On 12/24/19 11:27 AM, Daniel Frey wrote:
On 2019-12-24 02:17, Mick wrote:
On Tuesday, 24 December 2019 09:03:44 GMT Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Tuesday, 24 December 2019 06:11:12 GMT J. Roeleveld wrote:
What happens when you remove the IPv6 adresses from the NFS config?
As you
are using IPv4, those should not be needed.
I haven't had time to enable IPv6 yet, so can't check locally what
works
and what doesn't.
Well, wouldn't you just know it? The Atom box (the server) has died. No
blinken lights or anything. I wondered why Firefox was so slow; it's
lost
its proxy.
See you later...
I'd start with checking the PSU is providing adequate power, if any at
all.
If the MoBo is fried it would be probably a good time to find
something to
replace it in the January sales.
I agree... especially if it has an external AC-DC converter box in the
power cord. It may have gone poof by itself and the actual device is fine.
Dan
Fancy mult-meters are very valuable, if you have the cabbage. Being an
EE, it's a necessary tool. Fluke is always overpriced, but extremely
high quality. I have flukes that are 40+ years old and still do what
they were designed to do. Fluke is THE gold-standard in EE
instrumentation. Look at many different version, to decide the price
point. If Fluke is not your first MM,
it will be your second...... Extraordinary accuracy
and some version all data/images to be stored on your computer, as a
reference.
IMHO, everyone hacking on multiple systems, particularly embedded
(gentoo) should at the very least have a full function multi-meter.
Here's one to look at, as a reference (fluke87-V)::
https://www.amazon.com/Fluke-FLUKE-87-V-Digital-Multimeter/dp/B0002YFD1K/?keywords=fluke+meter&qid=1577219154&sr=8-8
Don't be shy, there are many online tutorials and places to learn/get-help.
hth,
James