In message 199901242201.raa17...@khavrinen.lcs.mit.edu, Garrett Wollman write
s:
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999 13:11:12 -0800, Mike Smith m...@smith.net.au said:
Backwards compatibility is one thing, but new nodes should be named,
not numbered. OID_AUTO is bogus because it perpetuates the numbering
On Sun, Jan 24, 1999 at 04:21:16PM -0800, Amancio Hasty
ha...@rah.star-gate.com wrote:
http://www.developer.com/experts/expertspanel.html
click on Bar's Guide to the the Interactive Fiction and after
the page finishes loading click Back on Netscape's tool bar.
Instant core -dump.
You
I think this is the first step to show the bug . The next step is to
pray that the netscape developer is listening so he can fix it .
I think is odd that the bug doesn't happen with the linux version
of netscape.
Cheers,
Amancio
On Sun, Jan 24, 1999 at 04:21:16PM -0800,
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
On Sat, 23 Jan 1999 11:04:15 -0800 (PST), Archie Cobbs
arc...@whistle.com said:
Peter pointed out that having the sysctl's as symbols was a nice
advantage of the current system. How important is this?
I don't think it's important at all.
Hi!
Now that the console system is restructured, shouldn't we consider
using GGI instead of inventing the wheel?
I happened to find this link and they seem to be positive to
supporting FreeBSD.
http://synergy.caltech.edu/~ggi/mailinglist/ev-mar98/139.html
==
Regards: Tommy - The source of all
:
: Basically this consists of a bit of code in /etc/rc and, later tonight,
: an /etc/rc.diskless script ( a new script ).
:
:before you reinvent the wheel, have you looked at my code in
:http://www.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/diskless981113/
:
:this is sliglthly pout of date wrt what i have now
199901250453.uaa00...@apollo.backplane.comMatthew Dillon writes:
archive:/cvs# time dd if=/dev/zero of=test2 bs=32k count=1024
1024+0 records in
1024+0 records out
33554432 bytes transferred in 13.700387 secs (2449159 bytes/sec)
0.000u 2.728s 0:13.75 19.7% 357+1405k
I found this log of an GGI irc meeting.
http://www.uk.ggi-project.org/irc/irc-980920-log
==
Regards: Tommy - The source of all good beers...
thallg...@yahoo.com
_
DO YOU YAHOO!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
Marco van Hylckama Vlieg wrote:
I'm running 3.0-CURRENT at the moment, last timme I built world is
about 2 or 3 weeks ago I guess. What I want to do is go to 3.0-RELEASE
and from then start keeping track of the 3.x-STABLE branch.
Since I've read a lot about various problems people had with
It seems Tommy Hallgren wrote:
Hi!
Now that the console system is restructured, shouldn't we consider
using GGI instead of inventing the wheel?
I happened to find this link and they seem to be positive to
supporting FreeBSD.
http://synergy.caltech.edu/~ggi/mailinglist/ev-mar98/139.html
: Basically this consists of a bit of code in /etc/rc and, later tonight,
: an /etc/rc.diskless script ( a new script ).
:
:before you reinvent the wheel, have you looked at my code in
:http://www.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/diskless981113/
...
I was basically just cleaning up stuff I've
On Jan 21, 9:40pm, Warner Losh wrote:
} Subject: Re: keymaps
} In message 199901220043.laa22...@lightning.itga.com.au Gregory Bond writes:
} : my vote: A version of the standard keymap with CapsLock and LeftCtl
} : functions swapped so the control key is under my left finger like
} : God
Luigi Rizzo wrote:
[..]
I haven't seen how you suggest to buildpopulate the MFS filesystems --
right now i use a rather crude method of putting all the stuff in a tgz
archive on the server and expanding it at runtime on the client. I
haven't solved the problem with passwords (i.e. i just copy
Hi,
Just finsihed upgrading to 4.0-Current, and both my machines now come up with:
wd0: DMA failure, DMA status 0
wd0: DMA failure, DMA status 0
wd2: DMA failure, DMA status 0
wd2: DMA failure, DMA status 0
wd1: DMA failure, DMA status 0
wd3: DMA failure, DMA status 0
wd3: DMA failure, DMA
It seems Karl Pielorz wrote:
This is due to Julians commit in 1.183 (IIRC) of wd.c, its bogus :(
The following patchh cures the mess, and fixes a couble of other
nits as well:
-Søren
Index: wd.c
===
RCS file:
I've a feeling that somewhere there is a memory
problem. Netscape-specific perhaps, but I suspect
otherwise due to what I've seen.
For example: the one machine that I have which
will constantly dump core when Netscape is run
is an HP Vectra. I've tried 3.0, 2.2.8, all current
patches, etc.
On Mon, Jan 25, 1999 at 05:08:19PM +1100, Bruce Evans wrote:
Can you find out what chipset is in this guy? There's support for anything
Intel or VIA, Promise UDMA cards, Cyrix MediaGX, and Acer Aladdin IV/V
right
now.
See kern/9550. The driver *used* to support my SiS chipset, but it
On Mon, Jan 25, 1999 at 12:11:01PM +0300, Alex Povolotsky wrote:
199901250453.uaa00...@apollo.backplane.comMatthew Dillon writes:
archive:/cvs# time dd if=/dev/zero of=test2 bs=32k count=1024
1024+0 records in
1024+0 records out
33554432 bytes transferred in 13.700387 secs
[.]
So I'd like to make another attempt to get agreement on the next
step here, so that *something* can happen. We need to get more
people using DEVFS, so we can gain some experience feedback.
I don't think DEVFS has any issues that are not surmountable.
However, at some point you must
On Mon, Jan 25, 1999 at 04:09:27PM +0300, Alex Povolotsky wrote:
19990125080617.a3...@tidalwave.netLee Cremeans writes:
ide_pci0: VIA 82C586x (Apollo) Bus-master IDE controller rev 0x06 on
pci0.
7.1
Don't you know if I can upgrade only one file, ide_pci.c? STABLE seems to not
much
Previously on Thu, Jan 21, 1999 at 06:09:41PM +, Geoff Buckingham wrote:
: On tuesday I crashed a machine after it ran out of kvm. (dual PII 400 with
: 768MB RAM) poking about in the code adding:
:
: options VM_KMEM_SIZE=(24*1024*1024)
: options
Søren Schmidt wrote:
This is due to Julians commit in 1.183 (IIRC) of wd.c, its bogus :(
The following patchh cures the mess, and fixes a couble of other
nits as well:
[snip]
Thanks, the patch fixed the problem...
-Kp
To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org
with unsubscribe
Hi folks,
The following files are not being created by installworld:
/usr/lib/crt0.o
/usr/lib/c++rt0.o
/usr/lib/gcrt0.o
/usr/lib/scrt0.o
/usr/lib/sgcrt0.o
/usr/lib/kztail.o
/usr/lib/kzhead.o
Am I correct in assuming they're stale and can be removed?
Ciao,
Sheldon.
To Unsubscribe: send mail
I completely re-cvsuped the sources and I still get errors in libpam.
Here is my make.conf:
# $Id: make.conf,v 1.70 1998/10/16 03:26:54 peter Exp $
#
# This file, if present, will be read by make (see /usr/share/mk/sys.mk).
# It allows you to override macro definitions to make without changing
Dear Archie,
Can you point all people (and me of course) who want to test DEVFS to some
common information about DEVFS (usage, possible advantages/disadvantages etc.)?
I think some FAQ or so will be nice. It's really will help us to go further
with this issue.
Sincerely,
Maxim
Archie Cobbs
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999 15:55:50 -0800 (PST), Matthew Dillon
dil...@apollo.backplane.com said:
Strings are a whole lot more portable then integer assignments.
Nonsense. Strings are not portable at all -- they only exist in
FreeBSD. The reference implementation (4.4BSD) and its other
In article 399.917273...@axl.noc.iafrica.com,
Sheldon Hearn a...@iafrica.com wrote:
The following files are not being created by installworld:
/usr/lib/crt0.o
/usr/lib/c++rt0.o
/usr/lib/gcrt0.o
/usr/lib/scrt0.o
/usr/lib/sgcrt0.o
/usr/lib/kztail.o
/usr/lib/kzhead.o
Am I correct in
In message 199901251615.laa19...@khavrinen.lcs.mit.edu, Garrett Wollman write
s:
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999 15:55:50 -0800 (PST), Matthew Dillon
dil...@apollo.backplane.com said:
Strings are a whole lot more portable then integer assignments.
Nonsense. Strings are not portable at all -- they
In article 19990124225936p.wghi...@wghicks.bellsouth.net,
W Gerald Hicks wghi...@bellsouth.net wrote:
And if you have cvsup-mirror loaded (running cvsupd), you can even use
cvsup against your local repository.
Seems a good bit faster than regular CVS for checkouts and updates.
It is
Hi,
after several days fiddeling with the cvs and source trees
I've finnaly found out, that setting OBJLINK= yes in /etc/make.conf
breaks installworld's.
Buildworld is successfully building the entire tree, but after that
the obj link in the source-tree is pointing to an /usr/obj/aout/something
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 08:32:17 PST, John Polstra wrote:
Yes, they all reside in /usr/lib/aout now.
So then for a machine that makes world with -DNOAUT they don't exist,
assuming all ports have been rebuilt for an ELF world, yes?
Ciao,
Sheldon.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to
On 25-Jan-99 Sheldon Hearn wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 08:32:17 PST, John Polstra wrote:
Yes, they all reside in /usr/lib/aout now.
So then for a machine that makes world with -DNOAUT they don't exist,
-DNOAOUT
assuming all ports have been
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999, Chris Knight wrote:
Greetings,
I have learned a very valuable lesson. No matter how many time I have
made world, I shouldn't do it while I'm tired. Last night I synced my tree
and made world. I rebooted, and was going to remake my kernel after the
boot. That
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 09:20:06 PST, John Polstra wrote:
Note, without those files you'll never again be able to link an a.out
program on the machine. Are you sure you really want that limitation?
As I understand it, the only times this hurts me are:
1) When I want to build binaries for
I've made some changes to sysctl to allow nodes to be declared dynamically
either by loading kld modules which contain SYSCTL declarations or, in
theory, by generating oids from some other kernel data such as the device
tree.
To recap for those that are interested, the existing scheme uses linker
: 'kern.conf_dir' which the kernel initially sets to nothing.
:
:ok, i can only suggest that if you replace the sysctl kern.conf_dir
:variable with a shell variable as i did, you can achieve a more
:portable result (this also in light of Jordan's idea of having a
:2.2S CD being made... putting
I sure did, but I never committed them. I would have to redo them
at this point. The patch was to have MFS maintain a persistant file,
so you could fsck the file as if it were a disk and then the mfs mount it.
Security is an issue, but it depends on how your password file is
If you can get a kernel core, run vmstat -m on it to see what the state
of the allocation hoppers was.
-Matt
Matthew Dillon
dil...@backplane.com
:As no one seemed to
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, John Polstra wrote:
On 25-Jan-99 Sheldon Hearn wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 08:32:17 PST, John Polstra wrote:
Yes, they all reside in /usr/lib/aout now.
So then for a machine that makes world with -DNOAUT they don't exist,
19990125083308.b3...@tidalwave.netLee Cremeans writes:
On Mon, Jan 25, 1999 at 04:09:27PM +0300, Alex Povolotsky wrote:
19990125080617.a3...@tidalwave.netLee Cremeans writes:
ide_pci0: VIA 82C586x (Apollo) Bus-master IDE controller rev 0x06 on pc
i0.
7.1
Don't you know if I can upgrade
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 18:06:15 GMT, Jason C. Wells wrote:
I did make buildworld with -DNOAOUT on -stable and it went fine. I did
make installworld and it croaked because it couldn't find the
afforementioned files.
Well, their absence certainly doesn't blow up installworld on a -current
: 'kern.conf_dir' which the kernel initially sets to nothing.
:
:ok, i can only suggest that if you replace the sysctl kern.conf_dir
:variable with a shell variable as i did, you can achieve a more
...
That's what I had originally, but extracting the machine's IP
address is not
Excerpts from FreeBSD-Current: 24-Jan-99 Re: kvm question by Archie
co...@whistle.com
Whether libkvm should even exist in a perfect world (it shouldn't)
is an entirely different question. For now, we're stuck with it
until somebody changes *everything* to use sysctl instead.
Just as a
yo, brian,
are you on 'net'?
have you had a look at the netgraph stuff?
particularly the kernel nodes that we use in conjuntion with mpd, and the
usserland modules of mpd that we use with it?
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Brian Somers wrote:
[.]
So I'd like to make another attempt to get
Brian Somers writes:
So I'd like to make another attempt to get agreement on the next
step here, so that *something* can happen. We need to get more
people using DEVFS, so we can gain some experience feedback.
I don't think DEVFS has any issues that are not surmountable.
However, at
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
I really don't understand the problems that everyone is having,
myself. I've been running netscape (communicator 4.5) in -current for
ages now and just switched to 4.0 without any problems. My netscape
still continues to function just fine and
Nate Williams writes:
I am current as of today 4.0, I have communicator 4.5 downloaded some time
ago (November more or less) directly from netscape and installed in
/usr/local/netscape with a link to /usr/local/bin/netscape and I have been
using it all day with no problems. My intranet if
I've been having a problem ever since I moved from 2.2.8-STABLE to
3.0-CURRENT (all elf). After long periods of intense disk activity (e.g. rm
-rf * in /usr/obj or a make world) my keyboard seems to become less
responsive and I can hear a quick burst of disk activity with each key
press. On a
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 18:28:10 GMT, Andrew Gordon wrote:
One variable may be available memory. On my system, with default
datasize limit of 16M from login.conf, Netscape coredumps very
frequently.
Aha! That figures.
Since I upgraded to CURRENT, with its login.conf which defaults to
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Jason C. Wells wrote:
[..\
I did make buildworld with -DNOAOUT on -stable and it went fine. I did
make installworld and it croaked because it couldn't find the
afforementioned files.
You need to make installworld with -DNOAOUT too. Otherwise it _will_ look
for a.out stuff
:One variable may be available memory. On my system, with default datasize
:limit of 16M from login.conf, Netscape coredumps very frequently. With
:datasize unlimited, Netscape eats all the available swap (this system is
:64M real 128M swap) and kills the system that way. I currently run
Doug Rabson writes:
I've made some changes to sysctl to allow nodes to be declared dynamically
either by loading kld modules which contain SYSCTL declarations or, in
theory, by generating oids from some other kernel data such as the device
tree.
To recap for those that are interested, the
Thomas Valentino Crimi writes:
Whether libkvm should even exist in a perfect world (it shouldn't)
is an entirely different question. For now, we're stuck with it
until somebody changes *everything* to use sysctl instead.
Just as a question, how much of a performance difference is there
In message 199901252212.oaa18...@bubba.whistle.com, Archie Cobbs writes:
Doug Rabson writes:
If anyone is interested in seeing diffs (approx 23k), please contact me.
I'm interested.. could you email me the diffs?
I'm more interested in whether these patches can be committed... ?
Have Poul,
Ladies and Gents,
I have completed the portification of f2c and its support library.
In principle, src/usr.bin/f2c, src/lib/{libI77,libF77,libf2c}, and
src/gnu/usr.bin/cc/f77 can be moved into the attic in -current (4.x).
Appropriate adjustments to the Makefile files in src/usr.bin,
src/lib, and
Right now we build libbind (so named, etc. can link) but don't
install it in /usr/lib.
However, there are parts of it that would be very nice to have
available to user programs.. in particular the event library
(see: nroff -man /usr/src/contrib/bind/lib/isc/eventlib.mdoc )
I would like to make
In the output below, notice there are two modules named ng_sync_sr
loaded in the kernel object (due to a typo), and moreover there's
a netgraph module loaded in both the kernel object and the netgraph.ko
object..
$ kldstat -v
Id Refs AddressSize Name
14 0xf010 1be82c
Hello,
Would it be possible to add a make update target to the top Makefile in
ports and doc? Similar to the Makefile in /usr/src, so that it does something
like cvs -q update -P -d.
It would keep the Makefiles more orthogonal, and in any case, make update
types easier than cvs -q update
Since building a new kernel and a full 'make world' on Jan 24,
I am seeing this at boot:
avail memory = 62210048 (60752K bytes)
Preloaded elf kernel kernel at 0xf02cc000.
Preloaded elf module msdos.ko at 0xf02cc09c.
Preloaded elf module procfs.ko at 0xf02cc13c.
Preloaded elf module if_tun.ko at
How does this look?
--- src/etc/rc.orig Mon Jan 25 17:39:07 1999
+++ src/etc/rc Mon Jan 25 17:43:52 1999
@@ -152,6 +152,16 @@
clean_var
fi
+# Load the vn module, if enabled.
+if [ X$vn_enable = XYES ]; then
+ echo Loading vn module.
+ if [ -f /modules/vn.ko ]; then
+
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999, Luigi Rizzo wrote:
which version of ip_dummynet are you using. There were lately a few
changes to fix a problem related to route entries being freed in the
wrong way.
.(02:36:11)(r...@bright.reserved)
ipfw add pipe 1 ip from server to cvsup.freebsd.org
(long pause
On 24 Jan 1999, Dag-Erling Smorgrav wrote:
Boris Staeblow b...@dva.in-berlin.de writes:
Beside your suggestions there are much more programs which use
libkvm:
/bin/ps/
/libexec/rpc.rstatd/
/sbin/ccdconfig/
/sbin/dmesg/
These are statically linked, and must be relinked after
Hi,
Am I the only one who gets this when he tries to compile a kernel with
the usb drivers in it?
cc -c -O -Wreturn-type -Wcomment -Wredundant-decls -Wimplicit
-Wnested-externs -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes
-Wpointer-arith -Winline -Wuninitialized -Wformat -Wunused
At 06:29 PM 1/25/99 +0100, Leif Neland wrote:
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999, Chris Knight wrote:
Greetings,
I have learned a very valuable lesson. No matter how many time I have
made world, I shouldn't do it while I'm tired. Last night I synced my tree
and made world. I rebooted, and was going
On Sun, 24 Jan 1999, Matthew Dillon wrote:
: I haven't cvs updated in 24 hours, if the Acer is newly committed then
I'll
: have to update again and retry. The CTX is using the Acer.
:
: ide_pci0: Acer Aladdin IV/V (M5229) Bus-master IDE controller rev 0x20
int a irq 0 on
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 19:40:38 EST, Brian Feldman wrote:
I say this because I am down to ~2.5MB/s on each hard drive, a MB or
so decrease; I also seem to be reading (bs=512k) from the CD uncooked
device at the right speed (~2MB/s), but it takes up 40% of the CPU,
which seems to be just PIO.
:On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 19:40:38 EST, Brian Feldman wrote:
:
: I say this because I am down to ~2.5MB/s on each hard drive, a MB or
: so decrease; I also seem to be reading (bs=512k) from the CD uncooked
:...
:
:Since I rebuilt world shortly after Matt's VM surgery started, I've also
:noticed this --
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Matthew Dillon wrote:
:On Mon, 25 Jan 1999 19:40:38 EST, Brian Feldman wrote:
:
: I say this because I am down to ~2.5MB/s on each hard drive, a MB or
: so decrease; I also seem to be reading (bs=512k) from the CD uncooked
:...
:
:Since I rebuilt world shortly after
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Matthew Dillon wrote:
:One variable may be available memory. On my system, with default datasize
:limit of 16M from login.conf, Netscape coredumps very frequently. With
I've been using netscape on a 24bit color system for well over a year
and have never had a
: I would like to know if your transfer rate improves or not, and by
: how much.
:
: #if 0
: if (cnt.v_inactive_count / 3 page_shortage) {
: maxlaunder = 0;
: launder_loop = 0;
: } else
: #endif
: {
:
Aha! That figures.
Since I upgraded to CURRENT, with its login.conf which defaults to
unlimited resources, my frequent netscape core dumps have gone away.
I hadn't realized why until now.
Suggestion: wwhen people complain about Netscape, ask them to mail us
back the output of ``ulimit
Hi!
I'am not sure where this comes from, but at the moment I have some
troubles with the userland ppp.
The symptoms: After establishing the connection and setting the
defaultroute *nothing* works, that means, the line seems
to be completely dead. Not even the peer can
My setup is about the same. I just modified all my login.conf
defaults to be unlimited/infinity. Still the same crappy core dumps.
Forrest
On Mon, Jan 25, 1999 at 08:47:29PM -0500, Luke wrote:
Aha! That figures.
Since I upgraded to CURRENT, with its login.conf which defaults to
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Matthew Dillon wrote:
: I would like to know if your transfer rate improves or not, and by
: how much.
:
: #if 0
: if (cnt.v_inactive_count / 3 page_shortage) {
: maxlaunder = 0;
: launder_loop = 0;
: } else
And here's with Soren's (sorry, I don't have any kind of European keyboard
mapping) patch.
{/home/green}$ diff3 iozone.old iozone iozone.newer
1:15,16c
Writing the 100 Megabyte file, 'iozone.tmp'...37.320312 seconds
Reading the file...37.710938 seconds
2:15,16c
Writing the 100
On Tue, 26 Jan 1999, Alex Le Heux wrote:
Am I the only one who gets this when he tries to compile a kernel with
the usb drivers in it?
Nope. I ran into this same problem, but I haven't had a chance to query
the list about it. This is produced by having USB_DEBUG turned on in your
kernel
The Linuxthreads changes in the system that have been optioned out for a
while have been enabled after testing by many people.
this will require a recompile of at least PS and probably the usual
culprits, (libkvm etc) (unless of course you've already been running with
the support turned on.)
yo, brian,
are you on 'net'?
have you had a look at the netgraph stuff?
particularly the kernel nodes that we use in conjuntion with mpd, and the
usserland modules of mpd that we use with it?
Eh, dunno :-/ What's netgraph (it rings bells - have you mentioned
it before ?) ?
--
Brian
This commit also requires a recompile of the usual cuplits.
Part of the reason for this commit is to make the thread-stack and non
thread stack cases be the same from the point of view of
non kernel programs. his allows the 'VM_STACK' option to be turned on and
off entirely vi kernel
I had this problem too. It seems that the code included when you
define USB_DEBUG has suffered some bitrot. Drop this out of your
kernel config, and these compile time errors will go away.
louie
Hi,
Am I the only one who gets this when he tries to compile a kernel with
the usb drivers in
At 06:41 PM 1/25/99 -0800, Julian Elischer wrote:
The Linuxthreads changes in the system that have been optioned out for a
while have been enabled after testing by many people.
this will require a recompile of at least PS and probably the usual
culprits, (libkvm etc) (unless of course you've
I recently looked at keymaps in /usr/share/syscons/keymaps and found
many minor errors. In addition to that, there is so much
inconsistency among existing keymaps. True that national keyboards have
different layout of regular keys (alphanumeric keys and symbol keys).
But, it is absurd that
yes
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Manfred Antar wrote:
At 06:41 PM 1/25/99 -0800, Julian Elischer wrote:
The Linuxthreads changes in the system that have been optioned out for a
while have been enabled after testing by many people.
this will require a recompile of at least PS and probably the
Brian Somers writes:
yo, brian,
are you on 'net'?
have you had a look at the netgraph stuff?
particularly the kernel nodes that we use in conjuntion with mpd, and the
usserland modules of mpd that we use with it?
Eh, dunno :-/ What's netgraph (it rings bells - have you mentioned
Maxim Sobolev writes:
Can you point all people (and me of course) who want to test DEVFS to some
common information about DEVFS (usage, possible advantages/disadvantages etc.
I think some FAQ or so will be nice. It's really will help us to go further
with this issue.
I agree.. and I've bugged
- What other code beside the installer (if any) uses libdisk?
Nothing does. That probably says something in and of itself. :)
- What are the relevant installer files in the source tree?
/usr/src/release/sysinstall.
- Jordan
To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org
with
Luigi Rizzo writes:
:I haven't seen how you suggest to buildpopulate the MFS filesystems --
...
There isn't much to build. Most of the MFS filesystems start
out empty.
ok here we use a different approach. For simplicity I am using a
single MFS system with all
Вы писали:
Nate Williams writes:
I am current as of today 4.0, I have communicator 4.5 downloaded some time
ago (November more or less) directly from netscape and installed in
/usr/local/netscape with a link to /usr/local/bin/netscape and I have been
using it all day with no problems.
On 26-Jan-99 Andrew Gordon wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Matthew Dillon wrote:
:One variable may be available memory. On my system, with default
:datasize
:limit of 16M from login.conf, Netscape coredumps very frequently. With
I've been using netscape on a 24bit color system for well
4.0-current as of today.
i am trying to make cvsup and blooie!
new source - compiling ../src/TreeComp.m3
new source - compiling ../src/FSServer.m3
new source - compiling ../src/FSServerU.m3
new source - compiling ../src/Main.m3
- linking cvsupd
/usr/lib/aout/crt0.o: file
I have been having these X lockups with the linux netscape 4.5
running. I may have exacerbated it when I installed the linux
realplayer and macromedia flash plugins.
I would like to have a methodology to help debug this, but I have just
this one system to use as the debug system. I do also have
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