On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 5:10 PM, ssartor wrote:
> Kind of a ‘me too’ but I just bought a Zotac Zbox Ci327 for use as a small
> home office server/firewall. Like your MSI board, it has a newer generation
> CPU, in this case a Celeron N3450 quad-core (Apollo Lake, Goldmont
> architecture, slight
Date:Thu, 16 Nov 2017 07:16:32 -0700
From:Andy Ruhl
Message-ID:
| I have a wm network adapter and performance with it was horrible,
Issues with (at least some types of) wm in -8 are known, and being
worked on. Or at least that is how it appears on the lists...
On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 3:53 AM, Robert Elz wrote:
Thanks, as always, for your detailed responses.
> | I think this is SMP related, but I'm not sure.
>
> That might make the issue more likely to occur, but is probably not
> directly related (that is, the busier the system gets, the more likely
On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 05:53:49PM +0700, Robert Elz wrote:
> | I took photos of the panic at:
> |
> | http://acruhl.freeshell.org/netbsd-i386-8-panic1.jpg
> | http://acruhl.freeshell.org/netbsd-i386-8-panic2.jpg
>
> Those are UVM (x86 pmap) issues - there have been recent "issues" with
>
Date:Wed, 15 Nov 2017 20:48:14 -0700
From:Andy Ruhl
Message-ID:
| I'm actually using netbsd-8 from the 201711131530Z directory on nyftp.
Yes, I knew you were using -8 ... in my last e-mail, somehow the "8"
I meant to type got skipped...
What I meant was that tha
Thanks for all of the responses!
On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 8:52 AM, Robert Elz wrote:
> | I rebooted and confirmed that it works (other than complaints about
> | the disks which don't exist). ACPI appears to be working.
>
> NetBSD- (Beta) will have a newer ACPI in it than your old -7 kernel.
I
On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 08:02:44AM -0700, Andy Ruhl wrote:
>
> http://acruhl.freeshell.org/netbsd_wont_boot2.jpg
>
> (last message is kern.module.path=/stand/i386/8.0/modules)
>
> I don't know what's happening at this point.
Hi Andy,
If you have a PS/2 keyboard you should be able to use ddb
(c
Date:Wed, 15 Nov 2017 08:02:44 -0700
From:Andy Ruhl
Message-ID:
| This is what I've done so far:
| Before the reboot I unplugged all disks except the root disk, which is
| partitioned "old style" with separate partitions for /, /usr, /tmp,
| and /var
Perf
On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 6:35 AM, Robert Elz wrote:
> Date:Wed, 15 Nov 2017 06:03:40 -0700
> From:Andy Ruhl
> Message-ID:
>
>
> | I can't seem to make this motherboard's BIOS disable ACPI.
>
> The intent was to disable it in NetBSD via the boot prompt - but that
>
Date:Wed, 15 Nov 2017 06:03:40 -0700
From:Andy Ruhl
Message-ID:
| I can't seem to make this motherboard's BIOS disable ACPI.
The intent was to disable it in NetBSD via the boot prompt - but that
is only possible if your boot.cfg (on the netbsd-7 root) was set up
On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 2:00 AM, Benny Siegert wrote:
>> The kernel boots just past the first acpi message and then just sits
>> there "forever" (minutes is all I've waited).
>
> Try disabling ACPI. There is probably an option in the bootloader menu
> to do that.
I got a few private responses, th
> The kernel boots just past the first acpi message and then just sits
> there "forever" (minutes is all I've waited).
Try disabling ACPI. There is probably an option in the bootloader menu
to do that.
I hastily bought a new motherboard, cpu, and memory combo because my
old machine wouldn't boot up anymore.
This is an i386 machine that has existed since somewhere in the 1.4.x
days. It's still i386.
It's an MSI Intel motherboard with a Celeron 3930 CPU.
Anyway, I tried a bunch of bios options,
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