El 19/07/2010 15:14, Carlos Sura escribió:
Hola, y entonces que hiciste? desinstalaste el firewall?, pusiste otro? o
modificaste alguna opcion?. Que firewall es?.
Saludos.
Date: Mon, 19 Jul 2010 10:01:23 +0100
From: reparaciononl...@gmail.com
To: centos-es@centos.org
Subject: Re:
buenos dias,
He terminado de hacer un proyecto usando linux centos y me ha dicho el jefe que
es necesario que documente este proyecto, ¿tendran algun ejemplo de como
documentarlo respetando las normas que existan?, es que trabajo para una
empresa.
gracias.
Hola,
Dependiendo del uso que le vayas a dar BackupPc puede ser una buena opción
por su sencillez y por la interfaz web.
Si lo que buscas es un soft potente, para manejar backups de millones de
ficheros, Bacula es mucho más eficiente (también más complejo de instalar y
configurar)
--
En si no existe una estructura o metodoogia para realizar eso, pero lo que
si hay que hacer es como dij tu jefe documentar todo el proceso que hiciste
.- Fuentes
.- Codigo
.- veneficios
.- etc ..
Vaya todo lo que te llevo para realizar tu proyecto.
Saludos !!
El 20 de julio de 2010 07:01, el
hola una buena receta es:
1.- servidor samba, 1 cuenta para cada usuario.
2.- montas el disco en red.
3.- instalas un programa que se llama synkron, este programa crea un espejo de
la maquina windows, bueno de las carpteas que escojas, en el tiempo que escojas
ejemplo cada 5 minutos.
4.-
Te recomendarias que lo estructures, desde lo primero a lo ultimo, que lleve un
orden logico.
Por otro lado, tambien depende mucho si es un documento tecnico, o un
documento para usuario, ya que no puedes describir los procesos y el
funcionamiento de la misma manera.
Carlos Sura.
Es ams que probable que en tu empresa ya tengan un protocolo de documentación,
te recomiendo que le preguntes que pasos tienes que seguir, no como hacerlo, si
no en que partes...por ejemplo
Información
Alcance
Objetivo
datos...
Anexos...
De: Carlos Sura
Si, como te dijeron, ya deben tener un formato para documentar, pero para que
te hagas a una idea... Te envio estos dos enlaces, tal vez te sirvan, no se de
que , ni para que es tu proyecto, pero para que veas nada mas la estructura de
documentacion.
Hola:
necesito de su ayuda o consejo actualmente tengo un fw con creado con ipfiltet
el cual tiene conexion a INET con un ISP1, se ha contratado un nuevo servicio
con otro ISP2. lo que se desea realizar es que ambos ISPs esten conectado a mi
firewall por diferentes NIC y la lan salga por
Hola.
Creo que lo que todos te estan estan diciendo es muy bueno y te ayuda a
construir tu documentación. Pero hay algo que no mencionan y es una seccion
donde hables de los problemas encontrados y las soluciones que les diste.
Por si alguien reproduce tu proyecto basado en tu documento, sepa que
Tengo 2 dns, un primario y el otro secundario, estoy tratando de sincronizarlos
pero no se sincronizan.
El dns primario tienen esta conf:
zone dominio.com.ar {
type master;
file /etc/bind/db.dominio.com.ar;
allow-query { any; };
allow-transfer { 70.34.20.37; };
};
Y el secundario tiene:
zone
Saludos compañeros listeros... tengo una duda que me gustaría me
ayudaran a resolver:
Tengo un servidor de correo Postfix funcionando y otro que estoy
preparando para utilizarlo como respaldo en caso de que el primero
falle, la idea es que todos los días se sincronicen para mantenerlos
iguales...
Estás cometiendo algunos errores: el archivo db.dominio.com.ar lo tienes que
crear tú y allí pones las máquinas que correspondan a tu dominio, por lo que yo
veo no tienes ninguna máquina que pueda resolver tu dns y, si está faltando
algo en la configuración eso depende de que es lo que quieres
On 20/07/10 03:08, Rob Kampen wrote:
Still no joy - I am at a loss to know what to check - if I boot a 194
kernel no sound, 164 kernel is fine - why the regression?
Same configs, same modules loaded but now no sound - what can I check to
determine problem and find a solution?
no errors in
On Mon, 19 Jul 2010, Frank Cox wrote:
It may yet be too early to get a definite answer about this, but I'm
wondering what the status of the formerly patented bytecode interpreter
in freetype will be in RHEL/Centos 6 and possibly future updates to
RHEL/Centos 5.
CentOS just rebuilds sources
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 20/07/2010 02:17, Markus Falb wrote:
#$ setfacl -m u:mf:r bla
#$ getfacl bla
...
It is readable by mf like intended.
#$ chmod go-rwx bla
...
It is not readable no more by mf which was not intended.
Obviously the mask:: is cleared, but why
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
I want to add a sleep() to a module. It tells me it can't find time.h;
if I tell it /usr/include/time.h, it gives me a ton of errors (I *have*
put the #include just above where I call sleep, not up at the top).
Any clues as to what I'm doing wrong? With kernel
On Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 11:41:07AM -0400, Fred Wittekind wrote:
Two web servers, both virtualized with CentOS Xen servers as host
(residing on two different physical servers).
GFS used to store home directories containing web document roots.
Shared block device used by GFS is an ISCSI
Hi all.
I have uploaded a PDF and DVI version of the Kickstart
manual for anyone to download and use.
I created this for my own personal use when learning to
write kickstart files.
You can grab the bits from here:
http://www.karsites.net/centos/anyuser/kickstart-PDF-manual.php
Feedback or
James Pearson wrote:
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
I want to add a sleep() to a module. It tells me it can't find time.h;
if I tell it /usr/include/time.h, it gives me a ton of errors (I
*have*
put the #include just above where I call sleep, not up at the top).
Any clues as to what I'm doing
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 10:13 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:
Hi all.
I have uploaded a PDF and DVI version of the Kickstart
manual for anyone to download and use.
I created this for my own personal use when learning to
write kickstart files.
You can grab the bits from here:
I'm configuring some monitoring for a particular java/tomcat
application. We have noticed the occasional Cannot allocate memory
error. When this occurs apache still seems to return a 200 OK
status code. Anyone know how to configure this so that when java has
an error, apache will also return
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 2:55 AM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:
On 20/07/10 03:08, Rob Kampen wrote:
Still no joy - I am at a loss to know what to check - if I boot a 194
kernel no sound, 164 kernel is fine - why the regression?
Same configs, same modules loaded but now no sound - what
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 06:24 -0400, R P Herrold wrote:
While this may induce a reluctance to change matters too
much, a closer to the 'leaf node' package such as freetype may
be 'doable' if you ask, and as I recall, RFE it in their
Bugzilla;
Upon checking the redhat bugzilla, I found that
On Tue, 20 Jul 2010, Kwan Lowe wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Kwan Lowe kwan.l...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Kickstart User Guide in PDF DVI format
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 10:13 AM, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:
Hi all.
I have uploaded a PDF and
Ned Slider wrote:
On 20/07/10 03:08, Rob Kampen wrote:
Still no joy - I am at a loss to know what to check - if I boot a 194
kernel no sound, 164 kernel is fine - why the regression?
Same configs, same modules loaded but now no sound - what can I check to
determine problem and
Akemi Yagi wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 2:55 AM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:
On 20/07/10 03:08, Rob Kampen wrote:
Still no joy - I am at a loss to know what to check - if I boot a 194
kernel no sound, 164 kernel is fine - why the regression?
Same
On Tue, 20 Jul 2010, Frank Cox wrote:
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 06:24 -0400, R P Herrold wrote:
While this may induce a reluctance to change matters too
much, a closer to the 'leaf node' package such as freetype may
be 'doable' if you ask, and as I recall, RFE it in their
Bugzilla;
Upon
In the last month - definitely after going to 5.5 - I've tried to fsck a
drive (340 days, or some such, unchecked). 960G RAID 5, I *think*,
possibly serial port attachment to a JetStore RAID array. Every time I
try, it gets to 70.0%, and stops. As in, I left it run last night, having
started it
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:57 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Note that my manager tried to run one on another server, also attached to
a JetStore, and it also stopped at the exact same point. This has never
happened before, and fsck has handled these in the past.
Anyone seen anything like this,
On 07/20/2010 10:57 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
In the last month - definitely after going to 5.5 - I've tried to fsck a
drive (340 days, or some such, unchecked). 960G RAID 5, I *think*,
possibly serial port attachment to a JetStore RAID array. Every time I
try, it gets to 70.0%, and stops.
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 13:26 -0400, R P Herrold wrote:
File the bug on that product [rhel 6/beta] as well, and
explain why it would be the right thing to do, and what the
needed fix are, (preferably with patches), and why taht is a
low risk, high gain decision, and it will flow into CentOS
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 11:10:45AM -0700, Benjamin Franz wrote:
I've seen e2fsck hang on large arrays (terabyte range) before,
particularly if you have lots of hard links. It's a bug in fsck.
I've see that too. Glad it's not just on my systems ... sorta.
Whit
Kwan Lowe wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 1:57 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Note that my manager tried to run one on another server, also attached
to
a JetStore, and it also stopped at the exact same point. This has never
happened before, and fsck has handled these in the past.
Anyone seen
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks, but I
removed one just before the install. Now when I boot it, it stops and
outputs a message complaining about the missing disk and I have to hit F1 to
get it to continue booting.
Is there some bios setting that is causing
Benjamin Franz wrote:
On 07/20/2010 10:57 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
In the last month - definitely after going to 5.5 - I've tried to fsck a
drive (340 days, or some such, unchecked). 960G RAID 5, I *think*,
possibly serial port attachment to a JetStore RAID array. Every time I
try, it gets
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks, but I
removed one just before the install. Now when I boot it, it stops and
outputs a message complaining about the missing disk and I have to hit F1 to
get it to continue booting.
Is there some bios setting that is
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 08:56:16 -1000 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks, but I
removed one just before the install. Now when I boot it, it stops and
outputs a message complaining about the missing disk and I
Robert Heller wrote:
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 08:56:16 -1000 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks,
but I removed one just before the install. Now when I boot it, it stops
and
outputs a message complaining about the
On 07/20/2010 10:26 AM, R P Herrold wrote:
Reading that and the companion mentioned in the last comment,
my takeaway is that fonts in fedora are (or were) bad [I trust
m miller's judgment here, and have for a long time, as he is
a thoughtful analyst]
Which fonts? All of the fonts I use on
This is not a Dell-specific BIOS hack. Dear child, ask your folks about
PCs. I think it was only this decade that PCs would actually boot
*without* a keyboard. EVERY PC EVER MADE before would not.
Nah! Every BIOS since I remember (at least from 1990) had a choice on
the first page, Standard
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 03:31:48PM -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
This is not a Dell-specific BIOS hack. Dear child, ask your folks about
PCs. I think it was only this decade that PCs would actually boot
This decade being the 2010s? :-)
*without* a keyboard. EVERY PC EVER MADE before would
On Tuesday, July 20, 2010 02:56:16 pm Dave wrote:
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks, but I
removed one just before the install. Now when I boot it, it stops and
outputs a message complaining about the missing disk and I have to hit F1 to
get it to continue
This is not a Dell-specific BIOS hack. Dear child, ask your folks about
PCs. I think it was only this decade that PCs would actually boot
*without* a keyboard. EVERY PC EVER MADE before would not.
Nah! Every BIOS since I remember (at least from 1990) had a choice on
the first page,
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 12:46 -0700, Gordon Messmer wrote:
Which fonts? All of the fonts I use on Fedora (pretty much all the
defaults) look significantly better than a default Windows desktop,
and
better than OS X, IMO.
See the discussion here:
On Tuesday, July 20, 2010 03:50:39 pm Stephen Harris wrote:
I'm sure sufficient googling would find even older examples.
Yep, especially single-board computers (typically ISA capable, but also capable
of not being in a slot (like an Advantech PCA-6145 i486 board used in lots of
embedded PC
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 15:31 -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Robert Heller wrote:
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 08:56:16 -1000 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks,
but I removed one just before the install. Now when I
On Tue, 20 Jul 2010, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 07/20/2010 10:26 AM, R P Herrold wrote:
Reading that and the companion mentioned in the last comment,
my takeaway is that fonts in fedora are (or were) bad [I trust
m miller's judgment here, and have for a long time, as he is
a thoughtful
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 20:49:23 +0100 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
This is not a Dell-specific BIOS hack. Dear child, ask your folks about
PCs. I think it was only this decade that PCs would actually boot
*without* a keyboard. EVERY PC EVER MADE before would not.
Nah!
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 15:31:48 -0400 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
Robert Heller wrote:
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 08:56:16 -1000 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks,
but I removed one just before
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 15:50:34 -0400 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
On Tuesday, July 20, 2010 02:56:16 pm Dave wrote:
I just installed centos on a Dell that used to have 2 internal disks, but I
removed one just before the install. Now when I boot it, it stops and
outputs a
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 16:26 -0400, Robert Heller wrote:
A PowerEdge with plain old SATA disks will complain about a missing disk
as well -- we had a disk die and everytime it booted while we waited for
the replacement it would stop complaining that the disk was missing (we
had software
On 07/20/2010 01:06 PM, R P Herrold wrote:
read the bugs -- I just summarised, and for the reasons stated
in the prior post
I did. The bug you linked to said nothing about any specific font. It
referenced another bug in RH Bugzilla where Matthew Miller complained
that freetype with BCI
On 07/20/2010 12:57 PM, Frank Cox wrote:
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 12:46 -0700, Gordon Messmer wrote:
Which fonts? All of the fonts I use on Fedora (pretty much all the
defaults) look significantly better than a default Windows desktop,
and
better than OS X, IMO.
See the discussion here:
Hi all,
I'm new to LDAP and want to use nss_ldap (version 253) against a centos
directory server (version 8.1.0) running on the same host. The great
mystery is, that as root everything works find, but as any other local
user, it does not:
root$ getent passwd
[...]
ldap:x:55:55:LDAP
On Mon, July 19, 2010 16:01, James Hogarth wrote:
Sent from Android mobile
-- Forwarded message --
From: James Hogarth james.hoga...@gmail.com
Date: 19 Jul 2010 21:00
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Problem with yum
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
With the kernel logging
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 9:50 AM, Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu wrote:
The answer depends on what kind of Dell this is. Is it a PowerEdge server?
Some sort of embedded RAID controller (PowerEdge and Precision workstations
both have those)? More information required to fully answer.
Precision
Thanks for all the discussion, but keyboard is not the issue.
I guess I should edit the bios settings and look for a way to tell it hey,
you've only got one disk now, be happy.
best,
Dave
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 at 11:34am, Dave wrote
Thanks for all the discussion, but keyboard is not the issue.
I guess I should edit the bios settings and look for a way to tell it hey,
you've only got one disk now, be happy.
All Dell desktops I've dealt with (including the Precision T3400 I use
Hi We use AoE disks for some of our systems. Currently, a 15.65Tb filesystem
we have is full, I then extended the LVM by a further 4Tb but resize4fs could
not handle a filesystem over 16Tb (CentOS 5.5). I then reduced the lvm by the
same amount, and attempted to create a new LV, but get this
Stephen Harris wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 03:31:48PM -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
This is not a Dell-specific BIOS hack. Dear child, ask your folks about
PCs. I think it was only this decade that PCs would actually boot
This decade being the 2010s? :-)
The calendar is '1' based. 2010
Hello
after several days of searching, I have not found a definitive answer to the
problem samba Migrating from 3.0.x to 3.3.x. (Migrating from 3.0.x to 3.3.x
Can Fail to Update passdb.tdb Correctly (bug # 6195) .
passdb.tdb break occurs in the file where the new samba starts.
Any suggestions
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with root being the owner.
The directory is for the firewall package for the server, so it is not
something malicious. Checking some other systems, they also have this
Ski Dawg wrote:
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with root being the owner.
The directory is for the firewall package for the server, so it is not
something malicious. Checking some other systems, they
On 07/20/10 4:54 PM, Larry Brower wrote:
Ski Dawg wrote:
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with root being the owner.
The directory is for the firewall package for the server, so it is not
something
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 17:38:32 -0400 (EDT) CentOS mailing list
centos@centos.org wrote:
On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 at 11:34am, Dave wrote
Thanks for all the discussion, but keyboard is not the issue.
I guess I should edit the bios settings and look for a way to tell it hey,
you've only got
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 16:40:25 -0400 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 16:26 -0400, Robert Heller wrote:
A PowerEdge with plain old SATA disks will complain about a missing disk
as well -- we had a disk die and everytime it booted while we waited for
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 16:57:11 -0700 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
On 07/20/10 4:54 PM, Larry Brower wrote:
Ski Dawg wrote:
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with root being the
Robert Heller wrote:
At Tue, 20 Jul 2010 16:57:11 -0700 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
On 07/20/10 4:54 PM, Larry Brower wrote:
Ski Dawg wrote:
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with
On Mon, Mar 08, 2010 at 07:34:14AM -0700, Warren Young wrote:
On 3/6/2010 4:04 PM, nate wrote:
if you can upload source code,
you can upload a precompiled binary
True, but most attacks are automated, and try to attack as wide a range
of machines as possible.
If I were to write a bit
On 07/20/2010 05:17 PM, Robert Heller wrote:
um... on a directory, the X bit means you can LS the contents of the
directory. of course, root ignores this anyways and overrides it.
Note that execute access is only needed on a directory if you want to
list its contents (eg ls). If you know
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 11:34:17AM -1000, Dave wrote:
Thanks for all the discussion, but keyboard is not the issue.
Of course it isn't. It's probably that you've configured the BIOS
to mirror the two disks, and with one disk missing it's bitching
and moaning at you.
The whole keyboard chatter
I've HP 520 laptop. I installed CentOS 5.5 a few days back. The laptop has
some weird placing of touchpad that is frustrating me while typing.
Please advise me how to disable touchpad on CentOS 5.5.
--
Regards,
- samoak.
___
CentOS mailing list
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 06:26:15PM -0400, Bob McConnell wrote:
Stephen Harris wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 03:31:48PM -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
This is not a Dell-specific BIOS hack. Dear child, ask your folks about
PCs. I think it was only this decade that PCs would actually boot
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 05:45:36PM -0600, Ski Dawg wrote:
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with root being the owner.
Heheheheh. That machine is so broken. Even 0700 would be unbelievably
broken
The
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 07:36:17PM -0700, Gordon Messmer wrote:
You and John are both incorrect. Read access is sufficient to get a
list of files and directories in a given directory. The execute bit on
a directory is required to access the directory's contents. If a
directory is 'rw-'
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 08:30:48PM -0700, Keith Keller wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 11:20:57PM -0400, Stephen Harris wrote:
Basically nothing non-root running will work properly on these machines.
And if everything is designed to run as root then the architect has
shown other issues.
On Tue, 2010-07-20 at 20:08 -0400, Robert Heller wrote:
Which makes me wonder why would you ever shut it down in the first
place? I sure would not wait a week on a disk replacement much less
more than 24 hours.
First of all WD was not going to send us a new disk unless we sent the
old
OK I believe I've resolved it. I knew I was in test mode, but wasn't
expecting those messages. Running the command out of test mode just works.
Should have tried that earlier, never mind I'll know next time.
Phil.
___
CentOS mailing list
Well, they would not even let you pay for it and overnight it to you
then send the old one back for another drive so you could break even? It's
an utmost priority if you have all common hardware to keep replacement disks
on site no matter who you work for or company.
Which is why you'll
On 07/20/2010 08:30 PM, Keith Keller wrote:
IOW, ls will work fine, but ls -l will not. (To be specific, a plain
old /bin/ls will work fine. If you have any ls options that need to read
the contents of the directory, like -l or -F, it'll b0rk.)
Well, to be *specific*, reading the contents
On 07/20/2010 08:20 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 05:45:36PM -0600, Ski Dawg wrote:
Hello all,
Today, I ran across a directory in /etc/ on one of our servers whose
permissions where set to 600 (drw---) with root being the owner.
Heheheheh. That machine is so broken.
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