Re: Dell H710 and H310 Raid Controller

2012-11-04 Thread Sean Bruno
On Sun, 2012-11-04 at 05:47 -0800, Omer Faruk SEN wrote:
 It seems right now only way to go with Rx20 Server models is to use
 Intel
 cards (dell provides i350 chipset network interfaces as alternative) 

The Broadcom 5720 support is in current right now.  It will not be in
9.1, but will be available in stable/9 soon-ish.

Sean


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Re: Support for Intel 82599ES?

2012-06-01 Thread Sean Bruno
On Fri, 2012-06-01 at 10:45 -0700, Rick Miller wrote:
 BCM5720

I haven't gotten this working on my Dell R620 via bge(4), but we are
actively working on it.

Sean

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Suggestion

2012-03-08 Thread Bruno Comerci

Hi guys.


Instead of wasting your time and man power, why wont you join to the ReactOS 
project?
It would be more beneficial to the internet community and to the users around 
the world who wants a free OS with similar looking and functions than Windows, 
if you just throw away your FreeBSD and join forces with the ReactOS team to 
accelerate their process.

Actually there isnt any single free OS that can be fully trusted, but ReactOS 
seems to be that one that we all are wating for.


Sincerely,
Common world's citizen who dont have money to pay Windows and dont trust Linux 
and any other Unix-based OS.
  
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Re: Nuxeo install in FreeBSD

2011-12-08 Thread Bruno Gruel

On Tue, 06 Dec 2011 20:50:06 +0100, Peter Ulrich Kruppa wrote:

Hello Bruno,

On 05.12.2011 21:47, Bruno Gruel wrote:

Hello,

I just want to know if someone already try to install NUXEO on a 
FreeBSD.

I try some month later without sucess. I will try to install it on
FreeBSD82 to day.

For the fun of it I just tried the nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat package on
my FreeBSD 9.0-RC1 (which in this case shouldn't make a difference to
your 8.2) with jdk-1.6.0_03-p4.

I unzipped the thing in /usr/local and tried to execute the
./bin/nuxeoctl start
command, which failed. Having a look at the first line of this file I 
found

#!/bin/bash
But my bash is installed in
# which bash
/usr/local/bin/bash
So I changed the first line of nuxeoctl into
#!/usr/local/bin/bash
and now I can start and run Nuxeo.

I hope that helps

Peter.


Hello,

Sorry for the delay i can't do the test before.

So i installed a 32 bits FreeBSD 82.
Install JDK16 (who take a long time to compil)
Install LibreOffice
Install PDFtoHML
Install postgresql

unzip nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat in /usr/local

Configure nuxeo via the web interface NB: after the configuration nuxeo 
may do a self reload but it's never do it so after 10mins (have you got 
the same behavior ) i restart the nuxeo server


When i do a ./nuxeoctl start i got this

Nuxeo# ./nuxeoctl start
Launcher command: /usr/local/bin/javavm -Dlauncher.java.opts=-server 
-Xms512m -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=512m 
-Dsun.rmi.dgc.client.gcInterval=360 
-Dsun.rmi.dgc.server.gcInterval=360 -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true -Djava.awt.headless=true 
-Dnuxeo.home=/usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat 
-Dnuxeo.conf=/usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/bin/nuxeo.conf 
-Dnuxeo.log.dir=/usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/log -jar 
/usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/bin/nuxeo-launcher.jar start
javavm: warning: The use of 'javavm' as a synonym for 'java' is 
deprecated

Nuxeo home:  /usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat
Nuxeo configuration: /usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/bin/nuxeo.conf
Include template: /usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/templates/common
Include template: /usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/templates/default
Include template: /usr/local/nuxeo-dm-5.4.2-tomcat/templates/postgresql
Detected Tomcat server.
Configuration files generation (nuxeo.force.generation=true)...
Configuration files generated.
Sent server start command but could not get process ID.

==
= Nuxeo EP Started
==
= Component Loading Status: Pending: 0 / Unstarted: 0 / Total: 453
==
Started in 0min28s


When i try to connect myself to ip:8080 i got this tomcat error:

HTTP Status 404 -

type Status report

message

description The requested resource () is not available.
Apache Tomcat/6.0.20


So what is my mistake ?? did you do something else ??

Thank's.

Bruno
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Re: Nuxeo install in FreeBSD

2011-12-07 Thread Bruno Gruel

On Tue, 06 Dec 2011 20:50:06 +0100, Peter Ulrich Kruppa wrote:

I unzipped the thing in /usr/local and tried to execute the
./bin/nuxeoctl start

I do the same thing
command, which failed. Having a look at the first line of this file I 
found

#!/bin/bash

Idem

But my bash is installed in
# which bash
/usr/local/bin/bash
So I changed the first line of nuxeoctl into
#!/usr/local/bin/bash

Idem

and now I can start and run Nuxeo.
Not work for me but i must try it on a 32 bits FreeBSD and give you 
some feed back.

I hope that helps

Yes it's help me

Peter.


Thank's

Bruno
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Nuxeo install in FreeBSD

2011-12-05 Thread Bruno Gruel

Hello,

I just want to know if someone already try to install NUXEO on a 
FreeBSD.
I try some month later without sucess. I will try to install it on 
FreeBSD82 to day.


I already ask the question on the nuxeo forum without reply..

Thank's.

Bruno

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Re: FreeBSD, Ubuntu and Win XP on one system

2008-08-11 Thread Bruno Schmitt
I recommend installing FreeBSD first, then Windows and then Ubuntu. For
reasons that I don't know, WinXP SP3 will become unable to start if you
installs FreeBSD after it (It will freeze on the welcome screen). - I don't
know if this problem just happened with me or with others people too, but it
happened more than one time.

Ubuntu uses GRUB boot manager and as far as I remember it won't recognize
FreeBSD partition out of the box, so you will have to add some lines to
/boot/grub/menu.lst

# For booting FreeBSD
title  FreeBSD 5.2
root   (hd0,a)
chainloader +1

where (hd0,a) reflects the position of the FreeBSD primary partition.



On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 1:05 PM, Jack Raats [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I would like to put FreeBSD, Ubuntu and WInXP on one system using a boot
 manager.

 Which version do I have to put first on the harddisk, which second and
 which last?

 I also want to know which bootmanager to use?


 Thanks for your time

 Greeting
 Jack

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Re: FreeBSD, Ubuntu and Win XP on one system

2008-08-11 Thread Bruno Schmitt
Sorry for not making myself clear... When I said Ubuntu uses GRUB boot
manager and as far as I remember it won't recognize FreeBSD partition out of
the box I was referring to the GRUB installed by Ubuntu installation which
won't come with FreeBSD partition configured.


On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 6:48 PM, Mike Clarke [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:

 On Monday 11 August 2008, Bruno Schmitt wrote:

  Ubuntu uses GRUB boot manager and as far as I remember it won't
  recognize FreeBSD partition out of the box, so you will have to add
  some lines to /boot/grub/menu.lst
 
  # For booting FreeBSD
  title  FreeBSD 5.2
  root   (hd0,a)
  chainloader +1
 
  where (hd0,a) reflects the position of the FreeBSD primary
  partition.

 Grub does recognise FreeBSD partitions so you can use either the
 chainloader command or point grub directly to /boot/loader, though I
 can't speak for the Ubuntu version. Here's the menu file for my box
 with FreeBSD 6.3, FreeBSD 7.0 and Windoze:

 default 0
 timeout 3
 hiddenmenu
 color white/blue yellow/blue

 title  FreeBSD 6.3
 root   (hd0,0,a)
 kernel /boot/loader

 title  FreeBSD 7.0
 root   (hd0,1,a)
 kernel /boot/loader

 title   MS Windows
 root(hd0,3)
 makeactive
 chainloader +1

 title Floppy
 root (fd0)
 chainloader +1


 --
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Re: Sendmail local LAN delivery

2008-07-27 Thread Bruno Joho
Hi Derek

thanks for the reply.
My intention was to deliver the mails between the workstations on the
LAN directly. Every Workstation
on the LAN would have an appropriate cf file which forwards mails with
a destination on the WAN - to the
WAN-Smarthost, any mail going to a destination from inside the LAN
would be delivered
directly to the destination host without involving a (LAN) smarthost.
Is that possible somehow?

Thanks for your help

Bruno
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Sendmail local LAN delivery

2008-07-24 Thread Bruno Joho
Hi folks

we have a inside the Lab (Class B Net, eg: bnet.ourdomain.com) several
workstations (eg: host1.intra015.bnet.ourdomain.com) in different
Class C Net (eg.intra015.bnet.ourdomain.com). There is a Mail Hub
outside the Class B Net which communicates with the Internet and
delivers
the mails sent by the workstations. All workstations have a
Smarthost entry in the cf file. Incoming mails are collected by the
mailhub, which
provides IMAP and POP access for all workstations. No mail coming from
the Internet will be delivered directly to the workstations.
Everything
works fine, exept one (small) problem. How can I configure the
sendmal.cf from the local workstations to send the mail addressed to a
neighbour
workstation (eg. from host1.intra015.bnet.ourdomain.com to
host2.intra016.bnet.ourdomain.com) directly. Sending it to the mailhub
and then sending
it back to the Intranet is no option due to firewall restrictions.

I apreciate any help, thanks

Bruno
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/var/lib disappeared

2007-07-01 Thread Bruno DAMOUR

Hello,
I'm begging for help, my /var/lib disappeared. I don't know why, but the 
most important is to recreate it.
What is usually there ? I know i had my postgresql data in there, but 
anything more ?

Please help with whats's in yours...

Bruno

PS : it must be not that bad because I didn't yet notice anything wrong 
aside of postgresql
PS2 : is there any config change that could have borked my /var/lib ? 
I'm runnung up-to-date current ( 1W)


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howto find build date for ports ?

2007-05-25 Thread Bruno Damour

Hello

I wonder if there is a tool that can tell which prots were last built
before a certain date ?
Thanks in advance

Bruno

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How to retrieve installed version ?

2007-03-29 Thread Bruno Costacurta
Hello,
how to retrieve installed FreeBSD version ?

Thanks.
-Bruno

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Bittorrent : any valid tracker ?

2007-03-03 Thread Bruno Costacurta
Hello,

I'm trying to download via bittorrent since few days now and cannot connect to 
http://torrents.freebsd.org:8080 which remains unavailable.

Any other trackers fro FreeBSD ?
Maybe better to simply download via FTP ?

Thanks.
Bye,
Bruno
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Re: FBSD 6.2-PRE/AMD64: two times SMBUS on ASUS A8N32-SLI?

2006-09-23 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Sat, Sep 23, 2006 at 11:26:41AM +0200, O. Hartmann wrote:
 I'm a little bit confused by the Temp 3 value. What is connected to this 
 sensor line? It looks strange, mearly 130 degree Celsius ...
 

More likely bit 8 is used for error.

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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4.11 b_iodone callback question

2006-01-23 Thread Sean Bruno
I just inherited some older code that runs under 4.11 ... the core of
software is a device driver that writes data to two separate
disks(da1/da2).

It appears that the authors are using a call back function to handle
some interesting behavior related to the second disk being a circular
buffer.

So a couple of questions:

1.  Does the call back routine set in b_iodone(disk writes are handled
by VOP_STRATEGY) get invoked in a separate thread of execution, i.e. is
simultaneous with the main code path?

2.  Is it o.k. to have the callback routine invoke itself vi
b_iodone(more VOP_STRATEGY) without locking the buffers used for the
disk writes?

Sean Bruno

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Re: acpi_perf0: invalid _PSS package?

2005-12-19 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Sun, Dec 18, 2005 at 07:08:40PM -0800, Jeff D. Hamann wrote:
 I've been noticing this message on startup (using dmesg)
 
 acpi_perf0: invalid _PSS package
 
 and can't figure out what it is, what it's for and why there are so many?

It's related to powernow somehow.  The powernow driver use ACPI in order
to get the needed configuration information.  Unfortunately, some BIOS
provide buggy _PSS packages.  It's likely harmless since other _PSS
packages are OK.  But to be sure, it would help if you provide a dump
of the acpi tables somewhere on the web, or, if you can't, send them
privately to me.  An acpidump -d -t will give us this information.

Note that the kernel log flood is already fixed under -current.
This will be MFC'ed soon to RELENG_6.

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: cpufreq and changing driver

2005-12-02 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Fri, Dec 02, 2005 at 08:35:54PM +1030, Daniel O'Connor wrote:
 On Fri, 2 Dec 2005 19:35, Marco Calviani wrote:
   It's not present under powerd for the simple fact that to be efficient
   in term of not being too intrusive (kernel to user data transfers, etc),
   powerd can only provide a limited number of check per second (at this
   time, 2 per second).  But the current algorithm present in powerd is
   not well suited in that case.  You have to wait one demi-second
   for the processor being put to full speed if the system was idle
   before.
 
  Are there on the horizon any sort of plans to implement a newer and
  more efficient algorithm to increase the number of transition per
  second? Sorry but i've not understood why linux-cpufreqd is able to
  cope with those without being so intrusive.
 
 I don't see why you can't run powerd more frequently, I do.. Unless your ACPI 
 has a problem that means the transition is slow.

I'm sure this could not be done under Linux without a lot of
problems (it is required to use the /proc things and it's too slow in
that case).

 I can't imagine that doing 5 (or even 50) syscalls a second is a big CPU load 
 unless there is a specific problem with sysctls or the cpufreq 
 infrastructure.

If that's possible being not so intrusive with, say 50 syscalls under FreeBSD,
then all I said above is indeed stupid crap.

 I run powerd like this -
 /usr/sbin/powerd -i 90 -r 30 -a adaptive -b adaptive -n adaptive -p 200
 

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: cpufreq and changing driver

2005-11-30 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Wed, Nov 30, 2005 at 12:37:43PM +0100, Marco Calviani wrote:
 Hi,
   having seen on the cpufreq(4) man page that there is more than one
 driver that is currently supported. In particular having a centrino
 processor, i would like to use the est driver. Currently, by default,
 the running driver is the one that comes with acpi (AFAIU), and i'm
 using powerd to control the cpu frequency in adaptive mode.

You have to load the cpufreq.ko module at boot.
Adding that line:
cpufreq_load = YES
to /boot/loader.conf
should be OK.

 In particular doing comparison with the linux case in which i have
 cpufreq with speedstep-centrino driver and the ondemand governor, in
 this case the system is much more responsive and also the fans runs
 much more quieter (although i cannot rely on proven data since i don't
 know any benchmark program). In particular i understood that the
 ondemand governor responds to the system much faster that powerd is
 able to do.
 
 Is there someone who can share some impression or thoughts?

powerd need some rework in order to get it working properly.  There
is one FreeBSD project on that subject if you are interrested.

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: cpufreq and changing driver

2005-11-30 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Wed, Nov 30, 2005 at 10:05:04AM -0800, Nate Lawson wrote:
 Marco Calviani wrote:
 Hi,
 
 2005/11/30, Bruno Ducrot [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 You have to load the cpufreq.ko module at boot.
 Adding that line:
 cpufreq_load = YES
 to /boot/loader.conf
 should be OK.
 
 
 I have that line in that position, and it seems working. The point is
 that i would like to change the driver and use (AFAIU) a better driver
 for my system (est).
 In particular i have:
 
 dev.cpu.0.%desc: ACPI CPU
 dev.cpu.0.%driver: cpu
 dev.cpu.0.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU0
 dev.cpu.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0
 dev.cpu.0.%parent: acpi0
 
 Maybe i didn't understood well: but what i have to do to use the Intel
 Enhanced SpeedStep driver?
 
 You should send the full output of sysctl dev.cpu.  There is no 
 cpufreq driver (est, acpi_perf, or other) driver running.  Perhaps look 
 at your dmesg to see if one is probing/attaching.
 
 If you are using acpi and load cpufreq.ko, you've got all the cpufreq 
 drivers in one package.  The right one for your platform will 
 automatically probe/attach.
 
 powerd need some rework in order to get it working properly.  There
 is one FreeBSD project on that subject if you are interrested.
 
 Well, thanks i'm very interested, although i'm not at all experienced
 in kernel programming
 
 I'm not inside this issue, but it would not be possible to emulate
 the behaviour of the ondemand governor? (sorry if this question makes
 no sense)
 
 I have no idea what you mean by on-demand governor.  The only 
 automated control of cpu speed is either by the BIOS (which we can't 
 control) or the TM/TM2 (and that one is heat-based, not load-based).
 

The ondemand governor is basically an implemation of the following
algorithm:

There is a counter, say count.

at each given fixed intervall:
if (idle less than a watermark) {
frequency full
reinitialise count to 10
} else if (idle more than another watermark) {
decrement count
if count is 0 {
down one step the frequency
}
else reinitilize count to 10

  
Note that in the latter case, the down step is performed only
after 10 such comparison.  In other word, intervall is ten times
larger for the down side than the full frequency one.

This work well when you can perform, say, 20 to 50 transitions per
second.  Otherwise, it is pretty bad.

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: cpufreq and changing driver

2005-11-30 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Wed, Nov 30, 2005 at 12:23:52PM -0800, Nate Lawson wrote:
 Bruno Ducrot wrote:
 On Wed, Nov 30, 2005 at 10:05:04AM -0800, Nate Lawson wrote:
 
 Marco Calviani wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 2005/11/30, Bruno Ducrot [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 
 You have to load the cpufreq.ko module at boot.
 Adding that line:
 cpufreq_load = YES
 to /boot/loader.conf
 should be OK.
 
 
 I have that line in that position, and it seems working. The point is
 that i would like to change the driver and use (AFAIU) a better driver
 for my system (est).
 In particular i have:
 
 dev.cpu.0.%desc: ACPI CPU
 dev.cpu.0.%driver: cpu
 dev.cpu.0.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU0
 dev.cpu.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0
 dev.cpu.0.%parent: acpi0
 
 Maybe i didn't understood well: but what i have to do to use the Intel
 Enhanced SpeedStep driver?
 
 You should send the full output of sysctl dev.cpu.  There is no 
 cpufreq driver (est, acpi_perf, or other) driver running.  Perhaps look 
 at your dmesg to see if one is probing/attaching.
 
 If you are using acpi and load cpufreq.ko, you've got all the cpufreq 
 drivers in one package.  The right one for your platform will 
 automatically probe/attach.
 
 
 powerd need some rework in order to get it working properly.  There
 is one FreeBSD project on that subject if you are interrested.
 
 Well, thanks i'm very interested, although i'm not at all experienced
 in kernel programming
 
 I'm not inside this issue, but it would not be possible to emulate
 the behaviour of the ondemand governor? (sorry if this question makes
 no sense)
 
 I have no idea what you mean by on-demand governor.  The only 
 automated control of cpu speed is either by the BIOS (which we can't 
 control) or the TM/TM2 (and that one is heat-based, not load-based).
 
 
 
 The ondemand governor is basically an implemation of the following
 algorithm:
 
 There is a counter, say count.
 
 at each given fixed intervall:
 if (idle less than a watermark) {
 frequency full
 reinitialise count to 10
 } else if (idle more than another watermark) {
 decrement count
 if count is 0 {
 down one step the frequency
 }
 else reinitilize count to 10
 
   
 Note that in the latter case, the down step is performed only
 after 10 such comparison.  In other word, intervall is ten times
 larger for the down side than the full frequency one.
 
 This work well when you can perform, say, 20 to 50 transitions per
 second.  Otherwise, it is pretty bad.
 
 
 Send me a URL to the datasheet that says Intel implemented this.

http://www.intel.com/cd/ids/developer/asmo-na/eng/195910.htm?prn=Y

 That algorithm is basically what powerd does.  So just run powerd.

Indeed.

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: cpufreq and changing driver

2005-11-30 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Wed, Nov 30, 2005 at 08:05:59PM +, Marco Calviani wrote:
 Hi Nate,
 
 2005/11/30, Nate Lawson [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 
  You should send the full output of sysctl dev.cpu.  There is no
  cpufreq driver (est, acpi_perf, or other) driver running.  Perhaps look
  at your dmesg to see if one is probing/attaching.
 
 
  sysctl dev.cpu
 dev.cpu.0.%desc: ACPI CPU
 dev.cpu.0.%driver: cpu
 dev.cpu.0.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU0
 dev.cpu.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0
 dev.cpu.0.%parent: acpi0
 dev.cpu.0.freq: 1000
 dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 1800/24000 1600/2 1400/18000 1225/15750
 1050/13500 1000/16000 875/14000 750/12000 625/1 600/12000
 525/10500 450/9000 375/7500 300/6000 225/4500 150/3000 75/1500
 
 
  If you are using acpi and load cpufreq.ko, you've got all the cpufreq
  drivers in one package.  The right one for your platform will
  automatically probe/attach.
 
 
 It seems that my system has recognized acpi_perf as the appropriate
 driver. But since my CPU is a dothan type centrino i would like to
 understand why is not possible to use the est driver.

Did you load the cpufreq driver at boot time which include the est
driver as said before?  It will replace the acpi_perf if appropriate.

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: cpufreq and changing driver

2005-11-30 Thread Bruno Ducrot
On Wed, Nov 30, 2005 at 01:57:42PM -0800, Nate Lawson wrote:
 Marco Calviani wrote:
 Hi Bruno,
 
 Yes cpufreq is loaded at boot time in /boot/loader.conf .However i
 don't know how to tell him that i want to load est instead of
 acpi_perf.
 
 est is preferred if supported.  But probably est doesn't have a table 
 for his processor so acpi_perf is used.

That's the case for any Dothan IIRC.

 There's nothing wrong with 
 using acpi_perf -- it just gives a BIOS interface to est anyway.

indeed.

 
 You can test this with:
 hint.acpi_perf.0.disabled=1
 
 This will cause acpi_perf to let est attach.  But I suspect est won't.

est need acpi_perf if a dothan or above is in use...

On the other hand, the linux driver work for the OP, and that's not
acceptable we can't do the same :)

Maybe a link to a 'acpidmp -d -t' may help to see a little deeper?

Marco, could you send to me privately or better provide a link to
this output?

Cheers,

-- 
Bruno Ducrot

--  Which is worse:  ignorance or apathy?
--  Don't know.  Don't care.
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Re: How can I programatically eject a live cd?

2005-11-12 Thread Sean Bruno
On Sat, 2005-11-12 at 09:35 -0500, Lowell Gilbert wrote:
 Sean Bruno [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 
  I was looking for an answer to this question.  Since my CD is actually
  the running file system(is mounted), I cannnot eject it while the system
  is running.
  
  So is there a way to do this that y'all have found, or do I have to
  change my CD to run from memory(RAMDISK) instead of running from the CD.
 
 You want to eject your running root filesystem?
 That's a *really* crazy idea.
 Why do you want to do that?  
 
Well, I don't want to eject my running root filesystem, but I need to
have the CD eject on a reboot/halt of the system.  

So, is there a nicer way of doing this?

Sean

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How can I programatically eject a live cd?

2005-11-11 Thread Sean Bruno
I was looking for an answer to this question.  Since my CD is actually
the running file system(is mounted), I cannnot eject it while the system
is running.

So is there a way to do this that y'all have found, or do I have to
change my CD to run from memory(RAMDISK) instead of running from the CD.

Sean

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DNS service with a SQL backend

2005-07-20 Thread Bruno Gallant
Hello,

We are redesigning our DNS infrastructure, which has been running on
BIND with the regular flat files for years, and there would be a need
for the data to be in a database. (postgresql or mysql, of course)

I looked around the ports to find powerdns, but I don't know if it's
good or not.

Is there a port or something already available that can convert DNS
data stored in sql into the proper format for BIND, or another
software with all included?

Thanks all.



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VIA 8237 RAID

2005-06-30 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
Has anyone tried any VIA 8237 RAID motherboard?

I've just bought a MSI K8T Neo with 2x80GB SATA 150 disks. I've created a 
Raid 1 configuration from the BIOS, but when FreeBSD (5.4 for x86) CD boots 
it detects both disks (ad4, ad6) and installer allows me to partition both 
disks individually.

I was hopping to see a single 80 GB drive from BSD. Could anyone give a 
hint?

Thanks in advance.
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Re: Raising temperature threshold

2005-06-22 Thread Bruno Gallant
Hi,  I don't think it is advisable to put your machine under such
strain.  I think 60C is already very hot for regular parts, and that
it is proper that the machine would shutdown .  Unless you have a
special military kind of hardware, I am sure that  more than 60C will
reduce the MTBF of your hardware, and maybe void your warranty if you
have one.

It would be interesting to know if that setting can be changed to a
_lower_ value, in fact.



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getting the HD serial numbers

2005-06-08 Thread Bruno Gallant
Hello,

is there a way to get the serial number of an hard drive while the
machine is up?  I know it can be done with the Linux /proc filesystem,
but I was wondering if I could do the same without having to stop the
server and remove the disks. [1]

I tried the smartctl command, but I don't think my drives are supported.
[2]

The individual hard drives are hidden behind a Compaq array.  2 x 36Gb
in raid 1.

ida0: Compaq Integrated Array controller port 0x2000-0x20ff mem
0xc400-0xc4
ff,0xc500-0xc5ff irq 19 at device 1.0 on pci0
ida0: [GIANT-LOCKED]
ida0: drives=1 firm_rev=1.42
idad0: Compaq Logical Drive on ida0
idad0: 34727MB (71122560 sectors), blocksize=512


I don't think I can get this info, but the only stupid question is the
one that is not asked.

Thanks all.



[1] My servers are HP DL-360s and DL-380s, so it's not _that_ hard to
do, but I don't like stopping my servers for nothing.
[2] Brand new HDs from HP


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Re: 3Ware SATA RAID 8000 - Supported on 5.3-R?

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
For fsck to work (to actually correct any problems you may have), partitions 
should be umounted first. Are you sure you have umounted /dev/twed 
before running fsck?


2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Hello,
 
 I have an interesting question, I have a Pentium 4 2.4Ghz (No HT Enabled),
 2x80GB SATA Hard Drives in RAID 1. The box boots, works, etc. However,
 whenever you try and do an fsck -y, it says:
 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)% fsck -y
 ** /dev/twed0s1a (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /
 ** Root file system
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 2821 files, 31805 used, 474682 free (322 frags, 59295 blocks, 0.1%
 fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1g (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /home
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 82057 files, 557735 used, 12912399 free (2343 frags, 1613757 blocks, 0.0%
 fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1d (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /tmp
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 30 files, 1787 used, 504700 free (20 frags, 63085 blocks, 0.0%fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1e (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /usr
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 251160 files, 1318908 used, 13912410 free (73346 frags, 1729883 blocks,
 0.5% fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1f (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /var
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 4424 files, 63321 used, 7042830 free (2462 frags, 880046 blocks, 0.0%
 fragmentation)
 
 The drives are Seagate SATA's (7200RPM) with a 3Ware SATA RAID Controller
 (8006-2LP) using the twe kernel driver. The drives themselves allow data
 to be read to/written from them, but fsck will not work (and is hanging
 things on boot).
 
 Anyone got any ideas? I looked at www.3ware.com http://www.3ware.comearlier 
 and it says that
 the 8006-2LP's support FreeBSD 4.x, but not 5.x - could this be a result
 of that, seeing as otherwise the drives/RAID work fine (AFAIK, it could
 not be and I'm just not sure how to test it).
 
 TIA,
 -- Jonathan
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Re: 3Ware SATA RAID 8000 - Supported on 5.3-R?

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
Could you post your /etc/fstab?

2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Yes, this is actually the autoboot fsck thats breaking, the one that is
 called from /etc/rc (via /etc/rc.d/). I can physically take the box down
 and do an offline fsck of it and that works fine, it's just when it's in
 multi-user mode thats the problem.
 
 -- Jonathan
 
 Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
  For fsck to work (to actually correct any problems you may have),
  partitions should be umounted first. Are you sure you have umounted
  /dev/twed before running fsck?
 
 
  2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  Hello,
 
  I have an interesting question, I have a Pentium 4 2.4Ghz (No HT
  Enabled),
  2x80GB SATA Hard Drives in RAID 1. The box boots, works, etc. However,
  whenever you try and do an fsck -y, it says:
 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (~)% fsck -y
  ** /dev/twed0s1a (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /
  ** Root file system
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  2821 files, 31805 used, 474682 free (322 frags, 59295 blocks, 0.1%
  fragmentation)
 
  ** /dev/twed0s1g (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /home
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  82057 files, 557735 used, 12912399 free (2343 frags, 1613757 blocks,
  0.0%
  fragmentation)
 
  ** /dev/twed0s1d (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /tmp
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  30 files, 1787 used, 504700 free (20 frags, 63085 blocks, 0.0%
  fragmentation)
 
  ** /dev/twed0s1e (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /usr
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  251160 files, 1318908 used, 13912410 free (73346 frags, 1729883 blocks,
  0.5% fragmentation)
 
  ** /dev/twed0s1f (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /var
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  4424 files, 63321 used, 7042830 free (2462 frags, 880046 blocks, 0.0%
  fragmentation)
 
  The drives are Seagate SATA's (7200RPM) with a 3Ware SATA RAID
  Controller
  (8006-2LP) using the twe kernel driver. The drives themselves allow data
  to be read to/written from them, but fsck will not work (and is hanging
  things on boot).
 
  Anyone got any ideas? I looked at www.3ware.com http://www.3ware.com
  http://www.3ware.com earlier and it says that
  the 8006-2LP's support FreeBSD 4.x, but not 5.x - could this be a result
  of that, seeing as otherwise the drives/RAID work fine (AFAIK, it could
  not be and I'm just not sure how to test it).
 
  TIA,
  -- Jonathan
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 --
 Jonathan M. Slivko - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Linux: The Choice for the GNU Generation
 - http://www.linux.org/ -
 
 Don't fear the penguin.
 .^.
 /V\
 /( )\
 ^^-^^
 He's here to help.

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Re: 3Ware SATA RAID 8000 - Supported on 5.3-R?

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
Your fstab is OK.

I don't exactly understand the problem. When you boot fsck will run 
automatically if the system did not correctly shut down. This is done 
*before* disks are mounted rw, so there's no way you will see the (NO 
WRITE) message.

If system was not correctly shut down, fsck will run, and it *will* (and 
should) slow down system boot process.

So, is it the problem that fsck is running *every* time you boot? Or is it 
that you get this (NO WRITE) message when you run it manually?


2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)% cat /etc/fstab
 # Device Mountpoint FStype Options Dump
 Pass#
 /dev/twed0s1b none swap sw 0 0
 /dev/twed0s1a / ufs rw 1 1
 /dev/twed0s1g /home ufs rw,userquota,groupquota
 2 2
 /dev/twed0s1d /tmp ufs rw 2 2
 /dev/twed0s1e /usr ufs rw 2 2
 /dev/twed0s1f /var ufs rw 2 2
 /dev/acd0 /cdrom cd9660 ro,noauto 0 0
 none /proc procfs rw 0 0
 [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)%
 
 
 Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
  Could you post your /etc/fstab?
 
  2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Yes, this is actually the autoboot fsck thats breaking, the one that is
 called from /etc/rc (via /etc/rc.d/). I can physically take the box down
 and do an offline fsck of it and that works fine, it's just when it's in
 multi-user mode thats the problem.
 
 -- Jonathan
 
 Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
 
 For fsck to work (to actually correct any problems you may have),
 partitions should be umounted first. Are you sure you have umounted
 /dev/twed before running fsck?
 
 
 2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Hello,
 
 I have an interesting question, I have a Pentium 4 2.4Ghz (No HT
 Enabled),
 2x80GB SATA Hard Drives in RAID 1. The box boots, works, etc. However,
 whenever you try and do an fsck -y, it says:
 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] (~)% fsck -y
 ** /dev/twed0s1a (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /
 ** Root file system
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 2821 files, 31805 used, 474682 free (322 frags, 59295 blocks, 0.1%
 fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1g (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /home
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 82057 files, 557735 used, 12912399 free (2343 frags, 1613757 blocks,
 0.0%
 fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1d (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /tmp
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 30 files, 1787 used, 504700 free (20 frags, 63085 blocks, 0.0%
 fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1e (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /usr
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 251160 files, 1318908 used, 13912410 free (73346 frags, 1729883 blocks,
 0.5% fragmentation)
 
 ** /dev/twed0s1f (NO WRITE)
 ** Last Mounted on /var
 ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
 ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
 ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
 ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
 ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
 4424 files, 63321 used, 7042830 free (2462 frags, 880046 blocks, 0.0%
 fragmentation)
 
 The drives are Seagate SATA's (7200RPM) with a 3Ware SATA RAID
 Controller
 (8006-2LP) using the twe kernel driver. The drives themselves allow 
 data
 to be read to/written from them, but fsck will not work (and is hanging
 things on boot).
 
 Anyone got any ideas? I looked at www.3ware.com http://www.3ware.com
 http://www.3ware.com
 http://www.3ware.com earlier and it says that
 the 8006-2LP's support FreeBSD 4.x, but not 5.x - could this be a 
 result
 of that, seeing as otherwise the drives/RAID work fine (AFAIK, it could
 not be and I'm just not sure how to test it).
 
 TIA,
 -- Jonathan
 ___
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 mailing list
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 To unsubscribe, send any mail to 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 
 --
 Jonathan M. Slivko - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Linux: The Choice for the GNU Generation
 - http://www.linux.org/ -
 
 Don't fear the penguin.
 .^.
 /V\
 /( )\
 ^^-^^
 He's here to help.
 
 
  ___
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 --
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 Linux: The Choice for the GNU Generation
 - http://www.linux.org/ -
 
 Don't fear the penguin.
 .^.
 /V\
 /( )\
 ^^-^^
 He's here to help.

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http

Re: 3Ware SATA RAID 8000 - Supported on 5.3-R?

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
If it fails it's because there are certain inconsistencies that need user 
confirmation before they are corrected.

You can add 
fsck_y_enable=YES 
to your /etc/rc.conf so if default fsck fails, fsck -y is run. Check the 
fsck man page before doing so.

Anyway, I don't understand why fsck is run on every reboot. If you just try 
a reboot or a shutdown -r now command in your console, will fsck run 
next time the system boots? It should'n happen. I don't understand why your 
file systems get uncleanly umounted.

About freebsd 5.3, I've been using 3ware 7500-4LP (in raid 5) for the last 3 
months, and I have not had such (nor any other) problems with twe driver.

Hope it helps.

2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Whether I run fsck manually or if I run it automagically at boot via rc
 (which happens every reboot), it fails. As I'm not at console, I can't
 tell whether the same things happen if the box is physically taken down.
 and fsck'd in single user mode. The better part of the question is,
 could this be the RAID card throwing out false errors due to not having
 complete support for 5.3-R?, as it says that it only supports the 4.x
 series.
 
 -- Jonathan
 
 Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
  Your fstab is OK.
 
  I don't exactly understand the problem. When you boot fsck will run
  automatically if the system did not correctly shut down. This is done
  *before* disks are mounted rw, so there's no way you will see the (NO
  WRITE) message.
 
  If system was not correctly shut down, fsck will run, and it *will* (and
  should) slow down system boot process.
 
  So, is it the problem that fsck is running *every* time you boot? Or is
  it that you get this (NO WRITE) message when you run it manually?
 
 
  2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)% cat /etc/fstab
  # Device Mountpoint FStype Options Dump
  Pass#
  /dev/twed0s1b
  none swap sw 0 0
  /dev/twed0s1a / ufs
  rw 1 1
  /dev/twed0s1g /home ufs rw,userquota,groupquota
  2 2
  /dev/twed0s1d /tmp ufs
  rw 2 2
  /dev/twed0s1e /usr ufs
  rw 2 2
  /dev/twed0s1f /var ufs
  rw 2 2
  /dev/acd0 /cdrom cd9660 ro,noauto
  0 0
  none /proc
  procfs rw 0 0
  [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)%
 
 
  Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
   Could you post your /etc/fstab?
  
   2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] :
  
  Yes, this is actually the autoboot fsck thats breaking, the one
  that is
  called from /etc/rc (via /etc/rc.d/). I can physically take the
  box down
  and do an offline fsck of it and that works fine, it's just when
  it's in
  multi-user mode thats the problem.
  
  -- Jonathan
  
  Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
  
  For fsck to work (to actually correct any problems you may have),
  partitions should be umounted first. Are you sure you have umounted
  /dev/twed before running fsck?
  
  
  2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
  
  Hello,
  
  I have an interesting question, I have a Pentium 4 2.4Ghz (No HT
  Enabled),
  2x80GB SATA Hard Drives in RAID 1. The box boots, works, etc.
  However,
  whenever you try and do an fsck -y, it says:
  
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (~)% fsck -y
  ** /dev/twed0s1a (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /
  ** Root file system
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  2821 files, 31805 used, 474682 free (322 frags, 59295 blocks, 0.1%
  fragmentation)
  
  ** /dev/twed0s1g (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /home
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  82057 files, 557735 used, 12912399 free (2343 frags, 1613757
  blocks,
  0.0%
  fragmentation)
  
  ** /dev/twed0s1d (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /tmp
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  30 files, 1787 used, 504700 free (20 frags, 63085 blocks, 0.0%
  fragmentation)
  
  ** /dev/twed0s1e (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /usr
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  251160 files, 1318908 used, 13912410 free (73346 frags, 1729883
  blocks,
  0.5% fragmentation)
  
  ** /dev/twed0s1f (NO WRITE)
  ** Last Mounted on /var
  ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
  ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
  ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
  ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
  ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
  4424 files, 63321 used, 7042830 free (2462 frags, 880046 blocks,
  0.0%
  fragmentation)
  
  The drives are Seagate SATA's (7200RPM) with a 3Ware SATA RAID
  Controller
  (8006-2LP

Re: 3Ware SATA RAID 8000 - Supported on 5.3-R?

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
Yes, but the default value is NO.

If you still have problems, ask again.

2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 OK, I added that. (it was actually already in /etc/defaults/rc.conf)
 -- Jonathan
 
 Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
  If it fails it's because there are certain inconsistencies that need
  user confirmation before they are corrected.
 
  You can add
  fsck_y_enable=YES
  to your /etc/rc.conf so if default fsck fails, fsck -y is run. Check the
  fsck man page before doing so.
 
  Anyway, I don't understand why fsck is run on every reboot. If you just
  try a reboot or a shutdown -r now command in your console, will fsck
  run next time the system boots? It should'n happen. I don't understand
  why your file systems get uncleanly umounted.
 
  About freebsd 5.3, I've been using 3ware 7500-4LP (in raid 5) for the
  last 3 months, and I have not had such (nor any other) problems with twe
  driver.
 
  Hope it helps.
 
  2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  Whether I run fsck manually or if I run it automagically at boot via rc
  (which happens every reboot), it fails. As I'm not at console, I can't
  tell whether the same things happen if the box is physically taken
  down.
  and fsck'd in single user mode. The better part of the question is,
  could this be the RAID card throwing out false errors due to not having
  complete support for 5.3-R?, as it says that it only supports the 4.x
  series.
 
  -- Jonathan
 
  Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
   Your fstab is OK.
  
   I don't exactly understand the problem. When you boot fsck will run
   automatically if the system did not correctly shut down. This is
  done
   *before* disks are mounted rw, so there's no way you will see the
  (NO
   WRITE) message.
  
   If system was not correctly shut down, fsck will run, and it
  *will* (and
   should) slow down system boot process.
  
   So, is it the problem that fsck is running *every* time you boot?
  Or is
   it that you get this (NO WRITE) message when you run it manually?
  
  
   2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
  
   [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)% cat /etc/fstab
   #
  Device Mountpoint FStype Options Dump
   Pass#
   /dev/twed0s1b
   none swap sw 0 0
   /dev/twed0s1a / ufs
   rw 1 1
   /dev/twed0s1g /home ufs
  rw,userquota,groupquota
   2 2
   /dev/twed0s1d /tmp ufs
   rw 2 2
   /dev/twed0s1e /usr ufs
   rw 2 2
   /dev/twed0s1f /var ufs
   rw 2 2
   /dev/acd0 /cdrom cd9660 ro,noauto
   0 0
   none /proc
   procfs rw 0 0
   [EMAIL PROTECTED](~)%
  
  
   Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
Could you post your /etc/fstab?
   
2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] :
   
   Yes, this is actually the autoboot fsck thats breaking,
  the one
   that is
   called from /etc/rc (via /etc/rc.d/). I can physically
  take the
   box down
   and do an offline fsck of it and that works fine, it's
  just when
   it's in
   multi-user mode thats the problem.
   
   -- Jonathan
   
   Franco Bruno Borghesi wrote:
   
   For fsck to work (to actually correct any problems you
  may have),
   partitions should be umounted first. Are you sure you
  have umounted
   /dev/twed before running fsck?
   
   
   2005/5/24, Jonathan M. Slivko  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
   
   Hello,
   
   I have an interesting question, I have a Pentium 4 2.4Ghz
  (No HT
   Enabled),
   2x80GB SATA Hard Drives in RAID 1. The box boots, works, etc.
   However,
   whenever you try and do an fsck -y, it says:
   
   [EMAIL PROTECTED] (~)% fsck -y
   ** /dev/twed0s1a (NO WRITE)
   ** Last Mounted on /
   ** Root file system
   ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
   ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
   ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
   ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
   ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
   2821 files, 31805 used, 474682 free (322 frags, 59295
  blocks, 0.1%
   fragmentation)
   
   ** /dev/twed0s1g (NO WRITE)
   ** Last Mounted on /home
   ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
   ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
   ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
   ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
   ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
   82057 files, 557735 used, 12912399 free (2343 frags, 1613757
   blocks,
   0.0%
   fragmentation)
   
   ** /dev/twed0s1d (NO WRITE)
   ** Last Mounted on /tmp
   ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
   ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
   ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
   ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
   ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
   30 files, 1787 used, 504700 free (20 frags, 63085 blocks,
  0.0%
   fragmentation)
   
   ** /dev/twed0s1e (NO WRITE)
   ** Last Mounted on /usr
   ** Phase 1 - Check

Re: Top only showing one active CPU on HTT system

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
I'm curious... doesn't enabling ht make your system run slower? That's what 
I had found searching on google a while ago, and that's why I have never 
enabled ht on my kernels.


2005/5/24, Kirk Strauser [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 On Tuesday 24 May 2005 10:59, Tim Kellers wrote:
 
  The acpi_load=YES in /boot/loader.conf might do the trick.
 
 Actually, it turns out that I have to set machdep.hyperthreading_allowed=1
 for HTT to work now.
 
 Speaking of which, is that tunable documented anywhere besides the HTT
 security PR? It's not in the 5.4-STABLE /usr/src/UPDATING or anyplace else
 I've looked, so I was more than a bit surprised to find that such an
 important default was changed without much notice. I imagine a lot of
 people read the PR much as I did: blah, blah, theoretical, doesn't affect
 me, next message...
 --
 Kirk Strauser
 
 

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Re: Installing on multiple machines

2005-05-24 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
You could use freebsd livecd (http://livecd.sourceforge.net/) for multiple 
installations. I don't know what kickstart is, but livecd lets you build an 
installation cd from an existing installation, and replicate it on other 
machines.

24 May 2005 14:25:16 -0400, Lowell Gilbert 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Ewald Jenisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 
  I'd like to install 5.4 on several machines. The hardware is similar,
  but not exactly equal (different size HDs, different amount of
  memory).
 
  Is there any way to install 5.4 on different machines with the same
  options, i.e. same set of packages, same settings (e.g. keyboard)
  etc. without manually going through the installation on every machine?
 
  What I'm thinking of is something similar to the kickstart feature
  in Linux.
 
  Is there anything similar under FreeBSD available?
 
 I'm not much of an expert on FreeBSD installs, and I know even less
 about Linux installs, but seeing that no one else has spoken up, I can
 at least point you in a few relevant directions.
 
 First of all, the standard install is scriptable to some extent. The
 manual for sysinstall(8) documents this capability. There are some
 messages in the archives of this list discussing people doing that.
 
 Another option is Freesbie, which has recently gained the ability to
 install to hard disk.
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Re: swap space

2005-05-03 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
Actually having a separated disk for swap should increase your performance.
But my opinion is that if you really need *all* the 40 GB of swap when your 
system's ram is 3 GB, you won't see the difference: most of the data your 
system needs is swapped out!

You could add a partition to your new disk (let's say 2 or 3 times the 
amount of ram), and leave the rest unpartitioned. You could use that extra 
space later for nightly backups, emergencies, etc. without loosing your 
performance gain.

Hope it helps.

PS: Is there a FreeBSD 5.4 stable version?


2005/5/3, Chris Knipe [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 Hi,
 
 Simple question really... Can you ever have to much swap space?
 
 We're sitting with quite a nifty P4 System with 1GB Ram. We will more than
 likely add another 2 or 3GB in the month to come as our applications 
 (mainly
 perl) are consuming vast amounts of memory and swap.
 
 We made the mistake however of just allocating 512MB swap as we did not 
 know
 accurately at the time of installation what the resouce requires are going
 to be (especially not that it would be this high).
 
 Obviously reinstalling the entire OS / Applications is not really a 
 option.
 We may want to install a dedicated 40GB just for swap... Would this be
 advisable, or will it actually slow the system down? And to what extend?
 
 We're running FreeBSD 5.4-STABLE.
 
 Thanks in advance.
 
 --
 Chris.
 
 I love deadlines. I especially love the whooshing sound they make as they
 fly by... - Douglas Adams, 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'
 
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Re: swap space

2005-05-03 Thread Franco Bruno Borghesi
Time to upgrade then ;-)

2005/5/3, Chris Knipe [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
 
  PS: Is there a FreeBSD 5.4 stable version?
 
 FreeBSD pyro.acme.com http://pyro.acme.com 5.4-STABLE FreeBSD 5.4-STABLE#0: 
 Wed Apr 27 15:51:43
 SAST 2005 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/PYRO i386
 
 Guess so :)
 

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Ping under normal user

2004-10-15 Thread Bruno M. Petroski
Hi,
   I'm using FreeBSD 4.10, and I'm trying to ping a computer using the 
following command as a normal user, but I receive an error message.

$ ping -s 64 -c 10 10.1.1.1
ping: -s flag: Operation not permitted
  If I use the same command as root, no error message is given. Is 
there any option I could setup in order to overcome this error???

# ping -s 64 -c 10 10.1.1.1
PING 10.1.1.1 (10.1.1.1): 64 data bytes
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=63 time=8.737 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=63 time=0.265 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=63 time=0.260 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=63 time=4.183 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=63 time=0.258 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=5 ttl=63 time=6.691 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=6 ttl=63 time=6.648 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=7 ttl=63 time=2.983 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=8 ttl=63 time=0.261 ms
72 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=9 ttl=63 time=0.260 ms
--- 10.1.1.1 ping statistics ---
10 packets transmitted, 10 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 0.258/3.055/8.737/3.142 ms
--
Bruno M. Petroski
UFSC - Brasil
Can't buy what I want because its FREE!
- Pearl Jam
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postfix smtp auth TLS , cyrus sasl SSL/TLS

2004-08-24 Thread bruno schwander
Trying to get cyrus with SSL/TLS, as well as postfix with smtp auth

what I did: follow the howtos
http://postfix.state-of-mind.de/patrick.koetter/smtpauth/sasldb_configuration.html
http://yocum.org/faqs/postfix-tls-sasl.html

things working so far:
I can login to imap accounts using SSL or TLS, and CRAM-MD5, etc. This is
with sasldb, as cyrus is configured with
sasl_pwcheck_method: auxprop

saslauthd is not running.

strange issue: whenever login in successfully, /var/log/messages shows (IP
changed)

Aug 24 13:55:55 www imaps[2004]: login:
adsl-X-X-X.pacbell.net [XX.XX.XX.XX] bruno CRAM-MD5+TLS User logged in

and in /var/log/auth:
Aug 24 13:55:55 www imaps[2004]: no user in db

sasldblistusers2 shows the user is there. Stranger: when
changing/adding/removing users to the sasldb database, I get this in
/var/log/messages:
Aug 24 14:04:37 www saslpasswd2: setpass succeeded for bruno
Aug 24 14:04:37 www saslpasswd2: Couldn't update db
Aug 24 14:04:37 www last message repeated 2 times

I do not know which db is not being updated, because I can list
users, and check they are in there.

Since encrypted login to imaps essentially works, I would not care, but
now that I am trying to get postfix smtp auth working through sasl, I
think it might be an issue.

When trying to login to postfix/smtp, the following message appears in
/var/log/messages:
Aug 24 15:49:50 www postfix/smtpd[2977]: warning: SASL authentication
failure: no user in db
Aug 24 15:49:50 www postfix/smtpd[2977]: warning: SASL authentication
failure: no user in db
Aug 24 15:49:50 www postfix/smtpd[2977]: warning: SASL authentication
failure: no secret in database
Aug 24 15:49:50 www postfix/smtpd[2977]: warning:
XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX.pacbell.net[XX.XX.XX.XX]:
SASL CRAM-MD5
authentication failed

So, the questions are:

- which db is not being updated ?
- why is authentication failing with smtp and not imap ?


Any help greatly appreciated !

bruno

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Porting ALSA drivers to OSS may be easy, according to OSS ;)

2004-05-27 Thread Bruno
Well, I looked here:
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=pcmsektion=4
Instead of here:
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.2.1R/hardware-i386.html#AEN1101
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/4.10R/hardware-i386.html#AEN1762
I haven't tried FreeBSD for a long time (before SB Live! was supported) 
but I knew my SB Live! is supported for some time now.

I also have read comments from others about sound support on FreeBSD, and 
when I compared the supported cards on the pcm man page with the 
commercial OSS and ALSA supported cards I felt they were right.

But I'm much happier now that I know I've searched the wrong places and 
FreeBSD supports much more soundcards that I could have imagined.

I can't remember which is the soundcard in the old Compaq Presario laptop 
my wife has.

But my desktop will migrate in a few days. Thanks for the quick answer :)
Bruno
BTW, you're right about the drivers, I haven't understood it the first 
time (OSS API != OSS drivers).


-Original Message-
From: Dan Nelson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: quarta-feira, 26 de Maio de 2004 20:30
To: Bruno
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Porting ALSA drivers to OSS may be easy, according to OSS
;)
In the last episode (May 26), Bruno said:
I know FreeBSD is mainly conceived as a performance server OS and
lacks in the multimedia field when compared with Linux which is much
more generic.
But in terms of sound I think the scenario could change easily: you
don't have ALSA drivers but according to this post it's possible to
convert ALSA drivers into free OSS drivers:
http://www.4front-tech.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=48#48
This could mean reduced need for commercial OSS driver support :) And
of course there may be licensing issues.
Not really my problem since I have a SB Live!, but this could easily
improve FreeBSD image on the multimedia *NIX field :)
Are there very many cards not supported by FreeBSD?  Note that OSS can
mean two things: drivers provided by 4front, or a userland API for
playing sound.  FreeBSD's sound system provides an OSS API, but is not
OSS internally.  Porting a Linux ALSA driver to FreeBSD is probably
about as easy as porting a Linux OSS driver.

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Porting ALSA drivers to OSS may be easy, according to OSS ;)

2004-05-26 Thread Bruno
Hi,
I've tinkered a bit with Linux and FreeBSD, but still consider myself as 
newbie.

I'm probably going for FreeBSD since I can see the best strenghts that 
Linux experts point in their distros already exist on FreeBSD, mostly 
coherent file structure, init scripts and package management. And a great 
plus in FreeBSD is the documentation, never seen anything like that in a 
Linux distro before (Debian seems the closest to me).

I know FreeBSD is mainly conceived as a performance server OS and lacks in 
the multimedia field when compared with Linux which is much more generic.

But in terms of sound I think the scenario could change easily: you don't 
have ALSA drivers but according to this post it's possible to convert ALSA 
drivers into free OSS drivers:

http://www.4front-tech.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=48#48
This could mean reduced need for commercial OSS driver support :)
And of course there may be licensing issues.
Not really my problem since I have a SB Live!, but this could easily 
improve FreeBSD image on the multimedia *NIX field :)

Thanks in advance,
Bruno
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MIPv6

2004-05-04 Thread BOUVARD Bruno
Hello.

I work at Celar in France and I would like to know how to set up 
mobility functions on free BSD 4.9

Thank you

Bruno BOUVARD

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Mounting a Windows NTFS file system

2004-05-02 Thread Bruno
Hi all,

can I safely mount (read/write or at least read only)
a windows NTFS partition in my FreeBSD operating system
without any damage for this partition ?

FreeBSD seekingjob.singles.it 4.9-RC FreeBSD 4.9-RC #0: 

Thank you in advance
Bruno

---
[Quipo ISP - Questa E-mail e' stata controllata dal programma Declude Virus]
[Quipo ISP - This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus]

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MIPL implementations

2004-04-02 Thread BOUVARD Bruno
Dear,

I recall you because I asked you a question last week and you did not 
answer me. I work at Celar in France and I currently make a study on the 
existing hardware configurations for the Mobile IPv6 protocol. I need 
informations on the last implementations which you developed for this 
protocol :

Which functionalities Mobile IPv6 are implemented?
To which version of the draft on Mobile IPv6 your equipment refers to 
and with which restrictions?
How to obtain your product and how to maintain it up to date?

Best regards

Bruno BOUVARD

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Implémentation Mobile IPv6

2004-03-25 Thread BOUVARD Bruno
Bonjour.

Je travaille au Celar et je réalise actuellement une étude sur les 
configurations martérielles existantes pour le protocole Mobile IPv6. 
J'aurais besoin de renseignements sur les dernières implémentations que 
vous avez  développé pour ce protocole :

Quelle version est actuellement utilisée?
Quelles fonctionnalités de Mobile IPv6 sont implémentées?
A quelle RFC se réfère t-elle et avec quelles restrictions?
...
Pourriez vous m'envoyer (à moi et à mon collègue dont l'@ figure 
ci-dessus) un descriptif des implémentations répondant à ma demande.

Merci d'avance

Bruno Bouvard

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xmms libpthread

2004-02-26 Thread bruno malag
FreeBSD 5.2-CURRENT #0: Wed Feb 18 00:02:18 EST 2004
x86
After building the xmms port I attempt to run xmms and get the following 
error:-
Fatal error 'Spinlock called when not threaded.' at line 83 in file /usr/src/
lib/libpthread/thread/thr_spinlock.c (errno = 0)
Abort (core dumped)

I understand that I may have to map another library to pthread in 
libmap.conf .
If this is right which library do I need to map to pthread in libmap.conf ?

Bruno
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FreeBSD 5.0 build

2003-02-02 Thread Bruno Clermont
I installed a fresh 5.0 system, grab a copy of 5.0 source, tried to 
build and it failed.

I don't know if it's a bug, I might be wrong, but I just want to know 
if I'm doing it right, I tried to did it the same way as I used to do 
in 4.x:

* grabbed a CVS snapshot of src module CVS tag RELENG_5_0
* define variable DESTDIR=/altroot
* make world

I get :

=== bin/cat
cc -O -pipe -mcpu=pentiumpro   -Werror -Wall -Wno-format-y2k 
-Wno-uninitialized -Wformat=2 -Wno-format-extra-args -Werror  -c 
/usr/src/bin/cat/cat.c
cc -O -pipe -mcpu=pentiumpro   -Werror -Wall -Wno-format-y2k 
-Wno-uninitialized -Wformat=2 -Wno-format-extra-args -Werror   -static 
-o cat cat.o
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/libc.a(atexit.o): In function `atexit':
atexit.o(.text+0xc7): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_unlock'
atexit.o(.text+0xd8): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_lock'
atexit.o(.text+0xe8): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_unlock'
atexit.o(.text+0x109): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_lock'
atexit.o(.text+0x11a): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_unlock'
atexit.o(.text+0x141): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_lock'
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/libc.a(_flock_stub.o): In function 
`flockfile':
_flock_stub.o(.text+0x10): undefined reference to `_pthread_self'
_flock_stub.o(.text+0x25): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_lock'
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/libc.a(_flock_stub.o): In function 
`_flockfile_debug':
_flock_stub.o(.text+0x60): undefined reference to `_pthread_self'
_flock_stub.o(.text+0x75): undefined reference to `_pthread_mutex_lock'
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/libc.a(_flock_stub.o): In function 
`ftrylockfile':
_flock_stub.o(.text+0xb5): undefined reference to `_pthread_self'
_flock_stub.o(.text+0xca): undefined reference to 
`_pthread_mutex_trylock'
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/libc.a(_flock_stub.o): In function 
`funlockfile':
_flock_stub.o(.text+0x10d): undefined reference to `_pthread_self'
_flock_stub.o(.text+0x149): undefined reference to 
`_pthread_mutex_unlock'
*** Error code 1

_pthread_* calls are in lib/libpthread, look like, while linking the 
binary, it didn't link with -lpthread also. But, libc.a archive isn't 
supposed to contain libpthread.a objects? Is FreeBSD 5.0 current source 
tree broken?

I tried to build RELENG_5_0 from 4.6 and it worked. I tried to rebuild 
it with something in /etc/make.conf and it failed at the same place. 
From a 5.0 host, I can't make it rebuild itself.

thanks for any advice


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Re: FreeBSD 5.0 build

2003-02-02 Thread Bruno Clermont
On Sun, Feb 2, 2003, at 07:52 America/Montreal, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:


Anything interesting in your /etc/make.conf file?
NO_LIBC_R perhaps?


On the 5.0 host, there is no /etc/make.conf and /etc/default/make.conf 
and no variable like those one specified in 
/usr/share/examples/etc/make.conf set in login scripts.

On the 4.6 host, only CFLAGS is set.

In fact, libc_r.* is builded in the obj directory.


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Problems installing FreeBSD

2003-01-02 Thread Bruno Campanelli

I've got the FreeBSD 2.1.5 CD-ROM from Walnut Creek, and I'm
having a lot of difficulty installing it.  I have a 66 MHz 486 with 16
MB of memory and an Adaptec 1540A SCSI board, a 1.2GB Quantum Fireball
disk and a Toshiba 3501XA CD-ROM drive.  The installation works just
fine, but when I try to reboot the system, I get the message Missing
Operating System.



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