Hi guys.
Am about to install Solaris10 x86 and I was wondering if there are any news as to whether it is possible or not to install the os on an external drive, especially firewire, I suppose I will have to open my tower and put in the drive to install it..the machine I want to put it on,... (0 Replies)
I have a 1TB hard disk that I had partitioned on a Sun clone and had 7 partitions of 137GB a piece. (Using a USB to SATA adaptor)
I then had loaded a new hard disk on my laptop (T60...Lenova) with Solaris 10 X86. I tried to mount the hard disk but it kept telling me the mount point was busy and I... (2 Replies)
Need to find the CPU speed of HP UX for a non root login.
echo "itick_per_usec/D" | adb /stand/vmunix /dev/mem | tail -1 will give the following for non root users
ERROR: cannot open `/dev/mem', errno = 13, Permission denied (2 Replies)
Need to find CPU Speed of zLinux.
The commands like cat /proc/cpuinfo and /usr/bin/cpufreq-info does not gave me the expected results.
/usr/bin/cpufreq-info prints the
....
analyzing CPU 0:
no or unknown cpufreq driver is active on this CPU
analyzing CPU 1:
no or unknown cpufreq... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Anyone has configured a Sunix Sata S150 card (AKA Initio Inic-1622) + disk in a Solaris10/x86 05/09 system? I wondered what to do to get it running. The Sunix card does not come with a Solaris driver ;-(
The card is seen by the system as the prtconf -v output shows (see below at the... (0 Replies)
Dear All
I am using Core2Duo processor on G31 chipset motherboard
with 1 Gb RAM and 20 GB IDE HDD.
I tried to install Solaris 10 from DVD and it installs Successfully without any error. after the first reboot it stop at GRUB prompt.
I tried to many times with different partitions layout,... (9 Replies)
I can't mount flash drives and dvd drives on my x86 solaris 10.
The error message appears after login; sd_media_watch_cb: dev gone.
When I issue #mount /usb, it first shows disk is mounted or busy, and
'/dev/dsk/c3t0d0p1 - there is no such device or address' when I repeat
it. But the... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
Installed Solaris10(1/13) on a normal Lenovo Thinkcenter desktop. The installation could proceed only in text mode (4).
Install is success, but not able to get the login window after the grub screen. The screen goes blank. (as was the case when selecting desktop mode during... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Solaris_Begin
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
cpuctl
CPUCTL(8) BSD System Manager's Manual CPUCTL(8)NAME
cpuctl -- program to control CPUs
SYNOPSIS
cpuctl command [arguments]
DESCRIPTION
The cpuctl command can be used to control and inspect the state of CPUs in the system.
The first argument, command, specifies the action to take. Valid commands are:
identify cpu Output information on the specified CPU's features and capabilities. Not available on all architectures.
list For each CPU in the system, display the current state and time of the last state change.
offline cpuno Set the specified CPU off line.
Unbound LWPs (lightweight processes) will not be executed on the CPU while it is off line. Bound LWPs will continue to be
executed on the CPU, and device interrupts routed to the CPU will continue to be handled. A future release of the system
may allow device interrupts to be re-routed away from individual CPUs.
At least one CPU in the system must remain on line.
online cpuno Set the specified CPU on line, making it available to run unbound LWPs.
ucode [file] This applies the microcode patch on all CPUs. The default filename is used if no filename is specified. The identify com-
mand prints the installed version on that CPU. On success the identify command show different ucode versions before and
after this command.
FILES
/dev/cpuctl control device
/libdata/firmware/x86/amd/
The directory to install the microcode file for AMD CPUs into. The default filename is microcode_amd.bin for CPU families 0x10
to 0x14. The default filename is microcode_amd_famXXh.bin where XX is the CPU family starting with 15 (hex). Get it from
http://www.amd64.org/support/microcode.html
EXAMPLES
Run
cpuctl identify 0
and you should see something like this:
cpu0: UCode version: 0x1000080
After applying the microcode patch with
cpuctl ucode
you can see with
cpuctl identify 0
that the patch got applied:
cpu0: UCode version: 0x1000083
SEE ALSO psrset(8), schedctl(8)HISTORY
The cpuctl command first appeared in NetBSD 5.0.
BSD January 13, 2012 BSD