Hello
Ronald Moesbergen wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for responding. To clarify: I'm not running linux inside
vmware, I'm running vmware on linux and the vmware images are on a
reiser4 partition. I'm running windows inside vmware. I can certainly
reproduce this,
Yes, vmware + reiser4 problem is
On 8/25/05, Hubert Chan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 24 Aug 2005 07:51:19 +0100, Leo Comerford [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
[... lots of stuff snipped ...]
At other levels, of course, the differences assert themselves. For one
thing, the normal Unix filesystem API doesn't have calls to,
On Sat, 2005-08-27 at 20:01 -0400, Jeff Mahoney wrote:
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Ming Zhang wrote:
On Sat, 2005-08-27 at 15:29 -0400, Jeff Mahoney wrote:
are this bitmap data is pinned into system thus will not be swapped out?
Yes, any buffers/pages with active
Ronald Moesbergen schrieb:
Well, I just successfully reproduced this without the nvidia module
loaded. The oops looks very similar:
[...]
kernel: Modules linked in: vmnet vmmon
kernel: CPU:1
kernel: EIP:0060:[lock_object+84/127]Tainted: P VLI
well, the kernel is still
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Ming Zhang wrote:
On Sat, 2005-08-27 at 20:01 -0400, Jeff Mahoney wrote:
yes, i have a 12*400GB SATA MD raid that want to store my huge number of
pictures (i am not a good photographer, but a quick shooter.) all these
files are named as
OK, but the tainting is because the license is different from GPL, not
because of lack of source code (vmware modules source code is
available). Anyway, I'll wait for a fix. Let me know if there's
anything I can do to help.
Ronald.
On 8/28/05, evilninja [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ronald
I know this probably doesn't fix your problem, but there's a program
called QEMU that might perform similar functionality to VMWare; does
it have the same issues? Maybe you want to try that, and see if you
have the same problem or not...
On 8/28/05, Ronald Moesbergen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
michael chang wrote:
I know this probably doesn't fix your problem, but there's a program
called QEMU that might perform similar functionality to VMWare; does
it have the same issues?
Sort of. And more.
I don't know how fast VMWare is, but qemu is pretty slow, as it does
actual emulation.
Felecia,
q0 - Deal International Currency - i4
http://uk.geocities.com/trade_foreign_currencies_2005 /1645158.html
Pierre Craig