[Context recovered from top posting.]
Nicpon, John [EMAIL PROTECTED] types:
From: Mike Meyer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Nicpon, John [EMAIL PROTECTED] types:
I've been having the same problem listed below and was wondering if
anyone had a fix?
There wasn't a fix when I asked last
These words, 830 of them, were obtained by intersecting the words
in a number of lexicons and then subtracting the words in
/usr/share/dict/web2. This all done with words that contain only
lowercase letters.
You'll find those words at the end of this message. Should you
take even a
It was a small link on the bottom of this page for users who did a bad
bios flash.
I thought there might be some information as far as card parameters that
would assist in updating the drivers.
http://www.ecsusa.com/ecsusa/www.ecs.com.tw/download/k7s5a.htm
-Original Message-
From: Mike
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 03:02:15PM -0600, Mike Meyer wrote:
[Context recovered from top posting.]
Nicpon, John [EMAIL PROTECTED] types:
From: Mike Meyer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Nicpon, John [EMAIL PROTECTED] types:
I've been having the same problem listed below and was wondering
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 03:02:15PM -0600, Mike Meyer wrote:
Could you provide a pointer to where you found it? An explanation of
why users need to reprogram their MAC's - which is rather unusual -
would help quite a bit.
There are several possibilities:
* Users wish to replace a card but
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wilko Bulte writes:
: Things like DECnet used to do it. And I think some server clustering
: solutions might still do it.
Some clustering solutions do do it to this day. They provide for
completely trasnparent IP failover, and experience has shown that the
easiest
Jason Mawdsley wrote:
Jason Mawdsley [EMAIL PROTECTED] asks:
I am looking for a way to reserve memory, without actually
allocating the swap space.
Alfred Perlstein answers:
Just proceed normally, freebsd does overcommit such that you really
don't need to do anything
Wilko Bulte wrote:
An explanation of
why users need to reprogram their MAC's - which is rather unusual -
would help quite a bit.
Things like DECnet used to do it. And I think some server clustering
solutions might still do it.
DECNet reprogrammed the MACs with the DEC ethernet
I am trying to profile a KLD. It seems to me that adding the following
line in its make file does not help:
COPTS+= -pg -DGPROF
The kernel was configured with config -p and I used kgmon -b, kgmon -h,
kgmon -p, and gprof /kernel gmon.out gprof.out to collect the data. But
none of my routines
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 02:50:44PM -0800, Terry Lambert wrote:
FreeBSD needs some basic changes for multiple MAC s to be
useful, though.
I have more than once wished to assign a separate MAC to each
virtual IP address on an interface. I have no idea how complex
that would be, but it would be
Leo Bicknell wrote:
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 02:50:44PM -0800, Terry Lambert wrote:
FreeBSD needs some basic changes for multiple MAC s to be
useful, though.
I have more than once wished to assign a separate MAC to each
virtual IP address on an interface. I have no idea how complex
Hi all,
A couple of questions here.
i. Is it feasible to port Linux fbdev modules to FreeBSD (as a modules,
again)? They work quite nice under Linux for multimedia apps, and it's a
pity we haven't got anything of this kind (TNT2 based v/cards with HW
accelleration, for one). Did anybody try to
:I am creating a virtual memory manager.
:
:Currently I am doing a
:mmap(...PROT_NONE, MAP_ANON ) to reserve the memory.
:then when committing the memory I am using mprotect( ...PROT_READ |
:PROT_WRITE )
:
:HTH
:
:Jason Mawdsley ~ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
:m_ a c a d a m i a nt e c h n o l o g i e
I am planning on building a true multi-user system (as opposed to a NFS
server, or a web server, or a mail server) - many people with many shells
will be doing many things.
Two things have been decided:
- it will run freeBSD
- it will be dual processor
-
So what two processors should I
Leo Bicknell [EMAIL PROTECTED] types:
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 03:02:15PM -0600, Mike Meyer wrote:
Could you provide a pointer to where you found it? An explanation of
why users need to reprogram their MAC's - which is rather unusual -
would help quite a bit.
There are several
Joesh Juphland [EMAIL PROTECTED] types:
I am planning on building a true multi-user system (as opposed to a NFS
server, or a web server, or a mail server) - many people with many shells
will be doing many things.
Two things have been decided:
- it will run freeBSD
- it will be dual
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 06:36:18PM -0700, Joesh Juphland wrote:
So what two processors should I use ? Coming from a Sun hardware
background, I originally thought to use PIII Xeons .. since they have a lot
of cache, and fast cache. I was thinking 512meg cache p3 xeons running at
550mhz.
Hello all,
I have ported the most recent version of boehm-gc (6.1-alpha) to
FreeBSD/i386 under the auspice of the gcc project (it will be in Hans'
6.1 release and it is on the gcc mainline). I got one notable thing
fully configured beyond what is in the ports tree (which is based on
6.0):
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Loren James Rittle
writes:
: void* worker (void* arg)
: {
: pthread_kill (*(pthread_t*)arg, SIGUSR1);
: sleep (1);
: pthread_kill (*(pthread_t*)arg, SIGUSR2);
: }
We've seen the same thing with:
pthread_kill (*(pthread_t*)arg, SIGUSR1);
I'm going to have to agree with your idea in general, however there are
parts that I disagree with. First, taking all of the code from Linux may not
be good for the FreeBSD project. That would steer FreeBSD into being more
like yet another Linux distro instead of an independent project. Just
On 09-Nov-2001 Craig R wrote:
code and build it straight into the base OS. A linux compatability layer
could be made (similar idea as the existing binary support) so that more
applications would run, but the system itself would be independant. The idea
Why write yet another interface?
This morning I've cvsuped to STABLE and put 'options IPFIREWALL' into my
kernel configuration file. After installing all I try to 'kldload ipfw' which
complains that ipfw module is already in kernel, but kldstat reports that
module is being loaded! Then I've decided to kldunload it Kernel
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