On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 7:31 PM, Mike McCarty wrote:
> This sounds like you have a hardware problem, or are not using
> the correct procedure to do the burn.
Try burning the DVD at a lower speed. If you are using wodim, use
"speed=1" on the command line.
Try buying a completely different brand o
Also take a look at star
(much the same as tar, but improved)
I have been using star with good results.
A limitation I found with tar was long filenames, with multiple tapes.
Was not supposed to be a limitation, but crashed every time.
Best Regards
ashley
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedo
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 4:22 PM, Chris Smart wrote:
>
> And my assumption is wrong.. I just logged in as root *GASP* and KDE
> also reports inability to step the CPU, so I must be missing some kind
> of package or configuration.
>
Does anyone with a KDE install have support for CPU scaling with
Po
On 03/01/2010 11:15 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
Thanks for the link. Read numerous posts and replies. Several people said by
wrapping the 32-bit flash plugin on their 64-bit systems/browsers, they got
Hulu to work. However, I never was happy with the performance of the wrapped
flash plugin.
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 4:11 PM, Chris Smart wrote:
>
> But if I run it as my regular user, I don't have permission. I'm
> _assuming_ that this is the reason that KDE doesn't support CPU
> scaling..
And my assumption is wrong.. I just logged in as root *GASP* and KDE
also reports inability to step
--- On Mon, 3/1/10, Andre Robatino wrote:
> This problem has existed since around
> January 9. At first, Hulu claimed
> that everyone just had to update their Flash version.
> When people did
> this and still reported having the problem, they started
> ignoring
> reports. Lots of archived comm
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 3:57 PM, Tim wrote:
>
> On my computers, running Gnome, there's a taskbar applet that lets me
> monitor CPU speed, it also lets me deliberately pick a particular speed
> to run at. I can make those adjustments as the user I'm logged in as,
> not needing to be root.
>
Thank
hi
I have F12 on this laptop HP Nx5000. The battery capacity is about 3
hours, When the laptop runs on battery, after a few times of auto
suspend, the battery indicator applet shows "Laptop Battery 2 hours 30
minutes remaining (4.7%)". why the remaining percentage was not right?
Y
--
http://etvi
Once upon a time, Russell Miller said:
> In my experience, a remount can be done on a running system, so I imagine
> that
> loss of data isn't something designed into that particular operation.
>
> I've done it successfully on each server in a running cluster of about 50
> when
> I wanted to
More seriously, if there is a command-line tool that root would use to
adjust the CPU scaling, perhaps it would work to add that command to
the /etc/sudoers file.
You would still need to use the sudo command to run it, but once
having entered your personal (not root) password, you could issue more
Tim wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-03-02 at 11:25 +1100, Chris Smart wrote:
>
>> Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
>> scaling? Currently the interfaces are all owned by root:root and short
>> of a hack to change their permissions on boot, I'm wondering if
>> there's a "proper
On Tue, 2010-03-02 at 11:25 +1100, Chris Smart wrote:
> Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
> scaling? Currently the interfaces are all owned by root:root and short
> of a hack to change their permissions on boot, I'm wondering if
> there's a "proper" way to do it?
On my
On Monday 01 March 2010 08:33:20 pm Jeffrey Metcalf wrote:
> > If you put the filesystem of interest on its own partition, then
> > ISTM you can mount -o remount,ro that one file system, and it should
> > remain static during the backup. All data will still be available,
> > though unmodifiable. Cl
>
> If you put the filesystem of interest on its own partition, then
> ISTM you can mount -o remount,ro that one file system, and it should
> remain static during the backup. All data will still be available,
> though unmodifiable. Clearly, one would need to do something like
> an lsof to ensure
On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 21:53 -0500, Temlakos wrote:
> I have downloaded this ISO twice, and verified it each time. I have made
> no less than three "coasters" while trying to create a DVD from it. Then
> I moved the ISO to another machine, and another program--which then
> proceeded to tell me th
Hello All,
I kindly ask for your support. On my MythTV frontend-only machine, I
had to replace the motherboard. The old motherboard was an ASUS P5KR
(Intel P35 chipset), and the newly installed motherboard is an MSI
P43T-C51 (Intel P43 chipset). The old MB wasn't faulty - I just had
to urgently us
I've got an FLV4 encoded video that I'd like to watch. Mplayer says
> [mkv] Track ID 1: video (V_MS/VFW/FOURCC), -vid 0
> [mkv] Track ID 2: audio (A_MPEG/L3), -aid 0, -alang jpn
> [mkv] Track ID 3: subtitles (S_TEXT/ASS), -sid 0, -slang eng
> [mkv] Will play video track 1.
> Matroska file format
On 01Mar2010 21:30, Mike McCarty wrote:
| Jeff Metcalf wrote:
| > wrote:
| > Isn't dump(8) considered a filesystem based backup? Are you refering to
something more specialized?
|
| Yes, it is. I suspect he meant a files based backup. With
| dump, what one gets is a dump of the file system itse
Temlakos wrote:
> I have downloaded this ISO twice, and verified it each time. I have made
> no less than three "coasters" while trying to create a DVD from it. Then
> I moved the ISO to another machine, and another program--which then
> proceeded to tell me that the ISO looked like a CD, not a
Jeff Metcalf wrote:
> wrote:
[...]
> A file system based backup is a good deal safer.
>
> Isn't dump(8) considered a filesystem based backup? Are you refering to
> something more specialized?
Yes, it is. I suspect he meant a files based backup. With
dump, what one gets is a dump of the file
Temlakos wrote:
> I have downloaded this ISO twice, and verified it each time. I have made
> no less than three "coasters" while trying to create a DVD from it. Then
> I moved the ISO to another machine, and another program--which then
> proceeded to tell me that the ISO looked like a CD, not a
I have downloaded this ISO twice, and verified it each time. I have made
no less than three "coasters" while trying to create a DVD from it. Then
I moved the ISO to another machine, and another program--which then
proceeded to tell me that the ISO looked like a CD, not a DVD.
What's going on? H
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 11:27 AM, Don Quixote de la Mancha
wrote:
>
> Unsolder the crystal on your motherboard, then solder in a slower one.
Apart from that :-P
-c
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/m
I realized a while back that if one's filesystem is a rat's nest, then
one's backups will be a rat's nest as well, as will be any files
restored from backup.
So I devoted a great deal of time to organizing all of the filesystems
on all of my computers, and getting rid of stuff that did not really
On Fri, 26 Feb 2010, nosp...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>On Fri, 2010-02-26 at 07:23 -0600, Mike Flannigan wrote:
>> > I would like to get any flavor of Linux installed
>> > to my older-generation computer. I have 2
>> > old computers:
>> > x86 Family 6 Model 7 Stepping 3 AT/AT Compatible 130,596 K
On Sunday 28 February 2010 06:39:53 pm Kevin Kofler wrote:
> Dave Stevens wrote:
> > I got a similar (or perhaps the same) issue and at this address:
> >
> > http://userbase.kde.org/Akonadi#Nepomuk_Indexing_Agents_have_been_Disable
> > d
> >
> > is a little box of three command line texts that wo
Jeff Metcalf wrote:
> A file system based backup is a good deal safer.
>
> Isn't dump(8) considered a filesystem based backup? Are you refering to
> something more specialized?
>
>
A file system based backup is one that uses the file system to pick up
the blocks of a file and store it
On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 16:48 -0600, Rick Sewill wrote:
> I've been confused what backup program, dump or tar, to use.
>
> At first, I was using dump to back up my partitions.
I might throw another suggestion in: One of the RAID techniques where
several drives are mirrors of each other.
Once you
On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 21:32 +0200, Dj YB wrote:
> I wish till that time to revert to my old state.
> how do I do that?
I've not done it myself, but research: yum downgrade
--
[...@localhost ~]$ uname -r
2.6.27.25-78.2.56.fc9.i686
Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored
wrote:
Journals make the problem far worse.
Good to know and understand.
On restore you will restore a journal log no longer related to whats on
the media, then risk replaying it and causing further damage.
This makes sense. It was not clear to me that the journal was being stored in
the "du
On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Chris Smart wrote:
> Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
> scaling?
Unsolder the crystal on your motherboard, then solder in a slower one.
I'll send you my bill in the mail.
Don Quixote
--
Don Quixote de la Mancha
quix...@dulcineatech.
Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
scaling? Currently the interfaces are all owned by root:root and short
of a hack to change their permissions on boot, I'm wondering if
there's a "proper" way to do it?
Thanks,
-c
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To
On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 9:41 AM, Andrew Haley wrote:
> On 03/01/2010 01:16 PM, Chris Rouch wrote:
>>
>> Or use the menus: Options->Set default font.
>
> That doesn't work. Try it, then C-x 5 2 . The new window is still
> in the old font.
curious, it works for me.
--
users mailing list
users@lis
Jeffrey Metcalf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm hoping I can start a brief thread discussing the potential risks involved
> with backing up live mounted (RW) ext2/3/4 filesystems using dump(8). Here
> are the reasons I ask this:
>
> 1. My understanding is that it is safest to dump unmounted
> filesystem
This problem has existed since around January 9. At first, Hulu claimed
that everyone just had to update their Flash version. When people did
this and still reported having the problem, they started ignoring
reports. Lots of archived comments at
http://www.hulu.com/discussions/9
with not a sin
On 1 Mar 2010 at 16:48, Rick Sewill wrote:
Subject:Which backup program should one use? Was Re: Risks
of backing up
live mounted filesystems using dump(8)
From: Rick Sewill
To: Community support for Fedora users
Date sent:
M A Young wrote:
>
>
> That is probably relative safe to do (provided you make sure you keep a
> Fedora 12 kernel installed to go back to just in case) because kernels
> have few dependencies. Possible difficulties include too-old kernel
> install tools like dracut, and incompatible selinux
On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 10:29 -0800, Jeffrey Metcalf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm hoping I can start a brief thread discussing the potential risks involved
> with backing up live mounted (RW) ext2/3/4 filesystems using dump(8). Here
> are the reasons I ask this:
>
> 1. My understanding is that it is s
Journals make the problem far worse.
On restore you will restore a journal log no longer related to whats on
the media, then risk replaying it and causing further damage.
Block reallocation is also nasty with a dump done that way because you
may end up with undetected data corruption including l
> Styma, Robert E (Robert) wrote:
> > My question becomes, "What file(s) other than fstab and grub.conf
> > need to change to change the root parttion from an LVM parition
> > to a normal ext partition such as sda2?"
>
> Recreate the mkinitrd in your /boot.
>
> Boot from a rescue disk, mount yo
Robert Nichols wrote:
>> I'm trying to understand how cron works nowadays.
>> I've been comparing my Fedora-12 laptop
>> with my CentOS-5.4 desktop,
>> and am slightly baffled by the difference between them.
> In CentOS 5, anacron is started by init on entry to any of runlevels
> 2-5. The anacro
>
> I do the g4l project, and it can make images of LVM
> partitions to new disks,
> but this is a raw mode image using dd. Depending on what
> errors the disk is
> having, you could make a backup image or clone it to a new
> disks. If the
> errors are to high, one might need to use ddresc
On Mon, 1 Mar 2010, Mike Cloaked wrote:
> Originally I was wondering if you could just update enough from devel repo
> to run the f13 or f14 kernels in an otherwise unaltered f12 - but maybe this
> is a bit tricky to get right?
That is probably relative safe to do (provided you make sure you keep
On 03/01/2010 11:29 AM, Jeffrey Metcalf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm hoping I can start a brief thread discussing the potential risks involved
> with backing up live mounted (RW) ext2/3/4 filesystems using dump(8). Here
> are the reasons I ask this:
>
> 1. My understanding is that it is safest to dump
> Out of curiosity, why exactly you can't use xrandr? What does it say
> when you run it?
It doesn't work with two video cards. According to the web, I need
Xrandr 1.3, but only 1.2 is available to me.
OTOH I'd really like to be proven wrong about this :-)
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fed
A curious incompatibility, it seems, between Hulu.com and 64-bit
libflashplayer.so plugin has recently reared its ugly head: streaming video
won't play or Hulu won't stream them for whatever reason. Also, any other
streaming sight that gets some of their content from Hulu like Fancast.com or
Don Quixote de la Mancha wrote:
> All of the hard drive vendors provide disk drive diagnostic tools,
> that are able to access vendor-specific - and undocumented - firmware
> in their drives. This diagnostic firmware is able to diagnose drive
> hardware problems in a much more thorough way than th
On 03/02/2010 05:53 AM, Bruno Wolff III wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 01, 2010 at 10:22:31 -0800,
>Mike Cloaked wrote:
>
>> If one wanted to install a rawhide kernel in a running f12 machine I guess
>> you could do something like
>> yum --enablerepo development install kernel kernel-devel etc
>>
2010/3/1 François Patte :
> I would like to know if someone experienced to install texlive-2009 under
> fedora.
>
> I am running fedora 10. On some computer I installed fedora 12, but in any
> of these release texlive still remains with 2007 release.
I run TL 2009 on Fedora 12. I don't use the rp
I'd like to recompile a single module without having to
recompile/reinstall the entire kernel.
This page - http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Docs/CustomKernel - talks
about compiling out-of-tree modules, but not the in-tree modules.
Specifically, I want to recompile sis190 module and turn on some debu
Bonjour Monsieur Patte,
I hope this is not a trivial answer.
To install latest TexLive (2009), I simply went to
http://www.tug.org/texlive/acquire-netinstall.html and after the download,
just followed the instructions which were pointed to on the same page.
Regards,
Berkin
2010/3/1 François P
On Monday 01 March 2010 04:37:36 pm DJ Delorie wrote:
> On 03/01/2010 02:08 AM, Dan Irwin wrote:
> > I'm not sure what setup you have, but I can use tools inside gnome to
>
> Four monitors on two nvidia GPUs set up as a single desktop running
> fvwm2. Like I said, I can't use Xrandr.
Out of curi
Bonjour,
I would like to know if someone experienced to install texlive-2009
under fedora.
I am running fedora 10. On some computer I installed fedora 12, but in
any of these release texlive still remains with 2007 release.
Is there a way to upgrade texlive under fedora 10 or 12.
Thank
On 03/01/2010 03:24 PM, Andrew Junev wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> I kindly ask for your support. On my MythTV frontend-only machine, I
> had to replace the motherboard. The old motherboard was an ASUS P5KR
> (Intel P35 chipset), and the newly installed motherboard is an MSI
> P43T-C51 (Intel P43 chipse
M A Young wrote:
>
>
> If you want to update everything to fedora 13 using yum (though of course
> the recommended way is to boot off a f13 iso image) then it should be
> enough to download and install (by hand) the fedora-release package from
> the f13 tree, and then run yum. If you want to
On Mon, 1 Mar 2010, Mike Cloaked wrote:
> If one wanted to install a rawhide kernel in a running f12 machine I guess
> you could do something like
> yum --enablerepo development install kernel kernel-devel etc
>
> However there are now rpms in the development directories both for 13/ and
> for raw
Styma, Robert E (Robert) wrote:
> My question becomes, "What file(s) other than fstab and grub.conf
> need to change to change the root parttion from an LVM parition
> to a normal ext partition such as sda2?"
Recreate the mkinitrd in your /boot.
Boot from a rescue disk, mount your system and chro
Hello All,
I kindly ask for your support. On my MythTV frontend-only machine, I
had to replace the motherboard. The old motherboard was an ASUS P5KR
(Intel P35 chipset), and the newly installed motherboard is an MSI
P43T-C51 (Intel P43 chipset). The old MB wasn't faulty - I just had
to urgently us
On 03/01/2010 12:12 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Mon, 01 Mar 2010 11:28:56 -0600
> Robert Nichols wrote:
>
>> The best way to disable anacron is to edit /etc/anacrontab and
>> change the START_HOURS_RANGE to something impossible. I use
>> "START_HOURS_RANGE=25-25" on my laptop, where I prefer to ru
On Mon, Mar 01, 2010 at 12:10:14 -0800,
Mike Cloaked wrote:
>
> OK a bit confused now - you mean that you "could" run f13 kernel in f12
> provided you also installed the appropriate graphics packages? If so what
> would a suitable yum command be?
Well the normal way to do this would be to use
Bruno Wolff III wrote:
>
>
> I think at this point in time, you would also be committed to pulling in
> updates related to graphics driver support (mesa, xorg-x11, libdrm).
>
>> However there are now rpms in the development directories both for 13/
>> and
>> for rawhide/ (and i386 and x86_64)
hello,
yesterday I have updated kdepim related packages and many things are missing
but will be back in future releases, so I wish till that time to revert to my
old state.
how do I do that?
thanks in advance,
YB
--- Begin Message ---
Am Monday 01 March 2010 19:29:11 schrieb Dj YB:
> thanks,
> I
On Mon, Mar 01, 2010 at 10:22:31 -0800,
Mike Cloaked wrote:
>
> If one wanted to install a rawhide kernel in a running f12 machine I guess
> you could do something like
> yum --enablerepo development install kernel kernel-devel etc
I think at this point in time, you would also be committed to
Hi everyone,
I have been struggling with this one for a while.
In switching to 389, I am trying to figure out how to get my Solaris
clients working with account management and ssh keys. SunDS 5.? has
an oid control that allows for account management and ssh keys to
proceed with their serve
Hi,
I'm hoping I can start a brief thread discussing the potential risks involved
with backing up live mounted (RW) ext2/3/4 filesystems using dump(8). Here are
the reasons I ask this:
1. My understanding is that it is safest to dump unmounted filesystems to
ensure all buffers are flushed an
On 03/01/2010 10:11 AM, Barry Yu wrote:
> On 02/28/2010 07:06 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
>> Barry Yu writes:
>>
>>> During the startup, when I chose the top line (updated kernel
>>> version) on the grub menu and then hit return, the round thing at
>>> center begins the progress indication of boot
If one wanted to install a rawhide kernel in a running f12 machine I guess
you could do something like
yum --enablerepo development install kernel kernel-devel etc
However there are now rpms in the development directories both for 13/ and
for rawhide/ (and i386 and x86_64) - is there a way to ins
On Mon, 01 Mar 2010 11:28:56 -0600
Robert Nichols wrote:
> The best way to disable anacron is to edit /etc/anacrontab and
> change the START_HOURS_RANGE to something impossible. I use
> "START_HOURS_RANGE=25-25" on my laptop, where I prefer to run
> the various daily, weekly
That's a way, I don'
On 26/02/10 10:57, Dick Roark wrote:
> I've been here before. I use a HL-1850 driver: Brother HL-1850
> Foomatic/HL-1850. This one seems to work well.
Thanks all - had to install gutenprint-foomatic but it's working
perfectly now.
What package does the default (non-working) driver belong to?
-
On 03/01/2010 10:55 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Mon, 01 Mar 2010 15:56:03 +
> Timothy Murphy wrote:
>
>> Any enlightenment gratefully received.
>
> I don't know about enlightenment, but I find the whole anacron
> thing absolutely useless and annoying. I used to be able
> to get rid of it by dis
On 03/01/2010 09:56 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> I'm trying to understand how cron works nowadays.
> I've been comparing my Fedora-12 laptop
> with my CentOS-5.4 desktop,
> and am slightly baffled by the difference between them.
>
> On the Fedora-12 system the venerable /etc/crontab is empty,
> and
> Subject: Re: Trying to convert a LVM partition to non-LVM
>
> I've never gone from LVM to native disk, but are you sure you have
> copied your MBR to the new disk?
>
>
> On 1 March 2010 11:18, Styma, Robert E (Robert)
> wrote:
> > I was working on a linux box which had a failing disk over
>
On Mon, 01 Mar 2010 17:32:52 +0100
Louis Lagendijk wrote:
> I understood (incorrectly?) that kernel 2.6.33 will have an option
> video=xxx option that would allow to fake the EDID.
Yea, I guess with kernel mode setting, the fake edid would have
to happen even earlier. I hope it works, it would be
On Mon, 01 Mar 2010 15:56:03 +
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> Any enlightenment gratefully received.
I don't know about enlightenment, but I find the whole anacron
thing absolutely useless and annoying. I used to be able
to get rid of it by disabling the (separate) anacron
service, or "yum erase ana
On 03/01/2010 02:08 AM, Dan Irwin wrote:
> I'm not sure what setup you have, but I can use tools inside gnome to
Four monitors on two nvidia GPUs set up as a single desktop running
fvwm2. Like I said, I can't use Xrandr.
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or chan
On Sun, 2010-02-28 at 19:21 -0600, Styma, Robert E (Robert) wrote:
> Hi,
> I've been looking at this for some time in both the
> archives of the list and the web in general. The problem
> is that when my Fedora 12 machine is connected though the
> KVM (Apex Outlook 8 port) the monitor shows up a
I have two monitors an my background image is exactly the size of both
combined. I used to be able to display this background image across
both screens as if they were a single display. I think I chose "Tiled"
to make this happen, but I'm not sure it was always that way.
Anyway, after an update a
I was working on a linux box which had a failing disk over
the weekend. It still booted, but flagged smartd errors
and had a couple of damaged files which were fortunately
replaceable (eclipse install tgz).
I booted Spinrite to make the drive readable and then planned
to use system rescue CD and
> Message: 6
> Date: Sat, 27 Feb 2010 14:10:11 -0500
> From: "Steven F. LeBrun"
> Subject: Re: Emacs has very large characters
> On 02/26/2010 02:35 PM, Vincent Onelli wrote:
> > Hello,
> > I installed emacs from software that comes with Fedora 12, the
> > characters are so large that makes unusa
I'm trying to understand how cron works nowadays.
I've been comparing my Fedora-12 laptop
with my CentOS-5.4 desktop,
and am slightly baffled by the difference between them.
On the Fedora-12 system the venerable /etc/crontab is empty,
and the work to be done is listed in /etc/anacrontab .
As far a
Kenneth Wolcott wrote:
> Hi;
>
> pulseaudio: no sound, Fedora 12, what debugging/diagnostic info is
> needed to solve this problem?
>
> Thanks,
> Ken Wolcott
Here's what I used to find my problem, in addition to making sure I
found the correct hardware and software versions:
lsmod | grep snd
l
On 27 February 2010 17:12, Vadkan Jozsef wrote:
> How can I do that in bash or perl, that I have a txt file, e.g.:
>
> $cat file.txt
> Hi, this is the content of the txt file, that contains links like this:
> http://www.somewhere.it/, and it could contain: http://somewhere.com,
> etc..
> This is t
On 02/28/2010 07:06 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Barry Yu writes:
>
>> During the startup, when I chose the top line (updated kernel
>> version) on the grub menu and then hit return, the round thing at
>> center begins the progress indication of booting into login window,
>> then then window is
On 03/01/2010 01:16 PM, Chris Rouch wrote:
>
> Or use the menus: Options->Set default font.
That doesn't work. Try it, then C-x 5 2 . The new window is still
in the old font.
Andrew.
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://adm
On Mon, 1 Mar 2010 08:36:38 -0500
Tom Horsley wrote:
> Maybe what I really need to do is put a local filter in /etc/logwatch
> that discards all the lines I don't want to see, gthen runs the
> rest through th
Truncation error :-). That should have said:
Maybe what I really need to do is put a lo
On Mon, 1 Mar 2010 07:24:55 -0600
Styma, Robert E (Robert) wrote:
> > Or if you really want to perform a service for the linux
> > community, you could travel the incredibly steep learning
> > curve on EDID and xorg software and provide a new module
> > for X that lets you plug in custom EDID info
On Mon, 1 Mar 2010 14:08:17 +0100
Chris Rouch wrote:
> Did you already copy it to the same directory under /etc/logwatch?
> Logwatch looks there for local changes.
Nah, I edit the file directly because if I make a local copy, I
don't get any updates (of course updates kill my changes, but I've
ne
> > I appreciate any time and help which can be offered.
>
> Getting X to pay attention to a custom setting has
> become increasingly difficult. They ignored EDID monitor
> info for 20 years, then instantly transitioned to ignoring
> user specified settings. I waged a battle several releases
> a
On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 8:10 PM, Steven F. LeBrun wrote:
> On 02/26/2010 02:35 PM, Vincent Onelli wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I installed emacs from software that comes with Fedora 12, the
> characters are so large that makes unusable. Any body know how to
> correct it to a standard font?
>
>
>
> Emacs, b
Did you already copy it to the same directory under /etc/logwatch?
Logwatch looks there for local changes.
Regards,
Chris
On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 2:18 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> I was formerly able to edit the file
>
> /usr/share/logwatch/scripts/services/dovecot
>
> to discard all the individu
On 3/1/10, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
> Hello,
> If I set a ramfs file system like this on a Fedora 12 system (but I think it
> is the same in general):
>
> mkdir /ramfs
> mount -t ramfs -o size=10m ramfs /ramfs
>
> I can see it via mount but not via df command.
> [r...@tekkaman ~]# mount
> ramfs on /
Dear All,
As the title...
Is the a Raid monitoring tool ( Web Based ) for install and use with the
adapter ( Server machine ) and FC OS ?
Thanks for your experience and share with me !
Edward.
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
http
On Sun, 2010-02-28 at 14:26 +, John Austin wrote:
> Maybe I am not thinking clearly
>
> All I am doing is using Thunar/PCManfm as a file manager and clicking
> on an email file to read or print it.
If you just want to read individually stored emails as files, there's
probably any number of w
Hello,
If I set a ramfs file system like this on a Fedora 12 system (but I think it
is the same in general):
mkdir /ramfs
mount -t ramfs -o size=10m ramfs /ramfs
I can see it via mount but not via df command.
[r...@tekkaman ~]# mount
ramfs on /ramfs type ramfs (rw,size=10m)
As ramfs is dynamic a
On Sun, 2010-02-28 at 22:03 -0500, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> I have two hard drives which look like this:
>
> FilesystemSize Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/sda6 9.4G 1.5G 7.5G 16% /
> /dev/sda11 85G 45G 36G 57% /g
> /dev/sda10 30G 6.1G 23
On Sun, 28 Feb 2010 15:57:00 -0800, Daniel wrote:
>
> FWIW, here is the sagator update problem:
>
> Running Transaction
> Installing :
> sagator-core-1.2.0-1.fc11.noarch 1/4
> Error unpacking rpm package sagator-core-1.2.0-1.fc11.noarch
> error: unpacking of archive
On maanantai, 1. maaliskuuta 2010 11:00:32 JayLinux wrote:
> On doing Shutdown as Normal User, there is a quick scroll of messages
> (similar to those at login) and it then hangs with a blinking cursor
> at the top left of the screen. I noticed this after a recent update
> that included a new kerne
On doing Shutdown as Normal User, there is a quick scroll of messages
(similar to those at login) and it then hangs with a blinking cursor
at the top left of the screen. I noticed this after a recent update
that included a new kernel.
2.6.31.12-174.2.22.fc12.i686.PAE
Trying to shutdown through a
98 matches
Mail list logo