Re: top/systat

2001-03-09 Thread Andrew Hesford
I'm probably going to make an ass out of myself which has certainly happened before. Still, a disclaimer: I don't know what I'm talking about. Take everything I say with the whole canister of salt. As I understand it, a symbol describes the relative entry point of a function in a given block of

Re: top/systat

2001-03-09 Thread Mikhail Kruk
[skip] When you try to run top, it looks for the symbol that represents nlist, and when it can't find it, it doesn't know where to find the nlist kernel function. I'm guessing nlist has something to do with a process list... hence, when top can't find nlist, it throws a fit. I think nlist

Re: top, systat )-: (all rebuilt!)

2000-03-28 Thread Mikhail Teterin
The patches did the trick for me... -mi =On Tue, Mar 28, 2000 at 09:53:20AM -0500, Mikhail Teterin wrote: = Ruslan Ermilov once stated: = = =Do you use loader(8), or directly boot your kernel from boot blocks? = = Directly... Is that what it is?!? = =Yes, starting from the following