On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
> Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
> build is going on.
>
> I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
> ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
>
> The system "works fine" unless I start a cpu-inte
On Mon, 5 Aug 2013 10:33:55 +0400
Eugene wrote:
> Hello Gary,
>
> Also make sure there is no packed dirt on the heatsink -- I don't
> know about AMDs, but older Intel heatsinks often tend to accumulate a
> paper-like layer of dirt on the 'top' of heatsink grid, blocking the
> airflow. I once had
Gary Aitken wrote:
> Air ducting shouldn't be a problem; I've got the side of the case off...
This just might be part of the problem. Air plumbing
is not as forgiving as it was in the old days.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lis
On 05/08/2013 06:05, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/04/13 21:39, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
This suggests it's not the ACPI in FreeBSD shutting you down, but
something on the motherboard.
That was my guess as well.
As it's probably not FreeBSD you're now asking on the wrong list, and
other than cooling
MD Phenom II X4 temperature issues (was Re: hardware monitor)
You can also try shutting down (obviously), then removing the heat sink, put
some thermal paste on the processor and reinstall the heat sink. Sometimes
there isn't much (any) thermal paste there and the processor can't get the
You can also try shutting down (obviously), then removing the heat sink, put
some thermal paste on the processor and reinstall the heat sink. Sometimes
there isn't much (any) thermal paste there and the processor can't get the heat
into the heat sink.
On 2013, Aug 4, at 15:22, Gary Aitken wro
On 08/04/13 21:39, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
> On 05/08/2013 03:01, Gary Aitken wrote:
>>> 50C isn't crazy.
>> Actually, the 50C figure is just where it shoots to for starters.
>> Mfg specs say 62C max, so I stall the process when it gets around
>> 59 and still climbing steeply.
>
> The manufactures
On 05/08/2013 03:01, Gary Aitken wrote:
> 50C isn't crazy.
Actually, the 50C figure is just where it shoots to for starters.
Mfg specs say 62C max, so I stall the process when it gets around 59
and still climbing steeply.
The manufactures specs I found when I looked that range of CPUs up was 71
On 08/04/13 18:30, Frank Leonhardt wrote:
> On 05/08/2013 00:29, Gary Aitken wrote:
>> On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
>>> Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang
>>> fast when a build is going on.
>>>
>>> I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
On 05/08/2013 00:29, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
build is going on.
I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
The system "works fin
On 8/4/2013 6:29 PM, Gary Aitken wrote:
On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
build is going on.
I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
The system "works fin
On 08/04/13 17:22, Gary Aitken wrote:
> Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
> build is going on.
>
> I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
> ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
>
> The system "works fine" unless I start a cpu-inte
Ok, so now I see that my cpu temperature shoots up pretty dang fast when a
build is going on.
I'm running an AMD Phenom II X4 with the AMD-supplied fan in an
ASUS M4A89TD PRO / USB3 motherboard.
The system "works fine" unless I start a cpu-intensive build.
If I leave it unattended, after some ti
On 04/08/2013 21:48, Gary Aitken wrote:
Can anyone suggest a hardware monitor app in the ports tree?
I've got an amd64 which may have a temperature issue,
but I can't see it to tell...
Try "sysctl hw.acpi.thermal"
For more information see "man acpi" and man "acpi_thermal". If you're
lucky i
On Sun, 04 Aug 2013 14:48:56 -0600, Gary Aitken wrote:
> Can anyone suggest a hardware monitor app in the ports tree?
> I've got an amd64 which may have a temperature issue,
> but I can't see it to tell...
If it's primarily about temperature... amdtemp (kernel
module), healthd (system service), m
On Oct 29, 2012 10:57 PM, "Joshua Isom" wrote:
>
> Soon I'll be purchasing a wireless N card for my current FreeBSD system
since I'm not yet ready to add ethernet to my house. What would be the
current recommendations for using wireless N on FreeBSD? My router is a
Linksys E2000, which supports
Hi,
it's not really about the machines but more the hardware.
FreeBSD is quite diverse in what it can run on so best bet check the
HCL's off the www.freebsd.org website as that would give you the best
idea!
Otherwise just install and see what works and doesn't. FreeBSD is
pretty comprehensive of
On 02/23/12 11:57, Da Rock wrote:
On 02/23/12 08:33, Jerry wrote:
On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 09:31:10 +1000
Da Rock articulated:
The most annoying for me was when they're running Win7 (blah!) and I
was trying to burn a cd _and_ keep the kids from interrupting by
playing on the keyboard. I closed the
On 02/23/12 08:33, Jerry wrote:
On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 09:31:10 +1000
Da Rock articulated:
The most annoying for me was when they're running Win7 (blah!) and I
was trying to burn a cd _and_ keep the kids from interrupting by
playing on the keyboard. I closed the lid like I do with FBSD and it
susp
On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 09:31:10 +1000
Da Rock articulated:
> The most annoying for me was when they're running Win7 (blah!) and I
> was trying to burn a cd _and_ keep the kids from interrupting by
> playing on the keyboard. I closed the lid like I do with FBSD and it
> suspended! Grr!
That behavior
On 02/22/12 09:19, Polytropon wrote:
On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 08:44:08 +1000, Da Rock wrote:
On 02/22/12 01:44, Polytropon wrote:
Today's problems seem to be suspend/resume/hibernate (all
the variations of "it's not switched on, but also not
switched off entirely") and some specific sorts of wireles
On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 08:44:08 +1000, Da Rock wrote:
> On 02/22/12 01:44, Polytropon wrote:
> > Today's problems seem to be suspend/resume/hibernate (all
> > the variations of "it's not switched on, but also not
> > switched off entirely") and some specific sorts of wireless
> > devices.
> I've never
On 02/22/12 01:44, Polytropon wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 10:45:05 +1000, Da Rock wrote:
To the OP, check the pages Polytropon has linked here, but the chances
of getting exactly that are nil to impossible. I've run about 6 or more
laptops now without too much trouble. The biggest problems were
w
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 10:45:05 +1000, Da Rock wrote:
> To the OP, check the pages Polytropon has linked here, but the chances
> of getting exactly that are nil to impossible. I've run about 6 or more
> laptops now without too much trouble. The biggest problems were
> wireless, but that was the bad
On 02/21/12 05:35, Polytropon wrote:
On Mon, 20 Feb 2012 17:35:43 +0100, Riccardo Garzelli wrote:
I was thinking of purchasing a new laptop and I wanted to go for FreeBSD
OS. Unfortunately I'm no brainer in Unix so I'd like to find a PC that can
run FreeBSD 9.0 out of the box.
Could you either t
On Mon, 20 Feb 2012 17:35:43 +0100, Riccardo Garzelli wrote:
> I was thinking of purchasing a new laptop and I wanted to go for FreeBSD
> OS. Unfortunately I'm no brainer in Unix so I'd like to find a PC that can
> run FreeBSD 9.0 out of the box.
> Could you either tell me which hardware are suitab
On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 05:35:43PM +0100, Riccardo Garzelli wrote:
> Dear Information service
>
> I was thinking of purchasing a new laptop and I wanted to go for FreeBSD
> OS. Unfortunately I'm no brainer in Unix so I'd like to find a PC that can
> run FreeBSD 9.0 out of the box.
The best way to
At 03:34 AM 9/15/2011, Doug Hardie wrote:
I encountered a situation today that I do not understand. This is a very
old i386 PC that does not have a usable CD drive. The existing drive uses
a very funky SCSI connector that I have nothing for. The system disk is
SCSI and there was one addition
Hi Polytropon cc list,
I wrote:
>
> > > You could look at man fsdb
> >
> > FreeBSD offers a lot of versatile diagnostic and rescue
> > tools, and surely fsdb is one of them. Others, provided
> > by the base system, are "fetch -rR " and also
> > recoverdisk.
> >
> > In the ports collection you'll
On Sat, May 21, 2011 at 3:14 PM, Julian H. Stacey wrote:
> Hi,
> Reference:
>> From: Alejandro Imass
>> Date: Fri, 20 May 2011 11:08:21 -0400
>> Message-id:
[...]
> Announcing you'r thinking if suing the 1st rescuer,
> might make some people might be nervous in being 2nd rescu
Hi Robert,
Thanks for your repsonse,
I mailed postmas...@freebsd.org that this thread exists, &
invited him to consider list definitions in light of past, present
& possible future response that may be psoted on this thread.
Cheers,
Julian
--
Julian Stacey, BSD Unix Linux C Sys Eng Consultants Mu
On Sat, May 21, 2011 at 4:13 PM, Julian H. Stacey wrote:
> Questions@ started as a catch all fallback address for simple beginners
> questions from the newly installed, who didn't know / hadn't yet read
> http://www.freebsd.org/community/mailinglists.html
> http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8
For Alejandro Imass as original poster re. Hardware Recovery Company:
FreebSD has a special mail list for file systeme
it's name is f...@freebsd.org.
(we also have hardware@ etc)
For all,
Questions@ started as a catch all fallback address for simple beginners
questions fro
Hi Polytropon cc list, you wrote
> > You could look at man fsdb
>
> FreeBSD offers a lot of versatile diagnostic and rescue
> tools, and surely fsdb is one of them. Others, provided
> by the base system, are "fetch -rR " and also
> recoverdisk.
>
> In the ports collection you'll find tools like
On Sat, 21 May 2011 14:14:39 -0500, Julian H. Stacey
wrote:
I really trust the people on this list so hopefully you can point me
to a real and non-bullshit lab that can really recover data.
Gillware, Inc.
Here's a referral code as well: 13967
http://www.gillware.com/
Regards,
Mark
On Sat, 21 May 2011 21:14:39 +0200, "Julian H. Stacey" wrote:
> Alejandro Imass wrote:
> > Hi folks,
> >
> > I recently sent a hard drive to be recovered and I think they just
> > ripped me off. I have the back-up drive and believe it or not it has
> > the same exact symptoms and won't mount. So
Hi,
Reference:
> From: Alejandro Imass
> Date: Fri, 20 May 2011 11:08:21 -0400
> Message-id:
Alejandro Imass wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I recently sent a hard drive to be recovered and I think they just
> ripped me off. I have the back-up drive and believe it or not it has
> th
On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 11:08 AM, Alejandro Imass wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I recently sent a hard drive to be recovered and I think they just
> ripped me off. I have the back-up drive and believe it or not it has
> the same exact symptoms and won't mount. So I want to send both drives
> to a REAL AN
On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 10:42 AM, Jaime Kikpole
wrote:
> My thanks to everyone for their replies. I guess that I wasn't
> specific enough about my needs, though. I don't need a tiny chassis.
> In fact, I need a proxy for around 750-900 computers, so an Atom
> system or the like wouldn't work for
On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 9:42 AM, Jaime Kikpole wrote:
> My thanks to everyone for their replies. I guess that I wasn't
> specific enough about my needs, though. I don't need a tiny chassis.
> In fact, I need a proxy for around 750-900 computers, so an Atom
> system or the like wouldn't work for
My thanks to everyone for their replies. I guess that I wasn't
specific enough about my needs, though. I don't need a tiny chassis.
In fact, I need a proxy for around 750-900 computers, so an Atom
system or the like wouldn't work for me. I just have no rack space
left. Fortunately, I might have
On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 12:04 PM, Jaime Kikpole
wrote:
> I'm looking for new hardware for my web filter (FreeBSD + dansguardian +
> squid).
>
> Can anyone suggest good (or warn about bad) models of hardware for
> this? I'm looking for a small tower or compact chassis (not rack
> mount) with two
>> On Tue, 26 Apr 2011 12:04:34 -0400,
>> Jaime Kikpole said:
J> I'm looking for new hardware for my web filter (FreeBSD + dansguardian +
J> squid).
Have a look at the Ars Technica system guides for suggestions on rolling
your own PC. They discuss three general-purpose systems with an ey
On Tue, 26 Apr 2011 20:09:41 +0100
Chris Whitehouse articulated:
> On 26/04/2011 18:45, Jaime Kikpole wrote:
> > On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 12:34 PM, Chris
> > Brennan wrote:
> >> Just out of curiosity, why not rack-mounted boxed?
> >
> > Space issues. They'll have to either fit on a shelf in one
On 26/04/2011 18:45, Jaime Kikpole wrote:
On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 12:34 PM, Chris Brennan wrote:
Just out of curiosity, why not rack-mounted boxed?
Space issues. They'll have to either fit on a shelf in one of two
rooms, depending on the outcome of some other things.
Any thoughts on brand o
On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 12:34 PM, Chris Brennan wrote:
> Just out of curiosity, why not rack-mounted boxed?
Space issues. They'll have to either fit on a shelf in one of two
rooms, depending on the outcome of some other things.
Any thoughts on brand or model?
Thanks,
Jaime
--
Network Adminis
On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 12:04 PM, Jaime Kikpole
wrote:
I'm looking for new hardware for my web filter (FreeBSD + dansguardian +
> squid).
>
> Can anyone suggest good (or warn about bad) models of hardware for
> this? I'm looking for a small tower or compact chassis (not rack
> mount) with two et
On 21/11/2010 17:25, Maciej Milewski wrote:
On Sunday 21 November 2010 17:19:05, Ben Quick wrote:
I don't really know what either of them are. I'm assuming the Matrix
Storage is the RAID controller. Is this supported? If not, I'll just use
gmirror, but will obviously have to be able to access t
On Sunday 21 November 2010 17:19:05, Ben Quick wrote:
> I don't really know what either of them are. I'm assuming the Matrix
> Storage is the RAID controller. Is this supported? If not, I'll just use
> gmirror, but will obviously have to be able to access the disks in the
> first instance.
AFAIK th
On 17 June 2010 17:38, Steve Polyack wrote:
> On 06/17/10 12:02, Martin Turgeon wrote:
>
>> Hi again everyone,
>>
>> I just realized after posting my question on optimal RAID config that the
>> best solution for hardware monitoring would be to use the integrated iDRAC6.
>> I have the Express vers
On 06/17/10 12:02, Martin Turgeon wrote:
Hi again everyone,
I just realized after posting my question on optimal RAID config that
the best solution for hardware monitoring would be to use the
integrated iDRAC6. I have the Express version (no dedicated port). I
have never worked with DRAC card
iXSystems (http://www.ixsystems.com/) ... they are a BSD shop,period ...
Been dealing iwth them a couple of years now for production servers,
haven't been disappointed yet ...
On Thu, 6 May 2010, Lonnie CasaDeCalvo wrote:
Hi,
Can you make a recomondation to a hardware supplier that will pr
On Thu, 18-Mar-2010 at 09:37:32 +0100, Andy Wodfer wrote:
> Hi,
> We're setting up two backup servers where each server will have about 4TB of
> harddrives (for now) connected (4x1TB and 8x500GB drives). Last night we ran
> into trouble with the 3ware controllers we have (9650SE-8LPML) because we
>
Thanks for all your feedback.
The problem occurs in the RAID controller BIOS (before we even boot or get
to the OS install).
Thanks to John for confirming these cards do work above 2TB. I will look
into upgrading the firmware (on these brand new cards). Perhaps it's just
the current firmware that
On Thursday 18 March 2010 03:37:32 Andy Wodfer wrote:
> Hi,
> We're setting up two backup servers where each server will have about 4TB
> of harddrives (for now) connected (4x1TB and 8x500GB drives). Last night
> we ran into trouble with the 3ware controllers we have (9650SE-8LPML)
> because we cou
At 04:37 AM 3/18/2010, Andy Wodfer wrote:
Hi,
We're setting up two backup servers where each server will have about 4TB of
harddrives (for now) connected (4x1TB and 8x500GB drives). Last night we ran
into trouble with the 3ware controllers we have (9650SE-8LPML) because we
couldn't create a large
Hi
and what about Areca? Natively supported via arcmsr driver.
For SATA II
http://www.areca.com.tw/products/pcie.htm
(ARC-1230, ARC-1260)
or
http://www.areca.com.tw/products/pcie341.htm
On one installation I have successfully set up RAID5
with 8x 1TB SATA II drives on ARC-1220, approx 6.5TB files
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 18/03/2010 10:09:55, Erik Trulsson wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 09:37:32AM +0100, Andy Wodfer wrote:
>> Hi,
>> We're setting up two backup servers where each server will have about 4TB of
>> harddrives (for now) connected (4x1TB and 8x500GB driv
On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 09:37:32AM +0100, Andy Wodfer wrote:
> Hi,
> We're setting up two backup servers where each server will have about 4TB of
> harddrives (for now) connected (4x1TB and 8x500GB drives). Last night we ran
> into trouble with the 3ware controllers we have (9650SE-8LPML) because w
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 18.03.2010 10:35, Andy Wodfer wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 10:30 AM, Matthew Law wrote:
>
>
>> Is ZFS not an option?
>>
>
> I'm afraid ZFS is not an option for this customer. I use ZFS on other system
> and it works great, but here the requir
On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 10:30 AM, Matthew Law wrote:
> Is ZFS not an option?
>
I'm afraid ZFS is not an option for this customer. I use ZFS on other system
and it works great, but here the requirement is RAID5, hotswap, hotspare and
so on.
Cheers,
Andreas
___
On Thu, March 18, 2010 8:37 am, Andy Wodfer wrote:
> Hi,
> We're setting up two backup servers where each server will have about 4TB
> of
> harddrives (for now) connected (4x1TB and 8x500GB drives). Last night we
> ran
> into trouble with the 3ware controllers we have (9650SE-8LPML) because we
> c
2010/1/4 Sergio Tam :
> 2010/1/4 Albert Hanslin :
>>
>> I tried to find out if the HP ProLiant DL380 G6 Server is supported.
>> [...]
>>
>> Please let me know if the ProLiant DL380 G6 Server is supported, thank you.
>>
>
Hi again
http://people.freebsd.org/~jcagle/
http://lists.freeb
2010/1/4 Albert Hanslin :
>
> I tried to find out if the HP ProLiant DL380 G6 Server is supported.
> Unfortunately the link under FreeBSD/i386 Projct - Hardware List does not
> work.
>
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/8.0R/hardware.html
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/7.2R/hardware.html
>
>
> P
On 31/12/2009 9:00 AM, Nenad Mihajlovic wrote:
Hello,
For the Intel processors VT support, you can check up on
http://ark.intel.com/VTList.aspx
go for no less than dual-core 8400.
and for the AMD desktop processors, here:
http://products.amd.com/en-us/DesktopCPUResult.aspx
and some of new X4
Hello,
For the Intel processors VT support, you can check up on
http://ark.intel.com/VTList.aspx
go for no less than dual-core 8400.
and for the AMD desktop processors, here:
http://products.amd.com/en-us/DesktopCPUResult.aspx
and some of new X4 phenoms.
Either AMD or Intel, both are good
-- Original Message --
From: "Diego F. Arias R."
Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2009 16:24:24 -0500
>On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 4:06 PM, Mike Jeays wrote:
>
>> I am about to buy a new desktop, and I want to make sure that hardware
>> virtualization is included. In one or
On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 4:06 PM, Mike Jeays wrote:
> I am about to buy a new desktop, and I want to make sure that hardware
> virtualization is included. In one or two local computer stores, I get a
> blank
> look when I ask about this. Intel seems provide it on only certain chip
> models
> and t
On Fri, 04 Dec 2009 14:07:41 +0100
Frank Wissmann wrote:
> Achilleas Mantzios schrieb:
>
> Hi!
> >
> > Hello,
> >
> > i am facing this situation, where i need to upgrade from my 6.3 i386
> > system, used as my main workstation, to a new hardware based on
fine.
Achilleas Mantzios
--- On Fri, 12/4/09, Adam Vande More wrote:
From: Adam Vande More
Subject: Re: Hardware migration and upgrade from 6.3 to 8.0 advice
To: "Achilleas Mantzios"
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Date: Friday, December 4, 2009, 1:36 PM
On Fri, Dec 4, 2009
Frank Wissmann writes:
> > i am facing this situation, where i need to upgrade from my 6.3 i386
> > system, used as my main workstation, to a new hardware based on amd64
> > (phenom II x4).
>
> > b) migrate all current data to the new hardware, kernel/system
> > included, and then try to upg
On Fri, Dec 4, 2009 at 2:57 AM, Achilleas Mantzios <
mantzios.ach...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>Hello,
>
> i am facing this situation, where i need to upgrade from my 6.3 i386
> system, used as my main workstation, to a new hardware based on amd64
> (phenom II x4).
>
>
>
> My c
Achilleas Mantzios schrieb:
Hi!
Hello,
i am facing this situation, where i need to upgrade from my 6.3 i386
system, used as my main workstation, to a new hardware based on amd64
(phenom II x4).
Well, you know that i386 is Intel, do you? It migh
devinfo -v
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 12:29 AM, gahn wrote:
>
> Hi all:
>
> How could I find out the list of hardware in my machine? I used "dmesg" and
> "var/run/dmesg.boot", it didn't seem to help that much as I expected.
>
> which file lists all of hardware in the machine?
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>
>
>
On Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:24:24 +, Ricardo Jesus
wrote:
> Polytropon I can't seem to find usbconf.
>
> % usbconf
> usbconf: Command not found.
> % whereis usbconf
> usbconf:
>
> Is it a third party application?
My mistake, sorry. Of course it's usbdevs, a tool that comes
with the OS.
Den Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:24:24 +
skrev Ricardo Jesus :
> Polytropon wrote:
> > On Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:07:51 +, Ricardo Jesus
> > wrote:
> >> % pciconf -lv
> >> man pciconf for further details.
> >
> > Additionally: usbconf to list USB devices, and camcontrol
> > to list SCSI devices, as w
On Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:07:51 +
Ricardo Jesus wrote:
>Josh Carroll wrote:
>> On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 2:59 PM, gahn wrote:
>>> Hi all:
>>>
>>> How could I find out the list of hardware in my machine? I used
>>> "dmesg" and "var/run/dmesg.boot", it didn't seem to help that much
>>> as I expected
Polytropon wrote:
On Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:07:51 +, Ricardo Jesus
wrote:
% pciconf -lv
man pciconf for further details.
Additionally: usbconf to list USB devices, and camcontrol
to list SCSI devices, as well as atacontrol for ATA devices.
And finally, dmesg. :-)
Note that these are *sy
On Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:07:51 +, Ricardo Jesus
wrote:
> % pciconf -lv
> man pciconf for further details.
Additionally: usbconf to list USB devices, and camcontrol
to list SCSI devices, as well as atacontrol for ATA devices.
And finally, dmesg. :-)
Note that these are *system tools*. In or
Josh Carroll wrote:
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 2:59 PM, gahn wrote:
Hi all:
How could I find out the list of hardware in my machine? I used "dmesg" and
"var/run/dmesg.boot", it didn't seem to help that much as I expected.
which file lists all of hardware in the machine?
Thanks.
Give the sysut
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 2:59 PM, gahn wrote:
>
> Hi all:
>
> How could I find out the list of hardware in my machine? I used "dmesg" and
> "var/run/dmesg.boot", it didn't seem to help that much as I expected.
>
> which file lists all of hardware in the machine?
>
> Thanks.
Give the sysutils/dmide
On Fri, Nov 07, 2008 at 10:35:39AM +0100, Pieter Donche wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Nov 2008, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
>
>>> Suppose you have a system with multiple disks managed by a
>>> hardware RAID controller in a RAID5 of RAID6 configuration,
>>> To FreeBSD it will look like e.g. a single large drive.
>>
On Thu, 6 Nov 2008, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
Suppose you have a system with multiple disks managed by a
hardware RAID controller in a RAID5 of RAID6 configuration,
To FreeBSD it will look like e.g. a single large drive.
what is "RAID5 of RAID6"???
RAID5 or RAID6 (sorry, typing error)
If you w
Pieter Donche wrote:
Suppose you have a system with multiple disks managed by a
hardware RAID controller in a RAID5 of RAID6 configuration,
To FreeBSD it will look like e.g. a single large drive.
If you want to extend your disk space by plugging in an extra
disk, the hardware RAID controller wi
> On Thursday 06 November 2008 22:01:39 Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> > > Suppose you have a system with multiple disks managed by a
> > > hardware RAID controller in a RAID5 of RAID6 configuration,
> >
> > what is "RAID5 of RAID6"???
>
> 'of' is 'or' in dutch, common typo for dutch or flemish people.
On Thursday 06 November 2008 22:01:39 Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> > Suppose you have a system with multiple disks managed by a
> > hardware RAID controller in a RAID5 of RAID6 configuration,
>
> what is "RAID5 of RAID6"???
'of' is 'or' in dutch, common typo for dutch or flemish people.
--
Mel
Prob
Suppose you have a system with multiple disks managed by a
hardware RAID controller in a RAID5 of RAID6 configuration,
what is "RAID5 of RAID6"???
To FreeBSD it will look like e.g. a single large drive.
If you want to extend your disk space by plugging in an extra
disk, the hardware RAID con
Thank you all, that exactly what I needed.
-fred-
On Mar 7, 2008, at 12:43 PM, beni wrote:
On Friday 07 March 2008 20:08:29 Fred C wrote:
I have one of my disks over heating and I would like to monitor the
disk temperature. Is there any way to get the disk S.M.A.R.T
information on FreeBSD?
On Friday 07 March 2008 20:08:29 Fred C wrote:
> I have one of my disks over heating and I would like to monitor the
> disk temperature. Is there any way to get the disk S.M.A.R.T
> information on FreeBSD?
>
> -fred-
The smartmontools in sysutils/smartmontools :
The smartmontools package contains
smartmontools
On Fri, 7 Mar 2008, Fred C wrote:
I have one of my disks over heating and I would like to monitor the disk
temperature. Is there any way to get the disk S.M.A.R.T information on
FreeBSD?
-fred-
--
Fred C!
PGP-KeyID: E7EA02EC3B487EE9
PGP-FingerPrint: A906101E2CCDBB18D7BD09AE
At 12:08 PM -0800 3/7/08, Fred C wrote:
>I have one of my disks over heating and I would like to monitor the
>disk temperature. Is there any way to get the disk S.M.A.R.T
>information on FreeBSD?
How about smartmontools from ports?
--
Walter M. Pawley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Wump Research & Company
In the last episode (Mar 07), Fred C said:
> I have one of my disks over heating and I would like to monitor the
> disk temperature. Is there any way to get the disk S.M.A.R.T
> information on FreeBSD?
Try the sysutils/smartmontools port.
--
Dan Nelson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
_
On Fri, Mar 07, 2008 at 12:08:29PM -0800, Fred C wrote:
>
> I have one of my disks over heating and I would like to monitor the disk
> temperature. Is there any way to get the disk S.M.A.R.T information on
> FreeBSD?
>
Sure. Install the sysutils/smartmontools port. Then you can use the smartc
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of D G Teed
> Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 3:54 AM
> To: Ted Mittelstaedt
> Cc: DAve; FreeBSD Questions
> Subject: Re: hardware problem
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 27, 200
On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 1:58 AM, Ted Mittelstaedt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of D G Teed
> > Sent: Monday, February 25, 2008 7:22 AM
> > To: DAve
&
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 08:38:09PM -0500, Tsu-Fan Cheng wrote:
>
> hi guys,
>just take every part out and dust with a brush, reseat the m-board
> and hook on the power supply, switch on the power and both fans spin
> for quite a while, seeing this, I switch it off and start to connect
> all the
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of D G Teed
> Sent: Monday, February 25, 2008 7:22 AM
> To: DAve
> Cc: FreeBSD Questions
> Subject: Re: hardware problem
>
>
> Every system I've seen with his descriptio
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 10:45 PM, Da Rock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 2008-02-25 at 20:38 -0500, Tsu-Fan Cheng wrote:
> > hi guys,
> >just take every part out and dust with a brush, reseat the m-board
> > and hook on the power supply, switch on the power and both fans spin
> > for
On Mon, 2008-02-25 at 20:38 -0500, Tsu-Fan Cheng wrote:
> hi guys,
>just take every part out and dust with a brush, reseat the m-board
> and hook on the power supply, switch on the power and both fans spin
> for quite a while, seeing this, I switch it off and start to connect
> all the cables.
hi guys,
just take every part out and dust with a brush, reseat the m-board
and hook on the power supply, switch on the power and both fans spin
for quite a while, seeing this, I switch it off and start to connect
all the cables. After all is done, i turn on the power again, and this
time it sto
1 - 100 of 298 matches
Mail list logo