.
I'm very interested, as are some other people I know, but we just
don't have any bluetooth hardware to use yet. Don't think people
don't care and thanks for the good work. :-)
--
Chris Dillon - cdillon(at)wolves.k12.mo.us
FreeBSD: The fastest and most stable server OS on t
s by default and offering a sysctl to turn on
the 6-byte-then-10-byte method when it is needed? The benefit of that
should greatly outweigh the drawbacks with the state of the hardware
as it is today.
--
Chris Dillon - cdillon(at)wolves.k12.mo.us
FreeBSD: The fastest and most stable server OS
On Mon, 13 Aug 2001, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Chris Dillon wrote:
> > Occasionally I'll have mouse sync problems when I switch between
> > FreeBSD and NT when the NT box has had difference mice (wheel vs.
> > non-wheel MS mice, apparently) used on it via the dual-user KV
ive.
> Belkin went out of its way to support FreeBSD specifically,
> actually: their firmware version 1.9 fixes the local wiring
> switches, so that they can pass FreeBSD's aggressive probe, even
> if the FreeBSD mouse/keyboard is _not_ selected.
Hmm... I'll have to check, m
ata1 which eats IRQ 15, the kernel fail
> to attach the first fxp device (which is actually uses IRQ15). I
> want to use both fxp ethernet devices...
See PR kern/21400. Sounds like the same problem I was (and still am)
having.
-- Chris Dillon - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FreeBSD:
essed by itself. The
code might say something different (which I've looked at but can't
quite figure out how that is handled). If assigning a pass number of
1 doesn't do that, we probably should either fix the code so it does,
or change the manual pages to match. :-)
-- Chris D
I can use savecore to get the dump back off of it, but it
accepted it to put it on it! Anyone know why that is happening? I
don't remember the exact error dumpon was giving me at this time,
sorry. I'll get it tonight if this doesn't ring a bell for someone.
:-)
-- Chris Dillo
On Fri, 8 Sep 2000, Soren Schmidt wrote:
> If I dont get any serious problem reports I'll commit this
> shortly, making FreeBSD the first OS that has tagged Queuing
> support for ATA drives :)
Wow, even before Windows? :-)
-- Chris Dillon - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECT
y have limitations to what types of DIMMs you can use (i.e.
single-sided only, registered only, etc.) when you do populate all of
them. The manual _should_ specify these limitations.
-- Chris Dillon - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FreeBSD: The fastest and most stable server
;keep state" like that. *boggle*
Just as a datapoint, here is what is showing up in the Squid proxy
logs each time I try this:
952812287.997 3 192.168.4.159 NONE/400 1100 GET / - NONE/- -
-- Chris Dillon - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FreeBSD: The fastest and most stable
On Mon, 18 Oct 1999, Chris Dillon wrote:
> Should this apply cleanly to -stable? If so, I'll give it a shot when
> I get home.
I'll answer my own question (which, oddly enough, still hasn't made it
to the list after about two hours). I forgot about newbus. It
doesn'
.
Should this apply cleanly to -stable? If so, I'll give it a shot when
I get home.
-- Chris Dillon - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FreeBSD: The fastest and most stable server OS on the planet.
For Intel x86 and Alpha architectures (SPARC under development).
( http://www.freebs
128, which is a very different animal as far
as the Windows drivers are concerned. It hasn't done too bad so far,
though we're running Win95, not FreeBSD (yet). The wavetable samples
don't appear to exist in any kind of onboard RAM, so I'm not entirely
sure just how "hardwar
On Sun, 22 Aug 1999, Andrzej Bialecki wrote:
> Anyway, this module was meant more as a joke, but if you guys like it so
> much you could vote for putting it in the tree...
It's extremely small, so why not? Got my vote. :-)
-- Chris Dillon - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ouldn't
hurt people who don't have firewalls anyway, so go for it.
-- Chris Dillon - cdil...@wolves.k12.mo.us - cdil...@inter-linc.net
FreeBSD: The fastest and most stable server OS on the planet.
For Intel x86 and Alpha architectures (SPARC under development).
( http://www.freebsd.org
; IS-IS routing protocol. Those standards were *not* openly available. (I
> believe they are now.)
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but OSPF stands for Open Shortest
Path First, and thus "Open" in this context would have nothing to do
with how "free" it is.
-- C
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