From won.derick at yahoo.com Fri Aug 1 04:10:10 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Fri Aug 1 04:10:16 2008 Subject: How to reset the OS Watchdog timer in IBM x343? Message-ID: <30555.48676.qm@web45811.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> Hello, I have been searching the internet as to how to enable the OS watchdog timer mechanism in IBM x343. I tried setting the watchdog timer at the BIOS utility, and what I wanted to know is how to reset the timer so as not to reboot the system during normal operation. The box is run by FreeBSD 6.2, and I can't just use the IBM director and/or the IBM director client as basically, it won't run on the said OS. Adding out-band management card will also not help as basically the box doesn't support such. I've learned that the built-in service processor can be accessed using the SMbus driver, but said driver is only for Windows/Linux. However, there should be a way how to access/control the watchdog timer either by using a BIOS interrupt call or a service. I need to send a heartbeat to the watchdog to continuously reset the timer. Thanks and best regards, Won From won.derick at yahoo.com Fri Aug 1 04:12:09 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Fri Aug 1 04:12:16 2008 Subject: How to reset the OS Watchdog timer in IBM x343? Message-ID: <189475.78465.qm@web45801.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> Hello, I have been searching the internet as to how to enable the OS watchdog timer mechanism in IBM x343. I tried setting the watchdog timer at the BIOS utility, and what I wanted to know is how to reset the timer so as not to reboot the system during normal operation. The box is run by FreeBSD 6.2, and I can't just use the IBM director and/or the IBM director client as basically, it won't run on the said OS. Adding out-band management card will also not help as basically the box doesn't support such. I've learned that the built-in service processor can be accessed using the SMbus driver, but said driver is only for Windows/Linux. However, there should be a way how to access/control the watchdog timer either by using a BIOS interrupt call or a service. I need to send a heartbeat to the watchdog to continuously reset the timer. Thanks and best regards, Won From randy at psg.com Wed Aug 6 04:24:30 2008 From: randy at psg.com (Randy Bush) Date: Wed Aug 6 04:24:36 2008 Subject: controller reccos for -current Message-ID: <4899277C.6080101@psg.com> what 10ge will i just love on -current? cx4gb is cheap and on mobos. and the most reliable dumb sata controllers that i will love with zfs? hd controllers are way too sneaky for me to sort out. and i am betting 20tb on this. randy From schrodyn at gmail.com Wed Aug 6 10:58:22 2008 From: schrodyn at gmail.com (schrodyn schrodinger) Date: Wed Aug 6 10:58:29 2008 Subject: Alfa USB AWUS036H Message-ID: <96fc7ef50808060332r57d182c5s5f4f1f81a51ded9e@mail.gmail.com> Hi all, Has anyone here used the Alfa USB AWUS036H 500mW wireless adaptor? I'm looking to know if it is at all supported by FreeBSD or if anyone is developing a driver for this card? There are Linux drivers which work fine for me with Debian but this card is the only device I own not suported by FreeBSD and it's somewhat annoying. Being a great card with lovely range I'm frustrated that it doesn't seem to be supported. If anyone is developing a driver for this I'd be more than happy to test with my adaptors. TIA, Conor. From won.derick at yahoo.com Wed Aug 6 14:24:31 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Wed Aug 6 14:24:38 2008 Subject: Fw: How to reset the OS Watchdog timer in IBM x343? Message-ID: <91453.25519.qm@web45803.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> resending this to the FreeBSD hardware mailing list. hope to receive a favorable response from you all. other ways to solve the problem are highly appreciated. Thanks! ----- Forwarded Message ---- From: Won De Erick To: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org Sent: Friday, August 1, 2008 11:53:31 AM Subject: How to reset the OS Watchdog timer in IBM x343? Hello, I have been searching the internet as to how to enable the OS watchdog timer mechanism in IBM x343. I tried setting the watchdog timer at the BIOS utility, and what I wanted to know is how to reset the timer so as not to reboot the system during normal operation. The box is run by FreeBSD 6.2, and I can't just use the IBM director and/or the IBM director client as basically, it won't run on the said OS. Adding out-band management card will also not help as basically the box doesn't support such. I've learned that the built-in service processor can be accessed using the SMbus driver, but said driver is only for Windows/Linux. However, there should be a way how to access/control the watchdog timer either by using a BIOS interrupt call or a service. I need to send a heartbeat to the watchdog to continuously reset the timer. Thanks and best regards, Won From info at tecodryer.com Wed Aug 6 21:20:41 2008 From: info at tecodryer.com (TECO DRYER) Date: Wed Aug 6 21:20:48 2008 Subject: Teco Industry is in the business of corn, wheat, paddy, and Message-ID: <20080806212040.CA03A8FC15@mx1.freebsd.org> vegetable dr Sender: "TECO DRYER" Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Date: Thu, 7 Aug 2008 00:12:22 +0300 Message-ID: <20080806211222822.0A0F51C23B62221B@erkan-e90bf8060> X-Priority: 3 (Normal) Importance: Normal Teco Industry is in the business of corn, wheat, paddy, and vegetable drying machines and the production and marketing of silo & steel construction. Related to the machines that our company produce; Teco Industry has the representatives in Bulgaria, Albania, Ukraine, Tatarstan, Kazakhstan, Russia, Angola and Indonesia. Our partners in these countries are accepted as the leaders in the steel industry. 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Sales Engineer Erkan AYMAN eayman@tecodryer.com From underligast at gmail.com Thu Aug 7 18:26:38 2008 From: underligast at gmail.com (underligast) Date: Thu Aug 7 18:26:44 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install Message-ID: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> I'm trying to install FreeBSD 7.0 on my IBM eServer x225 (8647-5CG) (1x Xeon 2.8GHz(512KB), 2x 2048MB PC2100 DDR SDRAM (ecc), 2x 74GB 10K rpm U320 HDD, Ultra320 SCSI LSI 1030 controller, 48x CD-ROM, Broadcom NetXtreme 10/100/1000 Integrated Ethernet, ATI Rage XL) The server/drives runs fine under windows 2003 and ubuntu server but the FreeBSD installation just halts. I've tried: CD: disk1 from 6.2, 7.0, CD: bootonly from 7.0-stable, 8.0-current Floppys: 7.0 They all end the same, cds with an infinite loop of numbers, floppys with BTX Halted and a lot of numbers. int=0000000d err=00000000 efl=00010006 eip=000219b2 eax=000219ac ebx=00000000 ecx=c0000080 edx=000587d8 esi=0003e007 edi=00000000 ebp=0008fcbc esp=00099c88 cs=0008 ds=0010 es=0010 fs=0010 gs=0010 ss=0010 cs:eip=0f 32 0d 00 01 00 00 0f-30 0f 20 e0 83 c8 30 0f 22 e0 b8 00 c0 03 00 0f-22 d8 0f 20 c0 0d 00 00 ss:esp=90 95 00 00 00 80 fc 00-00 90 fc 00 07 e0 03 00 00 00 00 00 07 d0 03 00-00 00 00 00 cc 87 05 00 BTX halted The only difference is when i boot from 7.0-STABLE-200804-i386-bootonly.iso, or 8.0-CURRENT-200807-i386-bootonly.iso, then i see BTX loader 1.00 BTX version is 1.02 Consoles: internal video/keyboard BIOS CD is cd0 BIOS drive A: is disk0 Then it stops. If i remove both the harddrives i can boot into the freebsd installer, but as there are no drives, there is nowhere to install. Atleast when i started with the floppys it detected drive1 and 2 before BTX halted.. I asked on questions@ and i was suggested to compile and boot a different kernel on the machine. There are three ways for me to do this, there are IDE-slots in it so i can probably find an old IDE drive somewhere and install. I have access to a rocketraid pci-x card for sata drives (might add yet another problem to the machine) or i can do it with a usb-attached sata/ide drive. I'm guessing the straight IDE approach is the best. What i need to know is how to compile a different kernel, where do i find drivers for the LSI 1030 SCSI-controller? What i see in the old kernel.conf for freebsd 6.0 (or is it 6.2) contains device mpt # LSI-Logic MPT-Fusion device mfi # LSI MegaRAID SAS I have no idea what they are but SAS is serial attached sata isn't it? And if they're uncommented it should mean that they're active and that they're most likely actually already running in the kernel i'm trying to boot from the installation cd? Can i get other drivers/modules or whatever they're called? When i've compiled the new kernel, how do i transfer it to a cd so i can boot the installation with it? I hope i make any sense with my questions. Thanks in advance :) From freebsd at sopwith.solgatos.com Thu Aug 7 19:44:37 2008 From: freebsd at sopwith.solgatos.com (Dieter) Date: Thu Aug 7 19:44:43 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 07 Aug 2008 20:12:27 +0200." <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <200808071943.TAA13102@sopwith.solgatos.com> > I'm trying to install FreeBSD 7.0 on my IBM eServer x225 (8647-5CG) > (1x Xeon 2.8GHz(512KB), 2x 2048MB PC2100 DDR SDRAM (ecc), 2x 74GB 10K rpm > U320 HDD, Ultra320 SCSI LSI 1030 controller, 48x CD-ROM, Broadcom NetXtreme > 10/100/1000 Integrated Ethernet, ATI Rage XL) > Then it stops. > If i remove both the harddrives i can boot into the freebsd installer, > but as there are no drives, there is nowhere to install. > What i need to know is how to compile a different kernel, where do i find > drivers for the LSI 1030 SCSI-controller? What i see in the old kernel.conf > for freebsd 6.0 (or is it 6.2) contains > device mpt # LSI-Logic MPT-Fusion > device mfi # LSI MegaRAID SAS If disconnecting the SCSI drives fixes the problem, I'd guess that you already have a device driver for the SCSI-controller, but it has a problem. You can look into debugging the driver, or you can use a different controller (e.g. PATA/SATA/Firewire/USB or a different SCSI controller) Is 1030 short for 53c1030 ? The 7.0 mpt(4) man page lists "LSI Logic 53c1030, LSI Logic LSI2x320-X (Single and Dual Ultra320 SCSI)" as being supported. > I have no idea what they are but SAS is serial attached sata isn't it? serial attached scsi > And > if they're uncommented it should mean that they're active and that they're > most likely actually already running in the kernel i'm trying to boot from > the installation cd? yes > Can i get other drivers/modules or whatever they're > called? You can uncomment additional drivers and build a new kernel. Or you can load additional drivers after booting with the kldload(8) command (man kldload). Obviously kldload is not useful for drivers that are needed to boot. But if you install to SATA (or whatever), you could boot from SATA and then kldload a custom driver for the LSI 1030 with extra debugging printfs. From ivoras at freebsd.org Thu Aug 7 20:14:14 2008 From: ivoras at freebsd.org (Ivan Voras) Date: Thu Aug 7 20:14:22 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: underligast wrote: > I've tried: > CD: disk1 from 6.2, 7.0, > CD: bootonly from 7.0-stable, 8.0-current > Floppys: 7.0 > > They all end the same, cds with an infinite loop of numbers, floppys with > BTX Halted and a lot of numbers. > > int=0000000d err=00000000 efl=00010006 eip=000219b2 > eax=000219ac ebx=00000000 ecx=c0000080 edx=000587d8 > esi=0003e007 edi=00000000 ebp=0008fcbc esp=00099c88 > cs=0008 ds=0010 es=0010 fs=0010 gs=0010 ss=0010 > cs:eip=0f 32 0d 00 01 00 00 0f-30 0f 20 e0 83 c8 30 0f > 22 e0 b8 00 c0 03 00 0f-22 d8 0f 20 c0 0d 00 00 > ss:esp=90 95 00 00 00 80 fc 00-00 90 fc 00 07 e0 03 00 > 00 00 00 00 07 d0 03 00-00 00 00 00 cc 87 05 00 > BTX halted > > The only difference is when i boot from 7.0-STABLE-200804-i386-bootonly.iso, > or 8.0-CURRENT-200807-i386-bootonly.iso, then i see > > BTX loader 1.00 BTX version is 1.02 > Consoles: internal video/keyboard > BIOS CD is cd0 > BIOS drive A: is disk0 > > Then it stops. > If i remove both the harddrives i can boot into the freebsd installer, > but as there are no drives, there is nowhere to install. Did you clear the configuration of the RAID controller? Is there a way you can completely reset it? Can you blank the drives? > What i need to know is how to compile a different kernel, where do i find > drivers for the LSI 1030 SCSI-controller? What i see in the old kernel.conf > for freebsd 6.0 (or is it 6.2) contains > device mpt # LSI-Logic MPT-Fusion > device mfi # LSI MegaRAID SAS Looking at the source, it seems LSI 1030 is supported by the mpt driver so it should work. Since you have problems with the boot loader, maybe it won't help to build another kernel. A wild guess could be that there's something on the RAID volume that's keeping the boot loader from working. Maybe the partition table is wrong in a subtle way? If you can get the RAID array to work *after* you boot from a FreeBSD installation CD (i.e. boot the machine without the drives, add drives later), try clearing the first megabyte of the array (dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/yourdrive bs=1m count=1). > I have no idea what they are but SAS is serial attached sata isn't it? And > if they're uncommented it should mean that they're active and that they're > most likely actually already running in the kernel i'm trying to boot from > the installation cd? Can i get other drivers/modules or whatever they're > called? > > When i've compiled the new kernel, how do i transfer it to a cd so i can > boot the installation with it? You need to create a bootable CD, at least. Google around, there are several tutorials. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 250 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature Url : http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-hardware/attachments/20080807/0078d91e/signature.pgp From whizzter at gmail.com Thu Aug 7 21:45:01 2008 From: whizzter at gmail.com (Jonas Lund) Date: Thu Aug 7 21:45:07 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <436c7eda0808071444g889a3f2q4a81d75c0deee407@mail.gmail.com> BTX is the "new" bootloader that works in 32bit (it's actually been in for a few releases now). So the kernel has nothing to do with this. I originally subscribed to this list for an almost identical problem. With my rocketraid somethingsomething PCI-SATA2 card with disks connected crashes the BTX loader. Connecting the disks to the internal via epia motherboard solved the problem (I'm using gmirror raid now as apperantly the rocketraid card was just some software thing anyhow). I have a feeling that it might be some combinations of BTX, BIOS and RAID firmware that causes these crashes. FreeBSD being a marginal OS the BTX code just has a chance of triggering odd corner case being a 32bit loader. I haven't kept up with linux but last i checked they use a 16bit bootloader unless the distro has migrated to grub. (Remembering correctly GRUB also crashed on my setup like btx). Never tried booting windows on my setup. / Jonas 2008/8/7 underligast : > I'm trying to install FreeBSD 7.0 on my IBM eServer x225 (8647-5CG) > (1x Xeon 2.8GHz(512KB), 2x 2048MB PC2100 DDR SDRAM (ecc), 2x 74GB 10K rpm > U320 HDD, Ultra320 SCSI LSI 1030 controller, 48x CD-ROM, Broadcom NetXtreme > 10/100/1000 Integrated Ethernet, ATI Rage XL) > > The server/drives runs fine under windows 2003 and ubuntu server but the > FreeBSD installation just halts. > > I've tried: > CD: disk1 from 6.2, 7.0, > CD: bootonly from 7.0-stable, 8.0-current > Floppys: 7.0 > > They all end the same, cds with an infinite loop of numbers, floppys with > BTX Halted and a lot of numbers. > > int=0000000d err=00000000 efl=00010006 eip=000219b2 > eax=000219ac ebx=00000000 ecx=c0000080 edx=000587d8 > esi=0003e007 edi=00000000 ebp=0008fcbc esp=00099c88 > cs=0008 ds=0010 es=0010 fs=0010 gs=0010 ss=0010 > cs:eip=0f 32 0d 00 01 00 00 0f-30 0f 20 e0 83 c8 30 0f > 22 e0 b8 00 c0 03 00 0f-22 d8 0f 20 c0 0d 00 00 > ss:esp=90 95 00 00 00 80 fc 00-00 90 fc 00 07 e0 03 00 > 00 00 00 00 07 d0 03 00-00 00 00 00 cc 87 05 00 > BTX halted > > The only difference is when i boot from 7.0-STABLE-200804-i386-bootonly.iso, > or 8.0-CURRENT-200807-i386-bootonly.iso, then i see > > BTX loader 1.00 BTX version is 1.02 > Consoles: internal video/keyboard > BIOS CD is cd0 > BIOS drive A: is disk0 > > Then it stops. > If i remove both the harddrives i can boot into the freebsd installer, > but as there are no drives, there is nowhere to install. > > Atleast when i started with the floppys it detected drive1 and 2 before BTX > halted.. > I asked on questions@ and i was suggested to compile and boot a different > kernel on the machine. > > There are three ways for me to do this, there are IDE-slots in it so i can > probably find an old IDE drive somewhere and install. I have access to a > rocketraid pci-x card for sata drives (might add yet another problem to the > machine) or i can do it with a usb-attached sata/ide drive. I'm guessing the > straight IDE approach is the best. > > What i need to know is how to compile a different kernel, where do i find > drivers for the LSI 1030 SCSI-controller? What i see in the old kernel.conf > for freebsd 6.0 (or is it 6.2) contains > device mpt # LSI-Logic MPT-Fusion > device mfi # LSI MegaRAID SAS > > I have no idea what they are but SAS is serial attached sata isn't it? And > if they're uncommented it should mean that they're active and that they're > most likely actually already running in the kernel i'm trying to boot from > the installation cd? Can i get other drivers/modules or whatever they're > called? > > When i've compiled the new kernel, how do i transfer it to a cd so i can > boot the installation with it? > > I hope i make any sense with my questions. > > Thanks in advance :) > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" > From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Fri Aug 8 03:56:20 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Fri Aug 8 03:56:26 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <20080808035619.GA73757@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Thu, Aug 07, 2008 at 08:12:27PM +0200, underligast wrote: > I'm trying to install FreeBSD 7.0 on my IBM eServer x225 (8647-5CG) > (1x Xeon 2.8GHz(512KB), 2x 2048MB PC2100 DDR SDRAM (ecc), 2x 74GB 10K rpm > U320 HDD, Ultra320 SCSI LSI 1030 controller, 48x CD-ROM, Broadcom NetXtreme > 10/100/1000 Integrated Ethernet, ATI Rage XL) > > The server/drives runs fine under windows 2003 and ubuntu server but the > FreeBSD installation just halts. > > I've tried: > CD: disk1 from 6.2, 7.0, > CD: bootonly from 7.0-stable, 8.0-current > Floppys: 7.0 > > They all end the same, cds with an infinite loop of numbers, floppys with > BTX Halted and a lot of numbers. > > int=0000000d err=00000000 efl=00010006 eip=000219b2 > eax=000219ac ebx=00000000 ecx=c0000080 edx=000587d8 > esi=0003e007 edi=00000000 ebp=0008fcbc esp=00099c88 > cs=0008 ds=0010 es=0010 fs=0010 gs=0010 ss=0010 > cs:eip=0f 32 0d 00 01 00 00 0f-30 0f 20 e0 83 c8 30 0f > 22 e0 b8 00 c0 03 00 0f-22 d8 0f 20 c0 0d 00 00 > ss:esp=90 95 00 00 00 80 fc 00-00 90 fc 00 07 e0 03 00 > 00 00 00 00 07 d0 03 00-00 00 00 00 cc 87 05 00 > BTX halted > > The only difference is when i boot from 7.0-STABLE-200804-i386-bootonly.iso, > or 8.0-CURRENT-200807-i386-bootonly.iso, then i see > > BTX loader 1.00 BTX version is 1.02 > Consoles: internal video/keyboard > BIOS CD is cd0 > BIOS drive A: is disk0 > > Then it stops. > If i remove both the harddrives i can boot into the freebsd installer, > but as there are no drives, there is nowhere to install. > > Atleast when i started with the floppys it detected drive1 and 2 before BTX > halted.. > I asked on questions@ and i was suggested to compile and boot a different > kernel on the machine. > > There are three ways for me to do this, there are IDE-slots in it so i can > probably find an old IDE drive somewhere and install. I have access to a > rocketraid pci-x card for sata drives (might add yet another problem to the > machine) or i can do it with a usb-attached sata/ide drive. I'm guessing the > straight IDE approach is the best. > > What i need to know is how to compile a different kernel, where do i find > drivers for the LSI 1030 SCSI-controller? What i see in the old kernel.conf > for freebsd 6.0 (or is it 6.2) contains > device mpt # LSI-Logic MPT-Fusion > device mfi # LSI MegaRAID SAS > > I have no idea what they are but SAS is serial attached sata isn't it? And > if they're uncommented it should mean that they're active and that they're > most likely actually already running in the kernel i'm trying to boot from > the installation cd? Can i get other drivers/modules or whatever they're > called? > > When i've compiled the new kernel, how do i transfer it to a cd so i can > boot the installation with it? > > I hope i make any sense with my questions. > > Thanks in advance :) CC'ing John Baldwin on this, as he has knowledge of BTX's internals. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Fri Aug 8 03:58:24 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Fri Aug 8 03:58:31 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <436c7eda0808071444g889a3f2q4a81d75c0deee407@mail.gmail.com> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> <436c7eda0808071444g889a3f2q4a81d75c0deee407@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <20080808035824.GB73757@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Thu, Aug 07, 2008 at 11:44:58PM +0200, Jonas Lund wrote: > BTX is the "new" bootloader that works in 32bit (it's actually been in > for a few releases now). So the kernel has nothing to do with this. > > I originally subscribed to this list for an almost identical problem. > With my rocketraid somethingsomething PCI-SATA2 card with disks > connected crashes the BTX loader. Connecting the disks to the internal > via epia motherboard solved the problem (I'm using gmirror raid now as > apperantly the rocketraid card was just some software thing anyhow). > > I have a feeling that it might be some combinations of BTX, BIOS and > RAID firmware that causes these crashes. FreeBSD being a marginal OS > the BTX code just has a chance of triggering odd corner case being a > 32bit loader. > > I haven't kept up with linux but last i checked they use a 16bit > bootloader unless the distro has migrated to grub. (Remembering > correctly GRUB also crashed on my setup like btx). > Never tried booting windows on my setup. Please be aware of the following CVS commit, which was 4 months ago (look at the top 3 commits shown, for RELENG_[467] branches): http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/boot/i386/btx/btx/Makefile -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From jhb at freebsd.org Fri Aug 8 13:51:22 2008 From: jhb at freebsd.org (John Baldwin) Date: Fri Aug 8 13:51:28 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <200808080947.35239.jhb@freebsd.org> On Thursday 07 August 2008 02:12:27 pm underligast wrote: > I'm trying to install FreeBSD 7.0 on my IBM eServer x225 (8647-5CG) > (1x Xeon 2.8GHz(512KB), 2x 2048MB PC2100 DDR SDRAM (ecc), 2x 74GB 10K rpm > U320 HDD, Ultra320 SCSI LSI 1030 controller, 48x CD-ROM, Broadcom NetXtreme > 10/100/1000 Integrated Ethernet, ATI Rage XL) > > The server/drives runs fine under windows 2003 and ubuntu server but the > FreeBSD installation just halts. > > I've tried: > CD: disk1 from 6.2, 7.0, > CD: bootonly from 7.0-stable, 8.0-current > Floppys: 7.0 > > They all end the same, cds with an infinite loop of numbers, floppys with > BTX Halted and a lot of numbers. > > int=0000000d err=00000000 efl=00010006 eip=000219b2 > eax=000219ac ebx=00000000 ecx=c0000080 edx=000587d8 > esi=0003e007 edi=00000000 ebp=0008fcbc esp=00099c88 > cs=0008 ds=0010 es=0010 fs=0010 gs=0010 ss=0010 > cs:eip=0f 32 0d 00 01 00 00 0f-30 0f 20 e0 83 c8 30 0f > 22 e0 b8 00 c0 03 00 0f-22 d8 0f 20 c0 0d 00 00 > ss:esp=90 95 00 00 00 80 fc 00-00 90 fc 00 07 e0 03 00 > 00 00 00 00 07 d0 03 00-00 00 00 00 cc 87 05 00 > BTX halted So here your BIOS is trying to read an MSR from the processor, but apparently an invalid MSR. Oh, it's reading EFER, and this is actually in the loader. When I've seen this in the past it was due to trying to boot FreeBSD/amd64 on a 32-bit CPU. Are you sure you are using i386 boot media rather than amd64? > The only difference is when i boot from > 7.0-STABLE-200804-i386-bootonly.iso, or > 8.0-CURRENT-200807-i386-bootonly.iso, then i see > > BTX loader 1.00 BTX version is 1.02 > Consoles: internal video/keyboard > BIOS CD is cd0 > BIOS drive A: is disk0 > > Then it stops. Try to fetch 7.0-RELEASE i386 again and see if that works. Are you using a serial console when you see the hangs or a VGA console? -- John Baldwin From whizzter at gmail.com Fri Aug 8 17:04:18 2008 From: whizzter at gmail.com (Jonas Lund) Date: Fri Aug 8 17:04:24 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <200808080947.35239.jhb@freebsd.org> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> <200808080947.35239.jhb@freebsd.org> Message-ID: <436c7eda0808081004j5e557f5ftc24b4356f8de4cf3@mail.gmail.com> (Copy of my old message from a few months ago is below the dotted line) The motherboard in my case is an EPIA EN12000EG The RR card is in a box now and i could send it somewhere if someone wants to experiment. The Motherboard is still in use tho. --------------------------------- The 6.2-Release-i386-bootonly.iso installer never gets past the BTX loader when the RocketRaid 1720 card is installed. Removing the card makes the boot process work. HighPoint claims compability with 6.x (6.2 is listed at their page) with a binary driver. However as the driver never has the chance to be loaded i have no idea. The error is the following. int=0000 000D err=0 efl=0003 0213 eip=0000 FFFF eax=0000 FFFF EBX=0000 0700 ecx=edx=0 esi=0000 03d8 edi=0000 ffd4 ebp=0000 FFFF esp=0000 ffd6 cs=d800 ds=es=9350 fs=gs=0 ss=9350 cs:eip = fffff ........... ffff (all fff...) ss:esp = ffff ........... ffff (as above) BTX HALTED From jhb at freebsd.org Fri Aug 8 18:29:51 2008 From: jhb at freebsd.org (John Baldwin) Date: Fri Aug 8 18:29:58 2008 Subject: IBM eServer x225 - LSI 1030 SCSI - BTX Halted / infinite loop - Need help booting recompiled kernel so i can install In-Reply-To: <436c7eda0808081004j5e557f5ftc24b4356f8de4cf3@mail.gmail.com> References: <3424e810808071112m60682d82w341a19149460f0a2@mail.gmail.com> <200808080947.35239.jhb@freebsd.org> <436c7eda0808081004j5e557f5ftc24b4356f8de4cf3@mail.gmail.com> Message-ID: <200808081426.36579.jhb@freebsd.org> On Friday 08 August 2008 01:04:16 pm Jonas Lund wrote: > (Copy of my old message from a few months ago is below the dotted line) > The motherboard in my case is an EPIA EN12000EG > The RR card is in a box now and i could send it somewhere if someone > wants to experiment. > The Motherboard is still in use tho. This is quite a different error. The recent changes to BTX may possible resolve this for you if the BIOS was buggy when called from vm86 mode. > --------------------------------- > The 6.2-Release-i386-bootonly.iso installer never gets past the BTX > loader when the RocketRaid 1720 card is installed. Removing the card > makes the boot process work. > > HighPoint claims compability with 6.x (6.2 is listed at their page) > with a binary driver. However as the driver never has the chance to be > loaded i have no idea. > > The error is the following. > > int=0000 000D err=0 efl=0003 0213 eip=0000 FFFF > eax=0000 FFFF EBX=0000 0700 ecx=edx=0 > esi=0000 03d8 edi=0000 ffd4 ebp=0000 FFFF esp=0000 ffd6 > cs=d800 ds=es=9350 fs=gs=0 ss=9350 > cs:eip = fffff ........... ffff (all fff...) > ss:esp = ffff ........... ffff (as above) > BTX HALTED > -- John Baldwin From freebsd at razik.name Sun Aug 10 22:44:29 2008 From: freebsd at razik.name (Lukas Razik) Date: Sun Aug 10 22:44:45 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC Message-ID: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> Hello! I've a GigaByte GA-X48-DQ6 Motherboard with a "RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC" and I've read that 7.0-RELEASE / amd64 should recognize these cards (by the "re" driver) but it doesn't in my case. #uname -a : FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 #pciconf -lv : [...] none2@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0xe0001458 chip=0x816810ec rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Realtek Semiconductor' device = 'RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC' class = network subclass = ethernet [...] So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? Regards and Many Thanks for your help! Lukas From venture37 at hotmail.com Sun Aug 10 23:21:41 2008 From: venture37 at hotmail.com (Sevan / Venture37) Date: Sun Aug 10 23:21:47 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> Message-ID: a working driver which needs testing is available in 7-STABLE _________________________________________________________________ Win New York holidays with Kellogg?s & Live Search http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/107571440/direct/01/ From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Sun Aug 10 23:44:21 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Sun Aug 10 23:44:27 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> Message-ID: <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:00:58AM +0200, Lukas Razik wrote: > Hello! > > I've a GigaByte GA-X48-DQ6 Motherboard with a "RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit > Ethernet NIC" and I've read that 7.0-RELEASE / amd64 should recognize these > cards (by the "re" driver) but it doesn't in my case. > > So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? Please download a FreeBSD 7.0-STABLE snapshot CD and try it. The re(4) maintainer has added support for many different sub-revisions of this NIC (read: same model number, but a completely different hardware revision) since the release of 7.0-RELEASE. ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200808/ (Or a mirror of your choice, e.g. ftp4.freebsd.org, etc.) -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From pyunyh at gmail.com Mon Aug 11 02:27:44 2008 From: pyunyh at gmail.com (Pyun YongHyeon) Date: Mon Aug 11 02:27:50 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> Message-ID: <20080811015528.GB50045@cdnetworks.co.kr> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:00:58AM +0200, Lukas Razik wrote: > Hello! > > I've a GigaByte GA-X48-DQ6 Motherboard with a "RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit > Ethernet NIC" and I've read that 7.0-RELEASE / amd64 should recognize these > cards (by the "re" driver) but it doesn't in my case. > > #uname -a : > FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 > root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 > > #pciconf -lv : > [...] > none2@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0xe0001458 chip=0x816810ec > rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 > vendor = 'Realtek Semiconductor' > device = 'RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC' > class = network > subclass = ethernet > [...] > > So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? > It looks like your hardware would be second generation of PCIe RTL8168/8111. Try latest 7 stable which might have support for your hardware. > Regards and Many Thanks for your help! > Lukas -- Regards, Pyun YongHyeon From michael at fuckner.net Mon Aug 11 15:43:41 2008 From: michael at fuckner.net (Michael Fuckner) Date: Mon Aug 11 15:43:48 2008 Subject: FreeBSD-AMD64 on Xeon MP Message-ID: <48A059CD.10108@fuckner.net> Hi all, I try to run FreeBSD-7-AMD64 on a Quad Xeon (Xeon MP 7320) and 32GB RAM. The Board is a X7QC3 by supermicro and the installation is done on another system, updated and plugged to this system. So I have a drive with 7-STABLE compiled today. The last line I see from dmesg is vga0- then the system freezes. Anyone using a similar configuration or knows what could be wrong? I still have some days left to play with it, before this box gets shipped to the customer. Regards, Michael! From simon at optinet.com Mon Aug 11 16:14:17 2008 From: simon at optinet.com (Simon) Date: Mon Aug 11 16:14:23 2008 Subject: FreeBSD-AMD64 on Xeon MP In-Reply-To: <48A059CD.10108@fuckner.net> Message-ID: <20080811161416.BFEEA8FC12@mx1.freebsd.org> Are you trying to run a generic kernel, if not, have you tried? -Simon On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 17:25:01 +0200, Michael Fuckner wrote: >Hi all, >I try to run FreeBSD-7-AMD64 on a Quad Xeon (Xeon MP 7320) and 32GB RAM. >The Board is a X7QC3 by supermicro and the installation is done on >another system, updated and plugged to this system. So I have a drive >with 7-STABLE compiled today. >The last line I see from dmesg is vga0- then the system freezes. >Anyone using a similar configuration or knows what could be wrong? I >still have some days left to play with it, before this box gets shipped >to the customer. >Regards, > Michael! >_______________________________________________ >freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list >http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware >To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" From michael at fuckner.net Mon Aug 11 16:28:29 2008 From: michael at fuckner.net (Michael Fuckner) Date: Mon Aug 11 16:28:36 2008 Subject: FreeBSD-AMD64 on Xeon MP In-Reply-To: <20080811161416.BFEEA8FC12@mx1.freebsd.org> References: <20080811161416.BFEEA8FC12@mx1.freebsd.org> Message-ID: <48A0688E.60600@fuckner.net> Simon wrote: > Are you trying to run a generic kernel, if not, have you tried? > > -Simon > Yes, I am trying to boot GENERIC. Michael! From ronan at artful.net Mon Aug 11 16:55:20 2008 From: ronan at artful.net (Ronan Kerambrun) Date: Mon Aug 11 16:55:27 2008 Subject: FreeBSD and DELL PowerEdge Blade servers. Message-ID: <48A06725.8070204@artful.net> Hi, I am not able to run FreeBSD 7 (amd64) on Dell Blade PE M600. It simply Freeze during the boot process, before launching the FreeBSD installer. It is a problem because it is the new serie of the Dell servers, they only sell this serie now. Cheers, ronan. From freebsd at razik.name Mon Aug 11 20:21:10 2008 From: freebsd at razik.name (Lukas Razik) Date: Mon Aug 11 20:21:17 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> Hello Jeremy, Sevan and Pyun! Thanks for your fast answers! I'm happy to see that it could work with the newest 7.0-STABLE tree because I don't want to buy a new NIC which works with FreeBSD. I use FreeBSD for 90% (for some years now) and therefore I also bought a 3ware 8006-2LP Hardware- RAID controller and will buy a second HighPoint 3120 HW-RAID controller (which is less expensive) because I had bad experiences with the Fake- (or Pseudo-)RAID controllers like the "normal" onboard controllers and others (Promise FastTrak 4310 etc.). Now I also have troubles with FreeBSD and the ICH9R SATA-controller and it's RAID functionality. So I don't want to pay more money for special hardware which works with FreBSD... BTW: Where can I read changes to the drivers (like this one) to be up to date? Is FreeBSD's CVS Repository the only ressource? It seems as if there's no new snapshot for the amd64 arch: ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200808/ So I will try 200807 or do you have a better idea? Maybe I can't test it in the next three weeks :-( but when I come back to home then it will be the first I do! :-) Regards and thanks again! Lukas On Monday 11 August 2008 01:44:21 Jeremy Chadwick wrote: > On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:00:58AM +0200, Lukas Razik wrote: > > Hello! > > > > I've a GigaByte GA-X48-DQ6 Motherboard with a "RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit > > Ethernet NIC" and I've read that 7.0-RELEASE / amd64 should recognize > > these cards (by the "re" driver) but it doesn't in my case. > > > > So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? > > Please download a FreeBSD 7.0-STABLE snapshot CD and try it. The re(4) > maintainer has added support for many different sub-revisions of this > NIC (read: same model number, but a completely different hardware > revision) since the release of 7.0-RELEASE. > > ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200808/ > > (Or a mirror of your choice, e.g. ftp4.freebsd.org, etc.) On Monday 11 August 2008 01:09:40 Sevan / Venture37 wrote: > a working driver which needs testing is available in 7-STABLE > > _________________________________________________________________ > Win New York holidays with Kellogg?s & Live Search > http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/107571440/direct/01/___________________________ >____________________ freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" On Monday 11 August 2008 03:55:28 Pyun YongHyeon wrote: > > So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? > > It looks like your hardware would be second generation of PCIe > RTL8168/8111. Try latest 7 stable which might have support for your > hardware. > From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Mon Aug 11 20:55:31 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Mon Aug 11 20:55:38 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> Message-ID: <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:21:00PM +0200, Lukas Razik wrote: > Hello Jeremy, Sevan and Pyun! > > Thanks for your fast answers! > I'm happy to see that it could work with the newest 7.0-STABLE tree because I > don't want to buy a new NIC which works with FreeBSD. Be aware that Realtek NICs have a history of being incredibly buggy and having very odd engineering design flaws. I go to great lengths to avoid them on motherboards; I agree an OS should work with it, but based on the pain I've seen Yong-Hyeon (driver maintainer) go through when it comes to hardware revisions or general oddities, I often cringe at the idea of using a Realtek NIC in any environment I have control over. (I've blogged about how Realtek more or less dominates the consumer market with their NIC/PHYs, which is quite scary considering the bugs even in their Windows drivers.) I am very, very thankful we have an active rl(4) and re(4) driver maintainer, though. :-) > I use FreeBSD for 90% > (for some years now) and therefore I also bought a 3ware 8006-2LP Hardware- > RAID controller and will buy a second HighPoint 3120 HW-RAID controller (which > is less expensive) because I had bad experiences with the Fake- (or > Pseudo-)RAID controllers like the "normal" onboard controllers and others > (Promise FastTrak 4310 etc.). I have a tendency to like Intel (and occasionally nVidia, but highly prefer Intel) ICH controllers simply because Intel has fantastic product errata, and the ICH controllers have performed quite well over the years. They're also used on server hardware (read: Supermicro). But in this day and age, one of the best SATA controllers for FreeBSD is an Areca controller. They're somewhat expensive (comparatively), but the performance is apparently stunning, combined with decent FreeBSD drivers that utilise CAM and da(4) (yes, despite the disks being SATA). Every time people mention them on the lists, the response is the same: amazing performance, and really good driver + administrative support (e.g. software administrative utilities). I do wish Areca made a less expensive controller with less features, intended for "tech-savvy" consumer use, in the US$125 or less price range. > Now I also have troubles with FreeBSD and the ICH9R SATA-controller > and it's RAID functionality. I'm not surprised. FreeBSD's Intel MatrixRAID support is very dangerous, I would not recommend using it if your data matters. There are a few PRs which contain patches that address some of the concerns, but out-of-the-box, I'd recommend avoiding Intel MatrixRAID on FreeBSD. > So I don't want to pay more money for special hardware which works with > FreBSD... > > BTW: > Where can I read changes to the drivers (like this one) to be up to date? > Is FreeBSD's CVS Repository the only ressource? > > It seems as if there's no new snapshot for the amd64 arch: > ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200808/ As far as I know, CVS is the only place you'll get explanations. It would be a daunting task to document every little change to snapshots. The ISO/CD snapshots are automatically generated, AFAIK. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From jhb at freebsd.org Mon Aug 11 21:23:58 2008 From: jhb at freebsd.org (John Baldwin) Date: Mon Aug 11 21:24:04 2008 Subject: FreeBSD-AMD64 on Xeon MP In-Reply-To: <48A059CD.10108@fuckner.net> References: <48A059CD.10108@fuckner.net> Message-ID: <200808111557.55101.jhb@freebsd.org> On Monday 11 August 2008 11:25:01 am Michael Fuckner wrote: > Hi all, > > I try to run FreeBSD-7-AMD64 on a Quad Xeon (Xeon MP 7320) and 32GB RAM. > The Board is a X7QC3 by supermicro and the installation is done on > another system, updated and plugged to this system. So I have a drive > with 7-STABLE compiled today. > > The last line I see from dmesg is vga0- then the system freezes. > > Anyone using a similar configuration or knows what could be wrong? I > still have some days left to play with it, before this box gets shipped > to the customer. It is probably waiting for a config intr hook to complete. rwatson@ recently added some code to HEAD to help with debugging hangs there. That patch probably applies directly to 7.x and would be helpful in determining what is hanging. -- John Baldwin From ivoras at freebsd.org Mon Aug 11 22:19:50 2008 From: ivoras at freebsd.org (Ivan Voras) Date: Mon Aug 11 22:19:56 2008 Subject: FreeBSD-AMD64 on Xeon MP In-Reply-To: <48A059CD.10108@fuckner.net> References: <48A059CD.10108@fuckner.net> Message-ID: Michael Fuckner wrote: > Hi all, > > I try to run FreeBSD-7-AMD64 on a Quad Xeon (Xeon MP 7320) and 32GB RAM. > The Board is a X7QC3 by supermicro and the installation is done on > another system, updated and plugged to this system. So I have a drive > with 7-STABLE compiled today. > > The last line I see from dmesg is vga0- then the system freezes. > > Anyone using a similar configuration or knows what could be wrong? I > still have some days left to play with it, before this box gets shipped > to the customer. This looks very, very similar to what I had once, on similar hardware (4x Xeon 7xxx, SuperMicro). I didn't find a solution and didn't bother since the box isn't intended for FreeBSD. I did find (by accident) a curious workaround: I booted Linux (I used Ubuntu 8.04 amd64 LiveCD - just to boot it, without installing), then rebooted and booted FreeBSD - worked every time, but it's obviously not a long-term solution. If you can also verify that this "solves" the problem, then someone might work with you to produce a patch. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 250 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature Url : http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-hardware/attachments/20080811/0254ec61/signature.pgp From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Mon Aug 11 23:06:40 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Mon Aug 11 23:06:48 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 Message-ID: Hi to all. I've finally convinced my IT manager to replace a MSFT Windows Server Virtual Server host with a FreeBSD 7 jail host. Obviously, before proposing this change I checked that our hardware was supported by the FreeBSD platform, but as soon as I boot the FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 CD-ROM the systems hangs! I also tried the i386 version of the same release experiencing the same trouble. By using a 6.3-RELEASE CD-ROM all works well (excluding some warnings still showing during the boot). I compared the source files of the driver arcmsr(4) without finding any real difference: both of them are at the 1.20.00.15 revision, but I'm not a very experienced FreeBSD sysadmin (yet!), and I need at least your opinions about this trouble! I think the most complete set of informations I can give you are the verbose boot logs of both the 6.3 and 7.0 releases (sorry for the log post), but I'm ready to submit whatever data you want... please help me to put Windows out of my datacenter! :) ############ FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 ############ OK boot -v SMAP type=01 base=0000000000000000 len=000000000009fc00 SMAP type=02 base=000000000009fc00 len=0000000000000400 SMAP type=02 base=00000000000e8000 len=0000000000018000 SMAP type=01 base=0000000000100000 len=00000000bfef0000 SMAP type=03 base=00000000bfff0000 len=000000000000f000 SMAP type=04 base=00000000bffff000 len=0000000000001000 SMAP type=02 base=00000000ff780000 len=0000000000880000 SMAP type=01 base=0000000100000000 len=0000000040000000 Copyright (c) 1992-2008 The FreeBSD Project. Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation. FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC Preloaded elf kernel "/boot/kernel/kernel" at 0xffffffff80fc8000. Preloaded mfs_root "/boot/mfsroot" at 0xffffffff80fc81b8. Calibrating clock(s) ... i8254 clock: 1192921 Hz CLK_USE_I8254_CALIBRATION not specified - using default frequency Timecounter "i8254" frequency 1193182 Hz quality 0 Calibrating TSC clock ... TSC clock: 2193768516 Hz CPU: Dual Core AMD Opteron(tm) Processor 275 (2193.77-MHz K8-class CPU) Origin = "AuthenticAMD" Id = 0x20f12 Stepping = 2 Features=0x178bfbff Features2=0x1 AMD Features=0xe2500800 AMD Features2=0x3 Cores per package: 2 L1 2MB data TLB: 8 entries, fully associative L1 2MB instruction TLB: 8 entries, fully associative L1 4KB data TLB: 32 entries, fully associative L1 4KB instruction TLB: 32 entries, fully associative L1 data cache: 64 kbytes, 64 bytes/line, 1 lines/tag, 2-way associative L1 instruction cache: 64 kbytes, 64 bytes/line, 1 lines/tag, 2-way associative L2 2MB unified TLB: 0 entries, disabled/not present L2 4KB data TLB: 512 entries, 4-way associative L2 4KB instruction TLB: 512 entries, 4-way associative L2 unified cache: 1024 kbytes, 64 bytes/line, 1 lines/tag, 16-way associative usable memory = 4277948416 (4079 MB) Physical memory chunk(s): 0x0000000000001000 - 0x000000000009bfff, 634880 bytes (155 pages) 0x00000000010c6000 - 0x00000000b6997fff, 3045924864 bytes (743634 pages) 0x0000000100000000 - 0x000000013ffeffff, 1073676288 bytes (262128 pages) avail memory = 4108828672 (3918 MB) ACPI APIC Table: INTR: Adding local APIC 1 as a target INTR: Adding local APIC 2 as a target INTR: Adding local APIC 3 as a target FreeBSD/SMP: Multiprocessor System Detected: 4 CPUs cpu0 (BSP): APIC ID: 0 cpu1 (AP): APIC ID: 1 cpu2 (AP): APIC ID: 2 cpu3 (AP): APIC ID: 3 APIC: CPU 0 has ACPI ID 1 APIC: CPU 1 has ACPI ID 2 APIC: CPU 2 has ACPI ID 3 APIC: CPU 3 has ACPI ID 4 ACPI: RSDP @ 0x0xf9850/0x0014 (v 0 ACPIAM) ACPI: RSDT @ 0x0xbfff0000/0x0034 (v 1 A M I OEMRSDT 0x02000614 MSFT 0x00000097) ACPI: FACP @ 0x0xbfff0200/0x0081 (v 2 A M I OEMFACP 0x02000614 MSFT 0x00000097) ACPI: DSDT @ 0x0xbfff0460/0x3470 (v 1 H8DA8 H8DA8010 0x00000000 INTL 0x02002026) ACPI: FACS @ 0x0xbffff000/0x0040 ACPI: APIC @ 0x0xbfff0380/0x0084 (v 1 A M I OEMAPIC 0x02000614 MSFT 0x00000097) ACPI: OEMB @ 0x0xbffff040/0x0041 (v 1 A M I OEMBIOS 0x02000614 MSFT 0x00000097) ACPI: SRAT @ 0x0xbfff38d0/0x0110 (v 1 A M I OEMSRAT 0x02000614 MSFT 0x00000097) MADT: Found IO APIC ID 4, Interrupt 0 at 0xfec00000 ioapic0: Routing external 8259A's -> intpin 0 MADT: Found IO APIC ID 5, Interrupt 24 at 0xfebfe000 MADT: Found IO APIC ID 6, Interrupt 28 at 0xfebff000 MADT: Interrupt override: source 0, irq 2 ioapic0: Routing IRQ 0 -> intpin 2 MADT: Interrupt override: source 0, irq 2 ioapic0: Routing IRQ 0 -> intpin 2 MADT: Forcing active-low polarity and level trigger for SCI ioapic0: intpin 9 polarity: low ioapic0: intpin 9 trigger: level ioapic0 irqs 0-23 on motherboard ioapic1 irqs 24-27 on motherboard ioapic2 irqs 28-31 on motherboard cpu0 BSP: ID: 0x00000000 VER: 0x00040010 LDR: 0x00000000 DFR: 0xffffffff lint0: 0x00010700 lint1: 0x00000400 TPR: 0x00000000 SVR: 0x000001ff timer: 0x000100ef therm: 0x00000000 err: 0x0001000f pcm: 0x00010000 ath_rate: version 1.2 wlan_amrr: wlan: null: random: nfslock: pseudo-device kbd: new array size 4 kbd1 at kbdmux0 mem: io: ath_hal: 0.9.20.3 (AR5210, AR5211, AR5212, RF5111, RF5112, RF2413, RF5413) hptrr: HPT RocketRAID controller driver v1.1 (Feb 24 2008 10:34:18) acpi0: on motherboard ioapic0: routing intpin 9 (ISA IRQ 9) to vector 48 acpi0: [MPSAFE] acpi0: [ITHREAD] acpi0: Power Button (fixed) AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.GOLA.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 10 func 0 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.GOLB.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 11 func 0 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.SBRG.LPCR -> bus 0 dev 7 func 0 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.IDE0.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 7 func 1 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.PMF_.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 7 func 3 acpi0: reservation of 0, a0000 (3) failed acpi0: reservation of 100000, bff00000 (3) failed ACPI timer: 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 -> 10 Timecounter "ACPI-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 1000 acpi_timer0: port 0x5008-0x500b on acpi0 pci_link0: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 5 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 5 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 pci_link1: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 11 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 11 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 pci_link2: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 9 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 9 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 pci_link3: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 10 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 10 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 cpu0: on acpi0 cpu0: switching to generic Cx mode acpi_throttle0: on cpu0 acpi_throttle0: P_CNT from P_BLK 0x5010 powernow0: on cpu0 cpu1: on acpi0 powernow1: on cpu1 cpu2: on acpi0 powernow2: on cpu2 cpu3: on acpi0 powernow3: on cpu3 pcib0: port 0xcf8-0xcff on acpi0 pci0: on pcib0 pci0: domain=0, physical bus=0 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7460, revid=0x07 domain=0, bus=0, slot=6, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x0b (2750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7468, revid=0x05 domain=0, bus=0, slot=7, func=0 class=06-01-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x000f, statreg=0x0220, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7469, revid=0x03 domain=0, bus=0, slot=7, func=1 class=01-01-8a, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0005, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x20 (960 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) map[20]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xffa0, size 4, enabled found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x746a, revid=0x02 domain=0, bus=0, slot=7, func=2 class=0c-05-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0001, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=d, irq=10 map[10]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xcc00, size 5, enabled pcib0: matched entry for 0.7.INTD pcib0: slot 7 INTD hardwired to IRQ 19 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x746b, revid=0x05 domain=0, bus=0, slot=7, func=3 class=06-80-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0280, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7450, revid=0x13 domain=0, bus=0, slot=10, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0116, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x05 (1250 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7451, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=0, slot=10, func=1 class=08-00-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0006, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfebfe000, size 12, enabled found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7450, revid=0x13 domain=0, bus=0, slot=11, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x05 (1250 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7451, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=0, slot=11, func=1 class=08-00-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0006, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfebff000, size 12, enabled found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1100, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=24, func=0 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0010, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1101, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=24, func=1 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1102, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=24, func=2 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1103, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=24, func=3 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1100, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=25, func=0 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0010, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1101, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=25, func=1 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1102, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=25, func=2 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1103, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=0, slot=25, func=3 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) pcib1: at device 6.0 on pci0 pcib1: domain 0 pcib1: secondary bus 5 pcib1: subordinate bus 5 pcib1: I/O decode 0xb000-0xbfff pcib1: memory decode 0xfca00000-0xfeafffff pcib1: no prefetched decode pci5: on pcib1 pci5: domain=0, physical bus=5 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7464, revid=0x0b domain=0, bus=5, slot=0, func=0 class=0c-03-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0280, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x50 (20000 ns) intpin=d, irq=10 map[10]: type Memory, range 32, base 0xfeafe000, size 12, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfeafe000-0xfeafefff: good pcib1: matched entry for 5.0.INTD pcib1: slot 0 INTD hardwired to IRQ 19 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7464, revid=0x0b domain=0, bus=5, slot=0, func=1 class=0c-03-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0280, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x50 (20000 ns) intpin=d, irq=10 map[10]: type Memory, range 32, base 0xfeafd000, size 12, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfeafd000-0xfeafdfff: good pcib1: matched entry for 5.0.INTD pcib1: slot 0 INTD hardwired to IRQ 19 found-> vendor=0x1002, dev=0x4752, revid=0x27 domain=0, bus=5, slot=4, func=0 class=03-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0087, statreg=0x0290, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x08 (2000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=11 powerspec 2 supports D0 D1 D2 D3 current D0 map[10]: type Memory, range 32, base 0xfd000000, size 24, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfd000000-0xfdffffff: good map[14]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xb800, size 8, enabled pcib1: requested I/O range 0xb800-0xb8ff: in range map[18]: type Memory, range 32, base 0xfeaff000, size 12, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfeaff000-0xfeafffff: good pcib1: matched entry for 5.4.INTA pcib1: slot 4 INTA hardwired to IRQ 17 ohci0: mem 0xfeafe000-0xfeafefff irq 19 at device 0.0 on pci5 ohci0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfeafe000 ioapic0: routing intpin 19 (PCI IRQ 19) to vector 49 ohci0: [GIANT-LOCKED] ohci0: [ITHREAD] usb0: OHCI version 1.0, legacy support usb0: on ohci0 usb0: USB revision 1.0 uhub0: on usb0 uhub0: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered ohci1: mem 0xfeafd000-0xfeafdfff irq 19 at device 0.1 on pci5 ohci1: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfeafd000 ohci1: [GIANT-LOCKED] ohci1: [ITHREAD] usb1: OHCI version 1.0, legacy support usb1: on ohci1 usb1: USB revision 1.0 uhub1: on usb1 uhub1: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered vgapci0: port 0xb800-0xb8ff mem 0xfd000000-0xfdffffff,0xfeaff000-0xfeafffff irq 17 at device 4.0 on pci5 isab0: at device 7.0 on pci0 isa0: on isab0 atapci0: port 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6,0x170-0x177,0x376,0xffa0-0xffaf at device 7.1 on pci0 atapci0: Reserved 0x10 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xffa0 ata0: on atapci0 atapci0: Reserved 0x8 bytes for rid 0x10 type 4 at 0x1f0 atapci0: Reserved 0x1 bytes for rid 0x14 type 4 at 0x3f6 ata0: reset tp1 mask=03 ostat0=60 ostat1=70 ata0: stat0=0x20 err=0x20 lsb=0x20 msb=0x20 ata0: stat1=0x30 err=0x30 lsb=0x30 msb=0x30 ata0: reset tp2 stat0=20 stat1=30 devices=0x0 ioapic0: routing intpin 14 (ISA IRQ 14) to vector 50 ata0: [MPSAFE] ata0: [ITHREAD] ata1: on atapci0 atapci0: Reserved 0x8 bytes for rid 0x18 type 4 at 0x170 atapci0: Reserved 0x1 bytes for rid 0x1c type 4 at 0x376 ata1: reset tp1 mask=03 ostat0=50 ostat1=00 ata1: stat0=0x00 err=0x01 lsb=0x14 msb=0xeb ata1: stat1=0x00 err=0x00 lsb=0x00 msb=0x00 ata1: reset tp2 stat0=00 stat1=00 devices=0x4 ioapic0: routing intpin 15 (ISA IRQ 15) to vector 51 ata1: [MPSAFE] ata1: [ITHREAD] pci0: at device 7.2 (no driver attached) pci0: at device 7.3 (no driver attached) pcib2: at device 10.0 on pci0 pcib2: domain 0 pcib2: secondary bus 4 pcib2: subordinate bus 4 pcib2: I/O decode 0x0-0x0 pcib2: memory decode 0xfc900000-0xfc9fffff pcib2: prefetched decode 0xfc500000-0xfc5fffff pci4: on pcib2 pci4: domain=0, physical bus=4 found-> vendor=0x14e4, dev=0x1648, revid=0x10 domain=0, bus=4, slot=5, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0116, statreg=0x02b0, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x40 (16000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=9 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 8 messages, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfc9f0000, size 16, enabled pcib2: requested memory range 0xfc9f0000-0xfc9fffff: good pcib2: matched entry for 4.5.INTA pcib2: slot 5 INTA hardwired to IRQ 26 found-> vendor=0x14e4, dev=0x1648, revid=0x10 domain=0, bus=4, slot=5, func=1 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0116, statreg=0x02b0, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x40 (16000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=b, irq=10 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 8 messages, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfc9e0000, size 16, enabled pcib2: requested memory range 0xfc9e0000-0xfc9effff: good pcib2: matched entry for 4.5.INTB pcib2: slot 5 INTB hardwired to IRQ 27 pci0:4:5:0: bad VPD cksum, remain 14 bge0: mem 0xfc9f0000-0xfc9fffff irq 26 at device 5.0 on pci4 bge0: Reserved 0x10000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc9f0000 miibus0: on bge0 brgphy0: PHY 1 on miibus0 brgphy0: OUI 0x000818, model 0x0019, rev. 0 brgphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, 1000baseT, 1000baseT-FDX, auto bge0: bpf attached bge0: Ethernet address: 00:30:48:77:94:a8 ioapic1: routing intpin 2 (PCI IRQ 26) to vector 52 bge0: [MPSAFE] bge0: [ITHREAD] pci0:4:5:1: bad VPD cksum, remain 14 bge1: mem 0xfc9e0000-0xfc9effff irq 27 at device 5.1 on pci4 bge1: Reserved 0x10000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc9e0000 miibus1: on bge1 brgphy1: PHY 1 on miibus1 brgphy1: OUI 0x000818, model 0x0019, rev. 0 brgphy1: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, 1000baseT, 1000baseT-FDX, auto bge1: bpf attached bge1: Ethernet address: 00:30:48:77:94:a9 ioapic1: routing intpin 3 (PCI IRQ 27) to vector 53 bge1: [MPSAFE] bge1: [ITHREAD] pcib3: at device 11.0 on pci0 pcib3: domain 0 pcib3: secondary bus 1 pcib3: subordinate bus 3 pcib3: I/O decode 0xa000-0xafff pcib3: memory decode 0xfc700000-0xfc8fffff pcib3: prefetched decode 0xfbc00000-0xfc4fffff pci1: on pcib3 pci1: domain=0, physical bus=1 found-> vendor=0x1014, dev=0x01a7, revid=0x02 domain=0, bus=1, slot=1, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0107, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x07 (1750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x0335, revid=0x0a domain=0, bus=1, slot=3, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0107, statreg=0x02b0, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x06 (1500 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) powerspec 2 supports D0 D1 D3 current D0 pcib4: at device 1.0 on pci1 pcib4: domain 0 pcib4: secondary bus 3 pcib4: subordinate bus 3 pcib4: I/O decode 0xa000-0xafff pcib4: memory decode 0xfc800000-0xfc8fffff pcib4: prefetched decode 0xfc400000-0xfc4fffff pci3: on pcib4 pci3: domain=0, physical bus=3 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=3, slot=4, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=5 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfc8a0000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc8a0000-0xfc8bffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc8a0000-0xfc8bffff: good map[20]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xa400, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xa400-0xa43f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xa400-0xa43f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTA pcib3: slot 1 INTA hardwired to IRQ 28 pcib4: slot 4 INTA is routed to irq 28 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=3, slot=4, func=1 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=b, irq=11 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfc880000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc880000-0xfc89ffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc880000-0xfc89ffff: good map[20]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xa000, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xa000-0xa03f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xa000-0xa03f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTB pcib3: slot 1 INTB hardwired to IRQ 29 pcib4: slot 4 INTB is routed to irq 29 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=3, slot=6, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=9 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfc8e0000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc8e0000-0xfc8fffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc8e0000-0xfc8fffff: good map[20]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xac00, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xac00-0xac3f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xac00-0xac3f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTC pcib3: slot 1 INTC hardwired to IRQ 30 pcib4: slot 6 INTA is routed to irq 30 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=3, slot=6, func=1 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=b, irq=10 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 64, base 0xfc8c0000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc8c0000-0xfc8dffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc8c0000-0xfc8dffff: good map[20]: type I/O Port, range 32, base 0xa800, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xa800-0xa83f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xa800-0xa83f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTD pcib3: slot 1 INTD hardwired to IRQ 31 pcib4: slot 6 INTB is routed to irq 31 em0: port 0xa400-0xa43f mem 0xfc8a0000-0xfc8bffff irq 28 at device 4.0 on pci3 em0: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc8a0000 em0: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xa400 em0: bpf attached em0: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:e8 ioapic2: routing intpin 0 (PCI IRQ 28) to vector 54 em0: [FILTER] em1: port 0xa000-0xa03f mem 0xfc880000-0xfc89ffff irq 29 at device 4.1 on pci3 em1: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc880000 em1: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xa000 em1: bpf attached em1: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:e9 ioapic2: routing intpin 1 (PCI IRQ 29) to vector 55 em1: [FILTER] em2: port 0xac00-0xac3f mem 0xfc8e0000-0xfc8fffff irq 30 at device 6.0 on pci3 em2: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc8e0000 em2: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xac00 em2: bpf attached em2: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:ea ioapic2: routing intpin 2 (PCI IRQ 30) to vector 56 em2: [FILTER] em3: port 0xa800-0xa83f mem 0xfc8c0000-0xfc8dffff irq 31 at device 6.1 on pci3 em3: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc8c0000 em3: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xa800 em3: bpf attached em3: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:eb ioapic2: routing intpin 3 (PCI IRQ 31) to vector 57 em3: [FILTER] pcib5: at device 3.0 on pci1 pcib5: domain 0 pcib5: secondary bus 2 pcib5: subordinate bus 2 pcib5: I/O decode 0xf000-0xfff pcib5: memory decode 0xfc700000-0xfc7fffff pcib5: prefetched decode 0xfbc00000-0xfc3fffff pci2: on pcib5 pci2: domain=0, physical bus=2 found-> vendor=0x17d3, dev=0x1120, revid=0x00 domain=0, bus=2, slot=14, func=0 class=01-04-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x00d6, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x80 (32000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=10 powerspec 2 supports D0 D1 D3 current D0 MSI supports 2 messages, 64 bit map[10]: type Memory, range 32, base 0xfc7ff000, size 12, enabled pcib5: requested memory range 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff: good map[18]: type Prefetchable Memory, range 32, base 0xfc000000, size 22, enabled pcib5: requested memory range 0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff: good pcib3: matched entry for 1.3.INTC pcib3: slot 3 INTC hardwired to IRQ 31 pcib5: slot 14 INTA is routed to irq 31 arcmsr0: mem 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff,0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff irq 31 at device 14.0 on pci2 arcmsr0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc7ff000 ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.39 2006-2-9 arcmsr0: [MPSAFE] arcmsr0: [ITHREAD] acpi_button0: on acpi0 atkbdc0: port 0x60,0x64 irq 1 on acpi0 atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 atkbd: the current kbd controller command byte 0065 atkbd: keyboard ID 0x41ab (2) kbdc: RESET_KBD return code:00fa kbdc: RESET_KBD status:00aa kbd0 at atkbd0 kbd0: atkbd0, AT 101/102 (2), config:0x0, flags:0x1d0000 ioapic0: routing intpin 1 (ISA IRQ 1) to vector 58 atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] atkbd0: [ITHREAD] psm0: unable to allocate IRQ psmcpnp0: irq 12 on acpi0 psm0: current command byte:0065 kbdc: TEST_AUX_PORT status:0000 kbdc: RESET_AUX return code:00fa kbdc: RESET_AUX status:00aa kbdc: RESET_AUX ID:0000 kbdc: RESET_AUX return code:00fa kbdc: RESET_AUX status:00aa kbdc: RESET_AUX ID:0000 psm: status 00 02 50 psm: status 00 02 0a psm: status 00 02 0a psm: status 00 02 0a psm: data 08 00 00 psm: status 00 02 0a psm0: irq 12 on atkbdc0 ioapic0: routing intpin 12 (ISA IRQ 12) to vector 59 psm0: [GIANT-LOCKED] psm0: [ITHREAD] psm0: model IntelliMouse, device ID 3-00, 3 buttons psm0: config:00000000, flags:00000008, packet size:4 psm0: syncmask:08, syncbits:00 sio0: configured irq 4 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio0: port may not be enabled sio0: irq maps: 0 0 0 0 sio0: configured irq 4 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio0: port may not be enabled sio0: irq maps: 0 0 0 0 sio0: port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x10 on acpi0 sio0: type 16550A, console ioapic0: routing intpin 4 (ISA IRQ 4) to vector 60 sio0: [FILTER] sio1: configured irq 3 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio1: port may not be enabled sio1: irq maps: 0 0 0 0 sio1: configured irq 3 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio1: port may not be enabled sio1: irq maps: 0 0 0 0 sio1: port 0x2f8-0x2ff irq 3 on acpi0 sio1: type 16550A ioapic0: routing intpin 3 (ISA IRQ 3) to vector 61 sio1: [FILTER] fdc0: port 0x3f0-0x3f5,0x3f7 irq 6 drq 2 on acpi0 fdc0: ic_type 90 part_id 80 ioapic0: routing intpin 6 (ISA IRQ 6) to vector 62 fdc0: [FILTER] fd0: on fdc0 drive 0 ppc0: using extended I/O port range ppc0: SPP ppc0: port 0x378-0x37f irq 7 on acpi0 ppc0: Generic chipset (NIBBLE-only) in COMPATIBLE mode ppbus0: on ppc0 ioapic0: routing intpin 7 (ISA IRQ 7) to vector 63 ppbus0: [MPSAFE] ppbus0: [ITHREAD] plip0: on ppbus0 plip0: bpf attached lpt0: on ppbus0 lpt0: Interrupt-driven port ppi0: on ppbus0 ppc0: [GIANT-LOCKED] ppc0: [ITHREAD] acpi_hpet0: iomem 0xfec01000-0xfec013ff irq 0,8 on acpi0 acpi_hpet0: vend: 0x1022 rev: 0x3 num: 2 hz: 14318180 opts: legacy_route Timecounter "HPET" frequency 14318180 Hz quality 900 ahc_isa_probe 0: ioport 0xc00 alloc failed ahc_isa_probe 10: ioport 0xac00 alloc failed ahc_isa_probe 12: ioport 0xcc00 alloc failed ex_isa_identify() atkbdc: atkbdc0 already exists; skipping it fdc: fdc0 already exists; skipping it ppc: ppc0 already exists; skipping it sio: sio0 already exists; skipping it sio: sio1 already exists; skipping it sc: sc0 already exists; skipping it vga: vga0 already exists; skipping it isa_probe_children: disabling PnP devices isa_probe_children: probing non-PnP devices orm0: at iomem 0xc0000-0xc7fff on isa0 sc0: at flags 0x100 on isa0 sc0: VGA sc0: fb0, kbd1, terminal emulator: sc (syscons terminal) sio2: not probed (disabled) sio3: not probed (disabled) vga0: at port 0x3c0-0x3df iomem 0xa0000-0xbffff on isa0 isa_probe_children: probing PnP devices Device configuration finished. Reducing kern.maxvnodes 238312 -> 100000 procfs registered lapic: Divisor 2, Frequency 99716759 hz Timecounter "TSC" frequency 2193768516 Hz quality -100 Timecounters tick every 1.000 msec lo0: bpf attached hptrr: no controller detected. Waiting 5 seconds for SCSI devices to settle md0: Preloaded image 4194304 bytes at 0xffffffff80bc6c08 ata1-master: pio=PIO4 wdma=WDMA2 udma=UDMA33 cable=80 wire acd0: setting PIO4 on 8111 chip acd0: setting UDMA33 on 8111 chip acd0: DVDROM drive at ata1 as master acd0: read 5512KB/s (5512KB/s), 256KB buffer, UDMA33 acd0: Reads: CDR, CDRW, CDDA stream, DVDROM, DVDR, DVDRAM, packet acd0: Writes: acd0: Audio: play, 255 volume levels acd0: Mechanism: ejectable tray, unlocked acd0: Medium: CD-RW 120mm data disc GEOM_LABEL: Label for provider acd0 is iso9660/FreeBSD_Install. (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retries Exausted (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retries Exausted (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retries Exausted (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retries Exausted (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retries Exausted (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retries Exausted (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): error 5 (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retries Exausted ############################################ ############ FreeBSD 6.3-RELEASE/amd64 ############ OK boot -v SMAP type=01 base=0000000000000000 len=000000000009fc00 SMAP type=02 base=000000000009fc00 len=0000000000000400 SMAP type=02 base=00000000000e8000 len=0000000000018000 SMAP type=01 base=0000000000100000 len=00000000bfef0000 SMAP type=03 base=00000000bfff0000 len=000000000000f000 SMAP type=04 base=00000000bffff000 len=0000000000001000 SMAP type=02 base=00000000ff780000 len=0000000000880000 SMAP type=01 base=0000000100000000 len=0000000040000000 Copyright (c) 1992-2008 The FreeBSD Project. Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation. FreeBSD 6.3-RELEASE #0: Wed Jan 16 01:31:10 UTC 2008 root@palmer.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC Preloaded elf kernel "/boot/kernel/kernel" at 0xffffffff80f31000. Preloaded mfs_root "/boot/mfsroot" at 0xffffffff80f311b8. Calibrating clock(s) ... i8254 clock: 1192922 Hz CLK_USE_I8254_CALIBRATION not specified - using default frequency Timecounter "i8254" frequency 1193182 Hz quality 0 Calibrating TSC clock ... TSC clock: 2193765798 Hz CPU: Dual Core AMD Opteron(tm) Processor 275 (2193.77-MHz K8-class CPU) Origin = "AuthenticAMD" Id = 0x20f12 Stepping = 2 Features=0x178bfbff Features2=0x1 AMD Features=0xe2500800 AMD Features2=0x3 Cores per package: 2 L1 2MB data TLB: 8 entries, fully associative L1 2MB instruction TLB: 8 entries, fully associative L1 4KB data TLB: 32 entries, fully associative L1 4KB instruction TLB: 32 entries, fully associative L1 data cache: 64 kbytes, 64 bytes/line, 1 lines/tag, 2-way associative L1 instruction cache: 64 kbytes, 64 bytes/line, 1 lines/tag, 2-way associative L2 2MB unified TLB: 0 entries, disabled/not present L2 4KB data TLB: 512 entries, 4-way associative L2 4KB instruction TLB: 512 entries, 4-way associative L2 unified cache: 1024 kbytes, 64 bytes/line, 1 lines/tag, 16-way associative real memory = 5368709120 (5120 MB) Physical memory chunk(s): 0x0000000000001000 - 0x000000000009efff, 647168 bytes (158 pages) 0x000000000102f000 - 0x00000000b6997fff, 3046543360 bytes (743785 pages) 0x0000000100000000 - 0x000000013ffeffff, 1073676288 bytes (262128 pages) avail memory = 4110155776 (3919 MB) ACPI APIC Table: APIC: CPU 0 has ACPI ID 1 MADT: Found IO APIC ID 4, Interrupt 0 at 0xfec00000 ioapic0: Routing external 8259A's -> intpin 0 MADT: Found IO APIC ID 5, Interrupt 24 at 0xfebfe000 MADT: Found IO APIC ID 6, Interrupt 28 at 0xfebff000 MADT: Interrupt override: source 0, irq 2 ioapic0: Routing IRQ 0 -> intpin 2 MADT: Interrupt override: source 0, irq 2 ioapic0: Routing IRQ 0 -> intpin 2 MADT: Forcing active-low polarity and level trigger for SCI ioapic0: intpin 9 polarity: low ioapic0: intpin 9 trigger: level ioapic0 irqs 0-23 on motherboard ioapic1 irqs 24-27 on motherboard ioapic2 irqs 28-31 on motherboard cpu0 BSP: ID: 0x00000000 VER: 0x00040010 LDR: 0x00000000 DFR: 0xffffffff lint0: 0x00010700 lint1: 0x00000400 TPR: 0x00000000 SVR: 0x000001ff timer: 0x000100ef therm: 0x00000000 err: 0x0001000f pcm: 0x00010000 ath_rate: version 1.2 wlan: null: random: nfslock: pseudo-device kbd: new array size 4 kbd1 at kbdmux0 mem: io: ath_hal: 0.9.20.3 (AR5210, AR5211, AR5212, RF5111, RF5112, RF2413, RF5413) hptrr: HPT RocketRAID controller driver v1.1 (Jan 16 2008 01:29:20) rr232x: RocketRAID 232x controller driver v1.02 (Jan 16 2008 01:29:21) acpi0: on motherboard ioapic0: routing intpin 9 (ISA IRQ 9) to vector 48 acpi0: [MPSAFE] AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.SBRG.LPCR -> bus 0 dev 7 func 0 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.IDE0.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 7 func 1 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.PMF_.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 7 func 3 acpi0: Power Button (fixed) AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.GOLA.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 10 func 0 AcpiOsDerivePciId: \_SB_.PCI0.GOLB.BAR0 -> bus 0 dev 11 func 0 ACPI timer: 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 -> 10 Timecounter "ACPI-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 1000 acpi_timer0: port 0x5008-0x500b on acpi0 pci_link0: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 5 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 5 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 pci_link1: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 11 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 11 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 pci_link2: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 9 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 9 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 pci_link3: Index IRQ Rtd Ref IRQs Initial Probe 0 10 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 Validation 0 10 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 After Disable 0 255 N 0 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 14 15 cpu0: on acpi0 cpu0: switching to generic Cx mode acpi_throttle0: on cpu0 acpi_throttle0: P_CNT from P_BLK 0x5010 pcib0: port 0xcf8-0xcff on acpi0 pci0: on pcib0 pci0: physical bus=0 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7460, revid=0x07 bus=0, slot=6, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x0b (2750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7468, revid=0x05 bus=0, slot=7, func=0 class=06-01-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x000f, statreg=0x0220, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7469, revid=0x03 bus=0, slot=7, func=1 class=01-01-8a, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0005, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x20 (960 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) map[20]: type 4, range 32, base 0000ffa0, size 4, enabled found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x746a, revid=0x02 bus=0, slot=7, func=2 class=0c-05-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0001, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=d, irq=10 map[10]: type 4, range 32, base 0000cc00, size 5, enabled pcib0: matched entry for 0.7.INTD pcib0: slot 7 INTD hardwired to IRQ 19 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x746b, revid=0x05 bus=0, slot=7, func=3 class=06-80-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0280, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7450, revid=0x13 bus=0, slot=10, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0116, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x05 (1250 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7451, revid=0x01 bus=0, slot=10, func=1 class=08-00-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0006, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) map[10]: type 1, range 64, base febfe000, size 12, enabled found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7450, revid=0x13 bus=0, slot=11, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x05 (1250 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7451, revid=0x01 bus=0, slot=11, func=1 class=08-00-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0006, statreg=0x0200, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) map[10]: type 1, range 64, base febff000, size 12, enabled found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1100, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=24, func=0 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0010, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1101, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=24, func=1 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1102, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=24, func=2 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1103, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=24, func=3 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1100, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=25, func=0 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0010, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1101, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=25, func=1 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1102, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=25, func=2 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x1103, revid=0x00 bus=0, slot=25, func=3 class=06-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0000, statreg=0x0000, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) pcib1: at device 6.0 on pci0 pcib1: secondary bus 5 pcib1: subordinate bus 5 pcib1: I/O decode 0xb000-0xbfff pcib1: memory decode 0xfca00000-0xfeafffff pcib1: prefetched decode 0xfff00000-0xfffff pci5: on pcib1 pci5: physical bus=5 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7464, revid=0x0b bus=5, slot=0, func=0 class=0c-03-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0280, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x50 (20000 ns) intpin=d, irq=10 map[10]: type 1, range 32, base feafe000, size 12, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfeafe000-0xfeafefff: good pcib1: matched entry for 5.0.INTD pcib1: slot 0 INTD hardwired to IRQ 19 found-> vendor=0x1022, dev=0x7464, revid=0x0b bus=5, slot=0, func=1 class=0c-03-10, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0280, cachelnsz=0 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x50 (20000 ns) intpin=d, irq=10 map[10]: type 1, range 32, base feafd000, size 12, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfeafd000-0xfeafdfff: good pcib1: matched entry for 5.0.INTD pcib1: slot 0 INTD hardwired to IRQ 19 found-> vendor=0x1002, dev=0x4752, revid=0x27 bus=5, slot=4, func=0 class=03-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0087, statreg=0x0290, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x08 (2000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=11 powerspec 2 supports D0 D1 D2 D3 current D0 map[10]: type 1, range 32, base fd000000, size 24, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfd000000-0xfdffffff: good map[14]: type 4, range 32, base 0000b800, size 8, enabled pcib1: requested I/O range 0xb800-0xb8ff: in range map[18]: type 1, range 32, base feaff000, size 12, enabled pcib1: requested memory range 0xfeaff000-0xfeafffff: good pcib1: matched entry for 5.4.INTA pcib1: slot 4 INTA hardwired to IRQ 17 ohci0: mem 0xfeafe000-0xfeafefff irq 19 at device 0.0 on pci5 ohci0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfeafe000 ioapic0: routing intpin 19 (PCI IRQ 19) to vector 49 ohci0: [GIANT-LOCKED] usb0: OHCI version 1.0, legacy support usb0: on ohci0 usb0: USB revision 1.0 uhub0: AMD OHCI root hub, class 9/0, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1 uhub0: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered ohci1: mem 0xfeafd000-0xfeafdfff irq 19 at device 0.1 on pci5 ohci1: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfeafd000 ohci1: [GIANT-LOCKED] usb1: OHCI version 1.0, legacy support usb1: on ohci1 usb1: USB revision 1.0 uhub1: AMD OHCI root hub, class 9/0, rev 1.00/1.00, addr 1 uhub1: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered pci5: at device 4.0 (no driver attached) isab0: at device 7.0 on pci0 isa0: on isab0 atapci0: port 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6,0x170-0x177,0x376,0xffa0-0xffaf at device 7.1 on pci0 atapci0: Reserved 0x10 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xffa0 ata0: on atapci0 atapci0: Reserved 0x8 bytes for rid 0x10 type 4 at 0x1f0 atapci0: Reserved 0x1 bytes for rid 0x14 type 4 at 0x3f6 ata0: reset tp1 mask=03 ostat0=60 ostat1=70 ata0: stat0=0x20 err=0x20 lsb=0x20 msb=0x20 ata0: stat1=0x30 err=0x30 lsb=0x30 msb=0x30 ata0: reset tp2 stat0=20 stat1=30 devices=0x0 ioapic0: routing intpin 14 (ISA IRQ 14) to vector 50 ata0: [MPSAFE] ata1: on atapci0 atapci0: Reserved 0x8 bytes for rid 0x18 type 4 at 0x170 atapci0: Reserved 0x1 bytes for rid 0x1c type 4 at 0x376 ata1: reset tp1 mask=03 ostat0=50 ostat1=00 ata1: stat0=0x00 err=0x01 lsb=0x14 msb=0xeb ata1: stat1=0x00 err=0x00 lsb=0x00 msb=0x00 ata1: reset tp2 stat0=00 stat1=00 devices=0x4 ioapic0: routing intpin 15 (ISA IRQ 15) to vector 51 ata1: [MPSAFE] pci0: at device 7.2 (no driver attached) pci0: at device 7.3 (no driver attached) pcib2: at device 10.0 on pci0 pcib2: secondary bus 4 pcib2: subordinate bus 4 pcib2: I/O decode 0x0-0x0 pcib2: memory decode 0xfc900000-0xfc9fffff pcib2: prefetched decode 0xfc500000-0xfc5fffff pci4: on pcib2 pci4: physical bus=4 found-> vendor=0x14e4, dev=0x1648, revid=0x10 bus=4, slot=5, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0116, statreg=0x02b0, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x40 (16000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=9 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 8 messages, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 64, base fc9f0000, size 16, enabled pcib2: requested memory range 0xfc9f0000-0xfc9fffff: good pcib2: matched entry for 4.5.INTA pcib2: slot 5 INTA hardwired to IRQ 26 found-> vendor=0x14e4, dev=0x1648, revid=0x10 bus=4, slot=5, func=1 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0116, statreg=0x02b0, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x40 (16000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=b, irq=10 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 8 messages, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 64, base fc9e0000, size 16, enabled pcib2: requested memory range 0xfc9e0000-0xfc9effff: good pcib2: matched entry for 4.5.INTB pcib2: slot 5 INTB hardwired to IRQ 27 bge0: mem 0xfc9f0000-0xfc9fffff irq 26 at device 5.0 on pci4 bge0: Reserved 0x10000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc9f0000 miibus0: on bge0 brgphy0: on miibus0 brgphy0: OUI 0x000818, model 0x0019, rev. 0 brgphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, 1000baseT, 1000baseT-FDX, auto bge0: bpf attached bge0: Ethernet address: 00:30:48:77:94:a8 ioapic1: routing intpin 2 (PCI IRQ 26) to vector 52 bge0: [MPSAFE] bge1: mem 0xfc9e0000-0xfc9effff irq 27 at device 5.1 on pci4 bge1: Reserved 0x10000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc9e0000 miibus1: on bge1 brgphy1: on miibus1 brgphy1: OUI 0x000818, model 0x0019, rev. 0 brgphy1: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, 1000baseT, 1000baseT-FDX, auto bge1: bpf attached bge1: Ethernet address: 00:30:48:77:94:a9 ioapic1: routing intpin 3 (PCI IRQ 27) to vector 53 bge1: [MPSAFE] pcib3: at device 11.0 on pci0 pcib3: secondary bus 1 pcib3: subordinate bus 3 pcib3: I/O decode 0xa000-0xafff pcib3: memory decode 0xfc700000-0xfc8fffff pcib3: prefetched decode 0xfbc00000-0xfc4fffff pci1: on pcib3 pci1: physical bus=1 found-> vendor=0x1014, dev=0x01a7, revid=0x02 bus=1, slot=1, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0107, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x07 (1750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x0335, revid=0x0a bus=1, slot=3, func=0 class=06-04-00, hdrtype=0x01, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0107, statreg=0x02b0, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x06 (1500 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) powerspec 2 supports D0 D1 D3 current D0 pcib4: at device 1.0 on pci1 pcib4: secondary bus 3 pcib4: subordinate bus 3 pcib4: I/O decode 0xa000-0xafff pcib4: memory decode 0xfc800000-0xfc8fffff pcib4: prefetched decode 0xfc400000-0xfc4fffff pci3: on pcib4 pci3: physical bus=3 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 bus=3, slot=4, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=5 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 64, base fc8a0000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc8a0000-0xfc8bffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc8a0000-0xfc8bffff: good map[20]: type 4, range 32, base 0000a400, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xa400-0xa43f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xa400-0xa43f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTA pcib3: slot 1 INTA hardwired to IRQ 28 pcib4: slot 4 INTA is routed to irq 28 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 bus=3, slot=4, func=1 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=b, irq=11 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 64, base fc880000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc880000-0xfc89ffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc880000-0xfc89ffff: good map[20]: type 4, range 32, base 0000a000, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xa000-0xa03f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xa000-0xa03f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTB pcib3: slot 1 INTB hardwired to IRQ 29 pcib4: slot 4 INTB is routed to irq 29 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 bus=3, slot=6, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=9 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 64, base fc8e0000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc8e0000-0xfc8fffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc8e0000-0xfc8fffff: good map[20]: type 4, range 32, base 0000ac00, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xac00-0xac3f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xac00-0xac3f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTC pcib3: slot 1 INTC hardwired to IRQ 30 pcib4: slot 6 INTA is routed to irq 30 found-> vendor=0x8086, dev=0x101d, revid=0x01 bus=3, slot=6, func=1 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=1 cmdreg=0x0117, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0xff (63750 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=b, irq=10 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 64, base fc8c0000, size 17, enabled pcib4: requested memory range 0xfc8c0000-0xfc8dffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc8c0000-0xfc8dffff: good map[20]: type 4, range 32, base 0000a800, size 6, enabled pcib4: requested I/O range 0xa800-0xa83f: in range pcib3: requested I/O range 0xa800-0xa83f: in range pcib3: matched entry for 1.1.INTD pcib3: slot 1 INTD hardwired to IRQ 31 pcib4: slot 6 INTB is routed to irq 31 em0: port 0xa400-0xa43f mem 0xfc8a0000-0xfc8bffff irq 28 at device 4.0 on pci3 em0: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc8a0000 em0: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xa400 em0: bpf attached em0: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:e8 ioapic2: routing intpin 0 (PCI IRQ 28) to vector 54 em0: [MPSAFE] em1: port 0xa000-0xa03f mem 0xfc880000-0xfc89ffff irq 29 at device 4.1 on pci3 em1: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc880000 em1: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xa000 em1: bpf attached em1: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:e9 ioapic2: routing intpin 1 (PCI IRQ 29) to vector 55 em1: [MPSAFE] em2: port 0xac00-0xac3f mem 0xfc8e0000-0xfc8fffff irq 30 at device 6.0 on pci3 em2: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc8e0000 em2: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xac00 em2: bpf attached em2: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:ea ioapic2: routing intpin 2 (PCI IRQ 30) to vector 56 em2: [MPSAFE] em3: port 0xa800-0xa83f mem 0xfc8c0000-0xfc8dffff irq 31 at device 6.1 on pci3 em3: Reserved 0x20000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc8c0000 em3: Reserved 0x40 bytes for rid 0x20 type 4 at 0xa800 em3: bpf attached em3: Ethernet address: 00:04:23:b8:75:eb ioapic2: routing intpin 3 (PCI IRQ 31) to vector 57 em3: [MPSAFE] pcib5: at device 3.0 on pci1 pcib5: secondary bus 2 pcib5: subordinate bus 2 pcib5: I/O decode 0xf000-0xfff pcib5: memory decode 0xfc700000-0xfc7fffff pcib5: prefetched decode 0xfbc00000-0xfc3fffff pci2: on pcib5 pci2: physical bus=2 found-> vendor=0x17d3, dev=0x1120, revid=0x00 bus=2, slot=14, func=0 class=01-04-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x00d6, statreg=0x0230, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x40 (1920 ns), mingnt=0x80 (32000 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=10 powerspec 2 supports D0 D1 D3 current D0 MSI supports 2 messages, 64 bit map[10]: type 1, range 32, base fc7ff000, size 12, enabled pcib5: requested memory range 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff: good map[18]: type 3, range 32, base fc000000, size 22, enabled pcib5: requested memory range 0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff: good pcib3: requested memory range 0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff: good pcib3: matched entry for 1.3.INTC pcib3: slot 3 INTC hardwired to IRQ 31 pcib5: slot 14 INTA is routed to irq 31 arcmsr0: mem 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff,0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff irq 31 at device 14.0 on pci2 arcmsr0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc7ff000 ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.39 2006-2-9 arcmsr0: [MPSAFE] acpi_button0: on acpi0 atkbdc0: port 0x60,0x64 irq 1 on acpi0 atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 atkbd: the current kbd controller command byte 0065 atkbd: keyboard ID 0x41ab (2) kbdc: RESET_KBD return code:00fa kbdc: RESET_KBD status:00aa kbd0 at atkbd0 kbd0: atkbd0, AT 101/102 (2), config:0x0, flags:0x1d0000 ioapic0: routing intpin 1 (ISA IRQ 1) to vector 58 atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] psm0: unable to allocate IRQ psmcpnp0: irq 12 on acpi0 psm0: current command byte:0065 kbdc: TEST_AUX_PORT status:0000 kbdc: RESET_AUX return code:00fa kbdc: RESET_AUX status:00aa kbdc: RESET_AUX ID:0000 kbdc: RESET_AUX return code:00fa kbdc: RESET_AUX status:00aa kbdc: RESET_AUX ID:0000 psm: status 00 02 50 psm: status 00 02 0a psm: status 00 02 0a psm: status 00 02 0a psm: data 08 00 00 psm: status 00 02 0a psm0: irq 12 on atkbdc0 ioapic0: routing intpin 12 (ISA IRQ 12) to vector 59 psm0: [GIANT-LOCKED] psm0: model IntelliMouse, device ID 3-00, 3 buttons psm0: config:00000000, flags:00000008, packet size:4 psm0: syncmask:08, syncbits:00 sio0: configured irq 4 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio0: port may not be enabled sio0: irq maps: 0 0 0 0 sio0: port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x10 on acpi0 sio0: type 16550A, console ioapic0: routing intpin 4 (ISA IRQ 4) to vector 60 sio1: configured irq 3 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio1: port may not be enabled sio1: irq maps: 0 0 0 0 sio1: port 0x2f8-0x2ff irq 3 on acpi0 sio1: type 16550A ioapic0: routing intpin 3 (ISA IRQ 3) to vector 61 fdc0: port 0x3f0-0x3f5,0x3f7 irq 6 drq 2 on acpi0 fdc0: ic_type 90 part_id 80 ioapic0: routing intpin 6 (ISA IRQ 6) to vector 62 fdc0: [MPSAFE] fdc0: [FAST] device_attach: fdc0 attach returned 12 ppc0: using extended I/O port range ppc0: SPP ppc0: port 0x378-0x37f irq 7 on acpi0 ppc0: Generic chipset (NIBBLE-only) in COMPATIBLE mode ppbus0: on ppc0 plip0: on ppbus0 plip0: bpf attached lpt0: on ppbus0 lpt0: Interrupt-driven port ppi0: on ppbus0 ioapic0: routing intpin 7 (ISA IRQ 7) to vector 63 acpi_hpet0: iomem 0xfec01000-0xfec013ff irq 0,8 on acpi0 acpi_hpet0: vend: 0x1022 rev: 0x3 num: 8 hz: 14318180 opts: leg_route Timecounter "HPET" frequency 14318180 Hz quality 900 fdc0: port 0x3f0-0x3f5,0x3f7 irq 6 drq 2 on acpi0 fdc0: ic_type 90 part_id 80 fdc0: [MPSAFE] fdc0: [FAST] device_attach: fdc0 attach returned 12 ahc_isa_probe 0: ioport 0xc00 alloc failed ahc_isa_probe 10: ioport 0xac00 alloc failed ahc_isa_probe 12: ioport 0xcc00 alloc failed ex_isa_identify() atkbdc: atkbdc0 already exists; skipping it fdc: fdc0 already exists; skipping it ppc: ppc0 already exists; skipping it sio: sio0 already exists; skipping it sio: sio1 already exists; skipping it pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 203 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 243 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 283 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 2c3 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 303 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 343 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 383 pnp_identify: Trying Read_Port at 3c3 PNP Identify complete sc: sc0 already exists; skipping it vga: vga0 already exists; skipping it isa_probe_children: disabling PnP devices isa_probe_children: probing non-PnP devices orm0: at iomem 0xc0000-0xc7fff on isa0 sc0: at flags 0x100 on isa0 sc0: VGA sc0: fb0, kbd1, terminal emulator: sc (syscons terminal) sio2: not probed (disabled) sio3: not probed (disabled) vga0: at port 0x3c0-0x3df iomem 0xa0000-0xbffff on isa0 isa_probe_children: probing PnP devices Device configuration finished. Reducing kern.maxvnodes 233016 -> 100000 procfs registered linprocfs registered lapic: Divisor 2, Frequency 99716630 hz Timecounter "TSC" frem0: Link is up 1000 Mbps Full Duplex em1: Link is up 1000 Mbps Full Duplex equency 2193765798 Hz quality 800 Timecounters tick every 1.000 msec Linux ELF exec handler installed lo0: bpf attached hptrr: no controller detected. rr232x: no controller detected. em0: link state changed to UP em1: link state changed to UP md0: Preloaded image 4194304 bytes at 0xffffffff80b2f428 ata1-master: pio=PIO4 wdma=WDMA2 udma=UDMA33 cable=80 wire acd0: setting PIO4 on 8111 chip acd0: setting UDMA33 on 8111 chip acd0: DVDROM drive at ata1 as master acd0: read 5512KB/s (5512KB/s), 256KB buffer, UDMA33 acd0: Reads: CDR, CDRW, CDDA stream, DVDROM, DVDR, DVDRAM, packet acd0: Writes: acd0: Audio: play, 255 volume levels acd0: Mechanism: ejectable tray, unlocked acd0: Medium: CD-RW 120mm data disc Waiting 5 seconds for SCSI devices to settle (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:1): Retries Exausted (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:2): Retries Exausted (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:3): Retries Exausted (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:4): Retries Exausted (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:5): Retries Exausted (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:6): Retries Exausted (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retrying Command (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Command timed out (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): error 5 (probe1:arcmsr0:0:16:7): Retries Exausted pass0 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0 pass0: Fixed Direct Access SCSI-3 device pass0: Serial Number 0000002054702917 pass0: 166.666MB/s transfers (83.333MHz, offset 32, 16bit), Tagged Queueing Enabled pass1 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 0 lun 1 pass1: Fixed Direct Access SCSI-3 device pass1: Serial Number 0000000247774074 pass1: 166.666MB/s transfers (83.333MHz, offset 32, 16bit), Tagged Queueing Enabled pass2 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 16 lun 0 pass2: Fixed Processor SCSI-0 device pass2 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 16 lun 0 pass2: Fixed Processor SCSI-0 device da0 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0 da0: Fixed Direct Access SCSI-3 device da0: Serial Number 0000002054702917 da0: 166.666MB/s transfers (83.333MHz, offset 32, 16bit), Tagged Queueing Enabled da0: 68664MB (140623872 512 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 8753C) da1 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 0 lun 1 da1: Fixed Direct Access SCSI-3 device da1: Serial Number 0000000247774074 da1: 166.666MB/s transfers (83.333MHz, offset 32, 16bit), Tagged Queueing Enabled da1: 389098MB (796872704 512 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 49603C) GEOM: new disk da0 GEOM: new disk da1 ATA PseudoRAID loaded Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/md0 start_init: trying /sbin/init start_init: trying /sbin/oinit start_init: trying /sbin/init.bak start_init: trying /rescue/init start_init: trying /stand/sysinstall /stand/sysinstall running as init on serial console ############################################ _________________________________________________________________ News, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Get it now! http://www.live.com/getstarted.aspx From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Mon Aug 11 23:24:18 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Mon Aug 11 23:24:25 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20080811232418.GA67049@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:54:41PM +0000, Andrew Hotlab wrote: > Hi to all. I've finally convinced my IT manager to replace a MSFT Windows Server Virtual Server host with a FreeBSD 7 jail host. Obviously, before proposing this change I checked that our hardware was supported by the FreeBSD platform, but as soon as I boot the FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 CD-ROM the systems hangs! Do you see any improvement using a 7.0-STABLE snapshot? ftp://ftp4.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200808/ -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 01:32:52 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 01:32:58 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <20080811232418.GA67049@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <20080811232418.GA67049@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: No improvement. I've just tried the 7.0-STABLE-200807-amd64 snapshot, that behaves like the 7.0-RELEASE, stopping at the same step. ---------------------------------------- > Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 16:24:18 -0700 > From: koitsu@FreeBSD.org > To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > CC: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org > Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > > On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:54:41PM +0000, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >> Hi to all. I've finally convinced my IT manager to replace a MSFT Windows Server Virtual Server host with a >> FreeBSD 7 jail host. Obviously, before proposing this change I checked that our hardware was supported by >> the FreeBSD platform, but as soon as I boot the FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 CD-ROM the systems hangs! > > Do you see any improvement using a 7.0-STABLE snapshot? > > ftp://ftp4.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200808/ > > -- > | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | > | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | > | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | > | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | > _________________________________________________________________ Connect to the next generation of MSN Messenger? http://imagine-msn.com/messenger/launch80/default.aspx?locale=en-us&source=wlmailtagline From kewlpcs at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 01:59:20 2008 From: kewlpcs at hotmail.com (Michael James Wright) Date: Tue Aug 12 01:59:27 2008 Subject: Help with freebsd with Vista Premium Message-ID: Hi guys How it going i'm downloading the freebsd software i'm not sure if it's suitable for my Operating System my Os is Vista Premium Intel(R) Pentium(R) D CPU 2.80ghz 1.00 GB RAM Intel(R) 82945G Express chipset family System Type 32 Bit Operating System i'm not sure if i am in the right area FTP directory /pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IMAGES/7.0 at ftp.au.freebsd.org To view this FTP site in Windows Explorer, click Page, and then click Open FTP Site in Windows Explorer. Up to higher level directory02/25/2008 12:34AM 35,276,800 7.0-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso 02/25/2008 12:35AM 534,177,792 7.0-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso 02/25/2008 12:35AM 728,487,936 7.0-RELEASE-i386-disc2.iso 02/25/2008 12:36AM 368,592,896 7.0-RELEASE-i386-disc3.iso 02/25/2008 12:37AM 248,350,720 7.0-RELEASE-i386-docs.iso 02/25/2008 12:38AM 224,655,360 7.0-RELEASE-i386-livefs.iso 02/25/2008 12:38AM 411 CHECKSUM.MD5 02/25/2008 12:40AM 621 CHECKSUM.SHA256 do i need to download all of this ???? Michael Wright _________________________________________________________________ Shout your Messenger buddies to the movies http://www.livelife.ninemsn.com.au/compIntro.aspx?compId=4590 From dean at fragfest.com.au Tue Aug 12 02:08:40 2008 From: dean at fragfest.com.au (Dean Hamstead) Date: Tue Aug 12 02:08:47 2008 Subject: Help with freebsd with Vista Premium In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <48A0F09F.2080202@fragfest.com.au> you will need to download the cd1-iso and burn it to a cd freebsd is an operating system, it runs on top of the hardware. not on top of vista. Dean Michael James Wright wrote: > Hi guys > > How it going i'm downloading the freebsd software i'm not sure if it's suitable for my Operating System > > my Os is Vista Premium Intel(R) Pentium(R) D CPU 2.80ghz 1.00 GB RAM Intel(R) 82945G Express chipset family > > System Type 32 Bit Operating System > > i'm not sure if i am in the right area > > FTP directory /pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IMAGES/7.0 at ftp.au.freebsd.org > To view this FTP site in Windows Explorer, click Page, and then click Open FTP Site in Windows Explorer. > > > Up to higher level directory02/25/2008 12:34AM 35,276,800 7.0-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso > 02/25/2008 12:35AM 534,177,792 7.0-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso > 02/25/2008 12:35AM 728,487,936 7.0-RELEASE-i386-disc2.iso > 02/25/2008 12:36AM 368,592,896 7.0-RELEASE-i386-disc3.iso > 02/25/2008 12:37AM 248,350,720 7.0-RELEASE-i386-docs.iso > 02/25/2008 12:38AM 224,655,360 7.0-RELEASE-i386-livefs.iso > 02/25/2008 12:38AM 411 CHECKSUM.MD5 > 02/25/2008 12:40AM 621 CHECKSUM.SHA256 > do i need to download all of this ???? Michael Wright > _________________________________________________________________ > Shout your Messenger buddies to the movies > http://www.livelife.ninemsn.com.au/compIntro.aspx?compId=4590 _______________________________________________ > freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" > -- http://fragfest.com.au From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 09:59:57 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 10:00:03 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <20080811170806.X99082@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> References: <20080811170806.X99082@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> Message-ID: My card has no battery backup, but I disconnected the machine power cord and pulled the card off itsPCI-X slot. After few minutes I reconnected the card and I booted the machine without any hard drive. Then the same issue arised with the 7.0-RELEASE. ---------------------------------------- > Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 17:09:04 -0600 > From: bvowk@math.ualberta.ca > To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > > Pull the battery from the unit and reset the configuration. Reconnect the > battery when the system boots FreeBSD properly. > > ----------------------------------------------------------- > Barkley C. Vowk -- Systems Analyst -- University of Alberta > Math Sciences Department - Barkley.Vowk@math.ualberta.ca > Office: CAB642A, 780-492-4064 > > Opinions expressed are the responsibility of the author and > may not reflect the opinions of others or reality. > > On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: > >> >> Hi to all. I've finally convinced my IT manager to replace a MSFT Windows Server Virtual Server host with >> a FreeBSD 7 jail host. Obviously, before proposing this change I checked that our hardware was supported >> by the FreeBSD platform, but as soon as I boot the FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 CD-ROM the systems >> hangs! >> >> I also tried the i386 version of the same release experiencing the same trouble. By using a 6.3-RELEASE >> CD-ROM all works well (excluding some warnings still showing during the boot). I compared the source files >> of the driver arcmsr(4) without finding any real difference: both of them are at the 1.20.00.15 revision, but >> I'm not a very experienced FreeBSD sysadmin (yet!), and I need at least your opinions about this trouble! >> >> I think the most complete set of informations I can give you are the verbose boot logs of both the 6.3 and >> 7.0 releases (sorry for the log post), but I'm ready to submit whatever data you want... please help me to >> put Windows out of my datacenter! :) >> _________________________________________________________________ Connect to the next generation of MSN Messenger? http://imagine-msn.com/messenger/launch80/default.aspx?locale=en-us&source=wlmailtagline From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 15:11:50 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 15:11:56 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Thanks for the suggestion, Mike. I've just tested both FreeBSD/amd64 6.3 and 7.0 releases with both 1.43 and 1.44 Areca firmware revisions, but nothing seems changed: 6.3 boots up, while 7.0 hangs! :( You can confirm me that you are successfully using FreeBSD 7.0R with the 1.43 firmware? If it's so, we might compare our hardware components to find out if and what are differences... Thanks a lot for your help. ---------------------------------------- > From: mike@sentex.net > To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 08:13:56 -0400 > > On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 22:54:41 +0000, in sentex.lists.freebsd.hardware > you wrote: >>arcmsr0: mem 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff,0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff irq 31 at device 14.0 on pci2 >>arcmsr0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc7ff000 >>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 >>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.39 2006-2-9 > > > Not sure it will help you or not, but I run the same card with version > 1.43 of the firmware. I would try to upgrade the Areca card's > firmware and then give 7.0R another try. > > ---Mike _________________________________________________________________ Invite your mail contacts to join your friends list with Windows Live Spaces. It's easy! http://spaces.live.com/spacesapi.aspx?wx_action=create&wx_url=/friends.aspx&mkt=en-us From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 16:13:18 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 16:13:26 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> References: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> Message-ID: > At 11:11 AM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: > >>You can confirm me that you are successfully using FreeBSD 7.0R with >>the 1.43 firmware? If it's so, we might compare our hardware >>components to find out if and what are differences... > > > Hi, > The dmesg below is on a supermicro board. Actually, if you > take the Areca out, does 7.0R boot up ? As mentioned by another > poster, try the RELENG_7 snapshot to see if it boots with that. If > you are starting fresh, I would suggest it as there are a number of > bug fixes and enhancements in the snapshot and its quite stable. > > Hi Mike... you've read in my mind: I tried to boot up 7.0R without the card immediately after I sent my last e-mail! :) I can confirm that all works like a charm without the Areca card. So, where the problem might lie?! I tested the card with both 7.0-STABLE and 8.0-CURRENT (it hangs even before) without success... :( P.S.: during all these tests I was always verifying that the card itself was always functioning well, by booting the Windows Server 2003 x64 installed on the RAID set. > > >>Thanks a lot for your help. >> >>---------------------------------------- >>> From: mike@sentex.net >>> To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com >>> Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 >>> Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 08:13:56 -0400 >>> >>> On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 22:54:41 +0000, in sentex.lists.freebsd.hardware >>> you wrote: >>>>arcmsr0: mem 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff,0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff irq 31 >> at device 14.0 on pci2 >>>>arcmsr0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc7ff000 >>>>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 >>>>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.39 2006-2-9 >>> >>> >>> Not sure it will help you or not, but I run the same card with version >>> 1.43 of the firmware. I would try to upgrade the Areca card's >>> firmware and then give 7.0R another try. >>> >>> ---Mike >> _________________________________________________________________ News, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Get it now! http://www.live.com/getstarted.aspx From bvowk at math.ualberta.ca Tue Aug 12 16:30:49 2008 From: bvowk at math.ualberta.ca (Barkley Vowk) Date: Tue Aug 12 16:30:55 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: References: <20080811170806.X99082@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> Message-ID: <20080812101605.B5198@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> On Tue, 12 Aug 2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: > > My card has no battery backup, but I disconnected the machine power cord and pulled > the card off itsPCI-X slot. > > After few minutes I reconnected the card and I booted the machine without any > hard drive. Then the same issue arised with the 7.0-RELEASE. Did you reset the raid configurations? I've had this problem several times with machines that have run the cards in Windows prior running FreeBSD. > ---------------------------------------- >> Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 17:09:04 -0600 >> From: bvowk@math.ualberta.ca >> To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com >> Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 >> >> Pull the battery from the unit and reset the configuration. Reconnect the >> battery when the system boots FreeBSD properly. >> >> ----------------------------------------------------------- >> Barkley C. Vowk -- Systems Analyst -- University of Alberta >> Math Sciences Department - Barkley.Vowk@math.ualberta.ca >> Office: CAB642A, 780-492-4064 >> >> Opinions expressed are the responsibility of the author and >> may not reflect the opinions of others or reality. >> >> On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >> >>> >>> Hi to all. I've finally convinced my IT manager to replace a MSFT Windows Server Virtual Server host with >>> a FreeBSD 7 jail host. Obviously, before proposing this change I checked that our hardware was supported >>> by the FreeBSD platform, but as soon as I boot the FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 CD-ROM the systems >>> hangs! >>> >>> I also tried the i386 version of the same release experiencing the same trouble. By using a 6.3-RELEASE >>> CD-ROM all works well (excluding some warnings still showing during the boot). I compared the source files >>> of the driver arcmsr(4) without finding any real difference: both of them are at the 1.20.00.15 revision, but >>> I'm not a very experienced FreeBSD sysadmin (yet!), and I need at least your opinions about this trouble! >>> >>> I think the most complete set of informations I can give you are the verbose boot logs of both the 6.3 and >>> 7.0 releases (sorry for the log post), but I'm ready to submit whatever data you want... please help me to >>> put Windows out of my datacenter! :) >>> > > _________________________________________________________________ > Connect to the next generation of MSN Messenger? > http://imagine-msn.com/messenger/launch80/default.aspx?locale=en-us&source=wlmailtagline From mike at sentex.net Tue Aug 12 16:32:40 2008 From: mike at sentex.net (Mike Tancsa) Date: Tue Aug 12 16:32:47 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> At 11:11 AM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >You can confirm me that you are successfully using FreeBSD 7.0R with >the 1.43 firmware? If it's so, we might compare our hardware >components to find out if and what are differences... Hi, The dmesg below is on a supermicro board. Actually, if you take the Areca out, does 7.0R boot up ? As mentioned by another poster, try the RELENG_7 snapshot to see if it boots with that. If you are starting fresh, I would suggest it as there are a number of bug fixes and enhancements in the snapshot and its quite stable. Copyright (c) 1992-2008 The FreeBSD Project. Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation. FreeBSD 7.0-PRERELEASE #3: Wed Feb 13 11:51:23 EST 2008 mdtancsa@db.example.com:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/db Timecounter "i8254" frequency 1193182 Hz quality 0 CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU 3060 @ 2.40GHz (2400.10-MHz K8-class CPU) Origin = "GenuineIntel" Id = 0x6f6 Stepping = 6 Features=0xbfebfbff Features2=0xe3bd AMD Features=0x20100800 AMD Features2=0x1 Cores per package: 2 usable memory = 8577662976 (8180 MB) avail memory = 8298295296 (7913 MB) ACPI APIC Table: FreeBSD/SMP: Multiprocessor System Detected: 2 CPUs cpu0 (BSP): APIC ID: 0 cpu1 (AP): APIC ID: 1 ioapic0: Changing APIC ID to 5 ioapic0 irqs 0-23 on motherboard kbd1 at kbdmux0 acpi0: on motherboard acpi0: [ITHREAD] acpi0: Power Button (fixed) Timecounter "ACPI-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 1000 acpi_timer0: <24-bit timer at 3.579545MHz> port 0x408-0x40b on acpi0 cpu0: on acpi0 est0: on cpu0 est: CPU supports Enhanced Speedstep, but is not recognized. est: cpu_vendor GenuineIntel, msr 92a092a0600092a device_attach: est0 attach returned 6 p4tcc0: on cpu0 cpu1: on acpi0 est1: on cpu1 est: CPU supports Enhanced Speedstep, but is not recognized. est: cpu_vendor GenuineIntel, msr 92a092a0600092a device_attach: est1 attach returned 6 p4tcc1: on cpu1 acpi_button0: on acpi0 pcib0: port 0xcf8-0xcff on acpi0 pci0: on pcib0 pcib1: at device 28.0 on pci0 pci1: on pcib1 pcib2: at device 0.0 on pci1 pci2: on pcib2 arcmsr0: mem 0xe8600000-0xe8600fff,0xe8000000-0xe83fffff irq 18 at device 14.0 on pci2 ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.43 2007-4-17 arcmsr0: [ITHREAD] pcib3: at device 0.2 on pci1 pci3: on pcib3 pcib4: at device 28.4 on pci0 pci4: on pcib4 pcib5: at device 28.5 on pci0 pci5: on pcib5 em0: port 0x2000-0x201f mem 0xe8580000-0xe859ffff,0xe8500000-0xe857ffff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci5 em0: Using MSI interrupt em0: Ethernet address: 00:15:17:50:40:28 em0: [FILTER] pci5: at device 0.3 (no driver attached) pci5: at device 0.4 (no driver attached) pcib6: at device 30.0 on pci0 pci6: on pcib6 vgapci0: port 0x1000-0x10ff mem 0xe0000000-0xe7ffffff,0xe8440000-0xe844ffff irq 18 at device 4.0 on pci6 em1: port 0x1100-0x113f mem 0xe8420000-0xe843ffff,0xe8400000-0xe841ffff irq 17 at device 5.0 on pci6 em1: Ethernet address: 00:15:17:50:40:29 em1: [FILTER] isab0: at device 31.0 on pci0 isa0: on isab0 atapci0: port 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6,0x170-0x177,0x376,0x3030-0x303f irq 18 at device 31.1 on pci0 ata0: on atapci0 ata0: [ITHREAD] ata1: on atapci0 ata1: [ITHREAD] atapci1: port 0x3048-0x304f,0x3064-0x3067,0x3040-0x3047,0x3060-0x3063,0x3020-0x302f mem 0xe8700000-0xe87003ff irq 19 at device 31.2 on pci0 atapci1: [ITHREAD] ata2: on atapci1 ata2: [ITHREAD] ata3: on atapci1 ata3: [ITHREAD] pci0: at device 31.3 (no driver attached) fdc0: port 0x3f0-0x3f5,0x3f0 irq 6 drq 2 on acpi0 fdc0: [FILTER] atkbdc0: port 0x60,0x64 irq 1 on acpi0 atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 kbd0 at atkbd0 atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] atkbd0: [ITHREAD] sio0: configured irq 4 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio0: port may not be enabled sio0: configured irq 4 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio0: port may not be enabled sio0: <16550A-compatible COM port> port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x10 on acpi0 sio0: type 16550A, console sio0: [FILTER] orm0: at iomem 0xc0000-0xc8fff,0xc9000-0xc9fff,0xca000-0xcafff,0xcb000-0xcbfff on isa0 ppc0: cannot reserve I/O port range sc0: at flags 0x100 on isa0 sc0: VGA <16 virtual consoles, flags=0x300> sio1: configured irq 3 not in bitmap of probed irqs 0 sio1: port may not be enabled vga0: at port 0x3c0-0x3df iomem 0xa0000-0xbffff on isa0 Timecounters tick every 1.000 msec Waiting 5 seconds for SCSI devices to settle (probe16:arcmsr0:0:16:0): inquiry data fails comparison at DV1 step da0 at arcmsr0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0 da0: Fixed Direct Access SCSI-5 device da0: 166.666MB/s transfers (83.333MHz DT, offset 32, 16bit) da0: 305175MB (624999424 512 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 38904C) SMP: AP CPU #1 Launched! Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/da0s1a >Thanks a lot for your help. > >---------------------------------------- > > From: mike@sentex.net > > To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > > Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > > Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 08:13:56 -0400 > > > > On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 22:54:41 +0000, in sentex.lists.freebsd.hardware > > you wrote: > >>arcmsr0: mem 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff,0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff irq 31 > at device 14.0 on pci2 > >>arcmsr0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc7ff000 > >>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 > >>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.39 2006-2-9 > > > > > > Not sure it will help you or not, but I run the same card with version > > 1.43 of the firmware. I would try to upgrade the Areca card's > > firmware and then give 7.0R another try. > > > > ---Mike > >_________________________________________________________________ >Invite your mail contacts to join your friends list with Windows >Live Spaces. It's easy! >http://spaces.live.com/spacesapi.aspx?wx_action=create&wx_url=/friends.aspx&mkt=en-us From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 16:54:15 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 16:54:21 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <20080812101605.B5198@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> References: <20080811170806.X99082@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> <20080812101605.B5198@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> Message-ID: > Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 10:17:58 -0600 > From: bvowk@math.ualberta.ca > To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > CC: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org > Subject: RE: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > > On Tue, 12 Aug 2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: > >> >> My card has no battery backup, but I disconnected the machine power cord and pulled >> the card off itsPCI-X slot. >> >> After few minutes I reconnected the card and I booted the machine without any >> hard drive. Then the same issue arised with the 7.0-RELEASE. > > Did you reset the raid configurations? I've had this problem several times > with machines that have run the cards in Windows prior running FreeBSD. > Booting without hard drives left the card with no knowledge about RAID sets or volumes, since these data are saved on them. Surely I can now retry the boot after destroying current RAID configuration, which was defined for Windows (by the way, I did it by using the BIOS configuration utility...), but sincerely I wish to view FreeBSD 7.0R booting at least one time before "breaking with the past". :) Uhm, wait for a moment... actually all that RAID volumes were defined when the card's firmware was at v1.39! What I can do now is booting the machine up with the v1.44 firmware without any attached drive. I'll post the result as soon as possible. Thanks you very much! >> ---------------------------------------- >>> Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 17:09:04 -0600 >>> From: bvowk@math.ualberta.ca >>> To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com >>> Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 >>> >>> Pull the battery from the unit and reset the configuration. Reconnect the >>> battery when the system boots FreeBSD properly. >>> >>> ----------------------------------------------------------- >>> Barkley C. Vowk -- Systems Analyst -- University of Alberta >>> Math Sciences Department - Barkley.Vowk@math.ualberta.ca >>> Office: CAB642A, 780-492-4064 >>> >>> Opinions expressed are the responsibility of the author and >>> may not reflect the opinions of others or reality. >>> >>> On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> Hi to all. I've finally convinced my IT manager to replace a MSFT Windows Server Virtual Server host with >>>> a FreeBSD 7 jail host. Obviously, before proposing this change I checked that our hardware was supported >>>> by the FreeBSD platform, but as soon as I boot the FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE/amd64 CD-ROM the systems >>>> hangs! >>>> >>>> I also tried the i386 version of the same release experiencing the same trouble. By using a 6.3-RELEASE >>>> CD-ROM all works well (excluding some warnings still showing during the boot). I compared the source files >>>> of the driver arcmsr(4) without finding any real difference: both of them are at the 1.20.00.15 revision, but >>>> I'm not a very experienced FreeBSD sysadmin (yet!), and I need at least your opinions about this trouble! >>>> >>>> I think the most complete set of informations I can give you are the verbose boot logs of both the 6.3 and >>>> 7.0 releases (sorry for the log post), but I'm ready to submit whatever data you want... please help me to >>>> put Windows out of my datacenter! :) >>>> >> _________________________________________________________________ Discover the new Windows Vista http://search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=windows+vista&mkt=en-US&form=QBRE From mike at sentex.net Tue Aug 12 17:04:29 2008 From: mike at sentex.net (Mike Tancsa) Date: Tue Aug 12 17:04:35 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: References: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> Message-ID: <200808121704.m7CH4OZG032314@lava.sentex.ca> At 12:13 PM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >last e-mail! :) I can confirm that all works like a charm without >the Areca card. So, where the problem might lie?! I tested the card >with both 7.0-STABLE and 8.0-CURRENT (it hangs even before) without >success... :( Perhaps a disk option set on the Areca ? Looking at my config, I have it set to SATA300+NCQ HDD Read Ahead Cache enabled Stagger Power On Control 0..4 Spin Down Idle HDD disabled HDD SMART status polling enabled Disk Write Cache Mode enabled Can you try booting without the drives, or with just a couple of drives with a fresh raidset created ? I wonder if the box is booting up and is confused by the existing raidset ? ---Mike >P.S.: during all these tests I was always verifying that the card >itself was always functioning well, by >booting the Windows Server 2003 x64 installed on the RAID set. > > > > > > >>Thanks a lot for your help. > >> > >>---------------------------------------- > >>> From: mike@sentex.net > >>> To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > >>> Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > >>> Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 08:13:56 -0400 > >>> > >>> On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 22:54:41 +0000, in sentex.lists.freebsd.hardware > >>> you wrote: > >>>>arcmsr0: mem 0xfc7ff000-0xfc7fffff,0xfc000000-0xfc3fffff irq 31 > >> at device 14.0 on pci2 > >>>>arcmsr0: Reserved 0x1000 bytes for rid 0x10 type 3 at 0xfc7ff000 > >>>>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: Driver Version 1.20.00.15 2007-10-07 > >>>>ARECA RAID ADAPTER0: FIRMWARE VERSION V1.39 2006-2-9 > >>> > >>> > >>> Not sure it will help you or not, but I run the same card with version > >>> 1.43 of the firmware. I would try to upgrade the Areca card's > >>> firmware and then give 7.0R another try. > >>> > >>> ---Mike > >> > >_________________________________________________________________ >News, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Get it now! >http://www.live.com/getstarted.aspx From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 17:38:56 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 17:39:02 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <20080812101605.B5198@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> References: <20080811170806.X99082@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> <20080812101605.B5198@3jane.math.ualberta.ca> Message-ID: >>> >>> My card has no battery backup, but I disconnected the machine power cord and pulled >>> the card off itsPCI-X slot. >>> >>> After few minutes I reconnected the card and I booted the machine without any >>> hard drive. Then the same issue arised with the 7.0-RELEASE. >> >> Did you reset the raid configurations? I've had this problem several times >> with machines that have run the cards in Windows prior running FreeBSD. >> > > Booting without hard drives left the card with no knowledge about RAID sets or volumes, since > these data are saved on them. Surely I can now retry the boot after destroying current RAID > configuration, which was defined for Windows (by the way, I did it by using the BIOS configuration > utility...), but sincerely I wish to view FreeBSD 7.0R booting at least one time before "breaking > with the past". :) > > Uhm, wait for a moment... actually all that RAID volumes were defined when the card's firmware > was at v1.39! What I can do now is booting the machine up with the v1.44 firmware without any > attached drive. I'll post the result as soon as possible. > No improvement: I've booted first without disks and then with only a RAID0 Volume created by scratch using one disk that was used as online spare in the old RAID set, and 7.0R still have not been able to complete the boot process! :( _________________________________________________________________ Invite your mail contacts to join your friends list with Windows Live Spaces. It's easy! http://spaces.live.com/spacesapi.aspx?wx_action=create&wx_url=/friends.aspx&mkt=en-us From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 17:54:32 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Tue Aug 12 17:54:39 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <200808121704.m7CH4OZG032314@lava.sentex.ca> References: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> <200808121704.m7CH4OZG032314@lava.sentex.ca> Message-ID: > Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 13:04:32 -0400 > To: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com > From: mike@sentex.net > Subject: RE: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > CC: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org > > At 12:13 PM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >>last e-mail! :) I can confirm that all works like a charm without >>the Areca card. So, where the problem might lie?! I tested the card >>with both 7.0-STABLE and 8.0-CURRENT (it hangs even before) without >>success... :( > > Perhaps a disk option set on the Areca ? Looking at my config, I have > it set to > SATA300+NCQ > HDD Read Ahead Cache enabled > Stagger Power On Control 0..4 > Spin Down Idle HDD disabled > HDD SMART status polling enabled > Disk Write Cache Mode enabled > > Can you try booting without the drives, or with just a couple of > drives with a fresh raidset created ? I wonder if the box is booting > up and is confused by the existing raidset ? > > ---Mike > My card's options were slightly different from yours ("Stagger Power On Control" was set to "0..7" and "Disk Write Cache Mode" was set to "Auto"). Even setting them as yours the 7.0R didn't boot. I tried to boot without disks using the new firmware, but nothing changed! Then I created a new RAID0 set/volume using only a single SATA drive (it was used as online spare), but still not success... I'm afraid to have ended any ideas about what it might be the cause of this trouble!! :( I'll go on changing PCI-X slot of the Areca card, but I'm going to became pessimistic about a successful end of this story... sigh! _________________________________________________________________ Discover the new Windows Vista http://search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=windows+vista&mkt=en-US&form=QBRE From mike at sentex.net Tue Aug 12 18:53:37 2008 From: mike at sentex.net (Mike Tancsa) Date: Tue Aug 12 18:53:44 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: References: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> <200808121704.m7CH4OZG032314@lava.sentex.ca> Message-ID: <200808121853.m7CIrYxo032800@lava.sentex.ca> At 01:54 PM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >I tried to boot without disks using the new firmware, but nothing >changed! Then I created a new RAID0 >set/volume using only a single SATA drive (it was used as online >spare), but still not success... I'm afraid >to have ended any ideas about what it might be the cause of this trouble!! :( > >I'll go on changing PCI-X slot of the Areca card, but I'm going to >became pessimistic about a successful >end of this story... sigh! MB BIOS update ? On some more exotic boards I find I sometimes have to disable some features, typically USB related, if there are problems. Not sure in your case. I think MSI is enabled by default on 7 and not on 6, so perhaps something on the board does not like that ? Try disabling it in the loader.conf hw.pci.enable_msi=0 ---Mike From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Tue Aug 12 19:20:36 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Tue Aug 12 19:20:42 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 In-Reply-To: <200808121853.m7CIrYxo032800@lava.sentex.ca> References: <200808121549.m7CFnmBo031979@lava.sentex.ca> <200808121704.m7CH4OZG032314@lava.sentex.ca> <200808121853.m7CIrYxo032800@lava.sentex.ca> Message-ID: <20080812192036.GA33759@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Tue, Aug 12, 2008 at 02:53:32PM -0400, Mike Tancsa wrote: > At 01:54 PM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >> I tried to boot without disks using the new firmware, but nothing >> changed! Then I created a new RAID0 >> set/volume using only a single SATA drive (it was used as online >> spare), but still not success... I'm afraid >> to have ended any ideas about what it might be the cause of this trouble!! :( >> >> I'll go on changing PCI-X slot of the Areca card, but I'm going to >> became pessimistic about a successful >> end of this story... sigh! > > > MB BIOS update ? On some more exotic boards I find I sometimes have to > disable some features, typically USB related, if there are problems. Not > sure in your case. I think MSI is enabled by default on 7 and not on 6, > so perhaps something on the board does not like that ? Try disabling it > in the loader.conf > > hw.pci.enable_msi=0 Don't forget MSI-X: hw.pci.enable_msix="0" -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From kewlpcs at hotmail.com Tue Aug 12 21:35:46 2008 From: kewlpcs at hotmail.com (Michael James Wright) Date: Tue Aug 12 21:35:53 2008 Subject: Partiting Message-ID: Before i can install the freebsd operating system, i need to Partition the disc drive since i'm using Windows Vista Premium. how do i do up a boot - drive for the freebsd ??? as i'm using windows and freebsd on the same hard drive. _________________________________________________________________ Are you paid what you're worth? Find out: SEEK Salary Centre http://a.ninemsn.com.au/b.aspx?URL=http%3A%2F%2Fninemsn%2Eseek%2Ecom%2Eau%2Fcareer%2Dresources%2Fsalary%2Dcentre%2F%3Ftracking%3Dsk%3Ahet%3Asc%3Anine%3A0%3Ahot%3Atext&_t=764565661&_r=OCT07_endtext_salary&_m=EXT From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Wed Aug 13 08:43:01 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Wed Aug 13 08:43:07 2008 Subject: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 Message-ID: > Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 12:20:36 -0700 > From: koitsu@FreeBSD.org > To: mike@sentex.net > CC: andrew.hotlab@hotmail.com; freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org > Subject: Re: Areca ARC-1120 on FreeBSD 7.0 > > On Tue, Aug 12, 2008 at 02:53:32PM -0400, Mike Tancsa wrote: >> At 01:54 PM 8/12/2008, Andrew Hotlab wrote: >>> I tried to boot without disks using the new firmware, but nothing >>> changed! Then I created a new RAID0 >>> set/volume using only a single SATA drive (it was used as online >>> spare), but still not success... I'm afraid >>> to have ended any ideas about what it might be the cause of this trouble!! :( >>> >>> I'll go on changing PCI-X slot of the Areca card, but I'm going to >>> became pessimistic about a successful >>> end of this story... sigh! >> >> >> MB BIOS update ? On some more exotic boards I find I sometimes have to >> disable some features, typically USB related, if there are problems. Not >> sure in your case. I think MSI is enabled by default on 7 and not on 6, >> so perhaps something on the board does not like that ? Try disabling it >> in the loader.conf >> >> hw.pci.enable_msi=0 > > Don't forget MSI-X: > > hw.pci.enable_msix="0" > > -- > | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | > | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | > | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | > | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | > Sorry for the late post, my Windows Live Hotmail mailbox suffered a disruption... :( I flashed the BIOS of the Supermicro H8DAE with the latest update available (v1.1a to v1.1b). With both the old and the new version of the BIOS to modify sysctl tunables do not resolve the problem, but I've found that FreeBSD 7.0R boots successfully simply by changing the PCI-X slot for the Areca card!!! I've also verified that 7.0R boots when only the RAID card is plugged in the system (removing the Intel Pro/1000MT Quad Port adapter)... it might be changed something in the latest FreeBSD release causing the fault with this particular hardware configuration. Thanks you all very much to have supported me in solving this trouble... that system will be the first physical Unix BSD host that can be considered in production in my network! I'm going to begin the setup! :) Andrew _________________________________________________________________ News, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Get it now! http://www.live.com/getstarted.aspx From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Wed Aug 13 09:16:54 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Wed Aug 13 09:17:01 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: <20080813091654.GA86595@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 01:55:30PM -0700, Jeremy Chadwick wrote: > But in this day and age, one of the best SATA controllers for FreeBSD is > an Areca controller. They're somewhat expensive (comparatively), but > the performance is apparently stunning, combined with decent FreeBSD > drivers that utilise CAM and da(4) (yes, despite the disks being SATA). > Every time people mention them on the lists, the response is the same: > amazing performance, and really good driver + administrative support > (e.g. software administrative utilities). > > I do wish Areca made a less expensive controller with less features, > intended for "tech-savvy" consumer use, in the US$125 or less price > range. And it appears they now do: the ARC-1200. PCIe x1, has 2 ports, and on-board cache. It lacks an IOP, so the performance won't be that of one of the more expensive cards. Either way, quite good for 2-disk servers: http://www.areca.com.tw/products/2ports.htm Cost is ~US$175. A little steep, but the on-board cache supposedly justifies it (IMHO, barely). Hopefully the price will come down to US$100-125, which would be perfect. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com Wed Aug 13 10:02:34 2008 From: andrew.hotlab at hotmail.com (Andrew Hotlab) Date: Wed Aug 13 10:02:40 2008 Subject: Partitioning Message-ID: On Tue, Aug 12, 2008 at 21:35:46 UTC, Michael James Wright wrote: > > Before i can install the freebsd operating system, i need to Partition the disc drive since > i'm using Windows Vista Premium. how do i do up a boot - drive for the freebsd ??? as i'm > using windows and freebsd on the same hard drive. If you are experiencing FreeBSD for the first time, I suggest you to use a dedicated hard disk for your first installation. If you can't, you may find useful to read the Chapter 4 "Shared OS installation" from the Greg Lehey's book "The Complete FreeBSD", which you can download a CC-licensed PDF version of at http://grog.evilcode.net/book.pdf.gz Have a nice day. Andrew _________________________________________________________________ News, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Get it now! http://www.live.com/getstarted.aspx From freebsd at razik.name Wed Aug 13 10:21:55 2008 From: freebsd at razik.name (Lukas Razik) Date: Wed Aug 13 10:22:03 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <20080813091654.GA86595@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <20080813091654.GA86595@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: <48A2B5BC.7080701@razik.name> Hello Jeremy! Jeremy Chadwick schrieb: > On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 01:55:30PM -0700, Jeremy Chadwick wrote: > >>But in this day and age, one of the best SATA controllers for FreeBSD is >>an Areca controller. They're somewhat expensive (comparatively), but >>the performance is apparently stunning, combined with decent FreeBSD >>drivers that utilise CAM and da(4) (yes, despite the disks being SATA). >>Every time people mention them on the lists, the response is the same: >>amazing performance, and really good driver + administrative support >>(e.g. software administrative utilities). >> >>I do wish Areca made a less expensive controller with less features, >>intended for "tech-savvy" consumer use, in the US$125 or less price >>range. > > > And it appears they now do: the ARC-1200. PCIe x1, has 2 ports, and > on-board cache. It lacks an IOP, so the performance won't be that of > one of the more expensive cards. Either way, quite good for 2-disk > servers: > > http://www.areca.com.tw/products/2ports.htm > > Cost is ~US$175. A little steep, but the on-board cache supposedly > justifies it (IMHO, barely). Hopefully the price will come down to > US$100-125, which would be perfect. > Ooops, I haven't seen your eMail when I wrote you the last some minutes ago... :-) I know this controller (as I wrote you) for some days now. Here in Germany I've only seen one Online-Shop where this controller is listed. If the HighPoint RocketRAID 3120 (100EUR =~ 150USD) isn't as good as I hope, then I will test the Areca ARC-1200 (140EUR =~ 210USD). But you wrote "It lacks an IOP [...]". Do you mean that it will have no Intel IOP because they only write it has a "500MHz Storage processor" and therefore it will be not as fast as the other controllers from Areca? Regards, Lukas From freebsd at razik.name Wed Aug 13 10:26:32 2008 From: freebsd at razik.name (Lukas Razik) Date: Wed Aug 13 10:26:40 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: <48A2B05B.20000@razik.name> Hello! >>I'm happy to see that it could work with the newest 7.0-STABLE tree because I >>don't want to buy a new NIC which works with FreeBSD. > > > Be aware that Realtek NICs have a history of being incredibly buggy and > having very odd engineering design flaws. I go to great lengths to > avoid them on motherboards; I agree an OS should work with it, but based > on the pain I've seen Yong-Hyeon (driver maintainer) go through when it > comes to hardware revisions or general oddities, I often cringe at the > idea of using a Realtek NIC in any environment I have control over. > (I've blogged about how Realtek more or less dominates the consumer > market with their NIC/PHYs, which is quite scary considering the bugs > even in their Windows drivers.) > > I am very, very thankful we have an active rl(4) and re(4) driver > maintainer, though. :-) I know that there are better NICs (in the past I had some from Intel) but the system is only for personal use and I don't need a "optimal working" Ethernet network, so the onboard RTL NICs should be enough for my purposes... >>I use FreeBSD for 90% >>(for some years now) and therefore I also bought a 3ware 8006-2LP Hardware- >>RAID controller and will buy a second HighPoint 3120 HW-RAID controller (which >>is less expensive) because I had bad experiences with the Fake- (or >>Pseudo-)RAID controllers like the "normal" onboard controllers and others >>(Promise FastTrak 4310 etc.). > > > I have a tendency to like Intel (and occasionally nVidia, but highly > prefer Intel) ICH controllers simply because Intel has fantastic product > errata, and the ICH controllers have performed quite well over the > years. They're also used on server hardware (read: Supermicro). > > But in this day and age, one of the best SATA controllers for FreeBSD is > an Areca controller. They're somewhat expensive (comparatively), but > the performance is apparently stunning, combined with decent FreeBSD > drivers that utilise CAM and da(4) (yes, despite the disks being SATA). > Every time people mention them on the lists, the response is the same: > amazing performance, and really good driver + administrative support > (e.g. software administrative utilities). > > I do wish Areca made a less expensive controller with less features, > intended for "tech-savvy" consumer use, in the US$125 or less price > range. I've read about the Areca (aka Tekram?) controllers and the good support by FreeBSD but as I told you, I have a 3ware controller and I'me _very_ happy with it. But now I need a second one (with PCIe x1 and two SATA ports) for RAID1 because it seems as if the RAID-functionallity of my onboard ICH9R controller isn't supported by FreeBSD and Linux but I want to do further testing... I've looked for such an Areca HW-RAID controller some days ago because of my bad experiences with the Fake-RAID controllers in the past and I've found the new Areca ARC-1200: http://www.areca.com.tw/products/2ports.htm but here in Germany it's with ~140EUR even more expensive than the 3ware 9650SE-2LP which is listed for ~130EUR: http://www.3ware.com/products/serial_ata2-9650.asp Then I've seen that HighPoint doesn't produce only cheap Fake-RAID cards but also the HighPoint RocketRAID 3120 HW-RAID controller which is listed for only ~100EUR and which ostensibly has a good Linux/FreeBSD support. If I will not be able to get the ICH9R working stable with FreeBSD and Linux, then I will buy the HighPoint 3120. If it works good and I have the time then I'll benchmark it against the 3ware 8006-2LP under FreeBSD... >>Now I also have troubles with FreeBSD and the ICH9R SATA-controller >>and it's RAID functionality. > > > I'm not surprised. FreeBSD's Intel MatrixRAID support is very > dangerous, I would not recommend using it if your data matters. There > are a few PRs which contain patches that address some of the concerns, > but out-of-the-box, I'd recommend avoiding Intel MatrixRAID on FreeBSD. > Then I can save my time... :-) Thanks for your answer with all information! Regards, Lukas From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Wed Aug 13 10:27:39 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Wed Aug 13 10:27:47 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <48A2B5BC.7080701@razik.name> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <20080813091654.GA86595@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <48A2B5BC.7080701@razik.name> Message-ID: <20080813102738.GA89899@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Wed, Aug 13, 2008 at 12:21:48PM +0200, Lukas Razik wrote: > Hello Jeremy! > > Jeremy Chadwick schrieb: >> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 01:55:30PM -0700, Jeremy Chadwick wrote: >> >>> But in this day and age, one of the best SATA controllers for FreeBSD is >>> an Areca controller. They're somewhat expensive (comparatively), but >>> the performance is apparently stunning, combined with decent FreeBSD >>> drivers that utilise CAM and da(4) (yes, despite the disks being SATA). >>> Every time people mention them on the lists, the response is the same: >>> amazing performance, and really good driver + administrative support >>> (e.g. software administrative utilities). >>> >>> I do wish Areca made a less expensive controller with less features, >>> intended for "tech-savvy" consumer use, in the US$125 or less price >>> range. >> >> >> And it appears they now do: the ARC-1200. PCIe x1, has 2 ports, and >> on-board cache. It lacks an IOP, so the performance won't be that of >> one of the more expensive cards. Either way, quite good for 2-disk >> servers: >> >> http://www.areca.com.tw/products/2ports.htm >> >> Cost is ~US$175. A little steep, but the on-board cache supposedly >> justifies it (IMHO, barely). Hopefully the price will come down to >> US$100-125, which would be perfect. >> > > Ooops, I haven't seen your eMail when I wrote you the last some minutes > ago... :-) > > I know this controller (as I wrote you) for some days now. Here in > Germany I've only seen one Online-Shop where this controller is listed. > If the HighPoint RocketRAID 3120 (100EUR =~ 150USD) isn't as good as I > hope, then I will test the Areca ARC-1200 (140EUR =~ 210USD). I've stayed away from HighPoint since the release of their HPT366 and HPT370/372 chips, which were horrible. That said, *please* let me know how their RocketRAID products perform and behave under FreeBSD. I'm interested to know if they've learned from past mistakes. > But you wrote "It lacks an IOP [...]". Do you mean that it will have no > Intel IOP because they only write it has a "500MHz Storage processor" > and therefore it will be not as fast as the other controllers from Areca? Correct. I'm lead to believe that the ambiguous "500Mhz Storage processor" item refers to a non-Intel processor of some sort. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From freebsd at razik.name Wed Aug 13 11:11:27 2008 From: freebsd at razik.name (Lukas Razik) Date: Wed Aug 13 11:11:41 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <20080813102738.GA89899@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <20080810234421.GA90311@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <200808112221.00672.freebsd@razik.name> <20080811205530.GA54217@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <20080813091654.GA86595@eos.sc1.parodius.com> <48A2B5BC.7080701@razik.name> <20080813102738.GA89899@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: <48A2C149.2040308@razik.name> Hello! Jeremy Chadwick schrieb: >>I know this controller (as I wrote you) for some days now. Here in >>Germany I've only seen one Online-Shop where this controller is listed. >>If the HighPoint RocketRAID 3120 (100EUR =~ 150USD) isn't as good as I >>hope, then I will test the Areca ARC-1200 (140EUR =~ 210USD). > > > I've stayed away from HighPoint since the release of their HPT366 and > HPT370/372 chips, which were horrible. That said, *please* let me > know how their RocketRAID products perform and behave under FreeBSD. > I'm interested to know if they've learned from past mistakes. lol, same here... :-) I have a HPT370 on my last motherboard and it didn't work with linux-2.4.X and SMP enabled - although it was "supported". Under FreeBSD it worked luckily good for me and this was one of the reasons for me to use FreeBSD instead of Linux on my dual CPU system since 2001. Now I'm a _big_ FreeBSD fan and I like the job of you guys! BTW: That's also the reason for my current (unsolved) decision to buy a GTX260 (because of nVIDIA's FreeBSD-driver) or to take ATI's cheaper and tendentially better Radeon HD4870 withoud FreeBSD-drivers. ;-) Hmmm... In linux-2.6.X these HPT370 chips where no longer supported. In 2006 I bought the Promise FastTrak 4310 (also Fake-RAID) for my new SATA-HDs and had again only problems under Linux and FreeBSD. http://www.mavetju.org/mail/view_message.php?list=freebsd-hardware&id=2320838 My solution was the 3ware 8006-2LP and I want never again any Fake-RAID card. But the 3ware and Areca controllers aren't cheap and because of that I want to test HPT's new HW-RAID card. I will buy it at the beginning of September and then I'll test and benchmark it. I'm also _very_ interested because it would be a cheaper solution and I'll inform you about my experiences ASAP. :-) >>But you wrote "It lacks an IOP [...]". Do you mean that it will have no >>Intel IOP because they only write it has a "500MHz Storage processor" >>and therefore it will be not as fast as the other controllers from Areca? > > > Correct. I'm lead to believe that the ambiguous "500Mhz Storage > processor" item refers to a non-Intel processor of some sort. > O.K. I see. That's a good hint! Regards, Lukas From freebsd at razik.name Wed Aug 13 21:19:57 2008 From: freebsd at razik.name (Lukas Razik) Date: Wed Aug 13 21:20:04 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <48A317D8.5070702@bah.homeip.net> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <48A317D8.5070702@bah.homeip.net> Message-ID: <48A34FF0.3010304@razik.name> Hello Bernt! Yes, you're right - that's interesting... I only can state that with 7.0-RELEASE and with 7.0-STABLE-200807 (07/15/08) it doesn't work. _But_ on 2008-07-15 there was a change made to the re driver which is relevant for the RTL8168 as you can see here: http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/dev/re/if_re.c Maybe with the current if_re.c it works and to test this I could build a new kernel from CVS but I come home not until September. :-( The only difference between our NICs which I see is the revision. Since the revision of your chip is 0x01, the NIC's revision on my MoBo is 0x02 ... Maybe that's the difference? Thanks for your statement! Regards, Lukas Bernt Hansson schrieb: > Lukas Razik: > >>Hello! >> >>I've a GigaByte GA-X48-DQ6 Motherboard with a "RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit >>Ethernet NIC" and I've read that 7.0-RELEASE / amd64 should recognize these >>cards (by the "re" driver) but it doesn't in my case. > > > I got an Gigabyte GA-MA790FX-DS5 with the same network chip and it's > working right out of the box. There are other issues with that motherboard. > > 7.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 > root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 > > > re0@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0xe0001458 chip=0x816810ec rev=0x01 > hdr=0x00 > vendor = 'Realtek Semiconductor' > device = 'RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC' > class = network > subclass = ethernet > > >>#uname -a : >>FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 >>root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 >> >>#pciconf -lv : >>[...] >>none2@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0xe0001458 chip=0x816810ec >>rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 >> vendor = 'Realtek Semiconductor' >> device = 'RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC' >> class = network >> subclass = ethernet >>[...] >> >>So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? >> >>Regards and Many Thanks for your help! >>Lukas >> >>_______________________________________________ >>freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list >>http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware >>To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" From won.derick at yahoo.com Fri Aug 15 07:06:56 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Fri Aug 15 07:07:03 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 Message-ID: <58713.71225.qm@web45802.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> Hello, I was wondering what are the processes running on my machine after checking the CPU utilization using ps and top commands. My Platform is IBM x3755 (w/ 8 CPUs) running FreeBSD 6.2. 1. Using top -S last pid: 90083; load averages: 0.22, 0.19, 0.17 up 5+00:26:5515:27:07 186 processes: 19 running, 152 sleeping, 15 waiting CPU states: 0.9 % user, 0.0 % nice, 7.2 % system, 0.0 % interrupt, 91.9% idle Mem: 54M Active, 22M Inact, 76M Wired, 26M Buf, 29G Free Swap: 6144M Total, 6144M Free PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE C TIME WCPU COMMAND 17 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 0 101.2H 98.97% idle: cpu0 13 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 4 105.7H 96.83% idle: cpu4 15 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 2 114.1H 96.04% idle: cpu2 12 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU5 5 109.8H 93.75% idle: cpu5 16 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 1 109.5H 86.18% idle: cpu1 14 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 3 113.7H 86.04% idle: cpu3 10 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 7 111.4H 83.98% idle: cpu7 11 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 6 110.8H 81.98% idle: cpu6 57213 root 10 20 0 14512K 4548K RUN 7 388:19 0.00% smd 18 root 1 -32 -151 0K 16K CPU0 0 83:07 0.00% swi4: clock sio 45 root 1 171 52 0K 16K pgzero 3 3:05 0.00% pagezero . . . 57094 root 1 8 0 31356K 9180K wait 6 0:01 0.00% php-cgi 18533 admin 1 96 0 30732K 4308K select 6 0:01 0.00% sshd90137 0.29, 0.20, 0.17 up 5+00:26:5715:27:09 [a] Average CPU Utilization = 0.9 % user + 7.2 % system = 8.1% = 100 - 91.9 = 8.1% 98.97 + 96.83 + 96.04 + 93.75 + 86.18 + 86.04 + 83.98 + 81.98 [b] Average CPU Utilization = 100 - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- = 9.53 % 8 2. Using ps -aux USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TT STAT STARTED TIME COMMAND root 17 99.0 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6074:32.36 [idle: cpu0] root 13 97.0 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6339:48.43 [idle: cpu4] root 15 96.2 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6847:42.20 [idle: cpu2] root 12 94.4 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6586:50.10 [idle: cpu5] root 16 85.9 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6567:57.05 [idle: cpu1] root 14 85.4 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6823:20.19 [idle: cpu3] root 10 85.2 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6683:28.54 [idle: cpu7] root 11 81.9 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6646:11.63 [idle: cpu6] root 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 ?? WLs Fri03PM 0:00.00 [swapper] root 1 0.0 0.0 912 460 ?? ILs Fri03PM 0:00.58 /sbin/init -- . . . admin 19027 0.0 0.0 12480 3384 p2 Ss+ 12:06PM 0:00.13 -clish (clish) root 19207 0.0 0.0 2604 940 p2 S+ 12:07PM 0:07.65 /usr/sbin/clog -f /var/log/dhcpd.log 99 + 97 + 96.2 + 94.4 + 85.9+ 85.4 + 85.2 + 81.9 Average CPU Utilization = 100 - --------------------------------------------------------- = 9.375 % 8 Question 1: What is the difference between 1 [a] and 1 [b]? Question 2: What are the processes (system?) that are running that resulted to 1 [b]? top -S is just giving a name idle: cpu0, idle: cpu1, etc. under the command column. Question 3: Is it logical to compare the average CPU utilization results obtained in number 1 and 2? How are they differ? Question 4. Are there other tools that I can use to accurately get the running processes that are eating the actual CPU resources on the machine? Please shed me some lights.. Thanks, Won From won.derick at yahoo.com Fri Aug 15 07:14:26 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Fri Aug 15 07:14:33 2008 Subject: Fw: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 Message-ID: <847976.42317.qm@web45803.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> forwarding the thread to freebsd-testing@freebsd.org, freebsd-performance@freebsd.org Hello, I was wondering what are the processes running on my machine after checking the CPU utilization using ps and top commands. My Platform is IBM x3755 (w/ 8 CPUs) running FreeBSD 6.2. 1. Using top -S last pid: 90083; load averages: 0.22, 0.19, 0.17 up 5+00:26:5515:27:07 186 processes: 19 running, 152 sleeping, 15 waiting CPU states: 0.9 % user, 0.0 % nice, 7.2 % system, 0.0 % interrupt, 91.9% idle Mem: 54M Active, 22M Inact, 76M Wired, 26M Buf, 29G Free Swap: 6144M Total, 6144M Free PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE C TIME WCPU COMMAND 17 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 0 101.2H 98.97% idle: cpu0 13 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 4 105.7H 96.83% idle: cpu4 15 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 2 114.1H 96.04% idle: cpu2 12 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU5 5 109.8H 93.75% idle: cpu5 16 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 1 109.5H 86.18% idle: cpu1 14 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 3 113.7H 86.04% idle: cpu3 10 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 7 111.4H 83.98% idle: cpu7 11 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 6 110.8H 81.98% idle: cpu6 57213 root 10 20 0 14512K 4548K RUN 7 388:19 0.00% smd 18 root 1 -32 -151 0K 16K CPU0 0 83:07 0.00% swi4: clock sio 45 root 1 171 52 0K 16K pgzero 3 3:05 0.00% pagezero . . . 57094 root 1 8 0 31356K 9180K wait 6 0:01 0.00% php-cgi 18533 admin 1 96 0 30732K 4308K select 6 0:01 0.00% sshd90137 0.29, 0.20, 0.17 up 5+00:26:5715:27:09 [a] Average CPU Utilization = 0.9 % user + 7.2 % system = 8.1% = 100 - 91.9 = 8.1% 98.97 + 96.83 + 96.04 + 93.75 + 86.18 + 86.04 + 83.98 + 81.98 [b] Average CPU Utilization = 100 - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- = 9.53 % 8 2. Using ps -aux USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TT STAT STARTED TIME COMMAND root 17 99.0 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6074:32.36 [idle: cpu0] root 13 97.0 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6339:48.43 [idle: cpu4] root 15 96.2 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6847:42.20 [idle: cpu2] root 12 94.4 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6586:50.10 [idle: cpu5] root 16 85.9 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6567:57.05 [idle: cpu1] root 14 85.4 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6823:20.19 [idle: cpu3] root 10 85.2 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6683:28.54 [idle: cpu7] root 11 81.9 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6646:11.63 [idle: cpu6] root 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 ?? WLs Fri03PM 0:00.00 [swapper] root 1 0.0 0.0 912 460 ?? ILs Fri03PM 0:00.58 /sbin/init -- . . . admin 19027 0.0 0.0 12480 3384 p2 Ss+ 12:06PM 0:00.13 -clish (clish) root 19207 0.0 0.0 2604 940 p2 S+ 12:07PM 0:07.65 /usr/sbin/clog -f /var/log/dhcpd.log 99 + 97 + 96.2 + 94.4 + 85.9+ 85.4 + 85.2 + 81.9 Average CPU Utilization = 100 - --------------------------------------------------------- = 9.375 % 8 Question 1: What is the difference between 1 [a] and 1 [b]? Question 2: What are the processes (system?) that are running that resulted to 1 [b]? top -S is just giving a name idle: cpu0, idle: cpu1, etc. under the command column. Question 3: Is it logical to compare the average CPU utilization results obtained in number 1 and 2? How are they differ? Question 4. Are there other tools that I can use to accurately get the running processes that are eating the actual CPU resources on the machine? Please shed me some lights.. Thanks, Won From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Fri Aug 15 07:44:27 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Fri Aug 15 07:44:33 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 In-Reply-To: <58713.71225.qm@web45802.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> References: <58713.71225.qm@web45802.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <20080815074426.GA74077@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 11:53:30PM -0700, Won De Erick wrote: > Hello, > > I was wondering what are the processes running on my machine after checking the CPU utilization using ps and top commands. > My Platform is IBM x3755 (w/ 8 CPUs) running FreeBSD 6.2. > > > > 1. Using top -S > > last pid: 90083; load averages: 0.22, 0.19, 0.17 up > 5+00:26:5515:27:07 > 186 processes: 19 running, 152 sleeping, 15 waiting > CPU states: 0.9 % user, 0.0 % nice, 7.2 % system, 0.0 % interrupt, 91.9% idle > Mem: 54M > Active, 22M Inact, 76M Wired, 26M Buf, 29G Free > Swap: 6144M Total, 6144M > Free > > PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE C TIME WCPU > COMMAND > 17 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 0 101.2H 98.97% > idle: cpu0 > 13 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 4 105.7H 96.83% > idle: cpu4 > 15 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 2 114.1H 96.04% > idle: cpu2 > 12 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU5 5 109.8H 93.75% > idle: cpu5 > 16 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 1 109.5H 86.18% > idle: cpu1 > 14 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 3 113.7H 86.04% > idle: cpu3 > 10 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 7 111.4H 83.98% > idle: cpu7 > 11 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 6 110.8H 81.98% > idle: cpu6 > 57213 root 10 20 0 14512K 4548K RUN 7 388:19 0.00% > smd > 18 root 1 -32 -151 0K 16K CPU0 0 83:07 0.00% swi4: > clock sio > 45 root 1 171 52 0K 16K pgzero 3 3:05 0.00% > pagezero > > . . . > > > 57094 root 1 8 0 31356K 9180K wait 6 0:01 0.00% php-cgi > 18533 admin 1 96 0 30732K 4308K select 6 0:01 0.00% sshd90137 > 0.29, 0.20, 0.17 up 5+00:26:5715:27:09 > > > [a] Average CPU Utilization = 0.9 % user + 7.2 % > system = 8.1% > = 100 - 91.9 = > 8.1% > > 98.97 + > 96.83 + 96.04 + 93.75 + 86.18 + 86.04 + 83.98 + 81.98 > [b] Average CPU Utilization = 100 - > ----------------------------------------------------------------------- = 9.53 > % > > 8 > 2. Using ps -aux > > USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TT STAT STARTED TIME COMMAND > root 17 99.0 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6074:32.36 [idle: > cpu0] > root 13 97.0 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6339:48.43 > [idle: cpu4] > root 15 96.2 0.0 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM > 6847:42.20 [idle: cpu2] > root 12 94.4 0.0 0 16 ?? RL > Fri03PM 6586:50.10 [idle: cpu5] > root 16 85.9 0.0 0 16 ?? > RL Fri03PM 6567:57.05 [idle: cpu1] > root 14 85.4 0.0 0 16 > ?? RL Fri03PM 6823:20.19 [idle: cpu3] > root 10 85.2 0.0 0 > 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6683:28.54 [idle: cpu7] > root 11 81.9 0.0 > 0 16 ?? RL Fri03PM 6646:11.63 [idle: cpu6] > root 0 0.0 > 0.0 0 0 ?? WLs Fri03PM 0:00.00 [swapper] > root 1 0.0 > 0.0 912 460 ?? ILs Fri03PM 0:00.58 /sbin/init -- > > . . . > > admin 19027 0.0 0.0 12480 3384 p2 Ss+ 12:06PM 0:00.13 -clish > (clish) > root 19207 0.0 0.0 2604 940 p2 S+ 12:07PM 0:07.65 > /usr/sbin/clog -f /var/log/dhcpd.log > > > > 99 + 97 > + 96.2 + 94.4 + 85.9+ 85.4 + 85.2 + 81.9 > Average CPU Utilization = 100 - > --------------------------------------------------------- = 9.375 % > > 8 > > Question 2: What are the processes (system?) that are running that resulted to 1 [b]? > top -S is just giving a name idle: cpu0, idle: cpu1, etc. under the command column. They're not really "processes", just kernel threads or kernel-level processes (for lack of better term). > Question 4. Are there other tools that I can use to accurately get the running processes that are eating the actual CPU resources on the machine? The utilities you're using are correct (ps and top), but I don't know why you're using top -S since it's pretty apparent you don't know how to read the output. :-) You shouldn't be using -S if you're just interested in actual processes on the UNIX machine itself. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From won.derick at yahoo.com Fri Aug 15 08:53:53 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Fri Aug 15 08:53:59 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 Message-ID: <480558.3162.qm@web45811.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> thanks for the lights. I may not be well verse in interpreting the output, but I am using top -S to make other system processes (like pager, swapper) visible. I just wondered why the command name should be idle : cpu0, etc. instead of giving a little bit more descriptive name (like what you said, kernel thread bla bla). With this, it would be more understandable. An ordinary user like me could mistakenly interpret it as an "actual" process. Well thanks Jeremy! ----- Original Message ---- From: Jeremy Chadwick To: Won De Erick Cc: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 3:44:26 PM Subject: Re: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 11:53:30PM -0700, Won De Erick wrote: > Hello, > > I was wondering what are the processes running on my machine after checking the CPU utilization using ps and top commands. > My Platform is IBM x3755 (w/ 8 CPUs) running FreeBSD 6.2. > > > > 1. Using top -S > Question 2: What are the processes (system?) that are running that resulted to 1 [b]? > top -S is just giving a name idle: cpu0, idle: cpu1, etc. under the command column. They're not really "processes", just kernel threads or kernel-level processes (for lack of better term). > Question 4. Are there other tools that I can use to accurately get the running processes that are eating the actual CPU resources on the machine? The utilities you're using are correct (ps and top), but I don't know why you're using top -S since it's pretty apparent you don't know how to read the output. :-) You shouldn't be using -S if you're just interested in actual processes on the UNIX machine itself. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | _______________________________________________ freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" From won.derick at yahoo.com Fri Aug 15 09:03:08 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Fri Aug 15 09:03:14 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 Message-ID: <224002.6575.qm@web45816.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> > The utilities you're using are correct (ps and top), but I don't know > why you're using top -S since it's pretty apparent you don't know how to > read the output. :-) > thanks for the lights. I may not be well verse in interpreting the output, but I am using top -S to make other system processes (like pager, swapper) visible. I just wondered why the command name should be idle : cpu0, etc. instead of giving a little bit more descriptive name (like what you said, kernel thread bla bla). With this, it would be more understandable. An ordinary user like me could mistakenly interpret it as an "actual" process. > You shouldn't be using -S if you're just interested in actual processes > on the UNIX machine itself. Then what should I use? I am interested in getting the detailed info to justify the %CPU idles and utilization. thanks Jeremy! From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Fri Aug 15 11:46:55 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Fri Aug 15 11:47:02 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 In-Reply-To: <224002.6575.qm@web45816.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> References: <224002.6575.qm@web45816.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <20080815114655.GA83634@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Fri, Aug 15, 2008 at 02:03:06AM -0700, Won De Erick wrote: > > The utilities you're using are correct (ps and top), but I don't know > > why you're using top -S since it's pretty apparent you don't know how to > > read the output. :-) > > thanks for the lights. > > I may not be well verse in interpreting the output, but I am using top -S to make other system processes (like pager, swapper) visible. > I just wondered why the command name should be idle : cpu0, etc. instead of giving a little bit more descriptive name (like what you said, kernel thread bla bla). With this, it would be more understandable. An ordinary user like me could mistakenly interpret it as an "actual" process. First and foremost, I'm not sure why you cross-posted this on 3 separate lists (testing, performance, and hardware). You probably should have posted this on freebsd-questions, and if no response after a week or so, again on freebsd-stable (although you're using FreeBSD 6.2). It's generally shunned by the FreeBSD mailing list community to cross-post to so many lists. Just something to keep in mind for the future. > > You shouldn't be using -S if you're just interested in actual processes > > on the UNIX machine itself. > > Then what should I use? I am interested in getting the detailed info to justify the %CPU idles and utilization. Of the entire machine? You can see that in top's header: last pid: 84636; load averages: 0.47, 0.14, 0.04 up 79+01:15:18 04:46:01 75 processes: 2 running, 70 sleeping, 3 stopped CPU: 28.6% user, 0.0% nice, 8.2% system, 0.0% interrupt, 63.3% idle Mem: 207M Active, 2433M Inact, 212M Wired, 91M Cache, 112M Buf, 57M Free Swap: 8192M Total, 228K Used, 8192M Free Regarding why you're adding up all the individual process statistics: I can imagine they would vary a slight bit, but I cannot explain a 7% variance. Someone with more knowledge will have to assist there. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From won.derick at yahoo.com Sat Aug 16 08:18:20 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Sat Aug 16 08:18:37 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 Message-ID: <897559.10614.qm@web45814.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> >First and foremost, I'm not sure why you cross-posted this on 3 separate >lists (testing, performance, and hardware). You probably should have >posted this on freebsd-questions, and if no response after a week or so, >again on freebsd-stable (although you're using FreeBSD 6.2). >It's generally shunned by the FreeBSD mailing list community to >cross-post to so many lists. Just something to keep in mind for the >future. Thanks for this reminder. I am testing my hardware against FreeBSD, and I just want to reach those people under the said areas (testing, performance, hardware) with the hope to get speedy response. >> Then what should I use? I am interested in getting the detailed info to justify the %CPU idles and utilization. >Of the entire machine? You can see that in top's header: >last pid: 84636; load averages: 0.47, 0.14, 0.04 up 79+01:15:18 04:46:01 >75 processes: 2 running, 70 sleeping, 3 stopped >CPU: 28.6% user, 0.0% nice, 8.2% system, 0.0% interrupt, 63.3% idle >Mem: 207M Active, 2433M Inact, 212M Wired, 91M Cache, 112M Buf, 57M Free >Swap: 8192M Total, 228K Used, 8192M Free >Regarding why you're adding up all the individual process statistics: I >can imagine they would vary a slight bit, but I cannot explain a 7% >variance. Someone with more knowledge will have to assist there. Though the header could be conclusive, I should want the specific processes (or threads). And come up with a list of breakdowns, like: User (28.6%) 1. Program1 -- 20.0% 2. Program2 -- 8.6% System(8.2%) 1. SystemProcess1 -- X % 2. (and so on) -- Y % Then match this by adding up all individual processes statistics. And if I couldn't match, at least I could tell some factors that cause variance. This variance has really struck my attention. When I run "top -SI", the result was: last pid: 2746; load averages: 0.20, 0.16, 0.10 up 0+00:07:38 15:54:26 125 processes: 12 running, 100 sleeping, 16 waiting CPU states: 0.3% user, 0.0% nice, 6.4% system, 0.0% interrupt, 93.2% idle Mem: 42M Active, 18M Inact, 62M Wired, 20M Buf, 27G Free Swap: PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE C TIME WCPU COMMAND 17 root 1 171 52 0K 16K RUN 0 6:05 99.02% idle: cpu0 15 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU2 2 6:05 99.02% idle: cpu2 14 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU3 3 6:28 96.58% idle: cpu3 10 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU7 7 6:19 92.24% idle: cpu7 11 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU6 6 6:22 92.09% idle: cpu6 16 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU1 1 6:30 91.26% idle: cpu1 12 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU5 5 6:26 84.47% idle: cpu5 13 root 1 171 52 0K 16K CPU4 4 6:36 83.50% idle: cpu4 The header says 12, but there were only 8 processes displayed. Sometimes it goes down to 10, but not 8. Hope you can shed me more lights on this. From chris at shagged.org Sat Aug 16 17:33:41 2008 From: chris at shagged.org (Chris Elsworth) Date: Sat Aug 16 17:33:58 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 In-Reply-To: <897559.10614.qm@web45814.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> References: <897559.10614.qm@web45814.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <20080816173339.GA34116@thestra.telon.net> On Sat, Aug 16, 2008 at 01:18:18AM -0700, Won De Erick wrote: > >Regarding why you're adding up all the individual process statistics: I > >can imagine they would vary a slight bit, but I cannot explain a 7% > >variance. Someone with more knowledge will have to assist there. > > Though the header could be conclusive, I should want the specific processes (or threads). > And come up with a list of breakdowns, like: > > Then match this by adding up all individual processes statistics. And if I couldn't match, at least I could tell some factors that cause variance. At the bottom of man top, reformatted for email width: As with ps(1), things can change while top is collecting information for an update. The picture it gives is only a close approximation to reality. Could this explain the variations you are seeing? top never gives you an accurate snapshot of what the system is doing at any one instant in time, afaik. -- Chris From won.derick at yahoo.com Sun Aug 17 08:36:18 2008 From: won.derick at yahoo.com (Won De Erick) Date: Sun Aug 17 08:36:30 2008 Subject: CPU Utilization on IBM x3755 Message-ID: <117484.97387.qm@web45813.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> On Sat, Aug 16, 2008 at 01:18:18AM -0700, Won De Erick wrote: >> >Regarding why you're adding up all the individual process statistics: I >> >can imagine they would vary a slight bit, but I cannot explain a 7% >> >variance. Someone with more knowledge will have to assist there. >> >> Though the header could be conclusive, I should want the specific processes (or threads). >> And come up with a list of breakdowns, like: >> >> Then match this by adding up all individual processes statistics. And if I couldn't match, at least I could tell some factors that cause variance. > >At the bottom of man top, reformatted for email width: > > As with ps(1), things can change while top is collecting > information for an update. The picture it gives is only > a close approximation to reality. > >Could this explain the variations you are seeing? top never gives you >an accurate snapshot of what the system is doing at any one instant in >time, afaik. >-- >Chris I'm aware with this limitation as displayed using man top. But when I ran top -SI, I only got 8 processes out of 12 processes [actively] running as displayed on the header making it far from reality. I did this several times, restarting the machine, bootstrapping, etc, but I got same result. I don't know what kernel threads are causing top -S to display the command as "idle: cpu0", "idle : cpu1", ... "idle:cpu7". Though Jeremy had mentioned them as simply kernel threads (due to lack of term), I should at least dig deeper on this matter and be able to specifically classify them. From rhomp2002 at earthlink.net Mon Aug 18 19:05:24 2008 From: rhomp2002 at earthlink.net (dick thompson) Date: Mon Aug 18 19:05:31 2008 Subject: Question of FreeBSD 7.0 support of my ethernet adapter Message-ID: <48A9B8F1.2080307@earthlink.net> My computer came with the Attansic L1 Gigabyte ethernet adapter. With Linux I need distros using a kernel later than 2.6.22.1. Does FreeBSD 7.0 support this ethernet adapter or has a work around come out that will work with it? I know that the older BSD releases did not support it but don't know if the new one does or not. This adapter is the same as the Atheros L1 Gigabyte ethernet adapter and appears to be widely used on the lower level Intel Core 2 Duo computers (mine is the E4400 chipset). I would like to use the FreeBSD but I am retired and do not want to have to do a lot of changing of what came with this computer for economic reasons. Thanks. Dick From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Mon Aug 18 19:14:31 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Mon Aug 18 19:14:38 2008 Subject: Question of FreeBSD 7.0 support of my ethernet adapter In-Reply-To: <48A9B8F1.2080307@earthlink.net> References: <48A9B8F1.2080307@earthlink.net> Message-ID: <20080818191421.GA6428@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Mon, Aug 18, 2008 at 02:01:21PM -0400, dick thompson wrote: > My computer came with the Attansic L1 Gigabyte ethernet adapter. With > Linux I need distros using a kernel later than 2.6.22.1. Does FreeBSD > 7.0 support this ethernet adapter or has a work around come out that > will work with it? I know that the older BSD releases did not support > it but don't know if the new one does or not. This adapter is the same > as the Atheros L1 Gigabyte ethernet adapter and appears to be widely > used on the lower level Intel Core 2 Duo computers (mine is the E4400 > chipset). I would like to use the FreeBSD but I am retired and do not > want to have to do a lot of changing of what came with this computer for > economic reasons. There is a new driver for FreeBSD, specifically for that adapter, called age(4). It was added to FreeBSD 3-4 months ago. It should be available via FreeBSD 7.0-STABLE (not RELEASE), so you should download a 7.0-STABLE snapshot image and install that: ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200807/ -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From rpaulo at FreeBSD.org Mon Aug 18 21:44:41 2008 From: rpaulo at FreeBSD.org (Rui Paulo) Date: Mon Aug 18 21:45:12 2008 Subject: Question of FreeBSD 7.0 support of my ethernet adapter In-Reply-To: <48A9B8F1.2080307@earthlink.net> References: <48A9B8F1.2080307@earthlink.net> Message-ID: <20080818211643.GA1208@epsilon.local> On Mon, Aug 18, 2008 at 02:01:21PM -0400, dick thompson wrote: > My computer came with the Attansic L1 Gigabyte ethernet adapter. With > Linux I need distros using a kernel later than 2.6.22.1. Does FreeBSD 7.0 > support this ethernet adapter or has a work around come out that will work > with it? I know that the older BSD releases did not support it but don't > know if the new one does or not. This adapter is the same as the Atheros > L1 Gigabyte ethernet adapter and appears to be widely used on the lower > level Intel Core 2 Duo computers (mine is the E4400 chipset). I would like > to use the FreeBSD but I am retired and do not want to have to do a lot of > changing of what came with this computer for economic reasons. Try upgrading to FreeBSD-CURRENT. It supports your NIC. The device driver is called age(4). See: http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=age&apropos=0&sektion=0&manpath=FreeBSD+8-current&format=html Regards, -- Rui Paulo From Effie.Kotika at saralee.com Thu Aug 21 13:12:28 2008 From: Effie.Kotika at saralee.com (Kotika, Effie) Date: Thu Aug 21 13:12:50 2008 Subject: Recall: SPEEDLOTTO AWARD WINNER Message-ID: <42230CECC12B5B4285CFCDA34F78328660D73C@DESHNGMG121.de.saralee.com> Kotika, Effie would like to recall the message, "SPEEDLOTTO AWARD WINNER". This transmission is intended only for use by the intended recipient(s). If you are not an intended recipient you should not read, disclose, copy, circulate or in any other way use the information contained in this transmission. The information in this transmission may be confidential and/or privileged. If you received this transmission in an error, please notify the sender immediately and delete this transmission including any attachments. From Effie.Kotika at saralee.com Thu Aug 21 13:14:50 2008 From: Effie.Kotika at saralee.com (Kotika, Effie) Date: Thu Aug 21 13:14:56 2008 Subject: SPEEDLOTTO AWARD WINNER Message-ID: <42230CECC12B5B4285CFCDA34F78328660D737@DESHNGMG121.de.saralee.com> Effie Kotika Executive Secretary Sara Lee HBC Hellas MEPE 100 Kifissou Avenue, GR 122 41 Aigaleo, Athens, Greece Tel. No 30 211 10 56802 Fax No 30 211 10 56991 Mobile 30 6936 814 237 Effie.Kotika@saralee.com This transmission is intended only for use by the intended recipient(s). If you are not an intended recipient you should not read, disclose, copy, circulate or in any other way use the information contained in this transmission. The information in this transmission may be confidential and/or privileged. If you received this transmission in an error, please notify the sender immediately and delete this transmission including any attachments. From Effie.Kotika at saralee.com Thu Aug 21 13:17:29 2008 From: Effie.Kotika at saralee.com (Kotika, Effie) Date: Thu Aug 21 13:17:36 2008 Subject: Recall: SPEEDLOTTO AWARD WINNER Message-ID: <42230CECC12B5B4285CFCDA34F78328660D73B@DESHNGMG121.de.saralee.com> Kotika, Effie would like to recall the message, "SPEEDLOTTO AWARD WINNER". From ryan.macy at us.army.mil Fri Aug 22 23:33:47 2008 From: ryan.macy at us.army.mil (Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG NGB) Date: Fri Aug 22 23:33:54 2008 Subject: looking to make the jump from linux to unix (freebsd) need to know if xps m1330n is supported? Message-ID: Hey guys, first mailing list post... ever! Anyways I spent the last 15 minutes running around on google?to find out if my dell xps?m1330n is supported or not. the machine was built for linux?(and practically out of the box) so it should pretty much work right? From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Sat Aug 23 01:27:30 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Sat Aug 23 01:27:38 2008 Subject: looking to make the jump from linux to unix (freebsd) need to know if xps m1330n is supported? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20080823012729.GA12042@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 06:21:59PM -0500, Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG NGB wrote: > Hey guys, first mailing list post... ever! > > Anyways I spent the last 15 minutes running around on google?to find out if my dell xps?m1330n is supported or not. > > the machine was built for linux?(and practically out of the box) so it should pretty much work right? http://linux.dell.com/wiki/index.php/Clients/Products/XPS_M1330n/lspci I believe all of these devices are supported under FreeBSD. Ones worth being concerned about: 1) Broadcom BCM5906M Ethernet NIC -- this NIC probably will not work with FreeBSD unless you install one of the snapshot versions. I see someone has recently committed support for the BCM5906 series to RELENG_6, RELENG_7, and HEAD/CURRENT, but that was 8 weeks ago, which is why you'll need a snapshot and not 7.0-RELEASE, etc... http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/dev/bge/if_bge.c Further proof older versions did not have support for this card: http://unix.derkeiler.com/Mailing-Lists/FreeBSD/questions/2008-04/msg01343.html 2) Intel 3945ABG wireless card -- appears there is a wpi(4) driver which is specific to this card model, but I believe some people have reported problems with it (not sure what their issues were, just going off of memory of things I'd seen in the past). 3) nVidia 8400M GS video card -- if you plan on using X on this machine[1], I recommend you install the i386 version of FreeBSD and not amd64. The nVidia driver for FreeBSD is known to not work on amd64[2]. If you have large amounts of memory in the machine, i386 will require you use PAE mode, which will probably cause you some pain; yep, the situation isn't user-friendly. Linux wins out here. Based on all of the above, I'd recommend you install one of the FreeBSD 7.0 snapshots, which are newer than 7.0-RELEASE, just to ensure you pick up any wireless card modifications or other fix-ups for stuff that has since been addressed since the release of 7.0: ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200807/ Also, if/when you reply, please remember to keep the mailing list CC'd so people can see your responses. Just a FYI since this is your first time posting. [1]: I don't use X myself, but I base this comment on what I've read time and time again on the mailing lists. Others can correct me if I'm wrong. [2]: If you're not familiar with FreeBSD, know that amd64 is the name of the 64-bit version of FreeBSD, and does not require an AMD processor. Do not confuse this with ia64, which is something *completely* different and you do not want it. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From ryan.macy at us.army.mil Sat Aug 23 02:52:22 2008 From: ryan.macy at us.army.mil (Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG NGB) Date: Sat Aug 23 02:52:29 2008 Subject: looking to make the jump from linux to unix (freebsd) need to know if xps m1330n is supported? In-Reply-To: <20080823012729.GA12042@eos.sc1.parodius.com> References: <20080823012729.GA12042@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: ----- Original Message ----- From: Jeremy Chadwick Date: Friday, August 22, 2008 20:27 Subject: Re: looking to make the jump from linux?to unix?(freebsd) need to know if xps?m1330n is supported? To: "Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG NGB" Cc: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org > On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 06:21:59PM -0500, Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG > NGB wrote: > > Hey guys, first mailing list post... ever! > > > > Anyways I spent the last 15 minutes running around on google?to > find out if my dell xps?m1330n is supported or not. > > > > the machine was built for linux?(and works fine, nearly right out of the box) > so it should pretty much work right? > > http://linux.dell.com/wiki/index.php/Clients/Products/XPS_M1330n/lspci > > I believe all of these devices are supported under FreeBSD. Ones > worthbeing?concerned about: > > 1) Broadcom?BCM5906M Ethernet NIC -- this NIC probably will not work > with FreeBSD?unless you install one of the snapshot versions. I > see someone has recently committed support for the BCM5906 series > to RELENG_6, RELENG_7, and HEAD/CURRENT, but that was 8 weeks ago, > which is why you'll need a snapshot and not 7.0-RELEASE, etc... > > http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/dev/bge/if_bge.c > > Further proof older versions did not have support for this card: > > http://unix.derkeiler.com/Mailing-Lists/FreeBSD/questions/2008- > 04/msg01343.html > 2) Intel 3945ABG?wireless card -- appears there is a wpi(4) driver > which is specific to this card model, but I believe some people have > reported problems with it (not sure what their issues were, just > going off of memory of things I'd seen in the past). > > 3) nVidia?8400M GS video card -- if you plan on using X on this > machine[1], I recommend you install the i386 version of FreeBSD?and > notamd64. The nVidia?driver for FreeBSD?is known to not work on > amd64[2].If you have large amounts of memory in the machine, i386 > will require > you use PAE mode, which will probably cause you some pain; yep, the > situation isn't user-friendly. Linux wins out here. > > Based on all of the above, I'd recommend you install one of the > FreeBSD7.0 snapshots, which are newer than 7.0-RELEASE, just to > ensure you pick > up any wireless card modifications or other fix-ups for stuff that has > since been addressed since the release of 7.0: > > ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200807/ > > Also, if/when you reply, please remember to keep the mailing list CC'd > so people can see your responses. Just a FYI since this is your first > time posting. > > [1]: I don't use X myself, but I base this comment on what I've read > time and time again on the mailing lists. Others can correct me if > I'm wrong. > > [2]: If you're not familiar with FreeBSD, know that amd64 is the > name of > the 64-bit version of FreeBSD, and does not require an AMD processor. > Do not confuse this with ia64, which is something *completely* > differentand you do not want it. > > -- > | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at > parodius.com | > | Parodius Networking > http://www.parodius.com/ | > | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, > USA | > | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: > 4BD6C0CB | > Thanks jeremy I appreciate the reply. Well it looks like the only hardware problems I should run into is the intel 3945 wifi card and some sound issues, i've heard that the intel hda has problems with unix and that only the front two outputs (on the m1330n) work? any chance that there is a iwl3945-ucode driver on freebsd? I'm planning to take the dive this upcoming monday after some reading, so I'm crossing my fingers and praying that everything works out of the box. From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Sat Aug 23 02:58:56 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Sat Aug 23 02:59:03 2008 Subject: looking to make the jump from linux to unix (freebsd) need to know if xps m1330n is supported? In-Reply-To: References: <20080823012729.GA12042@eos.sc1.parodius.com> Message-ID: <20080823025855.GA15921@eos.sc1.parodius.com> On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 09:52:20PM -0500, Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG NGB wrote: > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Jeremy Chadwick > Date: Friday, August 22, 2008 20:27 > Subject: Re: looking to make the jump from linux?to unix?(freebsd) need to know if xps?m1330n is supported? > To: "Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG NGB" > Cc: freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org > > > On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 06:21:59PM -0500, Macy, Ryan W PV2 NG NG > > NGB wrote: > > > Hey guys, first mailing list post... ever! > > > > > > Anyways I spent the last 15 minutes running around on google?to > > find out if my dell xps?m1330n is supported or not. > > > > > > the machine was built for linux?(and works fine, nearly right out of the box) > > so it should pretty much work right? > > > > http://linux.dell.com/wiki/index.php/Clients/Products/XPS_M1330n/lspci > > > > I believe all of these devices are supported under FreeBSD. Ones > > worthbeing?concerned about: > > > > 1) Broadcom?BCM5906M Ethernet NIC -- this NIC probably will not work > > with FreeBSD?unless you install one of the snapshot versions. I > > see someone has recently committed support for the BCM5906 series > > to RELENG_6, RELENG_7, and HEAD/CURRENT, but that was 8 weeks ago, > > which is why you'll need a snapshot and not 7.0-RELEASE, etc... > > > > http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/dev/bge/if_bge.c > > > > Further proof older versions did not have support for this card: > > > > http://unix.derkeiler.com/Mailing-Lists/FreeBSD/questions/2008- > > 04/msg01343.html > > 2) Intel 3945ABG?wireless card -- appears there is a wpi(4) driver > > which is specific to this card model, but I believe some people have > > reported problems with it (not sure what their issues were, just > > going off of memory of things I'd seen in the past). > > > > 3) nVidia?8400M GS video card -- if you plan on using X on this > > machine[1], I recommend you install the i386 version of FreeBSD?and > > notamd64. The nVidia?driver for FreeBSD?is known to not work on > > amd64[2].If you have large amounts of memory in the machine, i386 > > will require > > you use PAE mode, which will probably cause you some pain; yep, the > > situation isn't user-friendly. Linux wins out here. > > > > Based on all of the above, I'd recommend you install one of the > > FreeBSD7.0 snapshots, which are newer than 7.0-RELEASE, just to > > ensure you pick > > up any wireless card modifications or other fix-ups for stuff that has > > since been addressed since the release of 7.0: > > > > ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200807/ > > > > Also, if/when you reply, please remember to keep the mailing list CC'd > > so people can see your responses. Just a FYI since this is your first > > time posting. > > > > [1]: I don't use X myself, but I base this comment on what I've read > > time and time again on the mailing lists. Others can correct me if > > I'm wrong. > > > > [2]: If you're not familiar with FreeBSD, know that amd64 is the > > name of > > the 64-bit version of FreeBSD, and does not require an AMD processor. > > Do not confuse this with ia64, which is something *completely* > > differentand you do not want it. > > > > -- > > | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at > > parodius.com | > > | Parodius Networking > > http://www.parodius.com/ | > > | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, > > USA | > > | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: > > 4BD6C0CB | > > > > Thanks jeremy I appreciate the reply. > > Well it looks like the only hardware problems I should run into is the intel 3945 wifi card and some sound issues, i've heard that the intel hda has problems with unix and that only the front two outputs (on the m1330n) work? I have no experience with sound on BSD or Linux. I'm also one of those "surround sound should be in theatres only" people, so my own PC audio setup consists of two speakers only. :-) Others will have to help you with audio; sorry about that. > any chance that there is a iwl3945-ucode driver on freebsd? There is support for the Intel 3945ABG chip (I don't know what "ucode" is), but some users have reported certain oddities with it regarding configuration (I believe it had something to do with WPA). I don't remember reading any reports about the driver failing or acting oddly. > I'm planning to take the dive this upcoming monday after some reading, so I'm crossing my fingers and praying that everything works out of the box. Please be sure to report back with your experiences, as others on the list may find your information helpful, ditto with some developers wanting to fix bugs. Thanks! -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | From fhard at ccstores.com Tue Aug 26 22:51:25 2008 From: fhard at ccstores.com (Jim Pazarena) Date: Tue Aug 26 22:51:39 2008 Subject: your advice on vinum, RAIDs In-Reply-To: <43B3F341.5030906@mac.com> References: <43B3F341.5030906@mac.com> Message-ID: <48B484D8.1050406@ccstores.com> Chuck Swiger wrote: (in freebsd-questions) > > When choosing RAID levels, you are making a tradeoff between > performance, reliability, and cost: > > If you prefer... ...consider using: > ----------------------------------------------- > performance, reliability: RAID-1 mirroring > performance, cost: RAID-0 striping > reliability, performance: RAID-1 mirroring (+ hot spare, if possible) > reliability, cost: RAID-5 (+ hot spare) > cost, reliability: RAID-5 > cost, performance: RAID-0 striping > > If you've got enough drives, using RAID-10 or RAID-50 will also improve > performance compared to stock RAID-1 or RAID-5 modes. I just upgraded from MySQL 4 to MySQL 5 on a dual processor AMD-64 system, and MySQL now cannot keep up with the processing it needs to do. I need at least 500Gb for my MySQL customers, and am using a couple of 750Gb SATA drives - non raid. I was advised to switch to SAS for better performance. And to RAID for the 500Gb which I need. I see the RAID section in the 7.0 GENERIC kernel of: aac aacp ida mfi mlx pst twe Could someone please advise my best course of action for RAID? That is, the best controller (driver) to be using, and the most advisable method to provide myself with perhaps 750Gb of storage in a SAS & AMD environment? Or, would SATA work just as well for me under the correct RAID environment? Extreme thanks! Jim From bsd at fluffles.net Wed Aug 27 09:47:34 2008 From: bsd at fluffles.net (fluffles.net) Date: Wed Aug 27 09:47:40 2008 Subject: your advice on vinum, RAIDs In-Reply-To: <48B484D8.1050406@ccstores.com> References: <43B3F341.5030906@mac.com> <48B484D8.1050406@ccstores.com> Message-ID: <48B51EDD.8010906@fluffles.net> Jim Pazarena wrote: > Could someone please advise my best course of action for RAID? If you're building a database server, you dont need MB/s but IOps. Have you considered an SSD for this cause? The Intel SSD that arrives in Q4 2008 is said to do about 4.000 random write IOps, much more than the 100-200 a HDD will do. If you put two 256GB SSDs in RAID0 (geom_stripe) you have a 500GB volume with capable of lots of IOps. Just make sure there is no stripe misalignment, so pick stripesize 64KiB and label directly on the RAID device. Thus no partitions on the RAID device; this is the simplest to avoid a misalignment. You can put the SATA disks straight on the motherboard so you don't need a hardware controller. This saves cost and compensates for the high cost of SSD disks. But you don't need many! And unlike HDDs, an SSD would be quite safe to use in RAID0 mode. You should always have backups, ofcourse. RAID can never replace those. - Veronica From m0ps.ua at gmail.com Thu Aug 28 09:21:27 2008 From: m0ps.ua at gmail.com (m0ps) Date: Thu Aug 28 09:21:40 2008 Subject: Cronyx OMEGA-PCI on FreeBSD 7.0 Message-ID: is the next big challenge: i'm have old server with freebsd 4. xx that has an multiport pci card Cronyx OMEGA-PCI which are connected to dialup modems. i'm need move this server to another hardware, and update to FreeBSD 7.0. as it became known from the site of producer of card, in order that the card would be brought to freebsd above 6.x Boards need to make emulation mode MOXA and compile kernel with device puc, which was successfully done. after reboot with the new kernel machine saw 8 com ports in this form: uart0: on puc0 uart0: [FILTER] uart1: on puc0 uart1: [FILTER] uart2: on puc0 uart3: [FILTER] uart3: on puc0 uart3: [FILTER] uart4: on puc0 uart4: [FILTER] uart5: on puc0 uart5: [FILTER] uart6: on puc0 uart6: [FILTER] uart7: on puc0 uart7: [FILTER] in / dev created devices from cuau0 to cuau7 the first port to join dialup modem (us robotics) try to check his work: cu-l / dev/cuau0-s 57600 in response getting Connected, enter AT but did not get a response, instead, begins to run the cursor across the screen. (in the sense I can move his keys in the direction of any part) I understand that the problem in the cards (more accurately tell the driver), because modem and pci-card verified on the old server I may do something wrong? advance grateful for the assistance. P.S. sorry for my english -- best regards, m0ps From jos at catnook.com Thu Aug 28 17:11:43 2008 From: jos at catnook.com (Jos Backus) Date: Thu Aug 28 17:11:55 2008 Subject: nfe driver 6.2 stable In-Reply-To: <20070930224234.GA43927@lizzy.catnook.local> References: <20070927065155.GE3692@cdnetworks.co.kr> <3aaaa3a0709271030k24892099ra3409ce6f5f7020f@mail.gmail.com> <20070928000656.GA7119@cdnetworks.co.kr> <3aaaa3a0709281105g1503fdbcu70910de6eae060a0@mail.gmail.com> <20070929012801.GA11457@cdnetworks.co.kr> <20070929022147.GA27590@lizzy.catnook.local> <20070929050240.GC11457@cdnetworks.co.kr> <20070929181618.GA30333@lizzy.catnook.local> <20070930015343.GA15227@cdnetworks.co.kr> <20070930224234.GA43927@lizzy.catnook.local> Message-ID: <20080828164522.GA64038@lizzy.catnook.local> Fyi: after applying r180753 ("Only enable MSI mappings for devices that use MSI. Fixes interrupt loss on some nForce based boards.") using polling with nfe is no longer needed to avoid choppy audio playback. Thanks for the fix. -- Jos Backus jos at catnook.com From pyunyh at gmail.com Fri Aug 29 06:06:13 2008 From: pyunyh at gmail.com (Pyun YongHyeon) Date: Fri Aug 29 06:06:20 2008 Subject: Issue with 7.0-RELEASE and Realtek RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC In-Reply-To: <48B78DE0.8070808@bah.homeip.net> References: <200808110000.58666.freebsd@razik.name> <48A317D8.5070702@bah.homeip.net> <48B78DE0.8070808@bah.homeip.net> Message-ID: <20080829060606.GC35562@cdnetworks.co.kr> On Fri, Aug 29, 2008 at 07:49:20AM +0200, Bernt Hansson wrote: > > Lukas Razik: > >> Hello! > >> > >> I've a GigaByte GA-X48-DQ6 Motherboard with a "RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit > >> Ethernet NIC" and I've read that 7.0-RELEASE / amd64 should recognize these > >> cards (by the "re" driver) but it doesn't in my case. > > > > I got an Gigabyte GA-MA790FX-DS5 with the same network chip and it's > > working right out of the box. There are other issues with that motherboard. > > > > 7.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 > > root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 > > > > > > re0@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0xe0001458 chip=0x816810ec rev=0x01 > > hdr=0x00 > > vendor = 'Realtek Semiconductor' > > device = 'RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC' > > class = network > > subclass = ethernet > > > >> #uname -a : > >> FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.0-RELEASE #0: Sun Feb 24 10:35:36 UTC 2008 > >> root@driscoll.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 > > Just for the sake of it, I did an upgrade to 7.0-STABLE on 2008-08-20. > That killed my network card RTL8111B. Would you post the output of dmesg and "ifconfig re0"? > > >> #pciconf -lv : > >> [...] > >> none2@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0xe0001458 chip=0x816810ec > >> rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 > >> vendor = 'Realtek Semiconductor' > >> device = 'RTL8168/8111 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet NIC' > >> class = network > >> subclass = ethernet > >> [...] > >> > >> So, does FreeBSD 7.0 work with these NICs or am I out of luck? > >> > >> Regards and Many Thanks for your help! > >> Lukas -- Regards, Pyun YongHyeon From el.hendrixx at gmail.com Fri Aug 29 10:20:14 2008 From: el.hendrixx at gmail.com (Hendrix El) Date: Fri Aug 29 10:20:21 2008 Subject: problem with dell usb keyboard Message-ID: Hi I'm using desktopbsd 1.6 (6.3 freebsd release) on a Dell Inspiron 530 (there is no PS/2 port) and I have a keyboard problem. When Dbsd starts load the keyboard controller atkbd0 and the keyboard works fine with the console: dmesg | grep kbd kbd1 at kbdmux0 atkbdc0: at port 0x60,0x64 on isa0 atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 kbd0 at atkbd0 atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] but when the boot gets to the kdm (kde) screen I can't login cause my keyboard is blocked and any key work, there is no input of it until I unplug my keyboard and plug it back again and then this is the output of dmesg: kbd1 at kbdmux0 atkbdc0: at port 0x60,0x64 on isa0 atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 kbd0 at atkbd0 atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] ukbd0: Dell Dell USB Keyboard, rev 1.10/3.06, addr 3, iclass 3/1 kbd2 at ukbd0. I have tried to install pc-bsd and FreeBSD 7.0 release but and I have the same result. I have been looking for about it and I have found some similar but I'm not very sure how to do it: http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/bsd-17/freebsd-install-with-usb-keyboard-311089/ I looked at my BIOS "USB device settings" --> "USB controller" and there are two options (Enable and Disabled) and two modes operation USB (high speed and low speed), but nothing about USB legacy. On desktopbsd, is there any chance to configure its kernel like on Freebsd and disable aktbd (AT keyboard interface)?. Any other suggestion?. Thanks in advance and I'm sorry for my bad english. Cheers. From koitsu at FreeBSD.org Fri Aug 29 11:07:07 2008 From: koitsu at FreeBSD.org (Jeremy Chadwick) Date: Fri Aug 29 11:07:13 2008 Subject: problem with dell usb keyboard In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20080829105703.GA72351@icarus.home.lan> On Fri, Aug 29, 2008 at 10:02:06AM +0000, Hendrix El wrote: > I'm using desktopbsd 1.6 (6.3 freebsd release) on a Dell Inspiron 530 > (there is no PS/2 port) and I have a keyboard problem. > When Dbsd starts load the keyboard controller atkbd0 and the keyboard > works fine with the console: > > dmesg | grep kbd > kbd1 at kbdmux0 > atkbdc0: at port 0x60,0x64 on isa0 > atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 > kbd0 at atkbd0 > atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] > > but when the boot gets to the kdm (kde) screen I can't login cause my > keyboard is blocked and any key work, there is no input of it until I > unplug my keyboard and plug it back again and then this is the output > of dmesg: > > kbd1 at kbdmux0 > atkbdc0: at port 0x60,0x64 on isa0 > atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 > kbd0 at atkbd0 > atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] > ukbd0: Dell Dell USB Keyboard, rev 1.10/3.06, addr 3, iclass 3/1 > kbd2 at ukbd0. > > > I have tried to install pc-bsd and FreeBSD 7.0 release but and I have > the same result. > I have been looking for about it and I have found some similar but I'm > not very sure how to do it: > > http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/bsd-17/freebsd-install-with-usb-keyboard-311089/ > > > I looked at my BIOS "USB device settings" --> "USB controller" and > there are two options (Enable and Disabled) and two modes operation > USB (high speed and low speed), but nothing about USB legacy. The "USB Legacy" option in BIOSes allows USB keyboards to work in operating systems which lack a USB stack, such as MS-DOS, or the FreeBSD bootloader. The option should not affect the FreeBSD kernel once started and the USB stack loaded. I would try disabling the AT keyboard interface using /boot/loader.conf and see if it makes a difference for you. I believe this should do it: hint.atkbd.0.disabled="1" You'll need to reboot after adding the above. If that doesn't work, try disabling the keyboard multiplex driver in a similar way: hint.kbdmux.0.disabled="1" -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB |