isdtor writes:
> Gordon Messmer writes:
> > On 10/21/19 6:38 AM, isdtor wrote:
> > > Booting with CentOS6 /boot/efi/EFI/redhat/grub.efi, and the older style
> > > pxe config file as per ... results in a grub (legacy) prompt on the
> > > target machine.
> >
> >
> > Have you tried using the file
Am 22.10.19 um 04:52 schrieb Orion Poplawski:
On 10/21/19 3:42 PM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote:
Does someone have a working tmp on tmpfs via
systemctl enable tmp.mount
under CentOS8/RHEL8? This seems to work straight in EL7 ...
# LANG=C systemctl enable tmp.mount
The unit files have no ins
An age-old problem and there are some simple awk/grep-based scripts to
handle the easy cases. Are there any more sophisticated tools that can
extract all non-system users and groups and then merge the result into the
password/group/shadow/gshadow files of a new server? I don't need home
directo
On 10/22/19 7:04 AM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote:
Am 22.10.19 um 04:52 schrieb Orion Poplawski:
On 10/21/19 3:42 PM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote:
Does someone have a working tmp on tmpfs via
systemctl enable tmp.mount
under CentOS8/RHEL8? This seems to work straight in EL7 ...
# LANG=C
Hello Experts!
I'm sure many of you run CentOS for some time already.
My question is: is there some place that lists which of the most often
used sysadmin commands are gone and what are replacements for them. Or
what else one needs to do after successful installation. (in the past it
was proc
Am 22.10.19 um 18:55 schrieb Valeri Galtsev:
... Is there anything I can read so I can learn what differenmt to expect on CentOS 8
from, say, CentOS 7?
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/considerations_in_adopting_rhel_8/index
--
Leon
Am 22.10.19 um 16:31 schrieb Orion Poplawski:
On 10/22/19 7:04 AM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote:
Am 22.10.19 um 04:52 schrieb Orion Poplawski:
On 10/21/19 3:42 PM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote:
Does someone have a working tmp on tmpfs via
systemctl enable tmp.mount
under CentOS8/RHEL8? Thi
On Tue, 22 Oct 2019 at 12:55, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
>
> Hello Experts!
>
> I'm sure many of you run CentOS for some time already.
>
> My question is: is there some place that lists which of the most often
> used sysadmin commands are gone and what are replacements for them. Or
> what else one need
On 2019-10-22 12:20, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On Tue, 22 Oct 2019 at 12:55, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
Hello Experts!
I'm sure many of you run CentOS for some time already.
My question is: is there some place that lists which of the most often
used sysadmin commands are gone and what are re
On 10/22/19 10:55 AM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
Hello Experts!
I'm sure many of you run CentOS for some time already.
My question is: is there some place that lists which of the most often
used sysadmin commands are gone and what are replacements for them. Or
what else one needs to do after succe
On Tue, 22 Oct 2019 at 14:11, David G. Miller wrote:
>
> On 10/22/19 10:55 AM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
> > Hello Experts!
> >
> > I'm sure many of you run CentOS for some time already.
> >
> > My question is: is there some place that lists which of the most often
> > used sysadmin commands are gone
It looks like anaconda isn't installing centos-release-stream when you
install CentOS 8 Stream. I just did a minimal install through PXE and it
pulled everything from the 8-stream repository and installed the stream
versions, but didn't install centos-release-stream. (Below is the output
of yum l
The ip commands have been around since Centos 6 if not earlier. you can do
things with them that you can't do with ifconfig, such as setup policy
routing rule sets..
On Tue, Oct 22, 2019 at 11:27 AM Stephen John Smoogen
wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Oct 2019 at 14:11, David G. Miller wrote:
> >
> > On
Once upon a time, Stephen John Smoogen said:
> I think that the deprecation of ifconfig and route was started before
> RHEL-7 came out.. and yet I just can't get used to them.
I've started using "ip" for more things lately... partly because I'm
lazy, and once I learned the commands can be abbrevi
On Tue, Oct 22, 2019 at 11:36:54AM -0700, John Pierce wrote:
> The ip commands have been around since Centos 6 if not earlier. you can do
> things with them that you can't do with ifconfig, such as setup policy
> routing rule sets..
which makes them harder to learn...
Unix philosophy: small prog
On 2019-10-22 15:49, Fred Smith wrote:
On Tue, Oct 22, 2019 at 11:36:54AM -0700, John Pierce wrote:
The ip commands have been around since Centos 6 if not earlier. you can do
things with them that you can't do with ifconfig, such as setup policy
routing rule sets..
which makes them harder
With Centos 7 and earlier I've been using the Live CD image to test new
hardware (laptops etc) for compatibility. That way I can get a desktop up and
try the sound and the networking and whatnot without affecting what is already
installed on the machine, and then if everything looks good I can
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