So it appears current has switched 'gawk' to 'awk'. These
aren't 100% compatible, here's a little gotcha in case
someone else runs into it:
awk '{print var}' var='a
b'
works on 'gawk' (e.g. RELENG_4), but on current, will
awk '{print var}' var='a
b'
awk: newline in string a
b... at source line 1
From: Kris Kennaway [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I forwarded the reports of timecounter problems to phk, and he asked
> that people who are seeing timecounter problems provide FULL details
> of their system configuration, including:
>
> * dmesg
>
> * kernel configuration
>
> * compiler options
From: Kris Kennaway [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> On Sat, Nov 29, 2003 at 11:32:28AM +0100, Michael Nottebrock wrote:
> Content-Description: signed data
> > On Saturday 29 November 2003 09:19, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> > >
> > > Are all affected machines multi-processor?
> >
> > None. Both are i386
I have a current system configured to use a serial console. I'm
getting a 'login_tty /dev/console: Inappropriate ioctl for device'
to the console every few seconds.
bash-2.05b# cat /boot.config
-Dh
In /etc/ttys, i have set console as:
console "/usr/libexec/getty std.115200" vt100 on secure
From: Christian Laursen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Steve Ames <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > If you telnet to 127.0.0.1 the system still believes you are
> > coming from your public IP. Bizarre that. Other IPs don't act
> > that way. My system has two public IPs and 127.0.0.1. If I
> > telnet
From: Barney Wolff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2003 1:14 PM
> To: Bruce Evans
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: dumb question 'Bad system call' after make world
>
>
> On Sat, Nov 22, 2003 at 11:42:04PM +1100, Bruce Evans wrote:
> > On Fri, 21 Nov 2003, Barney Wol
So i have a machine freshly installed from 5.1 mini iso.
I did a cvs co of latest current sources, and accidentally
did a 'make world' instead of 'make buildworld'.
Now i just get 'Bad system call' when i try to do anything.
i need to get the correct kernel on there, does anyone have a
suggestio
From: Terry Lambert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "Michael O. Boev" wrote:
> > I've got a [uniprocessor 5.1-RELEASE] router machine with
> fxp and em nics.
> > I've built my kernel with the following included:
> >
> > options DEVICE_POLLING
> > options HZ=2500
> >
> > and enabled p
From: sebastian ssmoller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
...
>
> i turned of acpi on startup an voila :) : gdm starts two
> times faster as
> before (!) (30s -> 15-17s)
>
> can anyone explain me why, pls ?
I wonder how hot your processor is? perhaps ACPI is throttling
the clock back, either duty cyc
From: Terry Lambert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Don Bowman wrote:
> > This may be a dumb question, but I have
> > a situation where machine A and B both have
> > enabled serial console. I'm ssh'ing into A to
> > try and debug a problem on B. I'm trying t
This may be a dumb question, but I have
a situation where machine A and B both have
enabled serial console. I'm ssh'ing into A to
try and debug a problem on B. I'm trying to
use tip, but am getting interference from the
fact that A also has a serial console.
If i disable the getty, its a bit be
In the if_em driver, it appears there is a possibility of
a system crash when POLLING is enabled in conjunction with
a link change.
em_disable_intr leaves the RXSEQ interrupt enabled (which
occurs when a link goes up or down). THe em_intr routine,
when in polling mode, just returns (with the inte
> From: Terry Lambert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
...
>
> Anyway, it was a particular problem with the SuperMicro motherboards
> with the AMI BIOS that's been the subject of the rest of this
> discussion (i.e. the ones that kick out the escape sequence at the
> end, for no good reason, except to s
> From: Lucky Green [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> 1) Is there a way to prevent the FreeBSD kernel from ever
> switching into
> this different video mode, thus allowing me to continue to use the
> built-in serial terminal? The machine is a headless server, I
> don't care
> if video works as long
> From: Matthew Dillon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> :The cache and most of the execution hardware is shared. The
> execution
> :units can run something like 4 instructions per clock. If the "idle"
> :logical core is in a spinloop, then it is generating instructions for
> :execution, so you ar
From: Sean Chittenden [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> Anyone seen sysctl -a loop forever? I haven't been able to track down
> the MIB that it's gettinng hung up on, but it looks like there's a
> flaw in the algo that is walking through the MIBs. Given that this
> halts the machine while trying to
> From: Galen Sampson [mailto:galen_sampson@;yahoo.com]
>
> Out of pure curiosity what is the reason that the Duke and
> Rice patches were
> never incorporated into the base system. If it really
> enables the same machine
> to provide 4 times the number of connections this seems like
> it woul
> From: Kenneth P. Stox [mailto:stox@;imagescape.com]
>
> Well, I decided to have some fun and see if I could get a
> Novatel Merlin
> C-201 wireless modem running under FreeBSD. It seems I have run into a
> bit of a roadblock. It appears that the C-201 will only speak, through
> it's 16550 UAR
> Andrew Gallatin writes:
>> Kenneth D. Merry writes:
>> >
>> > I have released a new set of zero copy sockets patches, against
-current
>> > from today (May 17th, 2002).
>
> Hi Ken,
>
> I'm glad to see that you're still maintining this!
>
> Assuming the mutex issues get sorted out, what d
Order-dependency on the link command line has been common behaviour
in linkers forever as far as I know. This includes the FSF GNU linker,
as well as the system linker shipped with Unix systems.
It is a useful feature, allowing one to insert other objects in
front, e.g. to override 'malloc' with
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