I'm trying to make devd run an stty command whenever a USB serial device
is attached. Unfortunately, $device-name is ucom[0-9] and the device
names are /dev/cuaU[0-9] - how do I get the correct name in the device
action? I haven't found a way to extract the number by itself, so I'm
stuck with
Xin LI wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dr. Aharon Friedman wrote:
(note the fact that
/ can not be easily rolled back to previous state using ZFS's snapshot
feature, and can not be easily switched between clones
I actually keep a full minimal install on my UFS
On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 02:13:10PM +0100, Michael Sperber wrote:
I'm trying to make devd run an stty command whenever a USB serial device
is attached. Unfortunately, $device-name is ucom[0-9] and the device
names are /dev/cuaU[0-9] - how do I get the correct name in the device
action? I
On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 01:47:07AM -0500, Yoshihiro Ota wrote:
Hi, Luigi and Fabio:
I have a question about the GEOM disk scheduler you announed a while ago.
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2009-January/047597.html
Can you tell me how does the scheduler interact with
On Fri, Feb 27, 2009 at 07:21:15PM -0800, Matthew Dillon wrote:
My experience with one of our people trying to do the same thing
w/ HAMMER... we got it working, but it is not necessarily cleaner.
I'd rather just boot from a small UFS /boot partition on 'a' (256M
or 512M),
So, I have a farm of machines runnign 7.1/amd64, all of which have 16 gig of
memory in them. This afternoon, as an experiment, I altered loader.conf
to have these two lines in it:
vm.kmem_size=1536M
vm.kmem_size_max=1536M
This is what I do on machines running ZFS - these machines are not,
In the last episode (Feb 28), Pete French said:
So, I have a farm of machines runnign 7.1/amd64, all of which have 16 gig
of memory in them. This afternoon, as an experiment, I altered
loader.conf to have these two lines in it:
vm.kmem_size=1536M
vm.kmem_size_max=1536M
This is what I do
In the last episode (Mar 01), Pete French said:
You've probably reduced kmem_size from the default. I don't set
anything on my 6 GB amd64 system, and I get:
$ sysctl vm.kmem_size vm.kmem_size_max
vm.kmem_size: 2061496320
vm.kmem_size_max: 3865468109
I assume your 16GB system would