Helo list
About a month ago I was wandering how to upgrade php 51 to 53.
Finally, I follow those instructions:
http://drup.org/upgrading-centos-5-php-5.3
I share my experience with you.
Everything qoes fine and know 5.3.3 php ver run on my centos 5-10.el5.
Thank you all for your help.
Nikos
On
2013/11/18 Nikos Gatsis - Qbit
> Helo list
> About a month ago I was wandering how to upgrade php 51 to 53.
> Finally, I follow those instructions:
> http://drup.org/upgrading-centos-5-php-5.3
>
>
Err. Do not compile packages by hand. IUS repository provides packages for
php53.
--
Eero
_
John R Pierce wrote:
>On 11/16/2013 9:50 PM, whitivery wrote:
>> What else might I try?
>
>centos 6.latest ?or at least 5.latest5.7 is circa 2011,
>there's dozens of kernel patches since then, its up to 5.10 now.
Thank you John and John for the replies.
I was guessing that doing a
On 11/18/2013 12:08 AM, whitivery wrote:
> I was going for the kernel update since it could be done with a few RPMs
> remotely, fairly safely. I'm not sure if the same can be done with 5.7 to
> 5.10 or 6.4.
5.7 should upgrade to 5.10+ painlessly. if the host doesn't have
internet access, you ca
On Mon, Nov 18, 2013 at 3:03 AM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
> 2013/11/18 Nikos Gatsis - Qbit
>
> > Helo list
> > About a month ago I was wandering how to upgrade php 51 to 53.
> > Finally, I follow those instructions:
> > http://drup.org/upgrading-centos-5-php-5.3
> >
> >
> Err. Do not compile package
On 16/11/2013 21:46, Andrew Holway wrote:
> [root@ipa tftpboot]# semanage fcontext -l | grep tftp
> /tftpboot directory
> system_u:object_r:tftpdir_t:s0
> /tftpboot/.* all files
> system_u:object_r:tftpdir_t:s0
> /usr/s
On Sun, November 17, 2013 12:55, Michael Hennebry wrote:
>
> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
> I took the default desktop: gnome.
> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
> That gets rather annoying,
> especially when I have to drill down several levels.
> Is there around that
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On 11/18/2013 08:20 AM, Tris Hoar wrote:
>
> On 16/11/2013 21:46, Andrew Holway wrote:
>> [root@ipa tftpboot]# semanage fcontext -l | grep tftp /tftpboot
>> directory system_u:object_r:tftpdir_t:s0 /tftpboot/.*
>> all files system_u:object_r:tftpdir_t
On Mon, 18 Nov 2013, James B. Byrne wrote:
>
> On Sun, November 17, 2013 12:55, Michael Hennebry wrote:
>>
>> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
>> I took the default desktop: gnome.
>> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
>> That gets rather annoying,
>> especially when I have
Hi All.
I have an environment in which I would like to implement a GUI for parsing
syslog-ng logs from operating system, application servers and databases.
I've heard that Splunk is a good tool but its quite hard to learn. Are
there any valuable alternatives? What are you using and why?
Best rega
James B. Byrne wrote:
> On Sun, November 17, 2013 12:55, Michael Hennebry wrote:
>>
>> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again. I took the default desktop:
gnome.
>> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window. That gets rather
annoying,
>> especially when I have to drill down several levels.
On 2013.11.18 17:56, Rafał Radecki wrote:
> Hi All.
>
> I have an environment in which I would like to implement a GUI for parsing
> syslog-ng logs from operating system, application servers and databases.
> I've heard that Splunk is a good tool but its quite hard to learn. Are
> there any valuable
In GB, the paid license is an option ;)
2013/11/18 ign...@vault13.lt
> On 2013.11.18 17:56, Rafał Radecki wrote:
> > Hi All.
> >
> > I have an environment in which I would like to implement a GUI for
> parsing
> > syslog-ng logs from operating system, application servers and databases.
> > I've
When I was searching for something simillar, I red that syslog-ng plays
well with https://code.google.com/p/enterprise-log-search-and-archive/ .
They have how-tos and configs there specifically for that.
There is also Elasticsearch. Greylog2.
There are also more simple GUIs, but I doubt they will
2013/11/18 Rafał Radecki
> Hi All.
>
> I have an environment in which I would like to implement a GUI for parsing
> syslog-ng logs from operating system, application servers and databases.
> I've heard that Splunk is a good tool but its quite hard to learn. Are
> there any valuable alternatives?
Check LogAnalyzer:
http://loganalyzer.adiscon.com/
If life gives you lemons, keep them-- because hey.. free lemons.
"~heart~ Sticker" fixer: http://microflush.org/stuff/stickers/heartFix.html
On Monday, November 18, 2013 3:11 PM, Eero Volotinen
wrote:
2013/11/18 Rafał Radecki
>
On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 4:59 AM, wrote:
> James B. Byrne wrote:
> > On Sun, November 17, 2013 12:55, Michael Hennebry wrote:
> >>
> >> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again. I took the default desktop:
> gnome.
> >> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window. That gets rather
> annoying,
On Sun, 2013-11-17 at 14:50 -0600, Carson Chittom wrote:
> On Sun, 2013-11-17 at 14:37 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
> > On Sun, 17 Nov 2013 14:12:33 -0600
> > Carson Chittom wrote:
> >
> > > While I could, of course, just do the ./configure && make && make
> > > install dance, I don't like having softw
I'm trying to find the correct vpn plugin so I can vpn in to a server. The
server requirements are vpn server, username/password and shared secret.
I've installed a few vpn plugins, but I haven't found the correct one that
has the shared secret option. Anyone know which one it is? I've tried a
f
On 11/19/2013 03:45 AM, Carson Chittom wrote:
> After a brief effort, I didn't get it to work.
>
> [...]
> So I again attempted to compile the emacs-24.2 SRPM, but apparently the
> version of autoconf (2.63) in CentOS was too low (the emacs SRPM
> expected 2.69), which caused the build to fail.
My
On 11/19/2013 07:31 AM, Wes James wrote:
> I'm trying to find the correct vpn plugin so I can vpn in to a server. The
> server requirements are vpn server, username/password and shared secret.
You need to know what kind of VPN you're dealing with: OpenVPN? IPSec?
whatever?
--
+261 34 81 738 69
On 11/17/2013 08:58 PM, Rita wrote:
> What is the maximum number of NFS mounts per client? I have an instance
> where there are over 400 mount points using autofs. I was wondering if
> there is a downside to that.
Except the network load, I think you'll just have the same issues you
basically enc
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