As long as the secondary package includes a newer version of the file
(in the primary package), -U should work.
At worse, the user will be required to add --nodeps to the second
package's installation.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
...
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
On Sun, 2003-06-01 at 16:55, Miki Shapiro wrote:
Thx Gilboa Zafrir
One more question - I can't figure this out from the docs..
Can I build a main package WITHOUT one/some/all of the subpackages
Last time I checked it was Sivan (http://www.sivan.co.il)
Or at least they gave RedHat courses and technical support.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
On Sun, 2003-06-01 at 14:29, Moti Holzman wrote:
Hello,
any knows who
center).
Doron
I stand corrected.
Thanks.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word unsubscribe in the message
Assuming you're looking for a (very) good connection, ftp.mirror.ac.uk
never failed me. (I use it for ISOs, patches, cygwin installations, etc)
ftp://ftp.mirror.ac.uk/sites/ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/
Last time I checked, non of the IL sites carry RH9 ISOs.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML
, OpenBOS :-)
(http://www.openbeos.net/)
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2003-06-02 at 22:14, Ely Levy wrote:
Isn't it exactly what windows people tell linux users?:)
Ely Levy
System group
Hebrew University
Jerusalem Israel
On Mon, 2 Jun 2003
servers on Windows
NT/2K/XP/2K3.
Oh... having spent some time with MS developers... well, serious
professionals is not the word I was looking for. Baboons maybe?
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2003-06-02 at 23:43, Eli Billauer wrote:
Windows
On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 07:28, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Actually you are correct (here I get myself crucified) but hear me out.
I spent years of work on NT internal APIs (The the IBM OS2 APIs that
share the same design) and the design itself is *very* impressive.
Even
On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 08:33, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
On Mon, Jun 02, 2003 at 11:09:59PM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Actually you are correct (here I get myself crucified) but hear me out.
I spent years of work on NT internal APIs (The the IBM OS2 APIs that
share the same design
On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 09:06, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
On Tue, Jun 03, 2003 at 08:46:09AM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Argh.
I never said that it had anything to do with A. Scheduling or B.
Security.
That's what your sentence above implied, but it may or may not be my
lack of reading
On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 15:06, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Posix thread library is problematic.
Here's a couple of examples.
A. Threads:
Lack of true, low level, thread control.
For instance, in Win32 I can save a thread's context, suspend it
remotely (from
-platform OS abstraction layer that handled tcp, processes,
threads, etc.
I'm thinking about taking this code out, building Multi-Object like
option for all OS, and developing a multi-platform abstraction layer as
my main free open source project.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel
window manager.
(http://www.icewm.org/)
Icewm can mimic the Windows Explorer look'n'feel and will run nicely on anything above
486DX/33...
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 12:17, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Posix thread library is problematic.
Here's a couple of examples.
A. Threads:
Lack of true, low level, thread control.
For instance, in Win32 I can save a thread's context, suspend it
remotely (from another thread
On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 13:58, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
On Tue, Jun 03, 2003 at 01:01:33PM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
CPU affinity is available under Linux, at least.
If you can find me the command, I'll be forever in your debt. I googled
myself to death over this one.
Quoting Dave
?
What's the eth0/1 MTU size?
ADSL requires sizes below 1300.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word
On the clients or on the server?
(Should be on the clients.)
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
On Mon, 2003-06-09 at 00:38, Stiven Andre wrote:
On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 22:27, Gilboa Davara wrote:
On Sun, Jun 08, 2003 at 03:54:20AM
www.ximain.com (http://www.ximian.com/products/desktop/)
Best of all, evolution 1.4 has also been released:
ftp://ftp.ximian.com/pub/ximian-evolution/
(Time to dump the 1.3.92 beta version :))
Enjoy!
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
.
Next, do 'man hdparm' and check the current IDE support flags. (UDMA133
may require 'hdparm -c3 -u1 -X69 /dev/xxx' to reach optimal
performance.)
In general, people tend to ignore threads that are headed into
troll-land. I assume that it was never your intention.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
On Sun, 2003-06-15 at 00:27, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
On Saturday 14 June 2003 18:23, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Here's my problem.
The RedHat's 9.0 2.4.20 kernel is patched to it's teeth (NPL threads,
drivers, etc).
I wonder if RedHat will be kind enough to get a patched 2.4.21 kernel
for RH8/9
care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
On Mon, Jun 16, 2003 at 09:41:06AM +0200, Baruch Shpirer wrote:
Hi,
Anyone had any luck doing this ?
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL
Simple.
Does any one of your network cards uses DHCP to get its IP address?
If it does, then the DHCP server may also change the DNS settings,
hence, the resolv.conf changes.
(My Internet connection script, also restores the old resolv.conf after
I connect to the ISP)
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
Can you download the RPMs first? (and put them together?)
Once you do, just order the RPM to install everything inside the
directory, it will sort out the installation order.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
On Sun, 2003-06-22 at 09:17
to
controller mode)
HELP?!?!?
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
XML - Systems Israel.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word unsubscribe in the message body, e.g., run
Oded,
If you weren't a man, I would have kissed you. :-)
I knew that I'm doing the right thing; and I knew I forgot something
important guess I'm getting old and stupid..!
I'm in your debt. Thanks!
Gilboa
On Sun, 2003-06-22 at 14:54, Oded Arbel wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Here's
Here's a couple.
A. Development tools and workplaces:
Low adaptation gives MS power to dictate *bad* (non)standards. MS-Word
is not the real problem here; MFC, DirectX, Visual Basic, C#, etc are!
As developers we are forced to use non standard closed tools and
libraries that can be changed
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 15:45, Eli Billauer wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Here's a couple.
A. Development tools and workplaces:
Low adaptation gives MS power to dictate *bad* (non)standards. MS-Word
is not the real problem here; MFC, DirectX, Visual Basic, C#, etc are!
As developers we
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 14:43, Beni Cherniavsky wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote on 2003-06-24:
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 14:40, Eli Billauer wrote:
Since the Linux for masses issue is up again, here's my little food for
thought:
What's wrong with the situation as it is?
What's wrong
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 15:55, Beni Cherniavsky wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote on 2003-06-24:
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 15:45, Eli Billauer wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Here's a couple.
A. Development tools and workplaces:
Low adaptation gives MS power to dictate *bad* (non)standards
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 19:43, Beni Cherniavsky wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote on 2003-06-24:
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 15:55, Beni Cherniavsky wrote:
Let me doubt the Captian being a programmer :-). I stipulate that the
percent of programmers exposed to unix is much higher than the percent
the prefix suffix support
but if someone would help them add it, it won't be too hard
to write a module for aspell that uses hspell's logic/wordlist
Ely Levy
System group
Hebrew University
Jerusalem Israel
On 24 Jun 2003, Gilboa Davara wrote:
I was looking into ways to integrate hspell
precedence.
Gilboa
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 23:08, Meni Livne wrote:
On Tuesday 24 June 2003 22:57, Gilboa Davara wrote:
I was looking into ways to integrate hspell under Abiword and evolution.
Thus far... I found none.
I would guess they support ispell, don't they? Doing it in KDE was fairly
it was?) supports bidi.
Ely Levy
System group
Hebrew University
Jerusalem Israel
On 24 Jun 2003, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Yeah... I think both are using the gtk-spell module.
Maybe we (I) should contact the gtk-spell team and offer them help to
adopt the hspell for Hebrew.
I should add
No go.
Same problem.
They have right justification but I don't see no bidi option.
Gilboa
On Tue, 2003-06-24 at 23:59, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Tue, Jun 24, 2003 at 11:47:25PM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Doesn't really work.
As you
Set LANG=en_US.UTF-8 in /etc/sysconfig/i18n
Gilboa
On Wed, 2003-06-25 at 15:18, Guy Cohen wrote:
I have a problem with reading man pages on redhat8.
some chars are missing and instead I see garbage.
The garbage chars replace mostly the - chars infront of options.
Any one knows what's the
programmers from get what they (really) deserve: a one-way ticket home.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 00:06, Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
On Tuesday 24 June 2003 16:18, Gilboa Davara wrote:
But the percentage is getting lower and lower.
My guess it that in general close to 80% of the programmers
STL is one of the worst pieces of code I ever saw in my life. It's a
good example to what happens if you decide to take OO design a couple of
steps too far.
Gilboa
On Wed, 2003-06-25 at 23:43, Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
On Tuesday 24 June 2003 21:26, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Funny enough... I know
Aaahm.
I use Abiword extensively (1.9.something beta) and I love it, but while
faster then anything else (Especially OO...) it's unacceptably slow on
my laptop. (P366/256/icewm)
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 00:52, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 12:31:55AM +0300, Gilboa Davara
.. But two wrongs don't make a right.
STL sucks doesn't mean that sun's JRE (not the same I know) doesn't.
Same goes for .net, MFC, and ATL.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 00:39, Gilboa Davara wrote:
STL is one of the worst pieces of code I ever saw in my life. It's a
good example to what
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 01:21, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 12:39:19AM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
STL is one of the worst pieces of code I ever saw in my life. It's a
good example to what happens if you decide to take OO design a couple of
steps too far.
Your quote above
to
debug...
I do OS abstraction layers for a living (among others) so I know how an
efficient underlaying should look like. STL is *far* from that.
Can we return to content free mode? :-)
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 07:59, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 12:39:19AM +0300, Gilboa Davara
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 09:57, Alex Shnitman wrote:
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 00:31, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Instead of using this huge amount of computing power to break the
software sand-box and take computing to a new level, we waste it on
object constructors, virtual function tables, house
instead of MS-Word.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 10:36, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 01:00:45AM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Aaahm.
I use Abiword extensively (1.9.something beta) and I love it, but while
faster then anything else (Especially OO...) it's unacceptably slow
Same here. Though I usually use menuconfig instead, I do remember using
xconfig on KDE/QT less machines. (Old 486/P/K6...)
Weird... very weird.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 14:43, Oded Arbel wrote:
Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
When I try to
Try changing:
ConfigItem** ip = (ConfigItem*)menu-data;
To:
ConfigItem **ip = (ConfigItem**)menu-data;
Both should work... I've got no idea why GCC will shout on this one.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 20:01, Micha Feigin wrote:
Somewhere in 2.5 there are two graphical configurations I am aware
Get lm_sensors working and check the CPU's temperature.
My guess, your machine overheat and crashes.
If you're past 60c, you're in trouble.
My dual Athlon XP1900 machine will hardlock once the CPU passes the 58c
mark.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 21:30, Itay 'z9u2K' Duvdevani wrote:
While
.. Don't rule out hardware yet.
Are you using aggressive memory timing? (Gigabyte calls it Optimal
performance.).
Try lowing it to normal.
You memory modules may be over-heating.
(I had the same problem on a couple of GA-7VAXPs running Windows 2K/XP
and Linux).
Second... you can change the AGP
.
Plus, a large number RedHat9 users reported that there is a noticeable
performance loss after upgrading to 2.4.21; RedHat seemed to have done a
great job at patching the 2.4.20 kernel to gain better performance.
The new Iraqi information minister,
Gilboa Davara
the .so files on both cases have different extensions. (libc-2.2.x.so
vs. libc-2.3.2).
However, the problem will be the main libc.so symbolic link. (You'll
have to decide who gets the main symbolic link)
Forgive my stupid question... but why not upgrade to RH9 and save the
trouble?
Gilboa
On
Better yet:
#ifdef unix
// UNIX/Linux/*BSD.
#endif
#ifdef _WIN32
// Window stuff
#endif
Both symbols are auto defined by the compiler.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-07-03 at 18:48, Nadav Har'El wrote:
On Thu, Jul 03, 2003, Voguemaster wrote about Cross platform code:
The problem is very basic:
are required to access any OS
functions)
So yes, these are compiler defined macros that can be relayed upon.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-07-03 at 21:08, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Better yet:
#ifdef unix
// UNIX/Linux/*BSD.
#endif
#ifdef _WIN32
/socket.h
#endif
#ifdef _FREEBSD_
// Same as Linux...
..
#endif
#ifdef _HPUX_
..etc
On Thu, 2003-07-03 at 21:08, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Better yet:
#ifdef unix
// UNIX/Linux/*BSD.
#endif
#ifdef _WIN32
// Window stuff
#endif
http://news.com.com/2100-1016_3-1023130.html?tag=fd_top
Interesting.
--
Take care,
Gilboa Davara
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
972 - 054 968 909
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word unsubscribe
Two things...
A. The Intel modem drivers should work. You'll just have re-link them
with the new kernel.
B. We are talking about Beta. You won't see any major distro being
released with 2.6 kernel before Q1/04.
Gilboa
On Sat, 2003-07-05 at 14:33, Diego Iastrubni wrote:
, 5 2003, 11:48, Gilboa
drivers
if the current drivers won't be compatible.
Cheers,
Gilboa
On Sat, 2003-07-05 at 16:54, Diego Iastrubni wrote:
, 5 2003, 15:45, Gilboa Davara :
Two things...
A. The Intel modem drivers should work. You'll just have re-link them
with the new kernel.
B. We are talking about Beta. You
+5 Word! :-)
Gilboa *
* Yet another uneducated fool, that managed to stay employed during the
years by using the KISS factor. [Kudos for the new word!].
On Mon, 2003-07-07 at 15:03, Lior Kesos wrote:
Small disclaimer due to the fact I was asked to post the job and that a
healthy thread
Ummm... I'm using RedHat with pptp.
Maybe I didn't understand the question... my firewalls use pptp-1.1 to
connect to ADSL (Alcatel @work, RH7.3) or cable (Motorola @home RH9).
Just download the source and compile it.
You add the passwords to the chap/pap-secrets, and use the pptp binary
to
I'm using Promise controllers (NON Raid) for most of my older machines
(All running RedHat 7.3/8/9) without a problem.
However, some IDE cards are not supported... especially Raid cards.
As long as you are going for normal ATA100/133 cards, it should be fine.
Gilboa
On Fri, 2003-07-11 at 20:47,
I assume it's using the Intel Serial ATA controller, right?
Try checking here: http://support.intel.com/design/motherbd/linux/
Here's the PDF:
ftp://download.intel.com/design/motherbd/linux/RedHat9_info.pdf
Gilboa
On Wed, 2003-07-16 at 13:05, Herouth Maoz wrote:
Quoting Moti Holzman [EMAIL
Ignore arts for a second.
Do you hear anything when you cat wav_file /dev/dsp (as root)?
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 16:35, Amir Tal wrote:
got myself a used dell inspiron 4000 for a (very) good price, and loaded
debian sid on it.
it used to run winXP before i formatted it, and sound
Please do $ls -l /dev/dsp.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 17:00, Amir Tal wrote:
On Thursday 24 July 2003 10:07, Gilboa Davara wrote:
no i dont.
i didnt know that using cat will play the file!??!
it just gave me a giberish output in my terminal.
tal.
Ignore arts for a second
idea ?
tal.
Please do $ls -l /dev/dsp.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 17:00, Amir Tal wrote:
On Thursday 24 July 2003 10:07, Gilboa Davara wrote:
no i dont.
i didnt know that using cat will play the file!??!
it just gave me a giberish output in my terminal.
tal
., run the command
echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
is not there, it's just that
the device is not detected.
Ideas, anyone?
Shachar
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, e.g., run the command
echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or a server?
Shachar
Gilboa Davara
Mobile: 972 54 4968909
Email: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
actually run slower...
As for WhiteBox/CentOS, I used them both on my x86-64 IBM Opterons and they worked just fine, greatly outperforming their 32bit variants.
However, as I said, YMMV (Your millage may vary...)
Gilboa
On Sun, 2005-02-06 at 11:53 +0200, Erez Doron wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote
?
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Shlomo
in the message body, e.g., run the command
echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
Netvision. Hands down
1.The ISP wWorks with pptp and l2tp.
2, They have connection instruction and scripts (for both pptp and l2tp) on their site.
3. Their tech support have Linux people.
Gilboa
On Tue, 2005-03-08 at 16:56 +0200, Boris Zingerman wrote:
Hi
I would like to know which cable
Interesting.
How's your US/Europe bandwidth during peak hours?
Gilboa
On Tue, 2005-03-08 at 20:24 +0200, Lior Kaplan wrote:
I convinced Barak013 to give me DHCP access (=no dailer) so I won't have
to configure the dailer under linux. That took a few calls and expressing
the fact that I'll
__
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
the RAID and Linux tools without changing anything.
-Original Message-
From: Gilboa Davara [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2005 1:12 PM
To: Baruch Shpirer
Cc: linux-il@linux.org.il
Subject: Re: Linux NAS like Solution
. That's not my case however.
To make things worse it happens at random with different combinations
of *NIX/SSH.
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
, I just get a message saying that the service is temporarily unavailable.
Can anyone shed any light on this issue ?
TIA.
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
I last used it on Thursday...
Maybe we should contact their service-rep and ask for their help?
Gilboa
On Sun, 2005-04-10 at 12:35 +0300, Aharon Schkolnik wrote:
On Sunday 10 April 2005 12:28 pm, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Seems like a normal service-down problem.
God knows it happens *alot
a forum or reviews
site? I've tried Googling, but I get old reviews - I'm looking for
more uptodate stuff, especially with regards to their newer GPUs, such
as the XT850.
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
Thanks in advance,
:
, 12 2005, 16:39,Tzafrir Cohen:
On Tue, Apr 12, 2005 at 04:16:28PM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
ATI has just released a new set of i386 and x86-64 drivers.
While they are still inferior to nVidia performance wise, ATI seems to
be doing it's best to close the gap.
For now, I'd stick
. On the other hand,
xfontsel shows over 2000 fonts. Perhaps I just need to tell OpenOffice about
all the fonts I have installed, however I don't know how to do that.
I am using Fedora Core 3.
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice Systems
Quite on the contrary...!
If the bubble is back, I've got ~3 years to pay my mortgage, buy a BMW
M5 and fly around the world... twice. (before going back to minimum-wage
pro gaming in Java :))
Gilboa
On Thu, 2005-05-05 at 18:00 +0300, Peter wrote:
On Thu, 5 May 2005, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
I'd venture to guess that it's a P1/166MMX. The only other 166Mhz Pentium was the Pentium Pro 166Mhz/512kb, and was rarely used.
Gilboa
On Mon, 2005-05-09 at 15:51 +0300, Amit Aronovitch wrote:
Erez Doron wrote:
I have an old p2 166 mmx for giveaway.
Is that really a P2 ?
I think
Last time I tested it (Build 88?), the Office import plug-ins advanced to point where I could open Office 2K3 docs that couldn't be imported by older OO versions.
The beta itself was pretty stable and the Hebrew support was top-notch.
Though, I'd wait for the final version before using it
First, I'd suggest you post in English and in plain text.
HTML Hebrew message encoding tend to screw numbers and links... plus,
not all email clients accept HTML messages.
In general, you can't find the serial DKU-2 in Israel (at least I
couldn't) and the USB-to-serial DKU-5 cable (the one being
I stand corrected, then.
Never the less, IRDA and Bluetooth should probe to be faster then a 128Kbps serial line.
Gilboa
On Wed, 2005-05-18 at 13:08 +0200, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
In general, you can't find the serial DKU-2 in Israel (at least I
couldn't) and the USB-to-serial DKU-5 cable
I'm no kernel guru, but I, too, found cscope to be *very* annoying. vim+ctags is much better. (Let alone faster.)
Doing :tag ssize_t or :tag size_t (Or Ctrl+] over the tag itself) will jump to include/linux/types.h without too much fuss.
*However* if you you're looking for tag reference (E.g.
not being
able to mount root device NULL and suggest that I append root= to
the command line.
What gives ? I'm guessing I didn't do anything wrong, but probably I can
get it to work if I can supply the correct root flag. what should I
put in ?
--
Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nice
On Tue, 2005-06-21 at 19:42 +0300, Oded Arbel wrote:
On Tuesday, 21 June 2005 18:56, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Did it detect your IDE chipset?
I think that it did, but I can't really tell as it runs pretty fast by,
and i can't page back or pause it. The box currently has Mandrake 10
fine.
Why? I don't know, neither could i find a reasonable explanation. but it
worked for me on two seperate machines.
5. Enjoy!
Dvir
Gilboa Davara wrote:
On Tue, 2005-06-21 at 19:42 +0300, Oded Arbel wrote:
On Tuesday, 21 June 2005 18:56, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Did it detect your IDE chipset?
I
I usually setup a mirror on one server and do an NFS install instead.
If you use a kick-start image, you have a running FC copy within 20 minutes, hands off.
Gilboa
On Wed, 2005-06-22 at 12:17 +0200, Uri Sharf wrote:
If it makes sense to you, and you don't need to re-install on multiple
syslogd and klogd will log the messages under /var/log/message (or what-ever file configured in /etc/syslog.conf)
Adding 'dmesg -n 1' to the rc.local will prevent non-critical messages from making their way into a console.
Gilboa
On Wed, 2005-06-22 at 14:49 +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Hi
/kernel.h
#include linux/module.h
#include linux/moduleparam.h
#include linux/inetdevice.h
#include linux/netdevice.h
MODULE_DESCRIPTION(Test Module);
MODULE_AUTHOR(Gilboa Davara);
MODULE_LICENSE(GPL);
static int ethernet_id = 0;
module_param(ethernet_id,int,0400);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(ethernet_id
(?) enough, porting my code to vxworks is
not an option ;))
In general, I plan on doing swapper like file I/O.
Gilboa
On Thu, 2005-07-28 at 15:17 +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Hello all,
I need to file I/O operations from within kthread context (Multiple fast
network streams, no time to push
Gilad,
First, thanks for the answer.
On Thu, 2005-07-28 at 16:44 +0300, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
A kernel thread is indeed proccess context, but since you brought it
up
already and assuming we're talking 2.6, the correct way to do is
use
work queues (and hence schedule_work) instead of
: Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: IL List linux-il@linux.org.il
Subject: Re: File I/O within kernel threads?
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2005 17:24:41 +0300
Gilad,
First, thanks for the answer.
On Thu, 2005-07-28 at 16:44 +0300, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
A kernel thread is indeed proccess
-07-28 at 23:41 +0300, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
On Thu, Jul 28, 2005 at 04:15:57PM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Never the less, if anyone has interesting insight as for how to .very.
fast file I/O inside the kernel (Yes, I know that its considered bad,
and may results from a bad design decision
-28 at 23:41 +0300, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
On Thu, Jul 28, 2005 at 04:15:57PM +0300, Gilboa Davara wrote:
Never the less, if anyone has interesting insight as for how to .very.
fast file I/O inside the kernel (Yes, I know that its considered bad,
and may results from a bad design decision
that can be bent to suite my
rather weird requirements.
As the saying goes: Writing you own FS really cuts down on your Doom3
time! :-)
Gilboa
On Sun, 2005-07-31 at 14:56 +0300, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
Gilboa Davara wrote:
Muli,
I well aware of the controversy surrounding FS access from
Gilad,
Umm... Interesting. You might be right... but I'm still not convinced.
(Though my project manager will love the general idea. To say the least,
she doesn't really fancy the idea of writing our own FS :))
I'm sorry if I seound harsh, but I don't think you udnerstand your own
needs.
It
On Sun, 2005-07-31 at 17:35 +0300, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
I should add the encryption optional, depending on load and source. (And
more important, how fanatical is the client)
(There's no way in hell, I'll be able to process and encrypt two OC48
links in real time...)
I believe
1 - 100 of 357 matches
Mail list logo