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Date:      Wed, 1 Oct 2003 00:29:10 -0400
From:      Chris Pepper <pepper@reppep.com>
To:        Vivek Khera <khera@kcilink.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD 4.9 RC1 (i386) now available
Message-ID:  <p06100300bb9ff5750646@[10.0.1.12]>
References:  <20030929151905.GD3743@freebsdmall.com> <p06100304bb9e9e078823@[66.92.104.201]> <20030930110311.GA7634@rot13.obsecurity.org> <20030930112341.GK551@straylight.oblivion.bg> <p06100304bb9f2fd554b3@[66.92.104.201]>

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At 5:15 PM -0400 2003/09/30, Vivek Khera wrote:
>  >>>>> "CP" == Chris Pepper <pepper@reppep.com> writes:
>
>CP>	I'm using Mac OS X 10.2.8's Terminal.app, which claims to be
>CP> vt100, through minicom. The bad display is probably Terminal.app's
>CP> fault -- I'll try through an (Apple) xterm next -- but I was very
>CP> surprised that arrow keys wouldn't work in ANSI mode.
>
>I find that the Terminal.app emulation is pretty poor.  The latest
>failing is when running the imcom program (command line Jabber
>client).  It totally botches the curses display.
>
>I have used the iTerm application, but it has its own set of
>issues... at least the terminal emulation is better.

	Apple's Jaguar xterm (from XFree86) is better, but still not 
perfect. Biggest problem there is that the disklabel editor uses some 
font styling that doesn't show up in xterm, so I had to guess at 
which line I was on, and see if I'd gotten the mountpoints right 
afterwards, but before continuing...


	The weirdest thing is that switching my USB KVM (away from) 
the system crashed minicom (running in an xterm on my Mac) *twice*, 
and I was unable to 'pick up' the installation -- just lots of 
overlapping odd characters in the last column of the display -- so I 
had to start over a couple times.


	Not the weirdest, but the more serious thing, is that after 
the install completed, FreeBSD booted again, and died:

>Booting [kernel]...
>root device disk0s4a: invalid
>
>
>
>
>Type '?' for a list of commands ...

	lsdev showed my disk2 properly, and I was able to unload, set 
currdev, and boot successfully. When I next rebooted, BootEasy 
defaulted to F1 (DOS -- FreeBSD is F2). When I hit F2, FreeBSD booted 
correctly (sending console output to the serial port). After this, 
both F1 and F2 worked correctly.


						Chris
-- 
Chris Pepper:               <http://www.reppep.com/~pepper/>;
Rockefeller University:     <http://www.rockefeller.edu/>;



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