In article <20120521134722.gc8...@gumme.math.uni-bonn.de>,
Edgar Fuß wrote:
>> If is just a diagnostic
>Do you mean "It is"? Or how can I tell wheter it's a diagnostic or not?
>dsmc seems to run fine thanks to you repairing rt_sigtimedwait (which just
>got pulled up to 6.0_BETA) despite that mess
> This is not supposed to have changed recently, although I did rework
> the code and it's not impossible that some corner cases changed.
So what am I doing wrong here? Maybe it's something stupid and I just
don't notice:
$ ls -l /usr/pkg/etc/tsm/dsm.opt
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 70 May 9 15:22
hello. My understanding is that if namei can't find a file in the
/emul tree, it looks in the real root tree. So, if you just remove all
traces of the thing you want in the real tree from the emnulation tree,
you'll achieve the results you seek. The down side is that if you're
dealing wit
On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 03:44:51PM +0200, Edgar Fu? wrote:
> What's the suggested method for breaking out of the emulation directory?
> I want /opt/tivoli/tsm/client/ba/bin/dsm.opt to be a symlink to
> /usr/pkg/etc/tsm/dsm.opt.
> I can achieve this with a considerable amount of ../, but that am
On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 03:44:51PM +0200, Edgar Fu? wrote:
> What's the suggested method for breaking out of the emulation directory?
> I want /opt/tivoli/tsm/client/ba/bin/dsm.opt to be a symlink to
> /usr/pkg/etc/tsm/dsm.opt.
> I can achieve this with a considerable amount of ../, but that amount
> If is just a diagnostic
Do you mean "It is"? Or how can I tell wheter it's a diagnostic or not?
dsmc seems to run fine thanks to you repairing rt_sigtimedwait (which just
got pulled up to 6.0_BETA) despite that message.
What's the suggested method for breaking out of the emulation directory?
I want /opt/tivoli/tsm/client/ba/bin/dsm.opt to be a symlink to
/usr/pkg/etc/tsm/dsm.opt.
I can achieve this with a considerable amount of ../, but that amount depends
on the value of , more precisely, it's expanded value, whi
In article <20120521133627.ga8...@gumme.math.uni-bonn.de>,
Edgar Fuß wrote:
>What does this mean:
>
>May 21 15:32:12 trave /netbsd: /emul/linux32/usr/bin/dsmc: bad tag 1: [5
>4, 2 4, SuSE PaX]
If is just a diagnostic... It means that the kernel does not know what
to do with that elf tag.
chris
What does this mean:
May 21 15:32:12 trave /netbsd: /emul/linux32/usr/bin/dsmc: bad tag 1: [5 4, 2
4, SuSE PaX]