Caso a.- De que forma se puede hacer que mi centos detecte que se fue el
internet del proveedor principal y entre a funcionar el segundo proveedor
no es una configuración sencilla
usando iptables es relativamente fácil configurar dos gateway por defecto
aplicables a paquetes que cumplan
centos-boun...@centos.org schrieb am 04.07.2011 07:35:48:
Ray Van Dolson ra...@bludgeon.org
Gesendet von: centos-boun...@centos.org
04.07.2011 07:36
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Re: [CentOS] CentOS on the HP
On Saturday 02 Jul 2011 07:37:20 Frank Cox wrote:
On Fri, 01 Jul 2011 21:10:36 -0700
Craig White wrote:
Logs? /var/log/cups/error_log
Nothing of note.
How about after you do:
sudo cupsctl --debug-logging
and run with it for a while?
Settings? /etc/cups/printers.conf cupsd.conf
I'm been running two HP MicroServers as home-servers under CentOS-5.6
for 2 months, and have been very happy with their performance.
I'm wondering if there are many other MicroServer/CentOS users around?
I'm also running it for two days now, eagerly waiting for CentOS 6.0 to be
released so it
On 07/04/2011 06:28 AM, Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
oic, I've been using x64 exclusively to the point I overlooked the
entire half of the x32 tree in my pondering. What is the minimum
bandwidth required to host a mirror if not 25Mbps?
ideally 100mbps+ would be good, and a reasonable machine
On 7/4/11, Karanbir Singh mail-li...@karan.org wrote:
On 07/04/2011 06:28 AM, Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
oic, I've been using x64 exclusively to the point I overlooked the
entire half of the x32 tree in my pondering. What is the minimum
bandwidth required to host a mirror if not 25Mbps?
Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
Ouch, 25Mbps might had been a possible for me to contribute to the
project but 100Mbps is really hefty. I'll keep that in mind if we ever
get that much spare bandwidth to our private mirror and take it
public.
Once the new version fewer passes, current mirrors should
On 07/04/2011 01:12 PM, Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
Ouch, 25Mbps might had been a possible for me to contribute to the
project but 100Mbps is really hefty. I'll keep that in mind if we ever
get that much spare bandwidth to our private mirror and take it
public.
what part of the world are you
On Mon, 4 Jul 2011, Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Emmanuel Noobadmin centos.ad...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Centos|Windows Cross Platform File Managers
On 7/2/11, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:
I'm not a lover of M$ stuff, but the
On Mon, 4 Jul 2011, Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Emmanuel Noobadmin centos.ad...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Centos|Windows Cross Platform File Managers
On 7/2/11, Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net wrote:
I'm not a lover of M$ stuff, but the
On 7/4/2011 9:08 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Best possible move right now will be releasing .torrent as soon as
possible. This will distribute load on large number of home users. So
you can wait for .torrent, download it and set an upload limit to those
25Mbps. this will help immensely. I
On Mon, 4 Jul 2011, Keith Roberts wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Centos|Windows Cross Platform File Managers
Sorry for the double-post, but I'm having to send my emails
via my web hosting service SMTP server, as
You can also build the packages yourself and keep abreast of the mailing
list
On Sun, Jul 3, 2011 at 9:11 AM, John R. Dennison j...@gerdesas.com wrote:
On Sun, Jul 03, 2011 at 02:29:12PM +0200, Alain Péan wrote:
So 5.1.6 is the current package on CentOS, at least in base repo, I
don't
They have cheaper smaller UPS's that should be able to help you.
On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 7:05 AM, Timothy Murphy gayle...@eircom.net wrote:
I have a CentOS-5.6 remote server in a house in Italy,
where there are occasional thunder-storms.
There was one yesterday, when the electricity
went off
On Mon, 4 Jul 2011 09:55:18 +0100
Michael Gliwinski wrote:
Although you said CUPS wasn't updated so it should be unlikely, but may be
worth re-applying settings to enable sharing (on server) and browsing (on
client).
I actually removed and reinstalled the printers with system-config-printer
On 07/01/11 4:05 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
It seems to me that it should be possible
to have a simple, torch-battery operated
assuming 'torch' in this context means what us yank's call a flashlight,
and that a 'torch battery' is a C or D cell, lets see how much juice we
could get out of a
James Matthews wrote:
They have cheaper smaller UPS's that should be able to help you.
What UPS's are you suggesting?
(I didn't really follow your remark.)
--
Timothy Murphy
e-mail: gayleard /at/ eircom.net
tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366
s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity
On Tue, Jul 5, 2011 at 12:14 AM, Timothy Murphy gayle...@eircom.net wrote:
John R Pierce wrote:
Nb I didn't say, or mean to say, that I wanted to _make_ a flashlight
UPS.
My electronic skill is close to zero.
Well, that's your first problem - not knowing how todo it :)
I was simply
Timothy Murphy wrote:
I've been completely convinced that a UPS is what I need,
and am trying to source the APC UPS-BE350G, which was recommended.
I used APC Back-UPS CS BK500EI in a company that I service and with
their app (on Windows) I stretched lower and higher Volt boundary to
something
On 7/4/11 5:14 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
I've been completely convinced that a UPS is what I need,
and am trying to source the APC UPS-BE350G, which was recommended.
One thing that might not have been mentioned yet: somewhere around three years
out, a small UPS will cause an outage you
On 07/04/11 3:40 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
One thing that might not have been mentioned yet: somewhere around three years
out, a small UPS will cause an outage you wouldn't have otherwise when it
fails.
Generally replacing the battery will fix this, but by 6-10 years other
components will
Hook up ethernet, if its not POE, you plug it in, attach all the various usb
cables, vga, serial, ps/2, ect ect to the server and let it hang. When your
server is unresponsive just go ahead and hit the IP you assigned to your
Spider, and you get a full console, virtual media, mass storage
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 01:04:34PM -0700, PJ wrote:
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 12:49 PM, Marian Marinov m...@yuhu.biz wrote:
On Thursday 23 June 2011 22:41:50 PJ wrote:
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 12:31 PM, PJ pauljer...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 1:07 PM, Marian Marinov
Has anyone seen a supported hardware list on CentOS 6? I've been looking
around for the last few days; even looked at RedHat's site but didn't
find one.
I've got a Dell Inspiron 1501 with a Dell Wireless 1390 WLAN mini-card
in it and I'm trying to find out if it's going to have native driver
On Mon, Jul 04, 2011 at 10:30:08PM -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
Has anyone seen a supported hardware list on CentOS 6? I've been looking
around for the last few days; even looked at RedHat's site but didn't
find one.
I've got a Dell Inspiron 1501 with a Dell Wireless 1390 WLAN mini-card
in
On 7/4/2011 10:41 PM, Scott Robbins wrote:
On Mon, Jul 04, 2011 at 10:30:08PM -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
Has anyone seen a supported hardware list on CentOS 6? I've been looking
around for the last few days; even looked at RedHat's site but didn't
find one.
I've got a Dell Inspiron 1501 with
Hi,
I'm running CentOS 5 and running into a strange situation with symbolic
links that I have never seen or noticed before.
If I create the following symbolic link:
[eric@eric-laptop ~]$ pwd
/home/eric
[eric@eric-laptop ~]$ ls Mail
draft inbox queue sent trash
[eric@eric-laptop ~]$ ln -s
On 7/5/11, Eric B. ebe...@hotmail.com wrote:
The strange behaviour here is when listing the parent directory (..).
In this case, ls .. is listing the contents of Mail/ directory - not
/home/eric.
In the past, I always recall being able to use the parent identified
(..) to move up one level
Greetings,
On 7/5/11, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
On 7/4/11 5:14 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Generally replacing the battery will fix this, but by 6-10 years other
components will go too.
rant
I was running a shop with two servers as ltsp with about 100 thin
clients and a
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