new server exactly as old one?
3- Is there any changes to make on new server after full migration?
4- will root and other user credentials stay the same?
Any other suggestion appreciated,
--
Cheers,
Matt Zand
Cell: 202-420-9192
Work: 240-200-6131
High School Technology Services <ht
> On 08.06.2018 19:11, Matt wrote:
>> I have a Centos 7 install using EXT4 on LVM. Its running as a VM
>> inside KVM. Issue I have run into is that fstrim does not work due to
>> the LVM. Without fstrim snapshots have gotten huge. Is there a way
>> convert it fr
I have a Centos 7 install using EXT4 on LVM. Its running as a VM
inside KVM. Issue I have run into is that fstrim does not work due to
the LVM. Without fstrim snapshots have gotten huge. Is there a way
convert it from LVM to non-LVM without a complete reinstall?
I am setting up a new test server. Doing a fresh install from CD onto
a couple 4TB drives. Would like to try btrfs in a RAID 1 format. Are
there any how to's on how to do that?
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I have a centos 7 install with apache running. How do I get apache to
use gzip compression on html and text based content?
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Hi
If you go Applications >> Utilities >> Tweak Tool >> Workspaces, you can
set the number of workspaces.
On 07/06/17 09:28 AM, m...@tdiehl.org wrote:
Hi,
I have a new install of c7 with the gnome desktop. I run it with 12
workspaces.
Normally I create the shortcuts so that ctrl+f1 maps t
Check out this page:
https://scottlinux.com/2014/12/08/how-to-create-a-systemd-service-in-linux-centos-7/
On 12/06/17 11:47 AM, James Pearson wrote:
I'm looking into 'porting' some custom init.d scripts that are in use on
CentOS 6 boxes for use on CentOS 7 using systemd
One particular init.d
On a related note I need SNMP support to do snmpget and snmpset to
devices with Python3. Is there an easy way to get that without
breaking anything also?
On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 1:04 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
> On 3/24/2017 6:52 AM, Matt wrote:
>>>
>>> # yum install pyt
Hi,
I'm moving to Systemd for my network management but I don't see my
link name changed when I try to using a .link name.
The .network file works right, networkmanager is removed as well to
accomplish this.
Any idea why the rename is not done ?
/etc/systemd/network/0-eth.network
[Match]
MACAd
> # yum install python34
I already have epel installed. If it breaks something is it as simple
as yum erase python34 to restore everything back to normal?
On Thu, Mar 23, 2017 at 6:27 PM, Christian, Mark
wrote:
> On Thu, 2017-03-23 at 18:16 -0500, Matt wrote:
>> Is there a wa
Is there a way to install Python 3.x on Centos 7.x without breaking
anything that depends on an older version of Python? This server is a
minimal Centos 7 install that primarily runs a simple LAMP setup.
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On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 6:11 PM, John Jasen wrote:
> On 03/22/2017 03:26 PM, Matt Garman wrote:
>> Is anyone on the list using kerberized-nfs on any kind of scale?
>
> Not for a good many years.
>
> Are you using v3 or v4 NFS?
v4. I think you can only do kerberized NFS w
On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 3:19 PM, wrote:
> Matt Garman wrote:
>> (2) Permission denied issues. I have user Kerberos tickets
>> configured for 70 days. But there is clearly some kind of
>> undocumented kernel caching going on. Looking at the Kerberos server
>> lo
es might we consider? Paid support is not out of the
question (within reason). Are there any "super specialist"
consultants out there who deal in Kerberized NFS?
Thanks!
Matt
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Is there an easy way to graph ethernet eth0 on Centos 7 with MRTG
without using SNMP? I thought I found a way to do this in past by
using a shell script to poll the interface but cannot find it back.
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On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 12:08 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
> for Comcast/Xfinity, I'm using a Arris SB6183 that I got at Costco. this
> is a simple modem/bridge, so /my/ router behind it gets the public IP.
Note that some residential ISPs may not offer "naked" Internet, and/or
won't allow you to bri
On Thu, Feb 2, 2017 at 7:13 PM, TE Dukes wrote:
> Lately I have been getting slow and partial page loads, server not found,
> server timed out, etc.. Get knocked off ssh when accessing my home server
> from work, etc. Its not the work connection because I don't have problems
> accessing other sit
When I have multiple scripts in /etc/cron.hourly/ using noanacron do
they all start at same time or sequentially? I would rather they all
went at same time in case one takes close to an hour to complete.
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>> What size is recommended for the /boot partition? After doing a fresh
>> install and lengthy backup restore I realized I only made it 200M. Is
>> this going to be a problem?
>
> Mine was about 500 MB and I removed some kernels because I got a warning the
> partition was getting full.
>
> With
What size is recommended for the /boot partition? After doing a fresh
install and lengthy backup restore I realized I only made it 200M. Is
this going to be a problem?
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I have installed Centos 7 Minimal in a 1TB KVM. Used XFS file system.
I did not use LVM. I need to install Directadmin which requires
quotas.
I have this in fstab:
UUID=b482396d-d2fc-49ed-b9df-c49e9387405b / xfs defaults 0 0
UUID=e24a16e0-57ab-42b2-af0b-9edf789376e5 /boot xfs defaults
On Thu, Oct 27, 2016 at 12:03 AM, Larry Martell wrote:
> This site is locked down like no other I have ever seen. You cannot
> bring anything into the site - no computers, no media, no phone. You
> ...
> This is my client's client, and even if I could circumvent their
> policy I would not do that.
On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 7:22 PM, Larry Martell wrote:
> Again, no machine on the internal network that my 2 CentOS hosts are
> on are connected to the internet. I have no way to download anything.,
> There is an onerous and protracted process to get files into the
> internal network and I will see
On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 6:09 PM, Larry Martell wrote:
> The machines are on a local network. I access them with putty from a
> windows machine, but I have to be at the site to do that.
So that means when you are offsite there is no way to access either
machine? Does anyone have a means to access
Another alternative idea: you probably won't be comfortable with this,
but check out systemd-nspawn. There are lots of examples online, and
even I wrote about how I use it:
http://raw-sewage.net/articles/fedora-under-centos/
This is unfortunately another "sysadmin" solution to your problem.
n
s name resolution working on both machines? Do you address
machines by hostname (e.g., "my_c6_server"), or explicitly by IP
address? Are you using DNS or are the IPs hard-coded in /etc/hosts?
To me it still "smells" like a networking issue...
-Matt
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On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 8:02 AM, Larry Martell wrote:
>> To be clear: the python script is moving files on the same NFS file
>> system? E.g., something like
>>
>> mv /mnt/nfs-server/dir1/file /mnt/nfs-server/dir2/file
>>
>> where /mnt/nfs-server is the mount point of the NFS server on the
>>
On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 4:14 AM, Larry Martell wrote:
> We have 1 system ruining Centos7 that is the NFS server. There are 50
> external machines that FTP files to this server fairly continuously.
>
> We have another system running Centos6 that mounts the partition the files
> are FTP-ed to using
link
says "Solution in Progress", but that was last updated nearly a year
ago. We don't have any support contracts with upstream, just the
website access subscription, so I doubt RH will offer any help.
Appreciate any suggestions!
Thanks,
Matt
>> I am trying to install Centos 7 on a couple 4TB drives with software
>> raid. In the Supermicro bios I set UEFI/BIOS boot mode to legacy. I
>> am using the Centos 7 minimal install ISO flashed to a USB thumb
>> drive.
>>
>> So I do custom drive layout something like this using sda and sdb.
>>
I am trying to install Centos 7 on a couple 4TB drives with software
raid. In the Supermicro bios I set UEFI/BIOS boot mode to legacy. I
am using the Centos 7 minimal install ISO flashed to a USB thumb
drive.
So I do custom drive layout something like this using sda and sdb.
Create /boot as 512
As others have said, in the end, it's a matter of personal preference
(e.g. vim or emacs). You could spend a week reading articles and
forum discussions comparing all the different tools; but until you've
really used them, it will mostly be an academic exercise. Of course,
the particulars of your
I have an ext4 filesystem for which I'm trying to use "tune2fs -l".
Here is the listing of the filesystem from the "mount" command:
# mount | grep share
/dev/mapper/VolGroup_Share-LogVol_Share on /share type ext4
(rw,noatime,nodiratime,usrjquota=aquota.user,jqfmt=vfsv0,data=writeback,nobh,barrier=
I haven't used gnome3, or any Linux desktop in earnest for a long time...
But I used to be semi-obsessed with tweaking and configuring various Linux
desktops. And back when I was doing that, there were dozens of desktop
programs available, from super lightweight bare bones window managers, to
full
That's strange, I expected the SMART test to show some issues.
Personally, I'm still not confident in that drive. Can you check
cabling? Another possibility is that there is a cable that has
vibrated into a marginal state. Probably a long shot, but if it's
easy to get physical access to the mach
Have you ran a "long" smart test on the drive? Smartctl -t long device
I'm not sure what's going on with your drive. But if it were mine, I'd want
to replace it. If there are issues, that long smart check ought to turn up
something, and in my experience, that's enough for a manufacturer to do a
blem. And not to mention. possibly
inefficient---something like HandBrake should benefit from running on
bare metal, rather than under a virtualized CPU.
On Wed, Nov 18, 2015 at 1:11 PM, Lamar Owen wrote:
> On 11/17/2015 12:39 PM, Matt Garman wrote:
>>
>> Now I have a need
I always tell vendors I'm using RHEL, even though we're using CentOS.
If you say CentOS, some vendors immediately throw up their hands and
say "unsupported" and then won't even give you the time of day.
A couple tricks for fooling tools into thinking they are on an actual
RHEL system:
1. Modify /e
tl;dr - Is anybody "running" a Fedora system via systemd-nspawn under CentOS?
Long version:
Before CentOS 7, I used chroot to create "lightweight containers"
where I could cleanly add extra repos and/or software without the risk
of "polluting" my main system (and potentially ending up in dependen
If you're just getting starting with a screen multiplexer, I'd suggest
starting with tmux. My understanding is that GNU screen has
effectively been abandoned.
I used GNU screen for at least 10 years, and recently switched to
tmux. As someone else said, in GNU screen, if you want to send ctrl-a
t
I have 3 4TB WD drives I want to put in a RAID1 array.
Two WD4000FYYZ
and
One WD4000F9YZ
All enterprise class but two are WD Re and one is WD Se. I ordered
the first two thinking 2 drives in the raid array would be sufficient
but later decided its a long drive to the server so I would rather
h
Take a look at Devtoolset, I think this will give you what you want:
https://www.softwarecollections.org/en/scls/rhscl/devtoolset-3/
On Mon, Jun 29, 2015 at 1:56 PM, Michael Hennebry
wrote:
> gcc (GCC) 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-11) is a bit old.
> There have been major changes since the
Our environment has several "classes" of servers, such as
"development", "production", "qa", "utility", etc. Then we have all
our users. There's no obvious mapping between users and server class.
Some users may have access to only one class, some may span multiple
classes, etc. And for maximum c
bian had a
command to display various licenses in a consolidated way. Is there a
similar facility available, or a page we could link to?
-Matt
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On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 7:31 AM, Peter van Hooft
wrote:
>> You may want to try reducing sunrpc.tcp_max_slot_table_entries .
>> In CentOS 5 the number of slots is fixed: sunrpc.tcp_slot_table_entries = 16
>> In CentOS 6, this number is dynamic with a maximum of
>> sunrpc.tcp_max_slot_table_entries
> Check selinux context for directory?
This is Centos 7 minimal running in an openvz container. As far as I
can tell selinux is not present. sestatus returns command not found.
>> I have noanacron installed on a fresh centos 7 install.
>>
>> I added this too settings.
>>
>> nano /etc/cron.d/0
I have noanacron installed on a fresh centos 7 install.
I added this too settings.
nano /etc/cron.d/0hourly
*/5 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.fiveminutes
*/1 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.minute
0,30 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.halfhour
and then created the directories for it. Now I
On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 10:51 AM, wrote:
>> The server in this case isn't a Linux box with an ext4 file system - so
>> that won't help ...
>>
> What kind of filesystem is it? I note that xfs also has barrier as a mount
> option.
The server is a NetApp FAS6280. It's using NetApp's filesystem. I
On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 10:36 AM, Devin Reade wrote:
> Have you looked at the client-side NFS cache? Perhaps the C6 cache
> is either disabled, has fewer resources, or is invalidating faster?
> (I don't think that would explain the C5 starvation, though, unless
> it's a secondary effect from retr
We have a "compute cluster" of about 100 machines that do a read-only
NFS mount to a big NAS filer (a NetApp FAS6280). The jobs running on
these boxes are analysis/simulation jobs that constantly read data off
the NAS.
We recently upgraded all these machines from CentOS 5.7 to CentOS 6.5.
We did
What does your /etc/idmapd.conf look like on the server side?
I fought with this quite a bit a while ago, but my use case was a bit
different, and I was working with CentOS 5 and 6.
Still, the kicker for me was updating the [Translation] section of
/etc/idmapd.conf. Mine looks like this:
[Trans
On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 8:49 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> rpm -qp --changelog | less
>
> NOTE: This works for any kernel RPM in any version of CentOS ... you
> can download the latest 6 RPM from here:
>
> http://mirror.centos.org/centos/6/updates/x86_64/Packages/
>
> (currently kernel-2.6.32-504.12
rent 6.6 kernel.
Anyone have a link to this?
Thanks!
Matt
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>> I need to remove empty files out of a directory that are over 6 hours
>> old so I created this script and put it in cron.hourly.
>
> For what it's worth, we no longer have requiretty in the package in
> Fedora, so eventually that change will probably make it down to CentOS.
> Overall, security b
I need to remove empty files out of a directory that are over 6 hours
old so I created this script and put it in cron.hourly.
#!/bin/sh
cd /var/list
sudo -u matt find /var/list -mmin +360 -empty -user matt -exec rm {} \;
I want to run it as matt rather than root for just an added bit of
safety
ill me in on exactly what that partition structure on
the official images is doing though, I'd be curious to know.
-Matt
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 10:29 PM, Alfred von Campe
wrote:
On Jan 13, 2015, at 23:16, Matt wrote:
I guess I could phrase my question as "Given that the default
Almost. I've read that, and I can get it to work.
I guess I could phrase my question as "Given that the default image for
6.6 and 7.0 do this, how do I make custom media that does it to?"
When I make custom media, it only works off an actual DVD.
I need help making custom media that has that
like say the old Revisor tool that I should be
using to make my life much easier?
Any help would be much appreciated,
-Matt
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er there is more required to make it
work, or it's implementation is broken. Curiously, however, running
my bond0 in 802.3ad mode did work without any issue for over a month.
Anyway, hopefully this might help someone else struggling with a
similar problem.
On Fri, Oct 10, 2014 at 4:17 PM,
On Fri, Oct 10, 2014 at 4:11 PM, Joseph L. Brunner
wrote:
> If this is a server - is it possible your raid card battery died?
It is a server, but a home file server. The raid card has no battery
backup, and in fact has been flashed to pure HBA mode. Actual
RAID'ing is done at the software level
yer daemon)
Thanks,
Matt
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not swapping - 16 GB of RAM, 0 swap used. Most memory heavy
process is java (for CrashPlan backups).
iostat shows 0% disk utilization.
Anyone seen anything like this? Where else can I check to try to
determine the source of this lag (which I suspect might be related to
the recent crashes)?
Thanks,
I followed the wiki[1] to create a KVM virtual machine using bridged
network on CentOS 6.5. It seemed to work fine on initial setup.
However, after a boot, it doesn't auto-start the VMs, or at least,
something has to timeout (a *very* long time, on the order of 15--30
minutes) before they can be s
I am setting up a Centos 6.5 box to host some Openvz containers. I
have a 120gb SSD I am going to use for boot, / and swap. Should allow
for fast boots. Have a 4TB drive I am going to mount as /backup and
use to move container backups too etc. The remaining four 3TB drives
I am putting in a sof
Anyone know of a 2.5" to 3.5" converter so I can put a 2.5 SSD drive
in a Supermicro 3.5 SATA hot swap bay? The one I purchased does not
seem to work.
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Have a few Supermicro based CentOS boxes at remote date center. Is
there anyway to do a remote KVM over TCP to them for the case when
they do not seem to come back after a reboot?
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On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 11:28 AM, Eduardo Augusto Pinto
wrote:
> I'm using in my bond interfaces as active backup, in theory, should assume an
> interface (or work) only when another interface is down.
>
> But I'm just lost packets on the interface that is not being used and is
> generating
> pac
If I have multiple files in cron.weekly and one script takes hours to
finish. Will it block other scripts in cron.weekly?
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> http://www.inateck.com/inateck-kt4005-4-port-usb-3-0-pci-express-card-no-additional-power-connection-needed/
>
> Will these work under Centos 6.x? Can I just boot my home system with
> a CentOS 6.x live CD to test?
Above usb 3.0 card is based on NEC d720201 701 chip. I used this card
in my hom
> On Fri, Sep 5, 2014 at 4:36 PM, Matt wrote:
>> Tried it and CentOS 6 did not seem to find it. Anyone know of a USB
>> 3.0 card that does work with Centos 6.x?
>
> I've used a variety of no-name cards with the NEC (now Renesas)
> uPD72020x series host adapter chips
Tried it and CentOS 6 did not seem to find it. Anyone know of a USB
3.0 card that does work with Centos 6.x?
On Fri, Sep 5, 2014 at 3:12 PM, Matt wrote:
> http://www.inateck.com/inateck-kt4005-4-port-usb-3-0-pci-express-card-no-additional-power-connection-needed/
>
> Will these w
http://www.inateck.com/inateck-kt4005-4-port-usb-3-0-pci-express-card-no-additional-power-connection-needed/
Will these work under Centos 6.x? Can I just boot my home system with
a CentOS 6.x live CD to test?
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I have two openvz servers running Centos 6.x both with 32GB of RAM.
One is an Intel Xeon E3-1230 quad core with two 4TB 7200 SATA drives
in software RAID1. The other is an old HP DL380 dual quad core with 8
750GB 2.5" SATA drives in hardware RAID6. I want to figure out which
one has better random
>> I noticed that the Supermicro X9SCL has a USB type-a port right on the
>> motherboard.
>>
>> http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Xeon/C202_C204/X9SCL.cfm
>>
>> Has anyone used a port like this to boot the core OS and used the
>> physical drives for OpenVZ and KVM containers? I figure
I noticed that the Supermicro X9SCL has a USB type-a port right on the
motherboard.
http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Xeon/C202_C204/X9SCL.cfm
Has anyone used a port like this to boot the core OS and used the
physical drives for OpenVZ and KVM containers? I figure a 64GB thumb
drive
Hate to change the conversation here but that's why I hate hardware
RAID.
If it was software RAID, Linux would always tell you what's going on.
Besides, Linux knows much more about what is going on on the disk and
what is about to happen (like a megabyte DMA transfer).
>>> Hate to change the conversation here but that's why I hate hardware
>>> RAID.
>>> If it was software RAID, Linux would always tell you what's going on.
>>> Besides, Linux knows much more about what is going on on the disk and
>>> what is about to happen (like a megabyte DMA transfer).
>>>
>>> B
er).
>
> BTW, check if something is creating:
>
> /forcefsck
These exist:
-rw-r--r--1 root root 0 Jul 7 10:03 .autofsck
-rw-r--r--1 root root 0 Jul 7 10:03 .autorelabel
What does that mean?
> That would make the fsck run every time.
>
> GKH
>
>>
I have CentOS 6.x installed on a "HP ProLiant DL380 G5" server. It
has eight 750GB drives in a hardware RAID6 array. Its acting as a
host for a number of OpenVZ containers.
Seems like every time I reboot this server which is not very often it
sits for hours running a disk check or something on b
to be no logging package. This was a minimal openvz
template for Centos 7 though.
>
> On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 12:08 PM, Matt wrote:
>
>> Fixed it.
>>
>> yum install rsyslog
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 3:29 PM, Alexande
Fixed it.
yum install rsyslog
Thanks.
On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 3:29 PM, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
> Am 14.08.2014 um 21:06 schrieb Matt:
>> Have a OpenVZ Centos 7 Minimal instance running. Normally SSH
>> sessions are logged too /var/log/secure. There is no such file.
>&g
> Have a Centos 7 minimal openvz container I need to install a LAMP
> setup on. Does anyone recommend anything and have a link too it? I
> am guessing Mariadb is the new standard?
For mysql in past I always added bind-address=127.0.0.1 to my.cnf for
bit additional security. This server is dual
Have a OpenVZ Centos 7 Minimal instance running. Normally SSH
sessions are logged too /var/log/secure. There is no such file.
Where are they put then?
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So EPEL is preferred over rpmforge now days? In past to get clamav
and some other packages seemed like I had to use rpmforge.
On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 10:38 AM, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Thu, 2014-08-14 at 11:26 -0400, John Plemons wrote:
>
>> Here is a link to enable the epel repo
>>
>> http
ck-on-centos7-rhel7/
>
> john
Was looking at that link. Also found this:
https://www.liberiangeek.net/2014/07/install-apache2-mariadb-php5-support-centos-7/
Looks like phpmyadmin is not in the stock repositories so if I want it
I need to use epel or rpmforge?
>
>
>
>
> On
Have a Centos 7 minimal openvz container I need to install a LAMP
setup on. Does anyone recommend anything and have a link too it? I
am guessing Mariadb is the new standard?
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Do you need cron installed for the files in /etc/cron.daily/ to
execute? Did a Centos 6.x minimal openvz install and noticed cron is
not installed by default and after installing mlocate cant help but
wander if it will be updated without it.
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On Wed, Jun 25, 2014 at 4:47 PM, wrote:
> ? Why not to 5.10, the current release of CentOS 5.x?
Off topic for the question, but, briefly, changing *anything* in our
environment involves extensive testing and validation due to very
precise performance requirements (HFT, microsecond changes make o
I did a bulk "yum update -y" of several servers. As a sanity check
after the upgrade, I ran a grep of /etc/grub.conf across all updated
servers looking to ensure the kernel I expected was installed.
Two servers came up saying /etc/grub.conf did not exist!
I logged into the servers, and /etc/grub
I've used "usermod -p " successfully many times.
Just be careful with escaping of the '$' field separators that appear
in the encrypted password string from /etc/shadow.
On Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 4:28 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
> I want to copy a few user accounts to a new system... is there a
t --config-source \
xml:readwrite:/etc/gconf/gconf.xml.mandatory \
--type bool --set \
/apps/gdm/simple-greeter/disable_user_list true
--
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System Administrator, Computation Facility
Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophy
On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 7:21 AM, Joseph Hesse wrote:
> I want to build a lightweight server and install centos. Does anyone
> have a recommendation for a suitable motherboard?
What will the role of the server be? How "lightweight"? How many
users, what kinds of services, what (if any) performa
om the CentOS mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
> ___
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS@centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>
--
Matt Phelps
System Administrator, Computation Facility
Harvard - Smithsonian Center for A
Is the talk by Karsten Wade online somewhere so we can check the source
material?
--
Matt Phelps
System Administrator, Computation Facility
Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
mphe...@cfa.harvard.edu, http://www.cfa.harvard.edu
___
Cen
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 9:36 AM, Jim Perrin wrote:
>
>
> On 03/31/2014 08:16 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 8:58 AM, Jim Perrin wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> On 03/31/2014 07:28 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
> >>> Init
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 8:58 AM, Jim Perrin wrote:
>
>
> On 03/31/2014 07:28 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
> > Initial reaction: Crap!
> >
> > One of the best things about CentOS, in my opinion, was not having to
> deal
> > with all the different RHEL builds/relea
RHEL, like
> Centos currently is?
>
>
> http://www.zdnet.com/red-hat-reveals-centos-plans-727812/
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>
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Matt Phelps
Sys
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 9:37 AM, John R. Dennison wrote:
>
> On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 09:30:17AM -0500, Matt Garman wrote:
> >
> > How can the loadavg shoot up (from ~1 to ~20) without a corresponding
> > uptick in number of tasks?
>
> loadavg is based on number of p
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 10:30 AM, John Doe wrote:
> Any USB device?
> Each time I access USB disks, load goes through the roof.
Nope, it's a rack server in a secure remote location, with no
peripherals at all attached. Only attached cables are power and
network.
_
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 9:01 AM, Mr Queue wrote:
> On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 17:20:22 -0500
> Matt Garman wrote:
>
> > Anyone seen anything like this? Any thoughts or ideas?
>
> Post some data.. This public facing? Are you getting sprayed down by
> packets? Array? Soft/ha
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