Thanks Karanbir!
It's bug #0002284. I hope you can do a lot ;)
- Original Message -
From: "Karanbir Singh"
To: "CentOS mailing list"
Subject: Re: [CentOS] GNBD and DRBD kernel mods
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2007 02:35:17 +0100
Bart wrote:
>> What is it in the Plus kernel that you need and can
> Message: 26
> Date: Fri, 17 Aug 2007 20:56:38 -0400 (EDT)
> From: Scott Ehrlich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [CentOS] Help with backups
> To: centos@centos.org
> Message-ID:
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
>
> I've got a Redhat 5 server
Bart wrote:
What is it in the Plus kernel that you need and cant be packaged
into a kmod itself ?
Ehm, nothing...
I just need a kernel that both has a kmod-drbd and kmod-gnbd. I don't believe
that this is the case for the current Plus kernel.
This is my problem:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] log]# yum i
Noel Sanchez wrote:
>> Que te pasa con sendmail
>> ___
If you haven't already, take a look at ORDB lookups done with Sendmail.
This should be the first level of a multi-layer anti-spam approach for
any Sendmail installation.
Custom Rolled IP Tables Firewall Ruleset
On 8/20/07, Lanny Marcus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Mark: Below are the last 4 lines of dmesg on my daughters box. I had the
> CentOS 5.0 Install DVD in the drive and the DVD icon was visible on the
> desktop, but, it had not automounted the DVD. I did not mount the DVD
> manually. Lanny
>
>
>
Kai Schaetzl spake the following on 8/20/2007 11:31 AM:
> Tom Brown wrote on Mon, 20 Aug 2007 17:39:54 +0100:
>
>> DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=smtp,Addr=127.0.0.1, Name=MTA')dnl
>
> This is what you have to remove from the mc file, yes. That is what *I*
> do. But I think it can be made easier for the a
SAS all the way. Think of it as fibre channel, that you can afford.
You can also mix SATA and SAS disks so really the biggest difference
between SATA II and a SAS is the cost of the host bus adapter (HBA).
I don't have personal experience with external storage for SAS
(expanders) though I haven'
centos spake the following on 8/20/2007 4:10 AM:
>
> Centos 4 kernel's base version is 2.6.9 and Centos 5 kernel's base
> version is 2.6.18.
> and I couldn't find anything in Centos mirror sites and repository ( I
> really need kernel version 2.6.18. )
>
> Downloaded and installed kernel 2.16.18
>What is it in the Plus kernel that you need and cant be packaged
>into a kmod itself ?
Ehm, nothing...
I just need a kernel that both has a kmod-drbd and kmod-gnbd. I don't believe
that this is the case for the current Plus kernel.
This is my problem:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] log]# yum install kmod-
> Que te pasa con sendmail
> ___
> Orlando Rubino Gala
>Administración UONet
>Email = [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Email = [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Fax = 1(360) 351 - 0681
> Phone = 632138
>
>
>
>
On Mon Aug 20, 2007 04:57PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 04:54:11PM -0400, Trey Sizemore wrote:
> > I just did an install of CentOS 5 on one of my machines. However, when
> > I try to use the 'service' command (such as 'service httpd start') I get
> > an error that the service
On Monday, August 20, 2007 10:56 PM +0200 Ralph Angenendt
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Trey Sizemore wrote:
I just did an install of CentOS 5 on one of my machines. However, when
I try to use the 'service' command (such as 'service httpd start') I get
an error that the service command is not fo
Bart wrote:
Well, that explains. Can you start shipping kmod-gndb in the CentOSPlus kernels?
What is it in the Plus kernel that you need and cant be packaged into a kmod
itself ?
--
Karanbir Singh : http://www.karan.org/ : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___
Cen
On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 04:54:11PM -0400, Trey Sizemore wrote:
> I just did an install of CentOS 5 on one of my machines. However, when
> I try to use the 'service' command (such as 'service httpd start') I get
> an error that the service command is not found.
>
> Why would that be? Where does t
Trey Sizemore wrote:
> I just did an install of CentOS 5 on one of my machines. However, when
> I try to use the 'service' command (such as 'service httpd start') I get
> an error that the service command is not found.
It's "su -", not just "su" - see the su and the bash man pages for an
explanat
I just did an install of CentOS 5 on one of my machines. However, when
I try to use the 'service' command (such as 'service httpd start') I get
an error that the service command is not found.
Why would that be? Where does this command come from? I can launch
the services just fine using the res
Que te pasa con sendmail
___
Orlando Rubino Gala
Administración UONet
Email = [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Email = [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fax = 1(360) 351 - 0681
Phone = 632138
- Original Message -
F
A few more details about the failure mode might get you better help -
"didn't work as expected" is not very descriptive. Did you try to
reboot? What happened? What else have you tried? Can you boot from
rescue media? What is currently in /boot/...?
The answer to the last question is "nothing
I have a Dell PowerEdge 2950 and am looking to add more storage. I know a lot
of factors can go into the type of answer given, but for present and future
technology planning, should I look for a rack of SATA, SCSI, or fibre channel
drives?Maybe I'm dating myself with fibre channel, and pos
>http://mirror.centos.org/centos/5/updates/i386/RPMS/
>i can see the kmod-gnbd for 2.6.18-8.1.8 fine there
It's not one of both kmod's, it's the combination ;) I can't find a kernel that
has both.
>Also, i dont seem to recall us ever shipping kmod-gnbd for the
>CentOSPlus kernels.
Well, that e
Bart wrote:
Hmm, I have to disagree:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/5/updates/i386/RPMS/
i can see the kmod-gnbd for 2.6.18-8.1.8 fine there
Also, i dont seem to recall us ever shipping kmod-gnbd for the CentOSPlus
kernels.
- KB
--
Karanbir Singh : http://www.karan.org/ : [EMAIL PROTECTED
On Mon, 2007-08-20 at 12:30 -0700, John R Pierce wrote:
> Alfred von Campe wrote:
> > So I installed a second drive in my system today, and instead of
> > typing "mkfs.ext3 /dev/sda1" I did a "mkfs.ext3 /dev/hda1".
> > Fortunately, that was just my /boot partition. I thought I could
> just
> >
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ross S. W. Walker
> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2007 3:40 PM
> To: CentOS mailing list
> Subject: RE: [CentOS] HELP, I accidentally initialized my
> /boot partition
>
> > -Original Message-
> > F
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alfred von Campe
> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2007 3:24 PM
> To: CentOS mailing list
> Subject: [CentOS] HELP, I accidentally initialized my /boot partition
>
> So I installed a second drive in my system
Alfred von Campe wrote:
So I installed a second drive in my system today, and instead of
typing "mkfs.ext3 /dev/sda1" I did a "mkfs.ext3 /dev/hda1".
Fortunately, that was just my /boot partition. I thought I could just
copy the contents from the /boot partition from another system, but
that
So I installed a second drive in my system today, and instead of
typing "mkfs.ext3 /dev/sda1" I did a "mkfs.ext3 /dev/hda1".
Fortunately, that was just my /boot partition. I thought I could
just copy the contents from the /boot partition from another system,
but that didn't work as expect
Hi Everyone,
I have, for the first time, installed and minimally configured a cvs
server on a CentOS 5 box. I followed a "how to" to do the initial
configuration, so I'm sure I haven't done anything wrond (according to
the "how to", anyway). But, I keep getting this error:
$ CVSROOT=:pserver:[E
On 19 August 2007, "Mark Hull-Richter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there any way to read what's on this DVD (so I can back -up the
> files again, hopefully with better results)?
>
> Secondary related question: I noticed that my CentOS boot DVD does
> not automount when I put it in either dri
Tom Brown wrote on Mon, 20 Aug 2007 17:39:54 +0100:
> DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=smtp,Addr=127.0.0.1, Name=MTA')dnl
This is what you have to remove from the mc file, yes. That is what *I*
do. But I think it can be made easier for the average user. At least from
older SuSE systems I know that this can
On 19 August 2007, Robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would suspect IDE cable, DVD drive, P/S, motherboard (assuming an
> on-board IDE channel) in that order. Don't overlook the drive's power
> connector, either.
Robert: The DVD drive in my daughters box is a TEAC (which I've been
told are
Hmm, I have to disagree:
First check the current kernelversion:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# uname -a
Linux bartje 2.6.18-8.1.8.el5.centos.plus #1 SMP Mon Jul 16 08:49:50 EDT 2007
i686 athlon i386 GNU/Linux
Check for kmod-drbd:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# modprobe drbd
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# lsmod | grep drbd
On 8/19/07, Robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would suspect IDE cable, DVD drive, P/S, motherboard (assuming an
> on-board IDE channel) in that order. Don't overlook the drive's power
> connector, either.
>
I'll check out the cable when I get a chance, but most of the rest of
the hardware is r
On Mon, 2007-08-20 at 13:21 -0400, Stephen Harris wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 10:05:54AM -0700, Craig White wrote:
> > I have been running as root and if you notice, I did have a 'p'
>
> That you were running as root wasn't clear from your message (different
> people use different prompts).
On 19 August 2007, "Mark Hull-Richter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there any way to read what's on this DVD (so I can back -up the
> files again, hopefully with better results)?
>
> Secondary related question: I noticed that my CentOS boot DVD does
> not automount when I put it in either dri
On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 10:05:54AM -0700, Craig White wrote:
> I have been running as root and if you notice, I did have a 'p'
That you were running as root wasn't clear from your message (different
people use different prompts). I knew you used a "p" which is why I
said _rerun_ the command.
> #
I have been running as root and if you notice, I did have a 'p'
option
# netstat -tlpn |grep 46929
tcp0 0 0.0.0.0:46929 0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN -
and thus the process isn't displayed.
Likewise (and I tried this with lsof before posting to the list)...
# lsof |grep 4
If you run that netstat command as root, then the last column should
show which process/PID is listening on that port. (that is what the '-p'
option to netstat tells you)
lsof is handy for this as well.
Mike
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On B
On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 09:46:21AM -0700, Craig White wrote:
> results from 'netstat -tlpn' gives me a line...
>
> tcp0 0 0.0.0.0:46929 0.0.0.0:*
> LISTEN -
Rerun the command as root (eg under sudo). Then the "p" option will tell
you what process is listening.
eg
results from 'netstat -tlpn' gives me a line...
tcp0 0 0.0.0.0:46929 0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN -
googling for port 46929 doesn't turn up anything and so I don't have a
clue what process this belongs to.
Do I have to start capturing activity on this port or is there a bette
That's at least the default in CentOS 5, I don't remember how CentOS 4
handled this. You have to put a variable in /etc/sysconfig/sendmail, but I
don't know which one as I always compile my own sendmail.cf.
dnl # The following causes sendmail to only listen on the IPv4 loopback
address
Kenneth Porter wrote:
--On Monday, August 20, 2007 11:11 AM -0500 Les Mikesell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yes, unfortunately you have to choose between being able to keep much
more history online with no need to install a client agent and being able
to save windows metadata. Bacula also has b
--On Monday, August 20, 2007 10:51 AM -0500 Les Mikesell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Even better, use backuppc: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/ which can use
tar, smb, or rsync to perform the backups, then uses compression and
hardlinking to eliminate duplication and keep about 10x the backup
h
Steve Rigler wrote on Mon, 20 Aug 2007 10:56:28 -0500:
> In your case, I'd bet that sendmail
> is probably only configured to listen on lo.
That's at least the default in CentOS 5, I don't remember how CentOS 4
handled this. You have to put a variable in /etc/sysconfig/sendmail, but I
don't kno
--On Monday, August 20, 2007 11:11 AM -0500 Les Mikesell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yes, unfortunately you have to choose between being able to keep much
more history online with no need to install a client agent and being able
to save windows metadata. Bacula also has better integration for t
I've got a Redhat 5 server running Samba, and two dualboot CentOS 5
workstations.
Until we get a better backup strategy, I'm backing up the workstations
to the server via mounting a shared samba drive to /mnt.
Trying tar cvf /mnt/samba_share/backup.tar /* eventually yields
backing up /mnt,
Kenneth Porter wrote:
--On Monday, August 20, 2007 10:51 AM -0500 Les Mikesell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Even better, use backuppc: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/ which can use
tar, smb, or rsync to perform the backups, then uses compression and
hardlinking to eliminate duplication and keep
On Mon, 2007-08-20 at 10:52 -0500, Erick Perez wrote:
> Hi, My centos 4.4 fully updated is going to be used as a mail server.
> However I did something or i didn't do something and I need some assistance.
> You see, If I run sendmail in port 25, i can telnet localhost 25 fine.
> but if I telnet the
Hi, My centos 4.4 fully updated is going to be used as a mail server.
However I did something or i didn't do something and I need some assistance.
You see, If I run sendmail in port 25, i can telnet localhost 25 fine.
but if I telnet the machine from another machine, the port is refuse.
So i tested
Ken Price wrote:
What do people suggest?
Thanks.
Scott
Scott,
RSYNC!
For info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rsync
Homepage: http://rsync.samba.org/
Clients available for Win32 as well. This is an easy, tried-and-true
method of backing up a workstation (or other servers) to a centr
Before you go throwing together a solution, you need to check the laws
in your state and country. Here in the US there are laws that say how
patient data can be stored. There are compliant software packages for
Dr's and Hospitals that include everything they need including stuff
like medical bil
What do people suggest?
Thanks.
Scott
Scott,
RSYNC!
For info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rsync
Homepage: http://rsync.samba.org/
Clients available for Win32 as well. This is an easy, tried-and-true
method of backing up a workstation (or other servers) to a central
server. RSY
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007, Sophana wrote:
David Mackintosh a écrit :
I've followed a set of instructions I found on
http://www.linuxtopia.org/online_books/centos_linux_guides/centos_enterprise_linux_sysadmin_guide/ch-diskless.htmli
which describes using system-config-netboot to set up PXE booting.
Lanny Marcus wrote:
This is very OT. If list readers can point me in the right direction, to
other mailing lists, or web sites for recommended databases, that will
be much appreciated!
My wife's doctor wants to move records, for approximately 6000 patients
(over a 12 year period), from paper (18
Lanny Marcus wrote:
> This is very OT. If list readers can point me in the right direction, to
> other mailing lists, or web sites for recommended databases, that will
> be much appreciated!
http://www.care2x.org/
take a look at that, I've seen smallish Private practices to 400 bed
hospitals runn
On Sat, 2007-08-18 at 13:14 -0500, Scott Moseman wrote:
> An interesting idea. How would the install work? If you boot from
> DVD with the USB drive installed, will it see the drive and make it an
> option for the install destination?
Tried this a while back with an earlier release of CentOS4 an
Before you go throwing together a solution, you need to check the laws
in your state and country. Here in the US there are laws that say how
patient data can be stored. There are compliant software packages for
Dr's and Hospitals that include everything they need including stuff
like medical bill
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lanny Marcus
> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2007 7:49 AM
> To: CentOS Mailing List
> Subject: [CentOS] OT: Suggestions for database for physicians
> patientrecords?
>
> This is very OT. If list readers ca
On Mon, 2007-08-20 at 06:48 -0500, Lanny Marcus wrote:
> This is very OT. If list readers can point me in the right direction, to
> other mailing lists, or web sites for recommended databases, that will
> be much appreciated!
>
> My wife's doctor wants to move records, for approximately 6000 patie
I notice that CentOS 5 only blanks out my screen, but doesn't set it to
powersaving mode (the power LED stays blue instead of going yellow). I
think I saw this on CentOS 4 as well, but I had a CentOS 4 console machine
only for a short time back then and after that only remotely used ones.
Now I
If you want to take this offline I'll chat with you further. However, if it's
just for in office use I'd look at using CentOS, postgresql (not MYSQL), php,
and APACHE. It wouldn't be very hard to throw together an app that would do
what you want that is web based.
Of course if he wants a fat
This is very OT. If list readers can point me in the right direction, to
other mailing lists, or web sites for recommended databases, that will
be much appreciated!
My wife's doctor wants to move records, for approximately 6000 patients
(over a 12 year period), from paper (18th century) to a datab
Centos 4 kernel's base version is 2.6.9 and Centos 5 kernel's base
version is 2.6.18.
and I couldn't find anything in Centos mirror sites and repository ( I
really need kernel version 2.6.18. )
Downloaded and installed kernel 2.16.18 for version 5, and installed it
on Centos 4, it is ok but
David Hrbáč wrote:
> Hi,
> I guess, net-snmp should have dependency set to the latest net-snmp-libs.
> Regards,
> David
I agree, however we do not make technical changes to SPEC files. This
is an upstream issue.
Thanks,
Johnny Hughes
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 18/08/07 01:26 -0500, Johnny Hughes wrote:
beast wrote:
On 15/08/07 17:38 -0400, Phil Schaffner wrote:
On Wed, 2007-08-15 at 20:23 +0700, beast wrote:
On 14/08/07 07:26 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>one of the files /linuxrc should list what modules get loaded on start.
Thanks for the h
On 16/08/07 10:12 -0400, Phil Schaffner wrote:
For CentOS5 the r8169.ko module is in modules.cgz and the following
entries are found in the text files:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] modules]# grep r8169 module-info modules.alias modules.dep
module-info:r8169
modules.alias:alias pci:v1737d1032sv*sd00
On Friday 17 August 2007 22:12:57 Scott Ehrlich wrote:
> Now, using fdisk, I was reminded of being given superblocks. Although I
> haven't used data recovery techniques using superblocks, is there a way to
> retrieve the superblock numbers the OS has assigned to a partition?
>
sudo dumpe2fs /dev
David Mackintosh a écrit :
> Hi folks,
>
> I've followed a set of instructions I found on
> http://www.linuxtopia.org/online_books/centos_linux_guides/centos_enterprise_linux_sysadmin_guide/ch-diskless.htmli
> which describes using system-config-netboot to set up PXE booting.
>
> I used a CentOS-
Hi,
I guess, net-snmp should have dependency set to the latest net-snmp-libs.
Regards,
David
[root@ ~]# yum update net-snmp
Loading "fastestmirror" plugin
Setting up Update Process
Setting up repositories
Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile
Reading repository metadata in from local files
Re
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