Hi Martin, Martin Husemann <mar...@duskware.de> ezt írta (időpont: 2019. jan. 13., V, 13:53): > > On Sun, Jan 13, 2019 at 12:56:23PM +0100, Csányi Pál wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I am running NetBSD 8.0 version. > > > > I just installed links and want to open > > https://duckduckgo.com > > > > but links crached with this message: > > Illegal instruction (core dump). > > Tell us a bit about your hardware, please, e.g. show the output of > > cpuctl identfiy 0
cpu0: highest basic info 00000001 cpu0: highest extended info 80000005 cpu0: "AMD-K6(tm) D processor" cpu0: AMD-K6-2 (586-class), 333.30 MHz cpu0: family 0x5 model 0x8 stepping 0xc (id 0x58c) cpu0: features 0x8021bf<FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,MCE,CX8,PGE,MMX> cpu0: I-cache 32KB 32B/line 2-way, D-cache 32KB 2B/line 2-way cpu0: ITLB 64 4KB entries direct-mapped cpu0: DTLB 128 4KB entries 2-way cpu0: initial APIC ID 0 > If you check the directory where you did run links, you should see a > links.core > file around. You can analyze that with something like: > > gdb links links.core > x/i $pc > q > > and show us the last few lines when gdb loaded the core plus the output of > the x/i command. -bash-4.4$ gdb: command not find > Martin I must confess that that after I installed NetBSD on this old Toshiba Satellite 2540CDS laptop, I edited the /root/.profile file by adding this line: export PAGER=less and when I try to save it within Midnight Comander a messages says about that that this file is hard linked. Nevertheless, I saved the file. After that I realized that that the # prompt behave strange. Eg., I can run the reboot command from that prompt as root user. I must then to switch to the /dev/ttyE0 console, there su to get root, and then can I reboot.