If someone happens to be trying to run DragonFly 1.4.4, under Parallels,
on Mac OS X, on a 15" MacBook Pro - here's a working xorg config.
The only real changes are that /dev/psm0 is required to get the mouse to
work, instead of the usual /dev/sysmouse, and a custom modeline is needed
to get 1440x
On Sat, June 10, 2006 10:37 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> That's what I get when I decide to try out FreeBSD again. Can I still
> recover the data somehow? What to do now? Grub says it can't find
> partition.
>
I would think the partitions are fine; it's the bootblocks that are messed
up. boot0c
That's what I get when I decide to try out FreeBSD again. Can I still
recover the data somehow? What to do now? Grub says it can't find
partition.
/dev/ad0s1, you mean, not /dev/da0s1. (I assume the first two characters
were twiddled.)
AFAIK, 'ad' means IDE devices, while 'da' are SCSI.
Sincerily Yours,
Vladimir Mitiouchev
On Sat, June 10, 2006 6:50 pm, Erik Wikström wrote:
> When mounting a linux-partition you will obviously not have any BSD-
> partitions worry about so you should mount /dev/da0s1 (if the partition
> is the second on the first disk).
/dev/ad0s1, you mean, not /dev/da0s1. (I assume the first two c
On 2006-06-10 23:55, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello community.
What docs I must read for understanding /dev/ad* devices?
If you mean how to decrypt something like ad0s2b it goes like this:
da means that it's a ATA-disk, 0 means that it's the first disk (primary
master). s2 means slice 2, whi
Hello community.
What docs I must read for understanding /dev/ad* devices?
I need mounting ntfs and linux partiotions.
Best regards,
altnixsys.
Hi,
I'm using the if_iwi driver for several weeks now and have an annoying
problem. First, I want to desribe my setup:
I use an ADSL-router with built-in WLAN-capability (SMCWBR14-G), (local)
IP-address 192.168.2.1, which acts as DNS-server, too. DHCP is disabled.
WPA2-encryption is enabled.