Am Mittwoch 31 Dezember 2008 schrieb Justin P. Mattock: > Daniel Phillips wrote: > > On Tuesday 30 December 2008 23:34, sniper wrote: > >> Great, I have mounted tux3 filesystem under UML with stuffs in this > >> mail, but I still can't debug it with gdb. Anyone gives me > >> suggestion? > > > > You just have to give a "cont" command a bunch of times and you will > > eventually get to a command prompt. The reason for this is, uml uses > > the segfault interrupt as part of its machine simulation, and there > > is no exsiting way for uml and gdb to communicate in such a way that > > uml can recognize that the interrupt came from its own code and > > filter it. [...] > Hmm.. seems like a redundancy; > Anyways I looked at you're site, but am still > confused at what tux3 is: what is tux3? > > (at first I thought it was a video game, but was wrong); > can I use tux3 to secure a linux system or is it for > something else? > Hmmm, I thought --------------------------------------------------------------------- Tux3 is a write-anywhere, atomic commit, btree-based versioning filesystem. It is the spiritual and moral successor of Tux2, the most famous filesystem that was never released. The main purpose of Tux3 is to embody Daniel Phillips's new ideas on storage data versioning. The secondary goal is to provide a more efficient snapshotting and replication method for the Zumastor NAS project, and a tertiary goal is to be better than ZFS. --------------------------------------------------------------------- http://tux3.org/ was pretty clear. What are you missing? Ciao, -- Martin 'Helios' Steigerwald - http://www.Lichtvoll.de GPG: 03B0 0D6C 0040 0710 4AFA B82F 991B EAAC A599 84C7
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