On 08/21/2013 09:34 PM, Robert McBroom wrote:
# systemctl status dbus-org.freedesktop.nm-dispatcher.service
dbus-org.freedesktop.nm-dispatcher.service
Loaded: error (Reason: No such file or directory)
Active: inactive (dead)
Any ideas as to what is happening?
All I can say, right now, is th
On 22.08.2013 06:37, odie...@aol.com wrote:
>
> Hello. I am using Fedora 19 and would like to be able to unlock the LUKS
> root partition on my hard drive using a two factor authentication of
> both a passphrase and a sector stored on a USB flash drive.
> Accomplishing this requires modifying the
Hello. I am using Fedora 19 and would like to be able to unlock the LUKS root
partition on my hard drive using a two factor authentication of both a
passphrase and a sector stored on a USB flash drive. Accomplishing this
requires modifying the boot process to read a USB device.
This post
Updated to Fedora 19 but none of the kernels will boot. The process
begins and something about an error with connecting to DBUS flashes on
the screen then the cycle starts over. I can still run with
kernel-3.10.4-100.fc18.x86_64 although it complains about a file missing
that udev would like to
On 21Aug2013 10:19, Mark Haney wrote:
| Okay, I wasn't sure if that would work or not since I was running the
| internal script as a different user. Thanks.
Sounds like the files are already open; it will be fine.
If the inner script needed to open the files itself you might
encounter permissio
On 08/21/2013 05:03 PM, Temlakos wrote:
The new method, that creates a new non-super user, with Wheel
privileges, has been a part of Fedora since at least F17.
The idea is to make logging-in as root...obsolete. I gather most
developers think it's too dangerous--leaves your system wide-open.
Pe
On 08/21/2013 07:55 PM, Javier Perez wrote:
I am surprised because I did not ask it to do it, but the installer
did it nevertheless. Weird. Makes me wonder how the installer is
interpreting the instructions that we impart to it before installation.
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 12:53 AM, Joe Zeff
I am surprised because I did not ask it to do it, but the installer did it
nevertheless. Weird. Makes me wonder how the installer is interpreting the
instructions that we impart to it before installation.
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 12:53 AM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 08/20/2013 10:26 PM, Javier Perez
On 08/21/2013 01:36 PM, Michael Lang wrote:
Am 21.08.2013 21:31, schrieb Rich Megginson:
On 08/21/2013 01:03 PM, Michael Lang wrote:
Am 21.08.2013 19:25, schrieb Chris Taylor:
I am looking at replacing our two CentOS DS servers which are 5.9
with some on the 6.4 channel. What is the best way
On Wed, 21 Aug 2013 14:07:39 -0400
Bill Case wrote:
> Hi;
>
> I have several small Gnome 3 issues I would like help with or
> discussion about. Has anybody found a good way to communicate with
> gnome 3 users or developers. I belong to the following:
> gnome-l...@gnome.org,
> Gnome forum,
> ht
On 21/08/13 18:38, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 1:58 PM, g mailto:gel...@bellsouth.net>> wrote:
op poc seems to rather have a 'range roving chopper'
than a 'sit and watch dot'.
I have absolutely no idea what that means.
poc
That makes at least two of us :-)
Hi;
I have several small Gnome 3 issues I would like help with or discussion
about. Has anybody found a good way to communicate with gnome 3 users or
developers. I belong to the following:
gnome-l...@gnome.org,
Gnome forum,
http://forums.worldofgnome.org,
over the last few days I have not recei
On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 9:05 AM, Bryn M. Reeves wrote:
>
> $ padsp $old-program
>
> Yes, that is exactly the thing I was trying to remember.
Unfortunately, didn't work. Commandline complaint says it can't open the
sound device nor connect to ESD. I have only the foggiest, indistinct
recollection
Glad it helped
- Original Message -
On 21.08.2013, ergodic wrote:
> The UUIDs of the newly partitioned drive will most probably
> be different from those of the original drive
They *are* different, with 100% certainty. Great you mentioned it,
this will help to avoid mount problems (and
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 1:58 PM, g wrote:
> op poc seems to rather have a 'range roving chopper'
> than a 'sit and watch dot'.
>
I have absolutely no idea what that means.
poc
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Am 21.08.2013 16:04, schrieb Mark Haney:
> I've got a bash script that has two parts.
>
> 1. runs a script as a different user (using su -c
On 21.08.2013 15:39, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Aug 2013 15:32:19 +0200
> poma wrote:
>
>> When you get one of these USB gadgets make the review here. ;)
>
> Yea, I saw the gadget, but I already have HDMI out on my
> video card, you'd think there might be some magic ioctl()s
> or something y
On 21.08.2013, ergodic wrote:
> The UUIDs of the newly partitioned drive will most probably
> be different from those of the original drive
They *are* different, with 100% certainty. Great you mentioned it,
this will help to avoid mount problems (and save some time using a
rescue disk to fix tha
On 08/21/2013 09:53 AM, David Boreham wrote:
Another thing you might try :
While the server is under stress, run the "pstack" command a few times
and save the output.
gdb will give much more detail
http://port389.org/wiki/FAQ#Debugging_Hangs
If you post the thread stacks here, someone fami
On 08/21/2013 05:29 PM, David Boreham wrote:
On 8/21/2013 9:14 AM, Jeffrey Dunham wrote:
The reason I asked about nsslapd-threadnumber is because during the
time of the spike, all transactions slow. Meaning that binds, adds,
searches, ect. all start increasing in their etime until it hits the
On 08/21/2013 09:29 AM, David Boreham wrote:
On 8/21/2013 9:14 AM, Jeffrey Dunham wrote:
The reason I asked about nsslapd-threadnumber is because during the
time of the spike, all transactions slow. Meaning that binds, adds,
searches, ect. all start increasing in their etime until it hits the
On 08/21/2013 09:14 AM, Jeffrey Dunham wrote:
The reason I asked about nsslapd-threadnumber is because during the
time of the spike, all transactions slow. Meaning that binds, adds,
searches, ect. all start increasing in their etime until it hits the
point where we've processed the majority of
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On 08/21/2013 11:15 PM, ergodic wrote:
> Caveat.
>
> The UUIDs of the newly partitioned drive will most probably be different
> from those of the original drive which can create problems with the booting
> and swap partitions. Check the /etc/fstab fil
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On 08/21/2013 03:16 PM, Roberto Ragusa wrote:
> On 08/21/2013 05:13 AM, Gregory Hosler wrote:
>
>> If a mounted partition is being copied, then the result (destination) is
>> that mounted partition. As boot time, it will need to be fsck. Any open
>>
Caveat.
The UUIDs of the newly partitioned drive will most probably
be different from those of the original drive which can create
problems with the booting and swap partitions.
Check the /etc/fstab file to see what UUIDs the OS is using.
The UUIDs of the original drive and partitions should be i
After a bit more time with the Console I changed the order of the
attributes within the textbox(?) that displays the mail attribute values.
Please see the attached screenshots.
Ldapsearch output also confirms the new order. The change seems
persistent, at least for now.
I do not know what happe
Okay, I wasn't sure if that would work or not since I was running the
internal script as a different user. Thanks.
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 10:11 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
>
>
> Am 21.08.2013 16:04, schrieb Mark Haney:
> > I've got a bash script that has two parts.
> >
> > 1. runs a script as a
On 08/20/2013 08:39 PM, Jeffrey Dunham wrote:
We have a customer that has been multi-threading behind multiple
servers and writing to our Master server. These writes come in the
form of heavy spikes (1k over 5 second intervals) very much burst
traffic and all the writes are adding new items t
On 08/20/2013 10:39 PM, Jeffrey Dunham wrote:
We have a customer that has been multi-threading behind multiple
servers and writing to our Master server. These writes come in the
form of heavy spikes (1k over 5 second intervals) very much burst
traffic and all the writes are adding new items
I've got a bash script that has two parts.
1. runs a script as a different user (using su -c
On Wed, 21 Aug 2013 15:32:19 +0200
poma wrote:
> When you get one of these USB gadgets make the review here. ;)
Yea, I saw the gadget, but I already have HDMI out on my
video card, you'd think there might be some magic ioctl()s
or something you could use to send the signals out the
existing hdmi
On 21.08.2013 14:50, Tom Horsley wrote:
> Anyone know if linux video drivers with HDMI can generate the
> HDMI CEC signals? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI#CEC).
>
> The TV I use for a display doesn't support the "normal" DPMS
> power management. It would be nifty to be able to turn it
> on via
On 08/21/2013 04:00 AM, John Pilkington wrote:
<>
Hmm. I was surprised to see that most of the responses assumed that the
problem was in the hardware, since I had assumed that I was just seeing
the results of a misconfiguration.
could be that most of us know what we are doing, where some do
Anyone know if linux video drivers with HDMI can generate the
HDMI CEC signals? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI#CEC).
The TV I use for a display doesn't support the "normal" DPMS
power management. It would be nifty to be able to turn it
on via the HDMI connection.
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users mailing list
users@l
On 20/08/13 18:04, David G. Miller wrote:
John Pilkington tesco.net> writes:
On 19/08/13 21:22, David G. Miller wrote:
Patrick O'Callaghan gmail.com> writes:
I have a Logitech Bluetooth mouse which I'm fairly sure has a hardware
problem. The left button frequently issues two click events
On 08/21/2013 05:13 AM, Gregory Hosler wrote:
> If a mounted partition is being copied, then the result (destination) is that
> mounted partition. As boot time, it will need to be fsck. Any open files will
> be in whatever state they were in when they were copied. Hence, all files
> should be c
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