Subject: Re: Can't build userland, resultant binaries are not executable
To: Greg Earle <earle@isolar.DynDNS.ORG>
From: Rick Kelly <rmk@toad.rmkhome.com>
List: port-sparc64
Date: 03/22/2005 15:09:29
Greg Earle said:
>http://www.overstock.com/cgi-bin/d2.cgi?
>PAGE=PRODUCT&PROD_ID=1106306&cid=25608&fp=F
I prefer the $20 9 gig drives.
>In these days when you can get 73 GB SCSI disks for US $80, the old
>"But you might fill up the disk!" arguments don't hold much weight.
Assuming that the 73 GB drive has some life left in it.
>I separate my 9 GB boot disk. But the point I was trying to make is
>that in this day and age of 73 GB SCSI drives and 400 GB EIDE drives,
>a lot of the old arguments for partitioning have gone out the window.
And I do the same. One partition per tape, one tape per dump. 4 gigs per
tape. Some of my systems have partitions greater than 4 gigs, that means
multiple tar backups on separate tapes.
>"Sick to your stomach"? I suggest meditation if it stresses you that
>much :-) I've been running NetBSD/SPARC since 0.9 as well (early 1994,
>if I recall correctly; with one abortive foray into NetBSD/SPARC64).
>I don't see how it's cut-and-dried that it's "good engineering
>practice".
I still have my NetBSD 0.9a machine down in the basement. It's ready to
boot. That's from April 1994, and I also have a 1.0a system from spring
of 1995 down there. I shut it down when I moved from Mass to Colorado in
late 1998.
>If I make "/var" a separate partition and *it* fills up, and brings the
>machine to a grinding halt, whereas if I hadn't it could've used up
>dozens of GB more (those 73 GB disks, again), is *that* "good
>engineering
>practice"? My point was that there is no cut-and-dried argument that
>proves one is better than the other, so why keep arguing about it?
Ijust add more disks and move the partition.
>I'm 46. :-)
I'm 56. :-) :-)
--
Rick Kelly rmk@rmkhome.com
<http://www.rmkhome.com/>
<http://rkba.rmkhome.com/>