also have the impression that it is a
dracut issue, however, I have not pinpointed it yet.
Ron
On 12/26/19 9:57 AM, Drew Weaver wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to build a PXE boot image for CentOS 7.
>
> livemedia-creator --make-pxe-live --ks=ks --no-virt
>
> It runs the
is package is needed to boot the iso on UEFI
grub2-efi-*-cdboot
grub2-efi-ia32
%end
Thanks,
-Drew
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the backup and
then the installer to install the new OS.
-Drew
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You can simply create two virtual disks from the single RAID-5 volume.
Create one that is like 500GB for the OS volume and then create a 2nd one which
uses the remainder of the space.
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
If these drives do not have TLER do not use them with LSI controllers.
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
John Doe
Sent: Friday, July 19, 2013 5:13 AM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] LSI MegaRAID experience...
Not sure about TLER on those Plextors...
This is what megacli says:
Enclosure Device ID: 252
Slot Number: 0
Drive's position: DiskGroup: 0, Span: 0, Arm: 0 Enclosure position: N/A Device
Id: 0
WWN: 4154412020202020
Sequence Number: 2
Media Error Count: 0
John Doe wrote:
From: Drew Weaver drew.wea...@thenap.com
If these drives do not have TLER do not use them with LSI controllers.
Not sure about TLER on those Plextors...
snip
TLER would only show up on something that looks at a *very* low level on the
physical drive. What I know is that you
/vgs etc?
I figured there would be an autopart -atomic option but that doesn't seem to
exist.
Any advice?
Thanks,
-Drew
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Drew Weaver wrote:
Howdy,
The default partitioning scheme appears to be:
swap
/boot
/ small amount of space
/home remainder of space.
Is there any way via kickstart to have it just create swap with the
recommended size, /boot, and then just / with the remainder without
manually
?
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found for him.
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Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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on a windows box). You don't need it if you never move around.
What matters is the use of the certificate.
Token may have been the incorrect word as RSA's keyfobs are sometime
called tokens.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
at your firewall. In fact the linux based router's we
use have a specific Country Blocking feature which I use to block
large swathes of the Net from our systems.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
I posted this as a bug to redhat's bugzilla I think in January of 2011.
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Scott Johnson
Sent: Friday, December 09, 2011 11:39 PM
To: centos@centos.org
Subject: [CentOS] Unplugging DVI
.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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Isn't that D-Link DSN-5110 series a rebadged Dot Hill box?
Rebranded iStor Networks iS512. Incidentally iStor was bought out by
Promise so they now OEM the product line for D-Link.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
I think this was an attempt at humour, but it didn't work very well. :)
For a second I thought it was a sarcastic troll. Then I saw Johnny's
name on the email. It gave me a smile and a chuckle.
Seriously tho folks. Please let's not get into that flaming thread yet again. :)
--
Drew
Nothing
. :) All this on a two
year old i3 w/ 6GB RAM. Set me back around $900.
Larger screen? VGA or HDMI outputs. ;-) Nothing quite beats working on
a 55 HDTV in your living room, especially when I have time for STO.
--
Drew
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--Marie Curie
chroot to have it's own independent copy? Or does he want to share the
CMS core files across all instances?
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/boot as ext3.
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Step-1, get the major security stuff into 6.0/cr/.
Step-3, Profit.
;-)
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This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out of control.
-Unknown
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,
-Drew
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Antonio da Silva Martins Junior
Sent: Friday, September 09, 2011 8:01 AM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: [CentOS] CentOS5 with Dell Broadcom iSCSI Offload, does it work ?
Hi all
Note that this reply is not designed to stir up a bunch of list trolls
and this thread degenerating into a pissing contest isn't going to help
anyone.
I'll just cue the drum-roll. :-)
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
.
Somebody at IBM must not have gotten the memo then as the
M5015/9260-8i is their top of the line on-board RAID controller. :-)
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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purposes it works fine.
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software is going.
64bit doesn't specifically make it more advanced. 64bit CPU's just
support for a larger memory addressing space then 32bit CPU's, beyond
the 4GB limit of 32bit addresses.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
The older ISA (now called PATA = Parallel ATA) has been replaced by SATA
(Serial ATA). SATA has 3 speeds. Most new disks are either SATA 2 or
SATA 3 speed.
IDE I assume you meant. :) ISA was the old bus PCI replaced.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood
documents up to
Office 2003 (xls, doc, ppt) it chokes on anything made i Office
2007/2010. And as our parent company uses 2010...
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out of control.
-Unknown
MGen Dorlan
Linux, the BIOS, and the SATA
controller (especially early non-Intel ICH family) that was traced
back to that setting.
--
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--Marie Curie
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I wonder then what people would think about my running SL6 (centos 6
wasn't out yet) on an old P3-866 Toughbook w/ 768MB RAM? :)
Only machine in my inventory that I can drag *everywhere* and still
doesn't complain.
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a NIC driver that wasn't included in the stock kernel. That was with
maybe three days experience. :-)
-Drew
On 07/27/2011, Scot P. Floess sflo...@nc.rr.com wrote:
Oh wow 768 MB - nice. My laptops have 256 MB and 384 MB - how's that for
old :)
On Wed, 27 Jul 2011, Drew wrote:
I wonder
From the sounds of it it's fake raid. M$ doesn't leave any signatures
on their raid system that linux will detect. dm/md raid can see
fakeraid signatures in newer versions so the installer may be picking
up on that.
--
Drew
On 07/21/2011, Robert Heller hel...@deepsoft.com wrote:
At Thu, 21 Jul
% in benchmarks I've seen) and not worth the extra
complexity of managing entire branches of packages for specific
processor families. It makes sense however for the x86 vs x86-64 as
there's some pretty fundamental differences there.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only
. There I'd consider a
single interface system as inherently insecure.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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if you don't logically *and* physically separate your subnets.
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--Marie Curie
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only present in the 486 and better.
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When you say It shows usable disk space of approx 940 GB,
do you mean the array is 940 GB or the logical drive inside the array is
940GB?
And I think on such controller you can have 2 logical drives max...
On our IBM's it shows the size of the logical drive it presents to the OS.
--
Drew
VIA EPIA, which are fully supported in
CentOS 5.
--
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--Marie Curie
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(rebranded LSI3082E-R) is true
hardware RAID which I recently picked up *new* for $150. They don't do
RAID-5/6 or have a BBU but IMO you don't need a BBU for RAID-0/1/10.
Where can you pickup a new server for $150? :-P
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie
you're buying $1000 pizza boxes from Supermicro (not knocking the
brand, I use their kit at home ) that's still not even close to the
price of a decently spec'd IBM or HP server. Of course our spec comes
in around $6k per box. ;-)
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood
.
Good job on getting CentOS 5.6 out first however.
==
1,540,000 (bps) / 8 * .90 = your maximum throughput in Bps.
thanks,
-Drew
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family use Line
Interactive which runs on mains power until the
voltage/current/frequency goes out of tolerance, at which point they
cut over to battery. The Liebert GXT2/3 family which we use quite a
bit of were, until recently, strictly double conversion.
--
Drew
This started out as a hobby
depending on what combination of SGID SUID sticky bits you want on
the directory.
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This may not be the best from a security perspective but as you use
samba, why not just set it to force the correct user, group and mask
setting for that share?
My server at home is setup that way and it works just fine.
-Drew
On 06/21/2011, Todd Cary t...@aristesoftware.com wrote:
Grasping
Have you also unmounted the filesystem on LogVol00?
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--Marie Curie
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there was a thread on the linux raid list
where they discussed the TRIM command on SSD's. The gist of the
conversation (as I understood it) was that for SATA based SSD's, the
results of a raw read afterward were non-deterministic, ie you
couldn't be certain what you'd get back.
--
Drew
Nothing in life
virtual environment I
can fire of a VM spec'd the way it'd be in production and test it that
way. If it's a dead end a simple delete of the VM and it's gone. If it
has value, we can migrate the VM into production.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
reason we know about them is because of changes made by TPTB
to improve transparency openness into the state of the build
process, the hope being that by feeding the community information as
needed, they can avoid the recent flame-wars.
--
Drew
This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out
but still within the bounds
of an acceptable tech question for a *technical* mailing list.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out of control.
-Unknown
NAND Flash is the drive.
So SSD's can be SATA, SAS, built into custom PCIe cards (OCZ Revo
Drive's the ilk) or even ATA (never seen one). Regardless it's still
an SSD drive.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
This started out as a hobby
was.
Just my $0.02 form trolling the lists the last few years. :-)
--
Drew
Waiting patiently for 6.x so he can try out KVM stuff without having
to do a from scratch reinstall.
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are the field. And with
CentOS 6 just around the corner (no flame wars please, my nomex pants
are at the cleaners :-P ) I'm wanting to know if it's worth holding
off another month or so on finalizing my build.
Thanks,
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
are the field. And with
CentOS 6 just around the corner (no flame wars please, my nomex pants
are at the cleaners :-P ) I'm wanting to know if it's worth holding
off another month or so on finalizing my build.
Thanks,
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
I have a CentOS virtual private server from 1and1.com
This may be a non-issue but have you tried compiling stuff before on
this machine? Most of the VPS system's I've seen in operation have
stripped out the build tools for performance security reasons.
--
Drew
Nothing in life
the balloon drivers
in each guest inflate to recover that 4GB shortfall.
RedHat's statement above implies that the guests control how and when
that balloon inflates which seems to contradict what I understood.
--
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Original Message
Subject: Re: [CentOS] RHEL 6.1 beta
From: Steve Clark scl...@netwolves.commailto:scl...@netwolves.com
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.orgmailto:centos@centos.org
Date: Tuesday, May 03, 2011 10:40:51 AM
On 05/02/2011 10:47 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
On
they can
get on whenever they need to. And last I checked there weren't any
laws that prohibited parents from conducting random unannounced
inspections of the kid(s) machines.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
the load, that's their problem, not ours. It just means
they didn't do their infrastructure capacity planning properly.
--
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Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out of control.
-Unknown
auto-mounting. Been a while since I did this but
I believe you have to tell LVM about the volume group on that drive
before the logical volumes can be mounted.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out
the guest when the demands on the host's physical memory
exceed the amount available. The balloon inflates within the guests
forcing them to swap or take other memory management measures. When
the pressure on the host eases the balloon deflates automatically.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared
Is the list dead, or just quiet all of the sudden?
I'm going to assume people have stopped whining now that their beloved
5.6 is out. :-)
--
Drew
This started out as a hobby and spun horribly out of control.
-Unknown
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Hi,
Just an update to the list.
This issue is still present, I even tried it on a different Intel socket 1155
motherboard (DH61WW) which is about as plain vanilla as it gets.
It must be something to do with the onboard video and PCI Express.
Has anyone been able to get around this?
-Drew
Interactive Smart UPS family.
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Seagate's Constellation ES series SATA drives in 1TB for
$125. 2TB will run me around $225.
They're not something I'd run my database off, I have 15k SAS drives
for that, but for large amounts of storage on the cheap like our
backup system, it's just fine.
--
Drew
Nothing in life
AFAIK.
All I've done is applied the list's etiquette rules and am careful not
to break them. So what are an extra mouse click or two here and there?
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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.
In that case there's no real point upgrading. :-) The drives are U160's.
I was just hoping a slightly newer card might be available that'd give
me a speed boost for cheap. :-)
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
backplane(s) can
feed the u320 card and whether its bus can take the bandwidth.
AFAIK, the back plane is rated at U320 speeds. The unit is a
Supermicro CSE-M35S (SCA) which is listed as a U320 rated unit.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
is sufficient to drive a pair
of PCI-X 133 slots at full capacity.
--
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but faster then the old PERC? I'm looking for
something cheap that'll do RAID-10 but bonus points if it does
RAID-5/6. :-)
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Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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OS and doesn't care what it is given as a block
device.
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but VMware is
trying to phase that out as most everything you can do with ESX's
console can be done through ESXi's API's and the remote CLI.
Only downside to the free version is certain API's are unavailable and
if you need those features you may have to go to a paid version.
--
Drew
Nothing in life
And I see I have to put in a PCI-E NIC, not a common-or-garden PCI.
Why can't they leave things as they are ...
Because a PCIe x1 slot smokes your run of the mill PCI slot any day?
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
You don't have your base CentOS repository configured. What have you
done to /etc/yum.repos.d/CentOS-Base.repo, or have you been doing
something strange to /etc/yum.conf? And what is this Rocks-5.4
repository?
Rocks 5.4 is a recompile of CentOS 5 oriented towards compute clusters.
--
Drew
already paying for a RHEL subscription,
Novell's offer may have a lower cost or offer better value then RHEL
--
Drew
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to when it shows the POST screen. Swapping the 4GB of
ECC RAM for a single non-ECC stick greatly speeds that process up so I
assume there's some sort of tests it runs that can take a while.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
CentOS no hard
drives are recognised.
One other thing to check, which is rare but I've seen before with your
symptoms, is a controller that's not listed in the driver's PCI ID
list. The chip onboard is a 1068e but if Supermicro used a nonstandard
PCI ID, the driver wouldn't recognize it.
--
Drew
with a sysadmin I knew and download his knowledge about SCSI which
he'd learned over the decades.
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Would appreciate some suggestions for ecommerce hosting.
Depends on what you want. I use beanstream for the bit of stuff that I do.
I think he meant web hosting for running an ecommerce oriented website. :-)
+1 for BeanStream in any event.
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared
on a convenient CD. I use it to pound on
off-lease servers before we accept them from our Vendor.
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Drew
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with.
RTFM? :-)
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traffic over a IPv4 IPSEC tunnel you need to encapsulate the IPv6
payload within IPv4 packets. The reverse is also true of IPv4 over
IPv6.
This is why tunnel brokers like Freenet6 Teredo exist, you can't
push IPv6 traffic out across an IPv4 only network without tunneling.
--
Drew
Nothing in life
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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and pretty obvious
what the files are for.
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without crashing, we'll see what happens. doesn't seem like a hardware problem.
thanks,
-Drew
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terminals, this will not do at all.
I am going to retest with RHEL 6.
thanks,
-Drew
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.
These machines aren't always headless, sometimes we need to plug monitors into
them.
thanks,
-Drew
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On Wednesday, January 19, 2011 12:35:18 pm Drew Weaver wrote:
The kernel boots fine, and everything works ok until you unplug the monitor
from the DVI port on the motherboard.
When you unplug the monitor, that IRQ/ACPI message is displayed, and it
screws up the USB and the e1000 card
, the question is why
and how can I avoid it?
I have tried disabling all of the extra stuff in the BIOS that I could, and
this still happens fairly frequently.
Any advice would be great.
thanks,
-Drew
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Ah, it is a PCI card and there is only one PCI slot..
-Drew
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Giles Coochey
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2011 9:24 AM
To: centos@centos.org
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Intel DH67BL + CentOS 5.5 IRQ
.
thanks,
-Drew
From: Drew Weaver drew.wea...@thenap.com
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
Sent: Tuesday, 18 January, 2011 2:22:04 PM
Subject: [CentOS] Intel DH67BL + CentOS 5.5 IRQ #177 nobody cared
Hello,
We have built a couple of CentOS 5.5 systems
Hi,
It doesn't appear to, it simply shows a little ASCII diagram of what is set for
each slot.
thanks,
-Drew
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Giles Coochey
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2011 9:39 AM
To: centos@centos.org
Hi,
There does not appear to be a 'Plug and Play OS' option in the BIOS like on
previous Intel motherboards.
I have disabled all of the USB ports except for the rear panel ones and so far
it has been running for awhile.
I will see what happens.
thanks,
-Drew
From: centos-boun...@centos.org
Issue still persists, anyway I thought I'd let you guys know in case someone is
thinking about getting one or more of these boards.
-Drew
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Drew Weaver
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2011 11:42 AM
To: 'CentOS mailing
[e1000])
Jan 16 07:03:23 server kernel: Disabling IRQ #177
In case again anyone is interested.
I just tried updating the bios, if it freezes again I will boot with acpi=off
and then retest.
-Drew
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Drew Weaver
Sent
The keyboard that I use to ctrl-alt-del it is USB, but there was no keyboard
connected until after it locked up, so it's a chicken and egg thing.
-Drew
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
m.r...@5-cent.us
Sent: Tuesday
, not for standard wiring.
Don't tug on Superman's cape. Don't spit into the wind. Don't pull the
mask off the old Lone Ranger, and don't mess around with the color
coding of any electrical wiring.
And with that I deem this thread finished. :-)
--
Drew
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only
The colors do not matter. What matters is the pairs.
And every person who comes after you will curse your work because
*both* the colors *and* the pairs are part of the 568A/B standard.
In my shop if you tried that you'd be very quickly looking for work
elsewhere. ;-)
--
Drew
Nothing
Intel Jetway, is they seem to
prefer Realtek chipsets onboard. Jetway I understand because of price
points. Intel I don't as the Pro/1000 is a rock solid nic. That said,
I've never had a problem with flaky drivers or hardware from Realtek.
Maybe I'm just lucky. :-)
--
Drew
Nothing in life
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