On Mon, 12 Oct 2015, Ian Mortimer wrote:
On Sun, 2015-10-11 at 15:00 -0700, Emmett Culley wrote:
I assume there must be a different set of configuration files that
are accessed upon reboot than those accessed upon firewalld
restart.
The saved rules are under /etc/firewalld/zones. The rules
Looking for some feedback. Anybody using dnsmasq for dns/dhcp in enterprise
level (300-500) users and machines? We have a mix of osx and linux machines.
Have AWS instances as well (compute farm).
Thanks
-g
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On 10/10/2015 11:25 PM, Hua Wang wrote:
I am not sure if we can not send attachments to the mailing list. There were
quite a lot replies before, but I got nothing back since attachements was
added. I will remove the attachments and send it again.
You can use services like pastebin.com to temp
On 10/11/2015 03:00 PM, Emmett Culley wrote:
I just noticed that when rebooting a CentOS 7 server the firewall comes back up
with both interfaces set to REJECT, instead of the eth1 interface set to ACCEPT
as defined in 'permanent' firewalld configuration files.
Rather than paraphrasing, could
On Fri, October 9, 2015 10:17 am, david wrote:
> Folks
>
> I have several remotely-located servers, donated by folks not all of
> whom are computer geeks, let-alone Linux aware. In earlier versions
> of Centos, I directed them to perform a minimal NetInstall (not too
> difficult to direct over th
I am a newcomer to Centos and could benefit from some help.
I am repurposing an older server and installed Centos 6.7 on a Tyan Tiger MPX
2466 motherboard. The installation went flawlessly but the graphics chip on the
motherboard is obviously quite old, a Matrix Millennium MGA 2064W, and the slo
On 10/12/2015 10:17 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 10/11/2015 03:00 PM, Emmett Culley wrote:
>> I just noticed that when rebooting a CentOS 7 server the firewall comes back
>> up with both interfaces set to REJECT, instead of the eth1 interface set to
>> ACCEPT as defined in 'permanent' firewalld
Hey guys,
I'm trying to mount a disk volume on aws under CentOS 7. And when I try I
get this result:
[root@repo:~] #mount /dev/xvdf1 /opt/repo
mount: /dev/xvdf1 is write-protected, mounting read-only
mount: unknown filesystem type '(null)'
The only thing I can see in dmesg that seems to relate
Hi users,
I have setup OVIRT 3.5 with* 2 CENTOS 7.1 hosts. Everything is ok other
than HA ( High Availability). *To test HA, Documentation says, *Power
Management is needed. *
Could you pls let me know if this Power Management is a separate Device or
does it come with a BRANDED Server such as HP
On 10/12/2015 06:23 PM, Emmett Culley wrote:
I expect to see the second output upon reboot.
Thanks, that's a lot more clear. Weird, though. Does
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth1 specify a "ZONE="? Are you
using the "network" or the "NetworkManager" service?
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On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 12:15 AM, Gordon Messmer
wrote:
> On 10/11/2015 09:38 AM, C. L. Martinez wrote:
>>
>> That's the problem. There is no error but any cron job configured runs..
>> And this is the cuestion: why any cron job works?.
>
>
> It's not clear what you're asking. It would help if yo
On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 2:59 AM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
> Because systemwide cronjobs are installed in /etc/cron.* directories, not
> in root user cron file..
>
Thanks Eero. I know this. And I have tried to put some cron job in
these directories to test ... and nothing ...
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