Things are running better now. I moved it to  a dedicated
DSL line in my lab, and it's chugging along.

I see an occasional g_vfs_done message fly across. Error 16
on a read.
Something like
g_vfs_done: acd0[READ(offset=81920, length=2048) Error = 16

Opps, I crashed the machine. When I moved it, I unplugged the
USB DVD-RW and I had mounted one of the dist discs on there.
When I did a umount it paniced. My bad.

acd0 would be the internal DVD drive.


It seems that problem with my network was indeed the
Cisco ASA box we're beta testing. We have the CSC module
installed which is a stand alone linux box running trend for
virus, intrusion, etc. And there is a bug in the ftp inspection.
Hangs things up.

Ok, since I think the network is solved, I'll take this opportunity
to restart portmanager on the network.


Michael C. Shultz wrote:
***********************
This message has been scanned by the InterScan for CSC-SSM and found to be free 
of known security risks.
***********-***********


On Thursday 10 November 2005 09:42, Paul T. Root wrote:

I moved the machine to a DSL line here, and am running
portmanager. It seems to be working.

We're going to investigate issues with this beta Cisco
ASA machine.




I am very interested at how things go with your upgrade,
please keep me informed.  Just to let you know, the current
version of portmanager is 0.3.3_2 if anything goes wrong check
that first "portmanager -v".   If any problems arise I am more
than happy to work with you in solving them quickly.

-Mike



Michael C. Shultz wrote:

***********************
This message has been scanned by the InterScan for CSC-SSM and found to
be free of known security risks. ***********-***********

On Wednesday 09 November 2005 18:26, Paul Root wrote:

Michael C. Shultz wrote:

***********************
This message has been scanned by the InterScan for CSC-SSM and found to
be free of known security risks. ***********-***********

port and install or restart gnome-upgrade.sh


I'm now assuming that since all gnome has been wiped off the
disk, that the thing to do is build/install the port directly.
Starting that up, I seem to be having the same downloading
difficulties.

As an alternative to gnome-upgrade.sh you may want to consider
using sysutils/portmanager, all you need do is run

portmanager x11/gnome2

It'll do the upgrade no problem, tested it twice now myself.

Interesting. The web page said specifically don't do portupgrade.

I didn't say portupgrade, it is sysutils/portmanager


My main problem is it's having trouble downloading, I think. I'm
not sure why. We found problems on our Pix (actually the new
ASA firewall) and the port the machine is on. We were getting half
duplex, but those are all fixed now. Curiously, command line ftp
never has a problem downloading, it's fetch (I think it's using fetch),
that can't seem to download.

While your problem has nothing to do with gnome-upgrade.sh, portmanager
is designed to automatically pickup from where it left off, so stopping
and starting isn't a problem, and it won't remove a port until its
replacement is successfully built so if the port didn't fetch you won't
lose anything, portmanager will just move on to the next port that can be
upgraded,  it is very fail safe.

-Mike

Note: I removed [EMAIL PROTECTED] from the return address as it is a
dupe of [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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  /    _ \      1977 MGB
 /  /||  \\
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