Hi,
Is there any way I can avoid manually resolving hundreds of merge
conflicts of the following type while using freebsd-update ?
1 <<< current version
2 # $FreeBSD: release/9.0.0/etc/csh.cshrc 50472 1999-08-27 23:37:10Z
peter $
3 ===
4 # $FreeBSD: release/10.0.0/etc/csh.csh
On 12/10/2013 08:10, zhifeng hu wrote:
> I am noticed that the nslookup will not appear by default in freebsd 10.
> but this is a very basic tools, we need it very much more than you think.
> would you please add alias for nslookup ? such as
> alias nslookup="host -v"
>
> NOT FORCE USER TO INSTAL
On 13.09.2013 22:10, Glen Barber wrote:
The first ALPHA build of the 10.0-RELEASE release cycle is now available
on the FTP servers for the amd64, i386, ia64, powerpc, and sparc64
architectures.
The image checksums follow at the end of this email.
ISO images and, for architectures that support
On 5 September 2013 14:00, Edward Tomasz Napierała wrote:
> Wiadomość napisana przez Ivan Voras w dniu 5 wrz 2013, o
> godz. 13:18:
>> On 05/09/2013 12:27, Edward Tomasz Napierała wrote:
>>> Hello. At http://people.freebsd.org/~trasz/cfiscsi-20130904.diff you'll
On 05/09/2013 12:27, Edward Tomasz Napierała wrote:
> Hello. At http://people.freebsd.org/~trasz/cfiscsi-20130904.diff you'll find
> a patch which adds the new iSCSI initiator and target, against 10-CURRENT.
> To use the new initiator, start with "man iscsictl". For the target - "man
> ctld".
On 17 April 2013 00:44, Cy Schubert wrote:
> You were correct. Backing out r249508 in my tree resolves the panic on both
> hosts.
Hi,
Sorry about that - should be fixed by
http://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=249564 .
___
freebsd-curr
On 28/02/2013 11:31, Lev Serebryakov wrote:
> WD disks are in software RAID5 with geom_raid5 (from ports, but I'm
> active maintainer of it).
>Disks are in "Default" configuration: WC and NCQ are enabled.
>
>I know, that FS guys could blame geom_raid5, as it could delay real
> write up
On 07/12/2012 14:52, CeDeROM wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 7, 2012 at 2:41 PM, Ivan Voras wrote:
>> It looks like you are confusing GEOM journalling (-J) and UFS-SU
>> journalling (-j). They are very different, and today you probably want
>> to use the latter. If you are installing
On 07/12/2012 09:44, CeDeROM wrote:
> Any hints welcome :-)
It looks like you are confusing GEOM journalling (-J) and UFS-SU
journalling (-j). They are very different, and today you probably want
to use the latter. If you are installing 9.x from scratch, it will be
enabled by default. If not, you
On 15/11/2012 11:16, Andriy Gapon wrote:
> on 14/11/2012 23:56 Russell Cattelan said the following:
>> This has been sitting on my plate for a while and I would like to get some
>> more feedback / testing on this feature.
>
> A few words about what kload is and how to use/test it might increase ch
On 13/11/2012 03:23, Dan Nelson wrote:
> In the last episode (Nov 12), Darrel said:
>> Hello,
>>
>> Today I booted r242670 from the console and noticed an error. This
>> is one line from the end of dmesg:
>>
>> ipfw: ipfw_install_state: Too many dynamic rules
>>
>> The ruleset has always been dyna
On 10/10/2012 15:44, Baptiste Daroussin wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> If you are using the ports tree on a FreeBSD current setup, then you are
> concerned by the announce.
>
> As nvidia-drivers has been fixed and is now properly working with pkgng, the
> ports tree as been switch by default to use pkgng o
On 03/10/2012 22:15, Andre Oppermann wrote:
> I guess the problem is rather kern.ipc.maxsockets which is only 25600.
> maxsockets should be bumped up quite a bit by default IMO. How far needs
> some analysis because there are some dependencies and memory
> requirements.
So, how about a heuristic
On 12/09/2012 12:31, Ivan Voras wrote:
> Hi,
>
> For whatever reason, I'd like to start services, from a properly formed
> rc.d script, configured via /etc/rc.conf, etc. with a custom "nice"
> value. Is there already support for this?
... nevermind, I found it
Hi,
For whatever reason, I'd like to start services, from a properly formed
rc.d script, configured via /etc/rc.conf, etc. with a custom "nice"
value. Is there already support for this?
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 7 September 2012 13:54, Matthew Seaman
wrote:
> On 09/07/12 12:30, Ivan Voras wrote:
>> On 06/09/2012 18:44, Matthew Seaman wrote:
>>> On 06/09/2012 16:37, Ivan Voras wrote:
>>
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> It looks like the pkg port i
On 06/09/2012 18:44, Matthew Seaman wrote:
> On 06/09/2012 16:37, Ivan Voras wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> It looks like the pkg port installs pkg.conf.sample with the line:
>>
>> PACKAGESITE : http://pkg.freebsd.org/${ABI}/latest
>>
>> ... which is f
On 30/08/2012 16:19, Baptiste Daroussin wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Since Julien Laffaye and I started pkgng lots of things has happened and here
> we
> are now.
>
> After 2 years of development (first commit "Tue Sep 7 2010"), more than 2000
> commits, 43 different contibutors. The pkgng team is prou
On 21/08/2012 22:15, Doug Barton wrote:
> And in this case, it doesn't matter how awesome the new tools are, they
> are a MAJOR paradigm shift for how users interact with ports, and we are
Unless I've missed something, pkgng is actually *zero* paradigm shift
for users familiar with *ports*, and h
On 20/08/2012 21:43, Baptiste Daroussin wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Since 1.0-rc6 release, everything looks ready for a final release of 1.0, I'll
> give more details on the release commit bit :) this is planned for 30th august
> 2012.
Congratulations, it's great! :)
signature.asc
Description: OpenP
On 11/03/2012 10:35, Andrey V. Elsukov wrote:
> Hi, All
>
> i wrote GEOM_PART_LDM class. It provides basic support of Logical Disk Manager
> partitioning scheme [1]. Since LDM metadata is not documented i used several
> articles found in the web and linux implementation as reference [2].
Seems ok
On 09/03/2012 12:36, O. Hartmann wrote:
> Sorry if you feel boring by those messages, but soem of us still get wet
> eyes when it comes to OpenCL and LLVm (LLVM is supposed to become soon
> the backend compiler in FreeBSD, as I understand). On PHORONIX I read
> this message days ago:
>
> http://ww
On 10/02/2012 17:25, Eitan Adler wrote:
> setenv BLOCKSIZE K
Why note BLOCKSIZE M? It's pretty much ridiculous to count kilobytes
nowadays.
> Many people had alternative suggestions for the prompt. Can you please
> clarify why you believe your prompt should be the _default_ one?
My promp
On 06/02/2012 18:24, JD wrote:
dmesg no longer outputs the kernel messages.
$ dmesg
$
$ which dmesg
/sbin/dmesg
$what /sbin/dmesg
/sbin/dmesg:
So, I have no idea what version of dmesg got installed.
Anyone on 9.0 Release have this problem? How to fix it?
I thought this was by design, I've no
On 13/01/2012 15:37, Martin Cracauer wrote:
More findings.
Reminder, with the original report I found:
- files for no reason changing ownership and group to
root/
- data corruption as in inserting binary junk obviously from ports
- data corruption as in malformed ascii text that might be a bu
On 24/11/2011 18:06, Mark Martinec wrote:
If you can get it back into this state,
Sure, *every* time.
a procstat -k -k would be very helpful.
(the second -k is not a typo).
# procstat -k -k 5896
PIDTID COMM TDNAME KSTACK
5896 102364 iscontrol-
2011/10/7 Daniel Kalchev :
> 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 the last sect
> I am not a GEOM expert, but isn't it wrong concept, that glabel writes
> its metadata and publish original device size?
It does not.
# diskinfo -v /dev/md0
/dev/md0
512 # sectorsize
104857600 # mediasize in bytes (100M)
204800 # mediasize in
On 06/10/2011 13:29, Daniel Kalchev wrote:
>
>
> On 06.10.11 14:07, Ivan Voras wrote:
>>
>> Um, you do realize this is a "physical" problem with metadata location
>> and cannot be solved in any meaningful way? Geom_label stores its label
>> in the la
On 06/10/2011 00:12, Miroslav Lachman wrote:
> Scot Hetzel wrote:
>> 2011/10/5 Miroslav Lachman<000.f...@quip.cz>:
>>> I am waiting years for the moment, when these GEOM problems will be
>>> fixed,
>>> so I am really glad to see your interest!
>>> It will be move to right direction even if changes
On 23/09/2011 04:49, Matthew D. Fuller wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 08:26:47AM + I heard the voice of
> Thomas Mueller, and lo! it spake thus:
>>
>> I don't think there is any particular advantage in aligning GPT
>> partitions on 1 MB boundaries.
>
> No, but it's bg, and rund! (ht
On 21/09/2011 04:34, Garrett Cooper wrote:
> On Sep 20, 2011, at 6:19 PM, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> To build a new system, you have to start with something. You build the
>> toolcain and gcc. Those have to be built first with the existing compiler
>> and toolchain which uses the existing system in
On 11 July 2011 17:07, Andriy Gapon wrote:
> Yeah, but what problem is demonstrated here?
> Are we confident that non-even workload is inherently bad?
> E.g.:
> 79.39 + .. + 77.59 < 5 * 80 = 400
> 100.00 + ... + 55.18 ~~ 402 which is more than theoretically possible :-)
> So it would _appear_ tha
On 07/07/2011 22:08, Steve Kargl wrote:
4BSD kernel gives for N = Ncpu + 1.
34 processes: 6 running, 28 sleeping
PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZERES STATE C TIMECPU COMMAND
1417 kargl 1 710 370M 294M RUN 0 1:30 79.39% sasmp
1416 kargl 1 710
On 06/07/2011 20:11, Nathan Whitehorn wrote:
I've seen exactly this problem with multi-threaded math libraries, as
well. Using parallel GotoBLAS on FreeBSD gives terrible performance
because the threads keep migrating between CPUs, causing frequent cache
misses.
On both schedulers?
__
On 06/07/2011 19:05, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message<20110706170132.ga68...@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>, Steve Kargl w
rites:
I periodically ran the same type test in the 2008 post over the
last three years. Nothing has changed. I even set up an account
on one node in my cluster for jef
On 02/06/2011 14:23, Ivan Voras wrote:
On 01/06/2011 20:21, Attilio Rao wrote:
Current maximum number of CPUs supported by the FreeBSD kernel is 32.
That number cames from indirectly by the fact that we have a cpumask_t
type, representing a mask of CPUs, which is an unsigned int right now.
I
On 01/06/2011 20:21, Attilio Rao wrote:
Current maximum number of CPUs supported by the FreeBSD kernel is 32.
That number cames from indirectly by the fact that we have a cpumask_t
type, representing a mask of CPUs, which is an unsigned int right now.
I then made a patch that removes the cpumask_
On 24/05/2011 13:24, Robert Watson wrote:
Dear all:
Over the next few days, I will be merging a number of TCP-related
locking changes, as well as changes to various network stack
infrastructure bits, such as the netisr implementation. The goal,
generally, has been to move us in the direction of
On 26 March 2011 12:15, Julien Laffaye wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 12:33 PM, Julien Laffaye wrote:
>> On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Ivan Voras wrote:
>>> At this time I'd just like to suggest you add the use of WAL journal
>>> (http://www.sqlite.org/pra
On 25/03/2011 11:11, Baptiste Daroussin wrote:
In term of technology we decided to use a sqlite3 database, and to
prevent potential trolling, sqlite3 is used in it's amalgamation form
which means it is incorporated in the code sources (as recommanded by
sqlite developpers like a statical
On 23 February 2011 21:17, John Baldwin wrote:
> On Wednesday, February 23, 2011 2:11:35 pm Ivan Voras wrote:
>> On 22/02/2011 23:33, Alexander Best wrote:
>>
>> >>>>> Also, it looks like npviewer.bin still hangs to resources on
> until
>>
On 22/02/2011 23:33, Alexander Best wrote:
Also, it looks like npviewer.bin still hangs to resources on until
Firefox closes (or I kill it :)..), so something still needs to be
resolved there, but that isn't a regression (it's acted that way for
ages), and shouldn't be too hard to do.
Whi
On 7 January 2011 20:15, Rick Macklem wrote:
>> On 01/07/11 15:47, Rick Macklem wrote:
>>
>> > What it needs to know is the domain name that you are using
>> > for bind, etc since that is appended to user and group names
>> > that go on the wire. For example:
>> > - If the machine's name is nfs-cl
On 01/07/11 15:47, Rick Macklem wrote:
What it needs to know is the domain name that you are using
for bind, etc since that is appended to user and group names
that go on the wire. For example:
- If the machine's name is nfs-client.cis.uoguelph.ca as shown
by the hostname command...
--> t
On 04/01/2011 19:59, Roman Divacky wrote:
hi,
clang (svn version) has ability to detect unnecessary padding in structures.
I ran this on kernel build on i386 (stripped GENERIC) and amd64 (full GENERIC),
preprocessed this and posted on web.
The lists contain the file of the definition, name of
On 12/29/10 11:32, David Demelier wrote:
Hello,
Sometimes when I use my external harddrive I get these awful message :
g_vfs_done():da1[WRITE(offset=34590720, length=65536)]error = 5
/var/log/messages.1.bz2:Dec 21 18:36:07 Abricot kernel:
g_vfs_done():da1[WRITE(offset=34656256, length=65536)]er
On 17/12/2010 08:56, Rechistov Grigory (Речистов Григорий) wrote:
By the way, could someone suggest what types of stability tests I might
perform? I.e. examples of disk- and FS-intensive workloads.
Run blogbench and bonnie++ at the same time, possibly with tarring and
untarring /usr/ports.
_
On 15.12.2010 16:16, Andriy Gapon wrote:
> on 15/12/2010 16:25 Olivier Smedts said the following:
>> 2010/12/15 Vladislav V. Prodan :
>>> 15.12.2010 15:11, Vladislav V. Prodan wrote:
>>>
Now try to attach a screenshot.
>>>
>>> http://img576.imageshack.us/i/dsc00563u.jpg/
>>
>> ad6: T
On 12/02/10 12:53, Lawrence Stewart wrote:
For the really interested (by now I suspect my audience is down to 0,
but still), you might want to load siftr and enable/disable it during
each test run and make your very own plot of cwnd vs time to see what's
really going on behind the scenes.
Ok th
On 11/20/10 01:36, Ivan Voras wrote:
Here's the CPU topology (correctly parsed, thankfully :) ), if someone's
interested:
biggie# sysctl kern.sched.topology_spec
kern.sched.topology_spec:
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,
12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23
FWIW
On 11/22/10 13:56, John Baldwin wrote:
On Friday, November 19, 2010 1:20:53 pm Jung-uk Kim wrote:
I bet these are "legacy free" machines, right? I recently noticed
that recent Intel chipsets cause incredibly long delays when
non-existent ISA ports are accessed, most notably AT keyboard ports.
On 11/22/10 00:28, Paul B Mahol wrote:
Find way to reproduce it 100%.
The way I described it can be used to reproduce the problem 100%.
Detailed instructions for a test case would be something like this:
0) configure a system with tmpfs for /tmp
1) install PostgreSQL 9.0, use a ZFS file sys
On 11/21/10 23:19, Eir Nym wrote:
On 22 November 2010 01:00, Eir Nym wrote:
On 22 November 2010 00:47, Bruce Cran wrote:
On Mon, 22 Nov 2010 00:43:03 +0300
Eir Nym wrote:
Which type of MFS do you use? I think you shold use "swap-backed" for
your /tmp, not "malloc-based". Last type is only
On 11/21/10 20:26, Alan Cox wrote:
Sean Bruno wrote:
http://people.freebsd.org/~sbruno/256G_SMAP.png
http://people.freebsd.org/~sbruno/256G_panic1.png
http://people.freebsd.org/~sbruno/256G_panic2.png
Trying to get the HP DL980 online today and I see the following panic on
startup from the ins
I got a curious error today while starting PostgreSQL, complaining about
"out of space" errno while creating lock file on /tmp.
/tmp on this machine is mounted as tmpfs and indeed, here is the statistic:
biggie:/# df -i
Filesystem1M-blocks Used Avail Capacity iused ifree %iused
Mount
On 11/19/10 16:49, Taku YAMAMOTO wrote:
I have a dumb local hack to grant ts_slice proportional to the duration
the waking thread slept rather than unconditionally reset to sched_slice.
--- sys/kern/sched_ule.c.orig
+++ sys/kern/sched_ule.c
@@ -1928,12 +1928,16 @@ sched_wakeup(struct thread *t
On 11/19/10 19:15, Andriy Gapon wrote:
on 19/11/2010 20:02 Sean Bruno said the following:
What I've seen is that the long pause occurs between the display of the
SMAP (boot verbose) and the copywrite notice. The delay gets worse with
larger memory maps.
How much memory do we talk about?
24
On 19 November 2010 18:17, James R. Van Artsdalen
wrote:
> Ivan Voras wrote:
>> Unfortunately, the kernel hangs on boot. The loader finishes, the twirly
>> starts spinning but then hangs. Enabling verbose booting results in
>> nothing new - no kernel messages at all.
>
On 19 November 2010 18:04, Garrett Cooper wrote:
> A similar issue occurred with an HP box recently (in the last 3-4
> months?). I'd check the archives for more details.
Yes, I remembered the post by Sean Bruno but then I also remembered
people replying they have successfully booted larger machin
On 19 November 2010 17:59, Andriy Gapon wrote:
> on 19/11/2010 18:57 Ivan Voras said the following:
>> On 19 November 2010 17:13, Gary Jennejohn wrote:
>>> On Fri, 19 Nov 2010 17:51:22 +0200
>>> Andriy Gapon wrote:
>>>
>>>> on 19/11/2010 17:41 Iv
On 19 November 2010 17:13, Gary Jennejohn wrote:
> On Fri, 19 Nov 2010 17:51:22 +0200
> Andriy Gapon wrote:
>
>> on 19/11/2010 17:41 Ivan Voras said the following:
>> > Fujitsu TX300
>>
>> [Thunderbird 3 sometimes fails quoting while replying - blame it]
>
On 19 November 2010 16:51, Andriy Gapon wrote:
> on 19/11/2010 17:41 Ivan Voras said the following:
>> Fujitsu TX300
>
> [Thunderbird 3 sometimes fails quoting while replying - blame it]
>
> Perhaps I am wrong, but isn't the "twirly" shown by the loader, still
I have a large-ish marchine, a Fujitsu TX300 S6 with 2x6-core + HTT CPUs
and 24 GB RAM, configured as a demo machine with lots of interesting
hardware.
Unfortunately, the kernel hangs on boot. The loader finishes, the twirly
starts spinning but then hangs. Enabling verbose booting results in
nothi
On 19 November 2010 01:56, Sean Bruno wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-11-18 at 13:17 -0800, Ivan Voras wrote:
>> I have an IPMI-enabled server with BMC watchdog, and if I understand it
>> correctly, /dev/fido will be attached as the result of loading ipmi.ko.
>>
>> Is the
I have an IPMI-enabled server with BMC watchdog, and if I understand it
correctly, /dev/fido will be attached as the result of loading ipmi.ko.
Is there some easy way to test if everything works?
___
freebsd-current@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lis
On 11/08/10 10:55, Andriy Gapon wrote:
>
> JFYI.
> Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
Can you find any set of circumstances which make this repeatable?
This panic apparently goes like this:
1) used by devfs_open():
47 static struct cdevsw fuse_cdevsw = {
48 .d_open = fused
On 28 October 2010 23:57, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
> On (28/10/2010 22:24), Ivan Voras wrote:
>> On 28 October 2010 16:15, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
>>
>> > I'd agree that "sshfs" is most wanted feature, but fuse_sshfs
>> > implementation is broken at best. I
On 28 October 2010 16:15, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
> I'd agree that "sshfs" is most wanted feature, but fuse_sshfs
> implementation is broken at best. It doesn't even have notion on inode
> numbers. It returns all directory entries with d_file=0, the same way
> st_ino=0. To make it actually work (dire
On 10/28/10 14:35, Vincent Hoffman wrote:
> On 28/10/2010 12:49, Ivan Voras wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>
>> Basically, this is a call for help in working on fusefs. There are
>> several developers and users willing to do testing and such but no
>> available developers
Hello,
After a discussion in arch@, it looks like there are many developers
interested in having fusefs in the tree but no VFS experts with the
time to fix the remaining bugs and basically make it stable enough to
commit to the base tree.
Fusefs is the Linux-developed userland filesystem interfac
On 10/26/10 02:53, Garrett Cooper wrote:
> Wouldn't noting this in the manpage be sufficient?
> I ran into this `item' (:)..) today after a power outage because
> nvidia-driver was built against different kernel headers, and it
> prints out the error clear as day on /dev/console,
Luckily
On 10/25/10 22:13, Garrett Cooper wrote:
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 12:26 PM, Doug Barton wrote:
On 10/25/2010 12:19, Xin LI wrote:
Here is a simple patch that adds more meaning messages when kldload hits
ENOEXEC.
+1 on anything that makes this (and related) error more clear. I know I've
stumb
On 10/01/10 10:54, Andre Oppermann wrote:
> On 30.09.2010 19:51, Ivan Voras wrote:
>> On 09/30/10 18:37, Andre Oppermann wrote:
>>
>>> Both the vmmap and page table make use of splay trees to manage the
>>> entries and to speed up lookups compared to long to
On 09/30/10 18:37, Andre Oppermann wrote:
> Both the vmmap and page table make use of splay trees to manage the
> entries and to speed up lookups compared to long to traverse linked
> lists or more memory expensive hash tables. Some structures though
> do have an additional linked list to simplif
On 09/30/10 00:28, Matthew Jacob wrote:
On 9/29/2010 2:45 PM, Andriy Gapon wrote:
on 30/09/2010 00:12 Alexander Best said the following:
hi there,
i wanted to ask if it would be possible to asjust glabel so that e.g.
inserting
a new media into a dvd-drive gets recognised and glabel displays th
On 7 September 2010 22:05, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
> On (07/09/2010 16:27), Ivan Voras wrote:
>> On 09/06/10 20:38, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > I would like to ask for feedback on a kernel level stacked cryptographic
>> > filesystem. It h
On 09/06/10 20:38, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
Tested on top of ZFS, UFS and tmpfs on amd64 and i386; both 9-CURRENT
and 8-STABLE supported.
You probably didn't test it, but I've tried pefs on top of ext2fs (I use
ext2fs to share data between OSes) and it quickly panicked.
_
On 09/06/10 20:38, Gleb Kurtsou wrote:
Hello,
I would like to ask for feedback on a kernel level stacked cryptographic
filesystem. It has started as Summer Of Code'2009 project and matured a
lot since then. I've recently added support for sparse files and
switched to XTS encryption mode.
I've
On 19/08/2010, C. P. Ghost wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 3:43 PM, Andrew Reilly
> wrote:
>> On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 11:15:55PM -0700, Doug Barton wrote:
>>> got any other suggestions?
>>
>> This is very much a "sorry I asked" question, but is none-the
>> less quite a good one, given the size o
2010/8/16 Dag-Erling Smørgrav :
> Doug Barton writes:
>> lua too "flavor of the day," not enough track record of stability,
>> not enough installed base/proven utility
>
> You're wrong. Lua has been around for ages and is especially widely
> used as a game scripting engine. It is not int
On 15 August 2010 02:45, Doug Barton wrote:
> Ivan,
>
> I know that you mean this at least semi-humorously, however I'm going to
> provide a dead-serious reply below.
Thank you for your level-headed response - it's actually better than
continuing less seriously or explosively :) Also, sorry for
r
On 13.8.2010 11:34, Doug Barton wrote:
> On 08/13/2010 02:08, Gabor Kovesdan wrote:
>> Ok, I'll take care of this soon, and make GNU grep default, again with a
>> knob to build BSD grep. I agree with you that we cannot allow such a big
>> performance drawback but I my measures only showed significa
On 9 August 2010 14:37, Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote:
> Ivan Voras writes:
>> Dag-Erling Smørgrav writes:
>> > Marius Nünnerich writes:
>> > > I did not think of a new GEOM class that looks like glabel but one
>> > > that has no metadata stored on disk .
On 9 August 2010 10:51, Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote:
> Marius Nünnerich writes:
>> I did not think of a new GEOM class that looks like glabel but one
>> that has no metadata stored on disk . It is then activated and
>> controlled by loader.conf variables. (Maybe like gnop? If I remember
>> correctl
On 07/18/10 21:21, Fabio Kaminski wrote:
> (note that i cant be too precise , since i didnt go any further with more
> tests... its more a subjective feel (boot time, general use.. etc))
It is probable then that it is only your imagination, and if you are
really serious about this you should make
On 07/08/10 18:42, Alex Keda wrote:
> When booting, I have strange message.
> All work OK (processor with hyperthreading, but system seems it as 1 CPU ).
> lissyara-gp# dmesg
> Copyright (c) 1992-2010 The FreeBSD Project.
> Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
>
On 07/08/10 01:11, V. T. Mueller, Continum wrote:
> Eric Masson schrieb:
>> Martin Matuska writes:
>>> We decided not to go with v16 - the feature difference for FreeBSD
>>> between v15 and v16 is zero.
>>> (v16 = Common Multiprotocol SCSI Target (COMSTAR) for ISCSI export of
>>> ZVOLS - we don't
On 07/08/10 11:06, Martin Matuska wrote:
>
> Regarding performance, e.g. my PHP web servers with codebase in ZFS
> yield 15-20% more req/s with v15 patch (as compared to v14).
Good enough reason for me (this is most of my workload, too), get it in
as soon as you're able :)
_
On 06/28/10 17:20, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 28, 2010 at 9:43 AM, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
>>> Curious - this panic is UFS softdep-related - possibly from the SUJ work?
>>>
>>> On which file system type is your ports tree?
>>
>> ufs2
>
> it seems ivan may be correct, I went and tried to
On 06/28/10 03:59, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
> hello list,
>
> I just had a panic on a FreeBSD 9.0 built with yesterdays sources.
>
> uname -a
> FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT #0: Sat Jun 26 09:14:30 CDT
> 2010 sfourman@:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/ZFSv16 amd64
>
> GENERIC kernel with this
On 06/11/10 15:58, Roman Divacky wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 04:00:26PM +0200, Alexander Best wrote:
>> thanks a lot for the hints. doing buildkernel and buildworld with
>> current src worked fine. how should i proceed if i want to try
>> building kernel and world with clang?
>>
>> put CC, CXX
On 06/02/10 10:53, Sergey Matveychuk wrote:
> 02.06.2010 01:56, Bjoern A. Zeeb пишет:
>> On Tue, 1 Jun 2010, Sergey Matveychuk wrote:
>>
>>> Hi.
>>>
>>> Just after upgrade from 7.2-p5 to 7.3-p1 I've got periodic panics on
>>> my router (after about a hour uptime).
>> ...
>>> Any ideas?
>>
>> Are yo
On 05/31/10 02:25, Bjoern A. Zeeb wrote:
> On Mon, 31 May 2010, Ivan Voras wrote:
>
>> Shouldn't SU+J be visible in the output of "mount" somehow? I've just
>> enabled it on a root file system of a machine and while tunefs and
>> dumpfs report both so
Shouldn't SU+J be visible in the output of "mount" somehow? I've just
enabled it on a root file system of a machine and while tunefs and
dumpfs report both soft-updates and SUJ are enabled (after reboot), the
"mount" command only shows "soft-updates". Alternative question: how to
verify is it a
On 05/07/10 02:36, Kirk McKusick wrote:
Dag-Erling Smørgrav and I have been working on updating the
FFS quota system to support both traditional 32-bit and new 64-bit
quotas (for those of you who want to put 2+Tb quotas on your users).
By default quotas are not compiled into the kernel. To incl
On 04/23/10 14:32, Andriy Gapon wrote:
on 23/04/2010 12:28 Alexander Best said the following:
has anybody thought about adding scsi support to burncd(8)? i've been using
ATA CAM for quite a while now and really love it. however i miss burncd(8). i
found it to be much easier to use and less buggy
Rink Springer wrote:
On Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 12:21:29AM +0200, Ivan Voras wrote:
/mt/clangbsd/lib/libc/sys/stack_protector.c:88:19: error: format string
is not a string literal (potentially insecure) [-Wformat-security]
syslog(LOG_CRIT, msg);
^~~
1 diagnostic
Ivan Voras wrote:
Roman Divacky wrote:
We kindly ask you to setup ClangBSD chroot and/or use clang compiled
kernel and use it as you would normally use FreeBSD. Please report back
I have a buildworld error here:
clang -isystem /usr/obj/mt/clangbsd/tmp/usr/include/clang/1.5 -isystem
/usr
Roman Divacky wrote:
We kindly ask you to setup ClangBSD chroot and/or use clang compiled kernel and
use it as you would normally use FreeBSD. Please report back
I have a buildworld error here:
clang -isystem /usr/obj/mt/clangbsd/tmp/usr/include/clang/1.5 -isystem
/usr/obj/mt/clangbsd/tmp/u
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