man rsync
-i, --itemize-changes output a change-summary for all updates
--list-only list the files instead of copying them
--ignore-existing skip updating files that exist on receiver
-v, --verbose increase verbosity
--existing, --ignore-non-existin
On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 06:22 +0100, Lucian @ lastdot.org wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 5:23 AM, Robert Spangler
> wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > Can anyone tell me how to get the 2 in the Subject line to work? I have
> > read
> > a lot about adding this or that repo but still no joy as usually dep
Hi all
Hi list
my linux box is CentOS 5.3
it is properly updated
I use the old old stable version 0.1.1 of roundcubemail , which is contained
in the deposit EPEL
I preferred to continue using the version contained in the official
repositories of CentOS
I configure a user roundcubemail on my m
On Sunday 11 October 2009 01:22, Lucian @ lastdot.org wrote:
> > Can anyone tell me how to get the 2 in the Subject line to work? I have
> > read a lot about adding this or that repo but still no joy as usually
> > deps are missing. :(
> >
>
> Usually rpm -Uhv
>
> http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el
On Sunday 11 October 2009 05:35, lostson wrote:
> > > Can anyone tell me how to get the 2 in the Subject line to work? I
> > > have read a lot about adding this or that repo but still no joy as
> > > usually deps are missing. :(
>
> Personally I use rpmfusion repo which you can fine here
>
>
2009/10/11 Robert Spangler
> On Sunday 11 October 2009 01:22, Lucian @ lastdot.org wrote:
>
> > > Can anyone tell me how to get the 2 in the Subject line to work? I
> have
> > > read a lot about adding this or that repo but still no joy as usually
> > > deps are missing. :(
> > >
> >
> > Us
Hi,
I just installed and configured Conky, and I'd like to automatically
launch it whenever I start a GNOME session. I expected to see some sort
of Preferences>Launch Applications on Startup, some user-specific
equivalent of rc.local, but there doesn't seem to be such an entry.
Any suggestions
Niki Kovacs wrote:
Hi,
I just installed and configured Conky, and I'd like to automatically
launch it whenever I start a GNOME session. I expected to see some sort
of Preferences>Launch Applications on Startup, some user-specific
equivalent of rc.local, but there doesn't seem to be such an en
On Oct 10, 2009, at 12:29 AM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
> On Fri, 2009-10-09 at 21:42 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
>> On Oct 9, 2009, at 6:14 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
>>>
>>> So for iet, that means /etc/iet/ietd.conf should define the Lun like
>>> this:
>>>
>>> Lun 0 Path=/dev/sdb,Type=blockio,ScsiId=as
On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 12:36 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
> What does the ietd.conf, initiators.allow and targets.allow look like?
>
> What is your network setup? Are you using a vif on the loopback?
There's no VIF on loopback. The machine running iet has two NICs, the
private interconnect should not
On 11/10/09 17:28, Niki Kovacs wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just installed and configured Conky, and I'd like to automatically
> launch it whenever I start a GNOME session. I expected to see some sort
> of Preferences>Launch Applications on Startup, some user-specific
> equivalent of rc.local, but there does
On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 15:13 -0400, C Linus Hicks wrote:
> There's no VIF on loopback. The machine running iet has two NICs, the
> private interconnect should not be playing a role. It's IP address is
> 10.200.2.2/24 while the local subnet is 10.200.1.0/24 and the iet
> machine is IP address 10.200.
Hi!
I'm trying to install SVN on a latest version of CentOS (5.3). I just
did:
yum install subversion
yum install mod_dav_svn
Then i edited /etc/httpd/conf.d/subversion.conf
and here is the content:
DAV svn
SVNParentPath /var/www/svn
# Limit wri
On Oct 11, 2009, at 3:13 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
> On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 12:36 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
>> What does the ietd.conf, initiators.allow and targets.allow look
>> like?
>>
>> What is your network setup? Are you using a vif on the loopback?
>
> There's no VIF on loopback. The machi
On Oct 11, 2009, at 5:14 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
> On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 15:13 -0400, C Linus Hicks wrote:
>> There's no VIF on loopback. The machine running iet has two NICs, the
>> private interconnect should not be playing a role. It's IP address is
>> 10.200.2.2/24 while the local subnet is
Hi Guy;
On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 5:41 PM, Guy Boisvert wrote:
> What i find very strange is this:
> =
> [r...@svn mnt]# ll /var/www/svn/applitv/format
> -r--r--r-- 1 apache apache 2 Oct 11 11:40 /var/www/svn/applitv/format
Do you have SELinux enabled?
Also, what
Guy Boisvert wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I'm trying to install SVN on a latest version of CentOS (5.3). I just
> did:
>
> yum install subversion
> yum install mod_dav_svn
>
>
> Then i edited /etc/httpd/conf.d/subversion.conf
>
> and here is the content:
>
>
> DAV svn
>
Jake Shipton a écrit :
>>
> Hi, assuming the application can be started from terminal without issues
> you could go to:
>
> System > Preferences > More Preferences > Sessions
>
> And onto the "Start up" tab.
>
> Click "Add" and here, you will need to enter a command (such as
> /usr/bin/co
On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 17:43 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
> I'm a little confused now, you are running IET and open-iscsi on the
> same host, buy using an external interface for the connection between
> the two instead of the loopback? You would get much better throughput
> on the loopback.
Sure
Guy Boisvert wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I'm trying to install SVN on a latest version of CentOS (5.3). I just
> did:
>
> yum install subversion
> yum install mod_dav_svn
Your permission problem is probably selinux-related, but aside from that, the
version of subversion in the centos repo is ancie
On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 17:51 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
> I don't know much about open-iscsi, just IET and the best way to
> diagnose iSCSI problems is via tcpdump and wireshark not strace.
>
> Is the iscsi-target service running?
[r...@lh6 iscsi]# netstat -nlp | grep 3260
tcp0 0 0.0
Ian Wilson wrote:
> Hi Guy;
>
>
> On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 5:41 PM, Guy Boisvert
> wrote:
>> What i find very strange is this:
>> =
>> [r...@svn mnt]# ll /var/www/svn/applitv/format
>> -r--r--r-- 1 apache apache 2 Oct 11 11:40 /var/www/svn/applitv/format
>
> Do y
Guy Boisvert wrote:
> Ian Wilson wrote:
>
>> Hi Guy;
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 5:41 PM, Guy Boisvert
>> wrote:
>>
>>> What i find very strange is this:
>>> =
>>> [r...@svn mnt]# ll /var/www/svn/applitv/format
>>> -r--r--r-- 1 apache apache 2 Oct 11 1
Clint Dilks wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> There have still situations where permissive mode is not the same as
> disabled. I suggest that you try disabling to see if the the behavior
> is different.
vim /etc/selinux/config
==> SELINUX=disabled
Rebooted, then same result:
===
(
Drew wrote:
>> A lot changes in 7 years
>>
>> Anyway, so I just fire up adsl-setup, and it should walk me through; then
>> run adsl-start? At that point, should I be able to browse to Verizon's
>> setup your account website?
>
> If the ADSL modem provides an Ethernet jack w/ DHCP then it's usu
Kemp, Larry wrote:
> That will work great. One box...two NICS, running ipchains. If you are
Um, did you meant iptables? ipchains is a tiny bit dated
mark
--
"...As I got about three steps past, he registered. Long brown
hair like a hippie. Big full beard too. Broad shoulders and
sen
On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 7:05 PM, Guy Boisvert wrote:
> So i'm stumped!
That's ok.
Have you tried switching to the apache user ('su - apache') to see if
you can touch a file/read files in that directory? I'm still thinking
this is a permissions issue.
Ian
--
Ian Wilson
ian.m.wil...@gmail.com
h
Toby Bluhm wrote:
> Toby Bluhm wrote:
>> Niki Kovacs wrote:
>>>
>>> I just set up a web server... and my bandwidth is being eaten by some
>>> chinese folks trying to brute-force-ssh their way into the machine.
>>>
>>> Is there a simple way to banish either single IP addresses or, maybe
>>> even b
Am 12.10.09 01:05, schrieb Guy Boisvert:
> [r...@svn ~]# ll /var/www/svn
> total 16
> drwxr-xr-x 7 apache apache 4096 Oct 11 11:40 applitv
> drw-rw-r-- 7 apache apache 4096 Oct 11 10:31 repos
My repos directory has permissions 0750 - try to change into each
directory as user apache und touch file
Brian Mathis wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 10, 2009 at 2:14 PM, Giovanni P. Tirloni
> wrote:
>> On Oct 10, 2009, at 3:08 PM, Alan McKay wrote:
>>
The better solution would be to make sure you are prepared for when
the hardware does fail. Inform the client that you understand that
>>> This is b
Jake Shipton a écrit :
>
> Not quite sure what conky is, as I've never used it, so this may or may
> not work for you. But give it a try :-)
>
Here's an example of what Conky may look like, after a bit of tweaking:
http://www.kikinovak.net/images/conky.png
Cheers,
Niki
__
On 10/10/09 01:23, mbneto wrote:
> I'll have a look. I was hoping that the RH based rpms would be
> available to maintain the same update process.
There was and has been some uncertainity around the redhat webappstack
packages. I think were at a stage where much of that does not matter
anymore
Peter Hinse wrote:
> Am 12.10.09 01:05, schrieb Guy Boisvert:
>
>> [r...@svn ~]# ll /var/www/svn
>> total 16
>> drwxr-xr-x 7 apache apache 4096 Oct 11 11:40 applitv
>> drw-rw-r-- 7 apache apache 4096 Oct 11 10:31 repos
>
> My repos directory has permissions 0750 - try to change into each
> direct
The best way to do it is with iptables. If you want something "more
easily configurable" then some front end for it would be most useful.
Webmin most likely provides a graphical interface to do it.
Adding rules to drop traffic from IPs or whole subnets is not that
difficult if you have a bas
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 7:35 PM, Niki Kovacs wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just set up a web server... and my bandwidth is being eaten by some
> chinese folks trying to brute-force-ssh their way into the machine.
>
> Is there a simple way to banish either single IP addresses or, maybe
> even better, whole IP
On Oct 11, 2009, at 6:22 PM, C Linus Hicks wrote:
> On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 17:51 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
>> I don't know much about open-iscsi, just IET and the best way to
>> diagnose iSCSI problems is via tcpdump and wireshark not strace.
>>
>> Is the iscsi-target service running?
>
> [r...@lh
>
> Specific arguments I can think of would be:
> - Hard/Impossible to find replacement hardware
> - Lack of support for both H/W and S/W
> - Possibly unable to run current versions of CentOS
> - Higher probability of hardware failures over time
> - Performance bottlenecks
>
> Any other thoughts
On Sun, 2009-10-11 at 23:26 -0400, Ross Walker wrote:
> Can you send a short tcpdump between initiator and target during
> discovery/login?
Sure. Note that all this traffic is on the "lo" interface.
The discovery command and tcpdump output:
[r...@lh6 ~]# iscsiadm -m discovery -t st -p 10.200.1
Approach him like this. Tell him if he plans on moving his business forward
within the next 5 years he should think accordingly.
On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 11:26 PM, R-Elists wrote:
>
> >
> > Specific arguments I can think of would be:
> > - Hard/Impossible to find replacement hardware
> > - Lack o
Morning,
On 10 Oct 2009, at 17:12, Brian Mathis wrote:
> The better solution would be to make sure you are prepared for when
> the hardware does fail. Inform the client that you understand that
> they don't want to upgrade the servers, and that hardware failure is
> not a case of "if" but "when".
On 10 Oct 2009, at 01:23, mbneto wrote:
> Hi Sergey,
>
> I'll have a look. I was hoping that the RH based rpms would be
> available to maintain the same update process.
Why not just build the packages yourself, until the project gets
webstack available?
http://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/li
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