No, that wasn't it. When the 10.5.8 update came out I was hopeful that it
addressed our problem, but it did not.
Justin
On Oct 28, 2010, at 3:04 PM, Richard Ryan wrote:
> Hi again,
>
> I was wondering if this looks like your bug. Also, even if it's
> not the same bug, the person posting does seem to indicate
> that Apple did indeed respond.
>
> http://butnotyet.tumblr.com/post/175132533/the-story-of-a-simple-and-dangerous-kernel-bug
>
> Richard Ryan
>
>
> On 10/28/10 1:08 PM, Justin Greenfield wrote:
>> We experimented with running LDM on OS X, both Leopard and Snow Leopard.
>> Installation is fairly straightforward, I think we had to tweak a couple of
>> the perl scripts, but nothing difficult. When working, it works like a champ.
>>
>> But....
>>
>> The killer is there's a bug in OS X that locks up the product queue on a
>> call to fcntl. We tried various configurations, file systems, etc, to work
>> around this bug, for months and months.
>>
>> Sometimes it would hit the bug within a few hours of startup, sometimes it
>> would go for weeks before it locked up. But inevitably, it got hung up.
>> Sampling the process in this state always revealed the same thing: stuck in
>> the bowels of fcntl.
>>
>> We encountered it on 10.5 and 10.6. We wrote all kinds of scripts to detect
>> the hung process and restart the daemon, and they worked most of the time,
>> but sometimes the only solution was to reboot the machine.
>>
>> In the end, it just wasn't going to be reliable enough, which is a true
>> shame, because there are a lot of things we'd love to do with OS X. We gave
>> up and ported our stuff to run on linux.
>>
>> It's possible that a subsequent OS X update has fixed the issue, but I
>> wouldn't bet on it.
>>
>> Justin
>>
>>
>> On Oct 28, 2010, at 1:01 PM, Richard A. Ryan wrote:
>>
>>> Hi again,
>>>
>>> The last thing I wrote only mentioned how dscl replaces the
>>> /etc configurations. It turns out launchd/launchctl commands
>>> and files also replace some of the functionality of what's in
>>> /etc, and I'm guessing there are probably other things. The
>>> /etc/services file's functionality has something to do with
>>> launchd/launchctl rather than dscl.
>>>
>>> Again, for the Mac mini, if you want to do server type things
>>> on it you might want to get the Mac mini preloaded with
>>> Mac OS X Server because the user/group/account/networking/server
>>> related command line calls are a bit hard to figure out. The
>>> O'Reilly book ``Mac OS X for Unix Geeks'' doesn't seem to cover
>>> everything and they also don't have a version for Snow Leopard.
>>>
>>> Richard Ryan
>>>
>>>
>>>> -------- Original Message --------
>>>> Subject: [ldm-users] LDM on Mac OS X
>>>> Date: Wed, 27 Oct 2010 14:00:43 -0500
>>>> From: Tyler Allison <tyler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>>> To: ldm-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>> Anybody running or been successful in running LDM on Mac OS X?
>>>> I'm considering playing with a MacMini as a small SOHO device running LDM.
>>>> I don't want to drop $1000 on a paper weight :) So hopefully someone
>>>> else has been there/done that.
>>>> -Tyler
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>>>
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>>