Hello all,
I had problem to create a patch - the command didn't finish for long long time.
I tried to do it manualy step by step from command line and it seems
that the problem is with cp command.
This is method how to repeat it:
I have in my home dir prepared new version of tftpd.c
ls -l
I had problem to create a patch - the command didn't finish for long long
time.
I created a patch yesterday and it worked fine. It is fairly slow as it
diff's all the files you have changed with those on sources.
Sadly the 9p protocol is quite badly effected by high (intercontinential)
Neither purposeful omission nor amnesia. Rather pragmatism. Nachos,
ReactOS, QNX, and many others are left unmentioned, too. From these QNX has
been _really_ successful in the real world and it's fully POSIX. MOS is a
book for teaching the natural way to students not the (fruitless) deviation
Operating Systems Design and Implementation, 3rd Edition doesn't mention
it, but it's the MINIX (ah, MINIX 3) book anyway. Modern Operating
Systems, 2nd Edition contains not even a reference. Computer Networks,
4th Edition doesn't mention 9P at all--RPC's there, though.
Cool!
--On Friday,
On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 1:47 PM, erik quanstrom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I had problem to create a patch - the command didn't finish for long long
time.
I created a patch yesterday and it worked fine. It is fairly slow as it
diff's all the files you have changed with those on sources.
Anyway, does 9P and Plan9 know about path MTU discovery?
traditional path mtu uses icmp messages. if your router/modem/whatever
eats icmp, you're outta luck with these traditional methods.
cf. http://www.netheaven.com/pmtu.html i think there are some tricks
to get around the missing icmp
On Sep 12, 2008, at 8:28 AM, Eris Discordia wrote:
completely 'unencumbered' by POSIX.
s/completely/almost /
Pietro
s/completely/almost /
Please don't try to educate me P. G. Microsoft got themselves into lots of
trouble to make NT almost POSIX compliant and to also create a fully POSIX
compliant subsystem (SFU/SUA/Interix). Everybody knows that. The sentence
you quoted was a hypothetical, you know, a
Would you please move?
I don't know how you get the source but it is a cool program.
It can simulate itself simulating itself simulating another program.
Lotsa cool stuff.
http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=107172.107190coll=GUIDEdl=GUIDE
brucee
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