Linux-Misc Digest #334, Volume #26               Sat, 18 Nov 00 01:13:02 EST

Contents:
  Re: Creative Ensoniq AudioPCI Model CT4810? (John Scudder)
  meditech terminal session under linux ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  IPC's ("suresh")
  Re: Is this hard drive dead?
  Re: Kernel compilation problem (erich friesen)
  Wiping your tracks - bash history (Vivek Narayanamurthy)
  Gnome Desktop Status Bar Missing (mike)
  Re: Mount ufs (Solaris) Hard Disk on Storm Linux 2000 Server (Dances With Crows)
  Re: related ppp and rpm problems (Bob Holtzman)
  Re: The case of the fizzling fonts (B'ichela)
  Re: Responsiveness under X (Dances With Crows)
  Re: pine locally through dialup? (David Efflandt)
  Re: How do I display total page count in troff? (Clarke Echols)
  Why does linux keep crashing? ("Bob Jones")

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: John Scudder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Creative Ensoniq AudioPCI Model CT4810?
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 22:20:21 -0500

> is a plug'n'pray card you may need to fool with isapnptools by hand
> if sndconfig doesn't do the trick.

We must be talking about 2 different cards..mine is a PCI not ISA.  The es1371
configuration doesn't work for me.

John


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: meditech terminal session under linux
Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2000 03:17:09 GMT

anyone have experiences setting up sessions to Magic server under
linux?  currently using windows Meditech client.  please advise.


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: "suresh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: IPC's
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 22:29:40 -0500

Hi,
 I am a new bie to Linux and couldnot find answers to the following
questions. So please respond if you know any of them.
  Does Linux(RedHat 6.1 or 6.2) have the following IPC's :

1. POSIX Message Queues
2. POSIX Shared Memory
3. POSIX Semaphores.
4. Mutex that can be shared across PROCESSES.

   Any help in this direction will be greatly appreciated.

TIA,
Suresh




------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ()
Subject: Re: Is this hard drive dead?
Date: 18 Nov 2000 03:39:39 GMT

On Fri, 17 Nov 2000 13:57:11 -0500, 
Chuck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>. . . Pull the drive out and give it a good
>thump. Or as I have heard it called 
the the six inch drop tool.

>Just my two cents.
>Chuck

OK, I'll take it out on the porch and
hit it with a 2x4 :-)

bought a different drive today, so 
you're right, I've got nothing to lose.
(OK, enough chitchat ... sorry gang)

Thx
MP

------------------------------

From: erich friesen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: 
alt.os.linux,alt.os.linux.mandrake,alt.os.linux.redhat,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Kernel compilation problem
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 21:47:56 -0600

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
==============B66672BA5B9026345A215366
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

No, 2.2.17 is a stable version.  The development versions have the
second number odd
(e.g.: 2.3.17)

I would check if /usr/src/linux is a symbolic link that points to
another directory, if that is the case you need to change the symbolic
link to the location of your new kernel and module sources (My SuSE
default installation, /usr/src/linux was a symbolic linnk that pointed
to /usr/src/linux-suse and because the compilation process would always
look for the sources for modules in /usr/src/linux/modules, my
compilation would fail, unless I changed the symbolic link)

Erich

  ^
 /e\
_____


Wayne wrote:
> 
> Isn't 2.2.17 an "insecure" version of the kernel? Maybe that's it, try going
> for the stable 2.2.16 instead.
> 
> "Clifford W. Racz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:8u6n92$dvm$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > I have performed a fresh install of Linux Mandrake 7.2 and it has worked
> > well.  I am experimenting since Linux is new to me.  My system is a
> > P2-350MHz, 128MB PC100, Soundblaster Live! card.
> >
> > I have been trying to compile the 2.2.17 kernel so that I can get sound in
> > the Kernel (it works with the "O-negative" kernel like the kernel How-to
> > calls it) but it doesn't always work.
> >
> > Anyway, I downloaded the kernel tar.gz source from kernel.org and followed
> > the directions as in the Kernel-How-To, my RedHat book (Osbourne complete
> > RedHat reference), the Mandrake manual, the README that comes with the
> > kernel source and checked out some newsgroup archives.  I have tried the
> > compilation 6 times and I always get an "Error 2" after a long time of
> > compiling.
> >
> > I have made sure the binutils-2.10.0.24-4mdk.i586.rpm was installed (as
> one
> > of the posts said in a newsgroup archive) and I still got the error.
> >
> > Can anyone figure out a solution?
> >
> >
==============B66672BA5B9026345A215366
Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii;
 name="erichbf.vcf"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Description: Card for erich friesen
Content-Disposition: attachment;
 filename="erichbf.vcf"

begin:vcard 
n:Friesen;Erich
tel;cell:314.580.1459
tel;fax:314.454.9900
tel;home:314.721.5755
tel;work:314.454.9600
x-mozilla-html:FALSE
adr:;;6154 Washington Blvd.;Saint Louis;MO;63112;USA
version:2.1
email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
title:Architect
x-mozilla-cpt:;-30432
fn:Erich Friesen
end:vcard

==============B66672BA5B9026345A215366==


------------------------------

From: Vivek Narayanamurthy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Wiping your tracks - bash history
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 23:00:12 -0600

Hi

Is there any way by which you can *selectively* modify some of the
commands in your shell's history?

Vivek


------------------------------

From: mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Gnome Desktop Status Bar Missing
Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2000 04:05:47 GMT

Hi,
    I am running Redhat 6.1. I believe that there was
a status bar on the bottom of the screen that gave an indication
that a window was minimized or open. Not it is not there, so
when I minimize a window, maybe the term is hide, I have no
indication on the desktop that the window is available to be
opened.

                                                    Thanks
                                                            Mike


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dances With Crows)
Subject: Re: Mount ufs (Solaris) Hard Disk on Storm Linux 2000 Server
Date: 18 Nov 2000 04:47:27 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Fri, 17 Nov 2000 18:30:56 -0800, news.telus.net wrote:
>My question is: how can I mount the old Solaris disk in the new server? The
>new machine is all setup, including TCP_Wrappers for security :),  and I've
>installed the old SCSI hard disk into the new machine on it's own SCSI card
>(the new machine is using IDE). The old SCSI disk is recognized by the Storm
>Linux 2000 OS but when I try mounting it, using the following command:
>
>mount -t ufstype=sunx86 /dev/sda1 /mnt/old
>I get the following error:
>"fs type ufstype=sunx86 not supported by kernel"
[snip]

mount -t ufs /dev/sda1 /mnt/old -o ufstype=sunx86

-t means "filesystem type" and one of its possible values is "ufs".
-o means "various options" and is a grab bag of all kinds of things.
Many of these are specific to the particular filesystem you specified in
the -t option.  Others, such as "remount", "rw", and "ro" are general
for everything.  If you're used to Solaris, I'd suggest a quick trip
over to http://linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/ since there are a number of
differences at the low levels which can throw you off.  "man mount" for
a bit of background on the general weirdness of Linux's mount command.

If for some reason UFS filesystem support isn't there ("fs type ufs not
supported by kernel") then you'll have to compile UFS filesystem support
as a kernel module.  This is not too hard; check
http://linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Kernel-HOWTO.html for details.  HTH,

-- 
Matt G|There is no Darkness in Eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
Brainbench MVP for Linux Admin /  Workin' in a code mine, hittin' Ctrl-Alt
http://www.brainbench.com     /   Workin' in a code mine, whoops!
=============================/    I hit a seg fault....

------------------------------

From: Bob Holtzman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: related ppp and rpm problems
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 22:12:19 -0700

In article <8v44uj$l0o$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> You can sometimes get out of rpm problems by rebuilding the rpm database:
> 
>   rpm --rebuilddb

Been there, done that...no luck

> 
> Then reinstall ppp.  If you suspect the .rpm file you can check it:
> 
>   rpm -K --nogpg --nopgp *.rpm

Not familiar with -K. Neither is "man rpm" nor is Linux in a Nutshell.
I assume *.rpm is all rpm packages in the directory. In this case it 
would be ppp-2.3.7-2.src.rpm for the specific package. 
> 
> Did your ISP change their login to chap or pap authentication?  You may
> have to reconfigure your login.

Immediately after the first ppp failure I booted W95 and connected 
successfully.

This is the debug info from trying to install the package:


ot@localhost SRPMS]# rpm -ivh -vv  ppp-2.3.7-2.src.rpm
D: counting packages to install
D: found 1 packages
D: looking for packages to download
D: retrieved 0 packages
D: New Header signature
D: Signature size: 236
D: Signature pad : 4
D: sigsize         : 240
D: Header + Archive: 751601
D: expected size   : 751601
D: found 1 source and 0 binary packages
D: New Header signature
D: Signature size: 236
D: Signature pad : 4
D: sigsize         : 240
D: Header + Archive: 751601
D: expected size   : 751601
D: installing a source package
D: sources in: //usr/src/redhat/SOURCES
D: spec file in: //usr/src/redhat/SPECS
D:    file: ppp-2.3.5-pamd.conf action: unknown
D:    file: ppp-2.3.6-sample.patch action: unknown
D:    file: ppp-2.3.7-auth.patch action: unknown
D:    file: ppp-2.3.7-make.patch action: unknown
D:    file: ppp-2.3.7-wtmp.patch action: unknown
D:    file: ppp-2.3.7.tar.gz action: unknown
D:    file: ppp.spec action: unknown
ppp                         
##################################################

All files listed are present in their correct locations.

Any further ideas? Thanks.


 


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (B'ichela)
Subject: Re: The case of the fizzling fonts
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 23:18:40 -0500
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Fri, 17 Nov 2000 10:13:39 -0600, Cindy Huyser
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I suspect I'm having a memory problem with one of the machines here. I'm
>running RedHat 6.2 on an older 166 MHz MMX machine with 128 MB RAM, and
>my terminal fonts (not running X) are deteriorating.
        I have had that problem. What I had to do was reseat ALL of my
chips on the video card I had. Since I have Vesa Local Bus Cirrus
Logic cl5428 card with almost all chips socketed. If yours are socketed.
REmove the chips and reseat them! it works! My card has been flawless
since! also no more Video-RAM errors from the bios either! Vesa Local
Bus is hard to find and I did not want to chuck the  card and I was
comfortable with the repair work, it only took me about 15 minutes to do it.

-- 

                        B'ichela


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dances With Crows)
Subject: Re: Responsiveness under X
Date: 18 Nov 2000 05:13:54 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Fri, 17 Nov 2000 13:50:00 +0000, John English wrote:
>Dances With Crows wrote:
>> Trouble is, yanking the mouse around and moving/updating windows tends
>> to be a "bursty" operation, where X needs the processor a lot for one
>> timeslice and hardly at all for the next N timeslices.
>Yup -- but since it's bursty, how come it has so much trouble taking
>over from long-running CPU-bound jobs? I would have thought that the
>scheduler would give priority to restarting an idle job over one that's
>been busy using its timeslices to the full... I don't know what the
>scheduling algorithm is on Linux, but I thought that most systems work
>by gradually dropping the priority of compute-bound jobs or raising the
>instantaneous priority of idle jobs that suddenly wake up?

This is a question for someone who knows a lot more about the scheduling
code than I do...  I don't know for sure, but I think it may be related
to the fact that under Linux (and most Unices) every process gets some
time, no matter whether it's running at priority +20 or priority -20.
High-priority jobs cannot completely lock out low-priority jobs, unless
you're using one of the real-time modifications to the kernel.

>Hmm. It seems that just about anything can cause this problem if enough
>data is involved; generating a big tar file, copying or removing a
>directory tree containing several megabytes. It doesn't seem to be a
>disk bottleneck OTOH (I've just upgraded my disk and it's still the
>same).

If you're using an IDE disk, have you tried optimizing your throughput
with "hdparm -m16 -u1 -c1 /dev/hdX" ?  This tends to help quite a bit.
Add -d1 if you're feeling adventurous.  If you're using a SCSI disk,
forget this paragraph.

>But, it really makes X feel a lot like Windows (you know, the way the
>whole "multitasking" edifice freezes when you do something radical like
>copy a 1M file to a floppy?).

Heh.  Regardless of Linux/Xfree86's flaws in these respects, I've
noticed that my system has a great deal of difficulty running MS-Word97
and WinAmp at the same time.  StarOffice 5.1 and xmms at the same time,
along with several konsoles, apache, inetd, and various other bits in
the background, run much more smoothly.  *shrug*  XFree86 plays much
better with some video cards than others; if you're having to use the
framebuffer server instead of SVGA/Mach64/whatever, then X will be
horribly slow.  Xfree86 4.0.1 is supposed to be much faster wrt graphics
operations *if* it supports your card.  Again, if you're feeling
adventurous, try it?

-- 
Matt G|There is no Darkness in Eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
Brainbench MVP for Linux Admin /  Workin' in a code mine, hittin' Ctrl-Alt
http://www.brainbench.com     /   Workin' in a code mine, whoops!
=============================/    I hit a seg fault....

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Efflandt)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux.mandrake,comp.os.linux.portable
Subject: Re: pine locally through dialup?
Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2000 05:22:46 +0000 (UTC)
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Mon, 13 Nov 2000 19:17:34 -0500, Rick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>How would I send mail?

Either point pine at your ISP's mail server, or get your local smtp server
working.  I am using sendmail because I could not get postfix working.  
Or if I am out of town, I might telnet or ssh to my ISP and use pine
there.

>Sean wrote:
>> 
>> Check out fetchmail.
>> 
>> means you set up a mailserver on your own pc.  fetchmail collects mail
>> from your ISP and sends it to your local mailserver.  You can then use
>> pine to collect mail from there.
>> 
>> I love it, as it means I can check more than one ISP's mail at once!
>> 
>> Hope that is of help,
>> Sean
>> 
>> Rick wrote:
>> >
>> > Does anyone know if it might be possible to use PINE locally through a
>> > local dialup ISP.
>> >
>> > --
>> > Rick
>> > * To email me remove NOSPAM from my address *
>
>-- 
>Rick
>* To email me remove NOSPAM from my address *


-- 
David Efflandt  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  http://www.de-srv.com/
http://www.autox.chicago.il.us/  http://www.berniesfloral.net/
http://cgi-help.virtualave.net/  http://hammer.prohosting.com/~cgi-wiz/

------------------------------

From: Clarke Echols <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.text,comp.unix.questions,comp.unix.misc
Subject: Re: How do I display total page count in troff?
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 22:35:55 -0700

Use the % register.  Trap it using an end-of-file macro or place
a .tm % in the last line of your file being printed.  That will send
the page number at that point to the terminal.  I may be off a bit
on the syntax.  It's been many years since I was responsible for the
HP-UX system reference manuals (1989-1992) and I haven't been hacking
around in macros much since that time, except for a spell in 1996
when I was creating printed-circuit artwork using Eroff.  :-)

Clarke "You don't know troff until you can use it to draw printed
circuit layouts" Echols

"Andreas Kähäri" wrote:
> 
> In article <8s4nht$kki$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >In troff, how do I display the total number of pages in the page header
> >of my document?  For example, how do I display the '5' in "Page 1 of
> >5"?  I know the % register in troff displays the current page number,
> >but which registers holds the total number of pages?
> >
> >Derek
> 
> Looking in the manuals or tutorials at
> <URL:http://www.thphy.uni-duesseldorf.de/~vieth/subjects/computer/troff/>
> I can't seem to find a mentioning of how to get the total number of
> pages. There is no number register holding this number anyway...
> 
> /A
> 
> --
> Andreas Kähäri,
> Uppsala University, Sweden.
> -------{ Places to visit: www.gnu.org, www.faqs.org, New Zealand }------

------------------------------

From: "Bob Jones" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Why does linux keep crashing?
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.redhat,comp.os.linux.setup
Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2000 06:05:24 GMT

I'm having a hell of a time here. My kernel keeps dumping all over the
place and the computer just suddenly reboots from time to time. It all
started when I upgraded to redhat 7. I'm running the latest developement
kernel.
All of the kernel guys seem to think I have a hardware problem. I ran
memtest for a day with no problems at all. 
I've got a PIII 550, Asus MB, Matrox G400 Marvel, 128 meg ram, SB Live,
IBM Token ring card, Haughpauge TV Tuner, ummm I think that's it. I'll
post some stuff from /proc to see if that helps. Here is a couple of the
errors I get when the kernel dumps too. At the bottom is the /proc stuff.

Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual 
address 69d674b0
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: c012f266
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: *pde = 00000000
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: Oops: 0000
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: CPU:    0
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: EIP:    0010:[<c012f266>]
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: EFLAGS: 00010206
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: eax: 69d6749c   ebx: 69d6749c   ecx: 69d6749c   edx: 
00000400
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: esi: 00000000   edi: c5612a60   ebp: 00000001   esp: 
c3a85f80
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: ds: 0018   es: 0018   ss: 0018
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: Process sh (pid: 1410, stackpage=c3a85000)
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: Stack: 00000007 00000000 c011b3ea 69d6749c c5612a60 
c697b960 c3a84000 00000000 
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel:        bffff8f0 c011b9ea c5612a60 c3a84000 401488ec 
00000000 c011bb32 00000000 
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel:        c010a437 00000000 00000000 40149740 401488ec 
00000000 bffff8f0 00000001 
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: Call Trace: [<c011b3ea>] [<c011b9ea>] [<c011bb32>] 
[<c010a437>] 
Nov 16 11:51:54 phlegmish kernel: Code: 8b 43 14 85 c0 75 13 68 22 e1 20 c0 e8 35 9f 
fe ff 31 c0 83 

>>EIP; c012f266 <filp_close+6/64>   <=====
Trace; c011b3ea <put_files_struct+42/b0>
Trace; c011b9ea <do_exit+c2/1fc>
Trace; c011bb32 <sys_exit+e/10>
Trace; c010a437 <system_call+33/38>
Code;  c012f266 <filp_close+6/64>
00000000 <_EIP>:
Code;  c012f266 <filp_close+6/64>   <=====
   0:   8b 43 14                  mov    0x14(%ebx),%eax   <=====
Code;  c012f269 <filp_close+9/64>
   3:   85 c0                     test   %eax,%eax
Code;  c012f26b <filp_close+b/64>
   5:   75 13                     jne    1a <_EIP+0x1a> c012f280 <filp_close+20/64>
Code;  c012f26d <filp_close+d/64>
   7:   68 22 e1 20 c0            push   $0xc020e122
Code;  c012f272 <filp_close+12/64>
   c:   e8 35 9f fe ff            call   fffe9f46 <_EIP+0xfffe9f46> c01191ac 
<printk+0/19c>
Code;  c012f277 <filp_close+17/64>
  11:   31 c0                     xor    %eax,%eax
Code;  c012f279 <filp_close+19/64>
  13:   83 00 00                  addl   $0x0,(%eax)

Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual 
address 01800132
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: c012f266
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: *pde = 00000000
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: Oops: 0000
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: CPU:    0
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: EIP:    0010:[<c012f266>]
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: EFLAGS: 00010206
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: eax: 0180011e   ebx: 0180011e   ecx: 0180011e   edx: 
00000400
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: esi: 00000000   edi: c5608580   ebp: 00000001   esp: 
c464df80
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: ds: 0018   es: 0018   ss: 0018
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: Process sh (pid: 738, stackpage=c464d000)
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: Stack: 00000007 00000000 c011b3ea 0180011e c5608580 
c6979500 c464c000 00000000 
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel:        bffff8f0 c011b9ea c5608580 c464c000 401488ec 
00000000 c011bb32 00000000 
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel:        c010a437 00000000 00000000 40149740 401488ec 
00000000 bffff8f0 00000001 
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: Call Trace: [<c011b3ea>] [<c011b9ea>] [<c011bb32>] 
[<c010a437>] 
Nov 16 12:53:17 phlegmish kernel: Code: 8b 43 14 85 c0 75 13 68 22 e1 20 c0 e8 35 9f 
fe ff 31 c0 83 

>>EIP; c012f266 <filp_close+6/64>   <=====
Trace; c011b3ea <put_files_struct+42/b0>
Trace; c011b9ea <do_exit+c2/1fc>
Trace; c011bb32 <sys_exit+e/10>
Trace; c010a437 <system_call+33/38>
Code;  c012f266 <filp_close+6/64>
00000000 <_EIP>:
Code;  c012f266 <filp_close+6/64>   <=====
   0:   8b 43 14                  mov    0x14(%ebx),%eax   <=====
Code;  c012f269 <filp_close+9/64>
   3:   85 c0                     test   %eax,%eax
Code;  c012f26b <filp_close+b/64>
   5:   75 13                     jne    1a <_EIP+0x1a> c012f280 <filp_close+20/64>
Code;  c012f26d <filp_close+d/64>
   7:   68 22 e1 20 c0            push   $0xc020e122
Code;  c012f272 <filp_close+12/64>
   c:   e8 35 9f fe ff            call   fffe9f46 <_EIP+0xfffe9f46> c01191ac 
<printk+0/19c>
Code;  c012f277 <filp_close+17/64>
  11:   31 c0                     xor    %eax,%eax
Code;  c012f279 <filp_close+19/64>
  13:   83 00 00                  addl   $0x0,(%eax)

Nov 16 12:55:39 phlegmish kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual 
address 01c00132



cat devices 
Character devices:
  1 mem
  2 pty
  3 ttyp
  4 ttyS
  5 cua
  7 vcs
 10 misc
 14 sound
 21 sg
 36 netlink
 81 video_capture
128 ptm
136 pts
162 raw

Block devices:
  2 fd
  3 ide0
 11 sr
 22 ide1

.....................................
cat dma 
 4: cascade

....................................

 cat ioports 
0000-001f : dma1
0020-003f : pic1
0040-005f : timer
0060-006f : keyboard
0080-008f : dma page reg
00a0-00bf : pic2
00c0-00df : dma2
00f0-00ff : fpu
0170-0177 : ide1
01f0-01f7 : ide0
0213-0213 : isapnp read
02f8-02ff : serial(auto)
0376-0376 : ide1
0378-037a : parport0
037b-037f : parport0
03c0-03df : vga+
03f6-03f6 : ide0
03f8-03ff : serial(auto)
0778-077a : parport0
0a20-0a23 : ibmtr
0a79-0a79 : isapnp write
b400-b407 : Creative Labs SB Live!
b800-b81f : Creative Labs SB Live! EMU10000
  b800-b81f : EMU10K1
d000-d0ff : Adaptec AHA-7850
  d000-d0fe : aic7xxx
d400-d41f : Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 USB
d800-d80f : Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 IDE
  d800-d807 : ide0
  d808-d80f : ide1
e400-e43f : Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 ACPI
  e400-e403 : acpi
  e404-e405 : acpi
  e408-e40b : acpi
  e40c-e40f : acpi
e800-e81f : Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 ACPI
................................................

 cat isapnp
Card 1 'IBM0001:IBM Auto 16/4 Token-Ring ISA Adapter' PnP version 1.0 Product version 
0.1
  Logical device 0 'IBM0000:IBM Auto 16/4 Token-Ring ISA Adapter'
    Supported registers 0x3
    Device is active
    Active port 0xffff,0xffff,0xffff,0xffff,0xffff,0xffff,0xffff,0xffff
    Active IRQ 255 [0xff],255 [0xff]
    Active DMA 255,255
    Active memory 0xffffffff,0xffffffff,0xffffffff,0xffffffff
    Resources 0
      Priority preferred
      Port 0xa20-0xa20, align 0x3, size 0x4, 16-bit address decoding
      IRQ 11 High-Edge
      Memory 0xc8000-0xc8000, align 0x4000, size 0x4000, writeable, 16-bit
      Memory 0xcc000-0xcc000, align 0x2000, size 0x2000, writeable, expansion ROM, 
16-bit
...................................................

 cat mtrr 
reg00: base=0x00000000 (   0MB), size= 128MB: write-back, count=1
reg01: base=0xe2000000 (3616MB), size=  16MB: write-combining, count=1

....................................................

 cat pci 
PCI devices found:
  Bus  0, device   0, function  0:
    Host bridge: Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX - 82443BX/ZX Host bridge (rev 3).
      Master Capable.  Latency=64.  
      Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe4000000 [0xe7ffffff].
  Bus  0, device   1, function  0:
    PCI bridge: Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX - 82443BX/ZX AGP bridge (rev 3).
      Master Capable.  Latency=64.  Min Gnt=136.
  Bus  0, device   4, function  0:
    ISA bridge: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 ISA (rev 2).
  Bus  0, device   4, function  1:
    IDE interface: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 IDE (rev 1).
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  
      I/O at 0xd800 [0xd80f].
  Bus  0, device   4, function  2:
    USB Controller: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 USB (rev 1).
      IRQ 9.
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  
      I/O at 0xd400 [0xd41f].
  Bus  0, device   4, function  3:
    Bridge: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 ACPI (rev 2).
  Bus  0, device   9, function  0:
    Multimedia video controller: Brooktree Corporation Bt878 (rev 2).
      IRQ 9.
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  Min Gnt=16.Max Lat=40.
      Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe1000000 [0xe1000fff].
  Bus  0, device   9, function  1:
    Multimedia controller: Brooktree Corporation Bt878 (rev 2).
      IRQ 9.
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  Min Gnt=4.Max Lat=255.
      Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe0800000 [0xe0800fff].
  Bus  0, device  10, function  0:
    SCSI storage controller: Adaptec AHA-7850 (rev 1).
      IRQ 5.
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  Min Gnt=4.Max Lat=4.
      I/O at 0xd000 [0xd0ff].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xdf000000 [0xdf000fff].
  Bus  0, device  13, function  0:
    Multimedia audio controller: Creative Labs SB Live! EMU10000 (rev 7).
      IRQ 9.
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  Min Gnt=2.Max Lat=20.
      I/O at 0xb800 [0xb81f].
  Bus  0, device  13, function  1:
    Input device controller: Creative Labs SB Live! (rev 7).
      Master Capable.  Latency=32.  
      I/O at 0xb400 [0xb407].
  Bus  1, device   0, function  0:
    VGA compatible controller: Matrox Graphics, Inc. MGA G400 AGP (rev 4).
      IRQ 10.
      Master Capable.  Latency=64.  Min Gnt=16.Max Lat=32.
      Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe2000000 [0xe3ffffff].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe0000000 [0xe0003fff].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xdf800000 [0xdfffffff].


..........................................

------------------------------


** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **

The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:

    Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.misc) via:

    Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
    ftp.funet.fi                                pub/Linux
    tsx-11.mit.edu                              pub/linux
    sunsite.unc.edu                             pub/Linux

End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************

Reply via email to