t/i386/boot0/boot0.s
As for removing slices from the menu, man boot0cfg. The -m option lets
you mask out any or all of the partitions.
-Dan Nelson
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with no problems (I don't :)
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logging, so if the system crashes, the files are
recovered from the log?
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-ffast-math
-O6 is too much; -O3 is the highest level tested for by egcs.
-fexpensive-optimizations is redundant because -O2 turns it on.
See /usr/src/contrib/egcs/gcc/toplev.c, starting at line ~4250, to see
what the different -O levels actually do.
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-- 233472 r
(emssrv5:root) /root# lsof -p 1
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF INODE NAME
init 1 root cwd VDIR 4,131072 1024 2 /
init 1 root txt VREG 4,131072 233472 153791 /sbin/init
(emssrv5:root) /root#
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the output block size of 16k
is key for floppies, then. The conv=osync does the padding.
The block size for floppies is 512 bytes (which happens to be dd's
default blocksize), btw.
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with "unsubs
to get the processname unless
you give it the -f flag (and are root).
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. Root
can see all commandlines.
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or whatever), you're probably already root.
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un in each of those test cases.
I'm afraid I don't know much about the internal workings of NFS, so I'm
hoping my description is enough to pinpoint the problem.
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Copyright (c) 1992-1999 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989,
root wheel 844512 Sep 7 17:46 /bin/tcsh*
-r-xr-xr-x 1 root wheel 3214381 Oct 25 10:29 /sbin/ipfw*
-r-xr-xr-x 2 root wheel 3420946 Oct 25 16:02 /sbin/rdump*
-r-xr-xr-x 3 root wheel 3464372 Oct 22 12:07 /sbin/fsck_ufs*
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, or basically anything
except EIO, imho. I got bit by this as well, and thought /sbin/devfs
was simply broken or not fully coded until I saw this post.
Or maybe allow ruleset 0 to be modified like any other? Is there a
benefit to having an invisible, immutable default ruleset?
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.
Or alternatively, change that example /dev/speaker rule in the manpage
to devfs rule apply path speaker mode 666, so that people who only
care about fixing the speaker permissions (like me and apparently
Andrew Lankford) can just stick that command in /etc/rc.local and be
done :)
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booted and root mounted.
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In the last episode (Nov 17), John De Boskey said:
It would be nice if rc.conf could start a 2nd copy of named (split
dns). Comments on the following simplistic patch?
Just upgrade to bind 9 and set up two views. Much easier :)
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wrong anyway.
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. What we need is a matching Simple Shutdown Flag variable.
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to
ata_raid_attach inside an #ifdef DEV_ATADISK.
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files :)
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In the last episode (Dec 07), leafy said:
Hi,
CPUTYPE=pentium4 is know to be broken. What is the known working highest
CPUTYPE then? pentium3 or pentium2?
p3 has been working for me for quite a while.
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0xc04255e0 vm page queue mutex (vm page queue mutex) @ ../../../kern/vfs_bio.c:1480
acquiring duplicate lock of same type: vnode interlock
1st vnode interlock @ ../../../ufs/ffs/ffs_snapshot.c:1876
2nd vnode interlock @ ../../../kern/vfs_subr.c:1610
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. If there is no CPUTYPE, and you are on
i386, -mcpu=pentiumpro gets added (top of bsd.cpu.mk).
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In the last episode (Dec 13), Julian Elischer said:
It's always been there. the question is
Who has broken it?
I think it has just slowly bitrotted. I opened a PR on this in
November.
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=kern/45777
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stack trace.
Kernel was built from sources cvsupped just after 2002/12/15 17:41:07
PST. (Why in the heck are all the timestamps in commitlogs in PST??)
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GNU gdb 5.2.1 (FreeBSD)
Copyright 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GDB is free software, covered
wrong to my untrained eyes.
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usually stamped or printed on the card somewhere).
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of these messages on the 17th, 12 on the 18th, and after that,
2-3 a day. Not sure why the count was so high the first 2 days.
It's a squid proxy, plus bigbrother network agent. Lots of TCP
connections from lots of hosts. Is there a way to maybe print the
remote IP in the message?
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.
But not in the -D_POSIX_SOURCE case. Could someone with the POSIX spec
see whether sa_handler is supposed to be visible or not?
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into the sources with gdb I found
This is just a 'me too'. I get it with -O2 (-Os implies -O2, so it's
probably the same problem).
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In the last episode (Mar 15), David O'Brien said:
On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 10:51:55AM -0600, Dan Nelson wrote:
I get it with -O2 (-Os implies -O2, so it's probably the same
problem).
Not quite. -0s == all the -O2 optimizations that do not increase
code size. -Os can also perform other
ks, that's 1.6MB.
I have seen the jump in write throughput as I tuned an Oracle
database's parameters on both Solaris and DEC Unix boxes. Get Oracle
to write blocks larger than a RAID-5 stripe, and it flies.
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t;) if you actually send a single SCSI write request large
enough to span all the disks. I don't know what would be required to
get our kernel to even be able to write blocks this big (what's the
upper limit on MAXPHYS)?
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and transactions), so there's
no great need to replace our current DB.
Another big personal minus for me is that neither DB 2 or DB 3 will
compile at all under DOS, so I can't write portable programs with them.
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a `Pentium' at the expense of
more memory.
*Warning:* if you use the `-malign-double' switch, structures
containing the above types will be aligned differently than the
published application binary interface specifications for the 386.
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To U
the last couple of causes of this, but I
will try to reproduce it as you describe it with some debugging added.
How hard would it be to print the filename (or the device/inode) that
triggers the warning?
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n the tape is at.
Dunno if it has any other use :)
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it count? If I mount a Netware volume and decide to
edit a file with an editor that creates a temporary filename for some
reason, I'd like it to work.
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could reasonably be just "bobX.tmp".
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.
You make another commit, undoing what your first commit did. That way
there is a record of what you did, and hopefully why it was backed out.
For more info:
info -n "(cvs)Merging two revisions"
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methods and clean up after
themselves. All the ports have been changed accordingly. If you still
have old startup scripts lying around in /usr/{local,X11R6}/etc/rc.d
you should upgrade these ASAP.
Can we have little green "[ OK ]"s as well? :)
j/k
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-STABLE.
Semantics? Nit-picking? Both? :)
Why bother closing a fd when exit() will do it for you? You don't
close stdout when you're done with it :)
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threading library, which means that all
threads run as a single plain process. Linuxthreads forks a new
process for each thread. Try linking with -lkse or -lthr; both of
these threading libraries allow multiple threads to run simultaneously
on multiple CPUs.
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;)
Try updating to a -current kernel and libkse/libthr libraries; I have
no problems running your test program with either of them, and neither
did Norikatsu Shigemura, apparently.
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arrays are a gcc extension:
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Zero-Length.html
Under FreeBSD 4.x, you can't use them because gcc 2.95 only supports
the gcc extension. Intel has added support for a lot of gcc extensions
recently; they may be willing to add this to the list.
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/*.so -type l -ls | grep /lib | wc -l
24
.. symlinks back to /lib.
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In the last episode (Sep 05), Alexander Leidinger said:
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003 11:28:58 -0500
Dan Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you're talking FreeBSD 5, you should be able to simply subsitute
a C99 flexible array member (basically replace [0] with [])
and get the same effect. 0-length
to
a regular ypxfr for all I know. If I run rpc.ypxfrd on the server,
then run chfn and change my name, lastcomm shows that rpc.ypxfrd forks
a couple times, and the client's map is updated. -current server, 4.1
client.
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In the last episode (Sep 06), Ruslan Ermilov said:
On Fri, Sep 05, 2003 at 04:49:17PM -0500, Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Sep 05), Ruslan Ermilov said:
Is there anybody out there who successfully uses the rpc.ypxfrd(8)
server to speed up distribution of NIS maps, either on 4.x
they did it that way, but there you go.
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, but it does not seem to
be on either a current (yesterday) or an older current (9/19).
bsd.port.mk has used -lc_r for pthreads on 5.0 since March 2001 (rev
1.363).
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/Mk/bsd.port.mk.diff?r1=1.362r2=1.363f=h
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and their brother doing a make world today, are the sites
down for maintenance, or is something sinister going on?
cvsup4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 16 all work for me.
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wins
above all. If one threads library exports a symbol not in the others,
I'd call that an API bug in the first library.
This should be no different from explicitly linking in dmalloc to
override the malloc functions in libc, for example.
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be a tier 2 platform
and sparc64 is still on its way up ... sort of.
In my book sparc64 is also with one foot in the grave. As is Sun
itself.
Fujitsu makes sparc-compatible CPUs, too, so it'll be harder to kill
the entire architecture like HP did with the Alpha.
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executed
I'm not sure whether there's another 30-sec delay between the cd1 and
cd0 probes or not.
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on the filesystem.
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be generated by
resolveAbsBranch() in sys/boot/ficl/words.c.
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devices ..
done
Backing out the most recent checkin to sys/dev/ata/ata-queue.c (i.e.
reverting to version 1.6) makes the problem go away.
I upgraded from an Oct 1 - Oct 12 kernel and saw the same hang.
Backing out r1.6 fixed it for me too.
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);
printf(See the i386_set_ldt man page for more info\n);
}
/* verify range of descriptors to modify */
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:)
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a null pointer dereference
of some sort. I've added asserts to propagate_priority any place a
pointer to a structure is dereferenced, so if it happens again I should
have the line number at least.
panic1 was on an Oct 15 kernel, panic2 was on an Oct 27 kernel.
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In the last episode (Oct 28), John Baldwin said:
On 28-Oct-2003 Dan Nelson wrote:
I've gotten the following panic twice in the last few days. I'm
pretty sure truss has something to do with it, since I just started
trussing something when it paniced. No crashdumps unfortunately
In the last episode (Oct 29), John Baldwin said:
On 28-Oct-2003 Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Oct 28), John Baldwin said:
On 28-Oct-2003 Dan Nelson wrote:
The fault address is 0x24 so it looks like a null pointer
dereference of some sort. I've added asserts
= 0xbfafef2c ---
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people
will probably have to get an SMP machine to be able to debug it.
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library is being
used.
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strace forked a child, and it's hanging before it's able
to run ls. If I kill -CONT 75839, the child exec's ls and strace
traces it just fine.
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errors.
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In the last episode (Jun 03), Andreas Klemm said:
On Tue, Jun 03, 2003 at 01:23:35AM -0500, Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Jun 03), Andreas Klemm said:
ad2: UDMA ICRC error cmd=read fsbn 74689079 of 74689079-74689206 retrying
ad2: UDMA ICRC error cmd=read fsbn 74689079 of 74689079
. It
lets you set up rules that are guaranteed to work no matter what your
current IP is. Does this do what you want:
deny udp from 192.168.1.0/24 to any dst-port 137,138 in via dc0
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a net connection. It
requires a bit more disk space, though.
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Inspiron
4150, which you can find attached. Here are the steps to use it:
This patch fixes a -current hang on bootup and misdetection of the
serial ports on my Dell CP. thanks!
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$$0 }' $^ \
+ $(AWK) '{ if ($$1 != $$1 !~ ^#.*) print $$0\t$$0 }' $(YPSERVERS) \
| $(DBLOAD) -i $(YPSERVERS) -o $(YPMAPDIR)/$@ - $(TMP); \
$(RMV) $(TMP) $@
@$(DBLOAD) -c
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?
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system, to
maximize the number of machines it would run on.
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come on. I can live without suspend/resume
functionality. You can't miss something you have never had. :-)
My Dell laptop doesn't bring the display back on, but I can manually
re-enable it with the Fn-CRT/LCD key.
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messages in its logs?
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?
Make sure ls is dynamically-linked.
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using different liscences?
Sure. See /sys/gnu/ext2fs/ for an example, and see the COPYRIGHT.INFO
file for an explanation of which files have what license.
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you do per-user tracking. Enabling
quotas and running repquota gives you a per-user summary quicker, but
doesn't get any more specific.
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or function key which running
procps top; it doesn't even use curses, so it beeps and waits 2 seconds
for each character in the escape sequence :)
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diff -burp top-3.5beta12/display.c top-3.5beta12-l/display.c
--- top-3.5beta12/display.c Thu Sep
.
If you are using -j6, the real error could be many many lines above
what you pasted. It's most likely in usr.sbin somewhere, but probably
not keyserv. You'll have to capture the entire log and look at it to
determine the first failure.
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, but there are still things you can't turn off with -f.
They're half-aliases. toplev.c::parse_options_and_default_flags does
set -f flags based on the optimization level, but there is still a
whole lot of gcc code that directly tests the value of optimize and
optimize_size.
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files on exit:
void
_cleanup()
{
/* (void) _fwalk(fclose); */
(void) _fwalk(__sflush);/* `cheating' */
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the clock-speedup code in
i386/isa/clock.c. A very nice piece of functionality I use quite
often.
It's also handy if you don't have external speakers hooked up to a
machine, and want something better than beeps.
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. A much
bigger problem when going to -current is the gcc 2.95 - 3.2 upgrade;
lots of c++ programs break because things have moved out of the global
namespace into std::
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your best bet for recovering
the data.
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%-100% to imply a range instead of a transition,
since the message is printing your options, not the fact that the CPU
speed is actually changing now.
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If you're thinking it's /dev/random blocking on him, 5.0's output never
blocks. Its output is a PRNG periodically seeded from random data,
including interrupt timings and LAN traffic by default.
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=randomsektion=4manpath=FreeBSD+5.0-current
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, 530214912 bytes (129447 pages)
avail memory = 513802240 (501760K bytes)
It looks like there is just 512M of available memory in the system
anyhow. Setting MAXMEM to 768M isn't going to do you any good.
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and should only make a difference if you are low on memory. R is on
by default in 5.0 anyway, due to A and J being on by default. Setting
malloc.conf to aj makes it work like it does in 4.*.
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In the last episode (Jan 23), Rahul Siddharthan said:
Dan Nelson wrote:
# ls -l /etc/malloc.conf
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 4 Jan 23 11:52 /etc/malloc.conf - HR
H and should only make a difference if you are low on memory.
Yes.
R is on
by default in 5.0 anyway, due
is specified.
Compaq systems as recent at 2000 required MAXMEM to detect memory above
64k, I believe.
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really don't want to do that; install the compat4x port/package to
get libc.so.4.
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:-)
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pair.
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of time the disk is busy
wait and %w may zero on FreeBSD. Do we allow queuing more transactions
than the physical device supports?
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Dan Nelson
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-cse-after-loop,
-fexpensive-optimizations, and -fschedule-insns2 do absolutely nothing, since
-O2 enables them anyway. -fforce-addr is the only non-redundant -f flag in
that whole list.
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Dan Nelson
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In the last episode (Feb 24), Christoph P. Kukulies said:
On Mon, Feb 24, 2003 at 10:27:22AM -0600, Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Feb 24), Christoph Kukulies said:
sh: turning off NDELAY mode
appears from time to time in an xterm n my notebook
running 5.0-current
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