> [474047.688707] kcare: allocated 108032 bytes for patch at ffffc901c868a000 [474047.688748] kcare: verifying patch... [474047.688749] kcare: verified successfully [474047.688750] kcare: allocating memory in module space... [474047.688768] kcare: allocated 108032 bytes at ffffffffc09c4000 [474047.688780] kcare: 836 relocations to fixup... [474047.688784] kcare: fixed 836 relocations [474047.688784] kcare: jumping to ffffffffc09cbbe0 [474047.688786] kpatch: starting at ffffffffc09c4000 (Linux version 3.16.0-41-generic (build
so I'm running a kernel that's been patched at runtime, and my RAID controller has had a firmware update and restarted itself without rebooting the operating system
next they'll tell me I can upgrade from Windows 10 to Windows 10.1 without rebooting ;-)
> Each CacheVault product has a Gas Gauge Integrated Circuit (IC) that maintains an accurate record of the available charge on the SuperCap. Through ongoing long term testing, Avago has determined that an update to the Gas Gauge firmware is needed to prevent a situation where the SuperCap is prematurely declared Fault status. This update is recommended to be performed on the next available maintenance release for the CacheVault product.
Thankfully, the Gas Gauge IC on my CacheVault is not faulty.
The purpose of the SuperCapacitor is to ensure that any writes that are "in-progress" to the storage array in the event of power loss, can be transferred from the "volatile" components of the RAID controller (the RAID processor, the DRAM, etc.) onto the non-volatile NAND.
@Bob It shouldn't matter if KVM is loaded. In fact, it's smart enough that even with a custom compiled ZFS kernel module loaded into the kernel, it's able to do rebootless updates.
They explicitly support running it with custom filesystem drivers and hardware drivers. Probably not fglrx, though, because that thing is literally an OS of its own.
The only downside of running it with KVM is, if you want to take all your kernels rebootless (physical AND guests), you probably have to pay for multiple licenses
In your position I would only use it on the physical host, because that's the greatest pain to reboot
rebooting a guest is... meh, and much quicker than the host, too, since there's no preboot crap
Much worse in my vserver setup (which probably has thousands of bugs since it's running an unpatched kernel...) where a reboot can take down networking permanently, never mind kernel patches breaking vserver.
@allquixotic I have Debian set as first in the boot order, IIRC
@Bob it still has to load some kind of firmware in an Option ROM into the NIC upon boot, even if it doesn't try to boot to PXE. Ever watch the KVM-o-IP boot sequence?
When I boot up, I get hit with the LSI RAID Option ROM, then the NIC Option ROM, then the UEFI "I'm actually the motherboard trying to boot!" screen, then the PXE trying to find out if it needs to boot up the recovery, then finally my OS
oh, one strange consequence of getting a SP-128 instead of a SP-64, @Bob - I was expecting nproc to return 8, but it returns 12 :D I thought I was just getting a MHz bump with the CPU.
in my case I can actually use them, since ARK: Survival Evolved's game server is using some extremely recent technology and seems to be architected in a very smart way; it's highly multi-threaded, uses TCP for reliability but with NO_DELAY flag, has awesome netcode to minimize chattiness while still being responsive, is fully 64-bit, no memleaks...
it's interesting how I can only somewhat enjoy a game's actual content, but find it absolutely marvelous to play mainly because of how well-designed it is - a software engineer can appreciate well-designed software
I'll come to AUS and you can stow away in the cargo compartment of the airplane within a large, mostly-empty box that also contains a warm blanket and an oxygen tank and a mask that will fit over your muzzle
if I can get him to pay for my R9 280X upfront, I'll sell him that and be able to buy the 980 Ti at a reduced "price" since some of the money buying it won't be my money
@Bob By that logic, just wait until 2030 and buy a lightly used system that's been in mothballs for 6 years containing two TITAN Xs in SLI, an i7-5980X and 128GB DDR4
and 9xx will give you future proofing in the latest support for stuff like NVENC (the latest iteration thereof), G-Sync, DX12, tessellation, antitrust marketing practices GameWorks, etc.
also, I think Maxwell caught up to AMD significantly on the compute front, whereas everything in the GeForce product line before Maxwell was horrible at compute (for the most part)
their double floating point divisor is still twice what AMD's is, though, so I'm pretty sure the Fury X is the best bitcoin GPU now
No, that's me hoping my knowledge of computers will help me with the Belgian government knowledge, just like people hope their knowledge of the Belgian government will help them with computers.
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Oh, so I upgraded my desktop to Windows 10 last week. It works great, except for funky sound issues. But I think that's resolved.
I have 5.1 surround sound, with rear, not side speakers. But when I select 5.1 surround sound in Windows 10 it only gives me the option for side speakers. Have to select 7.1 surround and disable the side speakers in the configuration.
Also had to uninstall/reinstall the driver a couple times in the meantime to get it working.
Other than that, "Hey Cortana" is pretty dang awesome on a desktop :)
I rarely talk to my computer but I love that I can. It's like Star Trek XD
Tablet has Windows 10 sorta installed but it doesn't work because I forgot to remove a hack into the window manager that caused the W10 install to crash and corrupt.
Bringing that into a MS store to get it fixed. Don't want to fiddle.
Laptop will get W10 when it gets W10 :P In no rush
@snipe Yes. Press Alt+PrtScrn (Alt and Print Screen together) to put a screenshot of the current window (the one that's "active") onto the clipboard, and you can then paste it into an image editing program
@NateKerkhofs What's that? You like your 2015 Toyota Prius Four? Well I have a deal for you! Buy a brand new 2015 Toyota Prius One for only $A lot of money!
hmm, my simulated DDT histogram gives me a dedup = 1.04, compress = 1.00, copies = 1.00, dedup * compress / copies = 1.04 which means it would be a terrible waste to enable zfs dedup
You probably shouldn't be using a computer. If you want any further help from any of us, you'll also need to collect your thoughts and think about forming coherent, non-verbally aggressive sentences that we can understand.
"There is also something of a rebranding taking place. The Outlook Web App (OWA) is no more; say hello to Outlook on the web. The new name is a minor change, however. " anyone find those sentence(s) hard to understand?
Disclaimer: This is a followup question for Will the mandatory update policy in windows 10 bring security issues?; With the purpose to divide one broad question in two specific one, coincidentally originated due to the same policy. Thus, expecting quite different answers. Please, do read both que...
To me, it's less about his swearing and more about his behavior. Ranting, even if it's not directed to someone here, is not really something I like to see. Dunno about the others here.