For some time now, people have been referring to what build
they're using by the 'r' number, which I believe to be part of svn.
How would one go about determining this value for the installed
kernel?
Robert Huff
On Thu, 16 Jun 2011 08:16:45 -0400
Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
For some time now, people have been referring to what build
they're using by the 'r' number, which I believe to be part of svn.
How would one go about determining this value for the
installed kernel?
I'm not
On 06/16/2011 02:28 PM, Bruce Cran wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jun 2011 08:16:45 -0400
Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
For some time now, people have been referring to what build
they're using by the 'r' number, which I believe to be part of svn.
How would one go about determining this
On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 7:16 AM, Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
For some time now, people have been referring to what build
they're using by the 'r' number, which I believe to be part of svn.
How would one go about determining this value for the installed
kernel?
On 06/16/2011 02:32 PM, Brandon Gooch wrote:
That would be uname(1):
$ uname -v
FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT #0 r223017: Sun Jun 12 13:55:34 CDT 2011
root@m6500.local:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
where r223017 is the current svn revision number from which my
system is compiled (kernel and
On 6/16/11 3:17 PM, Bas Smeelen wrote:
On 06/16/2011 02:32 PM, Brandon Gooch wrote:
That would be uname(1):
$ uname -v
FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT #0 r223017: Sun Jun 12 13:55:34 CDT 2011
root@m6500.local:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
where r223017 is the current svn revision number from which