Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Erik P. Olsen
On 2018-06-11 at 19:44:02 Robert Moskowitz wrote: > On 06/11/2018 07:21 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: > > On 06/11/2018 04:05 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote: > >> > >> dnf install system-config-date  I used it through tons of versions > >> and works perfectly fine with Xfce. > >> > >> It has been dropped in

Re: Troubles with rsync

2018-06-11 Thread Robert McBroom via users
On 06/11/2018 06:57 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: On Mon, 2018-06-11 at 01:22 -0400, Robert McBroom via users wrote: On 06/10/2018 09:53 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote: On 06/08/2018 08:48 PM, Robert McBroom via users wrote: On 06/08/2018 10:57 PM, Robert McBroom wrote: System is mounted with CIFS wi

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Bev in TX
> On Jun 11, 2018, at 4:50 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote: > > On 06/11/2018 02:31 PM, Bev in TX wrote: >> >> It’s an option of the builtin set command. >> >> set … >> … When options are specified, they set or unset shell attributes. …. >> -v Print shell input lines as they are read. > >

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Robert Moskowitz
On 06/11/2018 07:21 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: On 06/11/2018 04:05 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote: dnf install system-config-date  I used it through tons of versions and works perfectly fine with Xfce. It has been dropped in F28. Not listed as a package for F 25. Bad. I jumped from F24 to F28 an

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Joe Zeff
On 06/11/2018 04:05 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote: dnf install system-config-date  I used it through tons of versions and works perfectly fine with Xfce. It has been dropped in F28. Not listed as a package for F 25. ___ users mailing list -- users@li

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Joe Zeff
On 06/11/2018 03:51 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote: I was originally checking on an F28 system, but I found an F25 system and the package is called "control-center" there.  You can also install it using "dnf install /usr/bin/gnome-control-center". The package control-center was installed, so I remove

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Joe Zeff
On 06/11/2018 03:51 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote: I was originally checking on an F28 system, but I found an F25 system and the package is called "control-center" there.  You can also install it using "dnf install /usr/bin/gnome-control-center". [joe@khorlia ~]$ ls /bin/gnome-cont* /bin/gnome-con

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Robert Moskowitz
On 06/11/2018 05:57 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: I expect to be moving to a different time zone in a few months, and wanted to make sure that I can easily change the time zone on my desktop, running F 25 and Xfce.  The Time and Date program on my Settings menu didn't run, but I was able to look in wit

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Samuel Sieb
On 06/11/2018 03:37 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: On 06/11/2018 03:17 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote: Try running "dnf install gnome-control-center". It's already installed.  Checking, That doesn't make sense. That should have said it doesn't exist. dnf remove -n gnome-control-center returns that there's

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Joe Zeff
On 06/11/2018 03:17 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote: Try running "dnf install gnome-control-center". It's already installed. Checking, dnf remove -n gnome-control-center returns that there's no package to remove. Even clean all doesn't help. What repo is it in? I doubt it, but I might have exclud

Re: Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Samuel Sieb
On 06/11/2018 02:57 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: I expect to be moving to a different time zone in a few months, and wanted to make sure that I can easily change the time zone on my desktop, running F 25 and Xfce.  The Time and Date program on my Settings menu didn't run, but I was able to look in with

Changing the timezone in a GUI

2018-06-11 Thread Joe Zeff
I expect to be moving to a different time zone in a few months, and wanted to make sure that I can easily change the time zone on my desktop, running F 25 and Xfce. The Time and Date program on my Settings menu didn't run, but I was able to look in with a menu editor and see that the command l

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 11Jun2018 14:02, Gordon Messmer wrote: On 06/11/2018 05:40 AM, bruce wrote: #-- this doesn't quite work.. as it generates the complete "ls... output" but it does display the cmd and the resulting num of the ls files.. (set -x; ls -al /cloud_nfs_parse/austincc*__parse.dat | wc -l ) Bash doe

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 06/11/2018 02:31 PM, Bev in TX wrote: It’s an option of the builtin set command. set … … When options are specified, they set or unset shell attributes. …. -v Print shell input lines as they are read. Yeah, that also *kinda* works.  That'll print lines as they're read, not as the

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Bev in TX
> On Jun 11, 2018, at 4:02 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote: > > On 06/11/2018 05:40 AM, bruce wrote: >> #-- this doesn't quite work.. as it generates the complete "ls... >> output" but it does display the cmd and the resulting num of the ls >> files.. >> (set -x; ls -al /cloud_nfs_parse/austincc*__par

Re: Troubles with rsync

2018-06-11 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Mon, 2018-06-11 at 10:41 -0700, Samuel Sieb wrote: > On 06/11/2018 03:57 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > Slightly OT: if you have admin access to the NAS you might want to > > consider using rsyncd (rsync daemon) on the server side. It's much more > > efficient because it doesn't require rsyn

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 06/11/2018 05:40 AM, bruce wrote: #-- this doesn't quite work.. as it generates the complete "ls... output" but it does display the cmd and the resulting num of the ls files.. (set -x; ls -al /cloud_nfs_parse/austincc*__parse.dat | wc -l ) Bash doesn't have a mode in which it echos a command

Re: Did cron files move?

2018-06-11 Thread Rick Stevens
On 06/11/2018 11:53 AM, ToddAndMargo wrote: > On 06/11/2018 11:38 AM, Rick Stevens wrote: >> On 06/11/2018 11:17 AM, ToddAndMargo wrote: >>> Hi All, >>> >>> Since upgrading a server to 28 from 27, I can not find >>> my root's cron file.  Mind you, all the jobs are still >>> firing off like they sho

Re: Did cron files move?

2018-06-11 Thread ToddAndMargo
On 06/11/2018 11:38 AM, Rick Stevens wrote: On 06/11/2018 11:17 AM, ToddAndMargo wrote: Hi All, Since upgrading a server to 28 from 27, I can not find my root's cron file.  Mind you, all the jobs are still firing off like they should. Did the cron files get moved? Uhm, no. They should be in

Re: Did cron files move?

2018-06-11 Thread Rick Stevens
On 06/11/2018 11:17 AM, ToddAndMargo wrote: > Hi All, > > Since upgrading a server to 28 from 27, I can not find > my root's cron file.  Mind you, all the jobs are still > firing off like they should. > > Did the cron files get moved? Uhm, no. They should be in the /etc/crontab file, in the /etc

Did cron files move?

2018-06-11 Thread ToddAndMargo
Hi All, Since upgrading a server to 28 from 27, I can not find my root's cron file. Mind you, all the jobs are still firing off like they should. Did the cron files get moved? Many thanks, -T -- ~~~ Serious error. All shortcuts have disappeared. Screen. Mind. Both

Re: Troubles with rsync

2018-06-11 Thread Samuel Sieb
On 06/11/2018 03:57 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: Slightly OT: if you have admin access to the NAS you might want to consider using rsyncd (rsync daemon) on the server side. It's much more efficient because it doesn't require rsync on your client machine to read entire files over the network to

Re: rpmbuild --define - some rpm sorcerer around?

2018-06-11 Thread Todd Zullinger
lejeczek via users wrote: > It actually might be working. What I was doing I was looking for a > confirmation like this: > > $ ps -FC rpmbuild --cols > UIDPID PPID CSZ RSS PSR STIME TTY TIME CMD > appmgr 24855 24835 0 44512 6772 16 17:33 pts/000:00:00 rpmbuil

Re: rpmbuild --define - some rpm sorcerer around?

2018-06-11 Thread lejeczek via users
On 11/06/18 17:07, lejeczek via users wrote: I'm sorry, I do not get it.. was I so hard to read? $ _def1="_me 1" $ rpmbuild --define \'"${_def1}"\' and no matter how I quote, how I escape bash's var, rpmbuild does not "react" to it. I run it from a bash script. I should mention I'm on Centos

Re: rpmbuild --define - some rpm sorcerer around?

2018-06-11 Thread Todd Zullinger
lejeczek via users wrote: > I'm sorry, I do not get it.. was I so hard to read? > > $ _def1="_me 1" > $ rpmbuild --define \'"${_def1}"\' > > and no matter how I quote, how I escape bash's var, rpmbuild does not > "react" to it. I run it from a bash script. > I should mention I'm on Centos 7.5. RP

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread George N. White III
On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 at 09:41, bruce wrote: > Hi. > > Running a centos/fed box, and trying to craft a simple shell test to > run a bunch of commands where the command is displayed as well as the > output > > Ie. The following cmd might return 10 (the num of the files if the cmd > is run from the c

Re: rpmbuild --define - some rpm sorcerer around?

2018-06-11 Thread lejeczek via users
I'm sorry, I do not get it.. was I so hard to read? $ _def1="_me 1" $ rpmbuild --define \'"${_def1}"\' and no matter how I quote, how I escape bash's var, rpmbuild does not "react" to it. I run it from a bash script. I should mention I'm on Centos 7.5. RPM version 4.11.3 many thanks, L. _

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Matthew Miller
On Mon, Jun 11, 2018 at 08:40:59AM -0400, bruce wrote: > Running a centos/fed box, and trying to craft a simple shell test to > run a bunch of commands where the command is displayed as well as the > output > > Ie. The following cmd might return 10 (the num of the files if the cmd > is run from th

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Mon, 2018-06-11 at 08:40 -0400, bruce wrote: > Hi. > > Running a centos/fed box, and trying to craft a simple shell test to > run a bunch of commands where the command is displayed as well as the > output > > Ie. The following cmd might return 10 (the num of the files if the cmd > is run from

Re: Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread Bev in TX
> On Jun 11, 2018, at 7:40 AM, bruce wrote: > > Hi. > > Running a centos/fed box, and trying to craft a simple shell test to > run a bunch of commands where the command is displayed as well as the > output > > Ie. The following cmd might return 10 (the num of the files if the cmd > is run fro

Display cmd within shell

2018-06-11 Thread bruce
Hi. Running a centos/fed box, and trying to craft a simple shell test to run a bunch of commands where the command is displayed as well as the output Ie. The following cmd might return 10 (the num of the files if the cmd is run from the cmdline. ls -al /cloud_nfs_parse/austincc*__parse.dat | wc

Re: Troubles with rsync

2018-06-11 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Mon, 2018-06-11 at 01:22 -0400, Robert McBroom via users wrote: > On 06/10/2018 09:53 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote: > > On 06/08/2018 08:48 PM, Robert McBroom via users wrote: > > > On 06/08/2018 10:57 PM, Robert McBroom wrote: > > > > System is mounted with CIFS with write permission. NAS only uses

[389-users] Re: 389 and Active Directory 2016

2018-06-11 Thread Marc Muehlfeld
Hi Jesse, On 25.05.2018 19:13, JESSE LUNT wrote: Does 389 synchronize with Active Directory 2016? I have found documentation saying 2003,2008, and 2012 are supported. Red Hat Directory Server 10.2 (= 389-ds 1.3.7.5) release notes: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_director