Date: Wed, 05 Jul 1995 07:53:44 -0500 From: "Eric L. Hernes" <erich@jake.lodgenet.com> To: clary@elec.uq.oz.au (Clary Harridge) Cc: freebsd-current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: netscape causing reboot of diskless clients Message-ID: <199507051253.HAA24112@jake.lodgenet.com> In-Reply-To: Your message of "Tue, 04 Jul 1995 12:41:07 %2B1000." <9507040230.AA06315@s1.elec.uq.edu.au>
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> > > > 1) a small mfs for /tmp/.X11-unix (if ram is plentiful) > How do you do this? Via fstab or /etc/rc? What parameters? > I have the following line in /etc/fstab /dev/null /tmp mfs rw,-s4000,-Tfd360 0 0 This makes an mfs for all of /tmp, beware if you're gonna do any heavy compiling and/or make use of /tmp. More correct would be to use /tmp/.X11-unix instead of /tmp for the mount point. I can't remember if /tmp gets rm -rf'ed on bootup, in which case you'll need to add something like [ -d /tmp/.X11-unix ] || mkdir /tmp/.X11-unix before the `mount -a' in /etc/rc some people use <swap device> instead of /dev/null, if you do this, your mfs is the same size as your swap partition, and you don't need the -Tfd360. If you use /dev/null, you'll get warnings about calculated sectors per cylinder etc, but it seems to work. > > -- > regards Dept. of Electrical Engineering, > Clary Harridge University of Queensland, QLD, Australia, 4072 > Phone: +61-7-365-3636 Fax: +61-7-365-4999 > INTERNET: clary@elec.uq.edu.au > eric. -- erich@lodgenet.com erich@rrnet.com
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