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It seems Robert Watson wrote:
Yeah, it's odd actually. I burnt myself a CD this morning using my Mac OS
X box, and it appeared to be fine on an older -CURRENT box and on the Mac.
Stuck it in my far-more-recent -CURRENT box and it died horribly. Or at
least, it gave the same error you're
Hello.
Recently I started looking into kqueue(2), and to get to know the
interface better I attempted to turn usr.sbin/moused into a kqueue
program (replacing the main select() loop that reads the mouse
device).
Now I thought I understood the interface, I requested a kqueue, but
as soon as I
It's chipset, not CPU specific. Your question is like asking if,
because your Yugo (car) can't go faster than 100 KPH on one brand
of gasoline, if it's a gasoline problem.
I get the point, though the example of the Yugo is missleading, some
'brands' tend to mix the gasoline, (diesel +
On Tue, Sep 24, 2002 at 01:46:03PM -0600, Ronald G Minnich wrote:
or get freebsd loadable from linuxbios (http://www.linuxbios.org). We load
plan 9 and WinCE, so how much does freebsd need?
Anyone looked at OpenBIOS? The line has to be drawn somewhere... as regards
supporting multiple
On Tue, Sep 24, 2002 at 12:32:40PM -0700, Nate Lawson wrote:
How about updating Alpine (alpine.cs.washington.edu) and fixing a lot of
its lousy hacks (i.e. the sysinit stuff)?
Nice idea, but a lot of people will/are use/using Bochs or VMware for this.
Mind you, the Alpine approach doesn't
On Wed, 2002-09-25 at 18:50, Bruce M Simpson wrote:
Port the Linux Rockwell/Conexant winmodem support to freebsd? (Tons of
laptops have this chipset).
http://www.mbsi.ca/cnxtlindrv/
I had a brief look at this last month. I should warn you that the Linux
driver is simply a wrapper.
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 10:12:53AM +0200, Michel Oosterhof wrote:
I've got one more question, actually a fact that surprises me, it
seems that tail(1) is the only place in the base system that actually
uses kqueue.
It is also used in libc for the DNS resolver.
Is there a reason for this? I
On 2002-09-24 13:57, Prafulla Deuskar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
All,
Is there a pre-set limit on maximum number of fragments in a
mbuf chain ?
Not as a limit of the mbuf chain code, but as a limit of the IP packet
input code. Look at the description of the ip_maxfragpackets sysctl
value in
when the time to write my final thesis in my university arrived
i immediately thought to help in some way the FreeBSD group.
Nice, Thanks !
-a fs with journaling: some times ago, i would like to develop
my own fs with journaling, but right now i could even drop the
dream of my own fs and
On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, Bruce M Simpson wrote:
Anyone looked at OpenBIOS? The line has to be drawn somewhere... as regards
supporting multiple chipsets/CPUs. Personally I like the idea of being able
to do PXE-like booting on non-Intel platforms.
sure, and it will probably run on top of
Hi, this is in no way related to the kqueue question asked below but to
event notification mechanisms in general. I was wondering if there is
some paper or design that talks about how such a facility could be
provided in a Unix type kernel. Kqueue is fairly recent, and I dont know
what its
Good day, I am Edward Mulete JR. the son of Mr.
STEVE MBEKI MULETE from Zimbabwe. I am sorry this mail
will surprise you, though we do not know, my mother Mrs. Clara
got your contact through the International Chamber of Commerce.
Due to the current war against white farmers in
Zimbabwe and
Hello all,
I just setup a 4.6.2 machine locally on my network at home to replace an
aging Linux NAT box I had going. Clients behind the new box can only get
100k/sec downloads while clients behind the old Linux box (running ipchains)
get 400k/sec+ downloads off the same cable modem. Locally on
In the last episode (Sep 25), Julian Stacey said:
-a fs with journaling: some times ago, i would like to develop my
own fs with journaling, but right now i could even drop the dream
of my own fs and JUST port the xfs/jfs for FreeBSD..
Journaling would support user level Undelete I
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2002-09-23 16:10:59 +0100:
On Mon, Sep 23, 2002 at 05:05:36PM +0200, Roman Neuhauser wrote:
[... re periodic diffs]
And, what would the preferred interface be? Most of periodic.conf
knobs are bools, but I'm not sure
diff_{context,traditional,unified}_format={YES,NO}
On Tue, 24 Sep 2002, Paul Schenkeveld wrote:
Hi Thomas,
On Tue, Sep 24, 2002 at 01:31:59AM +0200, tho wrote:
hi Paul,
have you considered using a file descriptor passing based technique
(section 14.7 of Stevens' UNPv1) ?
you may have a process with suser privs which creates file
Dan Nelson wrote:
You don't need journaling for undelete capability. When you delete a
file on Netware, the file is simply marked deleted but the filename
stays in the directory, and duplicate deleted filenames are allowed.
When true free disk space gets low, deleted files are purged in the
On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, Michel Oosterhof wrote:
Hello.
Recently I started looking into kqueue(2), and to get to know the
interface better I attempted to turn usr.sbin/moused into a kqueue
program (replacing the main select() loop that reads the mouse
device).
Now I thought I understood the
On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, Bruce M Simpson wrote:
On Tue, Sep 24, 2002 at 12:32:40PM -0700, Nate Lawson wrote:
How about updating Alpine (alpine.cs.washington.edu) and fixing a lot of
its lousy hacks (i.e. the sysinit stuff)?
Nice idea, but a lot of people will/are use/using Bochs or VMware for
Vmware2 stopped running from both md and ad devices. Virtual disks still
work. It is caused by a read that is not on sector boundary.
Should a program be able to read non-sector sized chunks from a raw disk
yes or no? What is the desired behaviour?
The fact that this did work, was it a bug or
Michel Oosterhof wrote:
I've got one more question, actually a fact that surprises me, it
seems that tail(1) is the only place in the base system that actually
uses kqueue. Is there a reason for this? I read in most places
kqueue() is more efficient, scalable, etc. I'm sure code like ftpd
or
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 07:41:44PM +0200, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
The fact that this did work, was it a bug or did this come out due to some
other change. The stacktrace from read(2) is below.
This hasn't worked for a long time in -current.
Long as in 6 months?
By looking at the code
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Mark Santcroos writes:
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 07:41:44PM +0200, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
The fact that this did work, was it a bug or did this come out due to some
other change. The stacktrace from read(2) is below.
This hasn't worked for a long time in
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 07:52:17PM +0200, Mark Santcroos wrote:
[freebsd-emulation@ bcc'ed]
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 07:47:48PM +0200, Mark Santcroos wrote:
A fact is that vmware did work up until a few months. I didn't do a binary
search yet. That is last resort...
Anyone running a
vmware used the blocking (b devices) interface to disks that do
blocking for you.
Some well meaning but misguided individuals removed block devices
without providing an alernate way of doing this. It should be possible
to do the equivalent of a vn device that accepts misalligned
accesses and
In the last episode (Sep 25), Terry Lambert said:
Dan Nelson wrote:
You might be able to misuse the Whiteout file type in FFS to
present a similar user interface. unlink(2) would rename the file
to filename.timestamp and whiteoute it. ls -W, rm -W, and rm would
list, salvage, and
Hello,
I'm not sure which list to send this to. I'm having problems
with USB and a POS lexmark x73, if I try to send it a job via unlpt0,
it dies very quickly (ulpt0 offline in dmesg) and I have to powercycle
the printer.
However, if kldunload ulpt, and use ugenX.1, everything is
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 11:29:12AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
vmware used the blocking (b devices) interface to disks that do
blocking for you.
Some well meaning but misguided individuals removed block devices
without providing an alernate way of doing this. It should be possible
to do
Dan Nelson wrote:
The NetWare undelete functionality, in particular, the ability to
delete multiple files of the same name, required that globbing
take place in the kernel, and that the deleted files be marked
not only in the inode, but in the directory space as well. The
ability to
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 10:35:06AM -0700, Terry Lambert wrote:
The obvious objection to such changes is that the internals
of the RPC library are sufficiently exposed that there is a
near-dependency on the use of select; if you look at the rpc
man page, for example, you will see, among other
Do we run on Spark 5? Someone's selling one and a monitor for 300 UK
pounds. Is it worth getting hold of?
Joe
--
As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain;
and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. - Albert
Einstein, 1921
On Thu, Sep 26, 2002 at 12:09:47AM +0100, Josef Karthauser wrote:
Do we run on Spark 5? Someone's selling one and a monitor for 300 UK
pounds. Is it worth getting hold of?
A Sparc 5 is a 32-bit machine (approximatly equivalent to a 90Mhz
Pentium) so no. If you ment's an Ultra5, that's a PCI
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 11:29:12AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
vmware used the blocking (b devices) interface to disks that do
blocking for you.
Some well meaning but misguided individuals removed block devices
without providing an alernate way of doing this. It should be possible
to do
Maybe I'm missing something huge, but getopt(1,3) aren't working the way I
think they should.
I have a script that I want to take two options, both of which have required
arguments.
gabby# getopt k:s: -k
getopt: option requires an argument -- k
--
gabby# getopt k:s: -s
getopt: option requires
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Josef Karthauser)
Date: Thu 26 Sep, 2002
Subject: Spark 5.
Do we run on Spark 5? Someone's selling one and a monitor for 300 UK
pounds. Is it worth getting hold of?
Not for FreeBSD (sun4u only, I believe); SPARC 5 is sun4m (32-bit only).
£300 is expensive - a
On Thu, 2002-09-26 at 08:52, James Gritton wrote:
After playing with a few encrypted filesystems, and giving up on them (after
a kernel crash or two), I went looking for something else to encrypt. The
logical choice is the device.
Have you seen ports/security/vncrypt?
I use
I have a Soltek 75DRV5 (VIA 8233a) and a Maxtor 6L080L4. The problem I
am having is with poor performance with ATA-133. My ATA-33 system beats
it.
After building a new system, I noticed that it was less responsive when
it came to I/O concerning the hard drive. The standard XFree86 source
Daniel O'Connor [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Have you seen ports/security/vncrypt?
Oops :-). I never was very good at looking to see what's out there. It
looks good - it apparently supports different crypto algorithms and isn't
broken WRT labels. Oh well, I can still call mine the poor
On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, Sean Farley wrote:
With write cache enabled it does perform better, but I would like the
new computer to at least equal the old system without it enabled.
With all due respect, whether that's a reality isn't your choice, it's the
drive's choice. :)
Does the drive
On Thu, 2002-09-26 at 14:18, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
Have you seen ports/security/vncrypt?
Or src/sys/geom/geom_aes ?
Whoo :)
I have what I hope is industry-strenght encryption in my development
tree with only a few more issues to straigten out before it hits -current.
MFC? 8-)
Sounds
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Daniel O'Connor
writes:
On Thu, 2002-09-26 at 14:18, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
Have you seen ports/security/vncrypt?
Or src/sys/geom/geom_aes ?
Whoo :)
I have what I hope is industry-strenght encryption in my development
tree with only a few more issues to
In message: 009b01c26500$3f7e91a0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Matthew Emmerton [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
: gabby# getopt k:s: -k -s
: -k -s --
: gabby#
:
: Wha? Neither of these options specified arguments! I guess you could
: consider that -k's argument was '-s', but I was pretty sure that
In the last episode (Sep 25), Matthew Emmerton said:
Maybe I'm missing something huge, but getopt(1,3) aren't working the
way I think they should.
gabby# getopt k:s: -k -s
-k -s --
gabby#
Wha? Neither of these options specified arguments! I guess you
could consider that -k's
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