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Date:      Tue, 4 Nov 1997 12:39:00 +0000 (GMT)
From:      sporkl <spork@dti.net>
To:        Parker Brown <phbrown@gte.net>
Cc:        support@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Cleaning up wierd system messages to root
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.96.971104123831.257A-100000@iconoclastic.com>
In-Reply-To: <345EAD68.262@gte.net>

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Hey.

	Did you include "option SYSVSHM" in your kernel config?



 -Spike Gronim
  sporkl@dti.net

	"Tradition is the chastity belt of the mind" 



On Mon, 3 Nov 1997, Parker Brown wrote:

> This could conceivably (that doesn't look right!) be an XFree86
> question, but I don't think so.
> When I bring FreeBSD up, I usually login as root on console 1, then as a
> regular user on console 2 (<alt><F2>) and use the system there without
> worrying about a global wipeout.  Also, just to monitor the efficiency
> of the system, I usually run systat -vmstat as root.  Anyway,  after
> using startx to use X-windows as a regular user, error messages
> something like "/kernel: cmd XF86-SVGA --- tried to use non-present
> SYSVSHM" show up on root's screen.  That blow's systat's whole screen
> (ok, no biggie) but I'm enough of a perfectionist to want to know what's
> wrong.  SYSVSHM refers to System V Shared Memory, I guess.  I think this
> only happens with my reconfigured kernel, and I know of nothing that
> I've omitted there.
> 
> Please give jme some suggestions where to look so I can clean my system
> up.
> 
> 




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