On Wed, 18 Jul 2018, at 8:31 PM, Dave Green wrote:
> If I disable 5 of the 6
> cores in the BIOS then setting frequency as above is successful.
Further, when setting:
# sysctl debug.cpufreq.verbose=1
A different 11.1 amd64 system with a 2nd gen 4 core processor reports:
cpufreq: setti
I have an 8th gen (i5-8400) processor installed in motherboard using the H370
chipset (Gigabyte H370 HD3) with factory default BIOS configuration running
FreeBSD 11.2 amd64. Although the correct number of cores (6) and available
frequencies are correctly detected only the lowest frequency is
On 2016-03-09 5:19 PM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 3/9/2016 5:06 PM, Dimitry Andric wrote:
Can you please try the attached patch, which I also attached to PR
207783? I think this will solve the crashes.
It should be enough to rebuild secure/lib/libcrypto, and install it.
Hi,
Yes it allows sshd to
On 2016-03-08 7:45 AM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
Hi,
I tried on 2 separate boxes, and sshd segfaults when this rev is applied
---Mike
Just adding some debug logs showing a couple places where sshd exited.
Encryption algorithm, kex and hmac didn't seem to matter.
Craig.
--
On 2016-03-07 17:24, Steven Hartland wrote:
On 07/03/2016 16:43, Will Green wrote:
On 4 Mar 2016, at 18:49, Mark Dixon <mnd...@hotmail.com> wrote:
Will Green sundivenetworks.com> writes:
I am happy to test patches and/or current on this server if that
helps. If
you want mor
> On 4 Mar 2016, at 18:49, Mark Dixon <mnd...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> Will Green sundivenetworks.com> writes:
>
>> I am happy to test patches and/or current on this server if that helps. If
> you want more details on the
>> motherboard/system I
Hello,
I’ve been testing a new Skylake E3 Xeon server with 10.3-BETA3. The slow loader
issue described on the forums https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/53511/ is
still present. On my Supermicro X11SSH-LN4F motherboard with E3-1260L v5 it
takes over ten minutes to get to kernel boot. After that
I wonder if this is connected to NVMe?
Our SATA Intel DC S3500 drives (which are not that different to the 750s) TRIM
much more quickly.
What does camcontrol think the secure erase time should be? For a 600GB S3500
camcontrol accurately gives the secure erase time as 4 minutes:
# camcontrol
Hello,
Has anyone had any success running FreeBSD 10.1 on the Xeon D-1540 [1]? It’s a
8-core Broadwell-based Xeon SOC with integrated GigE or 10GigE.
The combination of low power and support for 128 GB of ram makes them quite
attractive. An example motherboard with this CPU is the Supermicro
Thanks Steven. I’ll hold off releasing the updated tutorials for now.
On 21 Apr 2015, at 17:45, Steven Hartland kill...@multiplay.co.uk wrote:
I did actually request this back in November, but I don't seem to have had a
reply so I'll chase.
On 21/04/2015 16:23, Will Green wrote:
Hello
Hello,
I have been updating my ZFS tutorials for use on FreeBSD 10.1. To allow users
to experiment with ZFS I use file-backed ZFS pools. On FreeBSD 10.1 they cause
a kernel panic.
For example a simple command like the following causes a panic: zpool create
/tmp/zfstut/disk1
This issue was
of mergemaster's suggestions followed
by editing the file by hand.
Thanks,
--Lucky Green
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