On 03/31/16 01:00, Sorin Srbu wrote:
>> -Original Message-
>> From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
>> Behalf Of g
>> Sent: den 24 mars 2016 17:22
>> To: centos@centos.org
>> Subject: Re: [CentOS] Centos in the Browser string ?
>>
>> now i goofed. :-\
>>
>>
On Thu, 2016-03-31 at 05:59 +, Sorin Srbu wrote:
> > -Original Message-
> > From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On
> > Behalf Of g
> > if you have a file in profile directory, add this to it. if not,
> > create file and paste this in it.
> >
> > //set
On 30/03/2016 18:08, David Copperfield wrote:
Hi,
We have tens of networks(VLANs) in data center with a central Linux DHCP
server. each network has their router to do the DHCP relay. So, the DHCP
server's configuration files has tens 'subnet' statements.
Because PXE booting is standard in who
On 26/01/16 16:26, John R Pierce wrote:
On 1/26/2016 5:37 AM, lejeczek wrote:
I'm having a, I'd like to think a "regular" VPN with
IPsec/xl2tpd and it all works OK, except..
One thing that I never needed but now I do and I
wonder is it my iptables, or/and routing or maybe VPN
server conf
Oddity: rsync *should* be recursing, and dealing with very large number of
files. It works, going from box a to box b. But when I try to back b up to
c, it fails, 100%, complaining of "out of hashtable space [sender]". I've
tried adding -r, and changing --delete to --delete-delay, and no joy.
All
On 03/31/2016 07:35 AM, lejeczek wrote:
there will be a struggle on how to push routing to vpn clients when
they don't use vpn connection as default gateway.
How to get around it, how to tell clients (ideally in a
automated/unattended way) about VPN server other subnets?
L2TP VPNs are ppp lin
On 03/31/2016 09:53 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Oddity: rsync *should* be recursing, and dealing with very large number of
files. It works, going from box a to box b. But when I try to back b up to
c, it fails, 100%, complaining of "out of hashtable space [sender]". I've
tried adding -r, and chan
Hello all..
I'm trying to run CentOS 7 in a LXC container and need to disable udev so
that we can manage the devices ourselves. I believe that I've disabled all
of the systemd related udev services, but udev is still taking over and
mounting /dev. What is the proper way to disable this?
Thanks.
On 03/31/2016 09:24 AM, Robert Nichols wrote:
The only thing I know of that's likely to cause rsync to run out of
memory
is when there are a huge number of hard links and you are using the "-H"
option to preserve them.
If you're using -H, rsync has to keep a table of all of the files and
in
Hi tris,
Many thanks, I'll give the perl script a try shortly
Best,David
On Thursday, March 31, 2016 6:00 AM, Tris Hoar wrote:
On 30/03/2016 18:08, David Copperfield wrote:
> Hi,
> We have tens of networks(VLANs) in data center with a central Linux DHCP
>server. each network has t
On 31 Mar 2016 17:31, "Paul Schroeder" wrote:
>
> Hello all..
>
> I'm trying to run CentOS 7 in a LXC container and need to disable udev so
> that we can manage the devices ourselves. I believe that I've disabled
all
> of the systemd related udev services, but udev is still taking over and
> moun
On 03/31/2016 12:23 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 03/31/2016 09:24 AM, Robert Nichols wrote:
The only thing I know of that's likely to cause rsync to run out of memory
is when there are a huge number of hard links and you are using the "-H"
option to preserve them.
If you're using -H, rsync ha
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