Saludos
me podrian ayudar e instalado el squid
cinfigurandolo en modo convencional, me indica el siguiente error
ya he instalado y desintalado el squid varias veces, y de todos modos me indica
el mismo error
service squid start
Iniciando squid: /etc/init.d/squid: line 42: 3222 Abortado
visible hostname [nombre de host de tu server]
Sls
2011/5/24 Roberto Chavez Caiche rocha...@hotmail.com
Saludos
me podrian ayudar e instalado el squid
cinfigurandolo en modo convencional, me indica el siguiente error
ya he instalado y desintalado el squid varias veces, y de todos
Coloca el nombre y la ip de tu servidor proxy (el que estas tratando de
colocar en producciòn) en el archivo /etc/hosts, colocando la ip el nombre
completo y el nombre corto... algo como la siguiente entrada:
10.10.10.4myproxy.mamaron.commyproxy.
Saludos.
Carlos R.
2011/5/24
On 05/23/2011 12:24 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
yes,butt SSD has to erase and write a LARGE block all at once, so
they don't do so well with the sorts of 8k random writes that write
intensive applications like relational databases commonly perform.
Many SSD are faster at writing even to
A not so technical friend in India is shopping for a laptop. He often
travels and stays months in Malaysia and so needs to be able to use the
laptop there as well. He typically connects to the internet via wifi,
but sometimes must use a telephone line (yes, with a modem). And of
course there
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 05:48:16AM -0400, ken wrote:
Off-topic content trimmed.
While I commend you on the use of the OT tag in the message's Subject I
feel I have to ask... _why_ would you choose to post this here? I
didn't see a single item that was even remotely on-topic for this list.
On 23 May 2011 11:04, John Hodrien j.h.hodr...@leeds.ac.uk wrote:
On Mon, 23 May 2011, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
Doesn't SATA and SAS drives also wear out?
Not in such a clear way related to usage. You could have a SATA disk that you
write to 24 hours a day and it could last for years. With an
On 05/24/2011 06:17 AM John R. Dennison wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 05:48:16AM -0400, ken wrote:
While I commend you on the use of the OT tag in the message's Subject...
Thank you.
I didn't see a single item that was even remotely on-topic for this list.
Which is why it was
Who pissed in your cornflakes this morning John? :-)
Yeah the CentOS mailing list is for CentOS matters but nowhere in the
list rules have I seen one that says we can't post off topic
questions. Asking if the power in another country is compatible with
yours (or a friend's) laptop is off-topic
On 05/24/2011 10:48 AM, ken wrote:
A not so technical friend in India is shopping for a laptop.
try the iLUG mailing lists, there are some very clued up people there
who would be able to give you better feedback than this list. I
recommend the ilugc ( chennai ) list and the ilugd ( delhi )
On 5/23/2011 7:42 PM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 1:30 AM, Kevin K kevi...@fidnet.com wrote:
A SSD drive can be a SATA drive. SATA is the connection/protocol between
the drive and the computer.
Not quite. SATA is a type of drive, same as IDE / ATA, SCSI, SATA :)
SATA is
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 3:51 PM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
On 5/23/2011 7:42 PM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 1:30 AM, Kevin K kevi...@fidnet.com wrote:
A SSD drive can be a SATA drive. SATA is the connection/protocol between
the drive and the computer.
Not
On 5/24/2011 10:05 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 3:51 PM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
On 5/23/2011 7:42 PM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 1:30 AM, Kevin K kevi...@fidnet.com wrote:
A SSD drive can be a SATA drive. SATA is the connection/protocol
--- On Tue, 5/24/11, ken geb...@mousecar.com wrote:
From: ken geb...@mousecar.com
Subject: [CentOS] OT: wifi, phone, power in India and Malaysia
To: CentOS Mailing List centos@centos.org
Date: Tuesday, May 24, 2011, 5:48 AM
A not so technical friend in India is
shopping for a laptop. He
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 05:48:16AM -0400, ken wrote:
A not so technical friend in India is shopping for a laptop. He often
travels and stays months in Malaysia and so needs to be able to use the
laptop there as well. He typically connects to the internet via wifi,
but sometimes must use a
On 05/24/2011 03:29 PM, Richard Mollel wrote:
Similarly, will the modem work in both countries?
see above...
i dont think thats true. There are plenty of places I've travelled to
where the modem in my laptop ( this was 2002 - 2004 ) didnt work. Eg.
the modem that worked fine in the UK didnt
On 05/24/2011 03:29 PM, Richard Mollel wrote:
Am I overlooking any considerations?
YES. A big one for foreign travel people is a GSM modem, whereby one would
use a SIM card from their phone for internet access. I really doubt that part
of the world would have any dial-up access as you
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 4:22 PM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
On 5/24/2011 10:05 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 3:51 PM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
On 5/23/2011 7:42 PM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 1:30 AM, Kevin K kevi...@fidnet.com
In case you didn't see it, the initial CentOS 6 trees have been
released to QA:
http://qaweb.dev.centos.org/node/81
--
Paul Heinlein heinl...@madboa.com http://www.madboa.com/
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
On Tue, 24 May 2011, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
But don't you think that a SSD, or rather Solid State Drive, would
still be seen as a different type of drive than a SATA drive, even
though they share the same type of bus connector + power cable?
A SATA SSD is different to a SATA HDD. Yes. And the
On 5/24/2011 11:25 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 4:22 PM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
Personally, I would call it an SATA HDD vs an SATA SSD. The same would
be true of a SCSI HDD vs a SCSI SSD.
At the moment, if you say SATA drive, most people will understand
On 05/24/2011 08:25 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
But don't you think that a SSD, or rather Solid State Drive, would
still be seen as a different type of drive than a SATA drive, even
though they share the same type of bus connector + power cable?
Interface and media type are completely
--On Friday, May 20, 2011 02:28:18 PM -0700 John R Pierce
pie...@hogranch.com wrote:
[snip]
One question I have is: how well will this scale with several strings of
100 SAS drives on the same HA pair of servers?
Can SAS storage instead be fenced at the SES/expander level rather than
On 05/24/2011 10:38 AM Karanbir Singh wrote:
On 05/24/2011 03:29 PM, Richard Mollel wrote:
Similarly, will the modem work in both countries?
see above...
i dont think thats true. There are plenty of places I've travelled to
where the modem in my laptop ( this was 2002 - 2004 ) didnt work.
On 05/24/11 7:29 AM, Richard Mollel wrote:
Wifi is wifi, never heard of a wifi A or B.
actually, there's 802.11 (original, rarely used anymore), 802.11a, .11b.
.11g. and .11n, and .11n comes in multiple flavors. Most everything
these days is .11b/g or b/g/n compatible.
In various countries,
--On Monday, May 23, 2011 05:05:38 PM -0700 R - elists
list...@abbacomm.net wrote:
what specific units are considered server grade ssd's ?
What you want to look for in your drive specs are the acronyms
SLC and MLC.
SLC is enterprise grade, smaller capacity, expensive
MLC is consumer
On 05/24/11 9:36 AM, Devin Reade wrote:
--On Monday, May 23, 2011 05:05:38 PM -0700 R - elists
list...@abbacomm.net wrote:
what specific units are considered server grade ssd's ?
What you want to look for in your drive specs are the acronyms
SLC and MLC.
SLC is enterprise grade,
OK, so I did an upgrade to PHP 5.3 on one of my servers. I noticed the
uninstall of php also removed SquirrelMail and it won't install under
PHP 5.3. Has anybody worked this out with a good RPM or repo solution?
--
John Hinton
877-777-1407 ext 502
http://www.ew3d.com
Comprehensive Online
On 05/24/2011 09:57 AM, John R Pierce wrote:
also you want SSD that has a supercap on its internal cache so pending
writes aren't lost in a power failure scenario.
You know, I've asked people about that in the past since the whole block
read/erase/write cycle seems like a risk in the event of
Why not just install SquirrelMail the old fashioned way?
cd /var/www
wget
http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/squirrelmail/stable/1.4.21/squirrelmail-1.4.21.tar.gz?r=http%3A%2F%2Fsquirrelmail.org%2Fdownload.phpts=1306258610use_mirror=superb-sea2;
tar xvzf squirrelmail-1.4.21.tar.gz
Done.
If you're referring to capacitors, I do not believe modern SSD's used
those. Or at least ones I've seen didn't (that I recall).
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 1:32 PM, Gordon Messmer yiny...@eburg.com wrote:
On 05/24/2011 09:57 AM, John R Pierce wrote:
also you want SSD that has a supercap on its
On 05/24/11 10:32 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 05/24/2011 09:57 AM, John R Pierce wrote:
also you want SSD that has a supercap on its internal cache so pending
writes aren't lost in a power failure scenario.
You know, I've asked people about that in the past since the whole block
--- On Tue, 5/24/11, Karanbir Singh mail-li...@karan.org wrote:
From: Karanbir Singh mail-li...@karan.org
Subject: Re: [CentOS] OT: wifi, phone, power in India and Malaysia
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
Date: Tuesday, May 24, 2011, 10:39 AM
On 05/24/2011 03:29 PM, Richard
On 05/24/2011 02:01 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
On 05/24/11 10:32 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 05/24/2011 09:57 AM, John R Pierce wrote:
also you want SSD that has a supercap on its internal cache so pending
writes aren't lost in a power failure scenario.
You know, I've asked people about
--- On Tue, 5/24/11, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote:
From: John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com
Subject: Re: [CentOS] OT: wifi, phone, power in India and Malaysia
To: centos@centos.org
Date: Tuesday, May 24, 2011, 12:24 PM
On 05/24/11 7:29 AM, Richard Mollel
wrote:
Wifi is wifi,
On Mon, 23 May 2011, Mag Gam wrote:
I would like to confirm Matt's claim. I too experienced larger
latencies with Centos 5.x compared to 4.x. My application is very
network sensitive and its easy to prove using lat_tcp.
Russ,
I am curious about identifying the problem. What tools do you
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 8:01 PM, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote:
(and, please folks, UPS's are great, but they fail too, you can't rely
on them for data protection).
--
john r pierce N 37, W 123
santa cruz ca mid-left coast
On Mon, May 23, 2011 14:15, Scott Silva wrote:
on 5/23/2011 11:02 AM Ljubomir Ljubojevic spake the following:
snip
Then everybody cough on that and started endless flame-war.
I survived the rapture to come back to this? LMAO
http://www.ebiblefellowship.com/outreach/tracts/may21/
No! No!
James B. Byrne wrote:
On Mon, May 23, 2011 14:15, Scott Silva wrote:
on 5/23/2011 11:02 AM Ljubomir Ljubojevic spake the following:
snip
Then everybody cough on that and started endless flame-war.
I survived the rapture to come back to this? LMAO
On Tue, May 24, 2011 11:33, Paul Heinlein wrote:
In case you didn't see it, the initial CentOS 6 trees have been
released to QA:
http://qaweb.dev.centos.org/node/81
Now, perhaps, some civility will return to the list. I recall this
from my previous life:
Dost think in a moment of
centos-boun...@centos.org wrote:
James B. Byrne wrote:
On Mon, May 23, 2011 14:15, Scott Silva wrote:
on 5/23/2011 11:02 AM Ljubomir Ljubojevic spake the following:
snip
Then everybody cough on that and started endless flame-war.
I survived the rapture to come back to this? LMAO
Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
centos-boun...@centos.org wrote:
James B. Byrne wrote:
On Mon, May 23, 2011 14:15, Scott Silva wrote:
on 5/23/2011 11:02 AM Ljubomir Ljubojevic spake the following:
snip
Then everybody cough on that and started endless flame-war.
I survived the rapture to come
--On Tuesday, May 24, 2011 4:46 PM -0400 James B. Byrne
byrn...@harte-lyne.ca wrote:
No! No! This topic IS the RAPTURE. First there will be wars and
rumours of wars. . .
Delayed until October. :P
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110524/ap_on_re_us/us_apocalypse_saturday
Hello,
I'm trying to set up a centos 5.3 machine to do authentication via
openldap. I've got it working, I'm not sure if I have it 100% right,
but I can use ldapsearch to query the directory, use finger, id,
chown, and other utilities with ldap usernames and groups, log in via
ssh as an ldap user
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 04:49:09PM -0400, David Mehler wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to set up a centos 5.3 machine to do authentication via
openldap. I've got it working, I'm not sure if I have it 100% right,
but I can use ldapsearch to query the directory, use finger, id,
chown, and other
David Mehler wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to set up a centos 5.3 machine to do authentication via
openldap. I've got it working, I'm not sure if I have it 100% right,
but I can use ldapsearch to query the directory, use finger, id,
chown, and other utilities with ldap usernames and groups, log in
On Tue, 24 May 2011, David Mehler wrote:
Having got this far if anyone with a working ldap authentication
system could give my config a sanity check let me know. My goal now
is to get tls encryption going so that usernames and passwords
aren't sent in the clear. I'm using self-signed
on 5/24/2011 1:06 PM Brunner, Brian T. spake the following:
snip
When the 7th seal is opened there will be silence in heaven for about
the space of half an hour (Rev 8:1), implying that the net will be down
world-wide. THAT will cause Armageddon all by itself (Rev 9:16, 16:16).
I thought
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 4:52 PM, Scott Robbins scot...@nyc.rr.com wrote:
I'm going to post a link to my own page on it---which has links to other
pages. Among other things, it goes through TLS.
http://home.roadrunner.com/~computertaijutsu/ldap.html
Scott,
I didn't read through the whole
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 01:00:01PM -0400, John Hinton wrote:
OK, so I did an upgrade to PHP 5.3 on one of my servers. I noticed the
uninstall of php also removed SquirrelMail and it won't install under
PHP 5.3. Has anybody worked this out with a good RPM or repo solution?
Dump the CentOS
--On Tuesday, May 24, 2011 02:12:51 PM -0700 Paul Heinlein
heinl...@madboa.com wrote:
This /etc/ldap.conf works well for me on CentOS 5:
- % -
# failover doesn't work using the newer 'uri' directive.
# can go to ldap1; use ldap2 for backup
host ldap1.domain.com ldap2.domain.com
port
I think that the most secure setup is to use both LDAPI (ldap
connections over Unix sockets) for connections inside the ldap server
and TLS for connections from everywhere else on the network. Plus, ldapi
connections are much faster than TCP connections.
Am I wrong?
On May 24, 2011, at 5:58 AM, Drew wrote:
Who pissed in your cornflakes this morning John? :-)
I think he urinated in his own cornflakes.
- aurf
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 05:37:01PM -0400, Meenoo Shivdasani wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 4:52 PM, Scott Robbins scot...@nyc.rr.com wrote:
I'm going to post a link to my own page on it---which has links to other
pages. Among other things, it goes through TLS.
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 03:26:54PM -0700, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 24, 2011, at 5:58 AM, Drew wrote:
Who pissed in your cornflakes this morning John? :-)
I think he urinated in his own cornflakes.
This is so very appropriate in a distro mailing list.
And it's refreshing to see
On May 24, 2011, at 10:25 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
But don't you think that a SSD, or rather Solid State Drive, would
still be seen as a different type of drive than a SATA drive, even
though they share the same type of bus connector + power cable?
I know you get some USB type SSD's,
On 05/24/2011 07:07 PM, Richard Mollel wrote:
And also, the 3g auction went through in India a few months
back. I
would be very surprised if you had 3g anywhere at the
moment
I thought Africa (East to be specific) was supposedly backwards
technologically, I do get 3G there...and Indian was
On May 24, 2011, at 3:32 PM, John R. Dennison wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 03:26:54PM -0700, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 24, 2011, at 5:58 AM, Drew wrote:
Who pissed in your cornflakes this morning John? :-)
I think he urinated in his own cornflakes.
This is so very appropriate
John R Pierce wrote:
On 05/24/11 7:29 AM, Richard Mollel wrote:
Wifi is wifi, never heard of a wifi A or B.
actually, there's 802.11 (original, rarely used anymore), 802.11a, .11b.
.11g. and .11n, and .11n comes in multiple flavors. Most everything
these days is .11b/g or b/g/n
On 05/24/2011 11:40 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
This is so very appropriate in a distro mailing list.
Sorry John, I will review the Centos guidelines tonight for sure as I
want to be a good person.
can we cut this out please ?
- KB
___
CentOS
ken wrote:
Similarly, will the modem work in both countries?
You better make sure your Linux distro has drivers for the modem. for
connexant modem there as no free driver (at least for CentOS 5.x)
Ljubomir
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
Hi all...
A few weeks ago, I installed (and configured) the three recommended scripts to
run yum update check via cron.daily on my CentOS 5.6
server (a Dell 2650). Although it is clearly configured to check only, it
appears to be updating, instead. Has something
(environmentally?) changed
brian wrote:
#!/bin/sh
# Pull in sysconfig settings
. /etc/sysconfig/yum-check
if [ -f /var/lock/subsys/yum ]; then
if [ ${CHECKONLY} = yes ];then
/usr/bin/yum-check
fi
else
/usr/bin/yum -R 10 -e 0 -d 0 -y update
Good afternoon, We are running callgrind and
cg_annotate version 3.6.1
on Centos Linux Version 5.5 x86_32. One month ago Mr. Josef Weidenorfer
issued a special patch that fixed callgrind on Centos Linux Version
5.5 x86_32. We can now profile complex C++ programs which use our own
shared library
On Wednesday, May 25, 2011 04:06 AM, Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
Yesiree, before the Great Rapture, we who read this list are all going
to be out of work.
Who want to try to top me for spiritual silliness?
You've already been topped if you have not noticed by a certain person
who's been
On May 24, 2011, at 11:40 AM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
On 5/24/2011 11:25 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 4:22 PM, Bowie Bailey bowie_bai...@buc.com wrote:
Personally, I would call it an SATA HDD vs an SATA SSD. The same would
be true of a SCSI HDD vs a SCSI
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