Date:Wed, 03 Jul 2024 09:11:28 -0400
From:Greg Troxel
Message-ID:
| But, I wanted to ask: has anybody run on a 12th gen i7 or similar, and
| is this "works fine" or is it "run screaming"?
Of the replies you've already received, I have what might be the
closest t
Same. I have an i9-14900, which seems just happy. I haven't gotten
accelerated graphics to work though, which is a bit annoying.
--
Benny
On Wed, Jul 3, 2024 at 8:04 PM David Brownlee wrote:
>
> On Wed, 3 Jul 2024 at 14:11, Greg Troxel wrote:
> >
> > I am about to get a box with an i7-12700 (1
On Wed, 3 Jul 2024 at 14:11, Greg Troxel wrote:
>
> I am about to get a box with an i7-12700 (12th gen). These seem to have
> regular vs low-energy cores or something.
>
> I plan to run NetBSD 10. I don't really care if the scheduling is off
> and this leads to some jobs running on slower cores,
On Tue 02 Jul 2024 at 21:48:08 +0200, Ramiro Aceves wrote:
> El 2/7/24 a las 11:59, Greg Troxel escribió:
> > As I understand it, we don't really have a scheme for assigning devices
> > to users. Probably we should.
>
> I understand. No problem to use it as is.
There is /etc/X11/xdm/GiveConsole
Thank you that was it!.
Thanks,
On Wed, 3 Jul 2024, RVP wrote:
On Tue, 2 Jul 2024, xuser wrote:
My NetBSD 10.0 amd64 server says that 511MB of memory are in use after
running for one week. Without any load.
Do a `top -n'. If most of that 511MB is categorized as `File', then
it's normal.
I am about to get a box with an i7-12700 (12th gen). These seem to have
regular vs low-energy cores or something.
I plan to run NetBSD 10. I don't really care if the scheduling is off
and this leads to some jobs running on slower cores, as it will be
mostly running domUs to build packages and ne
El mié, 3 jul 2024 a las 3:10, Robert Elz () escribió:
>
> Date:Tue, 2 Jul 2024 11:37:50 +0200
> From:Ramiro Aceves
> Message-ID:
>
>
>
> | Because I rebooted the system there was nothing at sh shell history, I
> | would be a good thing being able to know what I
On Tue, 2 Jul 2024, xuser wrote:
My NetBSD 10.0 amd64 server says that 511MB of memory are in use after
running for one week. Without any load.
Do a `top -n'. If most of that 511MB is categorized as `File', then
it's normal. Every morning at 4:15 the /etc/daily script is run.
This does a che