On 11/19/2014 07:23 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 11/19/14 14:05, A.J. Bonnema wrote:
Can anyone help me get my virtual desktops back?
Kind regards, Guus.
System Settings > Workspace Appearance and Behavior ---> Workspace Behavior
---> Virtual Desktop
Thanks mate: I can't believe I forgot thi
On 11/19/14 14:05, A.J. Bonnema wrote:
> P.S. If any one knows what the vduchain is for, I would like to know that
> too. But it's no biggie.
It seems that is created when the kdevelop tools/environment is used.
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If you can't laugh at yourself, others will gladly oblige.
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On 11/19/14 14:05, A.J. Bonnema wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I run fedora 20 fully updated (on x64). I just renamed my .kde and
> .kdevduchain to respectively .kde-old and .kde-vduchain-old. My goal was to
> get the default desktop, and I did. However, in the process I lost my virtual
> desktops. I find
Hi all,
I run fedora 20 fully updated (on x64). I just renamed my .kde and
.kdevduchain to respectively .kde-old and .kde-vduchain-old. My goal was
to get the default desktop, and I did. However, in the process I lost my
virtual desktops. I find life in KDE pretty hard without my virtual
desk
On 19/11/14 14:34, Ian Pilcher wrote:
I'm looking for an (IPv4) multicast routing daemon for Fedora, and it
doesn't seems like there's anything out there.
Is this truly the case? (It just seems kind of hard to believe.)
I ported gated to Linux many years ago but it doesn't seem to be in any d
I'm looking for an (IPv4) multicast routing daemon for Fedora, and it
doesn't seems like there's anything out there.
Is this truly the case? (It just seems kind of hard to believe.)
--
Ian Pilcher
The OP was talking about running a centralized proxy. Put this in /etc/profile or /etc/inputrc (can't remember which)
per machine.
Sorry not to have spelled it out.
Bill
On 11/18/2014 4:22 AM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
On 18Nov2014 02:31, Bill Shirley wrote:
You can put this in your ~/.bashr
On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 01:36:46 +,
Bill Oliver wrote:
I've been reading a bit about port knocking as a security tool. It makes
pretty good sense for a private box, at least for stuff like ssh and ftp.
Does anybody know of a good tutorial/example/script for fedora for this?
If your
On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 5:36 PM, Bill Oliver wrote:
>
> I've been reading a bit about port knocking as a security tool. It makes
> pretty good sense for a private box, at least for stuff like ssh and ftp.
> Does anybody know of a good tutorial/example/script for fedora for this?
>
> Thanks!
>
I've been reading a bit about port knocking as a security tool. It makes
pretty good sense for a private box, at least for stuff like ssh and ftp.
Does anybody know of a good tutorial/example/script for fedora for this?
Thanks!
billo
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To u
On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 06:12:36PM -0500, Bill Davidsen wrote:
> Bill Davidsen wrote:
> >David A. De Graaf wrote:
> >>On Fri, Oct 03, 2014 at 02:19:55PM -0400, David A. De Graaf wrote:
> >>>On Fri, Oct 03, 2014 at 04:01:30AM +0930, Tim wrote:
> Allegedly, on or about 02 October 2014, Chris Murp
On Nov 10, 2014, at 11:26 PM, George R Goffe wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have some large ext4 filesystems with large numbers of files in them and
> performance really sucks. After inactivity, a simple ls takes minutes to
> complete. I'm pretty sure the drive is now powering itself down due to this
>
On 11/17/2014 01:28 PM, jd1008 wrote:
Man page says:
...
fdatasync
physically write output file data before finishing
fsync likewise, but also write metadata
There is no explanation about this, as dd is supposed to be agnostic
about the type of the data.
If a
On 18Nov2014 02:31, Bill Shirley wrote:
You can put this in your ~/.bashrc:
export http_proxy="http://127.0.0.1:3128";
export ftp_proxy="ftp://127.0.0.1:3128";
They both need to be "http://127.0.0.1:3128/";; the proxy protocol is HTTP,
hence the same scheme for each. Also https_proxy. Of cour
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