Using ssh and rsync to copy a lot of stuff from my
old desktop to my new laptop. The old desktop is using
a wired connection to an (admittedly crappy) D-Link router,
the new one is using an Atheros wireless connection to the
same router. I periodically see the transfer fail with
the following me
Luigi Rizzo wrote:
On Sun, Mar 07, 2010 at 03:08:38PM -0800, Chuck Swiger wrote:
Hi, Tim--
On Mar 7, 2010, at 2:16 PM, Tim Kientzle wrote:
[ ... ]
Corrupted MAC on input.
Disconnecting: Packet corrupt
rsync: connection unexpectedly closed ... [receiver]
and then the rsync session is
Trying to get X up and running on my Aspire One netbook
and having a couple of problems. Here's the first:
Whenever I exit, the server gets a Signal 11 and crashes,
corrupting the screen. So far, I've been able to just
tap the power button to get a clean reboot (in particular,
it's just X crash
On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 10:40 PM, Tim Kientzle wrote:
Trying to get X up and running on my Aspire One netbook
and having a couple of problems. Here's the first:
Whenever I exit, the server gets a Signal 11 and crashes ...
FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT r201154M: Tue Dec 29 09:27:29 PST 2009 GE
Peter Jeremy wrote:
On 2010-Mar-14 00:04:21 -0800, Tim Kientzle wrote:
Okay, I've updated a bunch of ports and am still seeing the
crash. I rebuilt the server with debug symbols and finally
got something informative; here's the relevant portion of
the backtrace (frame #10 is the
Garrett Cooper wrote:
I implemented the fix I suggested earlier (scanning
the WindowTable to remove Window objects as they're
deleted) and it does consistently resolve the crash,
but now the X server restarts itself when xinit asks
it to exit, so there's clearly still something amiss.
Patch atta
Garrett Cooper wrote:
If I'm understanding you correctly you're saying it's an issue when I do:
pkg_add A B C
# 1 year passes
pkg_add D
# D depends on A, B, C, of different revisions. pkg_add barfs because
it can't find the applications, etc.
This is something that's been hashed over a numbe
Julian Elischer wrote:
On 4/10/10 12:07 PM, Tim Kientzle wrote:
[1] Actually, PBI might work just fine even for
embedded if we address the disk bloat issue. One
approach would be to make
/Package/Bar/libfoo-2.8.7.so
a symlink or hardlink to
/Package/Shared/libfoo-2.8.7.so-
This gives easy
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I do have a question, assuming PBI's were merged officially into the
FreeBSD ports tree,
say I had PostgreSQL Server installed, via PBI. then I wanted to tweak
a setting so I:
cd /usr/ports/databases/postgresql84-server/ && make deinstall clean
would the PBI at this point
Paul B Mahol wrote:
It is apparently not possible to make use of -use-the-force-luke=4gms
on FreeBSD when appending new session after 4GB. Mounted disk
afterwards show nothing.
Should we allow it like linux does?
Are you claiming there is a problem when FreeBSD reads such
images or a problem
128
11:21:54.847657 client.961 > server.1023: udp 128
11:21:57.857700 client.961 > server.1023: udp 128
11:22:00.867747 client.961 > server.1023: udp 128
This is reproducible with both a 4.3-RELEASE client
and a recent -CURRENT client. The server is running
4.3-RELEASE, if it's relevan
"David O'Brien" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
On Sun, Feb 09, 2003 at 06:14:30PM +0100, Matthias Schuendehuette wrote:
Nothing against 'booteasy', it does the job - but it looks ugly :-)
If that is the only reason to use grub, try osbsbeta.exe that is in the
tools directory of your CDROM or ftp.
generally not too hard to support
this: it usually just involves replacing
fopen() with popen().
Tim Kientzle
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with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
On Aug 15, 2010, at 1:56 AM, Alban Hertroys wrote:
> On 15 Aug 2010, at 3:12, Doug Barton wrote:
>
>> (And before anyone bothers to reply saying "Use pkg_info -O for that"
>> I'll save you the trouble. My version is from 10-20% faster. Not sure
>> why, don't really care.) :)
>
>
> Congrats for
On Aug 15, 2010, at 12:49 PM, Dimitry Andric wrote:
> So my first quick fix attempt was to replace the home-grown grep_fgetln
> with fgetln(3), which is in libc. This does not support gzip and bzip2
> files, but just to prove the point, it is enough. It gave the following
> profiling result:
FYI
On Aug 22, 2010, at 8:02 AM, Garrett Wollman wrote:
> In article <86k4nikglg@ds4.des.no> you write:
>> Mike Haertel writes:
>>> GNU grep uses the well-known Boyer-Moore algorithm, which looks
>>> first for the final letter of the target string, and uses a lookup
>>> table to tell it how far ah
On Aug 22, 2010, at 9:30 AM, Sean C. Farley wrote:
> On Sun, 22 Aug 2010, Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote:
>> Mike Haertel writes:
>>> GNU grep uses the well-known Boyer-Moore algorithm, which looks first for
>>> the final letter of the target string, and uses a lookup table to tell it
>>> how far ahe
I just tried adding
nfsv4_server_enable="YES"
to my rc.conf and found that after I rebooted the server, my FreeBSD 8 client
(still using NFSv3) couldn't connect because there was no RPC mapping for nfs.
Removing the option above and rebooting the server makes it work again.
Server is GENERI
On Sep 11, 2010, at 4:20 PM, Rick Macklem wrote:
>> I just tried adding
>>
>> nfsv4_server_enable="YES"
>>
>> to my rc.conf and found that after I rebooted the server, my FreeBSD 8
>> client (still using NFSv3) couldn't connect because there was no RPC
>> mapping for nfs.
> Did you specify bot
On Sep 11, 2010, at 5:26 PM, Rick Macklem wrote:
>> On Sep 11, 2010, at 4:20 PM, Rick Macklem wrote:
>>
>>> You can also look in /var/log/messages to see if any of the daemons
>>> are complaining about something.
>>
>> Only warning I see on a system reboot is:
>> nfsd: can't open /var/db/nfs-stab
On Oct 5, 2010, at 1:27 AM, Mykola Dzham wrote:
> Hi!
> bsd tar parse only '[!...]' as negate pattern, but gnu tar and bsd tar
> on 8-STABLE parse '[^...]' too:
>
> Fix:
>
> Index: usr.bin/tar/pathmatch.c
> ===
> --- usr.bin/tar/pa
Has anyone else tried "make buildworld" on an 8-STABLE checkout on a recent
-CURRENT using clang?
I'm seeing failures building GCC and was wondering if this was something
messed-up locally and whether it was worth even trying to fix.
Tim
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On Nov 28, 2010, at 8:58 AM, Alexander Best wrote:
>>> On Fri Nov 26 10, Andriy Gapon wrote:
on 26/11/2010 00:25 Alexander Best said the following:
> 1) take a > 4 GB example.file
Likely we don't support multi-extent files at the moment.
>>>
> i found a way to access the
On Dec 6, 2010, at 11:17 AM, Chuck Swiger wrote:
> On Dec 6, 2010, at 9:13 AM, Alex Kozlov wrote:
>> On Tue, Dec 07, 2010 at 02:03:50AM +0900, Norikatsu Shigemura wrote:
>>> .xz smaller than .gz, but effective is about 96.2%:-(.
>>
>> Some time ago I do similar tests. Changing compression fo
On Nov 29, 2010, at 9:19 AM, Sergey Kandaurov wrote:
> I see these errors when tar (not limited to but including the version
> from FreeBSD -current)
>
> # bsdtar -xf ~/arch.tgz
> ./: Attempt to write to an empty file
> ./.cpan/: Attempt to write to an empty file
> ./.cpan/CPAN/: Attempt to write
On Feb 8, 2011, at 9:58 AM, Shawn Webb wrote:
> I've just finished a patch to add recursive functionality to setfacl. Before
> I officially submit it, I'd like a few suggestions on how to improve the
> patch.
>
> The part I'm worried about involves the #define directive at top. I'm not
> sure what
I have a FreeBSD-CURRENT AMD64 system here that was last updated at r215029.
I'm trying to update it to r219079, but the build fails in lib/libz when it
tries to compile gvmat64.S. It looks like the Makefile here has a workaround
for clang on AMD64, but it doesn't seem to actually be working in
search right now to see if I can figure
out where those are coming from.
Somewhere in here is the answer to this problem,
I just don't see it yet.
Tim Kientzle
P.S. Could you email me the log from your build
that failed?
Could you try a lower -j value? If -j 2 fail
Tim Kientzle wrote:
Matt Loschert wrote:
Then the following output repeated 363 times
crunchgen: make error: Remaking `crunchgen_objs'
crunchgen: make error: Results of making crunchgen_objs:
crunchgen: make error:
crunchgen: make error: Rem
Gordon Tetlow wrote:
It seems that the $(OUTPUTS) target (which has 3 components) causes
this particular error.
+.ORDER: $(OUTPUTS)
$(OUTPUTS): $(CONF)
MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX=${CRUNCHOBJS} crunchgen -q -m $(OUTMK) -c $(OUTC) \
$(CONF)
Hmmm... Is that what .ORDER is for? To work aro
Gordon Tetlow wrote:
On Mon, Jul 21, 2003 at 09:36:37AM -0700, Tim Kientzle wrote:
Hmmm... Is that what .ORDER is for? To work around a
parallel make that gratuitously rebuilds things?
Right it serializes build dependencies. The problem with crunchgen ...
I would argue "the problem with
Garance A Drosihn wrote:
Wed Jul 23 20:08:06 EDT 2003 Starting make depend
in /usr/obj/usr/src/rescue/rescue/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/gzip
Wed Jul 23 20:08:07 EDT 2003 Finished make depend
in /usr/obj/usr/src/rescue/rescue/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/gzip
Wed Jul 23 20:08:09 EDT 2003 Starting make depen
ld
be able to fulfill from free RAM, that's a concern.
Otherwise, it is perfectly normal and expected to see
a low level of swap activity even when memory is not
completely full.
Tim Kientzle
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On Fri, 25 Jul 2003, 13:22-0400, Robert Watson wrote:
Yeah, seems like an oxy-moron, but this is a legitimate question, I
promise. My linksys wireless router requires me to disable the admin
password on it to tftp a firmware update to it--however, the Windows tftp
client that Linksys ships appear
Mark Murray wrote:
Scott Long writes:
Bruce Cran wrote:
There appears to be a breakage of 'rerelease' - that is, 'release' works, but
'rerelease' fails in telnetd.
I saw this too, but couldn't verify that it wasn't due to other problems
that I was experiencing. Mark, can you take a glance at this?
Ruslan Ermilov wrote:
On Fri, Aug 22, 2003 at 10:40:32AM -0400, Richard Coleman wrote:
I saw that. I guess my question is whether a default nsswitch.conf file
will be checked into /etc and /usr/share/examples/etc, or whether it
will be left empty? I would expect that if this capability was wor
Garrett Wollman wrote:
The problem is that the P4 is not very wide to begin with, and it's very
hard to optimize well for that 23-stage pipeline.
I'll say. I spent months tuning some assembly code for P3 and P4
and was quite disappointed that the P4 consistently required
more CPU cycles for the sa
e, send me that, too.
If you don't have a core file, copy and paste the above program
(you may also need to create confdefs.h, which is included at the
end of config.log), compile it with the following command, and try
running it. Let us know what happens on your system:
cc -o conft
output of databases/mysql323-client/work/mysql-3.23.57/config.log
is at <http://www.freebsddiary.org/tmp/config.log>
> On 29 Aug 2003 at 11:07, Tim Kientzle wrote:
#line 16878 "configure"
#include "confdefs.h"
#include
typedef long long longlong;
main()
{
longlong
Paul Richards wrote:
Overwriting a file that's currently executing results in a "Text file
busy" error.
I guess there are folks around who don't know this:
When you execute a program, the program is not simply copied
into memory. Instead, the kernel keeps the file open and pages the
executable in
John Birrell wrote:
On Sat, Sep 20, 2003 at 08:06:25PM -0600, M. Warner Losh wrote:
At the very least, we should put [-pthread] back as a noop. The timing on
this really sucks because it breaks the ports tree for an extended
period of time. While the fixes are simple, they haven't been made
yet.
Terry Lambert wrote:
Unfortunately, IDE disks do not permit disconnected writes, due
to a bug in the original IDE implementation,
Therefore IDE disks almost universally lie to the driver any
time write caching is enabled on an IDE drive.
I understand that SATA has fixed a number of problems
in
ord with the documentation.
What happens when you try to 'open' a connection?
Tim Kientzle
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ilt and installed, e.g.,
make -DNO_RESCUE buildworld
make -DNO_RESCUE installworld
Or add it to /etc/make.conf
* Take the plunge and compile /bin dynamically.
Define WITH_DYNAMICROOT in /etc/make.conf.
* Get a bigger hard disk. ;-)
Hope this helps,
Tim Kientzle
ld be content to have a static /sbin/sh
that is used as the system script interpreter for
rc scripts, etc.
Tim Kientzle
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Stijn Hoop wrote:
On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 09:27:55PM -0800, Tim Kientzle wrote:
Maybe it's time to separate these two functions?
I would be content to have a static /sbin/sh
that is used as the system script interpreter for
rc scripts, etc.
And /usr/bin/sh as a user shell?
I was thinking /b
uld be to build a couple of default termcap entries
into ncurses or into vi.
If there are still rough edges on some of this well,
that is what -CURRENT is all about, after all. ;-)
Tim Kientzle
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Guy Helmer wrote:
Thanks to /rescue and the live filesystem archives on
current.freebsd.org, I was able to recover a machine
that I hosed after the statfs change by trying to installworld
without building & booting a new kernel first.
Great! Any changes you could suggest
to /rescue based on that e
. Looks like it would only add about
65k (20k for fetch, another 45k for libfetch which isn't
already in the crunched /rescue binary).
Submit a PR on this....
Tim Kientzle
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Leo Bicknell wrote:
To boot a machine into single user mode you need a kernel, init,
and /bin/sh (minimally). It would seem to me that alone is a good
argument for those three things to be static.
You need a static shell, yes. That does not have to be /bin/sh.
init does prompt, and /rescue/sh is
Leo Bicknell wrote:
The more I think about init the more I don't like dynamic linking for
it. init needs to have as few failure modes as possible. I do still
think it's fine for all the other /bin and /sbin things.
Right now, /sbin/init is statically linked.
Ti
pwnam();
I expect that's where the bloat gets pulled in.
Tim Kientzle
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Garrett Wollman wrote:
< said:
There have been a lot of proposed solutions:
* Rewrite NSS to not require dlopen().
* Rewrite dlopen() to not require dynamic linking.
* Don't support NSS in /bin/sh.
* Change the default script interpreter for rc and such.
* Make dynamic linking faster.
You forg
hen connections start getting dropped.
I wonder if something (PAM module, maybe?) is opening a
file on each connection and you're running out of per-process
file descriptors.
Tim Kientzle
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M. Warner Losh wrote:
In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Bruce M Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
: On Thu, Nov 20, 2003 at 04:31:10PM -0800, Tim Kientzle wrote:
: > * /rescue/vi is currently unusable if /usr is missing because
: >the termcap database is in /usr
ng config files;
errors in config files are not generally going to break /bin.)
I don't see fetch as a requirement for diskless clients.
This is a red herring: diskless clients don't need /rescue since
any "recovery" necessary can be done on the server. Whether or
not diskless c
sary in /rescue
is to pay attention to people who actually use it. If
someone knows they'll never use it, NO_RESCUE has been shown
to measurably reduce buildworld times.
I doubt there is any perfect answer which will satisfy
everyone, but perhaps we can recognize that and figure out
some flexi
David O'Brien wrote:
On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 12:08:58PM -0800, Tim Kientzle wrote:
... I think [/rescue] only needs to support those
recovery actions necessary to repair /bin and /sbin if they break.
My stance is that no failure mode needs to
be repairable that wasn't repairable wit
ms from /usr/bin and
/usr/sbin should be included. Right now, that includes
tar, gzip, bzip2, and vi/ex.
Tim Kientzle
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's required for POSIX compliance.
Tony.
Ouch! Very good point, Tony.
Does POSIX require that such expansion work for
usernames that may not be in the current passwd
file?
That could dictate a lot.
Tim Kientzle
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Matthew D. Fuller wrote:
On Tue, Nov 25, 2003 at 01:41:53PM -0500 I heard the voice of
Garance A Drosihn, and lo! it spake thus:
It is a bit more complicated than that, because programs may
include embedded references to other files. So, I think
some developer would *have* to do a little up-front
David O'Brien wrote:
... lets agree that the FTP client will be
the last thing added to /rescue that is outside the original charter.
I sincerely hope it will be. Mostly because I have a large chunk
of new code to contribute that's broken and sitting in pieces all over
my hard disk at the moment.
David O'Brien wrote:
On Wed, Nov 26, 2003 at 10:37:48AM -0800, Tim Kientzle wrote:
and [/usr/bin/ftp] doesn't support HTTP.
$ /usr/bin/ftp http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/32524.html
Requesting http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/32524.
Garrett Wollman wrote:
<
The problem is that the authentication information needs to be stored
somewhere, and the usual solution is to store it in the directory,
...which is usually the worst possible place. Please don't penalize
those of us with sensible authentication systems.
Care to elaborat
tilde expansion. Having
that break in any environment relying on networked directory
services is a pretty serious loss of functionality.
Tim Kientzle
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n executables to be static, such as /bin/sh?)
Tim Kientzle
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Xin LI wrote:
The recent lzma import has enabled libarchive's lzma support. However,
it have come to our attention that building -HEAD on earlier FreeBSD
versions (specifically, 7.x after 700044 through 8.x before 800022) have
been broken.
The reason behind this is that 'make buildworld' will b
After seeing Kirk's presentation on SUJ at
BSDCan, I decided to give it a try.
Wow.
The reality of being able to pull the plug
(or watch an experimental kernel patch
go down in flames) and simply power back
on and have a running system with a sane
clean filesystem almost immediately is
truly ama
Matthew Seaman wrote:
Presumably the import of clang to the base does
not mean the immediate removal of gcc.
Of course not.
I'm not part of core and don't know what they
may have discussed, but I went through some hoops
to replace 'tar' and 'cpio' in the base system
and have some idea what app
Thanks for the report! This was caused by an
overflow in the compression calculation when the "in"
bytes was larger than the "out" bytes.
I just committed a fix as r209152.
Tim
Boris Samorodov wrote:
Hi!
-
% uname -a
FreeBSD host.ipt.ru 9.0-CURRENT FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT #4 r208799: Fri Jun
The -R here does look suspicious. I'll look into that and the
test failure.
The -L handling here looks correct, though. Remember
that -L means "follow symlinks", which means that foo/baz
should get created in the target as a directory and not as
a symlink, which is exactly what you've shown.
If
't
find it and will install a new version in /usr/local anyway.
At least this way your custom version won't get destroyed.
Tim Kientzle
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The compiler in 4.7 does not like this:
-std=gnu99
As a result, buildworld of -CURRENT fails
rather early.
Tim Kientzle
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David O'Brien wrote:
On Fri, Jun 06, 2003 at 09:46:07PM -0700, Tim Kientzle wrote:
The compiler in 4.7 does not like this:
-std=gnu99
As a result, buildworld of -CURRENT fails
rather early.
Committers are not required to support building 5-CURRENT, post
5.0-RELEASE on a 4.7 machine. So
David O'Brien wrote:
This won't work on non-i386, due to alloca issues.
+ WORLDTMP=${WORLDTMP} CSTD= \
may.
Hmmm... This seems like the Right Thing in
any case, since it is one less assumption you're
making about the build environment.
I'm still getting buildworld failures, though.
Long afte
Pete Carah wrote:
pedantic and Werror together cause problems again... I presume we really
need the quad type here. (or is this one due to a compiler "upgrade"?)
-pedantic is broken in a number of ways and has been for
a long time. While it is still useful for occasional linting,
combining i
source tree, I note that there's
only a handful of uses of alloca outside of contrib and gnu.
Tim Kientzle
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Artem 'Zazoobr' Ignatjev wrote:
Juli Mallett wrote:
Anyone with insight into this?
([EMAIL PROTECTED]:~)39% ( echo 1 ; ( ( echo 2 ; echo 3 ) | xargs -I% echo + % ) )
1
+ 2
+ 3
([EMAIL PROTECTED]:~)40% ( echo 1 ; ( ( echo 2 ; echo 3 ) | xargs -I% echo + % ) ) |
cat
1
+ +2
3
last cat is not necess
If not, this
could arguably be considered a kernel bug. Hmmm...
Tim Kientzle
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ordon's
work will make the special partitioning unnecessary,
and provide a single switch for selecting dynamic
linking.
Warning: I haven't been brave enough to try this
myself, though I've heard reports from people who have. ;-)
Good luck.
Tim Kientzle
_
e build-tools as possible?
For example, the attached is a pretty close substitute for
mkinit.c in the /bin/sh build. It's crude, but it seems to work
and eliminates the need to compile mkinit at build time.
I'll see if I can scrape together something similar for
the other /bin/sh
Marcel Moolenaar wrote:
On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 08:10:02PM -0700, Tim Kientzle wrote:
In general I think that the more portable the build tool, the better.
If the shell script is not gross or overly ugly compared to the C
program, then replacing the latter may not be a bad idea.
The attached diff
ng
time as an extension, but it's not standard behavior
and you should not rely on it.
Tim Kientzle
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src/make.i386/make installincludes
creating osreldate.h from newvers.sh
*** Error code 2
So I'm not the only one who has been bitten by this.
Try the following patch. Worked for me.
Tim Kientzle
Index: include/Makefile
===
Terry Lambert wrote:
Tim Kientzle wrote:
Andrey Elperin wrote:
Tell me, please, is it a possible to "make release" of CURRENT on 4.7 box
at present ?
I see that make release stops with a such messages for a couple of days :
===> include
cd /usr/src/include; /usr/obj/usr/src/m
Bruce Evans wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jul 2003, Tim Kientzle wrote:
Terry Lambert wrote:
Does this damage CURRENT on CURRENT or anything like that?
Don't know, haven't had a chance to try it.
To be honest, I was never able to understand how
the previous version was supposed to work,
Bruce Evans wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jul 2003, Tim Kientzle wrote:
In particular, newvers.sh is being run with the
current directory being ${.OBJDIR}, and ${.OBJDIR}
doesn't contain a Makefile, ...
... `make -V FOO' doesn't require a Makefile in -current. ...
A-HA!
I don't know th
John Reynolds wrote:
[ On Sunday, July 13, Barney Wolff wrote: ]
Me too. I'm about to try re-cvsupping, in case I caught some update
in the middle.
Somebody else asked if I was doing a "make -jN" buildworld where N > 1 and I
was. So, I just now did a buildworld with one process and it finished jus
ouldn't be surprised that it's causing
problems.
Maybe someone who understands parallel make better than I do
could suggest something to look for?
Tim Kientzle
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going into ${.OBJDIR}. If they're
showing up in the source dir of the program, then
you haven't built the /usr/obj/usr/src/rescue directory
tree. You should either:
* define RESCUE during buildworld
* cd /usr/src/rescue && make obj
Tim Kientzle
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Gordon Tetlow wrote:
On Mon, Jul 14, 2003 at 12:40:42AM -0700, David O'Brien wrote:
On Sun, Jul 13, 2003 at 09:49:46PM -0700, Nate Lawson wrote:
It appears /rescue is cleaning for way too much as part of buildworld.
For instance, groff is NOT part of /rescue (or we have other things to
discuss. :)
Gordon Tetlow wrote:
On Mon, Jul 14, 2003 at 12:44:05PM -0700, Tim Kientzle wrote:
Gordon Tetlow wrote:
On Sun, Jul 13, 2003 at 09:49:46PM -0700, Nate Lawson wrote:
It appears /rescue is cleaning for way too much as part of buildworld.
For instance, groff is NOT part of /rescue (or we have other
Gordon Tetlow wrote:
Attached is the patch. It basically makes CRUNCH_PROGS into a per
directory item and then only does a make obj on the per program
directory.
Hmmm I do have a philosophical quibble with your
approach: My original intent for this Makefile was
that the top part was rescue-sp
Gordon Tetlow wrote:
Attached is the patch. It basically makes CRUNCH_PROGS into a per
directory item and then only does a make obj on the per program
directory.
Tim Kientzle whined:
Hmmm I do have a philosophical quibble ...
Gordon Tetlow generously suggested:
That could probably be solved
rescue really has. These are
all approximate timings on my desktop machine:
without /rescue: 47:30
with original /rescue: 50:12
with optimized /rescue: 50:10
Tim Kientzle
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understand the ability to enter
e. g. ufs:/dev/ad0a at "mountroot>" when it doesn't work.
I've also been stung by the fact that the
"mountroot>" prompt is broken.
I looked briefly at the code, but the
bug is not particularly obvious.
Tim Kientzle
Harald Schmalzbauer wrote:
Let's see what Tim can contribute to this topic, since he also claimed to
have problems with "mountroot>"
I installed FreeBSD (I think it was 5.0-RELEASE) on a hard disk
attached to ad0. It worked, I tested it.
I reconnected the hard disk to a separate IDE controller as a
John-Mark Gurney wrote:
Harald Schmalzbauer wrote this message on Wed, Jul 16, 2003 at 02:58 +0200:
Let's see what Tim can contribute to this topic, since he also claimed to
have problems with "mountroot>"
I have a possible patch that might address people's problems with mountroot.
http://people.
casm && make aicasm)
and copying it into the /usr/obj tree. Then
'make kernel' was able to succeed.
Tim Kientzle
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One possible solution to the sort problem:
* Continue to accept the old syntax for now,
but add a warning message, something like:
"Warning: sort +N is deprecated, use -k instead."
* After a year, drop support for the
old syntax. After staring at warning
messages for a year, few peo
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