. So I made a project just to play
with this stuff, if you want to check it out [4].
[1] http://shellcheck.net
[2] https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck
[3] https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core
[4] https://gitlab.com/salderma/bash-spec-test
--Sean
>
> From: Jerry Geis
> To: CentO
like a reasonable task for a Gnome user to do with out
escalating privilege. I can't explain why growisofs needs getattr on
all those disk devices, or why it "should" be denied. I have not
texted extensively outside of the current scenario, but I do believe
if the user is unconfined the burn process works as expected. There
is a very old Fedora bug suggesting similar, but not identical
behavior: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=479014
--Sean
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herwise noting a
"design" change between Gnome versions.
--Sean
On Mon, Feb 18, 2019 at 12:40 PM James Pearson
wrote:
>
> Sean wrote:
> >
> > It seems that with CentOS 7.6 and Gnome 3.28, a clean install of a
> > Workstation package profile does not build th
t CentOS is my
platform so I'm not sure if it's a distribution specific configuration
or functional change to Gnome. I tried searching through
gitlab.gnome.org to see if I can dig up any issues, release notes and
such, but I didn't find an
On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 9:39 PM Rob Kampen
wrote:
> On 13/02/19 2:05 PM, Sean Son wrote:
> > Hello all
> >
> > First off, I am running Oracle Linux 7.6 on a Hyper-V 2016 VM for a
> > customer. I know this is not an Oracle Linux mailling list, but because
> &g
.el7uek.x86_64
I have no idea what is going on here and why the space keeps filling up and
the VM crashing! ANY and all help will be greatly appreciated! Thanks!
I am running the following kernel:
4.14.35-1844.0.7.el7uek.x86_64
Thanks!
Sean S.
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Hi Leon,
I don't have access to a CentOS 6.10 system handy, but it looks like a
policy issue. If I take you're ausearch output and pipe it to
audit2allow on my CentOS 7.6 system, I get the following:
#= httpd_t ==
# This avc is allowed in the current policy
allow htt
Before I load the proprietary driver on all the problematic systems, I
was hoping someone on the list might have some insight or suggestions.
Thanks!
--Sean
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/minute --limit-burst 100 -j ACCEPT
How would I do the same using IPtables?
Thanks!!
Sean
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don't doubt that if I ditched NetworkManager and went for eth0:0 and
eth0:1 for the IP interfaces, all would be well. I'd just like to see if
anyone has some input on the issue.
--Sean
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nded
ports, on the switch, to a different VLAN, and it caused the management
port to stop responding to ping. Why is this and how do I fix that if I
decide to one day use two different VLANs for Management and the NIC bond
ports?
Thank you for all of your help in advance!
Sean
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l list.
I appreciate you taking the time to answer this thread! Thanks for
your hard work!
From: Johnny Hughes
To: centos@centos.org
Cc:
Bcc:
Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2018 06:16:14 -0500
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Firefox 60.0.1.0 ESR Progress?
On 07/03/2018 09:04 AM, Sean wrote:
> Thanks for the idea, I'm
Re: [CentOS] Firefox 60.0.1.0 ESR Progress?
> On 07/02/2018 06:57 AM, Sean wrote:
> > Is there a way to track CentOS's progress on RHSA-2018-2113?
> >
> > https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:2113
> >
> > Thanks!
> > __
Is there a way to track CentOS's progress on RHSA-2018-2113?
https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:2113
Thanks!
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vendors to receive broken drives back from GOV/MIL clients securely so that
failure methods can be researched.
Dell and EMC have been presenting this to us at storage briefs for a couple
of years now.
--Sean
On Thu, May 10, 2018 at 8:00 AM wrote:
> From: m.r...@5-cent.us
> To: CentOS mailin
Hi all,
RH published the advisory 2 weeks ago, according to
https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:0980. The main repo does not
appear to have the packages noted yet -
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/updates/x86_64/Packages/
We've been waiting on a few of these bugs to be fixed for some ti
On 01/11/2018 12:34 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Sean Smith wrote:
setting my resolution to 1600x900 is a cheesy, yet effective, way to do
get what I need.
...Now if I can just get my touchpad to FRICK'N disable while typing.
If/when you do, *PLEASE* post the solution. If you're
On 01/10/2018 11:45 AM, Scott Robbins wrote:
On Wed, Jan 10, 2018 at 09:25:04AM -0600, Sean Smith wrote:
I have no idea how. All I can find is the Hi-DPi settings in Gnome-Tweak
but, of course, it only lets me choose to scale from "1" to "2" which
makes things way too b
I have no idea how. All I can find is the Hi-DPi settings in
Gnome-Tweak but, of course, it only lets me choose to scale from "1" to
"2" which makes things way too big.
On 01/10/2018 08:54 AM, Giles Coochey wrote:
Is there a way I can add 1600x900 resolution the list of available
resolut
le
resolutions in settings-display?
Thanks,
Sean
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tf+0x691/0x6a0()
time: Mon 01 Aug 2016 09:14:44 AM EDT
cmdline:BOOT_IMAGE=/vmlinuz-3.10.0-327.22.2.el7.x86_64
root=/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 ro rd.lvm.lv=VolGroup00/LogVol00
vconsole.keymap=us vconsole.font=latarcyrheb-sun16 crashkernel=auto audit=1
rhgb quiet biosdevname=0 net.i
On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 10:55 AM, Gordon Messmer
wrote:
> On 11/15/2016 06:07 AM, Sean Son wrote:
>
>> I have no network connectivity even
>> when I restart the network service. Should I reenable NetworkManager now?
>>
>
>
> Yeah, the switch is just a test to
On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 5:30 PM, Gordon Messmer
wrote:
> On 11/14/2016 12:47 PM, Sean Son wrote:
>
>> Any ideas on what
>> I am doing wrong here?
>>
>
>
> Nothing obvious. Since your interfaces have static configurations, I'd
> suggest turning off N
On Tue, Nov 8, 2016 at 8:02 AM, Boris Epstein wrote:
> Hello there,
>
> What is the hypervisor that hosts the VM? What does ifconfig show on it?
>
> Boris.
>
> On Mon, Nov 7, 2016 at 4:36 PM, Gordon Messmer
> wrote:
>
> > On 11/06/2016 11:00 PM, Sean Son wrote:
e via both IPs? Please let me know what I may be doing wrong!
Thank you!
Sean
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x27;t give
you the same client view of the filesystem tree as mounting each
individually if it worked at all.
Cheers,
Sean
On 27 July 2016 at 23:21, Paul Heinlein wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2016, Frank Thommen wrote:
>
> Hello,
>>
>> does it in any respect (throughput/perfo
-ssh-access
Its got an Oxford Physics specific slant to it but hopefully its helpful.
*I don't think rsync has any issue when the remote machine prints things
either.
Sean
On 13 Jun 2016 7:26 pm, "H" wrote:
> On June 12, 2016 8:51:42 PM CEST, cpol...@surewest.net wrote:
> &g
Hello all
I installed MySQL 5.7 using the Mysql community YUM repository and I also
installed Tomcat 8 from tomcat.apache.org. The installations went fine but
ive been noticing that the VM,which is running CentOS 7.2, has been
freezing periodically. This morning when I checked the VM i saw the
fol
> Order of operations
> find /path/to/files/ -type f -mtime -2 -name *.xml.gz -print0
Thanks!
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If I run this:
find /path/to/files/ -type f -mtime -2 -name *.xml.gz
I get the expected results, files with modify time less than two days old.
But, if I run it like this, with the print0 flag:
find /path/to/files/ -print0 -type f -mtime -2 -name *.xml.gz
I get older files included as well. A
I have a string, "2012_10_16"; let's call this $YESTERDAY
How can I rsync a file tree from a remote machine to the local one,
including *only* filenames that contain the matching string? I've
read the man page and googled around but can't seem to get the syntax
right. I either end up syncing all
> What I'm trying to avoid is abruptly resetting the clock from 12:06 to
> 12:05 all at once. Instead we want to slowly turn the clock back that
> one minute, but spread the changes across several hours or days.
I think the "-x" option may be our solution; I R'd the FM and it says:
"...If the -x
> This is already how ntpd works. When you first start the service
> (usually upon reboot), it will use 'ntpdate' to do a hard set of the
> clock, then ntpd picks up and adjusts the clock back and forth to keep
> it correct.
My understanding was that ntpd will use "slewing" for adjustments of
les
Suppose you have server A and server B. Server B is running 60
seconds too fast, while server A is accurate. Is there a way to
gradually move server B's time back into sync with server A, without
making a drastic, immediate change to the clock? In other words, we
would like to 'smear' the differ
>> *sigh*
>> awk is not "cut". What you want is
>> awk '{if (/[-\.0-9a-z][-\.0-9a-z]*.com/) { print $9;}}' | sort -u
I ended up using this construct in my code; this one fetches out
servers that are having issues checking in with puppet:
awk '{if (/Could not find default node or by name with/) {
> *sigh*
> awk is not "cut". What you want is
> awk '{if (/[-\.0-9a-z][-\.0-9a-z]*.com/) { print $9;}}' | sort -u
>
> No grep needed; awk looks for what you want *first* this way.
Thanks, Mark. This is cleaner code but it benchmarked slower than awk
then grep.
real3m35.550s
user2m7.186s
Thank you Mark and Gordon. Since the hostnames I needed to collect
are in the same field, at least in the lines of the file that are
important. I ended up using suggestions from both of you, the code is
like this now. The egrep is there to make sure whatever is in the 9th
field looks like a doma
This snippet of code pulls an array of hostnames from some log files.
It has to parse around 3GB of log files, so I'm keen on making it as
efficient as possible. Can you think of any way to optimize this to
run faster?
HOSTS=()
for host in $(grep -h -o "[-\.0-9a-z][-\.0-9a-z]*.com" ${TMPDIR}/* |
> Anyone know how to get statistics on bonded interfaces? I have a
> system that does not use eth0-3, rather we have bond0, bond1, bond2.
> The members of each bond are not eth0-3, rather they are eth6, eth7,
> etc. I didn't see anything in the man page about forcing sar to
> collect data on spec
Anyone know how to get statistics on bonded interfaces? I have a
system that does not use eth0-3, rather we have bond0, bond1, bond2.
The members of each bond are not eth0-3, rather they are eth6, eth7,
etc. I didn't see anything in the man page about forcing sar to
collect data on specific netwo
Anyone have a script or utility to convert an RTF file to ANSI? The
main idea here is to preserve the color codes that are specified in
the RTF file, so they can be displayed easily in a terminal window.
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On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 1:00 PM, Sean Hart wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 6:40 PM, Sean Hart wrote:
>> On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 7:40 AM, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
>>> Am 30.07.2011 10:37, schrieb Sean Hart:
>>>> So here goes...
>>>> First some back sto
On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 6:40 PM, Sean Hart wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 7:40 AM, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
>> Am 30.07.2011 10:37, schrieb Sean Hart:
>>> So here goes...
>>> First some back story
>>> -Centos 5 with latest updates as of yesterda
On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 7:40 AM, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
> Am 30.07.2011 10:37, schrieb Sean Hart:
>> So here goes...
>> First some back story
>> -Centos 5 with latest updates as of yesterday. kernel is
>> 2.6.18-238.19.1.el5
>> -setup is raid 1
So here goes...
First some back story
-Centos 5 with latest updates as of yesterday. kernel is
2.6.18-238.19.1.el5
-setup is raid 1 for /boot and lvm over raid6 for everything else
- The / partition (lvm "RootVol") had run out of room... (100%
full, things where falling appart...)
undred files, check the list for duplicates, and alert someone if
duplicates were found. I had a nifty one-liner using grep, sort, and
uniq -c that basically spat out a list of hosts with duplicate
entries, but in the end it was easier to manipulate the data (at least
for me) using py
> [scarolan@server:~]$ echo $myvar
> Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, co sectetur adipisci g elit.
> lots of letter !
>
> Weird huh?
Ok, I'm a bonehead; I had this in my bash history:
IFS='\n'
That seems to have been the cause of the missing n's. Now the next
question would be, how can I include th
2011/7/20 Lamar Owen :
> On Wednesday, July 20, 2011 03:23:58 PM Sean Carolan wrote:
> [snip]
>> Where did all the letter n's go?
>
> I can't duplicate the problem here on a CentOS 5.6 box. What locale are you
> set to? Here's what I get (note that a copy
This is kind of odd.
[scarolan@host:~]$ cat loremipsum.txt
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Donec quis
ipsum sed elit laoreet malesuada. Quisque rhoncus dui vitae eros
euismod fermentum sollicitudin sem scelerisque. Nulla facilisi.
Maecenas mollis pulvinar euismod. Duis viv
> Did you try:
>
> virsh undefine domain-id
>
> where domain-id is your vm name
Perfect, thanks Earl! Here's the script in case anyone else might
find it useful. Please post any improvements if you can see a way to
improve it.
#!/bin/bash
# Removes all KVM virtual machines from this host
# Fi
the virt-manager GUI. Anyone have an idea how
you delete it from there as well, without using the GUI?
thanks
Sean
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> (Make sure you pick .dummy so as not to interfere with any other DNS.)
>
> In theory you could leave off .dummy, but then you risk hostname being
> completed with the search domain in resolv.conf, which creates the
> problems already mentioned with putting hostname.domain.com in
> /etc/hosts. (I
> First, if your host is actually communicating with any kind of ip-based
> network, it is quite certain, that 127.0.0.1 simply isn't his IP
> address. And, at least for me, that's a fairly good reason.
Indeed. It does seem like a bad idea to have a single host using
loopback, while the rest of t
Can anyone point out reasons why it might be a bad idea to put this
sort of line in your /etc/hosts file, eg, pointing the FQDN at the
loopback address?
127.0.0.1hostname.domain.com hostname localhost localhost.localdomain
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>> The remote host's $TERM variable is in fact xterm. When I connect to
>> the screen session the $TERM variable is 'screen'.
>
> Are you running screen locally or remotely?
Remotely. My work machine is a laptop, which is not powered on all
the time. Hence I use a remote box as a jumping-off po
> In this case, you might want to conditionally assign some reasonable
> value on failure. Say:
>
> tput -T $TERM init >/dev/null 2>&1 || export TERM=xterm
>
> 'tset -q' is another test which can be used.
The remote host's $TERM variable is in fact xterm. When I connect to
the screen session
>>> Hi Sean,
>>>
>>> Can you explain as I may be planning this for a site.
>>>
>>> So if I have 2 identical servers, each with there own IP, how will
>>> one
>>> of them going down cause issues?
>>>
>>> I'
e rich. Requires hardware
to go with it. http://www.zeus.com/products/load-balancer/
IPVS or LVS can work as a really simple/free solution:
http://www.linuxvirtualserver.org/software/ipvs.html
Round robin DNS would balance load, but will cause problems if one of
them goes down.
You could also set up apache or squid to do proxying...
Cheers,
Sean
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> I tried to forget the incompatibilities in different old terminal types
> after about everything settled on xterm compatibility. Instead of
> running screen, can you run a desktop session under freenx on a server
> somewhere and run everything in terminal windows there (even ssh
> sessions that
> You wouldn't by any chance be using PuTTY to access the session? If
> so, you may need to play around with the terminal settings including
> the scroll type so that it displays correctly. I don't recall the
> specifics but a similar thing happened to me.
Actually, no I'm using gnome-terminal o
I really like gnu screen and use it everyday but there's one thing
that is a bit inconvenient, and that's the odd line wrapping and
terminal size issues that seem to pop up. The problem crops up when I
type or paste a really long command, and then go back and try to edit
it; the text starts to wra
print $6 " " $7 " " $9}' | sort -r
Not using ls:
To take that input and sort you'd have to do some hashing to translate
the months to a sortable format (like numbers) I think. Alternatively,
you could use the listed date to generate a UTF date via the date command.
~S
giving money, pay
> the bill(s).
Core issue, I think, is the rights, privileges etc (the 'ownership'
attributes -- whether explicit or implicit) which attach to making
payments under most models. If/when my own little earner project fails
to earn, it disappears, and
ng worked on here:
http://flattr.com/
But, apart from being slightly experimental, may not be appropriate
either to your particular dilemma?
Sean
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months ago either Clonezilla or Gparted (or both) did not.
Sean
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Memory Utilization is 92.02%, crossed warning (80) or critical (90)
> threshold.
>
> Since server have 128 GB RAM and only 1 application. I really don't belive
> that. Does there has some way can check memory utilitation ?
>
What is
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Lessee, FC10->FC13 ... but gnome is completely
broken, and you can't log
in, then find that gnome is hostile to window manager switching ...
At least you got to late-FC before that one ... still UNFIXED since
RH8! ...(so KDE since for m
On 1/19/11 11:49 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 9:46 PM, Joshua Baker-LePain wrote:
>> On Wed, 19 Jan 2011 at 11:44am, Bob Eastbrook wrote
>>
>>> By default, CentOS v5 requires a user's password when the system wakes
>>> up from the screensaver. This can be disabled by each us
x is always playing catch-up on toys produced for
commercial OSes.
Sean
Parshwa Murdia wrote:
> But at least work could be done in Fedora too like without
> going into the technical details at least multimedia could be used,
> secured bank transactions could be done, prints can be taken a
Not sure exactly what you are trying to do, but Tie::File might be worth
a look at if you haven't done so already?
Sean
ken wrote:
> Given an HTML file which looks like this:
>
> - begin snippet -
>
>> > > We've Lied to You…> >
Les Mikesell wrote:
> On
> 12/21/2010 1:06 PM, Sean wrote:
>>
>>>If you can treat something as a black box and trust it, the size of
>>> the component isn't that important.
>> "If" or "IFF" ..(IF AND ONLY IF)..? A deep sceptici
would certainly
get overwrites, though not quite random.
Sean
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.
(including my own, which are a sort of dark grey!?).
Sean
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and since I
gather that a new major is immanent maybe it will support the new Google
Chrome (along with Seamonkey, Opera-11+)? I wonder if there is a list of
packages somewhere. If the repo web-page for CentOS provided the actual
repo-address I was going to try direct my FC4-yum there for list
Les Mikesell wrote:
> On
> 12/18/10 3:24 PM, Sean wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Or, you might move to java for a more self-contained, OS/distribution
>>> independent way of doing things.
>>>
>> Why Perl? Because writing/maintaining 20,000 lines of te
Les Mikesell wrote:
> On
> 12/17/10 2:12 PM, Sean wrote:
>> Interesting, and probably worth a play with indeed, although I tend to
>> steer clear of Bash (unhappy with) whenever possible to do the same in
>> Perl (happy with). I imagine there is machine level stuff inv
ut thanks for the thought.
Sean
> On Fri,
> 17 Dec 2010, Sean wrote:
>
>> To: centos@centos.org
>> From: Sean
>> Subject: [CentOS] two cents or not two cents
>>
>> Hello Producers
>>
>> "Longevity of Support" is an attractive drawcard fo
Ah, a reminder that it is always dangerous to unveil the vague? Sorry
... I should have pre-read 6000 pages from Redhat ... (but maybe I did!).
Sean
Michael R. Dilworth wrote:
> I'm sorry (I know don't feed the trolls), but recently
> there have been quite a few remarks resembli
(e) call up 'konquerorsu.desktop' (root-konqueror with embedded root-Kterm)
(f) have normal cron scheduling
...... maybe more,
but that's a start.
Thanks for listening.
Sean
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On Sun, Oct 31, 2010 at 6:07 AM, Sean Carolan wrote:
>> Use the 'reboot' option in your kickstart.
>
> Isn't this the default anyway? I will try to specify it explicitly
> and see how it works...
Looks like tha
> Use the 'reboot' option in your kickstart.
Isn't this the default anyway? I will try to specify it explicitly
and see how it works...
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The subject just about says it all - I'm wondering if there is a way
to do a completely hands-off installation, including the reboot at the
end, without "Press any key to continue"?
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> Here is the error:
>
> LDAP# ldapadd -x -D "cn=Manager,dc=summitnjhome,dc=com" -W -f /tmp/passwd.ldif
> adding new entry "uid=root,ou=People,dc=summitnjhome,dc=com"
> ldap_add: Invalid syntax (21)
> additional info: objectClass: value #6 invalid per syntax
>
I believe this is complaining
> One silly thing (but needs to be asked):
>
> Did you rebuild access.db after editing access?
Yes, the rebuild command is built into my init script. I just double
checked it.
I'm getting better results having changed the setting to REJECT
instead of DISCARD. I will investigate a bit further wh
> lefgifu with: sendmail access TO
>
> http://www.feep.net/sendmail/tutorial/anti-spam/access_db.html
>
> 'The left hand side of each entry can optionally be prefixed
> with one of the tags To:, From:, or Connect:.'
Yes, I have tried this. I have entries like this in my access file:
To:staff...@
Maybe someone can help me sort this out. I want to block outbound
mail from my network based upon the recipient address. Internal
servers should still be allowed to send emails, but not to a few
specific addresses. I've tried creating some rules in
/etc/mail/access but to no avail. Is it possib
On 10/21/10 11:45 AM, Roland RoLaNd wrote:
Dear all,
i'm writing a certain script which does a specific task in a
repetitive manner, i'm going to give a similar script with the same
concept hope you could advise me to a better way:
Try "for"
http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-for-loop/
_
ctly which vim
you are using... There is a history optin in vimrc, is it possible you
set this to 0? I believe it sets the number of lines to keep in history.
Cheers,
Sean
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Next, you could try removing the conflict or getting the required Zlib
package (rpm or sourced from cpan) and force install, but I don't really
recommend. I don't use Openwebmail, so I can't speak to the
requirements there.
Good luck,
~Sean
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> Transaction Check Error:
> file /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Compress/Zlib.pm from install
> of perl-Compress-Zlib-2.015-1.el5.rf.noarch conflicts with file from
> package perl-IO-Compress-2.030-2.el5.rf.noarch
> file /usr/share/man/man3/Compress::Zlib.3pm.gz from install of
> perl-C
> Just disable password authentication on ssh and use only keyfiles ..
>
> --
My initial thought exactly. Keys, and require passwords on the keys
too. Although if you want to be wicked paranoid, knocking + keys would
work too.
~Sean
_
don't email passwords... have them call
you for them or something... email is the least secure
thing on the damn planet
4. Sit back and have a beer, cuz yer done
I'm happy to help if you need more.
Cheers,
Sean
___
tc
http://xrayspx.com/part-3-subroutines
If you give me a better idea of exactly what you are looking for I'm
sure I could whip something up.
Cheers,
Sean
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> I'm not sure how much 64-bit support the kernel expects so there might be some
> complications going that direction, but you can certainly install a 64-bit
> system and run the 32-bit versions of the apps and have both versions of most
> libraries available.
To bring some closure to this thread,
According to the release notes this bug has been fixed in version 1.40:
http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net/e2fsprogs-release.html#1.40
E2fsprogs 1.40 (June 29, 2007)
There was a floating point precision error which could cause e2fsck to
loop forever on really big filesystems with a large inode count
> To extend his comment: There is a bug in e2fsck for filesystems with
> many hardlinks. It could take *weeks* or longer, if it finishes at all,
> to run on a large filesystem with lots of hardlinks.
>
> http://www.mail-archive.com/scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov/msg02180.html
Awesome.
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 8:49 AM, Brent L. Bates wrote:
> Use the XFS file system and never have to worry about fsck again. You'll
> have a fast, more reliable, and more robust file system with over a decade and
> exabytes of use under its belt that you will never have to wait for fsck
> again
> Yep, same answer here, I had RHEL4.8 on a 2.6 TB MSA, and you just leave it
> going over the weekend.
I kind of figured as much; we're letting ours run during the week so
that hopefully the partition will be ready for weekend backup jobs.
Thanks for the feedback.
___
I have a large (1.5TB) partition with millions of files on it. e2fsck has
been running nearly 12 hours and is still on "Checking directory structure".
Any tips for speeding this along?
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I'm configuring some monitoring for a particular java/tomcat
application. We have noticed the occasional "Cannot allocate memory"
error. When this occurs apache still seems to return a "200 OK"
status code. Anyone know how to configure this so that when java has
an error, apache will also return
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