On Tue, Jun 27, 2017 at 02:25:53PM -0700, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
> On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 18:39:42 +0200, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote:
> >
> > > The problem is that advanced NICs are quite programmable [1] and
> > > depending on use case one may want to load different firmware files.
> >
> > Right, so
On Tue, 27.06.17 05:11, Felix Miata (mrma...@earthlink.net) wrote:
> Full message waiting to reboot:
> A stop job is running for NTP server Daemon (1min nns / 1min 30s).
>
> This occurs on various installations here at various times, whether rebooting
> or
> shutting down, most never, others
On Tue, 27.06.17 10:26, Umut Tezduyar Lindskog (u...@tezduyar.com) wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I would like to make a method call on a remote machine with busctl
> where the method returns UNIX_FD (h), type unix domain socket.
>
> I am guessing the FD stops on stdio-bridge without any other magic
>
Full message waiting to reboot:
A stop job is running for NTP server Daemon (1min nns / 1min 30s).
This occurs on various installations here at various times, whether rebooting or
shutting down, most never, others routinely, yet not every time, or not a full
90s delay. Just tonight it's been
Afaik, the stdio bridge only supports a single dbus protocol stream and
nothing else.
Trying to pass file descriptors over the network might need magic in the
literal sense – just imagine emulating all the ioctls, socket operations,
etc. that a program may want to perform.
(I seem to remember a
Hello,
I would like to make a method call on a remote machine with busctl
where the method returns UNIX_FD (h), type unix domain socket.
I am guessing the FD stops on stdio-bridge without any other magic
bridging the UDS to an another socket on the host. Is that the case?
Can there be any magic
On Mon, 26.06.17 12:19, guhan balasubramanian (guhan@gmail.com) wrote:
> > if you use sd_bus_reply_method_return() (or sd_bus_append()) the
> > arguments to pass for an array is the array's size followed by the
> > members. Hence, the following should do what you want:
> >
> >
On Tue, 27.06.17 13:48, 清辰 (624001...@qq.com) wrote:
> for example: service nscd
> 1.execute: systemctl stop nscd.service
> stop nscd process actually
> 2.execute: /usr/bin/nscd
> start nscd by shell command
> 3.execute: systemctl status nscd.service
> inactive(dead)
> systemctl can't