On 7 October 2011 13:55, Garrett Cooper yaneg...@gmail.com wrote:
Has anyone seen this before?
This is _not_ plug/unplug the active storage device, or another
storage device. This is when doing IO on a storage device (whether the
root device or a media device) whilst plug/unplug a
Hello, Perryh.
You wrote 7 октября 2011 г., 18:06:38:
GPT (and MBR) metadata placement is dictated from outside world,
where is no GEOM and geom_label. They INTENDED to be used on DISKS.
BIOSes should be able to find it :)
Certainly GPT and MBR must place an instance of the partition table
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 2:12 PM, Jaakko Heinonen j...@freebsd.org wrote:
Looks mostly OK to me.
Why do you use printf() + exit() here and errx() in atacontrol? Is there
reason to not use errx() also here?
errx(3) adds a newline character to the output. Thus the latter '\n' is
redundant.
Hi,
just experienced a panic with if_iwn on 9.0-BETA3-amd64 (base and
kernel compiled with clang, CPUTYPE?=core2, GENERIC with CAPABILITIES).
My network card: iwn0: Intel(R) WiFi Link 5100 mem
0xf520-0xf5201fff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci3
iwn0: flags=8803UP,BROADCAST,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST
* Brett Glass br...@lariat.net, 20110926 02:52:
1) The jove editor worked strangely because, in /etc/ttys, the
terminal type was set to xterm instead of cons25 by default. (I
do not run a GUI on servers, so of course there will not be an
xterm.) As a result, parts of lines kept vanishing from
* Ed Schouten e...@80386.nl, 20111007 13:02:
It should be xterm, since syscons now uses an xterm-style terminal
emulator. I have never used jove before, so what should I do to
reproduce this?
After some tinkering, I think I know why it breaks. I thought that
when xterm processes a tab
Hi Brett,
* Brett Glass br...@lariat.net, 20111007 15:18:
Among other things, you'll see portions of lines vanish from the
screen while you're editing, until you hit ^L (the EMACS command to
refresh the screen) a couple of times.
Yeah, that should be fixed now. I just ran `jove /etc/ttys
Hi Brett,
* Brett Glass br...@lariat.net, 20111007 15:40:
The patch is an improvement. Not assuming that tabs blank the underlying
cells is definitely a help. But it does not fix all of the artifacts.
Just let me know what's broken specifically. So what keys to press when
I start jove
Lev Serebryakov l...@freebsd.org wrote:
GPT (and MBR) metadata placement is dictated from outside world,
where is no GEOM and geom_label. They INTENDED to be used on DISKS.
BIOSes should be able to find it :)
Certainly GPT and MBR must place an instance of the partition table
where the BIOS
At 05:02 AM 10/7/2011, Ed Schouten wrote:
It should be xterm, since syscons now uses an xterm-style terminal
emulator.
Interesting. Apparently, the xterm termcap does not work properly for it.
I have never used jove before, so what should I do to
reproduce this?
Have you ever used EMACS?
like, I can try to come up to speed on
the code and help to debug, but I do not use X and so have no experience
with its default terminal emulator; I'd have to study that as well.
--Brett Glass
At 06:25 AM 10/7/2011, Ed Schouten wrote:
* Ed Schouten e...@80386.nl, 20111007 13:02:
It should
On 10/07/11 12:26, Rene Ladan wrote:
Hi,
just experienced a panic with if_iwn on 9.0-BETA3-amd64 (base and
kernel compiled with clang, CPUTYPE?=core2, GENERIC with CAPABILITIES).
My network card: iwn0:Intel(R) WiFi Link 5100 mem
0xf520-0xf5201fff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci3
iwn0:
Dear all,
I feel like this has come up before, but a quick search didn't reveal
anything terribly recent, at least.
The new installation chapter of the handbook for 9.0 (that Warren and Glen
and Garrett and Gavin and more people I am probably missing have sunk huge
amounts of time into) has
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 10:42 AM, Benjamin Kaduk ka...@mit.edu wrote:
Dear all,
I feel like this has come up before, but a quick search didn't reveal
anything terribly recent, at least.
The new installation chapter of the handbook for 9.0 (that Warren and Glen
and Garrett and Gavin and more
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Garrett Cooper wrote:
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 10:42 AM, Benjamin Kaduk ka...@mit.edu wrote:
Dear all,
I feel like this has come up before, but a quick search didn't reveal
anything terribly recent, at least.
The new installation chapter of the handbook for 9.0 (that Warren
In message alpine.gso.1.10.1110071341430@multics.mit.edu, Benjamin Kaduk
writes:
Now, an ordinary user who is
doing this for the first time might ask, why do I need to do something
with 'debugflags' in order to make a USB stick?
Which is the exactly right question to ask.
The procedure
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message alpine.gso.1.10.1110071341430@multics.mit.edu, Benjamin Kaduk
writes:
Now, an ordinary user who is
doing this for the first time might ask, why do I need to do something
with 'debugflags' in order to make a USB stick?
Which is the
Hi,
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 2:13 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message alpine.gso.1.10.1110071341430@multics.mit.edu, Benjamin
Kaduk
writes:
Now, an ordinary user who is
doing this for the first time might ask, why do I need
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Arnaud Lacombe wrote:
Hi,
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 2:13 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message alpine.gso.1.10.1110071341430@multics.mit.edu, Benjamin
Kaduk
writes:
Now, an ordinary user who is
doing this
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Warren Block wrote:
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Arnaud Lacombe wrote:
Hi,
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 2:13 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message alpine.gso.1.10.1110071341430@multics.mit.edu, Benjamin
Kaduk
writes:
In message alpine.bsf.2.00.1110071236270.2...@wonkity.com, Warren Block write
s:
Which is the exactly right question to ask.
The procedure documented is clearly flawed.
Well, yes. The goal is to unprotect the device, regardless of what may
already be on it. Then the user can overwrite it
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 12:03 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp p...@phk.freebsd.dk wrote:
In message alpine.bsf.2.00.1110071236270.2...@wonkity.com, Warren Block
write
s:
Which is the exactly right question to ask.
The procedure documented is clearly flawed.
Well, yes. The goal is to unprotect the
In message CAGH67wQk0jR+uk0oFO7Ye001vd-0UgcY-bf+84a8=9wtlhg...@mail.gmail.com
, Garrett Cooper writes:
My guess is that GEOM isn't letting go of the GPT table and you have
multiple partitions in the GPT table and you're not destroying them
hierarchically in a proper manner.. but again, that's
On 07.10.2011 22:53, Warren Block wrote:
The current documentation is
sysctl kern.geom.debugflags=16
dd if=memstick.img of=/dev/whatever0 bs=64k
Did you try just write your image without debugflags settings?
When /dev/whatever0 is not used nothing should prevent you write
your image.
--
Hi,
On 10/7/11 3:18 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
My guess is that GEOM isn't letting go of the GPT table and you have
multiple partitions in the GPT table and you're not destroying them
hierarchically in a proper manner.. but again, that's just a guess
based on hazy recollection.
If none
Hello, Perryh.
You wrote 7 октября 2011 г., 18:06:38:
GPT (and MBR) metadata placement is dictated from outside world,
where is no GEOM and geom_label. They INTENDED to be used on DISKS.
BIOSes should be able to find it :)
Certainly GPT and MBR must place an instance of the partition table
On 07.10.2011 23:41, Glen Barber wrote:
In my experience, without kern.geom.debugflags=16, the MBR will not be
written to the memstick, leaving you with what would effectively be a
coaster in the not-so-distant past.
The problem is that this bad suggestion is everywhere in the Internet.
And
On 07.10.11 22:44, Lev Serebryakov wrote:
Hello, Perryh.
You wrote 7 октября 2011 г., 18:06:38:
GPT (and MBR) metadata placement is dictated from outside world,
where is no GEOM and geom_label. They INTENDED to be used on DISKS.
BIOSes should be able to find it :)
Certainly GPT and MBR
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Glen Barber wrote:
Hi,
On 10/7/11 3:18 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
My guess is that GEOM isn't letting go of the GPT table and you have
multiple partitions in the GPT table and you're not destroying them
hierarchically in a proper manner.. but again, that's just a guess
On 10/7/11 4:27 PM, Warren Block wrote:
In my experience, without kern.geom.debugflags=16, the MBR will not be
written to the memstick, leaving you with what would effectively be a
coaster in the not-so-distant past.
Tried it just now with the 9.0-BETA3 memstick image.
[...]
Followed
Hi,
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 4:27 PM, Warren Block wbl...@wonkity.com wrote:
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Glen Barber wrote:
Hi,
On 10/7/11 3:18 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
My guess is that GEOM isn't letting go of the GPT table and you have
multiple partitions in the GPT table and you're not
2011/10/7 Daniel Kalchev dan...@digsys.bg:
Then, by standard GPT cannot coexist with GLABEL. Such setup should be
disallowed, or at least big nasty message that you have just shoot yourself
in the leg should be output. (period)
GPT cannot coexist with ANY GEOM CLASS which writes metadata to
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Glen Barber wrote:
On 10/7/11 4:27 PM, Warren Block wrote:
In my experience, without kern.geom.debugflags=16, the MBR will not be
written to the memstick, leaving you with what would effectively be a
coaster in the not-so-distant past.
Tried it just now with the 9.0-BETA3
In message alpine.bsf.2.00.1110071352210.2...@wonkity.com, Warren Block write
s:
# mount /dev/da0p2 /mnt
# dd if=/tmp/FreeBSD-9.0-BETA3-amd64-memstick.img of=/dev/da0 bs=64k
dd: /dev/da0: Operation not permitted
# sysctl kern.geom.debugflags=16
kern.geom.debugflags: 0 - 16
# dd
Hi,
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 5:10 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp p...@phk.freebsd.dk wrote:
In message alpine.bsf.2.00.1110071352210.2...@wonkity.com, Warren Block
write
s:
# mount /dev/da0p2 /mnt
# dd if=/tmp/FreeBSD-9.0-BETA3-amd64-memstick.img of=/dev/da0 bs=64k
dd: /dev/da0: Operation not permitted
On 10/7/11 5:10 PM, Warren Block wrote:
Me not being one that uses hald or devd for USB, I'm certain the device
was not mounted when writing the memstick image. In the former case of
your test, is the USB stick bootable?
I cleared the first 34 blocks and wrote it again to make sure, but
On Fri, 7 Oct 2011, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message alpine.bsf.2.00.1110071352210.2...@wonkity.com, Warren Block
writes:
Followed by removing the memory stick without unmounting it to avoid
overwriting part of the image. No obvious problems, but no, it's not
polite. (I'm thinking
Hi!
r226027 fix ( ... s/freebsd1\*)/SHOULDNOTMATCHANYTHING1)/ ...) is
incorrect: this commit breaks metaports building:
# cd /usr/ports/print/teTeX sudo make clean all
=== Cleaning for teTeX-3.0_5
=== License check disabled, port has not defined LICENSE
=== Found saved configuration for
On Sat, 8 Oct 2011, Andrey V. Elsukov wrote:
On 07.10.2011 23:41, Glen Barber wrote:
In my experience, without kern.geom.debugflags=16, the MBR will not be
written to the memstick, leaving you with what would effectively be a
coaster in the not-so-distant past.
The problem is that this bad
On Sat, 8 Oct 2011 02:03:37 +0300
Mykola Dzham i...@levsha.me mentioned:
Hi!
r226027 fix ( ... s/freebsd1\*)/SHOULDNOTMATCHANYTHING1)/ ...) is
incorrect: this commit breaks metaports building:
# cd /usr/ports/print/teTeX sudo make clean all
=== Cleaning for teTeX-3.0_5
=== License
In case anyone wants to take this on, this port fails to install on 10.0
because it uses its own version of libtool. I took a quick look but
there wasn't a solution obvious enough for me. :)
Doug
On 10/07/2011 09:15, Hajimu UMEMOTO wrote:
ume 2011-10-07 16:15:47 UTC
FreeBSD ports
Hi,
please create a PR and send followups to freebsd-wirel...@freebsd.org .
Adrian
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Hi,
I have found that the dtrace command on FreeBSD, in both STABLE and HEAD, does
not print out
aggregations properly, likely due to the difference in how Solaris and FreeBSD
signals work.
For example, this one liner will give no output:
sudo dtrace -n 'syscall:::entry { @[execname] =
hail,
as recently had issues in this regard, to install it can I just use
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/desktop-browsers.html or there is
another guide ?
I looked for and found nothing on wiki.freebsd.org.
thanks,
matheus
--
We will call you cygnus,
The God of balance you shall be
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