-Mensaje original-
De: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]En nombre de Kent Stewart
Enviado el: Martes 19 de Diciembre de 2000 04:15
Para: Aoyama, Kieko
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Asunto: Re: Floppy disk is full
"Aoyama, Kieko" wrote:
Hello, I am Kieko Aoyama.
Title: -==Ïðîãðàììà===Ðåãèîí==-
Åñëè Âû ïîëó÷èëè ýòî ïèñüìî âòîðè÷íî,
òî çàðàíåå ïðèìèòå íàøè èçâèíåíèÿ,
ýòî ñâÿçàíî ñ îøèáêàìè ñåðâåðà
Ïðîãðàììà Ðåãèîí
Óñëóãè ïðèåçæàþùèì â Ìîñêâó||
Óñëóãè ïðèåçæàþùèì â Ìîñêâó
000 "Ïðîãðàììà Ðåãèîí" â ñîñòàâå
"Christian Kuhtz" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
1st channel:
Maxtor 54098U8 UDMA4
Kenwood CD-RUDMA2
2nd channel
Maxtor 54098U8 UDMA4
HP CD Writer 9300 UDMA2
[...]
snip
ata0-master: ata_command: timeout waiting for intr
ata0-master:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 09:31:37PM -0800, Matt Dillon wrote:
Is there anything special I need to do to edit a section in the
handbook, or can I just commit it?
A pass through -doc for review wouldn't be amiss. In general, this
means that we make sure that none of the rules at
Hi.
-Messaggio Originale-
Da: Michael T. Stolarchuk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
A: Loris Degioanni [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Data invio: giovedì 14 dicembre 2000 16.39
Oggetto: Re: R: [tcpdump-workers] Re: R: [Ethereal-dev] Re: Fwd:
kyxtech: freebsd outsniffed by wintendo !!?!?
ah, but the buffer sizes
Device Drivers
--
I don´t like binary only device drivers. The code of an operating
system is more complex than a driver. if a company does not want to
publish the sourcecode, the should go away.
You've lost all credibility here. Well supported device drivers should not
require
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Dennis writes:
Device Drivers
--
I don´t like binary only device drivers. The code of an operating
system is more complex than a driver. if a company does not want to
publish the sourcecode, the should go away.
You've lost all credibility here.
We have
Hello fellows,
I just faced with a problem of a strange (may be not documented)
recvfrom() behaviour.
The fragment of the code is:
...
signal(SIGALRM, timeouttrap);
alarm(10);
i = recvfrom(sock, buf, len, 0, from, fromlen);
printf("%d bytes received\n",i);
Hello Dennis,
Tuesday, December 19, 2000, 8:43:17 AM, you wrote:
D You've lost all credibility here. Well supported device drivers should not
D require source. I'd prefer a commercial (preferably the manufacters)
D support other than some guy in the ural mountains who fixes things IF he
D can
Hi, I want to commit pecoff module under sys/compat/.
The code is at
http://people.freebsd.org/~takawata/pecoff.tar.gz
This is kernel part of PEACE(http://chiharu.haun.org/peace/),that is
announced as NewFeature of NetBSD1.5.
Currently one more kernel module is needed to use PEACE in FreeBSD.
On Tue, Dec 19, 2000 at 09:45:05AM -0800, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
See the sigaction manpage and how one enable/disables system call
restarts.
He is setting the signal handler with signal(), which calls
sigaction() without the SA_RESTART flag set, so it seems that should
interrupt recvfrom().
Device Drivers
--
I don´t like binary only device drivers. The code of an operating
system is more complex than a driver. if a company does not want to
publish the sourcecode, the should go away.
Dennis said:
/*
I didnt "praise" closed source. I said there is arguable reasoning
On Tue, 19 Dec 2000, David Malone wrote:
On Tue, Dec 19, 2000 at 09:45:05AM -0800, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
See the sigaction manpage and how one enable/disables system call
restarts.
He is setting the signal handler with signal(), which calls
sigaction() without the SA_RESTART flag
On 19-Dec-00 Dennis wrote:
At 11:44 AM 12/19/2000, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Dennis
writes:
Device Drivers
--
I don´t like binary only device drivers. The code of an operating
system is more complex than a driver. if a company does not want to
He is setting the signal handler with signal(), which calls
sigaction() without the SA_RESTART flag set, so it seems that should
interrupt recvfrom().
Bzzt :-) Alfred's correct. Read the manpage for signal again.
Ahh - I was reading the source code and missed the ! in !sigismember().
I
On Tue, Dec 19, 2000 at 11:43:17AM -0500, Dennis scribbled:
|
| Device Drivers
| --
| I don´t like binary only device drivers. The code of an operating
| system is more complex than a driver. if a company does not want to
| publish the sourcecode, the should go away.
|
| You've lost
Your stupidity is also is emphasized by the fact that no major manufacturer
has supported drivers for freebsd. Intel wont even help by providing docs.
Bravo. What a WIN for the freebsd community. You've done a tremendous job
marketing your concept.
So that's why Intel provides free bound
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 04:14:10PM -0800, Devin Butterfield scribbled:
| "Michael C . Wu" wrote:
| The most important decision now would be:
| Should we concentrate on the PPC port first? Or should we go at each
| port simultaneously?
|
| Well, if there are enough people with PCC's that are
I have been working for several months to port NetBSD to a new StrongArm
platform. I currently am using the Intel Assabet as my development
platform. Based on my experience with NetBSD, I think that I could be of
assistance in initiating a FreeBSD port. I actually do most of my
development
I am setting up a base image for a couple of
network services servers being nfs root mounted
ontop of a netapp filer.
When I traced a problem with ethereal i found
(or the sniffer claimed) that the nfs version
that's used is v2 not v3.
Due to some nfsv2 limitations I would like
to get the
There are a number of reasons why a manufacturer can not/will not release
source code for a driver. A few that come to mind are:
a) A device driver is a reflection of the hardware. Manufacturers in
highly competitive markets could potentially be giving away trade
"Michael C . Wu" wrote:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 04:14:10PM -0800, Devin Butterfield scribbled:
| "Michael C . Wu" wrote:
| The most important decision now would be:
| Should we concentrate on the PPC port first? Or should we go at each
| port simultaneously?
|
| Well, if there are
Paul Becke wrote:
What does it take to start up a new mailing list for proting to the Arm? (Who do I
need to contact?)
Jonathan Bressler is our postmaster ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). I've added him
to this message in hopes that he sees this. I haven't seen much of him
lately...
Course, it's
It seems Steve Shoecraft wrote:
There are a number of reasons why a manufacturer can not/will not release
source code for a driver. A few that come to mind are:
a) A device driver is a reflection of the hardware. Manufacturers in
highly competitive markets could
Matt Dillon wrote:
Yes, it's a pretty sad state of affairs. What annoys me the most is
that companies actually believe they are protecting something when
they don't make their device driver source or hardware documentation
available. It has been well proven for years that
Hello!
I am interested in the internals of FreeBSD's dynamic loader;
where in the src module should I look for the appropriate source code?
Best Regards,
Sven C. Koehler
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
Hi,
I have a Mylex DAC960PL card on which FreeBSD 4.2 Release did not boot. I
checked the "Trouble.txt" file for suggestion to fix the problem. The advise
did not help.
But I was able to fix the problem by booting the system with DOS boot disk;
executing the DOS utility as "fdisk /mbr". This
What you are saying certainly has credence. I worked for a Semiconducter
manufacturer here in Arizona (Microchip) as a software engineer for a number
of years. We *ALWAYS* published full information about our devices
(datasheets, etc), and it never hurt us -- because we always kept
I think the time is right to reward companies that "get it". I propose
that the way to do this is to create an "open hardware" trademark that
can be used for marketing by companies that sell hardware for which they
either provide sufficient documentation that a fully featured device
driver
I have a Mylex DAC960PL card on which FreeBSD 4.2 Release did not boot. I
checked the "Trouble.txt" file for suggestion to fix the problem. The advise
did not help.
Which advice in particular? I assume that you already had the adapter
set to 2GB mode?
You should also have verified that the
sys/kern/kern_linker.c
n Tue, 19 Dec 2000, Sven C. Koehler wrote:
Hello!
I am interested in the internals of FreeBSD's dynamic loader;
where in the src module should I look for the appropriate source code?
Best Regards,
Sven C. Koehler
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL
On Tue, 19 Dec 2000, Christopher Nielsen wrote:
On 17 Dec 2000, Nat Lanza wrote:
Nothing documented the current kernel,
Not to be obtuse, but the source always documents the
current kernel for any OS...
Yes, so it must be a real pain to write drivers for a closed-source OS
like WinNT. I
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 03:12:35PM -0600, Michael C . Wu wrote:
I would be quite interested. But do we have the resouces and the man-hours
to handle IA-64/KA-64/PPC/Alpha/StrongARM at the same time?
Agreed.
Perhaps the first step would be to start a [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailing list?
Then
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 04:14:10PM -0800, Devin Butterfield wrote:
Well, if there are enough people with PCC's that are interested in
helping with the effort then perhaps pursuing the PPC port first would
make more sense. I don't have a PPC so I couldn't help out there...
There is a PowerPC
On Tue, Dec 19, 2000 at 12:56:58PM -0600, Michael C . Wu wrote:
many people) My understanding is that FreeBSD *wants* a FreeBSD/ARM,
but lack the resources/man-power to do so. I'd prefer to see an
official decision on the above by someone (hint hint -core :)) though.
Why are you looking to
On Sat, Dec 16, 2000 at 12:13:32PM -0800, Bakul Shah wrote:
May be people who know more about gcc will explain this
better but I will speculate in any case! Assuming that 16
...
But I still question this optimization. Are there any stats
on whether this 16 byte aligning improves
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 01:11:12PM -0600, Jacques A. Vidrine wrote:
/* Case 1 */ /* Case 2 */
if (data) vs. free(data)
free(data);
Actually from an optimization standpoint, #1 can be worse (ie, harder on
the processor).
On Tuesday, 19 December 2000 at 16:01:52 -0800, David O'Brien wrote:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 01:11:12PM -0600, Jacques A. Vidrine wrote:
/* Case 1 */ /* Case 2 */
if (data) vs. free(data)
free(data);
Actually from an
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Greg Lehey writes:
In which processors is a function call anywhere near as cheap as a
conditional local branch?
Doesn't PPC have some cases where a leaf function is basically free?
-s
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe
In which processors is a function call anywhere near as cheap as a
conditional local branch?
U.AMD2901?
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On Tuesday, 19 December 2000 at 16:01:52 -0800, David O'Brien wrote:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 01:11:12PM -0600, Jacques A. Vidrine wrote:
/* Case 1 */ /* Case 2 */
if (data) vs. free(data)
free(data);
Actually
Dennis wrote:
I didnt "praise" closed source. I said there is arguable reasoning behind
preferring supported binary drivers that work over incomplete source
drivers. Selecting an OS based solely on this criteria is just plain
stupid. Drivers generally do not require changes unless they are
Guys, on intel a simple conditional is going to be a whole lot
expensive then a subroutine call no matter what, even if the
conditional misses. Subroutine calls are very fast on a P6, but
if they push anything on the stack at all beyond the return address they
are not going
:Guys, on intel a simple conditional is going to be a whole lot
:expensive then a subroutine call no matter what, even if the
I'm really batting 0 today on grammer. I of course meant... "whole
lot LESS expensive". :-)
-Matt
To
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Sergey Babkin writes:
Dennis wrote:
I didnt "praise" closed source. I said there is arguable reasoning behind
preferring supported binary drivers that work over incomplete source
drivers. Selecting an OS based solely on this criteria is just plain
stupid. Drivers
:I would be very surprised to find *ANY* driver with absolutely *no* bugs.
/dev/null ?
:-)
-Matt
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Christopher Nielsen wrote:
On 17 Dec 2000, Nat Lanza wrote:
Nothing documented the current kernel,
Not to be obtuse, but the source always documents the
current kernel for any OS...
Aww come on man- that was just obtuse.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Matt Dillon writes:
:I would be very surprised to find *ANY* driver with absolutely *no* bugs.
/dev/null ?
It must have a bug, we got a support request once because of an error
message. Something about a bit bucket...
-s
p.s.: ;-)
To Unsubscribe: send mail
Christopher Nielsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Not to be obtuse, but the source always documents the
current kernel for any OS...
If you believe that the source is always adequate documentation for
kernel programming, especially in the Linux world, I have a bridge to
sell that you might be
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Nat Lanza writes:
If you believe that the source is always adequate documentation for
kernel programming, especially in the Linux world, I have a bridge to
sell that you might be interested in.
Is it open source? If so, I will be able to adapt it to my own purposes
On 19 Dec 2000, Nat Lanza wrote:
Christopher Nielsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Not to be obtuse, but the source always documents the
current kernel for any OS...
If you believe that the source is always adequate documentation for
kernel programming, especially in the Linux world, I
On Tue, Dec 19, 2000 at 06:36:06PM -0600, Peter Seebach wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Greg Lehey writes:
In which processors is a function call anywhere near as cheap as a
conditional local branch?
Doesn't PPC have some cases where a leaf function is basically free?
Maybe, but
On Tue, Dec 19, 2000 at 04:01:52PM -0800, David O'Brien wrote:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 01:11:12PM -0600, Jacques A. Vidrine wrote:
/* Case 1 */ /* Case 2 */
if (data) vs. free(data)
free(data);
Actually from an
At 18:47 19/12/00 -0800, you wrote:
Sergey Babkin wrote:
The drivers are _not_ assets. When I buy a piece of hardware I
very reasonably expect that it would come with drivers or at
least the manual on how to write these. It's a part of the deal.
However, if the device requires software
Aside: 82559/8, how does this affect BSDi's pre-installed rackmount boxes?
Dunno.
Presumably it's all going to go a little tits-up when they start getting
series 8 parts?
I was about to ask you to explain why this would be a problem, but I suppose
you can't. :) Anyway, I haven't heard
At 21:54 19/12/00 -0600, you wrote:
Presumably it's all going to go a little tits-up when they start getting
series 8 parts?
I was about to ask you to explain why this would be a problem, but I suppose
you can't. :)
I thought they were using intel 82559's and came with FreeBSD 4.x
We need to use the dual Intel PRO/100+ dual port server adapter, and I
wanted to know if FreeBSD supports them ?
I guess that the card is a dual port (2 x RJ45) card and it uses only 1
IP for both ports and if one switch goes down it will automatically
failure to the other port ?
Is this at the
When running the command gcc -v on FreeBSD 4.2-RELEASE,
I get "Using builtin specs". On Linux, I get some path.
How can I know which specs are used by the preprocessor,
compiler, assembler and linker on FreeBSD then?
PS. Should I have posted this question elsewhere?
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This is to propose a new ISA bus method to sys/isa/isa_common.c.
The new method is to enumerate PnP device instances matching the
specified PnP IDs. (Well, may be this is a kludge after all.)
device_t ISA_PNP_SCAN(device_t bus, struct isa_pnp_id *ids, int *n);
It will return the (n + 1)th
David O'Brien wrote:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2000 at 03:12:35PM -0600, Michael C . Wu wrote:
I would be quite interested. But do we have the resouces and the man-hours
to handle IA-64/KA-64/PPC/Alpha/StrongARM at the same time?
Agreed.
Perhaps the first step would be to start a [EMAIL
On Tue, 19 Dec 2000, Michael C . Wu wrote:
many people) My understanding is that FreeBSD *wants* a FreeBSD/ARM,
but lack the resources/man-power to do so. I'd prefer to see an
There is a german saying "Schuster, bleib bei Deinen Leisten", which
means something like "Only do, what you are
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