On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 11:37 PM, Joseph wrote:
> No, the problem in Fedora was thier "selinux". I suppose to be some extra
> security, but it seems to me it creates only more problems.
A common observation with SELinux. Even so, it definitely DOES
provide additional security. It is a standard
On 02/11/15 19:26, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Wed, Feb 11, 2015 at 6:26 PM, walt wrote:
Yes, I see the same, which I feel is a systemd bug. The escaping
trick works only with the 'enable' command, not stop or start. Dumb.
It seems more likely to be an error with the unit, which has nothing
to
On Wed, Feb 11, 2015 at 6:26 PM, walt wrote:
>
> Yes, I see the same, which I feel is a systemd bug. The escaping
> trick works only with the 'enable' command, not stop or start. Dumb.
>
It seems more likely to be an error with the unit, which has nothing
to do with systemd. As I mentioned alre
On 02/11/15 15:26, walt wrote:
On 02/11/2015 02:38 PM, Joseph wrote:
On 02/11/15 13:52, walt wrote:
On 02/11/2015 10:58 AM, Joseph wrote:
on Fedora when I do systemctl enable openvpn@eeepc.service
I get:
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory.
You need to escape the @ by typ
On 02/11/2015 02:38 PM, Joseph wrote:
> On 02/11/15 13:52, walt wrote:
>> On 02/11/2015 10:58 AM, Joseph wrote:
>>> on Fedora when I do systemctl enable openvpn@eeepc.service
>>>
>>> I get:
>>> Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory.
>>
>> You need to escape the @ by typing openvpn\
On 02/11/15 13:52, walt wrote:
On 02/11/2015 10:58 AM, Joseph wrote:
on Fedora when I do systemctl enable openvpn@eeepc.service
I get:
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory.
You need to escape the @ by typing openvpn\@eeepc.service,
which is not clear from the error message.
On 02/11/2015 10:58 AM, Joseph wrote:
> on Fedora when I do systemctl enable openvpn@eeepc.service
>
> I get:
> Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory.
You need to escape the @ by typing openvpn\@eeepc.service,
which is not clear from the error message.
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