I asked on -mobile, but didn't get an answer, so now I'm asking here. I
Have a Dell Latitude CPiR, and am thinking about getting the Intel cardbus
82559 based ethercard for this machine. What I want to know is, once
cardbus is rolled into 3.x, or when 4.x is fianlly release, will the FXP
-On [19991122 14:15], Jamie Bowden ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
I asked on -mobile, but didn't get an answer, so now I'm asking here. I
Have a Dell Latitude CPiR, and am thinking about getting the Intel cardbus
82559 based ethercard for this machine. What I want to know is, once
cardbus
Hi to all! I am new to FreeBSD. I was on Linux, and with great help of my
friend Alex I got on FreeBSD. I have several questions: 1) how can I build
my kernel that he can recognize my modem...Kernel show that hi is testing
COM3 but he cannot find there...2) my sound card is PnP and kernel found
-On [19991122 15:40], Milos Puzovic ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hi to all! I am new to FreeBSD. I was on Linux, and with great help of
my friend Alex I got on FreeBSD. I have several questions: 1) how can I
build my kernel that he can recognize my modem...Kernel show that hi is
testing COM3 but he
Hi,
SPY allows you to monitor and/or selectively block syscalls on your
system. It could be used either as a safety monitoring device, policy
enforcement, or debugging tool. You can download the sources (NOTE:
-current only) from:
http://www.freebsd.org/~abial/spy-0.1.tgz
Excerpt of
Daniel /me shivers at the thought of my (easily) 500+ new messages a day
Daniel and hundreds of thousands of messages being stored one file for each
Daniel message...
Works OK for us (and a number of even larger ISPs using Maildirs).
Though we use NetApps for the file storage and they have a
On Sun, 21 Nov 1999, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
Bringing something into question without detail is useless. If I
seriously questioned your sexual orientation, for example, you'd have
every right to ask me just what the hell I was basing such a question
on and why I was uncertain about it in
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Jamie Bowden
writes:
:
: I asked on -mobile, but didn't get an answer, so now I'm asking here. I
: Have a Dell Latitude CPiR, and am thinking about getting the Intel cardbus
: 82559 based ethercard for this machine. What I want to know is, once
: cardbus is rolled
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Ben Rosengart
writes:
: In my tests, I've found that FreeBSD is getting faster with successive
: releases -- I think because the increased weight of the extra disks helps
: overcome wind resistance.
That's just due to the beefier system requirements. of course the
On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, Alan Judge wrote:
Daniel /me shivers at the thought of my (easily) 500+ new messages a day
Daniel and hundreds of thousands of messages being stored one file for each
Daniel message...
Works OK for us (and a number of even larger ISPs using Maildirs).
Though we use
Please take a look at the following piece of code that creates a large
hole in a file named hole.dat. It tries to write 0x30-0x39 both at the
front and the tail of that file, the hole is therefore in the middle.
main()
{
char c;
FILE * fp;
fp = fopen("hole.dat", "w");
On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, Zhihui Zhang wrote:
lseek(fileno(fp), 3 * 8192, SEEK_CUR);
don't mix things that use file descriptors with stdio. End of problem.
ron
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with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
Ok... I have *had* it with the meta, but not really, lockd. Are there any
kernel issues with correctly implimenting rpc.lockd?How can I take a
filehandle and map it into a filename, with path, so I may open it and lock
it on the server? Are there any protocol specs? I downloaded the RFC
On Mon, Nov 22, 1999, Zhihui Zhang wrote:
lseek(fileno(fp), 3 * 8192, SEEK_CUR);
If I remove the fflush(fp), then the characters 0x30-0x39 will be all
written at the end of the file (use hexdump to find out), not as expected
(one at the beginning and the other at the end). It seems
On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, David E. Cross wrote:
Ok... I have *had* it with the meta, but not really, lockd. Are there any
kernel issues with correctly implimenting rpc.lockd?How can I take a
filehandle and map it into a filename, with path, so I may open it and lock
it on the server? Are
On Mon, Nov 22, 1999 at 01:48:38PM -0500, Zhihui Zhang wrote:
By the way, I also find out if you copy a file with holes into another
file, the holes in the first file will be replaced with 0s in the second
file, taking more disk space (check with du). Is there a better solution
for this?
Actually I wrote a system call for opening a file given a file handle for
freebsd a while back (oh, gee, has it really been 5 years ...), as part of
mnfs i'll try to find it. You don't need to map it to a filename to
make it go.
ron
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with
or other BSD platforms?
Any pointers are excellent.
ps. I understand that most of the DSL modems/routers
using ethernet or ATM as the interface talking to the
host. However, I'm asking about the internal DSL modem
that need DSL driver.
Robert
On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, Ronald G. Minnich wrote:
Actually I wrote a system call for opening a file given a file handle for
freebsd a while back (oh, gee, has it really been 5 years ...), as part of
mnfs i'll try to find it. You don't need to map it to a filename to
make it go.
i forgot to
Does NetBSD have a working rpc.lockd... that would make this much easier.
--
David Cross | email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Acting Lab Director | NYSLP: FREEBSD
Systems Administrator/Research Programmer | Web: http://www.cs.rpi.edu/~crossd
Rensselaer
On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, David E. Cross wrote:
Does NetBSD have a working rpc.lockd... that would make this much easier.
at a glance at http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/... no.
Linux may have one, a temporary GPL'd port would be interesting perhaps.
-Alfred
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I've noticed about 99% of the panics on our machines are the result of NFS,
more often than not it is the result of a backing store file being blown
away underneath the client. ie. person editing a file on one machine,
compiling and running on a second, then removing the binary on the first
"Julian" == Julian Elischer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Julian (the other end was a 486DX50 :-) with enough RAM we could
Julian probably serve 10K sessions, though that would require 10K ppp
Julian daemons until we got the kernel bypass working. in either
Julian case it would presently leave a
On Tue, 23 Nov 1999, Parthasarathy M. Aji wrote:
!Hey,
!
!I am trying to recompute the checksum of an IP packet. I use
!netinet/in_chksum.c to do this. The values returned are not correct. I've
!reset the ip_sum field to 0 before doing the sum. Is there something
!missing?
!
!thanks
!
!
How many bytes have you changed?
is it possible that some of the values have already been ntohs()'d
or something similar?
rather than recalculate the whole packet, just update the exisitng
value.
there is an rfc for this but it took me a while to get
the code right in C on a 386. The trick is
On Fri, 8 Oct 1999, Matthew Dillon wrote:
:
: Adjusting the bytes-per-inode (-i) specification in newfs should not
: pose a problem.
:
:IOW now you say it's ok to use very high values of -i... ;-)
:
:Andrzej Bialecki
No, I didn't say that. My recommended
:What's the recommended way to reduce the number of cylinder groups a bit?
:-c's maximum limit is affected by combinations of -b and -i, possibly some
:others. PHK was talking about new, more sensible values for filesystem
:parameters, but I don't know what happened. I just think it's a bit
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