- Original Message -
From: "James A. Peltier"
To: "CentOS mailing list"
Sent: Saturday, August 20, 2016 1:06:14 AM
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Centos7 kickstart & pxe
- Original Message -
|
|
| - Original Message -
| From: "John Hodrien"
| To: "CentOS mailing list"
| Se
On Fri, 2 Sep 2016, Toralf Lund wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to connect my CentOS 6.8 laptop to the wireless net at work, which
is secured with WPA2 and AES. I've done this successfully in the past using
NetworkManager, but a new safety feature was recently introduced: A CA
certificate is required.
Hi all,
I would like install 389 Directory Server on a Centos 6.8 server.
I followed the instructions reported in :
https://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/DirectoryServerSetup?highlight=%28directory%29%7C%28server%29
and installed with yum the following packages :
389-ds-base-1.2.11.15-75.el6_8.x86_64
On Sep 4, 2016, at 1:27 PM, Walter H. wrote:
> 'ifconfig' doesn't show these additional addresses ...
This is one of the many reasons why people don’t use ‘ifconfig’ anymore.
--
Jonathan Billings
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CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
https://lis
--On Monday, September 05, 2016 9:27 AM -0400 Jonathan Billings
wrote:
This is one of the many reasons why people don't use 'ifconfig'
anymore.
Is there a preferred tool? Perhaps a script that will dump out the full
network configuration for easy checking?
_
On Mon, 5 Sep 2016 15:05, Kenneth Porter wrote:
On Monday, September 05, 2016 9:27 AM -0400 Jonathan Billings wrote:
This is one of the many reasons why people don't use 'ifconfig'
anymore.
Is there a preferred tool? Perhaps a script that will dump out the full
network configuration for ea
Am 05.09.2016 um 14:27 schrieb Jonathan Billings:
On Sep 4, 2016, at 1:27 PM, Walter H. wrote:
'ifconfig' doesn't show these additional addresses ...
This is one of the many reasons why people don’t use ‘ifconfig’ anymore.
As additional information: ifconfig as part of net-tools is deprecat
--On Monday, September 05, 2016 4:15 PM +0200 Yamaban
wrote:
How about using the "ip" tool?
Thanks. I looked at the man page and it looks like it's the Swiss army
knife of Linux networking. Lots of subcommands. I'll dig through that.
___
CentOS
Am 05.09.2016 um 15:29 schrieb Kenneth Porter:
--On Monday, September 05, 2016 4:15 PM +0200 Yamaban
wrote:
How about using the "ip" tool?
Thanks. I looked at the man page and it looks like it's the Swiss army
knife of Linux networking. Lots of subcommands. I'll dig through that.
Probably
On 09/05/16 08:56, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
Am 05.09.2016 um 15:29 schrieb Kenneth Porter:
--On Monday, September 05, 2016 4:15 PM +0200 Yamaban
wrote:
How about using the "ip" tool?
Thanks. I looked at the man page and it looks like it's the Swiss army
knife of Linux networking. Lots of sub
On 05.09.2016 15:28, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
Am 05.09.2016 um 14:27 schrieb Jonathan Billings:
On Sep 4, 2016, at 1:27 PM, Walter H.
wrote:
'ifconfig' doesn't show these additional addresses ...
This is one of the many reasons why people don’t use ‘ifconfig’ anymore.
As additional informat
On Mon, 2016-09-05 at 15:15 +0200, Yamaban wrote:
> "ip addr show" and
> "ip route show"
>
> should give the needed info, at least with Centos 7.x
Works on C5 and C6 too.
--
Regards,
Paul.
England, EU. England's place is in the European Union.
On Tue, 6 Sep 2016 02:14, Always Learning wrote:
On Mon, 2016-09-05 at 15:15 +0200, Yamaban wrote:
"ip addr show" and
"ip route show"
should give the needed info, at least with Centos 7.x
Works on C5 and C6 too.
Good to know, b/c as my contact with C5 is minimal
and no-existant with C6 ,
On Fri, Sep 2, 2016, 8:52 PM Fred Smith
wrote:
> I've recently had this problem on two C7 systems, wherein when doing "yum
> update", I get a warning about /boot being low on space.
>
> both systems were installed using the partition size recommended by
> Anaconda, right now "df -h" shows /boot a
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