It seems Geoff Rehmet wrote:
> Hmm,
>
> My root device still lands up on "wd0" - even though my fstab has
> the root filesystem on ad0s1a. I haven't looked at getting it to
> use the ad dev entries for the root file system. (I'm assuming that
> is still WIP.)
Our boot blocks/loader dont have t
Hmm,
My root device still lands up on "wd0" - even though my fstab has
the root filesystem on ad0s1a. I haven't looked at getting it to
use the ad dev entries for the root file system. (I'm assuming that
is still WIP.)
Geoff.
> -Original Message-
> From: Soren Schmidt [mailto:[EMAIL P
It seems Francis Jordan wrote:
> Yes, HDD on the primary, CD-ROM on the secondary controller. This is a
> notebook I'm talking about, so I haven't tried any other CD-ROM drives.
> If it doesn't respond at all, then how do you get all the other
> information, such as supported read types, speed,
It seems Geoff Rehmet wrote:
> Brian McGroarty writes :
> > In using the ATA driver, I'm unable to automatically mount a
> > partition on a master drive on the secondary controller. fsck
> > complains that device rwd2s1e isn't configured and exists.
> > Immediately mounting by hand works perfectly
Brian McGroarty writes :
> In using the ATA driver, I'm unable to automatically mount a
> partition on a master drive on the secondary controller. fsck
> complains that device rwd2s1e isn't configured and exists.
> Immediately mounting by hand works perfectly.
>
> Compiling the kernel with wd ins
Doug White wrote in list.freebsd-current:
> On Tue, 10 Aug 1999, Oliver Fromme wrote:
> >
> > Do those drives happen to be IBM DeskStar drives?
> > They spin down automatically when they have not been turned
> > off for about a week, in order to clean the heads.
> > It's a feature.
>
> Y
Also of interest -
I have a seperate access light for each of my drives, as they're
in removable bays.
I notice the access light for the secondary master remaining on
after the kernel driver has done its scanning. The light goes
off on this, the failed first access. I believe the light for
the p
Brian McGroarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> In using the ATA driver, I'm unable to automatically mount a
> partition on a master drive on the secondary controller. fsck
> complains that device rwd2s1e isn't configured and exists.
> Immediately mounting by hand works perfectly.
Nice timing, I w
In using the ATA driver, I'm unable to automatically mount a
partition on a master drive on the secondary controller. fsck
complains that device rwd2s1e isn't configured and exists.
Immediately mounting by hand works perfectly.
Compiling the kernel with wd instead of ata eliminates the
problem.
Soren Schmidt wrote:
>
> It seems Francis Jordan wrote:
> > /kernel: acd0: CDROM drive at ata1 as master
> > /kernel: acd0: drive speed 4134KB/sec, 128KB cache
> > /kernel: acd0: supported read types: CD-R, CD-RW, CD-DA
> > /kernel: acd0: Audio: play, 256 volume levels
> > /kernel: acd0: Mechan
Heads up,
[ cc: to -doc, -current, -committers, reply-to: nik ]
On Sunday 15th August the doc/ tree will break. John Polstra will be
performing surgery on the CVS repository[1], and when he's completed
that I will be going in to fix up the build system infrastructure (all
the Makefiles, prima
It seems Thierry Herbelot wrote:
> Soren Schmidt wrote:
> >
> [SNIP]
> >
> > That can't be true, at least not for the IBM DeskStars I own, I've
> > NEVER EVER seen them do that, one proof should be:
>
> same here
>
> wdc0: unit 0 (wd0): , DMA, 32-bit, multi-block-16
> wd0: 8063MB (16514064 sec
Soren Schmidt wrote:
>
[SNIP]
>
> That can't be true, at least not for the IBM DeskStars I own, I've
> NEVER EVER seen them do that, one proof should be:
same here
wdc0: unit 0 (wd0): , DMA, 32-bit, multi-block-16
wd0: 8063MB (16514064 sectors), 16383 cyls, 16 heads, 63 S/T, 512 B/S
wdc0: unit
It seems Francis Jordan wrote:
> /kernel: acd0: CDROM drive at ata1 as master
> /kernel: acd0: drive speed 4134KB/sec, 128KB cache
> /kernel: acd0: supported read types: CD-R, CD-RW, CD-DA
> /kernel: acd0: Audio: play, 256 volume levels
> /kernel: acd0: Mechanism: ejectable tray
> /kernel: acd0:
An unrelated question:
I get the following in my dmesg:
/kernel: ata0: master: setting up UDMA2 mode on PIIX4 chip OK
/kernel: ad0: ATA-4 disk at ata0 as master
/kernel: ad0: 6194MB (12685680 sectors), 13424 cyls, 15 heads, 63 S/T,
512 B/S
/kernel: ad0: piomode=4, dmamode=2, udmamode=2
/kernel:
It seems Doug White wrote:
> > >
> > > > FWIW - I enabled APM over the weekend, configuring drives to
> > > > spin down when not used for a good period of time. I get the
> > > > message you list below, alternately with status 50 and 58, any
> > > > time a drive needs to spin up.
> > >
> >
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Garrett Wollman writes:
><
>said:
>
>> You've got to be kidding. That makes them totally useless for server
>> operation -- at some random time every week, down goes your server for a
>> few minutes. :(
>
>Ye gets what ye pays for if you want a reliable server
<
said:
> You've got to be kidding. That makes them totally useless for server
> operation -- at some random time every week, down goes your server for a
> few minutes. :(
Ye gets what ye pays for if you want a reliable server, use SCSI.
-GAWollman
--
Garrett A. Wollman | O Siem / We a
On Tue, 10 Aug 1999, Oliver Fromme wrote:
> Doug wrote in list.freebsd-current:
> > On Mon, 9 Aug 1999, Brian McGroarty wrote:
> >
> > > FWIW - I enabled APM over the weekend, configuring drives to
> > > spin down when not used for a good period of time. I get the
> > > message you list bel
Perhaps this should be a PR...
Seeing as how we are recently being amused by fortune(6) quotes, I thought
I'd mention an acronymn that hasn't been used recently: POLA
Can anyone explain why every time I upgrade world, my hard earned 'record'
file whilst playing hack(6) gets overwritten by /dev
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Mitsuru IWASAKI writes:
: + error = DEVICE_SUSPEND(root_bus);
: + /*
: + * XXX Shouldn't ignore the error like this, but should
: + * instead fix the newbus code. Until that happens,
: + * I'm doing this
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Peter Wemm writes:
: This still needs more work to handle line wraps etc. Matthew Dodd did some
: work in this area for the EISA code which should be able to be used.
I'd be very careful of line wrapping probe messages. I have scripts
that rely on them being on on
> When you go into upgrade under /stand/sysinstall, and select ftp and use
> current.freebsd.org as the site, does it take the most recent snapshot?
no you have to set that option in the options screen.
JOHN
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in
When you go into upgrade under /stand/sysinstall, and select ftp and use
current.freebsd.org as the site, does it take the most recent snapshot?
Arthur H. Johnson II [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linuxberg Manager Tucows.com Inc.
http://www.linuxberg.com
To Unsubscribe: send
On 10-Aug-99 Mitsuru IWASAKI wrote:
> Oh, do you have suspend button on your box? Cool.
> On my poor experience, suspeding by hot-keys easier to
> success than by zzz(8).
On this point I can report the oppposite experience, on my
machine (a no name special) the trackpad tends to lock up
The following has also been submitted in the form of a PR.
I am posting the information here because I think this will be of interest to
others out there as well.
If this is not the correct way to do it, or the correct place, please guide me
to the correct path, as this is my first submission (Bu
> Another possibility is *delay mechanism* on suspend (and standby).
> AFAIK, Linux, NetBSD and PAO has this but CURRENT. I'll make patch
> tonight based on PAO APM code.
Please try this patch.
If it still fails, it's worth to try increasing APM_SUSPEND_DELAY,
something like:
#define APM_SUSPE
On Tue, 10 Aug 1999, Alex Zepeda wrote:
:* an rc.audio or rc.multimedia (this could perhaps contain some bt484
:related things).
:
:But if it goes into "the" rc.conf, that would mean that whenever it runs
:at shutdown, it edits rc.conf; this isn't IMO a real great idea.
:Anything automated (eve
"Cameron Grant" wrote:
> to let newpcm out of the cage so you can all get your grubby little hands on
> it.
>
> http://www.vilnya.demon.co.uk/newpcm+dfrpnp-19990807.diff.gz
>
> this is a patch against a recent -current. if you have a pci or isapnp
> soundcard, you should have pnp0 and pcm0 in y
On Tue, Aug 10, 1999 at 07:04:15AM -0400, John Baldwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I hate VESA 2.0/3.0 specification :-( I hate ATI :-(
> >
> > Is there any good AGP graphics card with full BIOS support in hardware?
>
> Matrox G200 (and presumably G400).
Now I'm set. I buy the G400, nothing
On 10-Aug-99 Cejka Rudolf wrote:
>
> Soren Schmidt wrote (1999/08/09):
>
>> It seems Kazutaka YOKOTA wrote:
>> > There is a good possibility that the VESA BIOS extension for this card
>> > is provided in a DOS TSR program and the VESA BIOS entry in the ROM
>> > BIOS is just a stub. Such implem
On Mon, 9 Aug 1999, Brian F. Feldman wrote:
> On Mon, 9 Aug 1999, Alex Zepeda wrote:
>
> > One could stuff it into rc.conf, but this means it's harder to
> > automagically save the state upon shutdown/reboot. But something like:
>
> Not really. You could do it with grep, awk, sed, or whatever
On Tue, 10 Aug 1999, Daniel O'Connor wrote:
> The sound card shuts up after reset, and only starts outputing noise again
> after the sound card has been probed/attached.
Perhaps the attach routine (or rc.something) should explicitly zero all
the volumes, so that the card will remain silent until
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