John R Pierce wrote:
> On 2/16/2016 3:23 PM, Zube wrote:
>> Does anyone know what program can be used to query the RAID status
>> from the OS for an on-board LSI SAS 2308-4i?
>
> the 2308 isn't actually a megaraid, its a simple SAS HBA that has an
> optional raid mode IF its flashed with IR firmwar
On 2/16/2016 3:23 PM, Zube wrote:
Does anyone know what program can be used to query the RAID status
from the OS for an on-board LSI SAS 2308-4i?
the 2308 isn't actually a megaraid, its a simple SAS HBA that has an
optional raid mode IF its flashed with IR firmware... this only supports
raid
Does anyone know what program can be used to query the RAID status
from the OS for an on-board LSI SAS 2308-4i?
On this page:
http://docs.avagotech.com/docs/12351997
there is a curious note on the left that reads:
"Integrated MegaRAID support available upon request"
After one mostly fruitless
--On Saturday, February 13, 2016 03:24:53 PM -0500 David Both
wrote:
However, Devin, the answer to your question [...]
For the record, I didn't ask the question; I only posted the original
heads-up. That was Tim Murphy asking the question. Watch the
attributions, please.
Devin
___
Folks
This might be the wrong place to ask, but I don't know where to turn.
My internal home network, including wireless, is controlled by a
Centos6 server, which provides dhcpd services, along with NAT. I
have DHCPD configured with the addresses 192.168.155.200 through
192.168.155.254 as the
On 2/16/2016 1:18 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Frank Cox wrote:
>Why not put mydomain.com 192.168.whatever in your /etc/hosts file? No
>need to run a dns server to hard-code one single lookup like that.
Thanks very much, that seems to work.
I added "www.myserver.com" to the line starting 192.168
Frank Cox wrote:
> Why not put mydomain.com 192.168.whatever in your /etc/hosts file? No
> need to run a dns server to hard-code one single lookup like that.
Thanks very much, that seems to work.
I added "www.myserver.com" to the line starting 192.168.2.5.
--
Timothy Murphy
gayleard /at/ eir
Thanks for the reply - was waiting for a reply so I could give an update.
This seemed to be a bug with Autofs. I ran a yum update to autofs and the
problem has been resolved.
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Clint Dilks
S
Morning
On Wed, Feb 17, 2016 at 2:35 AM, Edsall, William (WJ)
wrote:
> Hello list,
> So I'm having a strange issue with Centos 7 mounting NFS V3.
>
>
As a first step I would confirm a few things.
1. Do you have any other systems using the NFS server successfully?
2. Does a manual mount work ?
3
For what it's worth, back in April of last year I reported that gkrellm
had started generating kernel panics with 7.1503's kernel.
I can now report that with the latest 7.1511 kernels (327.4.5 being the
latest I have installed) gkrellm is once again behaving for me.
Just wanted to close the l
On Tue, 16 Feb 2016 09:15:43 +
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> > you could run split DNS, so on your LAN, mydomain.com is 192.168.x.x
> > while on the internet, mydomain.com is the actual IP address.
>
> I'd rather not run a DNS server on my machine.
> I tried this some years ago, and ran into troubl
On 02/15/2016 02:12 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
It is so great to hear that! I was shushed a few times by modern
experts - I bet on this list too - about following ancient practices
and having more than just / partition... so I felt myself as a relic
dinosaur
...
On a public-facing server I ten
On 02/13/2016 03:50 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
I still like making /home its own file system, and if I'm running a
substantial (non-trivial) database server, it also has its own volume,
quite likely on its own raid.
I've done this for close to 20 years (19 years this April, to be
exact); my cu
On 02/14/2016 06:40 AM, Tim wrote:
> Hey Johnny,
>
> thank you very much for your instructions. The build is running at the
> moment but there seems to be a small bug in kernel-rt.spec.
>
> I changed the line 684 from
> mv %{name}-%{rpmversion}-%{pkg_release_simple}%{dist} vanilla-%{kversion};
>
On 02/13/2016 04:19 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
On Sat, February 13, 2016 2:24 pm, David Both wrote:
+1 Valeri. I agree that things have changed a lot!
_things_ changed? I wouldn't quite agree. It is people who have changed
definitely.
'Things have changed' is idiomatic English for the passive vo
Hello list,
So I'm having a strange issue with Centos 7 mounting NFS V3.
It starts with autofs. For example, my auto.share file:
apps-nfsvers=3 some-server:/mnt/xfs1/&
This will mount, but the first mount takes ~30 sec. After this, eventually the
mount becomes stale but it still shows as con
On Mon, Feb 15, 2016 at 6:52 PM, Warren Young wrote:
> On Feb 15, 2016, at 10:34 AM, Mike - st257 wrote:
> >
> > I have not yet found a USB-to-serial adapter detected as /dev/ttyACM1.
> > Try /dev/ttyUSB0 ?
>
> Both naming schemes are correct, depending on the *type* of USB to serial
> converter
Barry Brimer wrote:
>
>
>> My CentOS-7 home server has a static IP address.
>>
>> Is there a simple way of organizing the hpptd server
>> so that it is accessible through this address at a remote host,
>> but is accessed at its 192.168 address by a laptop on the WiFi LAN?
>
> Is the static IP a
John R Pierce wrote:
>> My CentOS-7 home server has a static IP address.
>>
>> Is there a simple way of organizing the hpptd server
>> so that it is accessible through this address at a remote host,
>> but is accessed at its 192.168 address by a laptop on the WiFi LAN?
> are you also running your
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