gPassenger on a RHEL 5
server with success. You'll see that most things are installed via yum
repositories except for rack and passenger, which are installed as
ruby gems. You'll probably find better answers for this type of
questions and any issues you might run into during implementation o
nfdump/nfsen does look like it could hold some value but i haven't evaluated
it yet.
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roper parameters in the grub.conf file:
title Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server (2.6.18-4.elxen)
root (hd0, 0)
kernel /xen.gz-2.6.18-4-el5 mem=32G
module /vmlinuz -2.6.18-4.el5xen ro root=LABEL=/
module /initrd-2.6.18-4.el5xen.img"
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configure the switch once and can monitor all the servers on
it instead of having to configure each server individually to allow snmp
access.
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gios, you could use passive checks. This is where the
programs that monitor your server run locally on the server and submit
results to the central monitoring server. The central Nagios server can
alert based on the results it receives or based on the fact that it hasn't
received results for a
ws from around 50 devices. I highly recommend you take a look if you have
serious needs to see what's really on the wire.
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glia with
> Nagios, and other tools:
> http://ganglia.wikimedia.org/
>
> Regards
>
> mg.
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all of the technologies on the list like they should have or
(maybe more likely) someone who took the exam a few years ago. I was RHCT
certified and went to the 1-week training with the exam at the end and
passed without any issues at all. If you have the money, this might be the
way to
to read the installation guide here:
http://www.centos.org/docs/5/html/CDS/install/8.0/ and the other guides
you'll find under "CentOS Directory Server 8.0" here:
http://www.centos.org/docs/5/.
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ailure. How is this
possible and how do I correct this?
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/solutions/enterprise/filtering/
Of course you can get around this filtering scheme but then no web
filtering technique is fool-proof...and blocking outbound dns requests
to all resolvers except the IP addresses of OpenDNS (there are just
two to put in your firewall) would go a long way towards preve
he
> linux
> box itself. It can't use samba-mounted storage for it's archive because it
> uses
> hard links to save space for duplicate files.
>
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- fsck takes too long and you'd hate to get hit by one of those
in what is supposed to be a "quick" reboot...and disabling them on the file
system isn't a good idea either.
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unt in LDAP and creates the home directory on an
NFS share. In this way, /etc/skel, etc. is maintained on the ldap
server and nowhere else.
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On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 3:45 PM, Per Qvindesland wrote:
> Hi Jake
>
> Appologies but I am wondering if you could give me a sample of that script,
> I am currently busy with setting up something similar where I work and it
> would be greate to perhaps get some new ideas.
I'm
is ran, and
creates a new tmp ldif file that gets imported via ldapadd into the
directory. There are extra steps to create the home directory as I
mentioned.
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y. Does anyone have an opinion on this software? It seems to
have some strong virtues but maybe not enough to justify using it over
BIND just because any Linux admin we hire could be expected to know
BIND.
Thanks for your time,
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__
o having success with our
technical staff. I think we'll likely stick with BIND.
-Jake
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 1:02 PM, Bill Campbell wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 09, 2009, Rainer Duffner wrote:
>>Ray Van Dolson schrieb:
>>> On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 07:58:38AM -0800, cen...@911networks.com
ke a look here:
http://www.linuxtopia.org/Linux_Firewall_iptables/x4658.html
Good luck!
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output doesn't show fractions of a percentage...it rounds.
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org
> > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
> >
> >
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cat6A anytime soon?
any thoughts appreciated.
Jake
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On Friday 14 March 2008 10:43, Kay Diederichs wrote:
> Jake Grimmett schrieb:
> > If I could ask question about 10Gbit ethernet
> >
> > We have a 70 node cluster built on Centos 5.1, using NFS to mount user
> > home areas. At the moment the network is a bottleneck
RITY=/root/xauth/xauth to /root/bashrc and this does
not work, so any ideas are welcome!
Many thanks,
Jake
--
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Computer Systems Manager
Division of Molecular Structure
National Institute for Medical Research
The Ridgeway
Mill Hill
London, NW7 1AA
_
t; CentOS@centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>
>
Yes, I will be using that :-). Already had it installed though :-). I to
recommend that add-on :-).
Ralph, thanks for sorting out the mess :-).
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2020-08-31 (月) の 13:31 + に Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming
さんは書きました:
>
> SECTION 4 Disable SELinux (Security Enhanced Linux)
> ===
>
> You MUST disable SELinux, otherwise Apache web server will not work.
>
> If you DO NOT want to disable SELinu
2020-09-02 (水) の 14:30 -0400 に Fred Smith さんは書きました:
> hi!
>
> I'm going to move soonand will lose this email address, so I'm going
> around
> all my various sbuscriptions changing the subscribed email address.
>
> But I don't see how to do that for the CentOS lists, other than
> perhaps
> to unsu
x27;ve never used it, so this may or may
not work for you. But give it a try :-)
Hope this helps.
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e forum, in the "When
will 5.4 be released" thread, (Massive flame war going on their if you
want to join in ;-) ) hughesjr said it should be out in a couple of
days. so not long to wait now :-)
Which you can see here:
https://www.centos.org/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=22004&am
not enough
time, or not-enough knowledge, I'm willing to help if needed)
Ian
http://mirror.switch.ch/ftp/mirror/centos/5.3/os/SRPMS/
There are SRPM's there. If that's what you mean.
I believe CentOS still uses Plague (internally)
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On 16/10/09 09:38, Ian Blackwell wrote:
Jake Shipton wrote:
Post #148.
You count your posts?
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No, that's the post # in the thread, of
have them put, in each corner
of their workspace, so we know exactly what their doing, even if it's
something we don't want to see them doing at night.
While we're at it, we could also install VNC to their machines so we can
watch from their also.
We also need cameras in thei
time, and would hate to
see MySQL die :-(
Thanks :-)
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ou build/acquire a new x86_64 box, throw a x86_64 OS on it :-)
But still, check make sure they are x86_64 binarys available. or sources
that will compile
on x86_64. In most cases, it will.
Oh, and there's no such thing as a silly question ;-)
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On 16/12/09 23:37, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
> On Wednesday 16 December 2009 21:52:05 Jake Shipton wrote:
>
>> On 16/12/09 19:53, Scot P. Floess wrote:
>>
>>> I have one box on my home network that is x86_64 capable...
>>>
>> Personally, i
er" this will hide the directory from normal view
(However can still be seen given the right commands)
If you run with a gui, you'll probably have a few dotted folders in
your home dir. If so run "ls" and then "ls -a" and you'll see a few
folders magically appea
ead this far though. :-D Also gotta close the window, before the snow
makes my window shelf white. (Or gets into my comp) (It's snowing here :-D)
Just my 2p (Or rather, rambling on lol.)
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oose another :-).
As for OS Choice, my personal preferences are:
Absolutely needs reliability (Such as Server): CentOS/RHEL
General Use (Such as Standard PC): Fedora (Latest, upgrade as soon as
new one is out)
I've never used Mac OSX so I have no comments with it :-)
Just my 2c :-)
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Yes, that's what you want to do (or should) :-)
If that don't work just generally try stuff such as:
yum remove gcc
That should remove a half installed package, if it managed to be
partially installed. (and marked as installed. Doesn't always
Source Edition also (Virtualbox), only it lacks USB
Support. If you go on there website, you can see the 3 missing features.
Tried KVM, but it didn't like my box not having AMD-V.
I think the best way to determine what's best for you, would be to try
them all, and see which you prefe
Can someone direct me to some simple instructions or a repo that I can enable
to get snort installed on my CentOS 5.1 boxes?
--Thanks,
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x27;s
PC to 6.1 now (from 6.0 CR enabled) :-), So again:
Thank You :-).
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entOS@centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Ah, I forgot about that qaweb thing :-). Thanks for reminding me.
And for the CentOS Team:
Great progress, and thank you :-D.
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using the issue, it turned out
that it was the proprietary Nvidia driver that I was using. So if you
are using Nvidia driver, it might be worth looking into. My issue was
resolved by updating the driver.
Your issue may be different, but I thought I would mention it just in
case :-).
- --
always run into some weird
problem or other with the repository versions. So I just keep a good
version of the driver at "/nv.run" and run it after each xorg or kernel
update :-). But that is my personal preference.
But if you do not get problems with the RPM versions I wo
if you get bored with Thunderbird, check out claws (I believe
it installed from EPEL repo.)
Anyhow, as for Thunderbird's search, I believe there was either an
addon for more advanced search, or it was hidden away in a menu
somewhere. Try right-clicking a folder and hitting search, I think it
i
whole DVD or a bunch of
CD's ;-)
Although do try the LiveCD as stated above.
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rver is Linux, to disable directory
listing edit this file: /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
You should fine a line like so:* *
Options All Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
Change to:
Options All FollowSymLinks MultiViews
That should do the trick :-)
Hope this helps somewhat :-)
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running that constantly for a month :o
Thus I doubt "Shared Hosts" could afford to run one, let alone more.
PS: Was the box running CentOS?
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gt; GRRR. Maybe this new 2.6.18-128.1.14.el5 will get it working right again...
>
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>
>
>
Although that last bit made me lau
hus getting him to upgrade them.
But on the other hand it may get him the sack for breaking into the
systems. Hmm.
However, I don't see how letting a system become very out of date, will
keep it stable, if anything it could cause more problems.
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g/grammar issues, been up all night and am tired,
only coffee keeping me going right now :D.
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ser
friendly now also.
The other problem people have, is that when they try Linux they tend to
go with an attitude of subconsciously wanting it not to work so they can
say it's crap and go back to Windows..
But it's far from perfect. Give it another 5 years and I personally
think Linux will be easy enough for "most" people to use.
After-all if my 75 year old Grandma is quite happily using a machine I
set up for her with Fedora 12, it can't be THAT hard, as she doesn't
know squat about computers (Mainly music, card games & email is all she
uses) :-)
As for Market Share.. I threw in my vote.. I personally am not to
worried about market shares of Linux. We are not a Corporation or
Company.. so why should it matter? :-|
Anyhow, just my 2p :-)
PS: Sorry for the short email, in a rush. :-)
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hours, or if they have lots of
memory possibly longer (48 hours) to allow all memory to be fully
tested. :-)
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edora release for me, so I
hope that has been carried over into EL6 :-) I'm guessing it has. If not
made better :-).
Anyhow, once again: Thanks to all the folk that make CentOS/RHEL/Linux
what it is today :-)
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ome minor
noise, but that's just it, minor noise.
However I would just tag along, and join up to yet another list (I like
to keep in the 'loop' of things) :-)
Just my £00.02p :-)
- --
Jake
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux)
Comment:
how to resolve this?
Take a look here:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=433661
Looks like a test kernel is available
We've been having this problem for quite some time - actually moved our
production box to RHEL 4.x
Jake
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ll work. However, the service
appears to start anyway, it just reports a fail. as connected said
device to eth1 works even though service apparently failed to start.
device connected and powered up, service reports to start OK.
I hope this can help you and fixes your issues. :-)
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the subject
line or change something or other.
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> (Pet peeve of the day -- dead end threads on mail lists.)
Couldn't Agree more.
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>
>
I wouldn't be so sure, from a BT Home connection here in England it's
working fine for me.
-- Ping Results --
[Jake@localhost ~]$ ping centos.org
PING centos.org (72.232.194.162) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from www.centos.org (72.232.194.162): icmp_req=1 ttl=41 time=154 ms
6
B/s (Not a typo, Megabytes not Megabits) to a Steady 1.0 to
3.0Mb/s was a harsh drop! (ADSL2+ to ADSL)
Feels like I went back to dial up.. but it works.. :-).
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this.
http://wiki.centos.org/TipsAndTricks/ReinstallGRUB
That should help you on your way to fixing your bootloader (assuming
your using grub) :-)
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ars in the maillog
as "to=," What I need is the email to go
to "gol...@lmb.internal"
I have four NFS servers, using NIS / automounts (no LDAP), my users all have
email addresses . Any ideas on how to get warnquota to
work, or should I just write a script to parse `repquo
ided by CentOS does not support Forward Secrecy for SSL
or TLS 1.2.
Version 2.2.24+ of upstream Apache includes patches which enable both
Forward Secrecy and TLS 1.2.
Now that C6's OpenSSL can also support both TLS 1.2, and Forward
Secrecy, upgrading Apache slightly to be able to use both of those
On 31/12/14 22:12, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
> On behalf of the CentOS project I wish you Happy New Year!
>
> Happy New Year!
>
Happy New Year all! I hope you all have a great new year!
(I know I'm a little late to the party... but hey, better late than
never!)
Kind Rega
ntos system.
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 400A DE8A 1D0B A5CF E3C3 1D8F
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trojan"
appeared.
Top that with two people seeing the same thing at the same time in two
completely different machines/companies chances are high its a false
positive.
Hope this helps set your mind at ease :-).
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
Twitter: @CrazyLinuxNerd
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D
is disabled without any password checking.
This way those who need the check disabled for quick deployments can do
so and put a stronger password in later at their own time and choosing.
Meanwhile those who wish to have the password checked can also do so.
Thus, both people happy :-).
Personall
would almost
certainly have triggered it as it was a different manufacture and all.
Naturally though make sure your drives match to a degree, aka, all are
the same spin speed, have same buffer size, same storage size etc.
But aside from that, you can almost stick any drive in and it'll rebuild
nclude a "kickstart"[1] file with your
installation media to include the extra repository and install the extra
software.
I hope this is able to answer your question.
[1]
https://github.com/rhinstaller/pykickstart/blob/master/docs/kickstart-docs.rst
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton
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getting used to a whole new shell could be a bit of a challenge
if you are very used to BASH.
There's also many other features which may be helpful to you. Such as
time stamps and shared history.
Search "history" on this page to see more:
http://linux.die.net/man/1/zshoptions
ping response? If not, check network settings. If you do,
move on..
$ ping google.com
Does the domain resolve correctly? If not, check DNS settings. If you
do, move on..
Assuming both of those have worked, can you do the following:
$ mkdir temporary
$ cd temporary
$ wget
"http://mirrorlis
http://www.karsites.net
> http://www.php-debuggers.net
> http://www.raised-from-the-dead.org.uk
>
> All email addresses are challenge-response protected with
> TMDA [http://tmda.net]
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It has this, that is the pattern thing, but you've got to make sure you
have the pattern correct :-).
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GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC
On Tue, 18 Dec 2012 15:30:41 -0500
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
> Jake Shipton wrote:
>
>
> I did try that, in options->xss? abe? but it complained that it didn't
> have an EOF or some such.
>
>mark
>
> ___
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istinfo/centos
I would recommend using "Mock" for this as it would both provide a
clean build environment (chroot) and the ability to cross compile
easily.
Once you get mock all configured and set up, it's actually a really
nice tool and
s just going to post exactly the same thing. I have
> used Crucial memory and SSD for as long as I can remember and have
> never had a single failure
>
Running Crucial RAM here as well never had any problems. :-).
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GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515
x the bug :-).
https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2013-0830.html
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GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
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signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
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keep
it around for development projects for QA/Testing purposes. So having a
handy RPM is always helpful :-).
I'll post back if I hit any bugs with the package :-).
Thanks,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 400A DE8A 1D0B A5CF E3C3 1D8F
s
though it was quite a bit of time ago since I last tried running it,
perhaps someone could bypass that issue?
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es --nodigest
Ignoring the Dep errors, it seems to be all there :-).
You can get v2.2.15-28 (current) here:
http://mirror.ovh.net/ftp.centos.org/6.4/updates/x86_64/Packages/mod_ssl-2.2.15-28.el6.centos.x86_64.rpm
and v2.2.15-26 (previous) here:
http://mirror.ovh.net/ftp.centos.org/6.4/os/x86_
4/
>
> Thanks,
> Johnny Hughes
>
Thanks for these Johnny much appreciated, I was quite surprised to find
the fix was not in the .14.1 kernel update from upstream.
I guess upstream does not see this as "important" enough.
Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG
ored so a non-issue for me.
I have the version from:
easytag x86_64 2.1-2.el6.rf @rpmforge 2.4 M
Other repo's may hold it, I'm not sure. But that's where mine came
from :-).
Hope this helps,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 4
e before confirming it.
>
That's one way of doing it.
I would suggest the following:
add:
exclude = firefox thunderbird xulrunner
to base/updates, followed by
priority = 1
and then in remi repo
priority = 10
and finally,
yum install yum-priorities*
This should keep those
and working...
All of our servers run the stock CentOS kernel as all hardware
appears to be supported and we need the stability more so than a
desktop does.
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 400A DE8A
[1]
https://community.qualys.com/blogs/securitylabs/2013/03/19/rc4-in-tls-is-broken-now-what
[2]
https://www.redhat.com/about/news/archive/2013/10/latest-beta-release-of-red-hat-enterprise-linux-6-now-available
--
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
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zimbra so you don't have to worry about conflicts as
such.
The only real issue is to ensure that no other services (such as
postfix) are using a port that Zimbra will need to use.
Things such as cron, logwatch etc can be configured to use Zimbra. But
it may take a little more configuration th
sitory? or will they become part of
base? extras?
Just curious :-).
Additionally, I would like to say Thank You for providing these
packages :-).
Thanks!
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
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e following:
# chkconfig mysqld off
# nano /etc/rc.local
Add at bottom:
rm /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
service mysqld start
Now Save.
Next time the machine boots it should remove the sock file, and then
start mysqld.
Once your PSU is fixed, remove those lines and run:
# chkconfig mysqld on
J
ay mail root,
Lastly another option is creating a dumby user for all mail directed at
root to go by setting up aliases in /etc/aliases (Basically at end:
root: dumbyuser) and then running newaliases.
Hope this helps :-).
Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 C
rations for the users!
>
> regards from and to everyone,
>
> - KB
>
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to the CentOS Team (and users) from
here too! :-D.
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19B
On 02/02/14 03:06, Markus Falb wrote:
> Hi,
> I do see a kernel update to 2.6.18-371.4.1.el5 but I am missing the
> announcement.
>
Hi,
It did get sent, just checked my announce folder (on another email) and
it is there.
Also:
https://lwn.net/Articles/583977/
Kind Regards,
d do:
exclude=flash*plugin clam*
etc, to add additional packages or options, and it will then choose to
get those packages from the next highest priority repository.
Hope this helps :-).
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 400A
h ignoring nvidia configuration,
turns out it wasn't Xorg at all.
It was GDM resetting everything when it loaded, switched to LightDM
problem solved as it was using Xorg configuration again!
Worth a shot if it's C7 :-).
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 400A DE8A 1D0B A5CF E3C3 1D8F
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On 24/09/14 13:02, mark wrote:
> On 09/23/14 19:21, Jake Shipton wrote:
>> On 22/09/14 22:37, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
>>> m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
>>>> I have one user. We've pretty much all got two monitors, but
>>>> he insists on rotating both of
ine.
This way each machine has the repository, and can install the extra
packages.
I have done this before and works fine, I usually just create my own
rpms or grab src rpms from fedora koji and put them in my own repo if
I want something that is not available in any repositories.
This should so
On 25/09/14 18:18, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
> Jake Shipton wrote:
>>
>> Guess it's the old "if it ain't American, it ain't right"
>> attitude? :-).
>
> Don't be absurd. How 'bout "can we be sure that no one's inserted
> n
uld have a line similar
to this:
mirrorlist=http://mirrorlist.centos.org/?release=$releasever&arch=$basearch&repo=os
If this line is present, but different (Excluding the repo= part), for
example pointing at a non-centos domain and location it would mean that
they have been modifi
unsafe .. don't use it
> .. don't do it .. please.
>
CentOS4 is perfectly safe to use :).
.. If it's in a Virtual Machine with no network access :).
Kind Regards,
Jake Shipton (JakeMS)
GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F
GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19B
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