To answer my own mail ...
I've never had to do this before but this is what did the trick to show mail on
login and ssh login:
/etc/pam.d/login - add the following line:
sessionoptional pam_mail.so standard
/etc/pam.d/sshd - add the following line:
sessionoptional pam_mail.so sta
Hello
I have a few servers running CentOS release 5.4 (Final) and none of them are
displaying a "you have new mail" message on login.
I've asked Professor Google but he is strangely silent. Have I neglected an
important setting? I thought this was a default on most linux ditributions.
Any help m
Hello
I have a few servers running CentOS release 5.4 (Final) and none of them are
displaying a "you have new mail" message on login.
I've asked Professor Google but he is strangely silent. Have I neglected an
important setting? I thought this was a default on most linux ditributions.
Any help m
7044 0 30876 350164
-/+ buffers/cache: 821683878084
Swap: 2031608 02031608
Thanks to the list and Nate in particular for the assistance.
Ian Masters
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houldn't the fstab entry be:
/dev/VolGroup00/swap swapswapdefaults
0 0
Just want to double-check before I dive in.
Thanks
Ian Masters
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Christopher Chan wrote:
> Was it Centos 5 that you installed? IIRC, the Centos/RHEL 4 installer
> would have asked you about the lack of swap assigned. I have only done
> one Centos 5 installation and I did not miss telling it to use the swap
> lv as swap so I cannot say whether the Centos 5 instal
Christopher Chan wrote:
> Well...it won't do that...but it should raise a flag on no swap being
> configured after you were done partitioning and assigning/setting
> filesystems.
As far as I can remember there was no such 'flag'. That's precisely the
kind of thing that would have made me jittery a
Christopher Chan wrote:
> Maybe you configured the swap lv but forgot to tell the installer to use
> it as swap.
Well that's entirely possible. The logical volume manager had me fairly
confused.
I would have thought the installer might have told me that I had not set
its file system type ...
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John R Pierce wrote:
> what does
>
> # swapon -s
>
> show?
According to 'man swapon', swapon -s means:
Display swap usage summary by device. Equivalent to "cat
/proc/swaps". Not available before Linux 2.1.25.
> for example, one of my systems shows...
>
> # swapon -s
> F
ion, using the GUI
install method. Any ideas on that? I'd prefer not to be in this
situation again.
Thanks
Ian Masters
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le?
The server is in use and presently doesn't have any memory problems, and
while it's not mission critical server I'd rather not mess it up with
any ill-thought out tinkering.
If anyone can give me some advice on this I'd be very grateful.
Thanks
Ian Masters
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