On 07.03.2012 03:57, Yves Bellefeuille wrote:
On Sunday 04 March 2012, Ralph Angenendt ralph.angene...@gmail.com
wrote:
Moved and linked.
Moving Grub Installation for CentOS 5 and 6 to the How-Tos seems to
have removed my editing rights. Can they be restored? Thanks.
Oh, I am terribly
On 07.03.2012 19:26, M Vieira wrote:
My CentOS wiki name: MVieira
Could you please make that MarcosVieira - we require a FirstnameLastname
login.
I'd like to suggest a small update to the page
http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/Virtualization/VirtualBox
where it reads usermod -G vboxusers
On 09.03.2012 14:48, john wrote:
*
*
* your FirstnameLastname username: JohnAde JohnAde
* the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s): Centos6.2 on Sony
VAIO VPCF11C5E
* the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s):
On 03/10/2012 10:57 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 03/10/2012 08:12 PM, Markus Falb wrote:
On 9.3.2012 09:43, Rainer Traut wrote:
Am 08.03.2012 15:37, schrieb Markus Falb:
I read your original message regarding this
https://www.redhat.com/archives/rhelv5-list/2012-February/msg00060.html
On Saturday 10 March 2012 13:45, the following was written:
Thnx everyone. I was under the impression that even though you had access to
the directory you still could not touch a file that you were not part of the
owner or group unless the bits were set.
--
Regards
Robert
Linux
The
On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 9:48 AM, Robert Spangler
mli...@zoominternet.net wrote:
On Saturday 10 March 2012 13:45, the following was written:
Thnx everyone. I was under the impression that even though you had access to
the directory you still could not touch a file that you were not part of the
In CentOS 5.7 and earlier versions, an alias interface is defined via
ifcfg-interface:foo which contains ONBOOT=no. The ONBOOT setting
appears to be ignored, and the interface always starts when the system
boots or if networking is restarted. This is a serious bug that seems to
date back many
On 11.3.2012 18:56, Steve Thompson wrote:
In CentOS 5.7 and earlier versions, an alias interface is defined via
ifcfg-interface:foo which contains ONBOOT=no. The ONBOOT setting
appears to be ignored, and the interface always starts when the system
boots or if networking is restarted. This
One difference I ran into with samba authentication is in cent 5
/etc/pam.d/system-auth-ac is the file to change but in cent 6 its
/etc/pam.d/password-auth-ac. I found that changes I made only to
system-auth-ac in 5 had to be made to both system-auth-ac and
password-auth-ac in 6. This was to
I had my samba printer shares working after many hours of struggling
with the samba.conf file. I was happy.
Now the printer shares have quit working. I checked the yum log to see
if anything had been changed. Nothing applicable seems to have been
changed.
I've been surfing the net for the
On 03/11/2012 02:34 PM, Kristen Eisenberg wrote:
One difference I ran into with samba authentication is in cent 5
/etc/pam.d/system-auth-ac is the file to change but in cent 6 its
/etc/pam.d/password-auth-ac. I found that changes I made only to
system-auth-ac in 5 had to be made to both
What do you guys recommend for backing up a small CentOS server in a
business environment. It will have (3) 300gb drives in a raid 5 array but I
don't anticipate more than about 25gb of data that needs to be backed up
each night.
I want a lot of backups with a rotation scheme that included daily,
On 03/11/2012 08:12 PM, Scott Walker wrote:
What do you guys recommend for backing up a small CentOS server in a
business environment. It will have (3) 300gb drives in a raid 5 array but I
don't anticipate more than about 25gb of data that needs to be backed up
each night.
I want a lot of
On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 8:12 PM, Scott Walker
scott_wal...@ramsystemscorp.com wrote:
What do you guys recommend for backing up a small CentOS server in a
business environment. It will have (3) 300gb drives in a raid 5 array but I
don't anticipate more than about 25gb of data that needs to be
Scott Walker Scott_Walker@... writes:
What do you guys recommend for backing up a small CentOS server in a
business environment. It will have (3) 300gb drives in a raid 5 array but I
don't anticipate more than about 25gb of data that needs to be backed up
each night.
.
.
.
I stumbled on
On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 7:12 PM, Scott Walker
scott_wal...@ramsystemscorp.com wrote:
What do you guys recommend for backing up a small CentOS server in a
business environment. It will have (3) 300gb drives in a raid 5 array but I
don't anticipate more than about 25gb of data that needs to be
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
Behalf Of Mark LaPierre
Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2012 8:37 PM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] CentOS Server Backup Options
On 03/11/2012 08:12 PM, Scott Walker wrote:
What do
On 03/11/2012 03:58 PM, Mark LaPierre wrote:
I had my samba printer shares working after many hours of struggling
with the samba.conf file. I was happy.
Now the printer shares have quit working. I checked the yum log to see
if anything had been changed. Nothing applicable seems to have
On 03/12/2012 12:11 AM, Scott Walker wrote:
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
Behalf Of Mark LaPierre
Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2012 8:37 PM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] CentOS Server Backup Options
On
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