Sources from ~12 hours ago:
=== usr.bin/kdump
cc -O -pipe -I/usr/src/usr.bin/kdump/../ktrace -I/usr/src/usr.bin/kdump/../..
-I/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include -c /usr/src/usr.bin/kdump/kdump.c
cc -O -pipe -I/usr/src/usr.bin/kdump/../ktrace -I/usr/src/usr.bin/kdump/../..
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 09:39:10AM +0100, Dag-Erling Smorgrav wrote:
Sources from ~12 hours ago:
=== usr.bin/kdump
...
In file included from ioctl.c:79:
/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include/sys/memrange.h:18: warning: `MDF_ACTIVE' redefined
Peter Wemm fixed this as src/include/Makefile rev
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 00:23:23 PST, "David O'Brien" wrote:
I think what you really want is:
sed 's/^\([^:#@+-]*\):[^:]*:/\1:(password):/'
Eeek, I don't know why I sent you that. It should have been:
sed 's/^\([ +-][^+-][^:]*\):[^:]*:/\1:(password):/'
Sorry about
There was a bug in realhostname_sa() in lib/libutil and
sometime daemon using it dies, such as telnetd.
I think following patch will fix it, but now checking make
world before actually committing it.
If anyone experienced same problem, please try following
patch.
Sorry for your troubles.
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 00:23:23 PST, "David O'Brien" wrote:
I think what you really want is:
sed 's/^\([^:#@+-]*\):[^:]*:/\1:(password):/'
Eeek, I don't know why I sent you that. It should have been:
sed 's/^\([ +-][^+-][^:]*\):[^:]*:/\1:(password):/'
IMNSO
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 04:11:38 PST, "Rodney W. Grimes" wrote:
sed 's/^\([ +-][^+-][^:]*\):[^:]*:/\1:(password):/'
IMNSO sed is the wrong tool here,
No arguments from me, since my awk skills are limited. However, I'll
point out that sed is doing a decent job without turning into an
I would like to use an ASDM (backup software) with linux-emulation. I
get
the following in /var/log/messages:
es-i2 /kernel: linux: syscall setresuid is obsoleted\
or not implemented (pid=41052)
Jan 27 13:12:42 es-i2 /kernel: pid 41052 (dsm), \
uid 0: exited on signal 11 (core dumped)
as
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 01:39:38PM +0100, F. Heinrichmeyer wrote:
I would like to use an ASDM (backup software) with linux-emulation. I
get
the following in /var/log/messages:
Have you tried the SCO client with the IBCS module loaded? I've been using it
with great success for a while.
subscribe freebsd-current
N
'²æìr¸{ûÙ[h¨èÚ£ñkyàRú+û§²æìr¸yúÞy»ýË«éíþ)í
æèw*¶¦zË
On 26 Jan 2000 20:33:31 +0100, Eric Jacoboni wrote:
in CURRENT, /usr/sbin/sendmail is a symlink to /usr/sbin/mailwrapper
(see man mailwrapper).
No, it's a hard link. I only mention this because your explanation
makes it sound like mailwrapper generates much more overhead than it
really
Sheldon Hearn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On 26 Jan 2000 20:33:31 +0100, Eric Jacoboni wrote:
in CURRENT, /usr/sbin/sendmail is a symlink to /usr/sbin/mailwrapper
(see man mailwrapper).
No, it's a hard link. I only mention this because your explanation
makes it sound like mailwrapper
On 27 Jan 2000 15:25:55 +0100, Eric Jacoboni wrote:
No, not on my box (as far as i believe 'ls' and 'file' ;-) :
% ls -l /usr/sbin/sendmail
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 21 26 jan 23:54 /usr/sbin/sendmail -
/usr/sbin/mailwrapper
My humble apologies. No more drugs for me. :-)
Ciao,
Sheldon.
Yoshinobu Inoue [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I just added debug flag check instead of changing syslog
level.
Could you please try the following patch to
usr.sbin/inetd/inetd.c ?
Ok, i had the same pbs with ipsec messages at startup (since my last
make world, yesterday evening)...
I've
level.
Could you please try the following patch to
usr.sbin/inetd/inetd.c ?
Ok, i had the same pbs with ipsec messages at startup (since my last
make world, yesterday evening)...
I've applied your patch : the messages have gone...
thanks,
--
Eric Jacoboni
Thanks,
I downloaded the 2000/01/25 snapshot of current today. When I booted
from floppy, this message showed up:
ep0: eeprom failed to come ready
(5 times)
and a NIC address of 0:0:0:0:0:0 was reported back. When booting this
machine with 3.4-RELEASE, the correct NIC address is reported. When
I suspect I'm not the only mirror operator who sees a huge load spike
early in the morning:
--- start of forwarded message (RFC 934 encapsulation) ---
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Apparently-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: xyz.lcs.mit.edu daily run output
Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 01:59:01 -0500
I'm at work now, so I can't apply the patches till I go home again (at
work I have Sun boxes and a linux box, blahh)
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best OS around.|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #:
I'm at work now, so I can't apply the patches till I go home again (at
work I have Sun boxes and a linux box, blahh)
It is OK, because Eric Jacoboni kindly tried the patch
instead. I already committed it.
Thanks for taking care for it.
Yoshinobu Inoue
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL
But...but... ITS SUCH AN EYE-SORE!
all depends on what image of professionalism freebsd thinks it is trying to
project.
randy
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
cpiazzOn Wed, Jan 26, 2000 at 07:26:30PM +0200, Alexandr Listopad wrote:
cpiazz hello!
cpiazz
cpiazz I have Abit motherboard with ATA-66 support.
cpiazz I try to install FreeBSD-CURRENT, all good when install, but after reboot
cpiazz kernel boots, but ask me a root device, when I press '?',
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 17:00:58 +0200, Ruslan Ermilov wrote:
An attached patch seems to fix the problem.
Does anybody actually understand what's really going on in this file?
Everyone uses the words "seems to" and "I think" when they're proposing
fixes in this file.
I propose that we hold out
Today Garrett Wollman wrote:
I suspect I'm not the only mirror operator who sees a huge load spike
early in the morning:
I plead guilty, your honor.
When are the low load times.
--
Jack O'Neill
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 06:34:08PM +0200, Sheldon Hearn wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 17:00:58 +0200, Ruslan Ermilov wrote:
An attached patch seems to fix the problem.
Does anybody actually understand what's really going on in this file?
Everyone uses the words "seems to" and "I think"
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Edwin Mons wrote:
I downloaded the 2000/01/25 snapshot of current today. When I booted
from floppy, this message showed up:
ep0: eeprom failed to come ready
(5 times)
Humm... Please boot verbose and send me the output. This may require you
to use a serial console.
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 10:29:13AM -0500, Garrett Wollman wrote:
I suspect I'm not the only mirror operator who sees a huge load spike
early in the morning:
The reason for this is probably because many people like to cron cvsup
early in the morning, when they're not using the computer.
You're
"Matthew N. Dodd" wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Edwin Mons wrote:
I downloaded the 2000/01/25 snapshot of current today. When I booted
from floppy, this message showed up:
ep0: eeprom failed to come ready
(5 times)
Humm... Please boot verbose and send me the output. This may
Using the boot configuration screen can you disable all devices that are
not installed?
I suspect something is clobbering the board after it is identified.
--
| Matthew N. Dodd | '78 Datsun 280Z | '75 Volvo 164E | FreeBSD/NetBSD |
| [EMAIL PROTECTED] | 2 x '84 Volvo 245DL|
On Wed, Jan 26, 2000 at 11:13:55PM +0100, Gert Doering wrote:
Hi,
On Tue, Jan 25, 2000 at 08:51:40PM +0100, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
But as a result mgetty gets into kermit's ways such that when a
modem connection is made I suddenly get a modem prompt like
+FCON as if someone (mgetty)
"Matthew N. Dodd" wrote:
Using the boot configuration screen can you disable all devices that are
not installed?
I suspect something is clobbering the board after it is identified.
--
| Matthew N. Dodd | '78 Datsun 280Z | '75 Volvo 164E | FreeBSD/NetBSD |
| [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
JFWIW, this sounds like something that I "fixed" in the old wd driver,
where a device 'echoed' on the bus after it was deselected. Increasing
the timeout between deselecting the device and trying to talk again to
the bus was, AFAIR, the workaround then.
It seems Alex wrote:
OK -
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Edwin Mons wrote:
and the setup continues as if nothing has happened. The drive is
configured as PIO mode 4 in the BIOS (the BIOS does not support UDMA,
the chipset apparently does). Any pointers?
Humm... Try mode 'Auto'?
Dunno.
--
| Matthew N. Dodd | '78 Datsun
On Wed, 26 Jan 2000, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm wondering how one can do a buildworld on a machine, and then NFS
mount /usr/src and /usr/obj on a client machine and do an installworld
of the freshly built sources? I've been
Hi,
I installed 4.0 2125-CURRENT last night on a new box, and had
several problems that I wanted to share:
1. sysinstall forgot to write my hostname to /etc/rc.conf . I had gone
into the options menu and selected "DHCP"; when I picked my network
interface it looked for and found a DHCP
Test IPv6 support! You've all been asking for it, test it.
Is there a quick primer on getting IPv6 up and running? I built a
kernel with INET6 and the ipsec stuff, and my interfaces now have IPv6
addresses, but no userland apps seem to be able to parse IPv6 addresses,
e.g. "ping ::1" says "no
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Matthew N. Dodd"
writes:
: Using the boot configuration screen can you disable all devices that are
: not installed?
:
: I suspect something is clobbering the board after it is identified.
We've had *BAD* luck with the ex driver doing this...
Warner
To
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Matthew N. Dodd wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Edwin Mons wrote:
and the setup continues as if nothing has happened. The drive is
configured as PIO mode 4 in the BIOS (the BIOS does not support UDMA,
the chipset apparently does). Any pointers?
Humm... Try mode
It seems Edwin Mons wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Matthew N. Dodd wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Edwin Mons wrote:
and the setup continues as if nothing has happened. The drive is
configured as PIO mode 4 in the BIOS (the BIOS does not support UDMA,
the chipset apparently does). Any
Test IPv6 support! You've all been asking for it, test it.
Is there a quick primer on getting IPv6 up and running? I built a
kernel with INET6 and the ipsec stuff, and my interfaces now have IPv6
addresses, but no userland apps seem to be able to parse IPv6 addresses,
e.g. "ping ::1"
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 11:03:28 -0800, Bill Fenner [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Is there a quick primer on getting IPv6 up and running? I built a
kernel with INET6 and the ipsec stuff, and my interfaces now have IPv6
addresses, but no userland apps seem to be able to parse IPv6 addresses,
e.g.
i've had ipv6 working with freenet6.net.. well, partially working, the
full feature should work fine soon though.
the tunneling through gif works, and i'm about to test IPSec with IPv4.
more testing is in order though, so, i'll try to pass on some more info
when i have it.
-- jan
On Thu, 27
Also, usual tools, rlogin, rlogind, rsh, rshd, telnet,
telnetd, ftp, ftpd, and inetd are already IPv6 capable.
Hm. rlogin and rsh attempt to connect, but my inetd isn't listening;
do I have to update inetd.conf to get inetd to listen on IPv6 addresses?
telnet can't parse ::1:
emachine%
"Matthew N. Dodd" wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Warner Losh wrote:
We've had *BAD* luck with the ex driver doing this...
Except that the ex driver doesn't do anything destructive in its identify
method now.
I'm having a hell of a time getting the ex driver to attach in PnP mode
but thats
On Fri, 28 Jan 2000, Peter Wemm wrote:
pnpinfo doesn't have anything to do with what the kernel thinks. It's a
userland program that manually resets and reconfigures the cards.. This is
an absolute disaster if you happened to be using the hardware, eg: the sound
driver. After running
Yesterday, I tested ping6 between two hosts using link-local
addresses, and it worked. The week before, however, I couldn't get a
different machine to transmit packets when it had IPv6 in the kernel.
I'm not sure about the relative dates involved.
-GAWollman
Some driver seems to have
Also, usual tools, rlogin, rlogind, rsh, rshd, telnet,
telnetd, ftp, ftpd, and inetd are already IPv6 capable.
Hm. rlogin and rsh attempt to connect, but my inetd isn't listening;
do I have to update inetd.conf to get inetd to listen on IPv6 addresses?
Yes, if tcp, please specify
SNIP
Hi,
I'm currently running 4.0-CURRENT (Jan 27) on a Dell I3500 laptop with
pccard and a D-LINK DE-660.
All runs ok except that my card is not recognized as ed0 but as ed1.
Here are my config params :
=-=-=-=
device card0
device pcic0 at isa? irq 10 port 0x3e0 iomem 0xd
device pcic1 at
"Matthew N. Dodd" wrote:
On Fri, 28 Jan 2000, Peter Wemm wrote:
pnpinfo doesn't have anything to do with what the kernel thinks. It's a
userland program that manually resets and reconfigures the cards.. This is
an absolute disaster if you happened to be using the hardware, eg: the soun
Hi,
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 07:03:38PM +0100, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
But as a result mgetty gets into kermit's ways such that when a
modem connection is made I suddenly get a modem prompt like
+FCON as if someone (mgetty) is either messing with my local
or the remote modem while
1. sysinstall forgot to write my hostname to /etc/rc.conf . I had gone
into the options menu and selected "DHCP"; when I picked my network
interface it looked for and found a DHCP server and popped up the
network configuration box with most of the fields filled in (including
domain name);
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED] you wrote:
I wrote a patch for the psm driver to add support for several PS/2 mice.
It is in http://www.freebsd.org/~yokota/ps2mice-24Jan2000.tar.gz.
I am attaching README included in the patch.
Thank you.
Kazu
Do you have specs on the Trackpoint PS/2 mice
I've been running this for a while. I reversed the normal order to
make it easier to do the math w/o having to shift columns and flip
things over.
BTW, I'm getting numbers that are 2x bigger than before :-(.I had
makebuildworld down to around 1:20 at one point, but now it is 2:40.
I just notice my par. port is no longer detected. A kernel built on Jan 21st
fails to detect my par. port which has worked fine so far.
In /var/log/messages I get the following:
Jan 27 22:29:53 kern.crit trantor /kernel: ppc0: parallel port found at 0x3bc
Jan 27 22:29:53 kern.crit trantor
Hi folks!
I'm running FreeBSD 4.0 from Dec. 26 1999. This should be on the "general
questions" malininglist, but I thought maybe there is something that changed
from -stable to -current that does this:
I'm trying to limit permissions on .bash_history. There have been users
on my server that
On 27-Jan-2000 Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
|
| 3. On the first reboot after installing, the keyboard was in a funny
| state.
|
| Urk, can't reproduce it. I need a reproducible sequence of operations
| before we'll have any hope of tackling this one.
|
| Control-alt-del
%
%On 27-Jan-2000 Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
% |
% | 3. On the first reboot after installing, the keyboard was in a funny
% | state.
% |
% | Urk, can't reproduce it. I need a reproducible sequence of operations
% | before we'll have any hope of tackling this one.
% |
% | Control-alt-del
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Garrett Wollman wrote:
I have on a number of occasions had my laptop boot with a
non-functional keyboard. Sometimes the keyboard is just locked; other
times it generates garbage. Never managed to isolate the
circumstances in which this happened (but it didn't happen
Right. I've seen this when I hit Enter rapidly twice at the first
loader prompt. Doesn't ever happen if I wait for the second
prompt.
That's my impression too -- I've seen it on my laptop when I do
that (sometimes), and I may have hit enter twice rapidly on this
reboot.
Bill
To
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Paul van der Zwan wrote:
I just notice my par. port is no longer detected. A kernel built on Jan 21st
fails to detect my par. port which has worked fine so far.
In /var/log/messages I get the following:
Jan 27 22:29:53 kern.crit trantor /kernel: ppc0: parallel
On Fri, 28 Jan 2000, Peter Wemm wrote:
For example:
Logical device #0
IO: 0x0534 0x0534 0x0534 0x0534 0x0534 0x0534 0x0534 0x0534
IRQ 5 0
DMA 1 0
IO range check 0x00 activate 0x01
versus:
pcm0: CS423x at port 0x534-0x537,0x388-0x38b,0x220-0x22f irq 5 drq 1,0 on isa0
Which is right?
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Garrett Wollman wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 13:28:10 -0800, "Jordan K. Hubbard" [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
3. On the first reboot after installing, the keyboard was in a funny
state.
Urk, can't reproduce it. I need a reproducible sequence of operations
before we'll
I can consistantly get ColdFusion 4.5 RC3 installed on FreeBSD-current.
It will not work on -stable (i didn't really mess with it too much
however)
i haven't gotten the Apache module to work yet (but i haven't even looked
at it, so give me time)
instructions are at
On 27 Jan 2000, Eric Jacoboni wrote:
All runs ok except that my card is not recognized as ed0 but as ed1.
Here are my config params :
=-=-=-=
device card0
device pcic0 at isa? irq 10 port 0x3e0 iomem 0xd
device pcic1 at isa? irq 11 port 0x3e2 iomem 0xd4000
device ed0 at isa? port
On 27-Jan-00 David O'Brien wrote:
I would appreciate it if those that want things changed would please try
Sheldon's `sed' expression below and report back how it worked for you.
That will expose passwords of users whose entries are commented out,
unfortunately. Then again, I've reverted the
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 05:34:01PM -0500, Brian Hechinger wrote:
I can consistantly get ColdFusion 4.5 RC3 installed on FreeBSD-current.
It will not work on -stable (i didn't really mess with it too much
however)
i haven't gotten the Apache module to work yet (but i haven't even looked
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 01:28:10PM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
In this case, I actually assume that the DHCP server will be providing
the host name and specifically *ignore* the user-provide hostname
IMHO, that is the wrong assumption. Most DHCP servers I've seen aren't
setup to provide
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 01:28:10PM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
4. X didn't come with /usr/X11R6/lib/aout, so I can't run netscape.
I guess we need to build our own XF86 distribution with the a.out
libraries built or we need to somehow stuff those into a compat dist.
OR we can make a
BTW, I'm getting numbers that are 2x bigger than before :-(.I had
makebuildworld down to around 1:20 at one point, but now it is 2:40.
Which compilers for both times?
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Bill Fenner wrote:
Right. I've seen this when I hit Enter rapidly twice at the first
loader prompt. Doesn't ever happen if I wait for the second
prompt.
That's my impression too -- I've seen it on my laptop when I do
that (sometimes), and I may have hit enter
Josef Karthauser drunkenly mumbled...
Is this ColdFusion for Linux?
yes. sorry about the confusion, i forgot to mention that.
Allaire off-record said that they aren't happy with Linux
and are seeking an alternative. i seem to be pushing
them towards FreeBSD. but, keep in mind, this will be
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 05:49:39PM -0500, Brian Hechinger wrote:
Josef Karthauser drunkenly mumbled...
Is this ColdFusion for Linux?
yes. sorry about the confusion, i forgot to mention that.
Allaire off-record said that they aren't happy with Linux
and are seeking an alternative. i
Garrett Wollman wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 13:28:10 -0800, "Jordan K. Hubbard" [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
3. On the first reboot after installing, the keyboard was in a funny
state.
Urk, can't reproduce it. I need a reproducible sequence of operations
before we'll have any hope of
Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, Paul Reece had
to walk into mine and say:
On Thu, 20 Jan 2000, Bill Paul wrote:
snip
Back up. You're leaving out some info.
- When did you buy these cards? (The firmware rev may be an issue.
knowing when you bought the
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, Bill Fenner wrote:
Right. I've seen this when I hit Enter rapidly twice at the first
loader prompt. Doesn't ever happen if I wait for the second
prompt.
That's my impression too -- I've seen it on my laptop when I do
that (sometimes), and I may have hit
In the last episode (Jan 27), Emre said:
I'm running FreeBSD 4.0 from Dec. 26 1999. This should be on the "general
questions" malininglist, but I thought maybe there is something that changed
from -stable to -current that does this:
I'm trying to limit permissions on .bash_history. There
On 27-Jan-00 David O'Brien wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 01:28:10PM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
In this case, I actually assume that the DHCP server will be providing
the host name and specifically *ignore* the user-provide hostname
IMHO, that is the wrong assumption. Most DHCP
On 2000-Jan-28 10:02:06 +1100, Warner Losh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] "David O'Brien" writes:
: BTW, I'm getting numbers that are 2x bigger than before :-(.I had
: makebuildworld down to around 1:20 at one point, but now it is 2:40.
...
So I'd say this is with
"Matthew N. Dodd" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On 27 Jan 2000, Eric Jacoboni wrote:
All runs ok except that my card is not recognized as ed0 but as ed1.
device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 irq 5 iomem 0xd8000
Thats correct. The kernel has assigned 'ed0' to the non-existent ISA card
you've told
- Original Message -
From: "Emre" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2000 4:53 PM
Subject: .bash_history and permissions
Hi folks!
I'm running FreeBSD 4.0 from Dec. 26 1999. This should be on the "general
questions" malininglist, but I thought
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mike Smith writes:
: It doesn't do anything to the keyboard, it just calls the BIOS to find
: out whether keys have been pressed.
I've been seeing the hit CR twice fast problem for months.
Warner
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mike Smith writes:
: It doesn't do anything to the keyboard, it just calls the BIOS to find
: out whether keys have been pressed.
I've been seeing the hit CR twice fast problem for months.
It's always been a problem; we don't understand the mechanics of it
IMHO, that is the wrong assumption. Most DHCP servers I've seen aren't
setup to provide hostnames to the requrestor.
Seems they're set up incorrectly then. You can't be a good "network
citizen" these days without a resolvable hostname that also matches
your primary IP address or, among other
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mike Smith writes:
: In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mike Smith writes:
: : It doesn't do anything to the keyboard, it just calls the BIOS to find
: : out whether keys have been pressed.
:
: I've been seeing the hit CR twice fast problem for months.
:
: It's
IMHO, that is the wrong assumption. Most DHCP servers I've seen aren't
setup to provide hostnames to the requrestor.
Seems they're set up incorrectly then. You can't be a good "network
citizen" these days without a resolvable hostname that also matches
your primary IP address or, among
Why not check to see what the hostname is after dhclient is run and then
stick that name in the network setup dialog box. If the user does edit
the hostname themselves, then you can flag that event.
That would work in that one specific case with that specific dhcp server.
Now change the dhcp
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 02:44:27PM -0700, Warner Losh wrote:
I've been running this for a while. I reversed the normal order to
make it easier to do the math w/o having to shift columns and flip
things over.
Thanks for the patch! It'd be nice to time the buildworld only. Is there
a timed
I recently cvsup'd the sources (around Thu Jan 27 19:30:48 EST 2000), and
I'm getting these errors compiling the kernel:
cc -c -mpentium -O3 -pipe -Wall -Wredundant-decls -Wnested-externs
-Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wpointer-arith -Winline -Wcast-qual
-fformat-extensions -ansi
3. On the first reboot after installing, the keyboard was in a funny
state.
Urk, can't reproduce it. I need a reproducible sequence of operations
before we'll have any hope of tackling this one.
Control-alt-del definitely didn't work, so I had to power off and
reboot. This hasn't
I seem to have this problem occasionaly, the keyboard keymap gets all screwed
up somehow, and the only way to get out is to hit the reset button. But I've
been having the problem for a long time, and with different boxes. It happens
about every 1 out of 15 reboots but randomly. I haven't been
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 07:31:50PM -0500, Donn Miller wrote:
I recently cvsup'd the sources (around Thu Jan 27 19:30:48 EST 2000), and
I'm getting these errors compiling the kernel:
cc -c -mpentium -O3 -pipe -Wall -Wredundant-decls -Wnested-externs
-Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes
whereintheworld.pl (thanxs Bill Fenner) shows ...
What does this Perl script do? :-)
See http://www.freebsd.org/~fenner/ - it parses "make world" output
in a way that gives slightly better progress info than just a "tail".
Bill
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mike Smith writes:
: It doesn't do anything to the keyboard, it just calls the BIOS to find
: out whether keys have been pressed.
I've been seeing the hit CR twice fast problem for months.
It's always been a problem; we don't understand the mechanics of it
:On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 02:44:27PM -0700, Warner Losh wrote:
: I've been running this for a while. I reversed the normal order to
: make it easier to do the math w/o having to shift columns and flip
: things over.
:
:Thanks for the patch! It'd be nice to time the buildworld only. Is there
:a
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 16:06:31 -0800, "Jordan K. Hubbard" [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
citizen" these days without a resolvable hostname that also matches
your primary IP address or, among other things, you won't be able to
send mail directly to anyone who practices traditional spam filtering
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 04:00:40PM -0700, Warner Losh wrote:
So I'd say this is with 2.7.3 and the compiler in today's current.
Ah. 2.95.2 is a known speed snail. The GCC developers took this to
heart and 2.96 will compile much faster.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 16:06:31 -0800, "Jordan K. Hubbard" [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
citizen" these days without a resolvable hostname that also matches
your primary IP address or, among other things, you won't be able to
send mail directly to anyone who practices traditional spam filtering
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 04:06:31PM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
IMHO, that is the wrong assumption. Most DHCP servers I've seen aren't
setup to provide hostnames to the requrestor.
Seems they're set up incorrectly then.
Not at all.
You can't be a good "network citizen" these days
=== libexec/getNAME
cc -O -pipe -I/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include -c /usr/src/libexec/getNAME/ge
tNAME.c
cc -O -pipe -I/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include -o getNAME getNAME.o
gzip -cn /usr/src/libexec/getNAME/getNAME.1 getNAME.1.gz
=== libexec/getty
cc -O -pipe
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 04:20:54PM -0800, Mike Smith wrote:
Actually, the problem here is that our dhclient doesn't pick the hostname
up the first time around. If it's set in an existing lease that is just
confirmed, it works, but if you're starting without a lease, you won't
get a
That's not correct; your DHCP configuration should reflect the hostname.
Sysinstall doesn't fill in the hostname field because the crunched binary
is missing the hostname(1) command. If we were to add that, it's just
possible that we'd get hostnames working too.
Actually, that's not
On Thu, Jan 27, 2000 at 04:20:54PM -0800, Mike Smith wrote:
Actually, the problem here is that our dhclient doesn't pick the hostname
up the first time around. If it's set in an existing lease that is just
confirmed, it works, but if you're starting without a lease, you won't
get a
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