Re: OpenGL problems on an Ultra/2 with Creator3D
Hello- On Sat, Nov 29, 2003 at 03:50:02PM -0800, Jon Leonard wrote: On Fri, Nov 28, 2003 at 08:05:54PM -0500, David Butts wrote: ... The Creator3D hardware doesn't do texture mapping, so anything that requests textures will fall back to a software renderer. That's probably what you're seeing. (At the time it was designed fast triangles seemed more imporant.) Fascinating, particularly given Ben's observation that this symptom strikes SDL apps generally. Is the software renderer likely to be implemented as part of SDL, or at a lower layer (e.g. mesa)? Not that I'm dying to play tuxracer, but I feel like I should do my part to fend off a hardware monoculture by reporting this to somebody... Thanks, David
OpenGL problems on an Ultra/2 with Creator3D
Hello, folks- I recently got my hands on a Creator3D, and, although I've got X up and running (apparently) cheerfully, almost none of the OpenGL apps I've tried are working. I'm running a stock installation of Woody, with xserver-xfree86 configured through debconf, and a 2.4.22 kernel with DRM enabled. In a (possibly misguided) attempt to preserve bandwidth and avoid false positives on future list searches, here are my debconf choices for xserver-xfree86: X Server Driver:11 (sunffb) Video card identifier: SUNW,ffb Bus Identifier: none Video memory: autodetect Use kernel framebuffer: no (though I've tried both) ... Color depth:6 (24-bit) Modules:all but dri and xtt I get 400+ fps in glxgears, which leads me to believe that, at least fundamentally, DRM and DRI are happy. The GL xlock modes seem happy as well (though 'molecule' is currently taking a somewhat suspicious 100% of the time on one of the CPUs). Everything else I've tried (e.g. tuxracer, openuniverse, and armagetron) mangles colors, or textures, or something. It's a little hard for me to tell what exactly, since I don't have a frame of reference. The closest thing I've seen to this in the list archives is the 'Ultra1 Creator quirks' thread from July and August of '01, but I don't have (or just haven't noticed) any problems with glxgears. Is there something that needs to be done with my kernel or X (or some other) config, or am I just looking at the limits of the 15MiB of RAM the card is purported to have[1]? Thanks, David [1] http://www.obsolyte.com/sunFAQ/faq_framebuffer/framebuffer.html#23
XF86_3DLabs and/or XF86_FBDev (3.3.6) on AXi w/PGX32
Hello, all- I am not subscribed to debian-user, so please cc me on any responses you send to that list (I know I should be, but I've been less than entirely diligent about keeping up with debian-sparc, debian-alpha and the like). The broadest question I have is where documentation for XFree on Sparc can be found. AFAICT, it's a fairly recent development (although I would assume that FBDev has been working for some time). If there's an FM to be read, please point me at it, and I'll keep myself occupied for a while. I have installed Potato on a Concorde UMax/10 (Basically an Ultra/10 but with SCSI instead of IDE), which is running a PGX32 (Permedia2). There is no video card on the motherboard, so the PGX32 is the only framebuffer in the system. # cat /proc/openprom/banner-name 'SPARCengine(tm)Ultra(tm) AXi (UltraSPARC-IIi 440MHz)' I've installed xserver-3dlabs and xserver-fbdev, but can't seem to get either of them to behave. XF86_3DLabs claims not to find any GLINT/PERMEDIA cards on startup, and the closest I was able to find poking through list archives was a thread about problems with XF4 probing multiple PCI busses to find video cards on Alphas. FWIW, the video card, in its current location, is on PCI bus 1. I tried moving it to another slot, and it ended up on bus 128. Rather than flailing around with that for too long, I figured I'd solicit an expert opinion or two first. I then tried to get XF86_FBDev (which has come to my rescue on a great many occasions... slow, but dependable) to work, but was unable to come up with an appropriate set of modelines. Sadly, xf86config has worked so well for me in the past that I have not really learned how to make my own XF86Config file from scratch. I tried using the output from fbset -x to create a usable modeline for the framebuffer (which is running 1280x1024x60 ATM. In a perfect world I'd get that up to 1280x1024x76, but am less picky for now), but XF86_FBDev continues to claim not to have found any valid modelines. Also, for whatever reason, multiple -verbose on the command line don't seem to be getting me any more detail. Is the most reasonable thing to do to try an upgrade to XF4? It seems like there's a great deal more traffic re: XF4 on sparc that there is about 3.3.6. Having written that all out, I get the sneaking suspicion that I should be sending this to a newbie list of some type, but I'm still too proud... I've included some details below. If any others would be useful (kernel config, XF86Config snippets, etc) please let me know. Thanks, David Butts Unix Systems Administrator Storability, Inc. # cat /proc/fb 0 Permedia2 # fbset -x Mode 1280x1024 # D: 107.991 MHz, H: 63.976 kHz, V: 60.015 Hz DotClock 107.992 HTimings 1280 1328 1440 1688 VTimings 1024 1025 1028 1066 Flags+HSync +VSync EndMode # cat /proc/pci PCI devices found: Bus 0, device 0, function 0: Host bridge: Sun Microsystems Ultra IIi PCI (rev 0). Medium devsel. Fast back-to-back capable. Master Capable. Latency=40. Bus 0, device 1, function 0: PCI bridge: Sun Microsystems Advanced PCI Bridge (rev 19). Medium devsel. Fast back-to-back capable. Master Capable. Latency=40. Min Gnt=2. Bus 0, device 1, function 1: PCI bridge: Sun Microsystems Advanced PCI Bridge (rev 19). Medium devsel. Fast back-to-back capable. Master Capable. Latency=40. Min Gnt=2. Bus 128, device 1, function 0: SCSI storage controller: NCR 53c875 (rev 20). Medium devsel. IRQ 6312128. Master Capable. Latency=80. Min Gnt=17.Max Lat=64. I/O at 0xf9fe02000400 [0xf9fe02000401]. Non-prefetchable 20 bit memory at 0xf9ff2000 [0xf9ff2002]. Non-prefetchable 20 bit memory at 0xf9ff4000 [0xf9ff4002]. Bus 128, device 1, function 1: SCSI storage controller: NCR 53c875 (rev 20). Medium devsel. IRQ 6312128. Master Capable. Latency=80. Min Gnt=17.Max Lat=64. I/O at 0xf9fe02000800 [0xf9fe02000801]. Non-prefetchable 20 bit memory at 0xf9ff6000 [0xf9ff6002]. Non-prefetchable 20 bit memory at 0xf9ff8000 [0xf9ff8002]. Bus 1, device 1, function 0: Bridge: Sun Microsystems PCI-EBus Bridge (rev 1). Medium devsel. Fast back-to-back capable. Master Capable. Latency=64. Min Gnt=10.Max Lat=25. Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xf9fff000 [0xf9fff000]. Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xf9fff100 [0xf9fff100]. Bus 1, device 1, function 1: Ethernet controller: Sun Microsystems Happy Meal Ethernet (rev 1). Medium devsel. Fast back-to-back capable. IRQ 6312160. Master Capable. Latency=64. Min Gnt=10.Max Lat=5. Non-prefetchable 20 bit memory at 0xf9ff40008000 [0xf9ff40008002]. Bus 1, device 2, function 0: Display controller: Texas Instruments TVP4020 Permedia 2 (rev 17). Medium
2.4.0-test4 possible memory issues on boot (re:2.4.0-test4 no boot?)
Hello, all- I noticed this thread on linux-kernel, an thought I'd throw my two cents in. I've cc'ed debian-sparc because I'm beginning to suspect that, at least in my case, this may be an issue with SIMM placement, and thus something that some of the good folks there may have run into. I'm not nearly brave enough at this point to actually subscribe to linux-kernel, so please cc me on any messages sent to linux-kernel. That said... I am seeing nearly identical behavior on a 2-way Sparc 10. On boot, it claims to be starting linux and then, after announcing a call to free_all_bootmem, it freezes solid, and won't respond to stop-A. Here's /proc/cpuinfo: cpu : Texas Instruments, Inc. - MicroSparc fpu : SuperSparc on-chip FPU promlib : Version 3 Revision 2 prom: 2.12 type: sun4m ncpus probed: 2 ncpus active: 2 Cpu0Bogo: 39.83 Cpu1Bogo: 39.93 MMU type: TI Viking invall : 0 invmm : 0 invrnge : 0 invpg : 0 contexts: 65536 CPU0: online CPU1: online I've compiled (and trimmed) some potentially interesting behavior from the console on boot into 2.4.0-test4, 2.4.0-test1, and 2.2.15. In the case of 2.4.0-test4, it simply doesn't boot, but the bootmem information it gives is slightly different from 2.4.0-test1, and will hopefully be helpful. With 2.4.0-test1, it boots, but doesn't seem to find anywhere near all the memory. In fact, the arithmetic suggests that it's only dealing with 64MB of memory, instead of 96MB. According to the info I found on docs.sun.com, I believe I've to the 6x16MB SIMMS in the correct places, but the order does seem (to me at least) to be deeply pathological, so I'm a bit suspicious. With the 2.4.0-test1 kernel, I also dumped the output from /proc/openprom/[EMAIL PROTECTED],0/available, in case that it helpful. Sadly, I was scared away from the /proc/openprom module when I compiled 2.2.15 by the fact that it was experimental, so I don't have anything else to compare the 2.4.0-test1 results with. If there's any other information whic would be helpful, or anything else I should try, please let me know. I appear not to have saved a copy of my 2.4.0-test1 config, but I do have the 2.4.0-test4 and 2.2.15 configs available if they would be of interest, but this is already probably far too long a message. Thanks- David /* Attempt to boot 2.4.0-test4 */ SPARCstation 10 MP (2 X 390Z50), Keyboard Present ROM Rev. 2.12, 96 MB memory installed, Serial #3170570. Ethernet address 8:0:20:1b:11:49, Host ID: 7230610a. Testing Memory - Initializing Memory |/-\|/-\|/-\|/-\ Boot device: /iommu/sbus/[EMAIL PROTECTED],40/[EMAIL PROTECTED],80/[EMAIL PROTECTED],0 File and args: SILO boot: linux2.4.0-test1 2.4.0-test4 fcs boot: 2.4.0-test4 PROMLIB: obio_ranges 5 bootmem_init: Scan sp_banks, init_bootmem(spfn[1f1],bpfn[1f1],epfn[c000]) free_bootmem: base[0] size[100] free_bootmem: base[400] size[100] free_bootmem: base[800] size[100] reserve_bootmem: base[0] size[1f1000] reserve_bootmem: base[1f1000] size[1800] init_bootmem: return end_pfn[c000] Booting Linux... mem_init: Calling free_all_bootmem(). SPARCstation 10 MP (2 X 390Z50), Keyboard Present ROM Rev. 2.12, 96 MB memory installed, Serial #3170570. Ethernet address 8:0:20:1b:11:49, Host ID: 7230610a. ** Power cycle ** /* Boot 2.4.0-test1 */ Testing Memory - Initializing Memory |/-\|/-\|/-\|/-\ Boot device: /iommu/sbus/[EMAIL PROTECTED],40/[EMAIL PROTECTED],80/[EMAIL PROTECTED],0 File and args: SILO boot: linux2.4.0-test1 2.4.0-test4 fcs boot: 2.4.0-test1 PROMLIB: obio_ranges 5 bootmem_init: Scan sp_banks, init_bootmem(spfn[1e4],bpfn[1e4],epfn[d000]) free_bootmem: base[0] size[100] free_bootmem: base[400] size[100] free_bootmem: base[800] size[100] free_bootmem: base[c00] size[100] reserve_bootmem: base[0] size[1e4000] reserve_bootmem: base[1e4000] size[1a00] init_bootmem: return end_pfn[d000] Booting Linux... mem_init: Calling free_all_bootmem(). PROMLIB: Sun Boot Prom Version 3 Revision 2 Linux version 2.4.0-test1 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (gcc version 2.95.2 2313 (Debian GNU/Linux)) #1 SMP Fri Jun 16 13:04:47 EDT 2000 ARCH: SUN4M TYPE: Sun4m SparcStation10/20 Ethernet address: 8:0:20:1b:11:49 Boot time fixup v1.6. 4/Mar/98 Jakub Jelinek ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). Patching kernel for srmmu[TI Viking]/iommu On node 0 totalpages: 53248 zone(0): 53248 pages. zone(1): 0 pages. zone(2): 0 pages. Found CPU 0 node=ffd4b120,mid=8 Found CPU 1 node=ffd4b3f0,mid=10 Found 2 CPU prom device tree node(s). Power off control detected. Kernel command line: root=/dev/sda1 ro Calibrating delay loop... 39.83 BogoMIPS Memory: 58060k available (1288k kernel code, 248k data, 124k init)
Re: newbie+potato+Classic=? [was CDU561 misadventures]
Hello, all- For what it's worth, I did an essentially complete potato install over a 33.6 modem[1]. The fact that I was doing the install through another machine doing IP masquerading meant that I was able to pretend it was a standard network install, but if you have copies of base2_2.tgz and drivers.tgz already, then it should (someone feel free to correct me on this, I've never actually tried it) be fairly straightforward to just tell it to do the install over PPP once the base system is up and running. That said, it will take a while. I can sustain about 10MB/hour through a 33.6 modem, so I expect that translates to around 8 or 9 MB/hour on a 28.8. It's a long time, granted, but if you let it go overnight, you end up sleeping through the bulk of it, which softens the demands on your attention span substantially. For what it's worth, I have potato running on a Classic (among several other systems), and have nothing but good things to say about it. Good luck- David [1] In the interests of full disclosure, the install was on a pentium notebook, but that's really immaterial. The install process is very smooth and consistent across Alpha, Sparc and x86, and, like I said, the only thing that my machine could tell was different from a 'real' net install was that the pipe was ... skinny. On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Ben Roberts wrote: You can put the files anywhere you like for things like base2_2.tgz, then tell the installer where to look for them. THe same goes for drivers.tgz; I agree you don't want to put all of those onto floppies :-) Also make sure that if you're using cdrw's that their formatting is compatible with your drive. But for the packages themselves I don't know... but one thing you can do is make a fake cd set with all the stuff you really need; get all the packages as well as the Packages.gz or whatever, and keep the directory structure intact. That COULD work... but you may need to remake the Packages.gz file for each cdrw, so that would be a challenge. Any change you can just get a whole lot of network cable strung to your friend's place with the ADSL connection? :-) The last option, which isn't that bad, is to configure apt to do http downloads, then individually select which major packages (i.e. not supporting packages, apt does that) you want via apt-get install package. Apt will prompt you asking if you want to do it and what packages it will download, including dependencies (the glory of apt!). Quit apt then copy the packages over to its temporary directory off the cdrw, then run it again. Voila! It's better than downloading them at least. - Ben Roberts, Class of 2001 (1st of millenium), founding member of MBLUG If your motherboard smells like carcinogens it's time to get a new motherboard. -- Ben Roberts, refering to his SPARC -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: SMP SS10 freezes hard intermittently
Hello, all- I apologize for taking so long to respond. I'm (hopefully) not nearly the ungrateful bastard I seem to be... On Tue, 13 Jun 2000, Anton Blanchard wrote: In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; from [EMAIL PROTECTED] on Mon, Jun 12, 2000 at 08:53:49PM -0400 I've got an SS10 with two CPUs, running a 2.2.15 kernel with SMP enabled. It locks up hard periodically, and won't respond to stop-A, a break on the serial port, the three-fingered salute, or, in fact, anything short of a power-cycle. When I was fixing sparc32 SMP in 2.2, I only had access to one cpu and machine type (viking supersparc on 4m/690). As such it tends to be stable :) ftoomsh# uptime 3:01am up 99 days, 13:59, 31 users, load average: 1.42, 1.38, 1.36 ftoomsh# cat /proc/cpuinfo cpu : Texas Instruments, Inc. - SuperSparc 50 fpu : SuperSparc on-chip FPU promlib : Version 3 Revision 2 prom: 2.14 type: sun4m ncpus probed: 4 ncpus active: 4 Cpu0Bogo: 49.86 Cpu1Bogo: 49.97 Cpu2Bogo: 49.97 Cpu3Bogo: 49.97 MMU type: TI Viking/MXCC contexts: 65536 CPU0: online CPU1: online CPU2: online CPU3: online FWIW, cpu : Texas Instruments, Inc. - MicroSparc fpu : SuperSparc on-chip FPU promlib : Version 3 Revision 2 prom: 2.12 type: sun4m ncpus probed: 2 ncpus active: 2 Cpu0Bogo: 39.83 Cpu1Bogo: 39.93 MMU type: TI Viking invall : 0 invmm : 0 invrnge : 0 invpg : 0 contexts: 65536 CPU0: online CPU1: online There are too many things to fix in 2.2 (that I am fixing in 2.4) so random lockups are no surprise to me. 2.4 should be ready for sparc32 real soon. Does that mean I should rush out and grab myself some 2.4.0-test2 sources and try them out, or have your changes not been incorporated yet? Also, if it's possible to describe generally, what sort of problems exist with the Sparc32 SMP code in 2.2? Thanks (belatedly)- David
RE: SMP SS10 freezes hard intermittently
Hello- Again, my apologies for the embarassingly long delay... On Mon, 12 Jun 2000, Gregory Leblanc wrote: -Original Message- From: David Butts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, June 12, 2000 8:00 PM To: debian-sparc@lists.debian.org Cc: sparclinux@vger.rutgers.edu Subject: RE: SMP SS10 freezes hard intermittently Hello- I've got a CG6. I had included the other FBs for the sake of ... completeness (read: figuring out what I had in the box). From /var/log/messages: fb0: cgsix at e. TEC Rev 4 CPU sparc Rev b [TurboGX] The only (permanent) change I made to the devices was the addition of a symlink to /dev/fb0: lrwxrwxrwx1 root root3 Jun 9 17:56 /dev/cgsix0 - fb0 crw--w--w-1 root tty 29, 0 May 4 08:32 /dev/fb0 HTH (particularly since I'm the one it will ultimately end up helping :) ok, time for some more random guessing. What CPU modules do you have in there? Is this machine stable under Solaris (any version)? Any other SBUS cards in there? What about sound, is DBRI compiled in, and does it work? (DBRI is EXTREMELY flaky on my SS20). Hopefully somebody else will have more guesses, I only have 1 situation where I can crash Linux/X, and that's about 100% reliable of a crash. :-( I just don't do that. Later, cpu : Texas Instruments, Inc. - MicroSparc fpu : SuperSparc on-chip FPU promlib : Version 3 Revision 2 prom: 2.12 type: sun4m ncpus probed: 2 ncpus active: 2 Cpu0Bogo: 39.83 Cpu1Bogo: 39.93 MMU type: TI Viking invall : 0 invmm : 0 invrnge : 0 invpg : 0 contexts: 65536 CPU0: online CPU1: online This particular beast is actually the unholy union of the innards of two otherwise identical SS10's, so it's never booted anything else in its current incarnation. The existing OS on the disks was SunOS 4.something, which was not amused to find a second CPU. As I expect you saw, Anton Blanchard suspects that this sort of unpleasantness is to be expected from a 2.2 kernel, so I'll either just be patient, or continue shotgun debugging. Thanks- David
Re: New set of boot-floppies to test
Hello- I tried the sun4cdm tftpboot image and boot floppies on an IPC (ROM version 2.6 w/24 MB of memory), but couldn't get either of them to work. I Also tried the disks/image from the current (2.2.15-2000-06-10) sun4cdm tree on ftp.debian.org, which gave me the same errors: With the tftpboot image, I managed to pull the image across, but then immediately got: Data Access Exception ok With the floppies, It fails immediately: Can't read disk label Can't open Sun disk label package Can't open boot device ok The bit with the floopies sounds like it's something fairly fundamental with the machine, rather than a problem with the disks, but I was wondering if anyone had managed to get an IPC to boot over the net. Thanks- David On Sun, 2 Jul 2000, Ben Collins wrote: New set of boot-floppies. Possibly the last set before release. These are based on the current boot-floppies CVS, 2.2.16pre. They use 2.2.17pre8 kernels. Let me know how they do: http://auric.debian.org/~bcollins/disks-sparc/2.2.16-2000-07-02/ Ben -- ---===-=-==-=---==-=-- / Ben Collins -- ...on that fantastic voyage... -- Debian GNU/Linux \ ` [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] ' `---=--===-=-=-=-===-==---=--=---' -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SMP SS10 freezes hard intermittently
Hello, all- I've got an SS10 with two CPUs, running a 2.2.15 kernel with SMP enabled. It locks up hard periodically, and won't respond to stop-A, a break on the serial port, the three-fingered salute, or, in fact, anything short of a power-cycle. It doesn't do it consistantly, but the times it happened were (a) when installing packages with apt-get (unfortunately, I didn't pay enough attention to which, but it froze immedaitely after it finished the download of the .deb files), and (b) in X (both when I was strace'ing the startup to find out why it thought I didn't have a screen, and later, while WindowMaker was starting up). There are no obviously strange log entries, and my strace output was in /tmp, so it was removed after teh power-cycle. If there are any other diagnostic steps I should try, please let me know. I've included my .config below. AFAIK, there were no modules loaded at the time of the crashes. I've cc'ed sparclinux@vger.rutgers.edu based on a suggestion in response to a similar problem a couple of months ago posted to debian-sparc, but I'm not on that list, so please cc me on any mail send to the vger list. Thanks, David Butts # # Automatically generated make config: don't edit # # # Code maturity level options # # CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL is not set # # Loadable module support # CONFIG_MODULES=y CONFIG_MODVERSIONS=y CONFIG_KMOD=y # # General setup # CONFIG_VT=y CONFIG_VT_CONSOLE=y # CONFIG_AP1000 is not set CONFIG_SMP=y # CONFIG_SUN4 is not set # CONFIG_PCI is not set # # Console drivers # CONFIG_PROM_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_FB=y CONFIG_DUMMY_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_FB_SBUS=y CONFIG_FB_CGSIX=y CONFIG_FB_BWTWO=y CONFIG_FB_CGTHREE=y # CONFIG_FB_TCX is not set # CONFIG_FB_CGFOURTEEN is not set # CONFIG_FB_LEO is not set # CONFIG_FB_VIRTUAL is not set # CONFIG_FBCON_ADVANCED is not set CONFIG_FBCON_MFB=y CONFIG_FBCON_CFB8=y CONFIG_FBCON_FONTWIDTH8_ONLY=y CONFIG_FONT_SUN8x16=y CONFIG_FBCON_FONTS=y CONFIG_FONT_8x8=y # CONFIG_FONT_8x16 is not set # CONFIG_FONT_PEARL_8x8 is not set # CONFIG_FONT_ACORN_8x8 is not set CONFIG_SBUS=y CONFIG_SBUSCHAR=y CONFIG_SUN_MOUSE=y CONFIG_SERIAL=y CONFIG_SUN_SERIAL=y CONFIG_SERIAL_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_SUN_KEYBOARD=y CONFIG_SUN_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_SUN_AUXIO=y CONFIG_SUN_IO=y # # Misc Linux/SPARC drivers # CONFIG_SUN_OPENPROMIO=m CONFIG_SUN_MOSTEK_RTC=y # CONFIG_SUN_OPENPROMFS is not set CONFIG_NET=y CONFIG_SYSVIPC=y CONFIG_BSD_PROCESS_ACCT=y CONFIG_SYSCTL=y CONFIG_BINFMT_AOUT=y CONFIG_BINFMT_ELF=y CONFIG_BINFMT_MISC=m # CONFIG_SUNOS_EMUL is not set # # Floppy, IDE, and other block devices # CONFIG_BLK_DEV_FD=y CONFIG_BLK_DEV_MD=y CONFIG_MD_LINEAR=m CONFIG_MD_STRIPED=m CONFIG_MD_MIRRORING=m CONFIG_MD_RAID5=m CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM=m CONFIG_BLK_DEV_LOOP=m # CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NBD is not set # # Networking options # CONFIG_PACKET=y CONFIG_NETLINK=y # CONFIG_RTNETLINK is not set CONFIG_NETLINK_DEV=m # CONFIG_FIREWALL is not set # CONFIG_FILTER is not set CONFIG_UNIX=y CONFIG_INET=y # CONFIG_IP_MULTICAST is not set # CONFIG_IP_ADVANCED_ROUTER is not set # CONFIG_IP_PNP is not set # CONFIG_IP_ROUTER is not set # CONFIG_NET_IPIP is not set # CONFIG_NET_IPGRE is not set # CONFIG_IP_ALIAS is not set # CONFIG_SYN_COOKIES is not set # # (it is safe to leave these untouched) # CONFIG_INET_RARP=m CONFIG_SKB_LARGE=y # # # # CONFIG_IPX is not set # CONFIG_ATALK is not set # # Amateur Radio support # # CONFIG_HAMRADIO is not set # # ISDN subsystem # # CONFIG_ISDN is not set # # SCSI support # CONFIG_SCSI=y # # SCSI support type (disk, tape, CDrom) # CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SD=y CONFIG_CHR_DEV_ST=m CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SR=y # CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SR_VENDOR is not set CONFIG_CHR_DEV_SG=m # # Some SCSI devices (e.g. CD jukebox) support multiple LUNs # CONFIG_SCSI_MULTI_LUN=y CONFIG_SCSI_CONSTANTS=y # # SCSI low-level drivers # CONFIG_SCSI_SUNESP=y # CONFIG_SCSI_QLOGICPTI is not set # # Fibre Channel support # # CONFIG_FC4 is not set # CONFIG_FC4_SOC is not set # CONFIG_FC4_SOCAL is not set # CONFIG_SCSI_PLUTO is not set # CONFIG_SCSI_FCAL is not set # # Network device support # CONFIG_NETDEVICES=y CONFIG_DUMMY=m # CONFIG_BONDING is not set CONFIG_PPP=m # # CCP compressors for PPP are only built as modules. # # CONFIG_SLIP is not set CONFIG_SUNLANCE=y CONFIG_HAPPYMEAL=m CONFIG_SUNQE=m # CONFIG_MYRI_SBUS is not set # # Unix98 PTY support # CONFIG_UNIX98_PTYS=y CONFIG_UNIX98_PTY_COUNT=256 # # Filesystems # # CONFIG_QUOTA is not set # CONFIG_AUTOFS_FS is not set # CONFIG_AFFS_FS is not set # CONFIG_HFS_FS is not set CONFIG_FAT_FS=m CONFIG_MSDOS_FS=m # CONFIG_UMSDOS_FS is not set CONFIG_VFAT_FS=m CONFIG_ISO9660_FS=y # CONFIG_JOLIET is not set CONFIG_MINIX_FS=m # CONFIG_NTFS_FS is not set # CONFIG_HPFS_FS is not set CONFIG_PROC_FS=y CONFIG_DEVPTS_FS=y # CONFIG_ROMFS_FS is not set CONFIG_EXT2_FS=y # CONFIG_SYSV_FS is not set CONFIG_UFS_FS=m # CONFIG_UFS_FS_WRITE is not set # # Network File Systems # CONFIG_CODA_FS=m CONFIG_NFS_FS=m CONFIG_SUNRPC=m CONFIG_LOCKD=m # CONFIG_SMB_FS is not set # CONFIG_NCP_FS
RE: SMP SS10 freezes hard intermittently
Hello- I've got a CG6. I had included the other FBs for the sake of ... completeness (read: figuring out what I had in the box). From /var/log/messages: fb0: cgsix at e. TEC Rev 4 CPU sparc Rev b [TurboGX] The only (permanent) change I made to the devices was the addition of a symlink to /dev/fb0: lrwxrwxrwx1 root root3 Jun 9 17:56 /dev/cgsix0 - fb0 crw--w--w-1 root tty 29, 0 May 4 08:32 /dev/fb0 HTH (particularly since I'm the one it will ultimately end up helping :) David On Mon, 12 Jun 2000, Gregory Leblanc wrote: -Original Message- From: David Butts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, June 12, 2000 5:54 PM To: debian-sparc@lists.debian.org Cc: sparclinux@vger.rutgers.edu Subject: SMP SS10 freezes hard intermittently Hello, all- I've got an SS10 with two CPUs, running a 2.2.15 kernel with SMP enabled. It locks up hard periodically, and won't respond to stop-A, a break on the serial port, the three-fingered salute, or, in fact, anything short of a power-cycle. It doesn't do it consistantly, but the times it happened were (a) when installing packages with apt-get (unfortunately, I didn't pay enough attention to which, but it froze immediately after it finished the download of the .deb files), and (b) in X (both when I was strace'ing the startup to find out why it thought I didn't have a screen, and later, while WindowMaker was starting up). There are no obviously strange log entries, and my strace output was in /tmp, so it was removed after the power-cycle. If there are any other diagnostic steps I should try, please let me know. I've included my .config below. AFAIK, there were no modules loaded at the time of the crashes. I've cc'ed sparclinux@vger.rutgers.edu based on a suggestion in response to a similar problem a couple of months ago posted to debian-sparc, but I'm not on that list, so please cc me on any mail send to the vger list. What's your console device? CG3? Greg
Video timing for Xsun?
Hello, all- I'm running Potato on a couple of Sun boxes (Ultra/1 and an SS10), both with CG6 framebuffers. X is working great, except that the video timing for one of the monitors seems a little off (too little dark time at either end of the horizontal scan). I can just about get it cleaned up with the controls on the monitor, but I was wondering if there was any way of specifying the video timings for Xsun. I've checked the Xsun and Xserver manpages, but didn't immediately see any reference to it. IIRC, the M64 drivers for Solaris 2.6 on an Ultra/5 (admittedly, a different animal entirely) provide a means to put monitor timing definitions in the openprom nvramrc. I would expect that this is a feature that is unique to Solaris and/or newer hardware, but is there some similar mechanism for the video timing? Thanks, David
Re: FAQlist?
Hello, all- First off, you guys rock. Many, many thanks for all the work you've done. I've poked around the ultralinux FAQ and a few man pages, but haven't quite managed to find this: Is it possible to get Xsun to honor the alt-F[1-6] virtual-console switching keystrokes that XF86_* allow? I realize that with a window manager that supports multiple workspaces, the presence of the virtual consoles is not as critical, but it'd be nice to have [access to] them. Thanks again- David On Fri, 24 Mar 2000, Pieter Krul wrote: Jim Mintha wrote: On Thu, Mar 23, 2000 at 02:15:18PM -0500, Chad Miller wrote: Hi. Is there a FAQ list? I have a few questions that I think would just annoy most experienced {ultra,}sparc users. There is a FAQ for sparc linux in general at: http://www.ultralinux.org/faq.html at the moment it doesn't have very much that is debian specific. But if you don't find what your looking for, as Ben said just ask the list. Any question that could annoy most experienced users should IMHO be asked right away. I'm quite sure that more Debian specific information will be added to the FAQ at www.ultralinux.org in the very near future. Regards, Pieter
Re: FAQlist?
Hello, all- My bad... That's what I get for asking the question w/out reading all the recent mail first. ctrl-alt-F[1-6] indeed does the trick. In a desperate attempt to redeem myself, I'll try to add some new content to the discussion :) Is there a particular reason that ctrl-alt- is used instead of just alt-? Is it configurable at all? For that matter, is there an analog of XF86Config for Xsun? Thanks again for all the work that has gone into this- David On Thu, 30 Mar 2000, David Butts wrote: Hello, all- First off, you guys rock. Many, many thanks for all the work you've done. I've poked around the ultralinux FAQ and a few man pages, but haven't quite managed to find this: Is it possible to get Xsun to honor the alt-F[1-6] virtual-console switching keystrokes that XF86_* allow? I realize that with a window manager that supports multiple workspaces, the presence of the virtual consoles is not as critical, but it'd be nice to have [access to] them. Thanks again- David On Fri, 24 Mar 2000, Pieter Krul wrote: Jim Mintha wrote: On Thu, Mar 23, 2000 at 02:15:18PM -0500, Chad Miller wrote: Hi. Is there a FAQ list? I have a few questions that I think would just annoy most experienced {ultra,}sparc users. There is a FAQ for sparc linux in general at: http://www.ultralinux.org/faq.html at the moment it doesn't have very much that is debian specific. But if you don't find what your looking for, as Ben said just ask the list. Any question that could annoy most experienced users should IMHO be asked right away. I'm quite sure that more Debian specific information will be added to the FAQ at www.ultralinux.org in the very near future. Regards, Pieter -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]