- Original Message
From: Alex de Kruijff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Sent: Saturday, March 1, 2008 3:32:32 AM
Subject: 7.0 Kernel install problem
Make buildworld make buildkernel KERNCONF=GENERIC whent without
errors. Make installkernel KERNCONF=GENERIC gave
Quoting Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On behalf of the FreeBSD Project thanks for your interest in FreeBSD.
We hope you enjoy the new release.
I've just spent the whole morning installing it on my office desktop.
It was an awful experience: installing packages
I noticed that the kernel directory was very large compaired to 6.1. Is
this for debugging and can I safely remove the symbols files I want to
save some space?
Yes, you can do this safely.
Björn
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On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 19:18:52 -0600
Paul Schmehl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It does seem to me that some work in this area would pay dividends.
Suggestion for a quick fix (hack might be the right word):
1. first time one of the extra cd's is read, the user gets a choice to
copy the cd to hard
Le Thursday 28 February 2008 13:18:30 Kris Kennaway, vous avez écrit :
freebsd update requires a known state to upgrade from, i.e. so it can
apply the right set of diffs to bring your system from one known state
to another. This basically means previously installed from the release
media and
On 29/02/2008, pluknet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I've updated to the recent RELENG_7 as of 2008/02/28
to try the new kld-add feature in kgdb, among other things
(yes, i do debug kernel modules).
However, now I get an error message;
also I'm unable to use the add-kld command.
Chris H. wrote:
* log on as root - or su to root after logging on as regular user
* type /usr/sbin/sysinstall - this brings up the installer again
* choose post install
* choose install additional ports/packages
* choose net/cvsup-without-gui
* when finished, exit the installer
A very nice
Alex de Kruijff wrote:
I noticed that the kernel directory was very large compaired to 6.1. Is
this for debugging and can I safely remove the symbols files I want to
save some space?
Yes but if you encounter a panic and need to submit a bug report then
you will need at least the kernel.debug
Quoting Chris H. [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
BSD is /different/. Which is /not/ bad, just /different/. :)
Never said it was bad (on the *very* contrary)
Been using it for a little more than 10 years now: would I have been if I had
thought otherwise ? ;-)
* choose net/cvsup-without-gui
no longer
Matthew Seaman wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On behalf of the FreeBSD Project thanks for your interest in FreeBSD.
We hope you enjoy the new release.
I've just spent the whole morning installing it on my office desktop.
It was an awful experience: installing packages from the
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 15:39:11 -0800
Stephen Hurd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As a workaround, adding the line:
hw.ata.ata_dma=0
To /boot/loader.conf will disable DMA and prevent the hangs that are
caused by the DMA timeouts.
Yeah, but having dma=1 makes the system faster, doesn't it?
--
Dick
Quoting Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Chris H. wrote:
* log on as root - or su to root after logging on as regular user
* type /usr/sbin/sysinstall - this brings up the installer again
* choose post install
* choose install additional ports/packages
* choose net/cvsup-without-gui
* when
Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Quoting Chris H. [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
BSD is /different/. Which is /not/ bad, just /different/. :)
Never said it was bad (on the *very* contrary)
Been using it for a little more than 10 years now: would I have been if I had
thought otherwise ? ;-)
* choose
Steven Hartland wrote:
Seems portupgrade can easily break the perl install.
How? Well there are various modules which can be updated
but are also part of the base perl and are hence required.
A good example of this is ExtUtils::MakeMaker. If you
uninstall any version of this port your done
On 2008-03-01 01:32, Alex de Kruijff wrote:
kldxref /boot/kernel
kldxref: file isn't dynamically-linked
...
Should I be worried?
You're probably upgrading from 6.x? The old kldxref doesn't grok the
new kernel format, apparently. So you might want to use the kldxref
from your buildworld
On Fri, 2008-02-29 at 19:18 -0600, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Another approach might be to make one cd the desktop install cd,
including all of the apps commonly used to install the desktop (xorg, kde,
gnome, etc.)
This is already in place, as best I can. X.org is on disc1 (on purpose
since it's
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-freebsd-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 6:18 PM
To: Kevin K
Cc: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: FreeBSD 6.2 -- cvsup to 7.0 + make buildworld fails
On 29/02/2008,
On Sat, 1 Mar 2008, Kris Kennaway wrote:
KK Alex de Kruijff wrote:
KK I noticed that the kernel directory was very large compaired to 6.1. Is
KK this for debugging and can I safely remove the symbols files I want to
KK save some space?
KK
KK Yes but if you encounter a panic and need to submit
But I'm not up to it right now. I'll save it for another posting.
Posting come go forgotten, so I suggest send your final script
as a send-pr to eg the doc/ tree. That (doc/ tree) ( www tree generated
from it, copied in advanced to local host) people can have available
eg on local laptop,
--On Saturday, March 01, 2008 3:32 PM +0800 Nawfal bin Mohmad Rouyan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You can actually use csup instead of cvsup and it is already included in
the base.
I knew that, but old habits die hard. Plus I haven't read the csup man
page yet. :-)
Paul Schmehl ([EMAIL
On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 06:12:52PM -0500, Kevin K wrote:
I have cvsupped my src - cvsup stable-supfile / RELENG_7
cvsup5,3,4.freebsd.org many times and I keep failing @ make buildworld :
magic, 67702: Warning type `log' invalid
magic, 67703: Warning offset [EMAIL PROTECTED] files no longer
-Original Message-
It looks like you did something wrong when using cvsup, and did
not check out RELENG_7, but instead got a copy of the whole
CVS repository - which cannot be compiled from directly.
Remove all the contents of your current /usr/src/, fix your supfile,
and try
On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 08:49:33AM +0100, Christian Brueffer wrote:
On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 08:04:10PM +0100, Patrick M. Hausen wrote:
Hello,
On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 09:18:31AM -0800, Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
I think you're looking for all the WITHOUT knobs in src.conf(5).
I'm
On Sat, 2008-03-01 at 14:53 +0100, Kris Kennaway wrote:
Steven Hartland wrote:
Seems portupgrade can easily break the perl install.
How? Well there are various modules which can be updated
but are also part of the base perl and are hence required.
A good example of this is
Alex de Kruijff wrote:
I noticed that the kernel directory was very large compaired to 6.1. Is
this for debugging and can I safely remove the symbols files I want to
save some space?
Some time ago someone already asked this question on current@ IIRC.
Someone proposed to add
On Sat, Mar 01, 2008 at 11:00:11AM -0500, Kevin K wrote:
I'll try removing /usr/src/* re-cvsupping.
I would recommend you also nuke relevant directories or files in
/usr/sup (or if you're using csup, /var/db/sup).
I tend to recommend using /usr/share/examples/cvsup/ports-supfile
and
I'm happy to say that the packet loss I experienced with re(4) on
6.3-RELEASE has been fixed by a patch provided off list by
Pyun YongHyeon.
I'm also happy to report that the same hardware does not
exhibit any re(4) problems with 7.0-RELEASE.
ref:
Dick Hoogendijk wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 15:39:11 -0800
Stephen Hurd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As a workaround, adding the line:
hw.ata.ata_dma=0
To /boot/loader.conf will disable DMA and prevent the hangs that are
caused by the DMA timeouts.
Yeah, but having dma=1 makes the system
Kris Kennaway wrote:
I think something is not quite right in your analysis, because perl
does not depend on any external perl modules (it cannot, by definition).
I ran into something like this when I was switching from a threaded perl
to an unthreaded perl. It wasn't possible to just use a
Hello,
I posted this around 3 months ago and never received a response. the
problem still occurs with 7.0-STABLE (csup on 20080301). I possibly
incorrectly referred to it as a panic last time, when the problem was
really a trap.
The only steps I've really taken since I posted this originally
- Original Message -
From: Kris Kennaway [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I think something is not quite right in your analysis, because perl does
not depend on any external perl modules (it cannot, by definition).
I know what your saying there Kris, this shouldn't happen. So I've
spent some time
On Fri, 29.02.2008 at 13:58:27 -0800, Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 10:07:23PM +0100, Ulrich Spoerlein wrote:
# $FreeBSD: src/etc/crontab,v 1.32 2002/11/22 16:13:39 tom Exp $
...
HOME=/var/log
If this has changed from before, I guess it would be due to a new shell
Jakub Siroky wrote:
I've just confirmed the same situation on 6.2-RELEASE amd64/GENERIC. I
did not noticed it before because I started using ext2fs extensively
some months ago.
Regards,
Jakub
On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 16:44:34 +0100
Kris Kennaway [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kris Kennaway wrote:
I've just confirmed the same situation on 6.2-RELEASE amd64/GENERIC. I
did not noticed it before because I started using ext2fs extensively
some months ago.
Regards,
Jakub
On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 16:44:34 +0100
Kris Kennaway [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kris Kennaway wrote:
Jakub Siroky wrote:
I
Jeff Blank wrote:
Hello,
I posted this around 3 months ago and never received a response. the
problem still occurs with 7.0-STABLE (csup on 20080301). I possibly
incorrectly referred to it as a panic last time, when the problem was
really a trap.
I also receive Fatal trap 12: page
I also receive Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode while
trying to boot a HP Proliant DL580G3 from the 7.0-RELEASE amd64 disc1 CD.
Does it boot with ACPI disabled ? I have an HP workstation
which did the same, and got a patch for it in the end, but
thius might be an utterly
On Sat, Mar 01, 2008 at 02:44:04PM -0500, Jeff Blank wrote:
I posted this around 3 months ago and never received a response. the
problem still occurs with 7.0-STABLE (csup on 20080301). I possibly
incorrectly referred to it as a panic last time, when the problem was
really a trap.
A trap
On Sat, Mar 1, 2008 at 4:33 AM, Alex de Kruijff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I noticed that the kernel directory was very large compaired to 6.1. Is
this for debugging and can I safely remove the symbols files I want to
save some space?
You can build a custom kernel, without debug support, if
On Sat, Mar 01, 2008 at 06:11:53PM +0300, Dmitry Morozovsky wrote:
On Sat, 1 Mar 2008, Kris Kennaway wrote:
KK Alex de Kruijff wrote:
KK I noticed that the kernel directory was very large compaired to 6.1. Is
KK this for debugging and can I safely remove the symbols files I want to
KK
On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 01:20:50PM -0700, Scott Long wrote:
I'd like to attack these driver problems. What I need is to spend a
couple of days with an affected system that can reliably reproduce the
problem, instrumenting and testing the driver. I have a number of
theories about what might
On Sun, Mar 02, 2008 at 09:56:46AM +1100, Peter Jeremy wrote:
On Sat, Mar 01, 2008 at 02:44:04PM -0500, Jeff Blank wrote:
/boot/loader.conf (XXX_load=YES). It seems to occur near the end of
device probing, just before it detects the disks.
This is likely to be when the loaded modules get
Does anybody know if it's possible to restore a dump of a ufs filesystem
to zfs?
Thanks
John
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On Sat, 01 Mar 2008 21:56:43 PST John Pettitt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anybody know if it's possible to restore a dump of a ufs filesystem
to zfs?
Yes. restore doesn't need any internals knowledge of the
target filesystem; it writes files, directories special
devices normally so it will
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