> I am trying to install OI 151a on an IBM x366. This machine has the
> Serveraid 8i SAS backplane, with a legacy IDE DVD rom drive.
>
> The machine will boot the DVD, but then gives a stream of errors on
> pci@0,0/pci-ide@f/edi@0 time reset bus
Yes, I have seen the same errors on an x3655 with S
Nice discussion.
Even though I remember not being able to remove because of a bash waiting there,
but probably was a zfs destroy...and IMHO this is a more logic approach
I'll read the RFCs :) Thanx!
Inviato da iPad
Il giorno 05/giu/2012, alle ore 22:06, James Carlson
ha scritto:
> Gabriel
On Jun 5, 2012, at 4:06 PM, James Carlson wrote:
> Gabriele Bulfon wrote:
>> I understand your point.
>> But, my question is...shouldn't a network filesystem try to completely
>> emulate a local file system,
>> trying to hide as much as possible the fact of being a network share?
>
> Sure, alth
2012-06-06 2:08, Christopher X. Candreva написал:
I am trying to install OI 151a on an IBM x366. This machine has the
Serveraid 8i SAS backplane, with a legacy IDE DVD rom drive.
The machine will boot the DVD, but then gives a stream of errors ...
You can also try the remote management - if t
I am trying to install OI 151a on an IBM x366. This machine has the
Serveraid 8i SAS backplane, with a legacy IDE DVD rom drive.
The machine will boot the DVD, but then gives a stream of errors on
pci@0,0/pci-ide@f/edi@0 time reset bus
I've read about problems with IDE, that offered adding opti
Gabriele Bulfon wrote:
> I understand your point.
> But, my question is...shouldn't a network filesystem try to completely
> emulate a local file system,
> trying to hide as much as possible the fact of being a network share?
Sure, although "try" is certainly the operative word here.
> In this c
On Tue, 5 Jun 2012, Jan Owoc wrote:
Some applications may depend on the files (or portions thereof) making
it out to disk in a specific order. The example you gave is perfect.
Let's say file "A" needs to exist before a change in file "B" happens.
A properly written program would write out file "A
On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 11:32 AM, Nick Hall wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 10:48 AM, Jan Owoc wrote:
>>
>> The data on the main pool is always consistent in that a certain
>> operation either made it to the disk or it didn't. However, if your
>> application depends on the fact that writes make it
On Tue, 5 Jun 2012, Richard Elling wrote:
This is no different than any other file system.
It is not different than EXT4?
While the promise should always be the same, what actually happens
seems to be very file system dependent.
Bob
--
Bob Friesenhahn
bfrie...@simple.dallas.tx.us, http://w
On Jun 5, 2012, at 10:32 AM, Nick Hall wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 10:48 AM, Jan Owoc wrote:
>
>>
>> The data on the main pool is always consistent in that a certain
>> operation either made it to the disk or it didn't. However, if your
>> application depends on the fact that writes make it
On Tue, 5 Jun 2012, Nick Hall wrote:
I'm just wondering, for my own personal knowledge and for anyone else who
finds this thread later, for some clarification on the above quote. So, if
I'm understanding this correctly, are you saying that, say I have an
application and it writes to file A, then
On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 10:48 AM, Jan Owoc wrote:
>
> The data on the main pool is always consistent in that a certain
> operation either made it to the disk or it didn't. However, if your
> application depends on the fact that writes make it out to disk in a
> specific order (that's why it's sync
I'm trying to use OI as the backend for my Windows desktops. One of the
things I have is a userprofile directory. Rather than manually link each
user's profile, I did what is normally done and have a login policy set to
map the user directory to a drive on Windows via something akin to:
net use U:
I understand your point.
But, my question is...shouldn't a network filesystem try to completely emulate
a local file system,
trying to hide as much as possible the fact of being a network share?
In this case, how does a local filesystem like ZFS or UFS manage these
situations?
Local file systems
There used to be a tanning salon like that in Winnipeg Canada in the
80s/90s. Before I knew who sun was I thought the logo was super awesome.
Sended from my Android.
On Jun 5, 2012 9:22 AM, "Paolo Marcheschi" wrote:
> Very funny indeed,
> a good place to make an openindiana summer dinner ;-0
>
Very funny indeed,
a good place to make an openindiana summer dinner ;-0
Paolo
On June 5, 2012 11:36:56 AM CEST, Gabriele Bulfon wrote:
thought many of you will smile at this discoverythis is a restaurant in
Italy, near Milan.
Look at the logo.. : I think I'll have a dinner t
2012-06-05 16:31, Jose-Marcio Martins da Cruz wrote:
Well ... sort of. What do you say when "rm -rf somedir" fails because
some of the files within "somedir," although owned by the invoker,
cannot be removed?
That means that these files are still open and in use by some program,
or some active
James Carlson wrote:
Jose-Marcio Martins da Cruz wrote:
...
Well ... sort of. What do you say when "rm -rf somedir" fails because
some of the files within "somedir," although owned by the invoker,
cannot be removed? Or when the GUI "Trash" icon stays messy after
emptying because there are f
Jose-Marcio Martins da Cruz wrote:
>
> Sorry for the top post...
>
> These files shouldn't be accessed by daemons other than those daemons in
> the NFS system. If other daemons are doing so, they're not respecting
> the NFS rules of the game.
Well ... sort of. What do you say when "rm -rf somed
Sorry for the top post...
These files shouldn't be accessed by daemons other than those daemons in the NFS system. If other
daemons are doing so, they're not respecting the NFS rules of the game.
The only thing to do with these files is to remove them after after a system
crash or similar ev
Gabriele Bulfon wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On NFS mounted file systems I often happen to find daemons of the client
> complaining about the hidden .nfsxxx files appearing and disappearing.
> These are often annoying.
>
> Is there any way to let the server completely hide these files to the client,
> and
thought many of you will smile at this discoverythis is a restaurant in
Italy, near Milan.
Look at the logo.. : I think I'll have a dinner there sooner or later!
http://www.ristorantesun.it/
Gabriele
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