I have some PCMCIA to ISA adapters which use the Data Book DB86082
chipset.
I would be happy to donate a card or 2 to anyone who would write a
driver for it.
Thank you
Richard Puga
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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On Mon, Nov 29, 1999 at 11:57:48PM -0700, Warner Losh wrote:
Note, this uses the "traditional computer science SI extention"
units. Where M == 1 20, G == 1 30, etc. Disk drive
manufacturers use the real SI units where M == 10 ^ 6, G == 10 ^ 9,
Some implimentations of ``df -h'' use "-h"
On Mon, Nov 29, 1999 at 10:37:08PM -0800, Kris Kennaway wrote:
Here's a patch to add -h flag to df to produce human readable
output. This makes it easier to read if the disk is big.
You should submit this as a PR so it doesn't fall through the cracks
(although it looks like Chris might
On Mon, 29 Nov 1999, Dan Moschuk wrote:
| I'm fairly certain that rpc.lockd is included with Darwin from Apple,
| I've not closely compared it to what we have in -STABLE or -CURRENT
| to see if it actually works.
|
| It doesn't, sorry... if someone gets a *BSD version of NFS locking
Stephen McKay wrote in list.freebsd-hackers:
On Tuesday, 30th November 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
FilesystemSize UsedAvail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/da0s1a 62.0M 31.0M 26.1M54% /
/dev/da0s1e 192M 167M 9.22M95% /usr
/dev/da0s1d 61.4M 11.3M 45.2M
In message 19991129230436.A6501@badmofo [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
: [badmofo@/home/matt] df -h
: FilesystemSize UsedAvail Capacity Mounted on
: /dev/wd0s1a 722M20M 644M 3% /
: /dev/wd0s2h 9.9G 4.4G 4.8G48% /usr
: procfs4.0K 4.0K 0B 100%
Stephen McKay [EMAIL PROTECTED] write
On Tuesday, 30th November 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
FilesystemSize UsedAvail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/da0s1a 62.0M 31.0M 26.1M54% /
/dev/da0s1e 192M 167M 9.22M95% /usr
/dev/da0s1d 61.4M 11.3M 45.2M20%
On Tue, 30 Nov 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
FilesystemSize UsedAvail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/da0s1a 62.0M 31.0M 26.1M54% /
Previously the three size column were right-aligned with the headers,
and the percentiage was centered under 'Capacity', I hope
we can keep that
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Richard Puga writes:
: I have some PCMCIA to ISA adapters which use the Data Book DB86082
: chipset.
:
: I would be happy to donate a card or 2 to anyone who would write a
: driver for it.
If you can get a databook/user manual for these things, I'd consider
it after
| I reviewed the NFSv4 specs recently and came to the same conclusion. To do
| it right will be quite a bit of work and would include a decent kernel
| side implementation of rpc and gssapi.
Cool! I can take that "I volunteer" ? :-)
--
Dan Moschuk ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
"Cure for global
Oliver Fromme wrote:
What I'd like to have would be an option that inserts thousands
separators ("," or whatever your locale settings say) into the
default display:
Filesystem1K-blocksUsed Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/da0s1a 105,893 5,117 97,600 5%
On Tue, 30 Nov 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
If you can get a databook/user manual for these things, I'd consider
it after the newcard stuff stabilizes.
It doesn't seem likely that we'll be able to get the manuals for them. :/
--
| Matthew N. Dodd | '78 Datsun 280Z | '75 Volvo 164E |
On Mon, 29 Nov 1999, Richard Puga wrote:
I have some PCMCIA to ISA adapters which use the Data Book DB86082
chipset.
I would be happy to donate a card or 2 to anyone who would write a
driver for it.
tcic0: Databook DB86082 at port 0x380 iomem 0xd irq 5 on isa0
I'm working on it...
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Matthew N.
Dodd" writes:
: On Tue, 30 Nov 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
: If you can get a databook/user manual for these things, I'd consider
: it after the newcard stuff stabilizes.
:
: It doesn't seem likely that we'll be able to get the manuals for them. :/
That
In the last episode (Nov 30), Stephen McKay said:
If anything, I want a 'df -m' option that does this:
Filesystem 1M-blocks Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/da0s1a 62 31 2654% /
/dev/da0s1e192167 995% /usr
/dev/da0s1d 61 11 4520%
Robert Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On a single system, if st_dev and st_ino are equal, you must be referring
to the same object. If not, I'd like to hear about it.
This assumption has always caused lots of pain and suffering for
distributed file system people -- in a distributed file
can any one help to explain how stack over security exploit. does anyone
know how to fix it? How it happens?
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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On Tue, 30 Nov 1999, Dan Moschuk wrote:
| I reviewed the NFSv4 specs recently and came to the same conclusion. To do
| it right will be quite a bit of work and would include a decent kernel
| side implementation of rpc and gssapi.
Cool! I can take that "I volunteer" ? :-)
Not with my
I get " LINUX: 'ioctl' fd=0, typ=0x53(S), num=0x13 not implemented "
when attempting to configure a IDE cdrom under VMware (really coold BTW!!
thanks for the port development).
Somebody close to a Linux box have an idea what this ioctl is supposed
to do?
Wilko
--
| / o / / _
Wait... vmware for linux works under FreeBSD now??? or it just runs
freebsd???
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best OS around.|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #: 24767726 |
| and student at
On Tue, Nov 30, 1999, Kenneth Wayne Culver wrote:
Wait... vmware for linux works under FreeBSD now??? or it just runs
freebsd???
It runs on FreeBSD.
--
|Chris Costello [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|What do computer engineers use for birth control? Their personalities.
Any wierd things I should do to get it running?
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best OS around.|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #: 24767726 |
| and student at The | AIM: AgRSkaterq
Wait... vmware for linux works under FreeBSD now??? or it just runs
freebsd???
You really need to go search the mailing list archives for the
discussion which has just occurred on this topic. Everything from
what it does to how to grab the port and apply the appropriate patches
to your kernel
As Kenneth Wayne Culver wrote ...
Wait... vmware for linux works under FreeBSD now??? or it just runs
freebsd???
Vladimir has created a port of the Linux version that, although highly
experimental, works with -current as the host operating system.
On Tue, 30 Nov 1999, Wilko Bulte wrote:
Well, I personally was gonna try to get my already installed windows
working... :-)
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best OS around.|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #: 24767726 |
| and student
Nice serial server, anyone working for serial support on USB ?
Have an 8 port and could help getting support for it or testing
drivers.
--
Regards, Ulf.
-
Ulf Zimmermann, 1525 Pacific Ave., Alameda, CA-94501, #: 510-769-2936
Oops... not a member of that one... I'll go look then... :-) sorry to have
cross posted...
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best OS around.|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #: 24767726 |
| and
As Chris Costello wrote ...
On Tue, Nov 30, 1999, Kenneth Wayne Culver wrote:
Wait... vmware for linux works under FreeBSD now??? or it just runs
freebsd???
It runs on FreeBSD.
More precisely: on -current.
In the meantime I also gave it a shot on my dual-P100 SMP box.
This gave me a
Well, I personally was gonna try to get my already installed windows
working... :-)
That's a really bad idea; the moment you run Windows under VMware it will
try to reconfigure itself for the new "hardware", and you'll screw your
old configuration.
--
\\ Give a man a fish, and you feed him
Kenneth Wayne Culver wrote:
Any wierd things I should do to get it running?
On Tue, Nov 30, 1999, Kenneth Wayne Culver wrote:
Wait... vmware for linux works under FreeBSD now??? or it just runs
freebsd???
It runs on FreeBSD.
Here's pointer to the announcement on
On Tuesday, 30th November 1999, Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Nov 30), Stephen McKay said:
If anything, I want a 'df -m' option that does this:
[snip]
Just set BLOCKSIZE to your preferred unit.
$ BLOCKSIZE=1M df
Filesystem 1M-blocks UsedAvail Capacity Mounted on
I was just playing with mmap() really for the first time, and I noticed
something a bit odd. When you mmap() a file for writing, it also appears
to require that you give it read permissions, else it dies on a signal 10.
Any reason for this? (I'm using 3.3-STABLE (11/30/99) with the following
Stephen McKay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And to Thomas: I've used dfspace before on ISC Unix, but never really
liked it. I prefer df to do what I want. Am I greedy? :-)
Not at all - it just seems to me the question should be asked,
that's all.
Since not a single person agreed - it seems
:I was just playing with mmap() really for the first time, and I noticed
:something a bit odd. When you mmap() a file for writing, it also appears
:to require that you give it read permissions, else it dies on a signal 10.
:Any reason for this? (I'm using 3.3-STABLE (11/30/99) with the following
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