2008/11/16 Ian Forde [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Actually, that's the problem that Red Hat Satellite Server can solve.
You can approve packages for deployment. Thus, when provisioning new
servers, they get updates from the approved list. And servers are
grouped by class. For the free version, one
Hi all,
I would like to know if I could share some space on on of my servers,
to another server(s) using the iSCSI protocal? I can see that CentOS
can connect to an iSCSI server, but can it act as a iSCSI server?
Is so, does anyone have some good HOWTO / tutorials / docs on how to set it up?
Send CentOS-announce mailing list submissions to
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Hi lanny,
Thank a lot for your valuale information also we are getting lot
of mails in this mailing list about debian,ubuntu,knopix and even the
microsoft and the people are getting help for such mails too .I dont
think anything wrong about posting RHEL related issue on this list,
also i
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 8:53 AM, lingu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thank a lot for your valuale information also we are getting lot
of mails in this mailing list about debian,ubuntu,knopix and even the
microsoft and the people are getting help for such mails too .I dont
think anything wrong
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
Hi all,
I would like to know if I could share some space on on of my servers,
to another server(s) using the iSCSI protocal? I can see that CentOS
can connect to an iSCSI server, but can it act as a iSCSI server?
Is so, does anyone have some good HOWTO / tutorials / docs on
Lanny Marcus wrote:
Have you considered posting to a mailing list for RHEL?
This list is
for CentOS users.
This is one of those situations where if you have nothing
useful to say it is best to keep quiet. What about those
in the CentOS forums asking for help after their subscriptions
Lanny Marcus wrote:
Have you considered posting to a mailing list for RHEL?
This list is
for CentOS users.
This is one of those situations where if you have nothing
useful to say it is best to keep quiet. What about those
in the CentOS forums asking for help after their subscriptions
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 5:00 PM, Fabian Arrotin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
Hi all,
I would like to know if I could share some space on on of my servers,
to another server(s) using the iSCSI protocal? I can see that CentOS
can connect to an iSCSI server, but can it act as a
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 5:00 PM, Fabian Arrotin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
snip
Hi Fabian,
Do you have any documentation for me on this? I don't know iSCSI at
all - well I haven't used it before myself, but from what I understand
it's much better than NFS.
Tom Wrote:
Now I have another problem: somehow in my putzing around the monitor
has taken on a blue hue both in the startup vga mode and the full-up
Nvidia X mode. Any ideas about that?
Check your Digital Viberance Setting (spelling)..
johnstanley
On Sun, 2008-11-16 at 09:39 -0500, Lanny Marcus wrote:
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 8:53 AM, lingu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thank a lot for your valuale information also we are getting lot
of mails in this mailing list about debian,ubuntu,knopix and even the
microsoft and the people are
A recap of the problems for my configuration: Centos 5.2, x86_64, PNY
9600 GT 512 Mb video, Rosewill R913J 19 LCD monitor, Gigabyte
GA-P35-DS3L mobo, Intel Core 2 Duo, 8 Gb RAM.
Using the latest Nvidia x86_64 driver package (177.82) I could not get
the 1280x1060 resolution (I could get nothing
Vandaman wrote on Sun, 16 Nov 2008 15:49:51 + (GMT):
This is one of those situations where if you have nothing
useful to say it is best to keep quiet.
Indeed. Look in a mirror and say it again.
Kai
--
Kai Schätzl, Berlin, Germany
Get your web at Conactive Internet Services:
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
Indeed. Look in a mirror and say it again.
You remind me of a Nazi Guard.
Regards,
Vandaman.
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http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 08:46:41PM +, Vandaman wrote:
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
Indeed. Look in a mirror and say it again.
You remind me of a Nazi Guard.
Please, take this fight off the list
--
Tru Huynh (mirrors, CentOS-3 i386/x86_64 Package Maintenance)
Hi all
I recently setup a CentOS 5.2 server, running XEN (using HyperVM), and
then moved the hard drive from my test box to my Intel server.The
problem I now have, is that it doesn't bootup properly. Shortly after
I see the udev service started, the machine reboots. This keeps on
going the whole
See my presentation at http://www.colug.net/notes/0810mtg/
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
Hi all,
I would like to know if I could share some space on on of my servers,
to another server(s) using the iSCSI protocal? I can see that CentOS
can connect to an iSCSI server, but can it act
On Nov 16, 2008, at 7:21 AM, Rudi Ahlers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I would like to know if I could share some space on on of my servers,
to another server(s) using the iSCSI protocal? I can see that CentOS
can connect to an iSCSI server, but can it act as a iSCSI server?
Is so, does
Rudi Ahlers schreef:
I have managed to kill udev on start-up (with CTRL + C), and then it boots up.
So, do I need udev? And what is it's purpose?
Udev is a device probing layer. In the old days we had a /dev system
prepped for standard use which would be complemented with other bootup
scripts
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 2:32 AM, Berend Dekens [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rudi Ahlers schreef:
I have managed to kill udev on start-up (with CTRL + C), and then it boots
up.
So, do I need udev? And what is it's purpose?
Udev is a device probing layer. In the old days we had a /dev system
Hi all,
I have installed Centos completely. However, the LAN doesn't work.
Below is the message after I issue. How can I make it work?
00:19.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82567V-2 Gigabit
Network Connection
Thanks!
___
CentOS mailing
I have installed Centos completely. However, the LAN doesn't work.
Below is the message after I issue. How can I make it work?
00:19.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82567V-2 Gigabit
Network Connection
What does ethtool eth0 tell you?
___
Actually, I have 2 LAN cards. eth0 is working as it is 10/100. There
is a build-in gigalan which doesn't work. I have to remove the 10/100
and make build-in lan works.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# ethtool eth0
Settings for eth0:
Supported ports: [ TP MII ]
Supported link modes:
Actually, I have 2 LAN cards. eth0 is working as it is 10/100. There
is a build-in gigalan which doesn't work. I have to remove the 10/100
and make build-in lan works.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# ethtool eth0
Settings for eth0:
Supported ports: [ TP MII ]
Supported link modes:
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 8:38 PM, Rilawich Ango [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I have installed Centos completely. However, the LAN doesn't work.
Below is the message after I issue. How can I make it work?
00:19.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82567V-2 Gigabit
Network
Below is the setting.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# more /etc/redhat-release
CentOS release 5.2 (Final)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# uname -a
Linux localhost.localdomain 2.6.18-92.1.18.el5 #1 SMP Wed Nov 12
09:30:27 EST 2008 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# ethtool eth0
Settings for eth0:
Rudi Ahlers schreef:
Unfortunately I don't see anything useful in the logs. If I let it
bootup by itself, then it reboots just after booting udev. If,
however, I press CTRL+C the moment I see udev on the screen, I have
attached a snippet from /var/log/message - which doesn't show me
anything at
You may want to see if the device driver for your device has been
blacklisted in order to protect it.
Look through the various /etc/modprobe.d/ blacklist files to see if it
is listed. I am not an expert, there may be another place to
blacklist or whitelist drivers on your config.
On Sun, Nov 16,
Tom Browder wrote:
3. I used nvidia-xconfig to write a new xorg.conf file.
Attached is my config file.
I'm curious how they differ.
# Xorg configuration created by livna-config-display
Section ServerLayout
Identifier Default Layout
Screen 0 Screen0 0 0
Jason Taylor wrote on Sat, 15 Nov 2008 17:00:46 -0700:
One thing to note is that the base Xen installs fine it seems
but when trying to create the virtual instance (domU) it says it cannot
connect to the console.
Then try without making it connect to the console. (I may have misunderstood
One thing: you want to use the Xen 3.2 rpms provided by xen.org for serious
production work on CentOS and not the one coming with CentOS. Suggest you read
the archives of the list for all tips and caveats.
I've been using the stock Xen (2.6.18) that comes with the latest
CentOS 5.2 in
One thing: you want to use the Xen 3.2 rpms provided by xen.org for serious
production work on CentOS and not the one coming with CentOS. Suggest you
read
the archives of the list for all tips and caveats.
When installing the xen.org RPMs, are existing VMs and config files etc dealt
with
Michael Hall wrote on Sun, 16 Nov 2008 21:59:35 +0930:
On the downloads page at xen.org I can only see source tarballs for 3.3.
There are no 3.3 rpms provided by xen.org. The fiels for 3.2 are in the
archive:
http://www.xen.org/download/dl_32rhel5.html
Again: before you use it, skim this
Brett Serkez wrote on Sun, 16 Nov 2008 07:16:45 -0500:
I've been using the stock Xen (2.6.18) that comes with the latest
CentOS 5.2 in production without major issue. At one time I had to
restart xend occasionally to be able to properly reboot guest OSes
from virt-manager, but even that has
Michael Hall wrote on Sun, 16 Nov 2008 21:34:25 +0930:
When installing the xen.org RPMs, are existing VMs and config files etc dealt
with gracefully?
yes.
Kai
--
Kai Schätzl, Berlin, Germany
Get your web at Conactive Internet Services: http://www.conactive.com
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