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Date:      Fri, 15 Nov 1996 12:09:11 +0000
From:      "RIVERA, ELADIO               " <E0R8047@acs.tamu.edu>
To:        hackers@freefall.freebsd.org
Cc:        freebsd-hackers-digest@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: hackers-digest V1 #1641
Message-ID:  <Pine.VMS.3.91-vms-b4-acs.961115120809.20504A-100000@VMS1.TAMU.EDU>
In-Reply-To: <199611151659.IAA29419@freefall.freebsd.org>

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On Fri, 15 Nov 1996 owner-hackers-digest@freefall.freebsd.org wrote:
Does anyone have any hints about Unix I would really appreciate the help. 
Thanks goat boy > 
> hackers-digest            Friday, 15 November 1996      Volume 01 : Number 1641
> 
> In this issue:
> Re: userland PPP giving weird load numbers
> Re: Interesting URL
> multicast - does NT 4.0 have it? Does Linux have it?
> Re: FreeBSD 2.2-ALPHA is now available.
> Re: Sockets question...
> Re: Q: system specific binaries
> Re: Q: system specific binaries
> Re: Sockets question...
> Re: Sockets question...
> Re: FreeBSD 2.2-ALPHA is now available.
> Re: Sockets question...
> Today's panic.
> Re: multicast - does NT 4.0 have it? Does Linux have it?
> Re: Sockets question...
> Re: Q: How to read hardware port ? *HELP*
> Re: Programming technique for non-forking servers?
> Re: Programming technique for non-forking servers?
> Contribution of Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 driver
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> From: hm@kts.org (Hellmuth Michaelis)
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 12:45:06 +0100 (MET)
> Subject: Re: userland PPP giving weird load numbers
> 
> > > > I see this too all the time, from 2.0.5 all the way to 2.1.5.  While
> > > > /usr/sbin/ppp is running, the load average hangs around 1.0.  Sometimes,
> > > > it'll drop.  It's odd ... it's usually when ppp is idle that it hangs
> > > > around 1.0.
> > >
> > > I had this phenomenon too - but NOT with ppp. An isdn userland daemon i am
> > > working on showed this exact behaviour; when it was running, the system load
> > > was constantly 1.0 or very nearby. This all is under 2.1.5 (and 2.1 too).
> > > The process wasn't doing anything (or very little).
> >
> > But what _was_ it supposed to be doing?
> 
> Ok, when this happened, the daemon was in a tight read() loop, where the
> read() timed out every second in the driver. Basically after implementing
> select() in the driver and using that with a one second timeout made the
> problem go away.
> 
> In the whole application several one second timeouts exists at several
> drivers in the kernel - i'm quite shure there is a problem with something
> like several timeouts timing out simultaneously causing something.
> 
> I just ran out of ideas where to search for and what to search for so i
> stopped looking for the real problem. But i'm able to reproduce it.
> 
> hellmuth
> - --
> Hellmuth Michaelis                hm@kts.org                    Hamburg, Europe
>                                               (A)bort, (R)etry, (I)nstall BSD ?
> - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>    kts.org will move and will be not available from November 20th for 10 days
> - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: John Fieber <jfieber@indiana.edu>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 09:11:58 -0500 (EST)
> Subject: Re: Interesting URL
> 
> On Thu, 14 Nov 1996, Chuck Robey wrote:
> 
> > I found an interesting URL full of some neat C++ graphics and network
> > code.   I'm always complaining to friends that C++ doesn't have enough
> > public code out there, so this is a nice surprise I thought I'd share.
> 
> Speaking of C++, there is a showstopper problem in 2.2-ALPHA with
> respect to STL.  The fix appears to be simple and a patch has
> been submitted via send-pr.  I have neither space nor time at
> this final hour to check it out personally or I would commit it
> myself, but it would *really* be a shame to ship 2.2 with an
> inoperable STL because of 3 missed files in the stdc++ library...
> 
> - -john
> 
> == jfieber@indiana.edu ===========================================
> == http://fallout.campusview.indiana.edu/~jfieber ================
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Christoph Kukulies <kuku@gilberto.physik.rwth-aachen.de>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 16:16:02 +0100
> Subject: multicast - does NT 4.0 have it? Does Linux have it?
> 
> As the subject asks: Do NT 4.0 and Linux 2.x have multicast
> routing in their kernel, i.e. can they act as a multicast router
> resp. run mrouted?
> 
> - --Chris Christoph P. U. Kukulies kuku@gil.physik.rwth-aachen.de
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: "Rodney W. Grimes" <rgrimes@GndRsh.aac.dev.com>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 07:18:11 -0800 (PST)
> Subject: Re: FreeBSD 2.2-ALPHA is now available.
> 
> > > I have clients with 2 and 3 of these cards in one system running 32 and
> > > 48 ports respectifully.  It will work for you when you go above your
> > > current 4 port utilization.
> > >
> > > You are correct about the 8 port not having modem control, but I think
> > > the (not positive here) the 4 port does.  If not I _know_ the 6 port
> > > board does.
> >
> > 4 port does not, 6 port does.
> >
> > Unless the product offering has changed lately.
> 
> Thanks Joe, combining your statement with what another person said
> defanitly qualifies the fact that the BB1004 does not have modem
> support, and that the IOAT66 (6-port) does.
> 
> Jordan, can you please list this in the serial board section of the
> release/whatever notes:
> 
> Boca BB1004 4-Port serial card (Modems NOT supported)
> Boca IOAT66 6-Port serial card (Modems supported)
> Boca BB1008 8-Port serial card (Modems NOT supported)
> Boca BB2016 16-Port serial card (Modems supported)
> 
> - --
> Rod Grimes                                      rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com
> Accurate Automation, Inc.                   Reliable computers for FreeBSD
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
> Date: Sat, 16 Nov 1996 02:29:19 +1100
> Subject: Re: Sockets question...
> 
> >% man 2 read
> >(SunOS version)
> >...
> >READ(2V)                  SYSTEM CALLS                   READ(2V)
> >
> >     system guarantees to read the number of bytes  requested  if
> >     the  descriptor references a normal file which has that many
> >     bytes left before the EOF (end of file),  but  in  no  other
> >     case.
> >
> >Key words, "but in no other case"..
> 
> FreeBSD says the same thing in the same words except for English
> improvements.  It lies :-).  Short reads are possible even for
> normal files because the read might be into a partially invalid
> buffer.  ffs_read() returns the blocks that are successfully
> read instead of unwinding the read and returning an EFAULT error.
> Example:
> 
> - ---
> #include <stdio.h>
> #include <stdlib.h>
> 
> #define SIZE	0x10000
> 
> main()
> {
>     void *buf;
>     int n;
> 
> 
>     buf = malloc(0x10000);
>     n = read(0, buf, 0x10000);
>     printf("read %d\n", n);
> }
> - ---
> 
> This prints 65536 here.  A watertight example can be probably be
> constructed using mmap().
> 
> Short writes to normal files are more likely.  They occur when the
> disk fills up and for partially invalid buffers.  There are more
> serious problems for the latter case.
> 
> Bruce
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: "John S. Dyson" <toor@dyson.iquest.net>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:43:10 -0500 (EST)
> Subject: Re: Q: system specific binaries
> 
> >
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > Does anyone have any experience with customising FreeBSD so that only
> > binaries which are compiled on a system itself will actually run on
> > that system ?
> > So the local compiler has to give a key to each binary when it's
> > compiled, and when executed there'd be a check for that key. ?
> > That way only people who have access to the compiler may generate
> > binaries, and no 'foreign' binaries will be executed by the syetem.
> >
> > If this is too easy to break, is there perhaps a way to specify
> > from which directories binaries may be executed ?
> >
> Perhaps, formulate a system whereby the flags bits on a file are used
> in some way...  Note that I am not talking about the "protection" bits,
> but there is another group of interesting things called flags bits that
> can be placed only under the control of the kernel.  Just a thought.
> 
> (Perhaps an "annoint" command???)
> John
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: jlemon@americantv.com (Jonathan Lemon)
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:01:10 -0600
> Subject: Re: Q: system specific binaries
> 
> > > Does anyone have any experience with customising FreeBSD so that only
> > > binaries which are compiled on a system itself will actually run on
> > > that system ?
> > > So the local compiler has to give a key to each binary when it's
> > > compiled, and when executed there'd be a check for that key. ?
> > > That way only people who have access to the compiler may generate
> > > binaries, and no 'foreign' binaries will be executed by the syetem.
> > >
> > > If this is too easy to break, is there perhaps a way to specify
> > > from which directories binaries may be executed ?
> > >
> > Perhaps, formulate a system whereby the flags bits on a file are used
> > in some way...  Note that I am not talking about the "protection" bits,
> > but there is another group of interesting things called flags bits that
> > can be placed only under the control of the kernel.  Just a thought.
> >
> > (Perhaps an "annoint" command???)
> 
> Now, why does this remind me of nettrek's "blessed" binaries?
> - --
> Jonathan
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Karl Denninger  <karl@Mcs.Net>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:07:47 -0600 (CST)
> Subject: Re: Sockets question...
> 
> > > I have an application which sends a query to a back-end server -- and that
> > > server can return literally hundreds of KB of data in response.
> > >
> > > On very long responses, it just STOPS.
> > >
> > > The writing end thinks it wrote all of the data, netstat -an shows nothing
> > > in the socket buffers, the reader is waiting in read() for more data (it
> > > never saw the end marker, and in fact never saw more than half of the
> > > response!)
> >
> > If the socket is not in non-blocking mode, and you do a write(2) of N
> > bytes to it, and the write call returns anything other than -1 or N,
> > then that is a bug.
> 
> The mode has not been modified; it should be in *blocking* mode.  The write
> returns the correct number of bytes in each case.
> 
> > If the sending socket returns N, but not all of the data gets to
> > the receiving socket, then that is either a bug or a network problem.
> 
> Bingo.  Send more than about 400KB in a stream transaction and you WILL see
> this.  Its very repeatable.
> 
> Bascially, what we do is this:
> 
> The query goes to the server.  It specifies the moral equivalent of a
> "select" call in ESQL (this is a home-brew database application).
> 
> The server computes the response, and squirts out ~8500 records in response,
> each of which is ~140 bytes long.  This is 8500 write(2) calls, one for each
> record.  All return with no errors.
> 
> About 2700 of the records get to the other end.  The rest DISAPPEAR.  They
> are NOT in the socket buffers (netstat -an shows *zero* bytes in the
> queue).
> 
> I have *also* seen this if you zmodem a file to a terminal server port.  You
> have a very good chance of long files not getting there intact.  I thought
> this was a terminal server problem, but I'm no longer convinced -- this
> looks like a problem in the network code.
> 
> Note that for the NETWORK case if we compile an on older machine running a
> - -CURRENT kernel (built around the July timeframe, has gcc 2.6.3 on it) the
> application does NOT exhibit this problem.
> 
> Compile on the -current machine, and it DOES.
> 
> In both cases the application is linked -static.
> 
> > >From write(2):
> >
> >      When using non-blocking I/O on objects such as sockets that are subject
> > 		^^^^^^^^^^^^
> >      to flow control, write() and writev() may write fewer bytes than request-
> >      ed; the return value must be noted, and the remainder of the operation
> >      should be retried when possible.
> >
> > OK, it doesn't come right out and say directly that it _won't_ do that
> > when using blocking I/O.  But that is the implication.  And it is the
> > historical behavior.  And it is the behavior that probably 90% of
> > network applications are written to expect.
> 
> - --
> - --
> Karl Denninger (karl@MCS.Net)| MCSNet - The Finest Internet Connectivity
> http://www.mcs.net/~karl     | T1's from $600 monthly to FULL DS-3 Service
> 			     | 33 Analog Prefixes, 13 ISDN, Web servers $75/mo
> Voice: [+1 312 803-MCS1 x219]| Email to "info@mcs.net" WWW: http://www.mcs.net/
> Fax:   [+1 312 248-9865]     | 2 FULL DS-3 Internet links; 400Mbps B/W Internal
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Karl Denninger  <karl@mcs.net>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:13:58 -0600 (CST)
> Subject: Re: Sockets question...
> 
> > > > Are you checking the return value from write() to make sure it actually
> > > > thinks that N bytes were _written_?
> > > >
> > > > ... JG
> > >
> > > Uh, hang on a second...
> > >
> > > Are you saying that the behavior of a *TCP* connection is such that you
> > > would expect to see a write(2) call to the socket come back with a short
> > > count for any reason other than the remote having closed or some other
> > > kind of transport error (ie: host unreachable, etc)?
> >
> > Yes: a nonblocking socket write will most definitely display this
> > behaviour.
> 
> Yes, but I did not set nonblocking mode on that socket.
> 
> - --
> - --
> Karl Denninger (karl@MCS.Net)| MCSNet - The Finest Internet Connectivity
> http://www.mcs.net/~karl     | T1's from $600 monthly to FULL DS-3 Service
> 			     | 33 Analog Prefixes, 13 ISDN, Web servers $75/mo
> Voice: [+1 312 803-MCS1 x219]| Email to "info@mcs.net" WWW: http://www.mcs.net/
> Fax:   [+1 312 248-9865]     | 2 FULL DS-3 Internet links; 400Mbps B/W Internal
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Joe Greco <jgreco@brasil.moneng.mei.com>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:13:49 -0600 (CST)
> Subject: Re: FreeBSD 2.2-ALPHA is now available.
> 
> > > 4 port does not, 6 port does.
> > >
> > > Unless the product offering has changed lately.
> >
> > Thanks Joe, combining your statement with what another person said
> > defanitly qualifies the fact that the BB1004 does not have modem
> > support, and that the IOAT66 (6-port) does.
> 
> Actually cruising the Boca Web site is handy... ( :-)  :-) )
> 
> http://www.bocaresearch.com/docs/prodlist.htm
> 
> Product Code: BB1008
> Eight-port serial expansion BOCABOARD for ISA. Drivers for SCO Unix/Xenix
> and PC-MOS. Includes eight six-foot RJ-11 to DB-25 cables.
> 
> Product Code: BB1004
> Four-port serial expansion BOCABOARD for ISA. Drivers for SCO Unix/Xenix and
> PC-MOS. Includes four six-foot RJ-11 to DB-25 cables.
> 
> Product Code: IOAT66
> I/O ports for ISA/EISA. Six high-speed RS-232 serial ports with 10-pin RJ-45
> connectors and 16C550 buffered UARTs. Excellent product for bulletin board
> and fax server applications.
> 
> Product Code: BB2016
> 16-port serial expansion BOCABOARD for ISA. Drivers for SCO Unix/Xenix and
> PC-MOS. External concentrator supports up to 16 RJ-45 ports.
> 
> Unfortunately their use of "RJ-45" is incorrect, it's actually a ten pin
> connector, allowing for full modem control.
> 
> > Jordan, can you please list this in the serial board section of the
> > release/whatever notes:
> >
> > Boca BB1004 4-Port serial card (Modems NOT supported)
> > Boca IOAT66 6-Port serial card (Modems supported)
> > Boca BB1008 8-Port serial card (Modems NOT supported)
> > Boca BB2016 16-Port serial card (Modems supported)
> 
> That is reasonable.
> 
> I have been toying with the idea of picking up an IOAT66, but I've had
> bad experiences with a BB2016 (interrupt problems) and I am a bit
> hesitant to try a Boca serial board again.  :-)  I guess that's fine
> since I don't think I know anyone who sells them anyways.  But they
> ARE very inexpensive!
> 
> ... JG
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Joe Greco <jgreco@brasil.moneng.mei.com>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:17:30 -0600 (CST)
> Subject: Re: Sockets question...
> 
> > > > > Are you checking the return value from write() to make sure it actually
> > > > > thinks that N bytes were _written_?
> > > > >
> > > > > ... JG
> > > >
> > > > Uh, hang on a second...
> > > >
> > > > Are you saying that the behavior of a *TCP* connection is such that you
> > > > would expect to see a write(2) call to the socket come back with a short
> > > > count for any reason other than the remote having closed or some other
> > > > kind of transport error (ie: host unreachable, etc)?
> > >
> > > Yes: a nonblocking socket write will most definitely display this
> > > behaviour.
> >
> > Yes, but I did not set nonblocking mode on that socket.
> 
> Did you receive a signal?  That is known to cause similar behaviour on
> SunOS...
> 
> However, if you received a return value from write() equal to the number
> of bytes you supplied to write(), I would state that the problem is
> almost certainly elsewhere.
> 
> ... JG
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Thomas David Rivers <ponds!rivers@dg-rtp.dg.com>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 07:23:40 -0500 (EST)
> Subject: Today's panic.
> 
> Well, I got a panic last night just after 1am - a different
> time; but it's a panic I've reported before.
> 
>   "panic: ifree: freeing free inode"
> 
> in ffs_vfree().
> 
> Recall, this is a 2.1.5-STABLE kernel I grabbed on Oct. 17th
> (should I refresh this?), with Terry's suggested check in
> vfs_subr.c and David's check for v_usecount==0 in vnode_pager.c
> [Previous mail contains the context diff's for these two files.]
> 
> Here's the traceback - but we've seen it before....
> 
> Again, let me say how much I appreciate everyone's effort on this!
> 
> 	- Dave Rivers -
> 
> 
> 
>    [ponds.water.net]$ gdb -k kernel.9 vmcore.9
>    GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
>     under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
>    There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
>    GDB 4.13 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
>    Copyright 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc...(no debugging symbols found)...
>    IdlePTD 1e4000
>    current pcb at 1d5484
>    panic: ifree: freeing free inode
>    #0  0xf0193d2b in boot ()
>    (kgdb) where
>    #0  0xf0193d2b in boot ()
>    #1  0xf0112b83 in panic ()
>    #2  0xf0176f67 in ffs_vfree ()
>    #3  0xf017c1f2 in ufs_inactive ()
>    #4  0xf0128d65 in vrele ()
>    #5  0xf0128cab in vput ()
>    #6  0xf017f724 in ufs_remove ()
>    #7  0xf012ad6e in unlink ()
>    #8  0xf019c0a6 in syscall ()
>    #9  0xf019156b in Xsyscall ()
>    #10 0x2d9a in ?? ()
>    #11 0x2b2a in ?? ()
>    #12 0x2507 in ?? ()
>    #13 0x19b9 in ?? ()
>    #14 0x10d3 in ?? ()
>    (kgdb) [ponds.water.net]$
>    Script done on Fri Nov 15 07:15:14 1996
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Bill Fenner <fenner@parc.xerox.com>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 08:20:44 PST
> Subject: Re: multicast - does NT 4.0 have it? Does Linux have it?
> 
> In message <199611151516.QAA04115@gilberto.physik.rwth-aachen.de> you write:
> >NT 4.0
> 
> No.  Microsoft apparently has no plans for implementing this, and I have
> it on good authority that they use some FreeBSD machines as their internal
> multicast routers =)
> 
> >Linux 2.x
> 
> More recent versions, yes.  I haven't tried them but have been assured that
> they work well.
> 
>   Bill
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Karl Denninger  <karl@mcs.net>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:24:05 -0600 (CST)
> Subject: Re: Sockets question...
> 
> > > > > > Are you checking the return value from write() to make sure it actually
> > > > > > thinks that N bytes were _written_?
> > > > > >
> > > > > > ... JG
> > > > >
> > > > > Uh, hang on a second...
> > > > >
> > > > > Are you saying that the behavior of a *TCP* connection is such that you
> > > > > would expect to see a write(2) call to the socket come back with a short
> > > > > count for any reason other than the remote having closed or some other
> > > > > kind of transport error (ie: host unreachable, etc)?
> > > >
> > > > Yes: a nonblocking socket write will most definitely display this
> > > > behaviour.
> > >
> > > Yes, but I did not set nonblocking mode on that socket.
> >
> > Did you receive a signal?  That is known to cause similar behaviour on
> > SunOS...
> 
> Can't.  Any signal on that process is a SERIOUS error; its a DBMS!  We have
> a generic "oh shit" trap for all signals set; it does not go off.
> 
> > However, if you received a return value from write() equal to the number
> > of bytes you supplied to write(), I would state that the problem is
> > almost certainly elsewhere.
> >
> > ... JG
> 
> Bingo.
> 
> - --
> - --
> Karl Denninger (karl@MCS.Net)| MCSNet - The Finest Internet Connectivity
> http://www.mcs.net/~karl     | T1's from $600 monthly to FULL DS-3 Service
> 			     | 33 Analog Prefixes, 13 ISDN, Web servers $75/mo
> Voice: [+1 312 803-MCS1 x219]| Email to "info@mcs.net" WWW: http://www.mcs.net/
> Fax:   [+1 312 248-9865]     | 2 FULL DS-3 Internet links; 400Mbps B/W Internal
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Slavik Terletsky <ts@polynet.lviv.ua>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 18:25:40 +0200
> Subject: Re: Q: How to read hardware port ? *HELP*
> 
> Andrew.Gordon@net-tel.co.uk wrote:
> 
> > Does your port actually want byte-wide reads?  There are other macros
> > in /usr/include/machine/cpufunc.h for 16-bit or 32-bit reads.
> no difference, the hardware just catches the trial of reading 0x443 port
> 
> Say, if i am using port 0x443 and have no driver compiled for it -
> can i read this port at all? (without driver!)
> - --
> # Slavik Terletsky      # University "Lvivska Poytechnica" #
> # Network Administrator # mailto:ts@polynet.lviv.ua        #
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Hal Snyder <hal@vailsys.com>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:31:33 -0600
> Subject: Re: Programming technique for non-forking servers?
> 
> Not exactly on subject, but does anyone know of a C++ class library for
> network servers?  Or is C++ still mainly for cooking application-level
> code?
> 
> I've looked as socket++, but it seems to have been abandoned, not sure
> why.
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
> Date: Sat, 16 Nov 1996 03:36:41 +1100
> Subject: Re: Programming technique for non-forking servers?
> 
> >> mset and mclear would be implemented as lib functions because Intel does
> >> have an atomic test and set.
> >
> >Yes it does: the "xchg" instruction.  Load 1 into a register, then "xchg"
> >the register with the memory location containing the lock.  Look at the
> >new value of the register to find out whether the lock was already
> >locked.
> 
> It also has many other instructions suitable for locking primitives:
> 
> 	bt, btc, btr, bts	(386 up)
> 	sal			(386 up) (standard trick)
> 	cmpxchg			(486 up)
> 	xadd			(486 up)
> 	cmpxchg8b		(Pentium (up?))
> 
> >It even works in a multiprocessor system.  According to the
> >Intel book:
> 
> >  If a memory operand is involved, the LOCK# signal is asserted for the
> >  duration of the exchange, regardless of the presence or absence of the
> >  LOCK prefix or of the value of the IOPL.
> 
> I think the other instructions work in multiprocessor systems if they
> have a `lock' prefix.  The optional locking makes them more useful on
> uniprocessors (actually, except for `sal' they are usually too slow to
> be worth using except for locking.  E.g., on Pentiums `bt' of a memory
> variable takes 26 times as long as a simple instruction).
> 
> Bruce
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> From: Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
> Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 17:53:37 UTC+0100
> Subject: Contribution of Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 driver
> 
> I've read the handbook on how to contribute new pieces of code to FreeBSD,
> and I've done what is says, namely:
> 
> 1. The driver has a BSD-style copyright.
> 
> 2. I've uploaded it to ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming, with
> filename if_ex-961115.tar.gz.
> 
> 3. I'm sending a message to hackers@freebsd.org telling about this, so that
> someone can commit/review/whatever the driver.
> 
> I hope it is not too late to include this driver in FreeBSD 2.2, assuming you
> find it appropriate enough.
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> End of hackers-digest V1 #1641
> ******************************
> 
> 



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