Subject: Re: message "/netbsdadb: standard keyboard at 2" has ^H^H
To: Makoto Fujiwara <makoto@ki.nu>
From: Space Case <wormey@eskimo.com>
List: port-mac68k
Date: 01/18/1998 10:52:16
On Jan 18, 8:23pm, Makoto Fujiwara wrote:
>(The address count is also strange ? It should be 0000010 on
>second line ? )
>
>makoto@ci 3:15:04/980118(/tmp)> grep 'adb: st' /var/log/messages | od -x
>0000000 4a61 6e20 3136 2032 303a 3537 3a34 3220
>0000020 6369 202f 6e65 7462 7364 3a20 0808 6164
>0000040 623a 2073 7461 6e64 6172 6420 6b65 7962
>0000060 6f61 7264 2061 7420 320a
>0000072
By default, addresses are shown in octal. To get a hex address, you'll
need to specify an offset in hex; an offset of +0x0 should start you
from the beginning of the file, with hex addresses. That is, *should*,
according to the man page. I couldn't get it to work under NetBSD nor
SunOS4, though IRIX happily takes a '-A x' to specify hex addresses.
~Steve
--
Steven R. Allen - wormey@eskimo.com http://www.eskimo.com/~wormey/
Faith is the quality that enables you to eat blackberry jam on a picnic
without looking to see whether the seeds move.
Contrary to popular belief, Unix is user friendly.
It just happens to be selective about who it makes friends with.
-Kyle Hearn <kyle@intex.net>
I don't object to sex before marriage, but two minutes before?!?