Re: [CentOS] Stop the FUD Xen is not deprecated

2008-11-30 Thread Pasi Kärkkäinen
On Fri, Nov 28, 2008 at 03:31:19PM +0100, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
> Pasi Kärkkäinen wrote on Thu, 27 Nov 2008 12:04:16 +0200:
> 
> > There are many options.
> 
> Yeah. The point behind my asking was if one would be able to run 
> RHEL/CentOS 6 as a dom0 - as it is derived from Fedora and reflects the 
> available bits at the time of the OS freeze. In other words, if there is a 
> normal upgrade path concerning Xen from RHEL/CentOS 5 to 6 or not. So, at 
> the moment it looks like you can't run RHEL 6 as a dom0, but this may 
> change until it's release depending on the upstream (kernel.org?) kernel 
> having the relevant xen bits in time for an RHEL release (which is 
> promised for 2.6.29 or so at the moment). 
> You can probably run RHEL 6 paravirtualized on a RHEL 5 dom0.
> Correct interpretation so far?
> 

Yeah, more or less correct :) 

Then again Redhat guys have not yet commented about planned features for
RHEL6.. 

-- Pasi
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Re: [CentOS] CentOS 5 - KDE - wireless ?

2008-11-30 Thread Akemi Yagi
On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 12:48 PM, Marko Vojinovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday 30 November 2008 02:14, Kevin Kempter wrote:
>> Hi All;
>>
>> How do I enable/configure wireless in CentOS 5 ?
>>
>> I cannot find knetworkmanager anywhere..
>>
>> Do I need to install another repository ?
>
> You want the nm-applet utility (provided that you have configured and running
> NetworkManager service). It is a gnome utility, so you need to start it
> yourself if you are using KDE.

For setting up NetworkManager, see:

http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/Laptops/NetworkManager

Akemi
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Re: [CentOS] CentOS 5 - KDE - wireless ?

2008-11-30 Thread Marko Vojinovic
On Sunday 30 November 2008 02:14, Kevin Kempter wrote:
> Hi All;
>
> How do I enable/configure wireless in CentOS 5 ?
>
> I cannot find knetworkmanager anywhere..
>
> Do I need to install another repository ?

You want the nm-applet utility (provided that you have configured and running 
NetworkManager service). It is a gnome utility, so you need to start it 
yourself if you are using KDE.

HTH, :-)
Marko

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Re: [CentOS] how can I stress a server?

2008-11-30 Thread Rudi Ahlers
On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 1:07 AM, Les Mikesell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Rudi Ahlers wrote:
>>
>> It has nothing todo with "he doesn't want anyone elses parts in the
>> system he sells and warranties because he doesn't want to be be
>> responsible for fixing ensuing problems. he's selling stuff he knows
>> works"
>
> I'm confused.  Aren't you the same person who just put together some stuff
> that doesn't work well - or bought from a supplier that wasn't picky about
> parts?
>
> --
>  Les Mikesell
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ___



Yes, the motherboard ended up being faulty. But what I said here is
from a different supplier. I work with about 8 suppliers, and there's
only supplier in the whole country who supplies Super Micro, but their
after-sales support really sux, which is why I won't support them, and
also why I can't use SuperMicro.

Currently, when one of my Dell's give hassles, Dell will come out
within 4 hours to fix it up. On the stuff that I build myself, I can
drive to a supplier and get a replacement component and have it
swapped out within an hour. And since I use desktop type components, I
can also use components from other suppliers, not just one.

-- 

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Rudi Ahlers
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Re: [CentOS] how can I stress a server?

2008-11-30 Thread Les Mikesell

Rudi Ahlers wrote:


It has nothing todo with "he doesn't want anyone elses parts in the
system he sells and warranties because he doesn't want to be be
responsible for fixing ensuing problems. he's selling stuff he knows
works" 


I'm confused.  Aren't you the same person who just put together some 
stuff that doesn't work well - or bought from a supplier that wasn't 
picky about parts?


--
  Les Mikesell
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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[CentOS] Mail and list server downtime

2008-11-30 Thread Ralph Angenendt
Hello,

there will be a downtime of the mail and list server tomorrow evening from
around 20:00 UTC and a few (hopefully) hours after that. This means that there
will be no mail traffic at that time to and from centos.org domains.

We need to move away mail from the current machine to a new machine, as our
old mailserver is a bit unreliable at the moment (the hardware is showing
its age).

After the move everything will work exactly as before, only faster, bigger
and better. 

Thanks for your understanding,

Ralph

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Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Jim Wildman

On Sun, 30 Nov 2008, John R Pierce wrote:


Alexander Farber wrote:

 You don't know our situation and already have an opinion.

 We already spent 40 Euro for SW licenses this year
 (and we have only 400 users). And we're an automotive business,
 so I can understand that management tries to save some money.




do you understand that if there is ANY issue which could be an OS related 
problem that even possibly could be caused by mixing builds of RPMs, SAP will 
not support you, and that e400K investment will be near worthless?


Actually it is trending towards worthless as soon as SAP says "please 
update package X to the latest version from Red Hat" and you can't do it.


--
Jim Wildman, CISSP, RHCE   [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.rossberry.com
"Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best
state, is a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one."
Thomas Paine
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Re: [CentOS] how can I stress a server?

2008-11-30 Thread Rudi Ahlers
On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 8:17 PM, John R Pierce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Rudi Ahlers wrote:
>>
>> I got the components cheaper from another supplier /
>> importer / retailer than from Dell directly. And really, how can
>> KingMax RAM or Seagate HDD's from one supplier be better than from
>> another supplier? I only use the recommended types, i.e ECC (non
>> registered), and Seagate RAID edition SATAII HDD's.
>>
>
> I dunno about Dell, but most vendors, their own 'branded' hard drives have
> customized firmware thats been tested and validated to work in all their
> various raid systems.
>
> its a lot of little things.  a Sun 72GB SCSI drive will always be an exact
> size, no matter what "72GB" drive is in it, while a whitebox generic drive
> from the same OEM(seagate/hitachi/etc) might be 50MB bigger or 10MB smaller
> or whatever. this really matters when you replace a raid drive.raid
> controllers in particular interact with hard drive firmware in some rather
> complex and subtle ways, and the drives really need to be tested and
> qualified for a specific application.   as an example, a seagate ST3100
> drive might have 100 or more variations, indicated by different part numbers
> (the 9L9005-xxx number in the case of Seagate) to meet specific OEM
> requirements.   mix and match the generic 'whitebox' versions of the drives
> in systems, and you're the one doing the qualification testing in
> production.
>

This is interesting, thank you for letting me know :)


> Memory has a lot of little specs that aren't readily apparent, and "DDR2-533
> Registered ECC" can have differing CAS timings, different voltages, and even
> if all that is identical on paper, may or may not work reliably in a given
> system due to timing subtleties..  The HP or Sun or whatever ram has been
> fully qualified to work in their systems and most importantly is supported
> by their field service people.   The stuff you get cheaper at mom-n-pops
> compuRus, who knows, you're the one doing the 'qualification testing' on
> your production systems.
>
> since you've mentioned dell, I'd have to say, in my personal experience,
> Dell's are the cheapest and least reliable of the brand name servers...
> their field service in the US at least is decent, but they have a far higher
> 'infant mortality' rate than about anything else I've used (mostly HP, Sun,
> IBM).

Sun, IBM & HP servers in our country are far over rated, and they
don't deal with the "small companies", only the larger corporates, so
it's not really an option for me. Intel server are easier to get hold
of, but also very expensive. Tyan - I don't know who sells it in our
country
>
> your supermicro vendor, he doesn't want anyone elses parts in the system he
> sells and warranties because he doesn't want to be be responsible for fixing
> ensuing problems.  he's selling stuff he knows works, he knows meets the
> specifications, and that he's warrantying and supporting.If you bought a
> new Volkswagen, then installed an aftermarket camshaft, and the engine eats
> a valve, you're not going to expect Volkswagen to repair the piston damage,
> are you?


Not quite. The CPU, RAM & HDD's that sells is 30% more expensive than
the other suppliers on the same thing, and this make the servers also
more expensive than what they can be. I'm sitting with a lot of CPU's,
RAM & HDD's which I'd still like to use, and don't see the point and
throwing them in the bin to buy new ones. My other big problem, is if
I want to upgrade anything, then I need to take the servers back to
their warehouse, which with traffic is 2 - 3 hours drive from the DC,
during office hours, and then there's a 2 day turn-around on upgrades.
Our dells can get upgraded by ourselves, we get the component from
Dell and then schedule upgrades for a Sunday night - very convenient.
And Dell will also come to the DC 24/7 if needed. For this reason, I
don't want to purchase from the current SuperMicro supplier.

See, the thing in our country is, some companies have monopolies in
their market, and they set the trends for how their clients may use
their products / services - which doesn't always make business sense.
It has nothing todo with "he doesn't want anyone elses parts in the
system he sells and warranties because he doesn't want to be be
responsible for fixing ensuing problems. he's selling stuff he knows
works" Even our Intel suppliers (there are a few of them) don't have
this stupid policy. IF I wanted to upgrade, I get the necessary
components and upgrade when convenient, not when the supplier feels
they can do it.

>
>
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-- 

Kind Regards
Rudi Ahlers
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Re: [CentOS] how can I stress a server?

2008-11-30 Thread Rudi Ahlers
On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 7:28 PM, William L. Maltby
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Fri, 2008-11-21 at 18:38 +0200, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
>> 
>
>> I'm sitting with a very expensive paper weight right now, and I don't
>> know what todo. The same websites are running very well on a machine
>> with a Gigabyte G31MX-S motherboard + 4GB DDRII 800 RAM + C2D 6750
>> CPU. This is what baffles me, how can the same load on a slower
>> machine work fine, but on the faster one not?
>
> Having watched all this thread, I note that certain things are not
> mentioned. Assuming that you followed all the previous suggestions, I'll
> add my own that is based on practical experience some years back, and
> one recent experience.
>
> Like you, I always built my own. Since you have no way to check the PS,
> try removing all components you can and see if that helps. _Usually_ a
> weak PS will show symptoms on boot, since all things are spinning up
> asnd doing max current draw, but sometimes not. Some BIOS have settings
> that allow or automatically "spin up" in a stepped sequence. This would
> not stress the PS as much. Keep in mind that PS's have different
> amperage draw capabilities for different rails. A seemingly "sufficient"
> PS in terms of wattage may be weak on one or more of the rails. Specs
> for the mobo and PS might indicate a problem.

I also thought the problems was related to the power supply, but I
don't have a spare one of these at the moment. I did, however,
swap-out the PSU with a standard 350W PSU, and the sympoms were the
same, so it's not PSU related in this case. This also reminds me that
I should get a spare PSU ASAP :)
>
> Have you checked the voltage settings in the BIOS for the CPU and
> memory? Many/most these days automatically detect, but...

I normally leave those on automatic, since I don't like running
components outside suppliers specs.

>
> Check the spec sheets for the CPU and memory sticks.
>
> I recently upgraded a mobo memory and it would not boot or run reliably.
> The spec for the memory was not available and I left the settings as
> with the previous memory. Not wanting to fry the sticks and possibly
> void the warranty, I picked up the whole thing an carried it back to my
> local supplier. I explained the symptoms and told him I suspected memory
> voltage but didn't want to try/fry the sticks and risk the warranty.
>
> Hmmm... he said. Well, long story short, he eventually kicked up the
> voltage (I guess the "auto" in the BIOS was flaky or something) and all
> worked. Required +.2 volts. Most memory sticks can be run at slightly
> higher (+.1, +.2) volts without harm. Larger memory may require a slight
> increase in voltage. I guess the "automatic" settings can't always be
> trusted.
>
> Running about 6 months now, NPs.
>
> Another thing about pulling all components you can: if there is some
> kind of IRQ conflict, this can (used to?) cause slowdowns. Maybe that
> will be shown there. But that should also leave some traces in
> the /var/log/messages or dmesg log.

There no add-in cards, nor a CD-ROM / DVD-ROM, only the on-board
devices & the HDD's. Taking the HDD's out doesn't help much, since the
problems only occur when there's a bit of load on the system.

>
> Let's presume that the "obvious" problem is not the problem. What if it
> is not hardware directly?
>
> Examine your /var/log/dmesg carefully for any "suspect" messages. I've
> also found that occasionally drivers selected by the system may not be
> exactly correct. Check the specs for mobo and add-in cards and see if it
> looks like the best drivers for the chip sets are loaded (lsmod and
> modinfo help here).

/var/log/messages didn't show anything related to the problem, at all.

>
> Grab any old performance/diagnostics software (maybe some on this list
> have current knowledge - I don't) and run it. Compare to published data
> for same or similar systems.
>
> Enable sar on the system, run the reports and see where the slowdowns
> are.
>
> I haven't used multi-core yet, but I would first check to see if all the
> cores are being effectively used. Maybe top will help here? Not sure.
>
> BIOS: some have oddball (not really, but legacy issues abound) settings
> that may limit amount of memory seen/used? Keep an eye out for those.
> Memory timings may not be properly detected and set. Check the specs for
> the memory and see if the BIOS has them properly set. BTW, _some_ memory
> and mobo combos will allow faster settings, but be careful. I haven't
> dinked with them for a long time, so I can't make any Q & A suggestions.
>
> Have you upgraded to the latest BIOS on the system? Most retail mobos
> come with an early BIOS version that has... "issues". Check the
> manufacturers web site and see if there is a later BIOS.

No, I don't like BIOS upgrades unless absolutely necessary.

>
> OTHER: Of course, you have manually "re-seated" all connections, yes? A
> slightly loose cable, add-in card or memory not fully seated can do
> thing

RE: [CentOS] Enterprise Package Tracker

2008-11-30 Thread Joshua Baker-LePain

On Sat, 29 Nov 2008 at 2:07pm, Joseph L. Casale wrote


Is that how rpmfind works?


Don't know _exactly_ how I searches, but I think that point is mute.


ObPetPeeve:  "moot".  The point is moot.

--
Joshua Baker-LePain
QB3 Shared Cluster Sysadmin
UCSF
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Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines? (RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Tru Huynh
On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 05:02:06PM +0100, Alexander Farber wrote:
> Hello,
> 
..
> However we have 4 important SAP-servers running RHEL5
...
> 
> Has anybody have been in a similar situation and figured
> out a good way to make "yum update" on RHEL machines
> to work against CentOS repositories?

http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/MigrationGuide

But all the caveats for your $$$ SAP license applies.

Tru
-- 
Tru Huynh (mirrors, CentOS-3 i386/x86_64 Package Maintenance)
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xBEFA581B


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Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread John R Pierce

Alexander Farber wrote:

You don't know our situation and already have an opinion.

We already spent 40 Euro for SW licenses this year
(and we have only 400 users). And we're an automotive business,
so I can understand that management tries to save some money.
  



do you understand that if there is ANY issue which could be an OS 
related problem that even possibly could be caused by mixing builds of 
RPMs, SAP will not support you, and that e400K investment will be near 
worthless?

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Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Fabian Arrotin

Alexander Farber wrote:

You don't know our situation and already have an opinion.

We already spent 40 Euro for SW licenses this year
(and we have only 400 users). And we're an automotive business,
so I can understand that management tries to save some money.

Regards
Alex

On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 7:10 PM, Jim Wildman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I always find the sentiments from the management of the original poster
interesting.  They are serious enough about their business to have spent
$$$ on SAP to run the business, then they want to cheap out on the support
contract on the OS.

Very short sighted.




woaw .. 40 euros and you want to spare 4 x 279 euros (basic RHEL 
subscription) ?

Sorry but i don't get the point ..
Of course you can normally switch to CentOS but for such business 
critical application (and the fact that 4 x 279 euros is nothing against 
SAP price itself) i'd rather continue with RHN subscription .. just my 
two cents of course


--
-
Fabian Arrotin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
"Internet network currently down, TCP/IP packets delivered now by 
UPS/Fedex ..."




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Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Alexander Farber
You don't know our situation and already have an opinion.

We already spent 40 Euro for SW licenses this year
(and we have only 400 users). And we're an automotive business,
so I can understand that management tries to save some money.

Regards
Alex

On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 7:10 PM, Jim Wildman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I always find the sentiments from the management of the original poster
> interesting.  They are serious enough about their business to have spent
> $$$ on SAP to run the business, then they want to cheap out on the support
> contract on the OS.
>
> Very short sighted.
>
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Re: [CentOS] KDE4

2008-11-30 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Martin Marques wrote on Sun, 30 Nov 2008 14:30:46 -0200:

> Is there any repo with binary rpm of KDE 4.1 for CentOS 5?

please search the archives of this list for "KDE 4".

Kai

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RE: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Jim Wildman

On Sun, 30 Nov 2008, John wrote:


And to add to that it will break your Contract with SAP!!!

JohnStanley


I always find the sentiments from the management of the original poster
interesting.  They are serious enough about their business to have spent
$$$ on SAP to run the business, then they want to cheap out on the support
contract on the OS.

Very short sighted.

--
Jim Wildman, CISSP, RHCE   [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.rossberry.com
"Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best
state, is a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one."
Thomas Paine
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Re: [CentOS] installation help

2008-11-30 Thread Lanny Marcus
On Sat, Nov 29, 2008 at 5:12 AM, Kevin Kempter
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm trying to instal CentOS on my new laptop but I've run into a few issues.
> It's a Dell Precision M6400 - I'm installing CentOS 5 (64bit) running KDE

You may want to try CentOS (32 bit). Suggest you try it with the
CentOS Live CD, first, to see if CentOS will work OK on your Laptop.
If not, suggest you use Fedora or Ubuntu or something that supports
more HW. GL

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RE: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread John

> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kenneth Burgener
> Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2008 11:52 AM
> To: CentOS mailing list
> Subject: Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to 
> RHEL machines?(RHN subscription expired)
> 
> Alexander Farber wrote:
> > Has anybody have been in a similar situation and figured
> > out a good way to make "yum update" on RHEL machines
> > to work against CentOS repositories?
> >   
> 
> The CentOS repositories are just a YUM repository.  Simply add the 
> '.repo' file to your '/etc/yum.repos.d/' folder.  You will 
> also need to 
> change the '$releasever' to just '5' as rhel uses 'server5'.  I just 
> tested this on a minimal install of RHEL 5.2.  Be warned that any 
> updated versions of the RPMs will be overridden by the CentOS RPMs, 
> which did include the kernel.  Yum is fairly flexible this way.  I am 
> not sure how flexible the rhel update plugin will be if you 
> eventually 
> renew your subscription and try to go back, though.

And to add to that it will break your Contract with SAP!!!

JohnStanley

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Re: [CentOS] USB or PCI dialup modem supported by Centos

2008-11-30 Thread Lanny Marcus
On Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 8:00 PM, Nicholas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Places like where I am, cell phone charges are very high if connection is
> for longer periods. I've got a USB Thundercom modem but could not get it
> connected to go online.
>
> A list of modems, (might be outdated) can be found at
> http://www.linuxsecurity.com.br/info/unix/winmodem.html
>
> Ramon Nieto wrote:
>>
>> That sounds cool, i haven't thought using a cell phone instead a modem and
>> a landline.

Our ADSL was down, for most of the past 3 days. The largest Cell phone
operator in Colombia (COMCEL) sells a HSDPA Wireless Modem (Huawei
E226), but, it can only work with one Windoze or MAC box, via USB
cable. If I could find something like that, that I could connect to
our IPCop Router/Firewall box, I'd go for it, without looking back.
The charge isn't bad: For unlimited 3G service, about USD$43.25 per
month, with a 12 month contract. The Modem costs USD$35.58.  Speed up
to 1.4Mbs, according to the sales guy, but the literature shows
"7.2Mb.  If and when WiMAX becomes available in our rural subdivision,
that's my preferred Internet connection. WiMAX is available in Cali,
but not where we live...
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Re: [CentOS] KDE4

2008-11-30 Thread Lee Perez

Martin Marques wrote:

Is there any repo with binary rpm of KDE 4.1 for CentOS 5?
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Hi Martin,

By Googling I found 2 instances concerning KDE and CentOS.  Here is the 
first discussion that I found dating back to Jan. 2008:


http://centos.org/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?viewmode=threaded&order=ASC&topic_id=12135&forum=37&move=next&topic_time=1200296331

And here is the second one data Oct. 2008:

http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2008-October/066735.html

Hope this helps.

Lee Perez
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Re: [CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines? (RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Kenneth Burgener

Alexander Farber wrote:

Has anybody have been in a similar situation and figured
out a good way to make "yum update" on RHEL machines
to work against CentOS repositories?
  


The CentOS repositories are just a YUM repository.  Simply add the 
'.repo' file to your '/etc/yum.repos.d/' folder.  You will also need to 
change the '$releasever' to just '5' as rhel uses 'server5'.  I just 
tested this on a minimal install of RHEL 5.2.  Be warned that any 
updated versions of the RPMs will be overridden by the CentOS RPMs, 
which did include the kernel.  Yum is fairly flexible this way.  I am 
not sure how flexible the rhel update plugin will be if you eventually 
renew your subscription and try to go back, though.


Kenneth
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[CentOS] KDE4

2008-11-30 Thread Martin Marques

Is there any repo with binary rpm of KDE 4.1 for CentOS 5?
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[CentOS] Installing CentOS security updates to RHEL machines? (RHN subscription expired)

2008-11-30 Thread Alexander Farber
Hello,

I hope my question is not annoying. I work as sysadmin
at a 400 users firm and we have around 20 CentOS 4/5
servers and VMs and CentOS is awesome, thank you!

However we have 4 important SAP-servers running RHEL5
and our RHN subscription has unforunately expired and
buying it again is not an option right now. Installing CentOS is
not an option too, because we'd have to pay for SAP-reinstall.

Has anybody have been in a similar situation and figured
out a good way to make "yum update" on RHEL machines
to work against CentOS repositories?

Regards
Alex
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Re: [CentOS] Apache, SELinux, and document root on a different partition

2008-11-30 Thread Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
On Sun, 2008-11-30 at 05:56 -0800, Kenneth Porter wrote:
> This works if I disable SELinux.

You forgot one important bit: the actual denials.

-- 
Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

PLEASE don't CC me; I'm already subscribed


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[CentOS] Apache, SELinux, and document root on a different partition

2008-11-30 Thread Kenneth Porter
I want to put the document root for an application on a separate paritition 
that has more space. When I try to configure this I can't access the files 
in the new location. I've got the SELinux attributes set on the directory 
and its files, so I'm thinking it's something about the parent path that 
SELinux doesn't like, but I don't know where that's handled.


My partition is mounted to /mnt/bigdisk2, and I put the app in the wbb3tmp 
subdirectory there:


[EMAIL PROTECTED] wbb3-tmp]# ls -Za
drwxr-xr-x  apache apache system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t .
drwxr-xr-x  root   root   system_u:object_r:file_t ..
-rw-r--r--  apache apache system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t 
WCFSetup.tar.gz

-rw-r--r--  apache apache system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t index.html
-rw-r--r--  apache apache system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t install.php
-rw-r--r--  apache apache system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t test.php
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wbb3-tmp]# pwd
/mnt/bigdisk2/wbb3-tmp


My Apache VirtualHost block contains this:

Alias /wbb3-tmp /mnt/bigdisk2/wbb3-tmp


   AllowOverride AuthConfig Options Limit
   Options +Indexes -ExecCGI +FollowSymLinks +MultiViews
   Order allow,deny
   Allow from all


This works if I disable SELinux.
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Re: [CentOS] Sendmail - STARTTLS not appear on one client

2008-11-30 Thread Ralph Angenendt
happymaster23 wrote:
> So I have opened telnet, connected via port 25 and writed "ehlo
> hostname" and then finded out, that there is missing STARTTLS. Is
> possible, that some bad configuration on client side (firewall,
> etc...) can cause this error including that this function is missing
> in printout of ehlo? 

Please *do not* show any configuration files when asking questions on a
mailing list. The bug hunters here will be unhappy if they get any hints on
what could be wrong in your setup.

> POP3S working good.

Yes, but that has nothing to do with sendmail. 

> >From Sendmail log (/var/log/maillog):
> 
> Nov 28 19:31:23 server sendmail[11163]: xxx:
> x.jizmorava.adsl-llu.static.bluetone.cz [85.207.xxx.211] did not
> issue MAIL/EXPN/VRFY/ETRN during connection to MTA

That doesn't have to do anything with the issue either.

Ralph

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