On 04/17/2016 02:49 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
I get:
Error starting network 'default': internal error: Network is already
in use by interface virbr0.
The "State" in the same window is shown as Inactive. The NetworkManager
status for virbr0 is Connected, which may explain the prob
On Sun, Apr 17, 2016 at 5:04 PM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
> On F22, the manpage for dnf says the update and update-to
> commands are deprecated aliases for upgrade and upgrade-to.
>
> That being the case, shouldn't the update-info and
> check-update commands also be deprecated and have
> corresponding u
On F22, the manpage for dnf says the update and update-to
commands are deprecated aliases for upgrade and upgrade-to.
That being the case, shouldn't the update-info and
check-update commands also be deprecated and have
corresponding upgrade versions?
jl
--
Jon H. LaBadie jo...@j
On Sun, 2016-04-17 at 12:07 -0700, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 04/17/2016 06:31 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> >
> > I've been occasionally using a Windows 7 VM with the libvirt system
> > for
> > several months now and have had no problems up to now. However
> > recently
> > I've been getting error
On Sun, Apr 17, 2016 at 1:54 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> Samuel Sieb wrote:
>
>>> The basic assumption seems to be that most people will burn a CD or DVD.
>>> Is that true any more?
>
>> I think there's an expectation now that people won't be burning it to CD
>> or DVD. That's why the size limits
On Sun, Apr 17, 2016 at 10:51 AM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 04/17/2016 03:23 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
>>
>> I normally use the LiveUSB Creator to get a live OS on a USB stick.
>> But as I said, this usually takes me a couple of tries,
>
>
> You might try using unetbootin instead. Among other things,
On 04/17/2016 12:52 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Joe Zeff wrote:
I normally use the LiveUSB Creator to get a live OS on a USB stick.
But as I said, this usually takes me a couple of tries,
You might try using unetbootin instead.
I prefer to try Fedora programs first.
Understood, but there a
Samuel Sieb wrote:
>> The basic assumption seems to be that most people will burn a CD or DVD.
>> Is that true any more?
> I think there's an expectation now that people won't be burning it to CD
> or DVD. That's why the size limits on the live images have been relaxed.
If that is the expectati
Joe Zeff wrote:
>> I normally use the LiveUSB Creator to get a live OS on a USB stick.
>> But as I said, this usually takes me a couple of tries,
>
> You might try using unetbootin instead.
I prefer to try Fedora programs first.
> Among other things, you can use
> it for .iso files that aren't
On 04/17/16 14:14, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 04/17/2016 11:54 AM, g wrote:
>> it seems that you and a few others need to read *all* of the page
>> at linuquestions.org.
>>
>> after your read *all* of that page, you _might_ begin to understand
>> how to modify an iso file.
>>
> Ok, I read that page,
On 04/17/2016 11:54 AM, g wrote:
it seems that you and a few others need to read *all* of the page
at linuquestions.org.
after your read *all* of that page, you _might_ begin to understand
how to modify an iso file.
Ok, I read that page, what's your point? You still can't modify an ISO
file.
On 04/17/2016 06:31 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
I've been occasionally using a Windows 7 VM with the libvirt system for
several months now and have had no problems up to now. However recently
I've been getting error messages from Windows about the network being
"unknown" and my shared host/gue
On 04/17/16 13:40, Samuel Sieb wrote:
<<>>
> As has already been mentioned several times, you can't edit a file on an
> ISO image even if you are root. However, you can mount an ISO image as
> a regular user using the Gnome disk image mounter application. But
> again, this is the wrong way
On 04/17/2016 03:23 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Because it seems to me to cut out one step in a fairly onerous process.
At the moment I download the ISO to /dev/sda9 (or something like that),
and then install it on a USB stick, which in my case seems to take
an average of 2 or 3 attempts, and then
On 04/17/2016 11:28 AM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
With your own domain name you could also set up your own mail server
at least for the inbound email. Doing that gives you an unlimited
number of "email accounts". I'm currently approaching 400 aliases
to "jon". If I start a new relationship with a ven
On 04/17/2016 03:53 AM, g wrote:
not only i do not, no one has be root when making an iso.
*but* ever one needs to be 'root' user when editing files owned by
'root, as is case of loop mounting an iso and editing boot.conf, which
is main of this thread.
As has already been mentioned several time
On Sun, Apr 17, 2016 at 04:03:24PM +0930, Tim wrote:
> On Sat, 2016-04-16 at 12:27 -0500, g wrote:
...
>
> Some service providers are just crap, and knowing that I've not used an
> ISP mail account since I ditched my second one. That way, I'm not held
> hostage to them. It's really worth getting
On 04/17/2016 03:23 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
I normally use the LiveUSB Creator to get a live OS on a USB stick.
But as I said, this usually takes me a couple of tries,
You might try using unetbootin instead. Among other things, you can use
it for .iso files that aren't from Fedora.
--
user
I've been occasionally using a Windows 7 VM with the libvirt system for
several months now and have had no problems up to now. However recently
I've been getting error messages from Windows about the network being
"unknown" and my shared host/guest volume is unavailable. On the most
recent attempt
On 04/17/16 03:17, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 04/17/2016 12:24 AM, g wrote:
>> On 04/16/16 23:45, Kevin Wilson wrote:
>>> Thanks, Mike, but this fails:
>>> mount -o loop,rw
>>> /work/down/setup/Fedora-Live-Workstation-x86_64-21-5.iso /mnt/loop
>>> mount: /dev/loop0 is write-protected, mounting read-
Joe Zeff wrote:
>> What would that mean? Normally, you are overwriting the hard drive, so
>> where would you put the installer files?
> I think he means extracting the .iso to one partition and using it to
> install Fedora on the rest of the drive (or even on a different drive)
> while not refor
On 04/16/2016 11:45 PM, Tim wrote:
Timothy Murphy:
Slightly OT, and no help to the OP, but it seems extraordinary to me
that there is no official way of installing Fedora from the hard disk.
Chris Murphy:
Start working on an implementation and propose it as a feature for a
future version of F
On 04/16/2016 11:40 PM, Tim wrote:
On Sat, 2016-04-16 at 11:15 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
I think he means extracting the .iso to one partition and using it to
install Fedora on the rest of the drive (or even on a different drive)
while not reformatting that partition. I'm not sure why he wants to
On 04/17/2016 12:24 AM, g wrote:
On 04/16/16 23:45, Kevin Wilson wrote:
Thanks, Mike, but this fails:
mount -o loop,rw
/work/down/setup/Fedora-Live-Workstation-x86_64-21-5.iso /mnt/loop
mount: /dev/loop0 is write-protected, mounting read-only
s:/$mount -o remount,rw /mnt/loop
mount: cannot re
On 04/17/16 00:19, Mike Wright wrote:
<<>>
> Here's an idea. Mount the r/o iso. Make a copy of it. cd to the copy.
> The copy will still have the original permissions but they are
> changeable. Make your changes and save it as an iso (not sure how you'd
> do that).
>
===>
that idea is
On 04/16/16 23:45, Kevin Wilson wrote:
> Thanks, Mike, but this fails:
> mount -o loop,rw
> /work/down/setup/Fedora-Live-Workstation-x86_64-21-5.iso /mnt/loop
> mount: /dev/loop0 is write-protected, mounting read-only
>
> s:/$mount -o remount,rw /mnt/loop
> mount: cannot remount /dev/loop0 read-w
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