/freebsd/sys/contrib/device-tree/Bindings/pinctrl/ |
H A D | pinctrl_spear.txt | 53 For All SPEAr3xx machines: 59 For SPEAr300 machines: 65 For SPEAr310 machines: 69 For SPEAr320 machines: 94 For SPEAr1310 machines: 112 For SPEAr1340 machines: 126 For All SPEAr3xx machines: 130 For SPEAr300 machines: 133 For SPEAr310 machines: 137 For SPEAr320 machines: [all …]
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/freebsd/share/doc/smm/11.timedop/ |
H A D | timed.ms | 63 time daemons (\fItimed\fP) running on the machines in a local 84 is running and those of all other machines. 91 of the other machines [1,2]. 119 The machines that are gateways between distinct local area 121 A time daemon on such machines may act as a \fIsubmaster\fP. 143 Machines that are only connected to point-to-point, 152 Therefore, a subset of machines must be designated as potential 157 daemons to machines with more powerful processors or lighter loads. 158 Also, machines with inaccurate clocks should not be used as masters. 160 well allow all of its machines to run master time daemons. [all …]
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/freebsd/usr.bin/rwho/ |
H A D | rwho.1 | 33 .Nd who is logged in on local machines 42 but for all machines on the local network. 63 information about other machines 76 This is unwieldy when the number of machines
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/freebsd/usr.bin/ruptime/ |
H A D | ruptime.1 | 33 .Nd show host status of local machines 48 displays uptime status for all machines; 53 Machines for which no status report has been received for 11 54 minutes are shown as being down, and machines for which no status
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/freebsd/contrib/ntp/ |
H A D | TODO | 45 libntp/machines.c 68 libntp/machines.c 113 Is adjtime accurate on ALL sysv4* machines? 115 Do we catch all Unixware machines with *-univel-sysv* ?
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/freebsd/share/doc/papers/newvm/ |
H A D | 1.t | 74 Most machines were used as centralized time sharing machines. 75 These machines had far more disk storage than they had memory 94 most machines ran with little or no networking. 118 pool of machines that provide filing, computing, and spooling services. 136 As the amount of physical memory on machines increases and the number of 142 Because many machines will have more physical memory than they do swap 148 For machines with no swap space, the maximum virtual memory will 309 For such machines the setting and clearing of locks would 370 informatieverwerkende machines,
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H A D | 0.t | 44 machines, a new approach to the implementation of virtual memory is 72 machines that have a test-and-set instruction can handle the usual 77 semaphore interface on most machines with a much lower runtime cost.
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/freebsd/contrib/ntp/html/ |
H A D | tickadj.html | 18 …ltrix, SGI and probably others. Those machines provide means to patch the kernel <tt>/dev/kmem</tt… 19 …m call, and <tt>dosynctodr</tt>, which indicates to the kernels on some machines whether they shou… 21 … different types of machines. The operations which <tt>tickadj</tt> tries to perform are not guara…
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/freebsd/share/man/man9/ |
H A D | ieee80211_proto.9 | 55 These state machines vary according to the vap operating mode. 56 Station mode state machines follow the 802.11 MLME states 58 Other state machines are simpler and reflect operational work 61 When multiple vaps are operational the state machines are used to 67 The following states are defined for state machines:
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H A D | ether_gen_addr.9 | 55 During early boot, the hostid may not be set on machines that haven't yet 58 or on machines that do not use
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/freebsd/share/man/man4/ |
H A D | vmci.4 | 28 (VMCI) in virtual machines by VMware. 30 VMCI allows virtual machines to communicate with host kernel modules and the 43 running within virtual machines.
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/freebsd/share/doc/psd/05.sysman/ |
H A D | 1.0.t | 40 Like many real machines, this virtual machine has memory management hardware, 44 and supports a set of operations. Like devices on real machines, some 47 other parts are often implemented in server processes on other machines.
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/freebsd/usr.bin/compress/doc/ |
H A D | README | 91 4. A large table is used on large machines when a relatively small 141 On machines that have a fixed stack size (such as Perkin-Elmer), set the 180 > machines and dependent on the vax sysgen option. 182 > various machines. This has been fixed. 190 >2. The exit status is not well defined (on some machines) causing the 212 >7. Removed extra bit masking for machines that support unsigned 222 >On machines that have a fixed stack size (such as Perkin-Elmer), set the
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/freebsd/sys/dev/isci/scil/ |
H A D | scif_sas_design.h | 76 To begin, it's important to discuss the utilization of state machines in 77 the design. State machines are pervasive in this design, because of the 87 machines, objects, and methods that are heavily utilized by this design. 90 Many of the framework objects have state machines associated with them. 99 Some of the SAS framework objects contain sub-state machines. These 100 sub-state machines are started upon entrance to the super-state and stopped 224 The SCIF_SAS_REMOTE_DEVICE object has sub-state machines defined for
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/freebsd/usr.bin/rusers/ |
H A D | rusers.1 | 33 .Nd who is logged in to machines on local network 45 or all machines on the local 62 Print all machines responding even if no one is currently logged in.
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/freebsd/contrib/ntp/include/ |
H A D | ntp_machine.h | 37 Some UNIX V.4 machines implement a sockets library on top of 44 UNIX V.4 machines implement a sockets library on top of streams. 54 Some UNIX V.4 machines do not appear to support ioctl() requests for the 114 /* in machines.c */ 117 /* machines.c */
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/freebsd/share/doc/smm/01.setup/ |
H A D | 5.t | 103 translations for machines that do not participate by use of the 285 .Sh 2 "Use of \*(4B machines as gateways" 298 Another change is that \*(4B machines that forward packets back through 461 machines by installing a 470 Thus, to create a class of equivalent machines, the 472 file should contain the \fIofficial\fP names for those machines. 474 of the host name for machines in your local domain. 475 For example, four machines on our local
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/freebsd/share/doc/papers/sysperf/ |
H A D | 5.t | 51 only by hosts at that site. To off-site hosts machines on a site's 87 to remote machines benefit from significant increases in buffering [Walsh84]. 245 all their machines up to date with a consistent set of sources and binaries. 253 The new utility \fItimed\fP keeps the time on a group of cooperating machines 259 Other machines may participate in a purely slave role.
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/freebsd/crypto/heimdal/appl/rcp/ |
H A D | rcp.1 | 8 .Nd copy file to and from remote machines 20 copies files between machines. Each file argument is either a remote file name of the form
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/freebsd/share/doc/smm/12.timed/ |
H A D | timed.ms | 83 is running and those of all other machines. The current implementation 85 between machines. 92 of the machines on the same network. 107 Additionally, a time daemon on gateway machines may run as 284 The candidate will add the slave's name to the list of machines that it
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/freebsd/contrib/ntp/util/ |
H A D | byteorder.c | 6 * Dec mip machines 7 * Dec alpha machines
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/freebsd/share/man/man7/ |
H A D | security.7 | 52 Machines are 111 servers on their machines. 271 the machines which run the Kerberos servers and your desktop workstation. 305 affect all the machines the staff member may have an account on. 308 password on all machines should not be underrated. 309 With discrete passwords, changing a password on N machines can be a mess. 615 limited-access box significant access to the other machines in the business, 616 usually either by doing a read-only NFS export of the other machines to the 618 box to SSH to the other machines. 941 should only be used for automated tasks from secure machines (something [all …]
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/freebsd/share/man/man4/man4.powerpc/ |
H A D | powermac_nvram.4 | 50 available on the Apple PowerPC-based machines. 52 This driver currently supports "Core99" machines containing a Sharp, Micron,
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H A D | snd_ai2s.4 | 51 predominantly in G4 and G5 machines, along with the snapper and tumbler 52 codecs. Some machines (e.g. the Mac Mini) do not have configurable
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/freebsd/contrib/gdtoa/ |
H A D | gdtoaimp.h | 53 /* strtod for IEEE-, VAX-, and IBM-arithmetic machines. 84 * #define IEEE_8087 for IEEE-arithmetic machines where the least 86 * #define IEEE_MC68k for IEEE-arithmetic machines where the most 88 * #define Long int on machines with 32-bit ints and 64-bit longs. 89 * #define Sudden_Underflow for IEEE-format machines without gradual 107 * #define NO_LONG_LONG on machines that do not have a "long long" 108 * integer type (of >= 64 bits). On such machines, you can 306 * An alternative that might be better on some machines is 675 * (On HP Series 700/800 machines, -DNAN_WORD0=0x7ff40000 works.)
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