Return to BSD News archive
Xref: sserve comp.os.386bsd.announce:95 comp.answers:1729 news.answers:11450 Path: sserve!newshost.anu.edu.au!munnari.oz.au!news.Hawaii.Edu!ames!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!natinst.com!hrd769.brooks.af.mil!hrd769.brooks.af.mil!not-for-mail From: burgess@brooks.af.mil (Dave Burgess) Newsgroups: comp.os.386bsd.announce,comp.answers,news.answers Subject: comp.os.386bsd.announce Frequently Asked Questions (Part 4 of 9) Followup-To: comp.os.386bsd.announce Date: 26 Aug 1993 15:20:09 -0000 Organization: Armstrong Laboratory, Brooks AFB, TX Lines: 301 Sender: burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu Distribution: world Expires: 09/13/93 Message-ID: <386bsd-faq-4-746378397@brooks.af.mil> References: <386bsd-faq-1-746378397@brooks.af.mil> Reply-To: 386bsd-faq@brooks.af.mil (386bsd FAQ Maintainer) NNTP-Posting-Host: hrd769.brooks.af.mil Posted-By: auto-faq 2.4 Archive-name: 386bsd-faq/part4 Section 4. (Kernel Additions) Thanks go to Marc Wandschneider (storm@cs.mcgill.ca) for putting this section of the FAQ together.. 4.0 Introduction If you have written some addition to the kernel, or know of one that feel should be mentioned, send mail to Dave Burgess (burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil) with all the relevant information, and it will be added for the next release. 4.1 Common Kernel-related problems 4.1.1 Where are the commands "rpcinfo" and "rpcgen"? Chris Flatters (cflatter@nrao.edu) informs us in the following posting excerpt where we can find them: -------------------------------------------------------------------- The sources for the Sun OS 4.0 RPC are on titan.rice.edu (I don't have the inet number handy) in directory sun-sources. You will have to pick up all the shell archives and unpack them to get at rpcgen. -------------------------------------------------------------------- These sources are also included in NetBSD and FreeBSD as part of the normal installation. 4.1.2 Where can I get a working "netstat"? netstat was released as a binary patch and source patch in the patchkit. Netstat will be a part of the FreeBSD distribution currently under construction, and is already part of NetBSD. 4.1.3 How can I fix NFS to work with my NE2000 board? Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com) has both identified the problem and provided us with a work around: -------------------------------------------------------------------- I reported previously that I was seeing problems reading files over NFS using the ne2000 driver; timeouts would eventually be reported, no data would be read. Listing files and directories (small ones anyways) were not a problem. After playing with etherfind and kernel printfs, I've come to this conclusion: Fragmented 8K UDP packets from the NFS server are not reaching the UDP layer in 386bsd. The Sun is sending them (according to another Sun spying on the network), but the UDP input routine is never called. I don't know if the bug here is on the 386bsd or Sun side, and won't have time to look into it in the next couple of days. In the meantime, mounting NFS file systems with "rsize=1024" does get rid of this problem. (It does nothing about TCP being slow, though.) Ken -------------------------------------------------------------------- Hopefully, the real solution (a UDP fix) will be forthcoming so that the slow TCP problem is fixed as well. See also: Section 2.6.3.3c "I am getting lousy performance out of my network card. What are some of the other possibilities?" 4.1.4 How can I get "ps" and "w" to work? The patch-kit contains a fix for /src/lib/libutil/kvm.c, which, last we heard, was due to the work of Jim Paradis (paradis@sousa.ltn.dec.com). New versions of the kernel should have this problem fixed. In order for users to be able to use certain flags with ps and the w/uptime commands, the kernel must have permissions 755. Also, in order to save space on the distribution, the kernel is 'stripped' of all its labels. Programs that rely on those labels will not work. There are several in this category, including ps, w, and uptime. Either ftp an un-stripped kernel, or recompile. 4.1.5 Where are re_comp and re_exec? These two functions are currently not in libc.a. However, there are two related functions that seem to work exactly the same in all cases we've heard of---These are regcomp() and regexec(). Thus, a pretty ugly fix for the problem would be to always compile as follows: $(CC) -Dre_comp=regcomp -Dre_exec=regexec .... There is a slightly nicer fix available for this, listed in 4.2 4.1.6 Where are stty() and gtty()? These functions are missing from libc.a. To fix, add the following #defines to your program: #define stty(f, m) ioctl((f), TIOCSETP, (m)) #define gtty(f, m) ioctl((f), TIOCGETP, (m)) A more elegant solution is to apply the patchkit. These routines are included in there. 4.1.7 The system hangs with the HD light on after intense disk usage. Brett Lymn (blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU) Provides us with a description of the problem and the steps that he had to take to fix it: It seems that, on some disk subsystems, the controller and the hard disk get out of synchronization when they are being used intensively. The result of this is that the disk completes a command but the controller still believes the disk not to have completed the command, so the controller status register indicates the disk is busy when it is not really. The standard wd drivers are too trusting of the hardware and expect it to do the right thing all the time. There are a few while loops in the wd drivers that loop on a status change from the disk controller, however; if the problem I have described takes place then the wd driver will be stuck looping waiting for the disk to not be busy - which never happens, so you lock the machine because this is a kernel level wait. To fix this problem I put a timeout into the while loops so that after a specified time the wd driver will give up waiting for the drive to become ready, reset the controller and retry the command. In my experience the retry always succeeds. Ed.Note: The retry doesn't ALWAYS work, but it IS better than just waiting for the drive to wake back up (which it never does). 4.1.8 How do you implement quotas on Net/2 derived BSD systems? From: tinguely@plains.NoDak.edu (Mark Tinguely) maybe you did not complete the setup, here is a step-by-step instructions to get them to work: 1) make a kernel with quota option installed 2) edit /etc/fstab and include the kinds of quotas you want, below I used "userquota", you could also add "groupquota". /dev/wd0h /usr ufs rw,userquota 1 2 3) for each filesystem that is in /etc/fstab that uses quota, create the file "quota.user" (and "quota.group if appropriate). Above I have user quotas in the /usr filesystem, so I would: # touch /usr/quota.user 4) scan filesystem for files ownership (and/or group ownership). # quotacheck -a 5) now you can add individual quota limits, if you want to add the same quotas to the many people, then make a template and replicate the template. If they change for each user, then edit seperately. # edquota tinguely (an editor is kicked up and says something like: Quotas for user tinguely: /usr: blocks in use: 11876, limits (soft = 0, hard = 0) inodes in use: 891, limits (soft = 0, hard = 0) a limit of 0 means "unlimited". Change these to the appropriate number of blocks. A soft limit generates a warning, and can be exceed for period of time (7 days?), after which time a soft limit is treated like a hard limit. A hard limit denies new writes. to replicate a template (for this example let us assume "tinguely" is the template): # edquota -p tinguely user1 user2 user3 ... userN 6) turn quotas on (usually done in the /etc/rc file, but turn it on manually so you do not have to reboot right now: # quotaon that should take care of setting up quotas. You can look at the status of use of files with repquota, the -a option lists all filesystems with quotas. 4.2 Available kernel add-ons 4.2.1 The Patch-Kit Perhaps the most famous of all additions to the kernel, the Patch-Kit, currently coordinated by Rodney Grimes (rgrimes@agora.rain.com) contains numerous bug fixes, Julian's SCSI drivers, as well as fixes for other parts of the system. The patch-kit, as well as all relevant information, is available on agate.berkeley.edu (and mirrors) in unofficial/patch-kit, as well as bsd.co.montana.edu in /pub/patch-kit. (archie will likely list other sites as well) It is highly recommended that all users with space for the source code apply the patch-kits as many things that seem broken in 0.1 suddenly start working with the patch-kits. 4.2.2 Shared Libraries A basic and experimental implementation of shared libraries exists for 386bsd. According to the author (Dr. Joerg Lohse, lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de), features are as follows: -No kernel extension is necessary -Shared libraries use the approach used in SysV. Others are also working on different implementations of shared libraries. This code can be obtained from agate.berkeley.edu in ~/unofficial/from-ref/sys.extras. The file is called ??????????. Bill and Lynne have adopted a shared-library implementation based on Dr. Lohse's original work. It will be included in Version 0.2 of 386bsd and should be included in NetBSD about the same time (Yes, I am guessing here). 4.2.3 Sound Blaster Drivers A driver for the Sound Blaster card has been written by Steve Haehnichen (steveh@ucsd.edu) for BSD. Steve Greakines has provided us with the information necessary to get this driver working under 386bsd. Most features of the SB family of cards are supported save some stereo portions of the SBPro cards. The driver is available on agate.berkeley.edu in unofficial/drivers/misc/soundblaster-1.4 4.2.4 Bus Mouse Drivers Fred Cawthorne (fcawth@delphi.umd.edu) has written a busmouse driver for 386bsd. It supposedly works with X386, and the last version we have checked out was labelled as a BETA release. This can be found on agate in unofficial/drivers/misc/busmouse 4.2.5 PPP Support A package to add PPP support to 386bsd can be found on agate in unofficial/drivers/net 4.2.6 re_comp and re_exec library functions As mentioned in section 4.1, re_comp and related functions, such as re_exec, are currently not in the library libc.a Apart from using the rather crude fix listed above, there is another option. Kim Anderson (kim@dde.dk) has provided a patch that will add these to libc.a. You can probably obtain this patch from the author, or you can ftp it from binkley.cs.mcgill.ca in pub/386bsd. 4.2.7 Intel i82586 Ethernet Controller driver Garrett A. Wollman has written a driver for the Intel i83586 Ethernet Controller. The driver is available from agate in unofficial/from-ref/sys.extras. The authors e-mail address is listed as Garrett.Wollman@uvm.edu, attempts to send him mail there have failed. 4.2.8 PC Speaker driver for Nethack Andrew A. Chernov has ported the Nethack PC Speaker driver to 386bsd. It allows the speaker to be controlled by applications. Unfortunately, we are not aware of a site that distributes this, but this patch has been posted a couple of times to the various comp.os.386bsd groups, and the author can be contacted at ache@astral.msk.su -- ------ TSgt Dave Burgess NCOIC AL/Management Information Systems Office Brooks AFB, TX