall, nothing at all happens.
No sound/key/disk/anything activity, screen updates stop in the middle
of an update. Until recently I
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