Horst von Brand wrote:
> Jonas Diemer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>
> [...]
>
>
>>I figured there could be a kernel compiled-in option that will make the
>>kernel lock all drives found during bootup. then, a malicous program
>>would need to install a different kernel in order to harm the drive,
>>
are gone in 2.6. So how _does_ one go about changing the repeat rate
on a keyboard input device in 2.4?
Thanks in advance for your help.
--Vernon Mauery
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Vernon Mauery wrote:
> I was wondering if anyone knows how to change the repeatrate on a USB
> keyboard with a 2.4 kernel. The system is a legacy free system (no ps2
> port), so kbdrate does nothing. With evdev loaded, the keyboard and mouse
> (both USB devices) get registered wi
I am working on getting one of the IBM blades to use ipmi and have run
into a problem. The driver doesn't load because it says it can't find
the device.
dmidecode shows that there are 39 entries and that the last one is the
BMC. I looked into dmi_table and noticed that it parses the table by
len
Pavel Machek wrote:
>
> Table of known working systems:
>
> Model hack (or "how to do it")
> --
> IBM TP R32 / Type 2658-MMG none (1)
IBM TP T40 / Type 2373-MU4 none (1)
IBM TP R50
Carl-Daniel Hailfinger wrote:
> 1. A first step towards better DSDTs would be to make the ASL compiler
> complain about the same things which are complained about by the
> in-kernel ACPI interpreter. An example would be the following:
>
> acpi_processor-0496 [10] acpi_processor_get_inf: Invalid PB
Mister Google wrote:
> Is there a way to simulate a keystroke to a program, ie. have a program
> send it something so that as far as it's concerned, say, the "P" key has
> been pressed?
>
Look at the input system. Documentation/input/input-programming.txt has a
great tutorial on how to do this.
In looking at the performance characteristics of my network I found that
2.6.21.5-rt15 suffers from degraded thoughput with multiple threads. The
test that I did this with is simply invoking 1, 2, 4, and 8 instances of
netperf at a time and measuring the total throughput. I have two 4-way
mac
On Monday 18 June 2007 11:51:38 pm Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Mon, 2007-06-18 at 22:12 -0700, Vernon Mauery wrote:
> > In looking at the performance characteristics of my network I found that
> > 2.6.21.5-rt15 suffers from degraded thoughput with multiple threads. The
> >
On Tuesday 19 June 2007 8:38:50 am Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Tue, 2007-06-19 at 07:25 -0700, Vernon Mauery wrote:
> > On Monday 18 June 2007 11:51:38 pm Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > > On Mon, 2007-06-18 at 22:12 -0700, Vernon Mauery wrote:
> > > > In looking at the per
On Monday 18 June 2007 10:12:21 pm Vernon Mauery wrote:
> In looking at the performance characteristics of my network I found that
> 2.6.21.5-rt15 suffers from degraded thoughput with multiple threads. The
> test that I did this with is simply invoking 1, 2, 4, and 8 instances of
>
In doing some stress testing of the NetXen driver, I found that my machine was
dying in all sorts of weird ways. I saw several different crashes, BUG
messages in the TCP stack and some assert messages in the TCP stack as well.
I really didn't think that there could be six different bugs all at
On 31-Aug-2017 01:38 PM, Samuel Mendoza-Jonas wrote:
> Patch "net/ncsi: Configure VLAN tag filter" defined two new callback
> functions in include/net/ncsi.h, but neglected the !CONFIG_NET_NCSI
> case. This can cause a build error if these are referenced elsewhere
> without NCSI enabled, for exampl
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