Actually, with C6, too. We've been fighting a problem with a server with a
RAID appliance that's having issues. It's also serving /home/* and project
directories for one team. What happens is when the issues happen, NFS on
the other servers they use, of course, gags with timeouts.
Now, my question
On 07/25/2017 09:12 PM, Scott Robbins wrote:
On Tue, Jul 25, 2017 at 09:06:25PM -0400, H wrote:
On 07/20/2017 05:49 AM, Scott Robbins wrote:
assignee's free time), but anyone who would like to add their support to
the request can view the bug at
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=147
Hello there,
I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
kernel can't run on this hardware.
What would you recommend? Waiting for CentOS8 is not an option unless
it's a question of few weeks. Are there r
Le 27/07/2017 à 19:25, wwp a écrit :
> I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> kernel can't run on this hardware.
>
> What would you recommend? Waiting for CentOS8 is not an option unless
> it's a
Hello Nicolas,
On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 19:51:07 +0200 Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
> Le 27/07/2017 à 19:25, wwp a écrit :
> > I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> > GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> > kernel can't run on this hardware.
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 07:25:25PM +0200, wwp wrote:
> I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> kernel can't run on this hardware.
What sense of the word "stable" are you looking for?
--
Matthew
Hello Matthew,
On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 14:27:47 -0400 Matthew Miller wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 07:25:25PM +0200, wwp wrote:
> > I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> > GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> > kernel can't run on
wwp wrote:
>
> I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> kernel can't run on this hardware.
>
> What would you recommend? Waiting for CentOS8 is not an option unless
> it's a question of few weeks. Ar
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 08:38:14PM +0200, wwp wrote:
> Say, instead of stable, something not rawhide. But I'll examine all
> options that do work, so let's forget about "stable".
In that case — and I freely admit I have some bias here — I highly
recommend Fedora. It's not stable in the sense of st
Did you already try current Centos? If yes what was the problem? Why it did
not work?
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 9:59 PM, Matthew Miller wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 08:38:14PM +0200, wwp wrote:
> > Say, instead of stable, something not rawhide. But I'll examine all
> > options that do work, so
Hello vychytraly,
On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 22:02:18 +0200 "vychytraly ." wrote:
> Did you already try current Centos? If yes what was the problem? Why it did
> not work?
It is as simple as unknown hardware at boot up, it's a well known issue
w/ *Lake hardware (modern hardware) that kernel 3.x canno
Hello m.r...@5-cent.us,
On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 15:25:49 -0400 m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
> wwp wrote:
> >
> > I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> > GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> > kernel can't run on this hardware.
> >
> > What
On Thu, July 27, 2017 3:02 pm, vychytraly . wrote:
> Did you already try current Centos? If yes what was the problem? Why it did
> not work?
I would first ask kindly: please, do not to post.
I would second that. Namely, I had quite a few Dell laptops, all of them
that were configured and purchase
Hello Matthew,
On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 15:59:35 -0400 Matthew Miller wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 08:38:14PM +0200, wwp wrote:
> > Say, instead of stable, something not rawhide. But I'll examine all
> > options that do work, so let's forget about "stable".
>
> In that case — and I freely adm
Maybe CentOS 7.4 would have backported compatibility for your hardware. I
had similar issues with Intel GPU not being recognized, which was solved by
"i915 preliminary hw support enabled" method. Try to have a look on that.
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 10:24 PM, wwp wrote:
> Hello Matthew,
>
>
> On T
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 10:24:29PM +0200, wwp wrote:
> Right, I'm currently digging that way, struggling a bit w/ the way I
> write the F26 ISO to a USB flashdrive (I'll succeed tomorrow, found
> better howtos to get rid of unetbootin issues).
I recommend using Fedora Media Writer
https://github.
> Am 27.07.2017 um 22:48 schrieb vychytraly . :
>
> Maybe CentOS 7.4 would have backported compatibility for your hardware. I
> had similar issues with Intel GPU not being recognized, which was solved by
> "i915 preliminary hw support enabled" method. Try to have a look on that.
https://access.
I would go with Fedora or OpenSUSE latest if you want RH like on that
hardware. There is nothing that unstable about them other than losing
updates and maintenance after 2 years and having to upgrade.
Another choice is to run Virtualbox on the Windows that shipped with the
laptop and run a CentOS
And, if Ubuntu isn't pariah, even it's LTS has a reasonably current kernel.
However, the "Debian way" (Debian, Ubuntu, others) is enough different than the
"Red Hat way" (RHEL, CentOS, SuSE more or less) that, if it's important to you,
stick with the RPM-based options.
- Original Message -
Am 27.07.2017 um 19:25 schrieb wwp :
>
> I've just got a Dell XPS 15 (9590) at work and need to set up a stable
> GNU/Linux system on it. I thought of CentOS7, but.. obviously its
> kernel can't run on this hardware.
>
> What would you recommend? Waiting for CentOS8 is not an option unless
> it's
I have a Dell XPS 13 (9360) with Fedora 26 installed. Very happy with it.
UEFI boot from flash drive works out of the box.
For install I needed to change the drive settings in the BIOS from the
default of RAID (what ever that means on a laptop) to AHCI. No need to
turn off secure boot.
If you wa
On CentOS7 I have following firewalld setting.
external (active)
target: default
icmp-block-inversion: no
interfaces: eth0
sources:
services: dns ftp http https imaps pop3s smtp ssh
ports: 110/tcp 21/tcp 2/tcp 106/tcp 53/tcp 990/tcp 5432/tcp 8447/tcp
113/tcp 143/tcp 3306/tcp 5224/t
On Jul 27, 2017, at 9:36 PM, 望月忠雄 wrote:
>
> On CentOS7 I have following firewalld setting.
>
> external (active)
> target: default
> icmp-block-inversion: no
> interfaces: eth0
> sources:
> services: dns ftp http https imaps pop3s smtp ssh
> ports: 110/tcp 21/tcp 2/tcp 106/tcp 53/tcp
Dear Jonathan,
Thank you.
Apache is running. And I can access by https(IPV4 443).
Please tell me which configuration I need to check.
Tadao
2017-07-28 10:52 GMT+09:00 Jonathan Billings :
> On Jul 27, 2017, at 9:36 PM, 望月忠雄 wrote:
> >
> > On CentOS7 I have following firewalld setting.
> >
> >
On 07/27/2017 06:36 PM, 望月忠雄 wrote:
But by ss -nat, IPV4 443 is not listend. How can I fix?
# ss -nat | grep LISTEN | grep 443
LISTEN 0 128 :::443 :::*
By default, Linux processes that listen on an IPv6 port will also listen
on the IPv4 port (when no spec
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