From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sat, 6 Apr 1996 20:53:48 -0500 From: Thomas Riemer triemer@babbitt.bernstein.com Subject: More on CPU/Auth server Topicbox-Message-UUID: 426dc992-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19960407015348.3CPFngqbyfiP-s93R0WxTg26ajGOvrzB5G7UzhquJ9E@z> I'm starting to understand my problem with the CPU/Auth server... The stuff that I'm seeing in /sys/log/auth >huygens Apr 6 15:15 t-fail authid 206.20.83.143 >huygens Apr 6 15:15 t-fail hostid 206.20.83.143 >huygens Apr 6 15:15 t-ok triemer 206.20.83.143 The t-fail entries are being generated because of a failure to find a key. The interesting part is that I know the lookup used for this is "triemer" - what I'm running into is the fact that a "stored procedure" - I mean a C function, rather (man - way to much sql) - the c-function "findkey" is not able to locate a key. (see /sys/src/cmd/auth/lib/readwrite.c, /sys/src/cmd/auth/auth.srv.c) I'm booting a PC 486 with a standalone filesystem on hd1fs as a CPU/auth server. It seems to come up fairly happy. It serves correct bootp stuff. I installed off of the CD-Rom. I boot with b hd!0!/plan9/9pccpudi (which is the 9pccpudisk from the CD-Rom dist) The interesting part is that it does ****NOT**** seem to have /dev/hd1* which to me is fairly odd. That is to say, that there doesn't seem to be any devices for harddrive, even though I'm clearly talking to the harddrive fs. (Is this odd to other folks out there?) Also, auth/wrkey gives the nice little message "wrkey: can't read nvram" - which looking at the code for wrkey seems to indicate that it can't open "#r/nvram". (Here's a question for the FAQ: what are all the #r, #H codes... and what do they mean?) hmmm.... the 9pc that I'm running had the same problem... I built 9pc with the patches from Feb 16 - and it now seems to see hd devices... I tried building the 9pccpudisk out of the same dist... only the patches seem not to have instructions in the mkfile to build 9pccpudisk. I apologize for what seems like spewing to me. It just, you see, that I don't meet folks in the local cafe that play with Plan9. -Tom ---- Where theory and reality meet. ---- Thomas Riemer, triemer@tom.rockefeller.edu