On Wed, Mar 27, 2024 at 05:55:20PM +0200, Konstantin Belousov wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 27, 2024 at 03:01:11AM +0100, Bernd Walter wrote:
> > Same Problem with current:
> > reeBSD 15.0-CURRENT #0 main-n268793-220ee18f1964: Thu Mar 14 02:58:39 UTC
> > 2024
> >
> > real memory = 1649265344512 (1572862
On Wed, Mar 27, 2024 at 03:01:11AM +0100, Bernd Walter wrote:
> Same Problem with current:
> reeBSD 15.0-CURRENT #0 main-n268793-220ee18f1964: Thu Mar 14 02:58:39 UTC 2024
>
> real memory = 1649265344512 (1572862 MB)
> avail memory = 1057118396416 (1008146 MB)
Real memory is really the max physi
El día miércoles, marzo 27, 2024 a las 10:37:48a. m. +0100, Matthias Apitz
escribió:
>
> Hello,
>
> I bought the laptop ASUS VivoBook Pro 14 90NB0VZ2-M01230 and managed to
> boot FreeBSD with boot verbose messages from an USB key and I'm able to
> login. The /var/log/messages are here
> http://
On Wed, Mar 27, 2024 at 01:00:07PM +0100, Mateusz Guzik wrote:
> Top of main, but I reproduced it on stable/14-e64d827d3 as well.
>
> Mere "timeout 2 sleep 10" correctly times out.
>
> Running "truss -f timeout 2 sleep 10" prevents timeout from killing
> sleep and the entire thing refuses to exit
Mateusz Guzik writes:
> Top of main, but I reproduced it on stable/14-e64d827d3 as well.
Confirmed on 14.0-RELEASE-p5.
> Mere "timeout 2 sleep 10" correctly times out.
>
> Running "truss -f timeout 2 sleep 10" prevents timeout from killing
> sleep
This is sort of expected as truss(1) uses ptrac
Top of main, but I reproduced it on stable/14-e64d827d3 as well.
Mere "timeout 2 sleep 10" correctly times out.
Running "truss -f timeout 2 sleep 10" prevents timeout from killing
sleep and the entire thing refuses to exit, truss has to be killed off
with SIGKILL.
Here is the best part: after do
On Wed, Mar 27, 2024 at 12:38 PM Matthias Apitz wrote:
>
>
> Hello,
>
> I bought the laptop ASUS VivoBook Pro 14 90NB0VZ2-M01230 and managed to
> boot FreeBSD with boot verbose messages from an USB key and I'm able to
> login. The /var/log/messages are here
> http://www.unixarea.de/ASUS-VivoBook-P
Hello,
I bought the laptop ASUS VivoBook Pro 14 90NB0VZ2-M01230 and managed to
boot FreeBSD with boot verbose messages from an USB key and I'm able to
login. The /var/log/messages are here
http://www.unixarea.de/ASUS-VivoBook-Pro-14-messages.txt
I can identify the harddisk as nda0 (correct), bu