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Holle

2002-11-25 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Good day,

I am obliged to confide in you with the hope that you will understand
my plight and need of assistance. I got your address from the net and
after praying for God´s guidance, decided to contact you.
I am Mariam  Bangura, daughter of late Mr John Bangura of Sierra Leone
who was killed by the Sierra Leone's rebel forces on the 24th of
December,1999 in my country Sierra Leone.
When he was still alive, he deposited one trunk box containing the sum
of USD$10 million dollars in cash (Ten Million dollars). with a private
security and safe deposit company here in Abidjan Cote d´Ivoire.
This
money was made from the sell of Gold and Diamond by my mother and she
have already decided to use this money for future investment of the
family.
Recently, I rushed down to Abidjan after being able to locate where my
late father kept the depository Agreement made between himself and the
security company. I have confirmed from the security company that the
consignment is in their custody, when I demanded for the release of the
consignment to me in my capacity of being the daughter of Mr Bangura,
the depositor of the consignment, I was told that in the absence of my
father, the only person that can demand for the release of the
consignment is my late father´s foreign partner on whose behalf the
consignment was deposited.
Meanwhile, my father have instructed me that in the case of his death,
that I should look for a trusted foreigner who can assist me to move
out this money from Côte d´Ivoire immediately for investment .

Based on this , I solicit for your assistance to transfer this fund
into your Account, but I will demand for the following requirement:

(1) Could you provide for me a safe Bank Account where
this fund will be transferred to in your country after  retrieving the
box containing the money from the custody of the security company.

(2) Could you be able to introduce me to a profitable business venture
that would not require much technical expertise in your country where
part of this fund will be invested?

  I am a Christian and I will please, want you to handle this
transaction based on the trust I have established on you.
For your assistance in this transaction, I have decided to compensate
you with 10 percent of the total amount at the end of this business.
The security of this business is very important to me and as such, I
would like you to keep this business very confidential.
I shall expect an early response from you.
Thank you and God bless.

Yours sincerely,
Mariam Bangura
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   



  



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documentation on kernel locks, mutexes?

2002-11-25 Thread Yury Tarasievich
Hello,

I need to port some driver from linux to freebsd and, somehow, 
I can't find documentation on kernel locks and mutexes. 
There are no man pages, links from handbook are broken, and search on 
freebsd site gives nothing (besides the handbook itself).

Where can I find some docs?

,Yury.

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Re: documentation on kernel locks, mutexes?

2002-11-25 Thread Terry Lambert
Yury Tarasievich wrote:
 I need to port some driver from linux to freebsd and, somehow,
 I can't find documentation on kernel locks and mutexes.
 There are no man pages, links from handbook are broken, and search on
 freebsd site gives nothing (besides the handbook itself).
 
 Where can I find some docs?

Kernel documentation is poor, because interfaces are not as
fixed in stone as you might expect them to be to encourage
third party developement and porting efforts like yours.

Your best bet is to pick a driver for an existing device that
is similar in operation to the device whose driver you are in
the process of porting, and use it as a guide to tell you
where and how to lock.

-- Terry

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Wierd message followed mem prob

2002-11-25 Thread Kenneth Culver
Hi,
This is in addition to my last mail. Just to reiterate, I'm using
FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE as of a few days ago, and I've never seen this problem
before. The wierd message comes from /usr/src/sys/i386/i386/machdep.c:

Too many holes in the physical address space, giving up

It prints before even the copyright message on bootup. Second is (I think
as a result of this message) My total memory is too small by over 100M (I
have 512M):

Copyright (c) 1992-2002 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE #0: Mon Nov 25 04:25:46 EST 2002
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/compile/MYKERNEL
Timecounter i8254  frequency 1193182 Hz
CPU: AMD Athlon(tm) XP 2000+ (1667.40-MHz 686-class CPU)
  Origin = AuthenticAMD  Id = 0x662  Stepping = 2

Features=0x383fbffFPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,APIC,SEP,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CM
OV,PAT,PSE36,MMX,FXSR,SSE
  AMD Features=0xc040AMIE,DSP,3DNow!
real memory  = 402669568 (393232K bytes)
avail memory = 386879488 (377812K bytes)

Anyone know what's going on/how to fix it?

Ken


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Re: Wierd message followed mem prob

2002-11-25 Thread Terry Lambert
Kenneth Culver wrote:
 This is in addition to my last mail. Just to reiterate, I'm using
 FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE as of a few days ago, and I've never seen this problem
 before. The wierd message comes from /usr/src/sys/i386/i386/machdep.c:
 
 Too many holes in the physical address space, giving up
 
 It prints before even the copyright message on bootup. Second is (I think
 as a result of this message) My total memory is too small by over 100M (I
 have 512M):

Your physical memory map is laid out such that it has holes in;
in general, the code, as written, can tolerate up to 7 holes...
8 discontiguous chunks.

In a properly functioning system, you will not have more than that,
and will generally have much less (the number goes up if 384K is
remapped from expansion RAM to back-fill the hole above 640K; in
general, you should turn this off in the BIOS, if you can, unless
you are multibooting the system in DOS, and are using QEMM or a
similar TSR to access expansion RAM).

In general, the message is mostly harmless.  What it means is that
there is some physical memory that was not mapped into the address
space as a known chunk, because of regions within memory that have
been mapped out -- holes.  You lose access to chunks above the
last chunk.

If it's complaining about holes, rather than segments, then it means
that INT 15:E820 is succeeding without leaving anything out, but
that the number of holes detected are larger than the number of holes
that the BIOS knows about -- there is a mismatch -- and that the
number of holes is greater than 8.

The number of holes available to be mapped this way are limited to
PHYS_AVAIL_ARRAY_END.  By default, this will be 8... the maximum
number supported is limited by the index for the declaration of
the phys_avail[] array, minus 2 (default: 10).

You can increase this number by modifying the 10 in the
phys_avail[] array declaration.  You may want to try jumping it
up to 20, and recompiling the kernel (the declaration is around
line 206 of /sys/i386/i386/machdep.c).

In general, this is a bad way to work around the problem.  If
you have many detected holes like this in your address space,
it is usually indicative of a hardware problem.  This is usually
either a brocken interior address line (but above a page worth
of bits - bit 12) in the memory bus circuitry, or a broken RAM
chip and/or bad connections on a SIMM.

NB: Given address space layout on PC's, the algorithm would lose
less total RAM in the situation where it has chunk issues like
this, if it started from the top down, instead of the bottom up,
since the chunkiness will be found below 540K and/or in the bus
I/O address space.

-- Terry

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jail: hide df output

2002-11-25 Thread Alexandr Kovalenko
Hello,

I'm trying to find place in kernel which is used by df to show
mountpoints and free space on them to change it in way that jailed user:
- cannot view any host-os mounted filesystems;
- can view in df output only his /jail/jailXX/ unionfs mount where
  data taken from quota data.

Any help would be appreciated.

-- 
NEVE-RIPE, will build world for food
Ukrainian FreeBSD User Group
http://uafug.org.ua/

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Re: jail: hide df output

2002-11-25 Thread Maxim Konovalov
On 15:29+0300, Nov 25, 2002, Alexandr Kovalenko wrote:

 Hello,

 I'm trying to find place in kernel which is used by df to show
 mountpoints and free space on them to change it in way that jailed user:
   - cannot view any host-os mounted filesystems;
   - can view in df output only his /jail/jailXX/ unionfs mount where
 data taken from quota data.

 Any help would be appreciated.

http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=26740

-- 
Maxim Konovalov, MAcomnet, Internet Dept., system engineer
phone: +7 (095) 796-9079, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Review by USB wizard wanted

2002-11-25 Thread Yar Tikhiy
Hi folks,

I'm playing with a Sony USB memory stick reader/writer.  It's a
pretty slow device, so it triggers some bugs in the FreeBSD USB
code unnoticed before.  I'm new to USB programming, so I submit
my notes to a discussion or review.

First, sometimes (especially, if twitching a memory stick out of
the reader while the device is being detected) a transfer to the
umass device is initiated *after* the device is already gone.  System
panic follows.  The transfer is initiated when destroying the default
pipe to the device.  Indeed, the current usb_subr.c code will detach
child devices first and destroy the default pipe then.  Reverting
this order eliminates the panic.

Second, twitching a memory stick can cause CAM jam.  That happens
because the umass detach routine won't wake up the upper layer when
processing a device with a pending transfer on it.

Patches addressing the above problems are attached below.

-- 
Yar


--- usb_subr.c.orig Sat Nov 16 12:07:50 2002
+++ usb_subr.c  Fri Nov 22 15:45:35 2002
@@ -1292,8 +1292,6 @@
 {
int ifcidx, nifc;
 
-   if (dev-default_pipe != NULL)
-   usbd_kill_pipe(dev-default_pipe);
if (dev-ifaces != NULL) {
nifc = dev-cdesc-bNumInterface;
for (ifcidx = 0; ifcidx  nifc; ifcidx++)
@@ -1340,6 +1338,9 @@
return;
}
 #endif
+
+   if (dev-default_pipe != NULL)
+   usbd_kill_pipe(dev-default_pipe);
 
if (dev-subdevs != NULL) {
DPRINTFN(3,(usb_disconnect_port: disconnect subdevs\n));




--- umass.c.origSat Nov 16 12:07:50 2002
+++ umass.c Fri Nov 22 21:42:10 2002
@@ -1033,6 +1033,13 @@
/* detach the device from the SCSI host controller (SIM) */
err = umass_cam_detach(sc);
 
+   /* if upper layer is waiting for a transfer to finish, wake it up */
+   if (sc-transfer_state != TSTATE_IDLE) {
+   sc-transfer_state = TSTATE_IDLE;
+   sc-transfer_cb(sc, sc-transfer_priv,
+   sc-transfer_datalen, STATUS_WIRE_FAILED);
+   }
+
for (i = 0; i  XFER_NR; i++)
if (sc-transfer_xfer[i])
usbd_free_xfer(sc-transfer_xfer[i]);

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Looking for old friends

2002-11-25 Thread From the desk of E.A. Roth
HTML

*** Come Check Out Me and My Happy Friends 
Live webmcams, one on one chat and lots more.
Click here for our pics: a href=http://ssvideos.com/main.html; 
http://ssvideos.com/main.html/a
No one under 18 allowed to view this material!
 if you would like to be removed please click
here: a href=http://ssvideos.com/remove.html;http://ssvideos.com/remove.html/a


/body/html

 [^3247(^(P]



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Re: jail: hide df output

2002-11-25 Thread Alexandr Kovalenko
Hello, Maxim Konovalov!

On Mon, Nov 25, 2002 at 03:42:54PM +0300, you wrote:

  I'm trying to find place in kernel which is used by df to show
  mountpoints and free space on them to change it in way that jailed user:
  - cannot view any host-os mounted filesystems;
  - can view in df output only his /jail/jailXX/ unionfs mount where
data taken from quota data.
 
  Any help would be appreciated.
 
 http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=26740

Thank you! :)
Now I need only quota thing and fix for correct stripping of unionfs
mounts.

-- 
NEVE-RIPE, will build world for food
Ukrainian FreeBSD User Group
http://uafug.org.ua/

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Why my FreeBSD can't recieve Multicast MAC frame

2002-11-25 Thread Daorat Kerdlapanan
I sent HTTP request to IP alias of my host with Multicast MAC address 
01:00:5e:01:02:03, but i don't see reply or respone from my FreeBSD. How can 
i do it?

I joined IP Multicast address Group 224.1.2.3 (Mac = 01:00:5e:01:02:03) by 
mtest program.
#netstat -nia /* At My host. Results of netstat -nia after join by mtest (j 
224.1.2.3 0.0.0.0) */
Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
ep1 1500 00:60:97:1a:af:ee 16 0 15 0 0
01:00:5e:01:02:03 /* Multicast MAC address from joining 224.1.2.3 */
33:33:95:a7:5b:2a
33:33:00:00:00:01
33:33:ff:1a:af:ee
01:00:5e:00:00:01
ep1 1500 192.168.2 192.168.2.2 12 - 8 - -
224.1.2.3 /* IP multicast */
224.0.0.1
ep1 1500 fe80:3::260 fe80:3::260:97ff: 0 - 0 - -
ff02:3::2:95a7:5b2a (refs: 1)
ff02:3::1 (refs: 1)
ff02:3::1:ff1a:afee (refs: 1)
ep1 1500 192.168.2.4/3 192.168.2.4 0 - 0 - -
224.1.2.3
224.0.0.1

#ifconfig /* My host is Apache server */
ep1: flags=8873 mtu 1500
inet 192.168.2.2 netmask 0xff00 broadcast 192.168.2.255
inet6 fe80::260:97ff:fe1a:afee%ep1 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x3
inet 192.168.2.4 netmask 0x broadcast 192.168.2.4
ether 00:60:97:1A:AF:EE
media: Ehernet 10baseT/UTP

Packet (HTTP request) contain following below:-
-src ether 00:A0:24:9D:AC:65
-dst ether 01:00:5E:01:02:03
-src IP 192.168.1.226
-dst IP 192.168.2.4

Why my FreeBSD can't recieve Multicast MAC frame that I sent to? How can i 
do? Please help me.

Thank you
Daorat

_
Add photos to your messages with MSN 8. Get 2 months FREE*. 
http://join.msn.com/?page=features/featuredemail


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RE: Why my FreeBSD can't recieve Multicast MAC frame

2002-11-25 Thread Don Bowman
 From: Daorat Kerdlapanan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 I sent HTTP request to IP alias of my host with Multicast MAC address 
 01:00:5e:01:02:03, but i don't see reply or respone from my 
 FreeBSD. How can 
 i do it?

HTTP is a TCP protocol. TCP doesn't support multicast (since there
are replies to be sent).

--don ([EMAIL PROTECTED] www.sandvine.com)

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Re: default acl for directory

2002-11-25 Thread Robert Watson

On Sat, 23 Nov 2002, Dancho Penev wrote:

 I was played with acl and specially default acl for directories at my
 FreeBSD-CURRENT machine with UFS2 filesystem and some questions appears
 to me: 
 
 1. How about default acl permission to override umask?  Is that the idea
 who isn't yet implemented or you have opinions against that. 

My reading of the POSIX.1e spec was that umask would continue to mask ACLs
in the same manner it masked permissions.  However, you're welcome to
re-read the spec, or e-mail the POSIX.1e mailing list, and let us know
if the result looks different to you :-).  The idea, btw, I suspect, is
that this provides maximum compatibility for applications that understand
only permissions and not full ACLs.

 2. What are reasons to update ACL_MASK entry (if exist) or ACL_GROUP_OBJ
 entry (if mask doesn't exist) but not both in ufs_sync_acl_from_inode()?
 
 It's true that reverse function ufs_sync_inode_from_acl() uses the same
 logic but take a look at follow situation: 

This is another POSIX.1e-ism, and our implementation is based on a reading
of that draft spec.  If you want to give it a reading, or query the
POSIX.1e list for clarification, I'd welcome any investigation of the
issue.  My understanding is that the goal of the mask is to match the
semantics of the permissions group entry in the traditional inode
protections for applications that don't understand ACLs.  I.e., suppose an
application creates a file, then chmods it 0600 -- the application wants
the owner, and only the owner, to have read and write access.  If a mask
entry is present (and it is required if there is ever any other extended
entry), then we update the mask entry in the chmod(), which in effect
leads to the same result: it masks all entries but the owner and the other
entry.  If there's no mask entry, then there are no extended entries, so
we actually change the group protections.  If the implementation of this
logic looks incorrect, please let me know.  Also, feel free to read the
spec and e-mail the list and see if this actually is a sensical
interpretation of the spec.

Thanks,

Robert N M Watson FreeBSD Core Team, TrustedBSD Projects
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  Network Associates Laboratories




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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread David Magda
Alexander [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 I just tested the sis.diff patch and it almost worked on me :)

What version of FreeBSD are you running? We had the same problem but
when we updated the sources to 4.6-stable it was fixed in
src/sys/pci/if_sis.c on February 19. Check the source of the file and
make sure you have at least version 1.13.4.20. If you don't, update
the sources and recompile. If you have that version (or newer) then
it's not the problem I'm thing about.

-- 
David Magda dmagda at ee.ryerson.ca
Because the innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under
the old conditions, and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well 
under the new. -- Niccolo Machiavelli, _The Prince_, Chapter VI

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Reading from an OS-X HFS disk drive ?

2002-11-25 Thread Thierry Herbelot
Hello,

I've installed 5.0-DP2 on my Vaio which has a firewire port.

I already had loaded the firewire driver in 4.7-Stable, to see what happened 
(nothing remarkable : the chipset is indeed probed and recognized, 
nevertheless, thanks for the driver !).

To go a bit further, I've borrowed a 80Gb disk from a colleague, who runs OS-X 
on his machine. I'm trying to read from this disk under 5.0-DP2

after loading the sbp.ko module, the disk is detected as :
sbp0: SBP2/SCSI over firewire on firewire0
sbp_attach
sbp_post_explore: EUI:0030e001e005 spec=1 key=1.
sbp0:0:0 LOGIN
sbp0:0:0 ordered:1 type:14 EUI:0030e001e005 node:1 speed:2 maxrec:5 new!
sbp0:0:0 'Oxford Semiconductor Ltd.   ' 'OXFORD IDE Device   ' '31'
sbp0:0:0 login: len 16, ID 0, cmd f010, recon_hold 0
sbp0:0:0 sbp_busy_timeout
sbp0:0:0 sbp_agent_reset
sbp0:0:0 sbp_do_attach
sbp0:0:0 sbp_cam_scan_lun
pass0 at sbp0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0
pass0: Oxford S OXFORD IDE Devic 0031 Fixed Simplified Direct Access SCSI-4 
device
pass0: Serial Number   VNC402A4L6Z6LA
pass0: 50.000MB/s transfers
da0 at sbp0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0
da0: Oxford S OXFORD IDE Devic 0031 FixedSimplified Direct Access SCSI-4 
device
da0: Serial Number   VNC402A4L6Z6LA
da0: 50.000MB/s transfers
da0: 78533MB (160836480 512 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 10011C)
GEOM: new disk da0

I've tried both /usr/ports/emulators/hfs and hfsutils, but I can't read the 
HFS partition. I only have the root directory :

portable-cur# hfs dir -d /dev/da0

Volume is Musique
Directory of :

DMGR   BTFL1257472 0  Aug 29 14:23   Desktop DB
DMGR   DTFL  0 0  Aug 29 14:23   Desktop DF
MACS   FNDR  0 0  Aug 29 14:23   Finder
ttxt   ttro   1781 0  Aug 29 14:23   ReadMe
MACS   zsys  0 22233  Aug 29 14:23   System

   5 file(s) 1259253 bytes (data)
   22233 bytes (resource)
   0 bytes free

Is it a special form of HFS (HFS+ ?) ? is there some utility to mount this 
kinds of partitions ?

Thanks in advance

TfH

PS : the first sentence of the ReadMe file is :
This hard disk is formatted with the Mac OS Extended format. Your files and 
information are still on the hard disk, but you cannot access them with the 
version To access your files you must mount this hard disk on a computer that 
has Mac OS 8.1 or later installed.


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RE: jail: hide df output

2002-11-25 Thread Robert S. Wojciechowski Jr.
 I'm trying to find place in kernel which is used by df to show
 mountpoints and free space on them to change it in way that jailed user:
   - cannot view any host-os mounted filesystems;
   - can view in df output only his /jail/jailXX/ unionfs mount where
 data taken from quota data.
 

Try http://garage.freebsd.pl/jailfsstat.README and http://garage.freebsd.pl/

-- Robert

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Re: Assembly and ELF

2002-11-25 Thread Jonah Sherman
I suggest you read The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System.  It 
will answer most if not all of your questions.

On Sat, Nov 23, 2002 at 02:05:03AM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 OK, I have read some more now and will ask a few questions. If I am asking
 the wrong place, please say so.
 1. If have found part of what I am looking for:
 http://www.cs.ucdavis.edu/~haungs/paper/node14.html#sections
 But I need more info (in depth info). Is .bss = the heap?
 
 2. I would like more info about the FreeBSD program loader. I would like
 to know what happens when you load a program, what is put in the ram. I
 have come by a short list:
 Fist .text
 Then .data
 Last the stack.
 But I would really like to know more about how FreeBSD use these, what is
 else there (in the ram)?
 
 3. I also read that when a buffer is overflowed, it is because this happens:
 a) The system make room in the stack for the buffer
 b) The buffer is overwritten.
 What I don't understand is why the stack is being use to store whole strings
 in (I understand that it is used to store addresses of string and other
 data). Why doesn't the program/system write to .data?
 
 Hope someone can help me with these questions.
 
 br
 socketd
 
 
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Re: Reading from an OS-X HFS disk drive ?

2002-11-25 Thread Andrew


On Mon, 25 Nov 2002, Thierry Herbelot wrote:

 Is it a special form of HFS (HFS+ ?) ? is there some utility to mount this

Yes its HFS+. You are seeing the little compatability partition thats on
HFS+ volumes. You'll see the same thing if you look at the drive under
System 7 or MacOS 8.0. I'm not sure if there are any tools to read it
(although you might be able to make your own using some of the stuff from
Darwin). You will also see it reffered to (as it says in the ReadMe) as
MacOS Extended.

Andrew


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September-October 2002 Development Status Report

2002-11-25 Thread Scott Long
  September-October 2002 Status Report

 Introduction:

   Another busy pair of months at the FreeBSD Project have brought
   substantial maturity and feature completeness to the fledgeling
   5.0-CURRENT branch. And just in time too, because by the time you read the
   next status report, we hope that you'll have FreeBSD 5.0 running on your
   desktop! Over the past two months, we've seen an upgrade of sparc64 to
   Tier 1 (Fully Supported) status, integration of a high quality storage
   encryption module, the commit of hardware-accelerated IPsec support, the
   addition of a general-purpose Device Daemon to process hardware
   attach/detach events to replace earlier single-purpose and bus-specific
   daemons, the commit of RAIDFrame, and the improved maturity of the
   TrustedBSD work. We've also seen another successful release of the 4.x
   branch, 4.7-RELEASE, which will continue to be the production supported
   platform as 5.X is brought in for landing.

   Over the next two months, the FreeBSD Project will be focussed almost
   entirely on making 5.0 a success: improving system stability and
   performance, as well as increasing the pool of applications that build and
   run on 5.0. The Release Engineering team will have announced the 5.0 code
   freeze, and released DP2 by the time you read this. Following DP2 will be
   a series of Release Candidates (RC's), and then the release itself. If
   you're interested in getting involved in the testing process, please lend
   a hand -- a spare box and a copy of the DP and RC ISOs burnt onto CD will
   make a difference. The normal caveats associated with pre-release versions
   of operating systems apply! You may also be interested in reading the
   Early Adopter's guide produced by the Release Engineering team to help
   determine when a transition from the 4.x branch to the 5.x branch will be
   appropriate for you and your organization.

   Thanks,

   Robert Watson, Scott Long

 * Bluetooth stack for FreeBSD (Netgraph implementation)
 * BSDCon 2003
 * C99  POSIX Conformance Project
 * DEVD Status Report
 * Fast IPsec Status
 * FreeBSD GNOME Project
 * FreeBSD Java Project
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Bluetooth stack for FreeBSD (Netgraph implementation)

   URL: http://www.geocities.com/m_evmenkin/
   URL: http://bluez.sf.net
   URL: http://sourceforge.net/projects/openobex

   Contact: Maksim Yevmenkin [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   I'm very pleased to announce that another engineering release is available
   for download at
   http://www.geocities.com/m_evmenkin/ngbt-fbsd-20021104.tar.gz

   This release features minor bug fixes and new OpenOBEX library port. The
   snapshot includes support for H4 UART and H2 USB transport layers, Host
   Controller Interface (HCI), Link Layer Control and Adaptation Protocol
   (L2CAP) and Bluetooth sockets layer. It also comes with several user space
   utilities that can be used to configure and test Bluetooth devices. Also
   there are several man pages.

   Service Discovery Protocol (SDP) port has been updated to version 0.8.
   (ported from BlueZ-sdp-0.8). Most of the RFCOMM issues have been resolved
   and now rfcommd works with Windows (3COM, Xircom and Widcomm) and Linux
   stacks.

   New supported USB device - EPoX BT-DG02 dongle. Also I have received
   successful report about Mitsumi USB dongle and C413S Bluetooth enabled
   cell phone (L2CAP and SDP works, waiting on RFCOMM report).

   I'm currently working on OBEX server (Push and File Transfer profiles)
   which will be based on OpenOBEX library (included in the snapshot).

 --

BSDCon 2003

   URL: http://www.usenix.org/events/bsdcon03/cfp/

   Contact: Gregory Shapiro [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   The BSDCon 2003 Program Committee invites you to contribute original and
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   Source world. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

 * Embedded BSD application development and deployment
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 * Kernel 

Fw: lpd and lprm broken?

2002-11-25 Thread GB Clark
Forwarding this for a friend that can't get mail to the list.

GB

Begin forwarded message:

Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2002 15:56:33 -0600
From: Peter Elsner [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: lpd and lprm broken?


Hello All...

Something appears to be broken with lpq and lprm.  I'm writing a Perl 
script to
easily allow users to manage printers/jobs from a easy to use interface.

1st problem (lpq):  man lpq displays the use as follows:

NAME
  lpq - spool queue examination program

SYNOPSIS
  lpq [-a] [-l] [-Pprinter] [job # ...] [user ...]

lpq -a (works fine)
lpq -l (doesn't return anything)
lpq -Pprinter (works fine)
lpq  job# and lpq user (don't work).

Examples follow:
spxdev:root# lpq -a
lsjd1p2:
spxdev.servplex.com: Warning: lsjd1p2 is down:
spxdev.servplex.com: Warning: no daemon present
Rank   Owner  Job  Files Total Size
1stpeter  13   (standard input)  785 bytes

(LPD Server):


spxdev:root# lpq -l
(LPD Server):

spxdev:root# lpq -Plsjd1p2
spxdev.servplex.com: Warning: lsjd1p2 is down:
spxdev.servplex.com: Warning: no daemon present
Rank   Owner  Job  Files Total Size
1stpeter  13   (standard input)  785 bytes

(LPD Server):

spxdev:root# lpq 13
(LPD Server):

spxdev:root# lpq peter
(LPD Server):

spxdev:root#

2nd problem (lprm): man lprm displays the use as follows:

NAME
  lprm - remove jobs from the line printer spooling queue

SYNOPSIS
  lprm [-Pprinter] [-] [job # ...] [user ...]

lprm -Plsjd1p2 (none of the above work at all)

spxdev:root# lprm -Plsjd1p2
(LPD Server):
Cancel Function Not Supported
spxdev:root# lprm -
(LPD Server):
Cancel Function Not Supported
spxdev:root# lprm 13
(LPD Server):
Cancel Function Not Supported
spxdev:root# lprm peter
(LPD Server):
Cancel Function Not Supported
spxdev:root#

Now, it does work if (and only if) I enter the following:

lprm -Plsjd1p2 13

spxdev:root# lprm -Plsjd1p2 13
dfA013spxdev.servplex.com dequeued
cfA013spxdev.servplex.com dequeued
(LPD Server):
Cancel Function Not Supported
spxdev:root#

It does actually remove the print job but still gives the Cancel Function 
Not Supported message...

System is 4.7-STABLE.  and I went back to another server that is running 
4.4-STABLE and got the same results
which indicates that this has been broken for some time.


Any help or insight anyone might be able to provide, would be greatly 
appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Peter Elsner


--
Peter Elsner [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Vice President Of Customer Service (And System Administrator)
1835 S. Carrier Parkway
Grand Prairie, Texas 75051
(972) 263-2080 - Voice
(972) 263-2082 - Fax
(972) 489-4838 - Cell Phone
(425) 988-8061 - eFax

I worry about my child and the Internet all the time, even though she's
too young to have logged on yet. Here's what I worry about. I worry
that 10 or 15 years from now, she will come to me and say Daddy, where
were you when they took freedom of the press away from the Internet?
-- Mike Godwin

Unix IS user friendly... It's just selective about who its friends are.
System Administration - It's a dirty job, but somebody said I had to do it.
If you receive something that says 'Send this to everyone you know,
pretend you don't know me.

Standard $500/message proofreading fee applies for UCE.




-- 
GB Clark II | Roaming FreeBSD Admin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | General Geek 
   CTHULU for President - Why choose the lesser of two evils?

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Re: Assembly and ELF

2002-11-25 Thread dslb
On 2002.11.23 02:13 Jonah Sherman wrote:
 I suggest you read The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD
 Operating System.  It will answer most if not all of your
 questions.

Funny you should mention that. I ordered that book thursday, It will be
here within 6-8 days :-)

br
socketd


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Re: Fw: lpd and lprm broken?

2002-11-25 Thread Garance A Drosihn
On 11/25/02, Peter Elsner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wanted to know:

Hello All...

Something appears to be broken with lpq and lprm.  I'm writing
a Perl script to easily allow users to manage printers/jobs
from a easy to use interface.

1st problem (lpq):  man lpq displays the use as follows:

NAME
  lpq - spool queue examination program

SYNOPSIS
  lpq [-a] [-l] [-Pprinter] [job # ...] [user ...]

lpq -a (works fine)
lpq -l (doesn't return anything)
lpq -Pprinter (works fine)
lpq  job# and lpq user (don't work).


'lpq -a' will check all local printer queues for any queues which
have jobs waiting for them.  It is the only option which checks
all queues.

If you do not specify '-a', then lpq will check only one queue
for print jobs.  By default, that single queue will be the one
named 'lp', unless you have defined and exported the environment
variable PRINTER.  In that case, it will check whatever single
queue is specified by PRINTER.

The same is true for 'lprm'.  It will only look at one single queue
for the job or jobs that you are trying to remove.


Now, it does work if (and only if) I enter the following:

lprm -Plsjd1p2 13

spxdev:root# lprm -Plsjd1p2 13
dfA013spxdev.servplex.com dequeued
cfA013spxdev.servplex.com dequeued
(LPD Server):
Cancel Function Not Supported
spxdev:root#

It does actually remove the print job but still gives the
Cancel Function  Not Supported message...


The Cancel Function Not Supported message does not come from
lprm or lpd.  The queue named lsjd1p2 is probably pointing at
some remote machine (either the printer itself, or maybe a print
server that is between you and the printer).  Given the look of
that error message, I would guess that you're talking to the
printer itself, or an LPD server which is running on some flavor
of Windows.

When removing jobs, lpd first removes any jobs on the local
machine which match the criteria you gave.  It then sends the
exact same criteria on to the remote host, so it can delete any
jobs which match your request.  In this case, the local host was
able to delete the one job, and when it asked the remote machine
to delete the same job, the remote machine said that it does not
support the cancelling of any jobs.

--
Garance Alistair Drosehn=   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Senior Systems Programmer   or  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Rensselaer Polytechnic Instituteor  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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out-of-order execution and code profiling

2002-11-25 Thread Luigi Rizzo
Hi,
I just got hit by a peculiar problem related to out-of-order
execution of instructions.
I was doing some low-level timing measurements using the rdtsc()
around selected pieces of code (the rdtsc() is included in
the TSTMP() functions that are in RELENG_4, source is in
sys/i386/isa/clock.c), as follows:

 TSTMP(3, ifp-if_unit, 1, 0);
tmp = CSR_READ_1(sc, FXP_CSR_SCB_STATACK);
 TSTMP(3, ifp-if_unit, 2, 0);
 TSTMP(3, ifp-if_unit, 3, 0);

CSR_READ_1() goes to do a volatile read on memory across a 33MHz
PCI bus, so it should take a very minimum of 100ns, plus arbitration
and bridge crossing and whatnot. To my surprise, on a 750MHz Athlon
box, the delta between the first two timestamps turned out to be
in the order of 39 clock cycles, whereas the delta between 2 and 3
is the 270-300 cycles range.

The only explaination i can find is that the rdtsc() within TSTMP()
is executed out of order.

I wonder, is there on the high-end i386 processors any 'barrier'
instruction of some kind that enforces in-order execution of some
piece of code ?
 
cheers
luigi

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Re: out-of-order execution and code profiling

2002-11-25 Thread Nate Lawson
On Mon, 25 Nov 2002, Luigi Rizzo wrote:
 I just got hit by a peculiar problem related to out-of-order
 execution of instructions.
 I was doing some low-level timing measurements using the rdtsc()
 around selected pieces of code (the rdtsc() is included in
 the TSTMP() functions that are in RELENG_4, source is in
 sys/i386/isa/clock.c), as follows:
 
  TSTMP(3, ifp-if_unit, 1, 0);
 tmp = CSR_READ_1(sc, FXP_CSR_SCB_STATACK);
  TSTMP(3, ifp-if_unit, 2, 0);
  TSTMP(3, ifp-if_unit, 3, 0);
 
 CSR_READ_1() goes to do a volatile read on memory across a 33MHz
 PCI bus, so it should take a very minimum of 100ns, plus arbitration
 and bridge crossing and whatnot. To my surprise, on a 750MHz Athlon
 box, the delta between the first two timestamps turned out to be
 in the order of 39 clock cycles, whereas the delta between 2 and 3
 is the 270-300 cycles range.
 
 The only explaination i can find is that the rdtsc() within TSTMP()
 is executed out of order.
 
 I wonder, is there on the high-end i386 processors any 'barrier'
 instruction of some kind that enforces in-order execution of some
 piece of code ?

The Intel processor manual has an explicit example for this and recommends
you use cpuid as a serializing instruction before the call to rdtsc.  
Basically you call cpuid + rdtsc a bunch of times to calibrate its average
latency.  Then do your run with cpuid + rdtsc to get the beginning and end
clockstamp, subtract the two plus the latency you calculated above.  This
gives a good value for the cycles in your routine.

Other factors like acpi can affect rdtsc so beware of this.

-Nate


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Re: out-of-order execution and code profiling

2002-11-25 Thread Luigi Rizzo
thanks a lot for the pointer to CPUID

luigi

On Mon, Nov 25, 2002 at 05:15:06PM -0800, Nate Lawson wrote:
...
 The Intel processor manual has an explicit example for this and recommends
 you use cpuid as a serializing instruction before the call to rdtsc.  

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Special Offer for SAP Professionals

2002-11-25 Thread mail
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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Alexander
Hi again.
I've looked at the sources and if_sis.c is 1.13.4.22 from 2002/08/09.
I've also recompiled my kernel and tried it on the laptop (thats where the
SIS 900 on board ethernet card is).
The card is detected well, the mac is shown and then the kernel fails:

Boot CD-ROM Type: Floppy Booting
Booting from Removable Media
Uncompressing ... done

BTX loader 1.00 BTX version is 1.01
Console: internal video/keyboard
BIOS drive C: is disk0
BIOS 639kB/457664kB available memory

FreeBSD/i386 bootstrap loader, Revision 0.8
([EMAIL PROTECTED], Tue Oct 8 00:52:30 PDT 2002)
Can't work out which disk we are booting from.
Guessed BIOS device 0x0 not found by probes, defaulting to disk0:


Hit [Enter] to boot immediately, or any other key for command prompt.
Booting [kernel]...
can't load 'kernel'
can't load 'kernel.old'

Type '?' for a list of commands, 'help' for more detailed help.
ok _
ok set currdev=disk0s1
ok boot kernel
/kernel 


sis0: SiS 900 10/100BaseTX port 0xe400-0xe4ff mem 0xf400-0xf4000fff
irq 10 at device 3.0 on pci0
sis0: Ethernet address: 00:40:d0:2a:b0:af
miibus0: MII bus on sis0
ukphy0: Generic IEEE 802.3u media interface on miibus0
ukphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, auto
pci_cfgintr_virgin: using routable interrupt 5


Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
fault virtual address   = 0xe6dc2
fault code  = supervisor read, page not present
instruction pointer = 0x8:0xc00e8cb5
stack pointer   = 0x10:0xc0536d6c
frame pointer   = 0x10:0xc0536d6c
code segment= base 0x0, limit 0xf, type 0x1b
= DPL 0, pres 1, def32 1, gran 1
processor eflags= interrupt enabled, resume, IOPL = 0
current process = 0 (swapper)
interrupt mask  = net tty bio cam
trap number = 12
panic: page fault
Uptime: 0s
Automatic reboot in 15 seconds - press a key on the console to abort

  I'm booting 4.7-RELEASE from the CDROM because I have only CD (no
floppy). I also have FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE on other computer where I
recompile the kernel.

  At the beginning of this dmesg output (actually I rewrote everything by
hand) You may see that my CD device is not detected but that is not my
worse problem I go through it easily. I have a fat32 partition where I
place the kernel and when changing 'currdev' to this partition I'm able to
boot the kernel. My CD is: SAMSUNG CDRW/DVD SN-308BI (fully supported by
Windows XP, RedHat Linux, OpenBSD (I've tested it)).

  The next thing that comes is the Ethernet Card. It is on board and from
the dmesg output You see what happens. The card is working properly on
Windows XP, RedHat Linux (OpenBSD have the same problems except for the
kernel failure).

  I've tried removing the driver from the kernel so that at least I can
boot and install FreeBSD and then probably go on PCMCIA but the kernel
failed again saying that the device is unknown (huh !).

  Please, if someone knows a fix or thinks that can help, write me.
I'm ready to test patches and provide more information.

thanks

P.S. Please excuse my English.


On 25 Nov 2002, David Magda wrote:

 Alexander [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

  I just tested the sis.diff patch and it almost worked on me :)

 What version of FreeBSD are you running? We had the same problem but
 when we updated the sources to 4.6-stable it was fixed in
 src/sys/pci/if_sis.c on February 19. Check the source of the file and
 make sure you have at least version 1.13.4.20. If you don't, update
 the sources and recompile. If you have that version (or newer) then
 it's not the problem I'm thing about.

 --
 David Magda dmagda at ee.ryerson.ca
 Because the innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under
 the old conditions, and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well
 under the new. -- Niccolo Machiavelli, _The Prince_, Chapter VI



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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Kent Stewart


Alexander wrote:


  The next thing that comes is the Ethernet Card. It is on board and from
the dmesg output You see what happens. The card is working properly on
Windows XP, RedHat Linux (OpenBSD have the same problems except for the
kernel failure).

  I've tried removing the driver from the kernel so that at least I can
boot and install FreeBSD and then probably go on PCMCIA but the kernel
failed again saying that the device is unknown (huh !).




  Please, if someone knows a fix or thinks that can help, write me.
I'm ready to test patches and provide more information.



A temporary solution as far as the kernel is concerned is to disable 
the on-board SiS-900 in the bios. Get your boot problem stable. Then, 
you can fix the kernel and try things.

I had problems with the SiS-900 on my SiS-735 based motherboard. I had 
a number of Intel 100's or 3Coms and adding one of them worked just 
fine. You need to be able to cvsup and in my case I am dependant on 
the NIC that is connected to my ADSL modem.

FWIW, an FTP between 2 machines with SiS-900's gives me my fastest 
transfer rates. The 3Com is the slowest. The 3Com's are older because 
I liked the idea of the onboard memory being 2x larger in the Intels.

Kent

--
Kent Stewart
Richland, WA

http://users.owt.com/kstewart/index.html


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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Alexander
Hello,
 The problem is that my bios have very few features and I can't disable
the Network Card.
 I'm not sure what is the mainboard, it is sis but I don't know which
model. Maybe this dmesg output from OpenBSD may help someone:

cpu0: Intel Pentium 4 (GenuineIntel 686-class) 2.20 GHz
cpu0: FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,PAE,MCE,CX8,SYS,MTRR,PGE,MCA,CMOV,PAT,PSE36,MMX,FXSR,SIMD
real mem  = 469282816 (458284K)
avail mem = 429006848 (418952K)
using 4278 buffers containing 23568384 bytes (23016K) of memory
mainbus0 (root)
bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+(8d) BIOS, data 07/25/02, BIOS32 rev. 0 @ 0xe87c0
apm0 at bios0: Power Management spec V1.2
apm0: AC on, battery charge unknown
pcibios0 at bios0: rev. 2.1 @ 0xe6000/0x691
pcibios0: PCI IRQ Routing Table rev. 1.0 @ 0xfe840/176 (9 entries)
pcibios0: PCI Interrupt Router at 000:02:0 (SIS 85C503 ISA rev 0x00)
pcibios0: PCI bus #2 is the last bus
bios0: ROM list: 0xc/0xc000 0xe/0x1800! 0xe5000/0x1000! 0xea000/0x5000!
pci0 at mainbus0 bus 0: configuration mode 1 (no bios)
pchb0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0 vendor SIS, unknown product 0x650 rev 0x01
ppb0 at pci0 dev 1 function 0 SIS 86C201 Host-AGP rev 0x00
pci1 at ppb0 bus 1
vga1 at pci1 dev 0 function 0 vendor SIS, unknown product 0x6325 rev
0x00: aperture at 0x9000, size 0x40
wsdisplay0 at vga1: console (80x25, vt100 emulation)
wsdisplay0: screen 1-5 added (80x25, vt100 emulation)
pcib0 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 SIS 85C503 ISA rev 0x00
ohci0 at pci0 dev 2 function 2 SIS 5597/5598 USB rev 0x07: irq 11, OHCI
version 1.0, legacy support
ohci0: SMM does not respond, resetting
usb0 at ohci0: USB revision 1.0
uhub0 at usb0
uhub0: vendor 0x OHCI root hub, class 9/0, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub0: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered
ohci1 at pci0 dev 2 function 3 SIS 5597/5598 USB rev 0x07: irq 11, OHCI
version 1.0, legacy support
usb1 at ohci1: USB revision 1.0
uhub1 at usb1
uhub1: vendor 0x OHCI root hub, class 9/0, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1
uhub1: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered
pciide0 at pci0 dev 2 function 5 SIS 5513 EIDE rev 0xd0: DMA, channel 0
wired to compatibility, channel 1 wired to compatibility
wd0 at pciide0 channel 0 drive 0: IC25N040ATCS04-0
wd0: 16-sector PIO, LBA, 38154MB, 16383 cyl, 16 head, 63 sec, 78140160 sectors
wd0(pciide0:0:0): using PIO mode 4, Ultra-DMA mode 2
atapiscsi0 at pciide0 channel 1 drive 0
scsibus0 at atapiscsi0: 2 targets
cd0 at scsibus0 targ 0 lun 0: SAMSUNG, CDRW/DVD SN-308B, U002 SCSI0
5/cdrom removable
cd0(pciide0:1:0): using PIO mode 4, DMA mode 2
vendor SIS, unknown product 0x7013 (class communications, subclass
modem, rev 0xa0) at pci0 dev 2 function 6 not configured
vendor SIS2, unknown product 0x7012 (class multimedia, subclass audio,
rev 0xa0) at pci0 dev 2 function 7 not configured
sis0 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 SIS 900 10/100BaseTX rev 0x90: irq 10
address 00:00:00:00:00:00
cbb0 at pci0 dev 9 function 0 Texas Instruments PCI1410 PCI-CardBus rev
0x02: irq 10
vendor NEC, unknown product 0xce (class serial bus, subclass Firewire,
rev 0x01) at pci0 dev 11 function 0 not configured
isa0 at pcib0
isadma0 at isa0
pckbc0 at isa0 port 0x60/5
pckbd0 at pckbc0 (kbd slot)
pckbc0: using irq 1 for kbd slot
wskbd0 at pckbd0: console keyboard, using wsdisplay0
pms0 at pckbc0 (aux slot)
pckbc0: using irq 12 for aux slot
wsmouse0 at pms0 mux 0
pcppi0 at isa0 port 0x61
midi0 at pcppi0: PC speaker
sysbeep0 at pcppi0
lpt0 at isa0 port 0x378/4 irq7
npx0 at isa0 port 0xf0/15: using exception 16
cardslot0 at cbb0 slot 0 flags 0
cardbus0 at cardslot0: bus 2 device 0 cacheline 0x8, lattimer 0x40
pcmcia0 at cardslot0
biomask cc0 netmask cc0 ttymask dc82
pctr: user-level cycle counter enabled
dkcsum: wd0 matched BIOS disk 80
root on wd0a
rootdev=0x0 rrootdev=0x300 rawdev=0x302
syncing disks... OpenBSD 3.2 (AMOUR) #2: Tue Nov 19 17:21:00 CET 2002

end of dmesg output;

ifconfig -m sis0:

sis0: flags=8843UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST mtu 1500
address: 00:00:00:00:00:00
media: Ethernet none (none)
supported media:
media none
inet 192.168.1.2 netmask 0xff00 broadcast 192.168.1.255
inet6 fe80::7c41:74f5:5650:398d%sis0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x1

end of ifconfig output;

On Mon, 25 Nov 2002, Kent Stewart wrote:



 Alexander wrote:

The next thing that comes is the Ethernet Card. It is on board and from
  the dmesg output You see what happens. The card is working properly on
  Windows XP, RedHat Linux (OpenBSD have the same problems except for the
  kernel failure).
 
I've tried removing the driver from the kernel so that at least I can
  boot and install FreeBSD and then probably go on PCMCIA but the kernel
  failed again saying that the device is unknown (huh !).

 
Please, if someone knows a fix or thinks that can help, write me.
  I'm ready to test patches and provide more information.
 

 A temporary solution as far as the kernel is concerned is to disable
 the on-board SiS-900 in the bios. Get your boot problem 

Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Wolfgang Zenker
Hello,

  The problem is that my bios have very few features and I can't disable
 the Network Card.
  I'm not sure what is the mainboard, it is sis but I don't know which
 model. Maybe this dmesg output from OpenBSD may help someone:

 cpu0: Intel Pentium 4 (GenuineIntel 686-class) 2.20 GHz
 [..]
 sis0 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 SIS 900 10/100BaseTX rev 0x90: irq 10

that's apparently a nic integrated in the SiS 635 chipset.

Wolfgang

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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Jack L. Stone
At 02:04 AM 11.26.2002 +0100, Wolfgang Zenker wrote:
Hello,

  The problem is that my bios have very few features and I can't disable
 the Network Card.
  I'm not sure what is the mainboard, it is sis but I don't know which
 model. Maybe this dmesg output from OpenBSD may help someone:

 cpu0: Intel Pentium 4 (GenuineIntel 686-class) 2.20 GHz
 [..]
 sis0 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 SIS 900 10/100BaseTX rev 0x90: irq 10

that's apparently a nic integrated in the SiS 635 chipset.

Wolfgang


At the very least, it should have a jumper on the MB to disable such a
feature you should go to the MB website if you don't have a manual with
the MB layout and jumpers. They should have the info there -- certainly
Tech support would be available I can't imagine an onboard NIC that
would not have an option to disable just as with audio or video

Best regards,
Jack L. Stone,
Administrator

SageOne Net
http://www.sage-one.net
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Kent Stewart


Jack L. Stone wrote:

At 02:04 AM 11.26.2002 +0100, Wolfgang Zenker wrote:


Hello,



The problem is that my bios have very few features and I can't disable
the Network Card.
I'm not sure what is the mainboard, it is sis but I don't know which
model. Maybe this dmesg output from OpenBSD may help someone:



cpu0: Intel Pentium 4 (GenuineIntel 686-class) 2.20 GHz
[..]
sis0 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 SIS 900 10/100BaseTX rev 0x90: irq 10


that's apparently a nic integrated in the SiS 635 chipset.

Wolfgang




At the very least, it should have a jumper on the MB to disable such a
feature you should go to the MB website if you don't have a manual with
the MB layout and jumpers. They should have the info there -- certainly
Tech support would be available I can't imagine an onboard NIC that
would not have an option to disable just as with audio or video


There should be an option in the bios called Features Setup. In it 
you have a choice of Onboard LAN enabled or disabled.

There are virtually no jumpers on SIS based motherboards.

Kent

--
Kent Stewart
Richland, WA

http://users.owt.com/kstewart/index.html


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Re: SiS 900 Ethernet card

2002-11-25 Thread Jack L. Stone
At 05:43 PM 11.25.2002 -0800, Kent Stewart wrote:


Jack L. Stone wrote:
 At 02:04 AM 11.26.2002 +0100, Wolfgang Zenker wrote:
 
Hello,


 The problem is that my bios have very few features and I can't disable
the Network Card.
 I'm not sure what is the mainboard, it is sis but I don't know which
model. Maybe this dmesg output from OpenBSD may help someone:

cpu0: Intel Pentium 4 (GenuineIntel 686-class) 2.20 GHz
[..]
sis0 at pci0 dev 3 function 0 SIS 900 10/100BaseTX rev 0x90: irq 10

that's apparently a nic integrated in the SiS 635 chipset.

Wolfgang

 
 
 At the very least, it should have a jumper on the MB to disable such a
 feature you should go to the MB website if you don't have a manual with
 the MB layout and jumpers. They should have the info there -- certainly
 Tech support would be available I can't imagine an onboard NIC that
 would not have an option to disable just as with audio or video

There should be an option in the bios called Features Setup. In it 
you have a choice of Onboard LAN enabled or disabled.

There are virtually no jumpers on SIS based motherboards.

Kent

-- 
Kent Stewart
Richland, WA


Well, he said no such option in the BIOS, so other way would be jumpers.
Sorry, not much more specific help... never owned a SIS MB

Best regards,
Jack L. Stone,
Administrator

SageOne Net
http://www.sage-one.net
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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