>
> On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, Mike Harrold wrote:
>
> >> Those would all be your problems and I would suggest using a different account
> >> for mail then.
> >
> >Out of interest, how would that solve anything? So I use an ISP instead.
> >Then I have to
>
> At 9:10 am + 14/2/2001, David Howells wrote:
> >How this for a laugh:
> >
> >http://www.microsoft.com/WINDOWS2000/hpc/indstand.asp
> >
>
> Can anybody say "Beowulf cluster"? I bet you need a W2K license for every
> box you hook up, too.
The sad thing is, 3/4 of the page is an outright
>
> if you use an MUA that can't do filtering, well then there's something
> wrong with you
I really don't believe there is any need for this kind of attitude.
/Mike
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>
> On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 06:03:22PM +0100, antirez wrote:
> > On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 09:54:04AM -0500, Brian Gerst wrote:
> > > This patch isn't really necessary, because GCC will automatically
> > > convert multiplications and divisions by powers of two to use shifts.
> >
> > Sure, but sinc
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: profmakx.fmp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> >
> > So, every good programmer
> > should know where to put comments. And it is unnecessary to
> > put comments to
> > explain what code does. One should see this as stated in the
> > CodingStyle doc.
> > Ok,
>
> Is there a way to dump the memory of any process without stopping, or
> modifying it?
>
> Obviously normally stopping it would be the right thing to do, but
> is it possible, and if so, is there a handy tool?
fork() and raise(SIGABRT) in the child does the trick. Of course this
only works
> The reason is that the Linux 2.4 kernel no longer reclaims swap
> space on swapin (2.2 reclaimed swap space on write access, which
> lead to fragmented swap space in lots of workloads).
>
> This means that a lot of memory ends up "duplicated" in RAM and
> in swap.
>
> I plan on doing some code
>
> This message is in MIME format. Since your mail reader does not understand
> this format, some or all of this message may not be legible.
>
> --_=_NextPart_001_01C08552.FFC336D0
> Content-Type: text/plain;
> charset="ISO-8859-1"
>
> I prefer descriptive variable and function names
>
>
>
> To confuse things even more, I have a "Hewlett-Packard 9114 Disc Drive," which
> is really a 720K 3.5-inch diskette drive.
>
> Wayne
My understanding (going back to the 80s) is that the correct term is
disc. "disk" is short for diskette. (discette would be pronounced as
"dissect" (thi
>
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> > There are advantages: distinguish personal messages from mailing list
> > messages, and distinguish between different mailing lists. And
> > disadvantages - maybe only one: sacrificing valuable Subject: line
> > space.
>
> The advantages can all be gained wit
>
> On Mon, 12 Feb 2001 10:25:47 -0500 (EST)
> Mike Harrold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> > > The advantages can all be gained without that disadvantage by just
> > learning
> > > to filter mail on other headers ins
>
> On 2001-02-12T11:56:00,
>Mike Harrold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>
> > Maybe I don't *want* the LKML messages in a seperate folder.
> > Maybe I just want to identify them at a pinch in my inbox?
>
> You can use procmail to modify the subject l
Martin Dalecki wrote:>
> Rob Landley wrote:
>
> > Or if you like the idea of a JIT, think about transmeta writing a code
> > morphing layer that takes java bytecodes. Ditch the VM and have the
> > processor do it in-cache.
>
> Blah blah blah. The performance of the Transmeta CPU SUCKS ROCKS. N
> To be honest, I disagree that #include'ing a GPL header file should force your
> app to be GPL as well. That may be how the license reads, but I think it's a
> very bad idea. I could write 1 million lines of original code, but if someone
> told me that but simply adding #include my code is no
Paul Mundt wrote:
>
> Oh please, next you'll be blaming world hunger on MS because third world
> countries can't afford licenses of win2k.
Absolutely. If their governments didn't have to shell out such a large
amount of money on M$ licenses, they'd have more money to feed their
people with...
;
>
> Alan Cox wrote:
> >
> > > the boss say "If Linux makes Sybase go through the page cache on
> > > reads, maybe we'll just have to switch to Solaris. That's
> > > a serious performance problem."
> >
> > Thats something you'd have to benchmark. It depends on a very large number
> > of factors
Hi,
We have a server which runs on a machine that now runs the new 2.4 kernel.
Since upgrading we've seen periods where it seems to just hang for minutes
at a time (anywhere form 5 minutes to an hour). I was finally able to get
a core dump of the server during one of these periods and it appears
formation the next time this happens... especially the "-p pid"
> option.
I didn't think about this. I'll give this a whirl next time.
/Mike
>
>
> Mike Harrold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>@vger.kernel.org on 05/04/2001 07:44:53 AM
>
> Sent by: [EMAIL PROT
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