I've been following the guide found here:
http://openvz.org/NFS_server_inside_container
Which says that this is no problem.
> On Sat, 15 Nov 2014 02:44:15 +0900
> c...@qgenuity.com wrote:
>
>> The server provider has loaded the nfsd module.
>
>> FATAL: Module nfsd not found.
>
> Apparently not
Hi list,
I need a new mobo for my workstation.
I'm planning to buy Asus Z97K or Asus Z97 Pro and install Centos 7.
Anyone has experiences with these mobos?
I need to know if Z97 chipset and NIC Realtek 8111GR are supported by C7.
Another question about Intel I218V NIC installed on Asus Z97 Pro.
Hi there,
I was using a ps/2 mouse.
I had to connect a ps/2 keyboard. As I have only one ps/2 socket I
connected an usb mouse.
I then removed the other keyboard and reconnected the ps/2 mouse and
removed the usb mouse.
Now the ps/2 mouse does not work, even after reboot. What should I do?
- Ge
On Sat, 15 Nov 2014 17:04:14 +0100
Gergely Buday wrote:
> Now the ps/2 mouse does not work, even after reboot. What should I do?
If the computer was turned on when you did this swapping around, there is a
slight chance that you shorted the connection and killed the socket.
--
MELVILLE THEATRE
> > Now the ps/2 mouse does not work, even after reboot. What should I do?
>
> If the computer was turned on when you did this swapping around, there is a
> slight chance that you shorted the connection and killed the socket.
I reconnected the other keyboard and I write this e-mail from it so
thi
On Fri, 2014-11-14 at 11:50 -1000, Miranda Hawarden-Ogata wrote:
> I could do that I suppose, but I haven't and probably wouldn't have the
> time necessary to separate out the emails between the two accounts. I
> already have 6+ email accounts that I have to monitor so I'd rather not
> fork of
On Sat, 2014-11-15 at 10:12 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Nov 2014 17:04:14 +0100
> Gergely Buday wrote:
>
> > Now the ps/2 mouse does not work, even after reboot. What should I do?
>
> If the computer was turned on when you did this swapping around, there is a
> slight chance that you s
On Sat, 15 Nov 2014 16:24:59 +
Always Learning wrote:
> Shouldn't USB be 'hot swappable' with the current limited to about 0.5
> amps ?
USB connections are hot swappable, but PS/2 sockets are not.
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~ www.melvilletheatre.com
___
On 11/14/2014 10:48 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> On 11/12/2014 03:09 PM, Phelps, Matthew wrote:
>> I concur. Enter key, ^M, etc. has no effect in the browser. Same for number
>> keys.
>
> This is a known issue, I will have another version soon (hopefully by
> Monday).
>
There is now a new Chromium
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 10:21 AM, Always Learning wrote:
>
> Why keep masses and masses of irrelevant data in an unstructured format
> presided over by Google? Its not logical sense. Essentially, why store
> a lot of "rubbish" that will never ever be needed ?
>
Email is inherently unstructured
On 11/15/2014 10:20 AM, Gergely Buday wrote:
>>> Now the ps/2 mouse does not work, even after reboot. What should
>>> I do?
>>
>> If the computer was turned on when you did this swapping around,
>> there is a slight chance that you shorted the connection and killed
>> the socket.
>
> I reconnec
On 2014/11/15 08:28, Les Mikesell wrote:
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 10:21 AM, Always Learning wrote:
Why keep masses and masses of irrelevant data in an unstructured format
presided over by Google? Its not logical sense. Essentially, why store
a lot of "rubbish" that will never ever be needed ?
On 14/11/14 18:09, Les Mikesell wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 4:07 AM, Karanbir Singh wrote:
>>
>>> So in practice I think this really boils down to the common problem of
>>> ancient software shipped by RHEL and the bug-for-bug compatibility in
>>> CentOS with the list system eating its own dog
On 11/16/2014 11:11 AM, Karanbir Singh wrote:
> 2) what is the
> lists.centos.org machine doing with DKIM and what is the larger fix for
> each of those things.
Did you get the off-list email I sent a couple days ago irt this?
Peter
___
CentOS mailing
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 4:11 PM, Karanbir Singh wrote:
> On 14/11/14 18:09, Les Mikesell wrote:
>> On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 4:07 AM, Karanbir Singh wrote:
>>>
So in practice I think this really boils down to the common problem of
ancient software shipped by RHEL and the bug-for-bug compa
On 15/11/14 23:09, Les Mikesell wrote:
> The point is that mailman has the fix. I suppose you can look at the
> question of whether you solve the problem only for yourself or for all
> centos users as two different things but the solution is pretty much
> the same as any other bug that has been f
Folks:
This conversation was trying to get Centos 7 installed on a machine
with a NIC that got de-supported in EL7.
Following the advice to do as follows:
- Install (via CD) the "minimal" ISO
- add the RPM of kmod-forcedeth-0.64-1.el7.elrepo.x86_64.rpm from
a USB stick, as obtained from EL
On 11/16/2014 12:09 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
> The point is that mailman has the fix. I suppose you can look at the
> question of whether you solve the problem only for yourself or for all
> centos users as two different things but the solution is pretty much
> the same as any other bug that has be
On 11/15/2014 5:17 PM, Peter wrote:
I think it's important to note that this actually isn't a bug. This is
failure to strip DKIM headers when forwarding a message. Note that when
RHEL6 was released DKIM was still new and DMARC was pretty much unheard
of. It's not surprising that the version of
On 11/16/2014 02:45 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
> the other important feature the new mailman has is to munge the From:
> field if the user's DNS has the DMARC records indicating a draconian
> policy.
Grrr, yes, of course, DMARC likes to check the From: header now (utterly
stupid). Anyways, it shoul
I've downloaded the tarball. When I run ./configure, I get
[sdstern@cumberland suphp-0.7.2]$ ./configure
configure: error: cannot find install-sh, install.sh, or shtool in
config "."/config
I've installed libtool, autoconf and automake. shtool and install-sh are
installed.
Any clues on how to ge
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