On Jul 1, 2013, at 3:25 PM, James Carlson wrote:
> On 07/01/13 16:36, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
>> Routing Table: IPv4
>> Destination Gateway Flags Ref Use Interface
>> - - --
And by "I can't see the internet", I cannot ping a known workable host, or
browse the internet.
HTH
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On Jul 1, 2013, at 4:49 PM, Marcus Agehall wrote:
>
> Hang on a second. Which vmic is 192.168.0.3? vnic3? If so, I think you are in
> trouble.
>
> I'm struggling to make sense of what you are trying to do here. To me, it
> seems like you are creating a very complicated network setup for someth
On Jul 1, 2013, at 6:21 PM, Christopher Chan wrote:
> Wait, what do you mean by "the gateway ip is the same as your nic address"?
>
What I meant is that the Gateway on line three says 192.168.0.4, and that is
also the IP address of the nic.
myad...@theotokos.dsicons.net:~# netstat -nr
Routing
First off, I'd like to thank you all for all the help you've given me. I
really appreciate it. I'd appreciate it if you'd bear with me just a little
bit longer...
I called our ISP, and the tech support person told me that the person who told
me last week that she had reconfigured the modem to
Indeed, this does look like a DNS problem. I just put the IP Address of our
monastery's website in Firefox in the OI box, and it brought up the site.
So maybe it isn't as bad of a network problem as it looked like yesterday. Or
at least it is better now.
But I still really need help getti
r to just stick with it. I didn't have to mess
> with whether nwam or "default" networking was enabled, or manually edit any
> files. It has more functionality than I would need for that machine, but
> it would be more work to disable it and configure it manually, so whatever.
Well, I don't know what just happened, but the /etc/defaultrouter disappeared.
So, I put it back, and rebooted. Now this mostly-stock OI box works. I.e. --
DNS works, and I can ssh into it from outside the network.
I'm hesitant to declare this solved just yet -- until I try this on the (more
On Jul 2, 2013, at 3:41 PM, Udo Grabowski (IMK) wrote:
> On 02/07/2013 23:18, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
>> svcadm disable svc:/network/physical:nwam
>> svcadm enable svc:/network/physical:default
>
> That's always a good thing.
>
>>
>> I cr
On Jul 2, 2013, at 4:52 PM, Udo Grabowski (IMK) wrote:
>> I put the following in my /etc/resolv.conf file:
>> nameserver 69.144.49.30
>> nameserver 69.146.17.2
>
> Of course, if 192.168.0.151 is a stealth local DNS
> slave server (I used such a beast for many years),
> this can work... I can't fi
On Jul 2, 2013, at 7:06 PM, Christopher Chan wrote:
> On Wednesday, July 03, 2013 07:45 AM, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
>> I have to call it a day. I appreciate all the help, everyone! I appreciate
>> it very much! Thank you. Peter,
>
> You are almost there Pet
On Jul 2, 2013, at 11:14 PM, Michael Schuster wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 4:07 AM, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com <
> dormitionsk...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Indeed, I don't know much about networking. I wish I could find a decent
>> book about
ig on day one...
>
> Kind regards,
>
> The out-side
>
> Op 3 jul. 2013 om 17:10 heeft "dormitionsk...@hotmail.com"
> het volgende geschreven:
Well, I would be that "Cisco manager" -- and everything else here. And you
know what they say about us "Jac
>>> Op 3 jul. 2013 om 17:10 heeft "dormitionsk...@hotmail.com"
>>> het volgende geschreven:
>> Well, I would be that "Cisco manager" -- and everything else here. And you
>> know what they say about us "Jack of All Trades". We
Oops. This wasn't intended for the list, folks.
I'm sorry...
On Jul 3, 2013, at 8:40 PM, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
>>>> Op 3 jul. 2013 om 17:10 heeft "dormitionsk...@hotmail.com"
>>>> het volgende geschreven:
>>> Well, I woul
On Jul 3, 2013, at 9:01 PM, Lou Picciano wrote:
> No worries on this end. In fact, I kinda dug it!
> Do take care of your back, though...!
>
> Lou Picciano
Dug it? Just don't use a jack-hammer.
[];-)
LOL
Thanks, mate.
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OpenIndiana-discuss ma
On Jul 16, 2013, at 3:05 AM, Jonathan Adams wrote:
> We have about 50 SunRays throughout our group, relying on the Smart Cards
> to move/lock the session (we're a Laboratory, and have people moving
> station all the time)
>
> with this news, we'll have to think long term about replacing them with
On Jul 18, 2013, at 6:13 AM, Jozsef Brogyanyi wrote:
> Hi
>
> I have a little problem with smb server. When I issue the svcs -x command
> then I looked everything is all right but from win7 I could not see the
> shared folder's.
> Just I can see the attached folder's.
>
I'm not real sure wha
> On Jul 18, 2013, at 6:13 AM, Jozsef Brogyanyi wrote:
>
>> Hi
>>
>> I have a little problem with smb server. When I issue the svcs -x command
>> then I looked everything is all right but from win7 I could not see the
>> shared folder's.
>> Just I can see the attached folder's.
>>
>
> I'm no
On Jul 18, 2013, at 7:32 AM, Jim Klimov wrote:
> That would be part of Samba, while I believe the OP is trying
> to get kCIFS working.
Ah, yes. I have too many years with Linux.
svc:/network/samba:default == samba
svc:/network/smb/server:default == kCIFS
Sorry about that.
Glad you got i
I've read others on this list reporting that the "Time Slider" gui doesn't work
until you change the root password via the command line. I'd guess you're
probably getting bit by an offshoot of that.
It's been a while since I've done a fresh install of OI, but I vaguely remember
something "squi
Now that I look at what I wrote earlier, it appears I didn't word my last email
as clearly as it could have been.
There appears to be a problem with the initial root password that you enter
when you install OI using the Live Desktop DVD. After you do a fresh install,
go into a terminal window
On Aug 2, 2013, at 9:08 PM, Harry Putnam wrote:
> Looking for a little advice about setting up a home lan server.
>
> So far just tinkering with a vbox oi as guest install hoping to make
> whatever nasty blunders on disposable data and OS.
>
> But getting right to it:
>
> In a previous life I r
> However, I really want to be able to perform an emergency rescue from
> the install media so am continuing with a clone in a few minutes.
>
Once you get this figured out, would you please post or make a wiki page about
how to do an emergency rescue from the install media? I, for one, would r
> The only way to circumvent this is using sudo, which is a bit
> difficult to use in menus (as gksu -S -u root), I tried, but
> somehow it fails to get the password window open.
Maybe you might be able to get beesu to work.
http://honeybeenet.altervista.org/beesu/
It's not really meant for Sol
Hi, everyone. I have a little problem. Our primary server hung on something
last night, and I don’t know what. I could not get into it, even with ssh.
So, maybe I did something stupid, but I powered the machine off. Now it will
not boot.
Editing the GRUB menu options, removing the console
On Jul 4, 2014, at 1:57 PM, Alexander Eremin
wrote:
> Just run in command prompt:
> # dmesg
>
> and see if output contains something interesting...
> Also check your disk space.
>
> Alexander
>
>> On 04 июля 2014 г., at 23:49, "dormitionsk...@hotmail.com&
>
> dmesg gives the following output. The last three entries, which seemed to
> have been repeated prior to this, are:
>
> —
>
> July 4 11:21:20 baptist.ds genunix: [ID 408114 kern.info]
> pci@0,0/pci1028,1b9@1d,7/hub@5/device@4/input@1 (hid8) offline
> July 4 11:21:25 baptist.ds genunix: [66
>
> This noise probably from your keyboard... Could you provide all output from
> dmesg and all output from svcs -xv?
>
> Alex
As I asked before, is there a way to direct it from this machine to another?
As it is, I’m typing into the machine I’m using to email these messages from
what I see
You can always force it the old fashioned way, like I had to do yesterday.
In /etc/hostname.bge0 (or whatever your NIC name is):
192.168.0.2 netmask 255.255.255.0
If you need to force the default router, simply put its IP Address in
/etc/defaultrouter, like:
192.168.0.1
HTH
fp
On Jul 6, 2
Additional Info.
It just occurred to me that I should give you the output of zfslist:
Additional Info.
It just occurred to me that I should give you the output of zfslist:
myad...@tryphon.ds:~# zfs list
NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT
rpool
Ok. Never mind. I did the math. It makes sense to me now.
NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT
rpool/ROOT 26.6G 481M31K legacy
rpool/dump 8.00G 481M 8.00G -
rpool/export
I’m real confused.
I’m investigating why our main server died last week. When I look at some of
the old logs of our nightly admin routines, I found that I might have had a
disk free problem. A “df -h” command on the server that died gave me this
output on June 25th:
*
On Jul 7, 2014, at 12:29 PM, James Carlson wrote:
>
> At a guess, you've got several snapshots that are tying up a lot of
> valuable resources.
Thanks, Mr. Carlson.
And that is something that I’d been wondering about for quite some time — “Do
snapshots take additional space?”
I think your
Well, I did the following to clear up space, from the “Open Solaris Bible":
zoneadm -z myzone2 uninstall -F
zonecfg -z myzone2 delete -F
That cleared up some space.
At first, it didn’t boot. It kicked me into maintenance mode. I don’t
remember what I did, exactly, but I booted it again, and i
them because I was new to all of this last year.
Thank you very much for your help.
I *greatly* appreciate it.
On Jul 7, 2014, at 2:21 PM, James Carlson wrote:
> On 07/07/14 15:52, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
>> Then I thought, well, maybe something in the zones are caus
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