-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
Behalf
Of Marcelo M. Garcia
Sent: Tuesday, September 29, 2009 10:36 PM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] CentOS for non-tech user
Not using, but I've tried it in a LAMP-configuration
2009/9/30 Miguel Medalha miguelmeda...@sapo.pt:
in /etc/ldap.conf:
bind_policy soft
I may not have used the right terminology, but I mentioned this in my
first message:
They all obtain their authentication information over LDAP and to avoid the
starting message bus hang problem[1], nscd is
Sorin Srbu wrote:
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
Behalf
Of Marcelo M. Garcia
Sent: Tuesday, September 29, 2009 10:36 PM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] CentOS for non-tech user
Not using, but
Think I might just wait for v5.4 and try that.
Ben
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-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
Behalf
Of Christopher Chan
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 9:42 AM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] CentOS for non-tech user
Yupp, as I said, at the time I was testing Ubuntu, I was
Does someone know, how to configure cups lpd job options.
My xinet.d config looks like this:
# default: off
# description: Allow applications using the legacy lpd protocol to
communicate w
ith CUPS
service printer
{
disable = no
socket_type = stream
protocol = tcp
On 09/29/2009 06:21 PM, Drew wrote:
Websites for example
have moved from static html on the arpanet university sites to the
rich multimedia content we see today. Back then the idea of a website
infecting a computer was unheard of.
For completelness sake - website content hasent changed an
On 09/29/2009 06:38 PM, Florin Andrei wrote:
I agree with your assessment that Red Hat Co are still The
Distribution for enterprise stuff.
Where Enterprise Stuff == 'Stable computing where you can focus on doing
things with your computer and know that when you want to, it will be
there -
Niki Kovacs wrote:
Geoff Galitz a écrit :
Ubuntu has the LTS releases, which are long term stable releases. They are
supported for five years after release.
Ubuntu Long Term Support is three years for desktops and five for servers.
In the last LTS version (8.04), half of the audio apps
Ron Blizzard wrote:
On Tue, Sep 29, 2009 at 3:09 PM, Tait Clarridge t...@clarridge.ca wrote:
CentOS is great for server use and if you want to learn CentOS for use
as a server, Fedora is a great place to start because they are both
redhat based. Chances are that if you got something to
On 09/30/2009 02:11 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
Solution: stick with CentOS, rock-solid and *real* LTS.
But that means you have to wait many years for new features - that you
probably
want in rapidly developing desktop apps.
thats not always true - it is to some extent though. And the 'long
I don't have any servers. I like CentOS on my desktop and my laptop
just because it's solid. It's also the Linux distribution of choice
for most Asterisk platforms -- which I intend to (eventually) learn.
(I'm a telephone tech, who is eventually going to have to go VOIP.)
Have a look at
Hello,
I've been asked to recruit a Linux Systems Administrator for one of
our clients. They're based in London, but I know many folk who
commute from Hampshire, so here's the spec:
Job:Systems Administrator
Company:Wordtracker
Location: Kentish
- Joseph L. Casale jcas...@activenetwerx.com wrote:
You can get asterisk packages from rpmforge on Centos...but on
Ubuntu
you do not have to add an extra repository to get asterisk.
Don't bother with that, go straight to the source!
http://packages.asterisk.org/
These get updated
Don't bother with that, go straight to the source!
http://packages.asterisk.org/
These get updated rather quickly.
jlc
+1 for this suggestion.
Starting out it may be easier to pull packages from a repo if you're not
familiar with building from source. BUT, in the long run, you'll need to
Karanbir Singh wrote:
On 09/30/2009 02:11 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
Solution: stick with CentOS, rock-solid and *real* LTS.
But that means you have to wait many years for new features - that you
probably
want in rapidly developing desktop apps.
thats not always true - it is to some extent
You can get asterisk packages from rpmforge on Centos...but on Ubuntu
you do not have to add an extra repository to get asterisk.
Don't bother with that, go straight to the source!
http://packages.asterisk.org/
These get updated rather quickly.
Ah, now that will definitely
Hello,
I have installed new network card under CentOS 5.3, but there are some
problems. I want delete existing ifcfg-eth0 and automatically make new
on as it is during OS installation process. Is it possible?
Thank you
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Do you wish to configure it using a DHCP server?
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 11:45 AM, happymaster23 happymaste...@gmail.comwrote:
Hello,
I have installed new network card under CentOS 5.3, but there are some
problems. I want delete existing ifcfg-eth0 and automatically make new
on as it is
No, I want create files /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 and
others...
2009/9/30 James Matthews nytrok...@gmail.com
Do you wish to configure it using a DHCP server?
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 11:45 AM, happymaster23
happymaste...@gmail.comwrote:
Hello,
I have installed new network
2009/9/30 happymaster23 happymaste...@gmail.com:
No, I want create files /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 and
others...
Try running setup
Ben
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-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi list,
I have an IBM xseries 345, running CentOS 5.3, hosting a few Xen domUs.
However, I need more RAM -- but cannot remember if all (four) RAM
sockets are populated (which would mean to buy higher capacity modules)
or if there are two slots left
On Wed, September 30, 2009 12:56 pm, Timo Schoeler wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi list,
I have an IBM xseries 345, running CentOS 5.3, hosting a few Xen domUs.
However, I need more RAM -- but cannot remember if all (four) RAM
sockets are populated (which would
On 09/30/2009 05:56 PM, Timo Schoeler wrote:
Any hints?
dmidecode ?
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No this is not solution. I have tried to run firstboot but without
result. There should be some script, that is making these files
(including writing MAC address and full device name). Other thing is
modprobe.conf - there is name of driver connected to device name
(eth0, eth1, e.g.), but there is
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
thus Marko A. Jennings spake:
On Wed, September 30, 2009 12:56 pm, Timo Schoeler wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi list,
I have an IBM xseries 345, running CentOS 5.3, hosting a few Xen domUs.
However, I need more RAM --
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Timo,
dmidecode can show what RAM sockets are populated if your motherboard
supports retrieval of this information.
- From 'man dmidecode'
dmidecode is a tool for dumping a computer's DMI (some say SMBIOS)
table contents in a human-readable
happymaster23 wrote:
No this is not solution. I have tried to run firstboot but without
result. There should be some script, that is making these files
(including writing MAC address and full device name). Other thing is
modprobe.conf - there is name of driver connected to device name
(eth0,
Joseph L. Casale wrote:
Don't bother with that, go straight to the source!
http://packages.asterisk.org/
These get updated rather quickly.
jlc
+1 for this suggestion.
Starting out it may be easier to pull packages from a repo if you're not familiar with
building from source. BUT, in
happymaster23 wrote:
No this is not solution. I have tried to run firstboot but without
result. There should be some script, that is making these files
(including writing MAC address and full device name). Other thing is
modprobe.conf - there is name of driver connected to device name
(eth0,
Thank you,
this looks good, but I don´t want unconfigure whole system...
2009/9/30 John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com:
happymaster23 wrote:
No this is not solution. I have tried to run firstboot but without
result. There should be some script, that is making these files
(including writing MAC
Marko A. Jennings wrote:
Take a look at dmidecode.
and, to cut the clutter, try...
# dmidecode -t memory
on most servers, the first entry will be the mainboard memory array,
which should show how many slots and max capacity, while the rest of the
entries will show the installed
Rob Kampen wrote:
I have a dedicated * CentOS box that shows today as uptime 543 days. I
built from scratch as I needed to support a four port analog trunk card.
This does not have internet access as I'm running it like an old
fashioned PABX -
just with great sip / linux based snom
Thank you,
I am trying to make list of needed changes. So - first line of
ifcfg-eth* is commented full name of adapter (no sense). Only one
think that should be changed is HWADDR. This file is in three
directories (/etc/sysconfig/network-script/ifcfg-eth*,
happymaster23 wrote:
Thank you,
I am trying to make list of needed changes. So - first line of
ifcfg-eth* is commented full name of adapter (no sense). Only one
think that should be changed is HWADDR. This file is in three
directories (/etc/sysconfig/network-script/ifcfg-eth*,
happymaster23 wrote:
Thank you,
I am trying to make list of needed changes. So - first line of
ifcfg-eth* is commented full name of adapter (no sense). Only one
think that should be changed is HWADDR. This file is in three
directories (/etc/sysconfig/network-script/ifcfg-eth*,
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 9:13 AM, Chan Chung Hang Christopher
You can get asterisk packages from rpmforge on Centos...but on Ubuntu
you do not have to add an extra repository to get asterisk.
What I meant was that the pre-built Asterisks (Trixbox, AsteriskNow,
Elastix and PBX in a Flash) are all
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 9:35 AM, Joseph L. Casale
jcas...@activenetwerx.com wrote:
Have a look at FreeSwitch as well:)
Thanks. I think I looked at it once, but I can't remember what it was
about it that didn't attract me at the time. I'll take another look.
--
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.3
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 1:18 PM, Rob Kampen rkam...@kampensonline.com wrote:
I have a dedicated * CentOS box that shows today as uptime 543 days. I built
from scratch as I needed to support a four port analog trunk card.
This does not have internet access as I'm running it like an old
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 12:28 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
Rob Kampen wrote:
I have a dedicated * CentOS box that shows today as uptime 543 days. I
built from scratch as I needed to support a four port analog trunk card.
This does not have internet access as I'm running it
Ron Blizzard wrote:
Have a look at FreeSwitch as well:)
Thanks. I think I looked at it once, but I can't remember what it was
about it that didn't attract me at the time. I'll take another look.
Here's some interesting commentary on why it is likely to become more
popular than asterisk
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 1:18 PM, Brian Mathis brian.mat...@gmail.com wrote:
Uptime is a red herring and is generally meaningless. You'd be better
off performing updates and reboots at least once a month, so you don't
need to worry about any big changes that might come with not updating
for
Ron Blizzard wrote:
I do want to do an update of it all to latest versions etc. but when it
just keeps working it is hard to justify the down time and potential
hic-ups.
If you are very well firewalled and trust all the local users you might
get away with ignoring security updates but it's
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 1:42 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
Ron Blizzard wrote:
Have a look at FreeSwitch as well:)
Thanks. I think I looked at it once, but I can't remember what it was
about it that didn't attract me at the time. I'll take another look.
Here's some
If you are very well firewalled and trust all the local users you might
get away with ignoring security updates but it's mostly a matter of
luck. With the stock CentOS components, your downtime for an update is
normally just a reboot and problems are extremely rare. If you'd added
custom or 3rd
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 1:55 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
You are still exposed to anything that is on the local LAN - which could
include other machines that might have been compromised through browser
exploits, etc. unless the segment only connects to IP phones (and you
On Wed, Sep 23, 2009 at 2:16 PM, Steve Bonds wrote:
These $50 four port cards work wonderfully with the sata_sil24 drived included
with CentOS:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816132017
They only come as PCI. I never found anything stable enough for me
(which is VERY
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 2:43 PM, Ron Blizzard rb4cen...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 1:18 PM, Brian Mathis brian.mat...@gmail.com wrote:
Uptime is a red herring and is generally meaningless. You'd be better
off performing updates and reboots at least once a month, so you don't
Yes, you are right. You can delete all three files and make new one in
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/. Other two files are automatically
created by running setup command (choose device and then save
properties).
So, thank you very much everybody. I think, that now is everything OK
(changes in
Christopher Chan wrote:
And I can't believe I just write that...! I sound like a linux
die-hard...
Just try Solaris or FreeBSD then. That should make you a Linux die-hard. :-D
Oh yes. I tried Opensolaris for a while and now I'm more convinced of
Linux than ever.
mg.
Sorin Srbu wrote:
HTH.
Hi Sorin
You can sudo bash and you will have a root terminal. In it, you can
set the root password for root.
Yupp, as I said, at the time I was testing Ubuntu, I was rather green and
didn't know about those little tricks. Now is a another matter, but I still
prefer
happymaster23 wrote:
Hello,
I have installed new network card under CentOS 5.3, but there are some
problems. I want delete existing ifcfg-eth0 and automatically make new
on as it is during OS installation process. Is it possible?
Thank you
Hi
I'm not sure if I understood your problem,
Hi all,
Curious issue.. looking in to how much disk space is being used on a
machine (CentOS 5.3). When I compare the output of du vs df, I am
seeing a 12GB difference with du saying 8G used and df saying 20G used.
# du -hcx /
8.0Gtotal
# df -h /
FilesystemSize Used Avail
In Timo's thread about RAM today, I noticed dmidecode and I got the
data for my Dell Dimension 2400 (Celeron CPU) box, which is below. I
won this box in a raffle, during February 2005. After I got the box, I
got conflicting information, from Crucial.com and from Dell Latin
America, regarding the
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 04:59:25PM -0400, Ryan Pugatch wrote:
Hi all,
Curious issue.. looking in to how much disk space is being used on a
machine (CentOS 5.3). When I compare the output of du vs df, I am
seeing a 12GB difference with du saying 8G used and df saying 20G used.
# du -hcx
Lanny Marcus wrote:
In Timo's thread about RAM today, I noticed dmidecode and I got the
data for my Dell Dimension 2400 (Celeron CPU) box, which is below. I
You running the latest bios for the system?
According to dell 2GB is the max
Cut'n'paste from a tutorial I'm writing right now:
Check with lsof if there are any very large files that are already deleted but
are still open by some processes.
# df -h .
FilesystemSize Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/md0 194M 32M 153M 18% /boot
# dd
Ryan Pugatch wrote:
I recognize that in most cases du and df are not going to report the
same but I am concerned about having a 12GB disparity. Does anyone have
any thoughts about this or reason as to why there is a big difference?
I have read a few articles online about it and none have
-Original Message-
From: Brian Mathis
The difference is that CentOS is a general-purpose OS that can be used
for many things, and has a much bigger installed base. That makes it
more of a target and would likely be included in scanning tools. A
custom OS running on a PBX might also
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 2:59 PM, Ryan Pugatch r...@tripadvisor.com wrote:
Hi all,
Curious issue.. looking in to how much disk space is being used on a
machine (CentOS 5.3). When I compare the output of du vs df, I am
seeing a 12GB difference with du saying 8G used and df saying 20G used.
#
At Wed, 30 Sep 2009 21:41:48 +0100 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
Sorin Srbu wrote:
HTH.
Hi Sorin
You can sudo bash and you will have a root terminal. In it, you can
set the root password for root.
Yupp, as I said, at the time I was testing Ubuntu, I was rather
At Wed, 30 Sep 2009 16:59:25 -0400 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
Hi all,
Curious issue.. looking in to how much disk space is being used on a
machine (CentOS 5.3). When I compare the output of du vs df, I am
seeing a 12GB difference with du saying 8G used and df saying
At Wed, 30 Sep 2009 14:10:46 -0700 (PDT) CentOS mailing list
centos@centos.org wrote:
Ryan Pugatch wrote:
I recognize that in most cases du and df are not going to report the
same but I am concerned about having a 12GB disparity. Does anyone have
any thoughts about this or reason as
-Original Message-
From: Brian Mathis
The difference is that CentOS is a general-purpose OS that can be used
for many things, and has a much bigger installed base. That makes it
more of a target and would likely be included in scanning tools. A
custom OS running on a PBX might also
Robert Heller wrote:
df does not look at files (deleted or not) at all! It just looks at
allocated inodes.
yeah but the result is pretty much the same, at least to me. I suppose
I could of worded it a bit differently.
nate
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On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 4:09 PM, nate cen...@linuxpowered.net wrote:
Lanny Marcus wrote:
In Timo's thread about RAM today, I noticed dmidecode and I got the
data for my Dell Dimension 2400 (Celeron CPU) box, which is below. I
You running the latest bios for the system?
Probably not. I will
Ryan Pugatch wrote:
I recognize that in most cases du and df are not going to report the
same but I am concerned about having a 12GB disparity. Does anyone have
any thoughts about this or reason as to why there is a big difference?
Sparse files?
--
Florin Andrei
Hi All,
I have a server that is IDE drives and I dont have any so I wanted to
put in a sata PCI card.
Will CentOS be able to see the drives as they will be connected to the
card?
-ML
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On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 5:52 PM, ML mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com wrote:
Hi All,
I have a server that is IDE drives and I dont have any so I wanted to
put in a sata PCI card.
Will CentOS be able to see the drives as they will be connected to the
card?
My CentOS systems are all using SATA
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 4:23 PM, rb4cen...@gmail.com wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Brian Mathis
The difference is that CentOS is a general-purpose OS that can be used
for many things, and has a much bigger installed base. That makes it
more of a target and would likely be
Quoting Lanny Marcus lmmailingli...@gmail.com:
On 9/29/09, Dave Stevens g...@uniserve.com wrote:
I manage a small server that I back up weekly. I do this by making a
tarball of relevant files then transferring it over the local subnet
to my station (Fedora 11), whereupon I burn it to DVD.
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 17:59, Ryan Pugatch r...@tripadvisor.com wrote:
Hi all,
Curious issue.. looking in to how much disk space is being used on a
machine (CentOS 5.3). When I compare the output of du vs df, I am
seeing a 12GB difference with du saying 8G used and df saying 20G used.
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 5:23 PM, rb4cen...@gmail.com wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Brian Mathis
The difference is that CentOS is a general-purpose OS that can be used
for many things, and has a much bigger installed base. That makes it
more of a target and would likely be
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 3:41 PM, Marcelo M. Garcia
The reason for Ubuntu in the laptop is simply because CentOS didn't work
very well. I followed the wiki about XPS M1530[1] and everything
almost work. At the office one of the developers uses a Dell Precision
laptop with RHEL 5.3 (it came
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 5:15 PM, Brian Mathis brian.mat...@gmail.com wrote:
Not connected to the Internet, and not connected to a LAN are very
different things. I doubt VOIP would work if the server was not
connected to a LAN. There could be quite a few things on the LAN,
depending on it's
Luciano Rocha wrote:
Do this:
mount /dev/xvda3 /mnt
du -hc /mnt
And see if you can find the other 12GB.
I usually do:
du -mc --max-depth 2 /mnt | sort -n
Though I've recently learned:
du -hc --max-depth 2 /mnt | sort --human-readable or some such, but that
requires a very recent
If the SATA controller is supported then CentOS will be able to see
the drives. You might have a look at
http://linux-ata.org/driver-status.html
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 5:52 PM, ML mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com wrote:
Hi All,
I have a server that is IDE drives and I dont have any so I wanted to
Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
ls -l /proc/[0-9]*/fd/| grep delete
will show those up. Then its a matter if you want to keep that file
around or not.
also du / did not look for files in / that were starting with a .
ls -la / and see if there are hidden directories or files taking up
Ron Blizzard wrote:
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 5:15 PM, Brian Mathis brian.mat...@gmail.com wrote:
Not connected to the Internet, and not connected to a LAN are very
different things. I doubt VOIP would work if the server was not
connected to a LAN. There could be quite a few things on the
Marcelo Roccasalva wrote:
Maybe you have a mount point overlaping big files... du -x will not find
them...
Hey Marcelo,
I am not sure what you mean.. can you give me an example?
Thanks
Ryan
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Ryan Pugatch wrote:
Nothing for deleted files and no large . files found.
Thanks,
Ryan
Oh, and no sparse files either :)
Ryan
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Ryan Pugatch wrote:
Marcelo Roccasalva wrote:
Maybe you have a mount point overlaping big files... du -x will not find
them...
Hey Marcelo,
I am not sure what you mean.. can you give me an example?
Thanks
Ryan
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Ryan Pugatch wrote:
Hi all,
Curious issue.. looking in to how much disk space is being used on a
machine (CentOS 5.3). When I compare the output of du vs df, I am
seeing a 12GB difference with du saying 8G used and df saying 20G used.
# du -hcx /
8.0Gtotal
# df -h /
Filesystem
Ryan Pugatch wrote:
Oh, and no sparse files either :)
Last time I saw this issue, no sparse files, nothing legit, it was a
corrupted FS. :(
--
Florin Andrei
http://florin.myip.org/
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On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 5:34 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
But even with old-school phone switches, your support contract would
require software updates at regular intervals and unless you had
redundant hot-failover equipment, that would involve scheduled downtime.
Not with
Florin Andrei wrote:
Last time I saw this issue, no sparse files, nothing legit, it was a
corrupted FS. :(
Well, if I mount to another directory the size is right. My next step
will be to fsck probably.
Ryan
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Clint Dilks wrote:
Hi,
He means a situation where you have something this this
You create a partion lets say /dev/hda1 you use it as you / partition
you create a directory called /data and copy some data into it
You then have a second partiton /dev/hda2 and you mount /dev/hda2 off of
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 2:52 PM, ML wrote:
I have a server that is IDE drives and I dont have any so I wanted to
put in a sata PCI card.
Will CentOS be able to see the drives as they will be connected to the
card?
That's certainly the goal! :-) In addition to the linux-ata link
already
At Wed, 30 Sep 2009 18:31:11 -0400 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
If the SATA controller is supported then CentOS will be able to see
the drives. You might have a look at
http://linux-ata.org/driver-status.html
*Some* SATA controllers (at least NV's ahci on-board ones) seem
I have just completed building the RPMS for the CentOS Enterprise IPA
(Identity, Policy, and Audit) Server.
This is based on the sources from the Red Hat Enterprise IPA server.
Documentation can be downloaded here:
http://www.centos.org/docs/5/pdf/eipa/1.0/
The RPMS are located in the testing
Neat!
Thanks!
-Kristopher Kane
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On 09/30/2009 07:43 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
I have just completed building the RPMS for the CentOS Enterprise IPA
(Identity, Policy, and Audit) Server.
This is based on the sources from the Red Hat Enterprise IPA server.
Documentation can be downloaded here:
On 09/24/2009 07:35 AM, Rainer Duffner wrote:
Am 24.09.2009 um 07:43 schrieb Fajar Priyanto:
Hi all,
Sorry for the OT.
I've got an IBM N3300-A10 NAS. It runs Data Ontap 7.2.5.1.
The problem is, from the docs it says that it only supports either
RAID-DP or RAID4.
What I want to achieve
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 08:52:08PM -0500, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 09/24/2009 07:35 AM, Rainer Duffner wrote:
Well, it depends on the disk-size:
http://www.enterprisestorageforum.com/technology/features/article.php/3839636
This info is VERY relevant ... you will almost ALWAYS have a
Slightly OT...
Opensolaris has just had triple parity raid (raidz3) added to ZFS;
http://blogs.sun.com/ahl/entry/triple_parity_raid_z
Pity we can't get an in kernel version of ZFS for linux.
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 12:41 PM, Stephen Harris li...@spuddy.org wrote:
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009
Stephen Harris wrote:
Almost always is very dependent on the disks and size of the array.
Let's take a 20TiByte array as an example.
...
he did say 'very large'.
note, raid10 has another parameter... say you have a 20 drive raid10 of
1TB drives (10TB total usable). if one drive fails,
testing email delivery
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Dear Russ.
Please note that the style used within the customization we provide is
not yet final. To give an example of how the upcoming websites might
look like, I have uploaded some screenshots to the Draft page:
http://wiki.centos.org/WebsiteVer2/WebEnvironment/Draft
yuck -- too much
As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
# your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
# the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
# the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
I'll branch out from here. Maybe. While I
On Wed, 2009-09-30 at 16:25 -0700, Steve Bonds wrote:
As requested on http://wiki.centos.org/Contribute, here is my info:
# your FirstnameLastname username [SteveBonds]
# the proposed subject of your Wiki contribution(s) [Personal Page]
# the proposed location of your Wiki contribution(s)
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