csemege

Kulcsár Ferenc kulcsar.ferenc at onyf.hu
2001. Jún. 6., Sze, 10:39:50 CEST


Udv Mindenkinek!

Nehany ujabb gyongyszem a NetBSD vilagabol:

Driver for National Semiconductor DP83820 Gigabit Ethernet (17 May) (top)

     Jason Thorpe has committed a driver for the National Semiconductor
DP83820 Gigabit Ethernet chip to
     NetBSD-current. This chip is found on several low-cost Gigabit Ethernet
boards, including the NetGear GA-622 and
     the Asante FriendlyNet GigaNIX boards.

     gsip0 at pci0 dev 9 function 0: NatSemi DP83820 Gigabit Ethernet
     gsip0: interrupting at irq 9
     gsip0: Ethernet address 00:50:fc:2c:b4:da
     ukphy0 at gsip0 phy 1: Generic IEEE 802.3u media interface
     ukphy0: OUI 0x1000e8, model 0x0006, rev. 0
     ukphy0: 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, 1000baseTX, 1000baseTX-FDX, auto

     Jason hasn't written a driver for the PHY yet, but you should still be
able to use the case in 100base and 1000base
     modes. There is still some tuning to do for this driver, but it
certainly works well enough for people to use now.

A felhasznalok baratsagaert:

New menu structures for sushi (26 Apr) (top)

     Tim Rightnour has committed new networking configuration and processes
menu structures to sushi. In
     addition, a new sysctl form has been added to the existing system menu
structure.

     Sushi is an interactive, menu-based program that is designed to aid the
user or administrator with administrative and
     complex tasks on their machines. Sushi provides a menu of various
functions that the user can perform on his or her
     machine. Once the user selects a desired function, the function is
either performed outright, or in most cases, the user is
     asked to fill in a simple form with required and optional information,
which is then processed by sushi, and the action
     occurs.

     The new networking configuration menu structure allows sushi to do
tasks like edit /etc/exports, modify NIC
     configuration, and setup YP/NIS. The processes menu structure will
allow starting / stopping / showing / restarting of
     things in /etc/rc.d. The new sysctl form in the system menu structure
allows a user to both set sysctl's interactively, and
     save them in /etc/sysctl.conf.

     People running a NetBSD system with sushi already installed can update
their menu structures easily by running 'make
     install' in 'sharesrc/share/sushi'. Of course if you do a 'make build'
or install a snapshot based on
     NetBSD-current sources past 2001-04-26, you'll get the updated menus
also.

Erdemes neha olvasgatni a http://www.netbsd.org/Changes/#top oldalacskat.

Feri

UNIX *is* user friendly. It is just a bit selective about his friends.




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