See:
http://www.linuxin.dk/node/19778 for the original text:
Via google translate:
"Version 3.4 of Linux has not arrived yet, but 3.5 already appears to
be a very interesting version. There will be a vital improvement to
the handling of buffers in the network. More specifically, it is a new
algo
Thx for the numbers!
Could you do a TCP_RR while under load from UDP_STREAM?
On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 1:31 AM, Tobias Diedrich
wrote:
> Tobias Diedrich wrote:
>> Dave Taht wrote:
>> > In looking over the enormous stack of boards and drivers that openwrt
>> > supports, I see that many of the ether
When using privoxy as a transparent HTTP proxy a race condition occurs
where privoxy may attempt to startup and start listening on the LAN
interface before the network configuration is completed. As a result
privoxy fails to start up because it can't bind to the correct listening
address. This
Hi Thomas,
Yes, CONFIG_TARGET=env solves my problem from trunk.
Thanks for pointing out this usage. Probably documentation would also help
on CONFIG_TARGET usage.
Btw, i got error while i did "make CONFIG_TARGET=env kernel_menuconfig"
since there was no $(TOPDIR)/env already present. Perhaps the f
Tobias Diedrich wrote:
> Dave Taht wrote:
> > In looking over the enormous stack of boards and drivers that openwrt
> > supports, I see that many of the ethernet drivers don't yet support
> > Linux 3.3's "Byte Queue Limits", which are discussed here:
> >
> > http://lwn.net/Articles/454390/
> >
>
Updated lang/erlang package with some adjustments for the new version.
Signed-off-by: Mark Wolfe
Index: lang/erlang/patches/103-disable_emacs.patch
===
--- lang/erlang/patches/103-disable_emacs.patch (revision 0)
+++ lang/erlang/pa
xxd tool is nice when you want to get hex output from a file.
Dump whole flash from the device:
$ xxd /dev/mtdX
Capture the output from terminal (I used tee), do some basic vim magic
and on host pc recreate binary:
$ xxd -r /name/of/hex/dump /name/of/output/binary/file
Package is also cleaned
Add byte queue limits support to net/ethernet/ramips_main.c
"Byte queue limits are a mechanism to limit the size of the transmit
hardware queue on a NIC by number of bytes. The goal of these byte
limits is too reduce latency (HOL blocking) caused by excessive
queuing in hardware (aka buffer bloat)
Dave Taht wrote:
> In looking over the enormous stack of boards and drivers that openwrt
> supports, I see that many of the ethernet drivers don't yet support
> Linux 3.3's "Byte Queue Limits", which are discussed here:
>
> http://lwn.net/Articles/454390/
>
> It would be good if more did. They im
Hello all,
I was trying to access the config file for brcm47xx under
http://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/trunk/, to use as the starting
point for some builds of my own. However, I received a 403 Forbidden
error. I tried a few other targets - some worked fine, but others also
gave 403. S
Hi,
this patch upgrades the following packages to v0.4.1:
baresip v0.4.1 (Portable and modular SIP User-Agent with audio and video
support)
restund v0.4.1 (Modular STUN/TURN server)
libre v0.4.1 (Generic library for real-time communications with async IO
support)
librem v0.4.1 (Aud
Hi Kalyan,
with your change it is not possible anymore for a developer to use this
command for editing the configuration of a target or subtarget.
But this is the main functionality behind this.
Have you had a look at the existing option to do "make kernel_menuconfig
CONFIG_TARGET={platform,s
Hi All,
The current implementation of the build system for handling "make
kernel_menuconfig" involves modifying the default configurations under
target/linux/.
A side affect of this process is that the default configuration under
target/linux is now lost.While within the version control system it
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