John R Pierce wrote:
>> My CentOS-7 home server has a static IP address.
>>
>> Is there a simple way of organizing the hpptd server
>> so that it is accessible through this address at a remote host,
>> but is accessed at its 192.168 address by a laptop on the WiFi LAN?
> are you also running your
Barry Brimer wrote:
>
>
>> My CentOS-7 home server has a static IP address.
>>
>> Is there a simple way of organizing the hpptd server
>> so that it is accessible through this address at a remote host,
>> but is accessed at its 192.168 address by a laptop on the WiFi LAN?
>
> Is the static IP a
On Mon, Feb 15, 2016 at 6:52 PM, Warren Young wrote:
> On Feb 15, 2016, at 10:34 AM, Mike - st257 wrote:
> >
> > I have not yet found a USB-to-serial adapter detected as /dev/ttyACM1.
> > Try /dev/ttyUSB0 ?
>
> Both naming schemes are correct, depending on the *type* of USB to serial
> converter
Hello list,
So I'm having a strange issue with Centos 7 mounting NFS V3.
It starts with autofs. For example, my auto.share file:
apps-nfsvers=3 some-server:/mnt/xfs1/&
This will mount, but the first mount takes ~30 sec. After this, eventually the
mount becomes stale but it still shows as con
On 02/13/2016 04:19 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
On Sat, February 13, 2016 2:24 pm, David Both wrote:
+1 Valeri. I agree that things have changed a lot!
_things_ changed? I wouldn't quite agree. It is people who have changed
definitely.
'Things have changed' is idiomatic English for the passive vo
On 02/14/2016 06:40 AM, Tim wrote:
> Hey Johnny,
>
> thank you very much for your instructions. The build is running at the
> moment but there seems to be a small bug in kernel-rt.spec.
>
> I changed the line 684 from
> mv %{name}-%{rpmversion}-%{pkg_release_simple}%{dist} vanilla-%{kversion};
>
On 02/13/2016 03:50 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
I still like making /home its own file system, and if I'm running a
substantial (non-trivial) database server, it also has its own volume,
quite likely on its own raid.
I've done this for close to 20 years (19 years this April, to be
exact); my cu
On 02/15/2016 02:12 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
It is so great to hear that! I was shushed a few times by modern
experts - I bet on this list too - about following ancient practices
and having more than just / partition... so I felt myself as a relic
dinosaur
...
On a public-facing server I ten
On Tue, 16 Feb 2016 09:15:43 +
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> > you could run split DNS, so on your LAN, mydomain.com is 192.168.x.x
> > while on the internet, mydomain.com is the actual IP address.
>
> I'd rather not run a DNS server on my machine.
> I tried this some years ago, and ran into troubl
For what it's worth, back in April of last year I reported that gkrellm
had started generating kernel panics with 7.1503's kernel.
I can now report that with the latest 7.1511 kernels (327.4.5 being the
latest I have installed) gkrellm is once again behaving for me.
Just wanted to close the l
Morning
On Wed, Feb 17, 2016 at 2:35 AM, Edsall, William (WJ)
wrote:
> Hello list,
> So I'm having a strange issue with Centos 7 mounting NFS V3.
>
>
As a first step I would confirm a few things.
1. Do you have any other systems using the NFS server successfully?
2. Does a manual mount work ?
3
Thanks for the reply - was waiting for a reply so I could give an update.
This seemed to be a bug with Autofs. I ran a yum update to autofs and the
problem has been resolved.
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Clint Dilks
S
Frank Cox wrote:
> Why not put mydomain.com 192.168.whatever in your /etc/hosts file? No
> need to run a dns server to hard-code one single lookup like that.
Thanks very much, that seems to work.
I added "www.myserver.com" to the line starting 192.168.2.5.
--
Timothy Murphy
gayleard /at/ eir
On 2/16/2016 1:18 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Frank Cox wrote:
>Why not put mydomain.com 192.168.whatever in your /etc/hosts file? No
>need to run a dns server to hard-code one single lookup like that.
Thanks very much, that seems to work.
I added "www.myserver.com" to the line starting 192.168
Folks
This might be the wrong place to ask, but I don't know where to turn.
My internal home network, including wireless, is controlled by a
Centos6 server, which provides dhcpd services, along with NAT. I
have DHCPD configured with the addresses 192.168.155.200 through
192.168.155.254 as the
--On Saturday, February 13, 2016 03:24:53 PM -0500 David Both
wrote:
However, Devin, the answer to your question [...]
For the record, I didn't ask the question; I only posted the original
heads-up. That was Tim Murphy asking the question. Watch the
attributions, please.
Devin
___
Does anyone know what program can be used to query the RAID status
from the OS for an on-board LSI SAS 2308-4i?
On this page:
http://docs.avagotech.com/docs/12351997
there is a curious note on the left that reads:
"Integrated MegaRAID support available upon request"
After one mostly fruitless
On 2/16/2016 3:23 PM, Zube wrote:
Does anyone know what program can be used to query the RAID status
from the OS for an on-board LSI SAS 2308-4i?
the 2308 isn't actually a megaraid, its a simple SAS HBA that has an
optional raid mode IF its flashed with IR firmware... this only supports
raid
John R Pierce wrote:
> On 2/16/2016 3:23 PM, Zube wrote:
>> Does anyone know what program can be used to query the RAID status
>> from the OS for an on-board LSI SAS 2308-4i?
>
> the 2308 isn't actually a megaraid, its a simple SAS HBA that has an
> optional raid mode IF its flashed with IR firmwar
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