This is useful for people who want index their home directory:
$ env LOCATE_CONFIG=$HOME/.locate.rc /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb
Submitted by: Dmitry Morozovsky <marck@rinet.ru>
Sync up device Ids with the master Adaptec list.
Add probe support for the 2940 Pro although it isn't obvious that
all of the termination support is correct for this adapter yet.
tell the sequencer to pause itself for a target msg variable update. This
avoids the pause race entirely as HS_MAILBOX can be accessed without
pausing the chip.
3.2 Merge candidate.
v1.19 (1999/04/15) updates the CEM56/REM56 support.
Current bugs & misfeatures
--------------------------
* CE2 cards still not working reliably. Unclear if this is related to
packet I/O code or interrupt handling.
* Autonegotiation support remains flaky. We're now OK with 10Mbit auto
hubs, but certain combination of hardware will fail to connect.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.19 (1999/04/15) updates the CEM56/REM56 support.
Current bugs & misfeatures
--------------------------
* CE2 cards still not working reliably. Unclear if this is related to
packet I/O code or interrupt handling.
* Autonegotiation support remains flaky. We're now OK with 10Mbit auto
hubs, but certain combination of hardware will fail to connect.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.18 (1999/04/08) adds support for CEM56 and REM56 multifunction cards.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.18 (1999/04/08) adds support for CEM56 and REM56 multifunction cards.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.17 (1999/03/28) has xperimental fixes to 10Mbit autonegotiation and
CE2 input lockup.
KNOWN BUGS
==========
* Media auto-negotiation is definitely not right. It will work in most
circumstances and seems to connect OK to most 100Mbit networks, however some
pathological combinations of hubs/networks/peers seem to confuse it.
* CE2 support is somewhat flakey (ranging from 'works perfectly' to 'hangs the
machine' so far). I've fixed the probe routine and a potential lockup in
the output routine, but a lot of people still report that they can't receive
or transmit.
* You won't be able to use the modem and Ethenet parts of a multifunction card
simultaneously. This is limitation the current FreeBSD PCMCIA support.
Likewise, there is no support for CardBus devices.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.17 (1999/03/28) has xperimental fixes to 10Mbit autonegotiation and
CE2 input lockup.
KNOWN BUGS
==========
* Media auto-negotiation is definitely not right. It will work in most
circumstances and seems to connect OK to most 100Mbit networks, however some
pathological combinations of hubs/networks/peers seem to confuse it.
* CE2 support is somewhat flakey (ranging from 'works perfectly' to 'hangs the
machine' so far). I've fixed the probe routine and a potential lockup in
the output routine, but a lot of people still report that they can't receive
or transmit.
* You won't be able to use the modem and Ethenet parts of a multifunction card
simultaneously. This is limitation the current FreeBSD PCMCIA support.
Likewise, there is no support for CardBus devices.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.16 (1999/03/08) fixed BPF input hang and infinite loop on CE2
short-packet output.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.16 (1999/03/08) fixed BPF input hang and infinite loop on CE2
short-packet output.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
This driver is mostly based on the `xirc2ps' driver for Linux by Werner
Koch. Werner has even allowed his code to be distributed under a BSD licence,
making our life considerably easier -- thanks Werner!
This driver supports:
* Intel EtherExpress(TM) PRO/100 PCCARD (16-bit version)
* Xircom CreditCard CE2 / CEM28 / CEM33 / CE3 / CEM56 Ethernet adapters.
* Toshiba Advanced Network 10/100 PCCARD
* Certain Compaq Netelligent 10/100 branded cards
v1.14 has major changes to media selection code, and bugfixes in the
probe routine.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
This driver is mostly based on the `xirc2ps' driver for Linux by Werner
Koch. Werner has even allowed his code to be distributed under a BSD licence,
making our life considerably easier -- thanks Werner!
This driver supports:
* Intel EtherExpress(TM) PRO/100 PCCARD (16-bit version)
* Xircom CreditCard CE2 / CEM28 / CEM33 / CE3 / CEM56 Ethernet adapters.
* Toshiba Advanced Network 10/100 PCCARD
* Certain Compaq Netelligent 10/100 branded cards
v1.14 has major changes to media selection code, and bugfixes in the
probe routine.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
inodes were synced every 15 seconds. This is now reversed as during
directory create, we cannot commit the directory entry until its
inode has been written. With this switch, the inodes will be more
likely to be written by the time that the directory is written thus
reducing the number of directory rollbacks that are needed.
a sync on the block device for the filesystem. That allows it to push the
bitmap blocks before the inode blocks which greatly reduces the number of
inode rollbacks that need to be done.
add a -j flag that tells date not to try to set the date. This allows you
to use date as a userland interface to strptime.
example:
TZ=GMT date -j -f "%a, %d %b %Y %T %Z" "Sun, 08 Nov 1998 02:22:20 GMT" +%s
which is the standard format for Last-modified headers in HTTP requests.
only one to respond: eivind
driver to use bus_space_read_foo()/bus_space_write_foo(). The line is not
visible unless you compile the driver to use PCI memory mapped mode, which
not done by default, but it should be fixed anyway.