On 19/09/2010, at 4:48 AM, Emmett Culley wrote:
> On 09/17/2010 02:51 AM, Robert P. J. Day wrote:
>>
>>(another in an ongoing list of things i just want to clarify
>> for the
>> sake of future courses taught on centos.)
>>
>>from this RHEL doc page:
>>
>> http://docs.redhat.com/docs/en-
On 30 November 2010 09:03, Christopher Chan
wrote:
> On Monday, November 29, 2010 11:58 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
>
You end up with a zillion groups - which is
pointless and unmaintainable. Thank goodness for ACL support and
setfacl/getfacl.
>>>
>>> So what do you do when you
You need to exclude it in grub otherwise the graphical boot loads it.
On Jul 21, 2011 10:08 PM, "Jerry Geis" wrote:
>
> I "wish" to not load the or even install the nouveau driver by default.
> I want to use the NVIDIA binary driver.
>
> I have tried a number of things:
>
> 1) in my kickstart pack
On 03/08/2011, at 7:32 AM, James B. Byrne wrote:
> Mike A. Harris mharris at mharris.ca
> Tue Aug 2 16:45:56 EDT 2011
>
>> What I'm left wondering is:
>>
>> 1) Why you are relying on PATH expansion for this from something as
>> critical as a cron job. It is good sysadmin practice to specify
>>
What's missing?
On 28/12/2014 8:30 pm, "Alexandru Chiscan" wrote:
> ktorrent
>
> Lec
>
> ___
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS@centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>
___
CentOS mailing lis
No I meant Transmission.
On 28 December 2014 at 22:15, Sorin Srbu wrote:
> With ktorrent? No idea. Didn't even think of checking that one out.
> //Sorin
>
> Sent from my tablet, please excuse the brevity.
>
> Jeff Allison wrote:
>
>
> What's missing?
> O
Sorin Srbu wrote:
>> With ktorrent? No idea. Didn't even think of checking that one out.
>> //Sorin
>>
>> Sent from my tablet, please excuse the brevity.
>>
>> Jeff Allison wrote:
>>
>>
>> What's missing?
>> On 28/12/2014 8
Ok I've a HP mircoserver that I'm building up.
It's got 4 bays for be used for data that I'm considering setup up woth
softwere raid (mdadm)
I've 2 x 2TB 2 x 2.5 TB and 2 x 1TB, I'm leaning towards usig the 4 2.x TB
is a raid 5 array to get 6TB.
Now the data is on the 2.5TB disks currently.
So
Ok so I built the microserver as a centos box and now I have a strange one
I built a Centos 6.5 box with a 3.6 raid ext4 data drive on it, shared
with samba.
Now when I browse these folders on the console I can see the files. when I
sftp on the command line from another box I can see these files
I've set myself as the owner and the permissions to 777
On 10 February 2014 14:08, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2014-02-10 at 13:46 +1100, Jeff Allison wrote:
> > Ok so I built the microserver as a centos box and now I have a strange
> one
> >
> > I built
The strangest is that it's not all the files I can see files in some
folders but to others. If I sort alphabetically I get to about b.
On 10 February 2014 14:11, Jeff Allison wrote:
> I've set myself as the owner and the permissions to 777
>
>
> On 10 February 2014 14:08,
Possibly, but I've moved a file from inside a folder to the top level and
it still doesn't show.
It's a 700G folder though.
On 10 February 2014 14:25, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2014-02-10 at 14:17 +1100, Jeff Allison wrote:
>
> > The strangest is that it
Seems to be still alphabetical
On 10 February 2014 14:29, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2014-02-10 at 14:17 +1100, Jeff Allison wrote:
>
> > The strangest is that it's not all the files I can see files in some
> > folders but to others. If I sort alphabetically
samba / gui sftp client.
Commanline sftp gives the right response.
On 10 February 2014 14:52, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2014-02-10 at 14:37 +1100, Jeff Allison wrote:
>
> > Seems to be still alphabetical
>
> Regret I don't know. Hopefully the others may
Perhaps it's time to generate nfs shares and see how that goes.
On 10 February 2014 15:08, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2014-02-10 at 14:56 +1100, Jeff Allison wrote:
>
> > samba / gui sftp client.
> >
> > Commanline sftp gives the right response.
>
Seems to work fine in nfs, a bit slower though.
On 10 February 2014 15:19, Always Learning wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2014-02-10 at 15:12 +1100, Jeff Allison wrote:
>
> > Perhaps it's time to generate nfs shares and see how that goes.
>
> I'd be interested in your progr
John Doe wrote:
> From: Jeff Allison
>
>> Now when I browse these folders on the console I can see the files. when I
>> sftp on the command line from another box I can see these files.
>> But when I browse via samba or using a gui sftp client quite a lot of these
>> file
OK all my HP Microserver is purring away nicely now, as usual I
looking for the rainy day.
Although my data is on a RAID 5 array my OS is on a single disk.
Any suggestions as to the best way to have a copy of my OS on an
attached USB Drive?
Been considering dump and restoring to the usb disk per
Answers to questions...
It really depends on your use case.
I'm looking to be able to pull out old dead drive, and replace it with
new (almost up to date) drive and reboot.
The USB disk is a 1TB disk in a case.
> Been considering dump and restoring to the usb disk periodically? or
> maybe somet
OK todays problem.
I have a HP N54L Microserver running centos 6.5.
In this box I have a 3x2TB disk raid 5 array, which I am in the
process of extending to a 4x2TB raid 5 array.
I've added the new disk --> mdadm --add /dev/md0 /dev/sdb
And grown the array --> mdadm --grow /dev/md0 --raid-device
Updating my own post iostat shows /dev/sdb is at 100% transferring at 4MB/S
So what limits a disk to 4MB/S???
On 18 March 2014 08:43, Jeff Allison wrote:
> OK todays problem.
>
> I have a HP N54L Microserver running centos 6.5.
>
> In this box I have a 3x2TB disk raid 5 array, wh
21 matches
Mail list logo