On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Biju Susmer wrote:
hi,
I tried yesterday to make the kernel understand my CD ROM drive.. but it
refused. Here is the dmesg (of boot -v)... is my config wrong or i missed
something? The drive is Acer 32X and connected as secondary slave. It is seen by
Win98 and BIOS.
On Tue, Aug 03, 1999 at 02:22:17PM -0700, Alex Zepeda wrote:
Also you'll have to run the script to allow users to change passwords as
"root", which you probably will NOT want to do (same for adding/
deleting/changing users)
So with your setup, any user can add/delete/modify existing
It seems Vince Vielhaber wrote:
Out of curiousity, have there been any successes in the drivers for
the OnStream tape drives (SCSI or IDE)?
Working on it (for IDE that is), support is planned for, but I have
no release date yet... I know that there is work done on the SCSI
end too...
At 8:01 PM +0200 8/3/99, Robert Nordier wrote:
- If I select 3.2 at the PowerBoot menu, it comes up
with two messages about "invalid partition", [...]
It seems to want to boot 'da(0,a)/kernel', but if I
type in 'da(0,e)/kernel', then it boots up fine.
The
Ville-Pertti Keinonen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I certainly don't expect any of the available voices to be able to
pronounce Finnish names correctly, even with phonetic specifications.
If the software were *designed* to speak Finnish, I'd expect it to
cope with Finnish much better than it
"Kelly Yancey" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
to avoid cache invalidation? The idea is to keep a chunk of zeroes on
disk and DMA it into memory instead of clearing pages "manually". This
assumes your disk supports DMA, of
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dag-Erling Smorgrav) writes:
Ville-Pertti Keinonen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I certainly don't expect any of the available voices to be able to
pronounce Finnish names correctly, even with phonetic specifications.
If the software were *designed* to speak Finnish, I'd
Hey all, I purchased a Tekram DC-390U2W scsi controller to use with
a FreeBSD server of mine. It uses the NCR 53c141 (and 53c895?)
chipset(s). I see that ncr.c supports the NCR 53c8xx family of
chipsets.. which the controller is seen as having a 53c895, which
only supports 40Mb/sec
What makes you think you haven't got 80mbps? How would you tell?
Something like this in your dmesg/boot output.
da0: 80.000MB/s transfers (40.000MHz, offset 15, 16bit), Tagged Queueing
Enabled
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the
Alfred Perlstein [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I heard they have released the source to the kernel modules needed
to run it.
why not port them over? :)
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel
I have a really strong urge to submit a PR to make fetch default to passive
mode, instead of requiring a command-line switch ...
In this day and age, with firewalls and NAT abound, it's a bit odd that such
a change has not already been made. Am I missing something? Is there a
reason we haven't
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel module does, which makes it somewhat harder to implement the
same functionality on FreeBSD :-)
a
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Milan Kopacka wrote:
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel module does, which makes it somewhat harder to implement
Robert Nordier wrote:
Because most modern BIOSes do CHS translation, the BIOS geometry is
not always evident from the geometry reported by the drive, and
FreeBSD may get this wrong, particularly if no existing partitions
are defined.
Since you are installing to a drive with no
On 4 Aug 1999, Assar Westerlund wrote:
"Brian F. Feldman" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
Actually, with interfaces like this you should generally pass a pointer
to the structure in userspace, and stick a version number constant in
the beginning
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Doug Rabson wrote:
The argument for versioning is not simply because the size of ip_number
might change (it should be a sockaddr) but because other fields might be
added or removed. To avoid allocating a new syscall whenever this happens,
the structure should be
Soren Schmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel module does, which makes it somewhat harder to implement the
same functionality on FreeBSD :-)
If you
"Brian F. Feldman" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
As I read it, sockaddr is a transparent type (overloaded, as it were).
So we would use something like:
struct jail {
...
struct sockaddr;
char [SOCK_MAXADDRLEN - sizeof(struct sockaddr)];
Peter Jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery purposes (/stand and /sbin) as well as for
security.
Isn't that the same problem as with PAM?
/assar
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with
Because most modern BIOSes do CHS translation, the BIOS geometry is
not always evident from the geometry reported by the drive, and
FreeBSD may get this wrong, particularly if no existing partitions
are defined.
Since you are installing to a drive with no pre-existing non-FreeBSD
After collecting a bunch of emails from the list, this is the
approach I'll be taking:
1. use the existing nsdispatch code obtained from NetBSD as a base
for parsing the /etc/nsswitch.conf file.
2. Make the C library nsdispatch aware. The dtab[] array will be
filled dynamicaly from the
On Tue, Aug 03, 1999 at 07:52:26PM -0400, Bill Fumerola wrote:
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Ted Faber wrote:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1999/08/990802072727.htm
The Duke release credits one Andrew Gallatin for a couple quotes.
Not only FreeBSD in the news, but one of our own
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
I have a freebsd-stable system. I can't build a kernel for
freebsd-current on that system unless I upgrade my compiler to egcs.
Will this cause problems for our upgrade proceedure?
gcc 2.7.2.3 doesn't like i386/include/atomic.h. It complains about
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
I have a freebsd-stable system. I can't build a kernel for
freebsd-current on that system unless I upgrade my compiler to egcs.
Will this cause problems for our upgrade proceedure?
gcc 2.7.2.3 doesn't like i386/include/atomic.h. It complains
As Dag-Erling Smorgrav wrote ...
"Kelly Yancey" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
to avoid cache invalidation? The idea is to keep a chunk of zeroes on
disk and DMA it into memory instead of clearing pages "manually".
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Osokin Sergey
writes:
: try to cvsup your source tree to 4.0, then rebuild your system
: with simply make world procedure.
I can't do that. This system *MUST* be a 3.2-stable system. I was
building the kernel to test to see if a nasty NFS bug I've found in
-stable
In article
local.mail.freebsd-hackers/[EMAIL PROTECTED] you write:
-hackers,
As docs/12220 points out;
We want to extract routing information by specifying a particular
destination IP address. The man page on Route and Rtentry mention
that this information can be acquired using
In message
[EMAIL PROTECTED] David
Scheidt writes:
: Read the docs? Who me? It sounds like the 3.X to 4.0-RELEASE documentation
: should say not to do this. Unless, of course, gcc-2.95 is imported before
: t hen.
Give me a F*ing break. No such documetation exists and the more that
we
Assar Westerlund [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Peter Jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery purposes (/stand and /sbin) as well as for
security.
Isn't that the same problem as with PAM?
Quite probably PAM has
Were there any issues related to a memory leak in the routing table ?
I am running freebsd-stable.
After a few days vmstat -m shows the memory used by routing table to be
very high and log messages "arpresolve: cant allocate llinfo for
a.b.c.d"
"arplookup a.b.c.d failed could not allocate
On 04-Aug-99 Matthew Dillon wrote:
I kinda like the second choice the best but the first choice is what
most
other system calls use.
That doesn't make it right =)
The second avoids the 'the data is different but the size is the same' problem
which would seem to be not too
John Polstra [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Peter Jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Assar Westerlund [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Peter Jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery purposes (/stand and /sbin) as well as
On Wed, Aug 04, 1999 at 03:59:00PM -0500, Jonathan Lemon wrote:
getkerninfo() is depreciated, we use sysctl() instead. In fact, most of
the information provided by getkerninfo() is implemented in terms of
sysctl().
snip
The route(4) manpage says:
User processes can obtain
hi, there!
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Oscar Bonilla wrote:
*Step One: I ported the NetBSD implementation of nsdispatch(3) as
implemented
by Luke Mewburn. See attached patch to libc and new header file. I'm also
attaching the man page for /etc/nsswitch.conf. Right now it compiles,
installs, and
* Peter Jeremy (jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au) [990804 01:13]:
Jordan recently mentioned Wonderful World of Linux 2.4 (Second
Edition) http://features.linuxtoday.com/stories/8191.html.
This article makes the statement Linux is still the only operating
system completely compatible with the
This is a clear security vs functionality issue and I need to get a
good feel for which cause is ascendent here in knowing which way to
jump on the matter. Can we now hear the closing arguments from the
pro and con folks?
I am pro.
It takes a root compromise to use it anyway, and its
I am pro.
It takes a root compromise to use it anyway, and its usefulness
for DHCP and rarpd is too compelling.
Perhaps the comments in the GENERIC file could be updated.
Well, given that I've gotten primarily positive support for this I
guess it's time to do it. Warner, do you want to
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
Speaking of the jail() syscall -- it really needs to be revamped a
little before people really start using it wholeheartedly. The size
of the jail structure needs to be passed in the syscall to allow
backwards
compatibility when
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Brian F. Feldman wrote:
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
Speaking of the jail() syscall -- it really needs to be revamped a
little before people really start using it wholeheartedly. The size
of the jail structure needs to be passed in the
Olivia Cheriton wrote:
Niall,
VMware will support FreeBSD as a guest operating system, but unfortunately
we currently do not have plans to support FreeBSD as a host operating
system. I have noted your request of FreeBSD host support in case we review
this in the future.
Best regards,
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Biju Susmer wrote:
hi,
I tried yesterday to make the kernel understand my CD ROM drive.. but it
refused. Here is the dmesg (of boot -v)... is my config wrong or i missed
something? The drive is Acer 32X and connected as secondary slave. It is seen
by
Win98 and BIOS.
w...@softweyr.com (Wes Peters) writes:
available for home computers decades ago. (Anyone else here ever use
SAM the Software Automated Mouth for the Atari 800 or Commodore 64?)
Yes.
It's almost surprising how little speech synthesis has improved, at
least judging from the festival demos (it
On Tue, Aug 03, 1999 at 02:22:17PM -0700, Alex Zepeda wrote:
Also you'll have to run the script to allow users to change passwords as
root, which you probably will NOT want to do (same for adding/
deleting/changing users)
So with your setup, any user can add/delete/modify existing users?
Out of curiousity, have there been any successes in the drivers for
the OnStream tape drives (SCSI or IDE)?
Vince.
--
==
Vince Vielhaber -- KA8CSH email: v...@michvhf.com flame-mail: /dev/null
# include
It seems Vince Vielhaber wrote:
Out of curiousity, have there been any successes in the drivers for
the OnStream tape drives (SCSI or IDE)?
Working on it (for IDE that is), support is planned for, but I have
no release date yet... I know that there is work done on the SCSI
end too...
-Søren
At 8:01 PM +0200 8/3/99, Robert Nordier wrote:
- If I select 3.2 at the PowerBoot menu, it comes up
with two messages about invalid partition, [...]
It seems to want to boot 'da(0,a)/kernel', but if I
type in 'da(0,e)/kernel', then it boots up fine.
The
Ville-Pertti Keinonen w...@iki.fi writes:
I certainly don't expect any of the available voices to be able to
pronounce Finnish names correctly, even with phonetic specifications.
If the software were *designed* to speak Finnish, I'd expect it to
cope with Finnish much better than it currently
Brian F. Feldman gr...@freebsd.org writes:
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
Actually, with interfaces like this you should generally pass a pointer
to the structure in userspace, and stick a version number constant in
the beginning of the structure. The size is often not enough
Kelly Yancey kby...@alcnet.com writes:
[...]
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
to avoid cache invalidation? The idea is to keep a chunk of zeroes on
disk and DMA it into memory instead of clearing pages manually. This
assumes your disk supports DMA, of course.
Hey all, I purchased a Tekram DC-390U2W scsi controller to use with a
FreeBSD server of mine. It uses the NCR 53c141 (and 53c895?) chipset(s). I
see that ncr.c supports the NCR 53c8xx family of chipsets..
which the controller is seen as having a 53c895, which only supports
40Mb/sec operation(?)
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Peter Jeremy wrote:
Oscar Bonilla oboni...@fisicc-ufm.edu wrote:
If anyone has any comments, suggestions, etc. I would appreciate it.
Overall, I like the idea of NSS. But, having worked on Solaris 2.x
for some time, we need to avoid some of the blunders Sun made: The
d...@flood.ping.uio.no (Dag-Erling Smorgrav) writes:
Ville-Pertti Keinonen w...@iki.fi writes:
I certainly don't expect any of the available voices to be able to
pronounce Finnish names correctly, even with phonetic specifications.
If the software were *designed* to speak Finnish, I'd
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Niall Smart wrote:
Olivia Cheriton wrote:
Niall,
VMware will support FreeBSD as a guest operating system, but unfortunately
we currently do not have plans to support FreeBSD as a host operating
system. I have noted your request of FreeBSD host support in case
Hey all, I purchased a Tekram DC-390U2W scsi controller to use with
a FreeBSD server of mine. It uses the NCR 53c141 (and 53c895?)
chipset(s). I see that ncr.c supports the NCR 53c8xx family of
chipsets.. which the controller is seen as having a 53c895, which
only supports 40Mb/sec
The 53c141 is an auto-sensing single-ended/LVDS terminator, permitting
you to connect single-ended and LVDS drives to the same cable. It is
transparent.
If you want 80mbps you need
1. a wide LVDS (aka Ultra2 or fast40) drive
2. a wide LVDS terminator
The 40 in the portion of ncr.c you quote is
Robert Nordier wrote:
It's usually best to temporarily change fdisk partition types,
so that sysinstall sees no existing FreeBSD slice on the drive.
However, there may be other problems involved here as well.
Hmmm. This sounds a good plan. Would the following then work
(I'm using `partition'
Why does open() at sys/kern/vfs_syscalls.c line 1023 call
vfs_object_create() when vnopen() (sys/kern/vfs_vnops.c line 174)
already does so?
vfs_object_create checks for this and doesn't leak, but it looks
funny to me.
-Alfred Perlstein - [bri...@rush.net|bri...@wintelcom.net]
systems
What makes you think you haven't got 80mbps? How would you tell?
Something like this in your dmesg/boot output.
da0: 80.000MB/s transfers (40.000MHz, offset 15, 16bit), Tagged Queueing
Enabled
To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org
with unsubscribe freebsd-hackers in the body of
Alfred Perlstein bri...@rush.net writes:
I heard they have released the source to the kernel modules needed
to run it.
why not port them over? :)
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel
Graham Wheeler wrote:
Robert Nordier wrote:
It's usually best to temporarily change fdisk partition types,
so that sysinstall sees no existing FreeBSD slice on the drive.
However, there may be other problems involved here as well.
Hmmm. This sounds a good plan. Would the following
It seems Assar Westerlund wrote:
Alfred Perlstein bri...@rush.net writes:
I heard they have released the source to the kernel modules needed
to run it.
why not port them over? :)
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully
On 4 Aug 1999, Assar Westerlund wrote:
Alfred Perlstein bri...@rush.net writes:
I heard they have released the source to the kernel modules needed
to run it.
why not port them over? :)
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't
It's usually best to temporarily change fdisk partition types,
so that sysinstall sees no existing FreeBSD slice on the drive.
However, there may be other problems involved here as well.
Hmmm. This sounds a good plan. Would the following then work
(I'm using `partition' to refer to
I have a really strong urge to submit a PR to make fetch default to passive
mode, instead of requiring a command-line switch ...
In this day and age, with firewalls and NAT abound, it's a bit odd that such
a change has not already been made. Am I missing something? Is there a
reason we haven't
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel module does, which makes it somewhat harder to implement the
same functionality on FreeBSD :-)
a
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Milan Kopacka wrote:
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel module does, which makes it somewhat harder to implement
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
so one must purchase the program to get the kernel mods, is there
an evaluation that can be downloaded?
They have all described on website. The program is key-protected, you can
buy a key, or ask for evaluation key, which will work one month.
You
Robert Nordier wrote:
Because most modern BIOSes do CHS translation, the BIOS geometry is
not always evident from the geometry reported by the drive, and
FreeBSD may get this wrong, particularly if no existing partitions
are defined.
Since you are installing to a drive with no
On 4 Aug 1999, Assar Westerlund wrote:
Brian F. Feldman gr...@freebsd.org writes:
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
Actually, with interfaces like this you should generally pass a pointer
to the structure in userspace, and stick a version number constant in
the beginning of
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Doug Rabson wrote:
The argument for versioning is not simply because the size of ip_number
might change (it should be a sockaddr) but because other fields might be
added or removed. To avoid allocating a new syscall whenever this happens,
the structure should be versioned.
Soren Schmidt s...@freebsd.dk writes:
I started looking at the kernel modules and porting them, however, I
must confess that I don't fully understand exactly what the linux
kernel module does, which makes it somewhat harder to implement the
same functionality on FreeBSD :-)
If you
Brian F. Feldman gr...@freebsd.org writes:
As I read it, sockaddr is a transparent type (overloaded, as it were).
So we would use something like:
struct jail {
...
struct sockaddr;
char [SOCK_MAXADDRLEN - sizeof(struct sockaddr)];
Peter Jeremy jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery purposes (/stand and /sbin) as well as for
security.
Isn't that the same problem as with PAM?
/assar
To Unsubscribe: send mail to
Because most modern BIOSes do CHS translation, the BIOS geometry is
not always evident from the geometry reported by the drive, and
FreeBSD may get this wrong, particularly if no existing partitions
are defined.
Since you are installing to a drive with no pre-existing non-FreeBSD
:The argument for versioning is not simply because the size of ip_number
:might change (it should be a sockaddr) but because other fields might be
:added or removed. To avoid allocating a new syscall whenever this happens,
:the structure should be versioned.
:
:Putting sizeof(whatever) at the
After collecting a bunch of emails from the list, this is the
approach I'll be taking:
1. use the existing nsdispatch code obtained from NetBSD as a base
for parsing the /etc/nsswitch.conf file.
2. Make the C library nsdispatch aware. The dtab[] array will be
filled dynamicaly from the
-hackers,
As docs/12220 points out;
We want to extract routing information by specifying a particular
destination IP address. The man page on Route and Rtentry mention
that this information can be acquired using getkerninfo command. But
there is no such man page. Is it
On Tue, Aug 03, 1999 at 07:52:26PM -0400, Bill Fumerola wrote:
On Tue, 3 Aug 1999, Ted Faber wrote:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1999/08/990802072727.htm
The Duke release credits one Andrew Gallatin for a couple quotes.
Not only FreeBSD in the news, but one of our own
I have a freebsd-stable system. I can't build a kernel for
freebsd-current on that system unless I upgrade my compiler to egcs.
Will this cause problems for our upgrade proceedure?
gcc 2.7.2.3 doesn't like i386/include/atomic.h. It complains about
bad assmbler contraints.
Warner
To
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
I have a freebsd-stable system. I can't build a kernel for
freebsd-current on that system unless I upgrade my compiler to egcs.
Will this cause problems for our upgrade proceedure?
gcc 2.7.2.3 doesn't like i386/include/atomic.h. It complains about
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
I have a freebsd-stable system. I can't build a kernel for
freebsd-current on that system unless I upgrade my compiler to egcs.
Will this cause problems for our upgrade proceedure?
gcc 2.7.2.3 doesn't like i386/include/atomic.h. It complains
As Dag-Erling Smorgrav wrote ...
Kelly Yancey kby...@alcnet.com writes:
[...]
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
to avoid cache invalidation? The idea is to keep a chunk of zeroes on
disk and DMA it into memory instead of clearing pages manually. This
In message
pine.neb.3.96.990804145111.73456a-100...@shell-3.enteract.com David
Scheidt writes:
: I upgraded a -STABLE system to -CURRENT using source a month or two
: ago. The first step is to build the new toolchain, so you shouldn't
: ever be compiling a new kernel with an old compiler.
In message pine.bsf.4.10.9908042352560.1550-100...@ozz.etrust.ru Osokin
Sergey writes:
: try to cvsup your source tree to 4.0, then rebuild your system
: with simply make world procedure.
I can't do that. This system *MUST* be a 3.2-stable system. I was
building the kernel to test to see if a
In article
local.mail.freebsd-hackers/19990804165905.a16...@kilt.nothing-going-on.org
you write:
-hackers,
As docs/12220 points out;
We want to extract routing information by specifying a particular
destination IP address. The man page on Route and Rtentry mention
that this
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
In message
pine.neb.3.96.990804145111.73456a-100...@shell-3.enteract.com David
Scheidt writes:
: I upgraded a -STABLE system to -CURRENT using source a month or two
: ago. The first step is to build the new toolchain, so you shouldn't
: ever be
Dag-Erling Smorgrav d...@flood.ping.uio.no wrote:
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
This sounds reasonable. Some DMA engines support filling regions
and memory-memory copies, but I'm not sure about what can be done
with the DMA engine(s) in PCs.
The idea is
In message
pine.neb.3.96.990804161056.80097a-100...@shell-3.enteract.com David
Scheidt writes:
: Read the docs? Who me? It sounds like the 3.X to 4.0-RELEASE documentation
: should say not to do this. Unless, of course, gcc-2.95 is imported before
: t hen.
Give me a F*ing break. No such
Assar Westerlund as...@sics.se wrote:
Peter Jeremy jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery purposes (/stand and /sbin) as well as for
security.
Isn't that the same problem as with PAM?
Quite probably PAM
Were there any issues related to a memory leak in the routing table ?
I am running freebsd-stable.
After a few days vmstat -m shows the memory used by routing table to be
very high and log messages arpresolve: cant allocate llinfo for
a.b.c.d
arplookup a.b.c.d failed could not allocate llinfo ,
I'm doing some research on resource limits and I can't find any
information at all on the ignoretime capability that's in
/usr/src/etc/login.conf. A 'grep -iR ignoretime *' in /usr/src didn't
return any hits outside of the login.conf files in /usr/src/etc and the
picobsd stuff. Does anyone
I'm seeing on a -stable system that netstat will always print values
obtained from sysctl rather than from the core file specified. Can
anybody confirm this? It doesn't seem like feature to me...
Warner
To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org
with unsubscribe freebsd-hackers in
On 04-Aug-99 Matthew Dillon wrote:
I kinda like the second choice the best but the first choice is what
most
other system calls use.
That doesn't make it right =)
The second avoids the 'the data is different but the size is the same' problem
which would seem to be not too
On Wed, 4 Aug 1999, Oscar Bonilla wrote:
[skip]
2. Make the C library nsdispatch aware. The dtab[] array will be
filled dynamicaly from the contents of /etc/nsswitch.conf.
I'm still not sure if this has to be done whithin the C library
or if nsdispatch should fill the dtab[] array
On Wed, Aug 04, 1999 at 01:20:59PM +0200, Dag-Erling Smorgrav wrote:
Kelly Yancey kby...@alcnet.com writes:
[...]
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
to avoid cache invalidation? The idea is to keep a chunk of zeroes on
disk and DMA it into memory instead
Dag-Erling Smorgrav scribbled this message on Aug 4:
Kelly Yancey kby...@alcnet.com writes:
[...]
Which reminds me - has anyone thought of using DMA for zeroing pages,
to avoid cache invalidation? The idea is to keep a chunk of zeroes on
disk and DMA it into memory instead of clearing
In article 99aug5.074611est.40...@border.alcanet.com.au,
Peter Jeremy jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au wrote:
Assar Westerlund as...@sics.se wrote:
Peter Jeremy jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery
John Polstra j...@polstra.com wrote:
Peter Jeremy jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au wrote:
Assar Westerlund as...@sics.se wrote:
Peter Jeremy jere...@gsmx07.alcatel.com.au writes:
We need to be able to build an application that has no dynamically
loaded code for recovery purposes (/stand and
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