Re: [CentOS] Nvidia-detect error with on HP Z4 (CentOS 6.9)

2018-04-13 Thread Danny Smit
On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 8:50 PM, Phil Perry wrote: > > Your device is supported: > > $ nvidia-detect -l | grep -i 1cb2 > [10de:1cb2] NVIDIA Corporation GP107GL [Quadro P600] > > Support was added in the 375.39 NVIDIA driver. I assume the driver works as > expected for you? Yes

Re: [CentOS] Nvidia-detect error with on HP Z4 (CentOS 6.9)

2018-04-13 Thread Phil Perry
On 13/04/18 16:21, Danny Smit wrote: Hi all, Hi Danny, I'm the author of nvidia-detect. I'm testing an installation of nvidia drivers on a HP Z4 workstation (nvidia Quadro P600) with CentOS 6.9. Running nvidia-detect with this setup gives the following output: # nvidia-detect Error

[CentOS] Nvidia-detect error with on HP Z4 (CentOS 6.9)

2018-04-13 Thread Danny Smit
Hi all, I'm testing an installation of nvidia drivers on a HP Z4 workstation (nvidia Quadro P600) with CentOS 6.9. Running nvidia-detect with this setup gives the following output: # nvidia-detect Error getting device_class nvidia-detect also quits with exit-code 255. Could this be a bug in

Re: [CentOS] Nvidia-detect error with on HP Z4 (CentOS 6.9)

2018-04-13 Thread Akemi Yagi
On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 8:21 AM, Danny Smit wrote: > Hi all, > > I'm testing an installation of nvidia drivers on a HP Z4 workstation > (nvidia Quadro P600) with CentOS 6.9. Running nvidia-detect with this > setup gives the following output: > > # nvidia-detect > Error

[CentOS] Create CentOS 6 system as "clone" of another - with LVM and different disk sizes

2018-04-13 Thread Toralf Lund
Hi, I just found myself having to set up a new CentOS 6 system with a nearly identical configuration to an existing host, so I thought I would just 1. Do a minimal install to set up partitions etc. on the new system. 2. Create an image of the existing system using Clonezilla

Re: [CentOS] Help with yum

2018-04-13 Thread Liam O'Toole
On 2018-04-13, Paul R. Ganci wrote: [...] > Then it was just a matter of: > > > yum groupinstall "MATE Desktop" > > systemctl set-default graphical.target > > reboot > > Voila... I have a desktop running MATE! Glad you got it working. I thought I'd mention that the reboot is

[CentOS] YUM4/DNF for CentOS updates announcement

2018-04-13 Thread Marek Blaha
I am pleased to announce some significant updates to our ConfigManagement Special Interest Group for YUM4. This provides YUM4, based on DNF technology, for testing on CentOS Linux 7/x86_64. These updates are based on feedback from our prior test release last October. It includes signed packages,

Re: [CentOS] [Marketing Mail] Re: [External] Re: [Marketing Mail] Create CentOS 6 system as "clone" of another - with LVM and different disk sizes

2018-04-13 Thread Lange, Markus
Hi, I could be wrong, but afaik clonezilla makes bit-accurate copies of the file system like dd does. Therefore, no configurations should be adapted. Usually Linux doesn't care where it runs, as long as the underlying 'hardware' (or virtual hardware) architecture matches. However, there are a

Re: [CentOS] Create CentOS 6 system as "clone" of another - with LVM and different disk sizes

2018-04-13 Thread m . roth
Toralf Lund wrote: > Hi, > > I just found myself having to set up a new CentOS 6 system with a nearly > identical configuration to an existing host, so I thought I would just > > 1. Do a minimal install to set up partitions etc. on the new system. > 2. Create an image of the existing system

Re: [CentOS] [Marketing Mail] Create CentOS 6 system as "clone" of another - with LVM and different disk sizes

2018-04-13 Thread Lange, Markus
Hi, You can simply boot a live system to create your partition layout and copy it over the existing system with rsync. Once your system is copied, you will need to customize all hardware-dependent configuration files such as {crypt,fs}tab, network configurations, bootloader and so on depending on

Re: [CentOS] [External] Re: [Marketing Mail] Create CentOS 6 system as "clone" of another - with LVM and different disk sizes

2018-04-13 Thread Toralf Lund
On 13/04/18 15:32, Lange, Markus wrote: Hi, You can simply boot a live system to create your partition layout and copy it over the existing system with rsync. Once your system is copied, you will need to customize all hardware-dependent configuration files such as {crypt,fs}tab, network