On Tue, 14 Dec 1999 15:13:17 GMT, Nik Clayton wrote:
We need more than just an ASCII capture. Grabbing the colour information
is also very useful. This lets you make full colour pictures of things
like sysinstall.
Sure, I was just explaining what lots of users have asked for. I'm not
Is Qt going to be put into the base system in this case? If
I can wrestle along with figuring out a few little problems with
Qt (ones that I could even somehow more easily solve with
Motif!), then I'll continue to develop my system administration
tool(s) with it.
No, I don't envision
"Daniel C. Sobral" wrote:
Peter Jeremy wrote:
Firstly, size: One of sysinstall's requirements is that it fit (along
with a variety of other related commands) onto a floppy disk. Last
time I checked, the /stand bundle (sysinstall + friends) was ~640K.
The smallest X-server
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999 21:26:04 +0100, Oliver Fromme wrote:
I'm not yet 100% convinced that it would make sense to separate
the propellers code into a module. Is 5 Kbyte of kernel code
really that much of a problem?
No, but think ahead, into a future where we use a teeny tiny kernel into
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 06:21:48 +1100, Peter Jeremy wrote:
@@ -344,7 +352,7 @@
tools::
.for _tool in ${_strfile} ${_aout_tools} usr.bin/gensetdefs \
gnu/usr.bin/binutils usr.bin/objformat usr.bin/yacc usr.bin/colldef \
-gnu/usr.bin/bison gnu/usr.bin/cc
+gnu/usr.bin/bison
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 01:24:40 CST, Bruce Albrecht wrote:
Would it be simpler to install from the latest -current snap?
Wait a few days. We're almost at the point where current CURRENT can be
built on pre-sigset_t-changes CURRENT.
Watch your cvs-all mail. :-)
Ciao,
Sheldon.
To
The sbc driver seems to correctly detect my soundcard for the first time
since the introduction of newpcm but I don't actually get sound out of it.
I think the IRQ it's detecting might be wrong. Both Windows 98 and the old
pcm driver always used IRQ 10.
Unfortunately my BIOS is too
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
Sheldon Hearn wrote:
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999 15:42:11 +0100, Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
You set all those variables for the first make command, but not for the
second. What did you expect to happen?
That make(1) would execute.
At 6:44 PM -0800 1999/12/14, Rodney W. Grimes wrote:
There... easy enough??? fsdb is not that big of a deal as long as you
stay with the basic commands of cd, ls, chown, chmod, chgrp, rm and ln.
It's the ones like uplink downlink chgen that can hose you up but good.
If it looks like a
Martin Cracauer wrote:
You mix up variable settings for just one command vs. permanent ones;
export VAR=foo
VAR=bar sh -c 'echo $VAR'
echo $VAR
==
bar
foo
This is correct, the second line's variable settings only affect the
command behind it. The next command will have the original
This all sounds like a decision, whether we want to be a desktop
or a server-only system.
For mainly server-oriented, the "install source to update" or
console-based setups are quite enough, because the system will
most probably administraded by people, that know, what they are
doing.
But if we
Hi
My Toshiba Libretto has dogslow disk; here is the probe message. Any
chances of getting this one to work in DMA mode?
ad0: TOSHIBA MK4310MAT/G2.02 B ATA-4 disk at ata0 as master
ad0: 4126MB (8452080 sectors), 8944 cyls, 15 heads, 63 S/T, 512 B/S
ad0: 16 secs/int, 1 depth queue, PIO
M
To
It seems Mark Murray wrote:
Hi
My Toshiba Libretto has dogslow disk; here is the probe message. Any
chances of getting this one to work in DMA mode?
ad0: TOSHIBA MK4310MAT/G2.02 B ATA-4 disk at ata0 as master
ad0: 4126MB (8452080 sectors), 8944 cyls, 15 heads, 63 S/T, 512 B/S
ad0: 16
OK, the problem is real.
BTW, its worse:
#! /bin/sh
hash -v
PATH=/sbin:/bin
PATH=/foo:/bar:/bin ls
hash -v
ls
= coredump
Working on it.
--
%
Martin Cracauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.cons.org/cracauer/
BSD User Group Hamburg,
Sounds great. I hope this means I get to import OpenSSH!
Hell, yes!
I reckon it may be better to let me do it; that way I can get
Internat and Freefall synchronised.
M
--
Mark Murray
Join the anti-SPAM movement: http://www.cauce.org
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with
Sound okay to everyone?
Fine by me! :-)
M
--
Mark Murray
Join the anti-SPAM movement: http://www.cauce.org
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999, Andrew Gallatin wrote:
I have an old, wheezing Dell Lattitude LM with an ESS1688 sound chip.
(specs at http://support.dell.com/docs/systems/pespmmx/specs.htm)
I have managed to get newpcm to find the 1688 via 'options PNPBIOS'
and the following patch:
I've added
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Jeremy L. Stock wrote:
The sbc driver seems to correctly detect my soundcard for the first time
since the introduction of newpcm but I don't actually get sound out of it.
I think the IRQ it's detecting might be wrong. Both Windows 98 and the old
pcm driver always used
Martin Cracauer wrote:
OK, the problem is real.
BTW, its worse:
#! /bin/sh
hash -v
PATH=/sbin:/bin
PATH=/foo:/bar:/bin ls
hash -v
ls
= coredump
It seems to me that when there's a PATH= assignment you don't want to
add anything to the cache or alternatively, clear the cache after
It seems Mark Murray wrote:
Hi
My Toshiba Libretto has dogslow disk; here is the probe message. Any
chances of getting this one to work in DMA mode?
ad0: TOSHIBA MK4310MAT/G2.02 B ATA-4 disk at ata0 as master
ad0: 4126MB (8452080 sectors), 8944 cyls, 15 heads, 63 S/T, 512 B/S
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
It seems to me that when there's a PATH= assignment you don't want to
add anything to the cache or alternatively, clear the cache after
execution of the command having a PATH= assignment.
The first solution is better, but the source messes with
It seems Mark Murray wrote:
It seems Mark Murray wrote:
Hi
My Toshiba Libretto has dogslow disk; here is the probe message. Any
chances of getting this one to work in DMA mode?
ad0: TOSHIBA MK4310MAT/G2.02 B ATA-4 disk at ata0 as master
ad0: 4126MB (8452080 sectors), 8944
Martin Cracauer wrote:
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
It seems to me that when there's a PATH= assignment you don't want to
add anything to the cache or alternatively, clear the cache after
execution of the command having a PATH= assignment.
The first solution is
According to Hellmuth Michaelis:
Should i be concerned about this ?
No. You have booted with "-v" haven't you ? It is just a message saying that
the # of tagged commands is down from the default of 64 to 31. Nothing to
worry about.
--
Ollivier ROBERT -=- FreeBSD: The Power to Serve! -=- [EMAIL
Adam Strohl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Daniel C. Sobral wrote:
Hey, I like CUI. I'd rather install with a CUI than a GUI, all other
things being equal. And besides some quirks here and there, I really
like sysinstall.
Its nice, but its not where it should be.
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Thomas David Rivers wrote:
This is important to note... 25% of all the installs I do are
on MGA (remember monochrome graphics adapter - a hercules card.)
True, hence there would be other display targets, ie; CUI, and I like
Jordan's text-only non GUI idea, too. It
So, would having a kernel config utility help us get better
reviews? I was thinking about something like an explorer-type
thing that was divided into two panes. On the left would be
LINT. Here, we would have icons representing the various
devices. For example, we could ahve an icon
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
Martin Cracauer wrote:
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
It seems to me that when there's a PATH= assignment you don't want to
add anything to the cache or alternatively, clear the cache after
execution of the command
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 10:41:56 +0100, "Thomas Runge" wrote:
So, we have a very good server OS, let's focus a little bit
more on the desktop.
Most developers are more concerned with improving the operating system
itself than providing an inviting desktop experience.
The problem is that it's
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
VESA syscons, either using libvgl and an array of crude widgets or
something like MGR and its widget set, has long been on the wish-list
but I didn't even include it in my summary since it's still very much
a pipe-dream. :-)
Hmm, this has been a
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 03:09:10AM -0600, Jeremy L. Stock wrote:
The sbc driver seems to correctly detect my soundcard for the first time
since the introduction of newpcm but I don't actually get sound out of it.
Just a quick check: Can you type "mixer" at a shell prompt and check
whether
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 10:41:56AM +0100, Thomas Runge wrote:
This all sounds like a decision, whether we want to be a desktop
or a server-only system.
I don't agree at all -- I think that's another divsion which is
orthogonal to the current discussion. Why can't we be a server OS
with a
So, would having a kernel config utility help us get better
reviews? I was thinking about something like an explorer-type
thing that was divided into two panes. On the left would be
LINT. Here, we would have icons representing the various
devices. For example, we could ahve an icon
At 7:34 AM -0500 1999/12/15, Thomas David Rivers wrote:
This is important to note... 25% of all the installs I do are
on MGA (remember monochrome graphics adapter - a hercules card.)
So, I would not be in favor of any replacement that required a VESA
or VGA platform...
There a more Linux distros with grahical installs. Correl 1.0 - based
upon debian. Also, I believe that SUSE 6.3 has one also.
Tom Veldhouse
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999, Don 'Duck' Harper wrote:
Sometime Tomorrow, Daniel C. Sobral said something like this:
:-)But the fact is that
jack wrote in list.freebsd-current:
Today Oliver Fromme wrote:
I'm afraid that wouldn't work. In order to run non-trivial X11
apps, you _will_ need a full-blown X server, including X libs.
You'll also need at least a very simple window manager (while
xclock would probably work
"Jordan K. Hubbard" wrote:
VESA syscons, either using libvgl and an array of crude widgets or
something like MGR and its widget set, has long been on the wish-list
but I didn't even include it in my summary since it's still very much
a pipe-dream. :-) There's actually one mode you forgot,
Better news. I've recompiled the kernel just now and that did not make a
difference. Then I recompiled pccardd and pccardc and I can now
suspend/resume my machine at will (as in I've suspended the machine
during the writing of this message).
Thanks.
Nick
On Tue, 7 Dec 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
Thus spake Don 'Duck' Harper ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
fires up XFree86's VGA server. And it fits all this on one floppy. They
do have two floppies, one for local CD/disk installs, and another for
NFS/FTP/HTTP/SMB installs.
So, I know it can be done. Is it worth the effort? I donno.
Maybe
Please send me the output of the following:
xntpdc -c loopinfo
xntpdc -c kerninfo
xntpdc -c peer
Poul-Henning
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Khetan Gajjar writes:
Hi.
I've started seeing "microuptime() went backwards" errors, followed
by calcru errors. I think it's
Donn Miller wrote:
So, would having a kernel config utility help us get better
reviews? I was thinking about something like an explorer-type
thing that was divided into two panes. On the left would be
LINT. Here, we would have icons representing the various
devices. For example, we
On Mon, 13 Dec 1999, Greg Lehey wrote:
Note: this fixes some recent problems (Hi Greg!) that I've been
having.
Really? I thought they were more serious.
So did I. Although, I did a 'make world' after I saw the change go in,
so the fix could have come from a different commit.
In any
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 16:26:29 +0100, Oliver Fromme wrote:
Sure, in that case, syscons itself should be a module,
shouldn't it?
I would have thought so, yes.
Ciao,
Sheldon.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
I can definitely see advanatages, not that I would use it myself. :-) I
also think that if it was written properly, which I'm sure that it would
be, it could also be used to setup ppp etc..
By clicking on the icons, a properties pane would show the
properties for this device. Of
Alexander Langer wrote in list.freebsd-current:
Thus spake Don 'Duck' Harper ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
fires up XFree86's VGA server. And it fits all this on one floppy. They
do have two floppies, one for local CD/disk installs, and another for
NFS/FTP/HTTP/SMB installs.
So, I know it
Same here:
henny:n_hibma# mixer
Mixer vol is currently set to 75:75
Mixer synthis currently set to 0:0
Mixer pcm is currently set to 75:75
Mixer line is currently set to 75:75
Mixer mic is currently set to 0:0
Mixer cd is currently set to 75:75
sbc0: ESS
I have a few "scratch" servers which are running -current from early
July. They serve large, fast scratch filesystems striped over 4 large
IDE drives. With the recent improvements to the NFS code the ATA
code, I was hoping to get them running a more recent -current.
However, I'm seeing a
Does the newpcm system support the Sound Blaster 128 PCI card (ESS1371
chipset)? I am aware of a pcm dirver for it in STABLE, but I have not
tried it.
Tom Veldhouse
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999, Peter Wemm wrote:
The RZ1000 is *dangerous*! We are doing no favours by making it run.. :-/
IMHO It is better to loose the user by not playing ball than to corrupt
their data or run unreliably and make them hate us for it.
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Bruce Albrecht writes:
: I know that I need to build the tools for config, and build a new
: kernel, and reboot it before doing a make world. My question is,
: after booting the new kernel, do I run MAKEDEV immediately, or do I run
: make world before runnning
Hi,
I am attempting to build the source, and am getting the following
error:
cc -O -pipe -DFREEBSD_NATIVE -DIN_GCC -DHAVE_CONFIG_H
-DDEFAULT_TARGET_VERSION=\"2.95.2\" -DDEFAULT_TARGET_MACHINE=\"i386-unknown-freebsd\"
-I/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc/../cc_tools
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Oliver Fromme writes:
: That's because X itself contains a very simple "windowmanager"
: functionality, which focuses the window beneath the mouse
: pointer. But when you have to access something which is behind
: another window, you lose.
That's not entirely true.
:However, I'm seeing a showstopping problem when running newer kernels:
:When writing a large file via TCP, a Solaris 2.7 client pauses when
:closing the file, and appears to become stuck in an infinate loop.
:Eg:
:
:dd if=/dev/zero of=zot bs=64k count=8192
:8192+0 records in
:8192+0 records out
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thomas Veldhouse
writes:
: Does the newpcm system support the Sound Blaster 128 PCI card (ESS1371
: chipset)? I am aware of a pcm dirver for it in STABLE, but I have not
: tried it.
Looking at src/sys/dev/sound/pci/es137x.c, we find the comment:
* Support the
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Bruce Burden writes:
: Yet I see people are getting their builds to work. Okay, what
:did I miss?
Looks like a bug to me... What is the date/version of the system you
are updating?
Warner
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Oliver Fromme
writes:
: That's because X itself contains a very simple "windowmanager"
: functionality, which focuses the window beneath the mouse
: pointer. But when you have to access something which is behind
:
Thanks,
I will CVSUP tonight and try out the new sound and ATA at the same
time. I am runing on an AMD board (Compaq style 751 chipset) with a
200MHz FSB. Promises to be interesting with ATA and sound. Everthing
always takes work with this board, because I can't disable PNP.
Tom
While testing ktrace today for the FreeBSD-Audit project with smashwidgets, I
left the room and came back to my bios booting up. Unfortunatly smashwidgets
wasn't in full logging mode for speed, so I don't know what arguments or
environment variablesm were executed to trigger the crash.
What
Matthew Dillon writes:
This is very odd. Does it lockup with UDP or only with TCP? And only
with a solaris client?
This appears to be solaris only. I just tried a UDP mount I see the
same problem. Is there anything else I can do?
...
:
:- UDP NFS write performance from
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Thomas Veldhouse wrote:
I will CVSUP tonight and try out the new sound and ATA at the same
time. I am runing on an AMD board (Compaq style 751 chipset) with a
200MHz FSB. Promises to be interesting with ATA and sound. Everthing
always takes work with this board,
:
:
:Matthew Dillon writes:
: This is very odd. Does it lockup with UDP or only with TCP? And only
: with a solaris client?
:
:This appears to be solaris only. I just tried a UDP mount I see the
:same problem. Is there anything else I can do?
Yes, see if you can repeat the
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 07:49:27 -0500, Donn Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
thing that was divided into two panes. On the left would be
LINT. Here, we would have icons representing the various
devices.
This is actually a really cool idea, although it needs a bit of
refinement, and we would
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Garrett Wollman wrote:
Icons are probably not the right user interface. I'd suggest
something like Windows's ``hardware manager'' (in the System control
panel).
Some people were afraid that it would end up like the Windows
registry. Well, even if it did, I'd argue that
It seems Thomas Veldhouse wrote:
Thanks,
I will CVSUP tonight and try out the new sound and ATA at the same
time. I am runing on an AMD board (Compaq style 751 chipset) with a
200MHz FSB. Promises to be interesting with ATA and sound. Everthing
always takes work with this board,
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Donn Miller
writes:
: I've got the ESS 1868 chipset, and all I get is static. In fact, when I
: press the "play" button in RealPlayer, the sound clip never starts but
: hangs in the beginning. Then, RealPlayer itself hangs. I end up killing
: RealPlayer with
Some people were afraid that it would end up like the Windows registry.
But it wouldn't, because that isn't the right thing.
A kernel config utility should end up functioning like XF86Setup. When was the
last time most people made an XF86Config file since that program came around?
and we
It seems Robert Watson wrote:
On Tue, 14 Dec 1999, Peter Wemm wrote:
The RZ1000 is *dangerous*! We are doing no favours by making it run.. :-/
IMHO It is better to loose the user by not playing ball than to corrupt
their data or run unreliably and make them hate us for it.
Chris Costello wrote:
So is all of this (TCL, Qt, et. al.) going into the base
system to facilitate this work?
NOT AGAIN! Please! In particular TCL.
--
Daniel C. Sobral(8-DCS)
who is as social as a wampas
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Unsubscribe:
Chris Costello wrote:
What do you want in making Unix quick to administer? Seems to
me that's the real goal of those things. Click click click done,
you know.
/me clear the throat
GUI's are *NEVER* the faster way to administer. They can make faster a
very limited set of tasks. When I
"Rodney W. Grimes" wrote:
Yea... been hearing that for 4 years... one of it's big short comings is
that it needs a persistent backing store for this. Sounds like this C
program could fullfill one of the missing parts of devfs :-)
F persistent backing store. The daemon solution is perfectly
Wilko Bulte wrote:
This does, however, have all the risks of building yet another SMIT or
SAM. :-( Neither attempt at making Unix sysadm 'user-friendly' makes
me want to cheer.
Actually, I very much like both SMIT (in it's 4.x incarnation) and SAM.
Sure, I'll complain loudly if that was the
Warner Losh wrote in list.freebsd-current:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Oliver Fromme
writes:
: That's because X itself contains a very simple "windowmanager"
: functionality, which focuses the window beneath the mouse
: pointer. But when you have to access something which is behind
Bruce Burden wrote:
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc/../cc_drv/libcc_drv.a(choose-temp.o):
In function `make_temp_file':
choose-temp.o(.text+0x264): undefined reference to `mkstemps'
*** Error code 1
Yet I see people are getting their builds to work. Okay, what
Donn Miller wrote in list.freebsd-current:
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
[...]
There is no placement management, no redirection of windows, no
visibility management or anything of the sort in the X server. It
But, if there's only one app running, then that app gets the
"Daniel C. Sobral" wrote:
Perhaps you mean "easy" instead of "quick"? Or maybe "quick" as in "flat
learning curve"?
Thats it. We have to provide some tools to easily administrate
the system for the *avarage* user (but without breaking the
"old fashioned way")
It would be nice, if we really
I'm having trouble convincing -CURRENT to disklabel or newfs an AMI
MEGARAID adapter.
amr0: AMI MegaRAID irq 10 at device 11.1 on pci0
amr0: firmware GH89 bios 1.41 16MB memory
amrd0: MegaRAID logical drive on amr0
amrd0: 122647MB (251181056 sectors) RAID 5 (optimal)
[1:22:322]root@raid1:~
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Daniel C. Sobral" writes:
"Rodney W. Grimes" wrote:
Yea... been hearing that for 4 years... one of it's big short comings is
that it needs a persistent backing store for this. Sounds like this C
program
I may be missing the obvious, but what is
everybody using for userland tools (ping6 etc)
on current? I haven't tried, but will the
kame-snap tools for 3 work?
Thanks
Chad
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 12:37:43PM -0500, Donn Miller wrote:
I've got the ESS 1868 chipset, and all I get is static. In fact, when I
press the "play" button in RealPlayer, the sound clip never starts but
hangs in the beginning. Then, RealPlayer itself hangs. I end up killing
RealPlayer
FreeBSD-current source cvsup'd at 1034pst on 991215.
--
Building libraries
--
cd /usr/src;
COMPILER_PATH=/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec:/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/bin
FYI just CVSup'd and got this:
X-UIDL: 495287ccf607850cc65e4c59c7b49751
cd /usr/src/lib/librpcsvc; make beforeinstall
cd /usr/src/lib/libskey;make beforeinstall
sh /usr/src/tools/install.sh -C -o root -g wheel -m 444 /usr/src/lib/libskey/skey.h
:Also, while read performance has improved by 44%, write performance
:has degraded by between 50 - 70% (FreeBSD clients)! Here are some
:quick benchmarks. Note that the file size of 512MB is larger than
:memory on both the server and client. Also note that the disk array
:on the server will
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 11:33:19PM +1030, Mark Newton wrote:
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 10:41:56AM +0100, Thomas Runge wrote:
For mainly server-oriented, the "install source to update" or
console-based setups are quite enough, because the system will
most probably administraded by people,
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999 at 05:28:32PM -0600, Chris Costello wrote:
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999, Donn Miller wrote:
Maybe we could call it "sysconfig", in honor of the old
/etc/sysconfig file that was superceded bt /etc/rc.conf.
That's not very creative! I had "Trident" in mind. Only
problem
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999 at 05:44:32PM -0600, Chris Costello wrote:
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999, Wilko Bulte wrote:
This does, however, have all the risks of building yet another SMIT or
SAM. :-( Neither attempt at making Unix sysadm 'user-friendly' makes
me want to cheer.
What do you want in
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999 at 03:32:09PM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
And: how many people would volunteer for such a job?
Or is it assumed that since this appears suspiciously like Real Work
it will be a paid-for job?
It will be a paid-for job, naturally.
:)
Something we also have to
Matthew Dillon writes:
:Also, while read performance has improved by 44%, write performance
:has degraded by between 50 - 70% (FreeBSD clients)! Here are some
:quick benchmarks. Note that the file size of 512MB is larger than
:memory on both the server and client. Also note that
From the keyboard of Hellmuth Michaelis:
from time to time (i have no idea how to reproduce it or what causes it) i get
the following message on the console of one of my current systems:
(da1:ncr0:0:1:0): tagged openings now 31
The drive causing this is a
da1 at ncr0 bus 0
The compile dies with prototype-missing errors on osig*() routines
in kern/kern_sig.c and i386/i386/machdep.c if COMPAT_43 is not defined.
-Matt
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the
Call it Inuit. (rationale: Inuit feed on pinguins (right?))
How about PolarBear in that case? :)
- Jordan
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
Wilko Bulte wrote:
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999 at 05:28:32PM -0600, Chris Costello wrote:
On Tue, Dec 14, 1999, Donn Miller wrote:
Maybe we could call it "sysconfig", in honor of the old
/etc/sysconfig file that was superceded bt /etc/rc.conf.
That's not very creative! I had "Trident"
Thomas Veldhouse wrote:
Does the newpcm system support the Sound Blaster 128 PCI card (ESS1371
chipset)? I am aware of a pcm dirver for it in STABLE, but I have not
tried it.
The only major problems have been with certain ASUS motherboards and
some of the newer PCI128's. (the card freezes)
Wilko Bulte wrote:
Whatever [CG]UI you throw at the problem at hand: there is *NO* programmer-
fixable way out from cluelessnes. What good would be a system that is
a snap to install but once it is installed it says # to you?
It says /etc/motd to you, actually. :-)
--
Daniel C. Sobral
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 11:44:17AM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
Call it Inuit. (rationale: Inuit feed on pinguins (right?))
How about PolarBear in that case? :)
I was under the impression that Polar Bears are native to the
North Pole and penguins are from the South Pole.
Promoting a
Matthew Dillon writes:
:
:
:Matthew Dillon writes:
: This is very odd. Does it lockup with UDP or only with TCP? And only
: with a solaris client?
:
:This appears to be solaris only. I just tried a UDP mount I see the
:same problem. Is there anything else I
On 15 Dec, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
Call it Inuit. (rationale: Inuit feed on pinguins (right?))
How about PolarBear in that case? :)
Okpicky time here.
Polar bears and Inuits are found near the North Pole (Alaska,
Greenland, etc).
Penguins are typically only found in Antarctica. Their
On 1999-Dec-15 19:57:49 +1100, Sheldon Hearn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-gnu/usr.bin/bison gnu/usr.bin/cc
+gnu/usr.bin/bison gnu/usr.bin/cc gnu/usr.bin/texinfo
Presumably this hunk is a stray fix for something other than the fortune
database? :-)
Yes it is. I was having problems with
Jon Parise wrote:
On Wed, Dec 15, 1999 at 11:44:17AM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
Call it Inuit. (rationale: Inuit feed on pinguins (right?))
How about PolarBear in that case? :)
I was under the impression that Polar Bears are native to the
North Pole and penguins are from the
I was under the impression that Polar Bears are native to the
North Pole and penguins are from the South Pole.
Really? What eats penguins then? Maybe walrus?
- Jordan
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
Polar bears and Inuits are found near the North Pole (Alaska,
Greenland, etc).
Penguins are typically only found in Antarctica. Their only natural
enemies are killer whales and leopard seals.
I knew we'd get to the bottom of this eventually. We're hackers,
not naturalists! :-)
OK, I
1 - 100 of 154 matches
Mail list logo