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Date:      Sat, 20 Nov 1999 09:16:10 -0500
From:      "Jason Craig" <freebsd@b0rg.net>
To:        "Greg Lehey" <grog@lemis.com>
Cc:        "FreeBSD Current" <FreeBSD-current@FreeBSD.ORG>, "FreeBSD Hackers" <freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: Compile new kernel with MCA support
Message-ID:  <008f01bf3361$cb5d5900$d3b17018@wlfdle1.on.wave.home.com>
References:  <001701bf32dd$4f76a500$d3b17018@wlfdle1.on.wave.home.com> <19991119180320.65386@mojave.sitaranetworks.com>

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Sorry about the multiple posts.  I have @home to thank for this.  The mail
server said the connection was timing out.  Apparently not.
I am quite well aware of the mailing list etiquette.  I read through many of
them frequently.

The question itself should remain in the hackers list.  Support for Micro
channel is not only fairly new from what I read, but a direct modification
to the kernel to support the old architecture.  That's why I am running
current on said machine.

A beginner to FreeBSD, I am not...  I am a beginner to making MCA work on
BSD.

Anyways...

Thank you Matthew for replying to my message.  I'll get the boot messages
this morning.

Jason



----- Original Message -----
From: Greg Lehey <grog@mojave.sitaranetworks.com>
To: Jason Craig <freebsd@b0rg.net>; Jason Craig <nemesys@home.com>; Jason
<jcraig@servtech.com>
Cc: FreeBSD current users <FreeBSD-current@FreeBSD.ORG>
Sent: Friday, November 19, 1999 6:03 PM
Subject: Re: Compile new kernel with MCA support


> [moved to -current]
>
> On Friday, 19 November 1999 at 17:27:15 -0500, Jason Craig wrote:
> On Friday, 19 November 1999 at 17:32:20 -0500, Jason Craig wrote:
> On Friday, 19 November 1999 at 17:38:07 -0500, Jason wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I have a few FreeBSD machines that I am playing around with now, and
have
> > come across a nice old IBM PC Server 320 with dual P90 processors and
64MB
> > of RAM i would also like to utilize.
> >
> > I am currently using 4.0-19991113-CURRENT generic kernel, and things are
> > working great.
> >
> > However, I tried to compile a custom kernel to weed out any unwanted
> > devices, and to enable SMP and have have run into a problem.  After
> > compiling the kernel using the standard procedure, I rebooted it, and it
> > panic'd after doing the kernel config.
> >
> > I tried removing most of the entries from /boot/kernel.conf, only to
find it
> > still panics saying something about the MCA bus.
> >
> > Am I missing something?
>
> Yes, probably http://www.lemis.com/questions.html.  To quote:
>
> Should I ask -questions or -hackers?
>
> Two mailing lists handle general questions about FreeBSD,
> FreeBSD-questions and FreeBSD-hackers. In some cases, it's not really
> clear which group you should ask. The following criteria should help
> for 99% of all questions, however:
>
>      If the question is of a general nature, ask
>      FreeBSD-questions. Examples might be questions about intstalling
>      FreeBSD or the use of a particular UNIX utility.
>
>      If you think the question relates to a bug, but you're not sure,
>      or you don't know how to look for it, send the message to
>      FreeBSD-questions.
>
> 6.  Specify as much information as possible. This is a difficult area,
>     and we need to expand on what information you need to submit, but
>     here's a start:
>
>     In nearly every case, it's important to know the version of
>     FreeBSD you're running.  This is particularly the case for
>     FreeBSD-CURRENT, where you should also specify the date of the
>     sources, though of course you shouldn't be sending questions about
>     -CURRENT to FreeBSD-questions
>
>     (...)
>
>     If your system panics, don't say ``My system panicked'', say (for
>     example) ``my system panicked with the message 'free vnode
>     isn't'''.
>
> 7.  If you do all this, and you still don't get an answer, there could
>     be other reasons. For example, the problem is so complicated that
>     nobody knows the answer, or the person who does know the answer
>     was offline. If you don't get an answer after, say, a week, it
>     might help to re-send the message. If you don't get an answer to
>     your second message, though, you're probably not going to get one
>     from this forum. Resending the same message again and again will
>     only make you unpopular.
>
> One that's not in there: if you're running -CURRENT, come with some
> *clever* questions.  -CURRENT isn't for beginners.
>
> In your case, you sent three messages in 11 minues.  That's a good way
> to make yourself unpopular, especially when you're running exotic
> hardware which not many people know.
>
> Greg
> --
> Finger grog@lemis.com for PGP public key
> See complete headers for address and phone numbers



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