I was booted into my cpu/auth server's terminal; then pressed ctrl-p by
accident in a rio window; which caused the machine to immediately reboot -
and now it gets to particular point and (seemingly) hangs at:
sync...2009/0722 02:04:58 arenas00: indexing 1544 clumps...
I imagine it's got
On Tue, Jul 21, 2009 at 7:20 PM, Coreyco...@bitworthy.net wrote:
I was booted into my cpu/auth server's terminal; then pressed ctrl-p by
accident in a rio window; which caused the machine to immediately reboot -
and now it gets to particular point and (seemingly) hangs at:
sync...2009/0722
On Tue Jul 21 22:34:47 EDT 2009, leim...@gmail.com wrote:
ctrl-p is reboot!? That's surprising. I thought it was Ctrl-t-t r.
only on a cpuserver. this means that you can C into a cpu server
and type ^p and reboot the cpu server, without worring about
nuking your terminal.
- erik
On Tuesday 21 July 2009 19:32:47 David Leimbach wrote:
ctrl-p is reboot!? That's surprising. I thought it was Ctrl-t-t r.
grin ... so did I! (based on what I have read)
I tried ctrl-p because I just learned that ctl-a moves cursor to
beginning of line, or point; and I thought, I wonder if
On Tue Jul 21 22:37:35 EDT 2009, michaelian.en...@gmail.com wrote:
echo ctlpoff /dev/consctl
would have to be run each time the system boots right?
ian
god invented /rc/bin/cpurc for a reason.
- erik
I tried ctrl-p because I just learned that ctl-a moves cursor to
beginning of line, or point; and I thought, I wonder if there's
a keybinding that will always move cursor to point - so for the
hell of it, I tried the obvious ctl-p.
this is a modern invention. i think it may be an emacs or
On Tue, Jul 21, 2009 at 10:40 PM, erik quanstromquans...@quanstro.net wrote:
On Tue Jul 21 22:37:35 EDT 2009, michaelian.en...@gmail.com wrote:
echo ctlpoff /dev/consctl
would have to be run each time the system boots right?
ian
god invented /rc/bin/cpurc for a reason.
Observe how yes.