mething running away
>> with my memory. Also see
>>
>> https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1726385
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldi
ttp://192.168.1.1"; (or whatever IP address it's
set to). By default, the username is "admin" as is the password. See
page 26 of the user guide (I pulled down the PDF from Linksys' website).
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigital
On 1/15/19 7:52 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 01/14/19 17:33, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> ZoneMinder is available from the repos.
> .
> Ok, I dnf installed zoneminder this morning, that part is easy enough,
> but apparently it does not create a working zoneminder program
On 1/14/19 4:26 PM, Doug wrote:
>
> On 01/14/2019 05:33 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 1/14/19 12:41 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>>> .
>>> Does anyone have experience with software for use with Amcrest cameras.
>>> I am able to view the rtsp video with vlc and
On 1/14/19 3:16 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 01/14/19 17:33, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>> .
>>> Does anyone have experience with software for use with Amcrest cameras.
>>> I am able to view the rtsp video with vlc and Fedora 29 but that does
>>> not pr
y guess is you could borg those scripts to do what you
wish. ZoneMinder is available from the repos.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 2264
not included. Some assembly required.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
On 1/10/19 10:43 AM, John Harris wrote:
> On Thursday, January 10, 2019 1:16:11 PM EST Rick Stevens wrote:
>> If I may offer my $0.02, Fedora on production systems is not a great
>> idea. We manage well over 2000 servers each in two data centers. The
>> vast majority (&
;t know why you'd bother, there are
plenty of other web browsers out there.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2
ser 0 0
>>
>> in /etc/fstab should permit any user to:
>>
>> $ mount /mnt/USB
>
> The problem is that it tries to mount at boot even if the drive is off
Then also set the "noauto" option:
defaults,user,noauto
That requires a manual moun
to the Internet so
smaller hardware is not an option. Fortunately, I'm well versed in these
beasties as Cisco IOS isn't a particularly intuitive system.
For a router/VPN gateway in a SOHO environment (even some medium-sized
cases), I'd go along with those who recommended usi
OT use
root's password, use your own.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
opriate permissions for the user). Not necessarily secure, but...
----------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
n the desktop so the laptop wouldn't exhibit the issue as
readily.
Utilities like free, vmstat and top can also help you see if it's a
memory issue.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigit
uth2?
If you mean the buttons at the top (Fedora, Google, Twitter, GitLab,
etc.), yes, that's OAuth2 stuff which permits you to use your account
on one of those systems to authenticate.
> Happy New Year everyone!
You too, buddy!
---
ou get back from
the site must be included in any future transactions. The token is
typically only valid for a short period of time...the site can
revalidate when it expires if it wishes to.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems
ilar with the obvious substitutions.
>
> Note that, even after the failures in the F27 updates last night or the
> F28 updates previously, the RPMFusion updates did not fail.
Ok, so it looks like one of the scripts is leaving you in a bogus
directory so the next script fails. Like I said
s good, I'll promote this
> thread from CLOSED to SOLVED.
Yeah, good idea!
Note that "sizes" in most word processors or printing-related things are
given in points (12 points to the inch, so 24 points is 2 inches or
about 5 cm high). For display-oriented things such as grub or X
not under cron usually indicates that you've
forgotten that running under cron, you don't have the same environment
as you do in an interactive session. So, make sure your environment is
set correctly in the script (such as the PATH and such). Just for
giggles, try creating a script:
or details.
Note that if you put a space in the session identifier, you MUST enclose
it in quotes so the shell doesn't try to interpret it.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 22643
/grub2/fonts
And put the name of the file into the GRUB_FONT option:
GRUB_FONT=newfont.pf2
That oughta do it.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri.
connections of >120K
clients spread across all the edge servers with a total bandwidth of
about 4.2Gbps at full song (pun intended).
Icecast is available from the standard repos:
icecast.x86_64 2.4.4-1.fc29 updates
icecast-doc.noarch 2.4.4-1.fc29updates
The mai
On 12/18/18 12:11 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 12/17/18 5:13 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> Most streaming platforms now use quasi-HTTP connections to packetize the
>> stream content (HLS, HDS, MPEG-Dash, et al.). As clients connect,
>> they're given a "playlist"
s typically use fully analog systems with
a distribution amplifier feeding a bus where individual loudspeaker
amps pick the signal off the distribution amplifier for local playback.
No packetization, no decoding, nada. The only synchronization issues
there are the speed of the signal on the bu
ont and rebuild grub via grub-mkconfig.
----------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
ey use "dnf upgrade" for updates
and "dnf system-upgrade" for OS upgrades, but using the term "upgrade"
for both is (IMHO) confusing.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 2264373
On 12/11/18 2:36 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 12/12/18 6:12 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 12/11/18 1:52 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>
>>> I get the feeling the folks at Netwisp, Inc. are doing something to
>>> "prevent" hacking.
>> Yup. Tried three
On 12/11/18 1:52 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 12/12/18 5:25 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> I just did the same. From a Spectrum IP here in Orange County, CA,
>> the system doesn't respond (and Spectrum is a Comcast company).
>>
>> From a monitoring system in our ASN
ich. Looks like an argument you need to have with Comcast to
see if they're blacklisting it and if so, why?
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo:
#x27;s your problem. Those routers do have
a log in them. Check it to see if you see anything like what they're
claiming.
A far more likely candidate is that the cable modem got an update from
Comcast (they do that on occasion and without telling you) and it's
screwed up. I had a sim
he NM config are only used to match the hardware.
And in answer to your second message, NM doesn't do any renaming of
devices. That's still done by the udev rules.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2IC
/mysql/mysqlx.sock'
> bind-address: '::' port: 33060
Yup. Some of those are fixable via mysql_upgrade, others are fairly
important and appear to be caused by using a newer mysqld that's not
backwards compatible with your previous version. You didn't say which
version of MySQL you were running before and whether 8.0
On 12/10/18 3:54 PM, Danny Horne via users wrote:
> On 10/12/2018 11:48 pm, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 12/10/18 3:32 PM, Danny Horne via users wrote:
>>> On 10/12/2018 11:26 pm, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Keep in mind that you're really running m
On 12/10/18 3:32 PM, Danny Horne via users wrote:
> On 10/12/2018 11:26 pm, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>
>> Keep in mind that you're really running mariadb and the command to start
>> it is "systemctl start mariadb" even though the daemon will show up as
>&g
n the logs? Try
journalctl -b0 | egrep '(maria|mysql)'
and see if anything shows up.
Check to see if you have any files in /var/log/mariadb and check to see
if you have any AVC (SELinux) denials regarding it.
--------
On 12/10/18 2:10 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
> On 12/10/18 1:01 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
>> On 7/12/18 9:10 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> On 12/7/18 4:33 AM, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>>> Thanks Ed, I'll try that again.
>>>>
>>>> I am using a vpn
n, and
> when I navigate to /mnt where the mount points are, the import dialog
> shows me all the directories in /mnt except the three windows
> directories even though those mount points are currently mounted. All
> the directories in /mnt are owned by root and world readable. How do
On 12/6/18 2:33 PM, AV wrote:
> On Thu, 2018-12-06 at 19:23 +0000, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 12/6/18 10:21 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
>
>>> On Thu, 06 Dec 2018 17:42:22 +0100
>>> AV wrote:
>>>
>>>> Didn't there use to be a 'delet
ested in
5. Click on the "Administration" dropdown menu in that menu
6. The "Delete Printer" option there (3rd item down for me)
Sheesh!
--
- Ri
of bureaucracy in any form, it might be time for
ANSI or ISC to create a committee to address UI issues such as this.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
r to confuse us? It's getting pretty awful. Sheesh! This isn't
an Easter egg hunt, folks!
--
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- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
On 12/4/18 11:06 AM, Mike Wright wrote:
> On 12/4/18 11:01 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>
>> On my evince (V3.30.2), you can click on the hamburger stack
>
>
> And all this time I thought those were pancakes.
Well, I guess you could "insert stacked food of your preference
the printer is the left most icon in the row of icons at the top.
------
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- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
--
On 12/3/18 1:07 PM, John Pilkington wrote:
> On 03/12/2018 19:19, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 12/3/18 10:16 AM, John Pilkington wrote:
>>> On 03/12/2018 17:30, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>> On 12/3/18 8:15 AM, John Pilkington wrote:
>>>>> Hi: I have two
g ssh. I can't remember if it's blocked by default or not, which
is why I suggested also checking the firewall config.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: the
On 12/3/18 10:16 AM, John Pilkington wrote:
> On 03/12/2018 17:30, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 12/3/18 8:15 AM, John Pilkington wrote:
>>> Hi: I have two boxes connected to the same router. One runs SL7.5,
>>> from tomorrow probably SL7.6, which is an el7 clone, and t
;ve never done this in the installer as I never dual
>>>> boot Windows and Linux using the same physical disks. For the (very)
>>>> few
>>>> times I must share a machine between the two, I ha
g and remounting with a changed parameter has
>> no effect.
>
> Except that it did have an effect. I used 'umount -f ...' and then
> 'mount -a' and it worked.
"mount -a" will only mount things that aren't already mounted. It
worked a
Algorithms" option in /etc/ssh/sshd_config) or use one of the
acceptable ciphers/algorithms at the client (SL7) end.
Logs and error messages are your friends in these cases.
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigital
etween the two, I have one set of disks
>> for Windows and a separate set of disks for Linux.
>>
>> In my world, Windows gets run in VMs with Linux as the host OS. Thus, I
>> use mdadmin and its metadata natively for my RAID stuff as I don't hav
dows and a separate set of disks for Linux.
In my world, Windows gets run in VMs with Linux as the host OS. Thus, I
use mdadmin and its metadata natively for my RAID stuff as I don't have
to share that metadata with Windows. Preferably, I use a _real_ RAID
controller--but they can be e
ect without a remount of some
sort. The best remount is a full umount/mount cycle, but umounting
(without the "-f") will require that there are no open files on that
filesystem. Using the "-f" will forcefully dismount it and that can lead
to some grievous consequences to proces
gone through PT several times in my
life, I know it's a pain (both literally and euphemistically) and a
real drudge, but it's necessary and hopefully all will work out.
Keep at the work and keep us posted, buddy!
----------
- Rick
rk. Check
/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/
and
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-
------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype
code-of-conduct.html
>> List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
>> List Archives:
>> https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/users@lists.fedoraproject.org
> _______
> users mailing list -- users@lis
On 11/27/18 12:48 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 27/11/18 10:53 am, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/26/18 1:46 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>> On 21/11/18 10:02 am, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>> On 11/20/18 2:09 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>>> On 11/21/18 5:07 AM,
hen use it to collect and
graph the SNMP data from your devices--provided they provide SNMP
services and have MIBs you can use. That's what we do, but we're a
streaming company with a LOT of servers, switches and routers and two
10Gbps uplinks. Perhaps that's overkill for you.
-
urrent Fedora 28 & 29 kernels? Does a kernel from Rawhide fix the
>> problem?
>>
>> perl -pe 's/^\s+//g' *.py
>>--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: ther
On 11/26/18 1:46 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 21/11/18 10:02 am, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/20/18 2:09 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> On 11/21/18 5:07 AM, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Given that the front screen of the bios is displaying the time as
&
entries will be correct from that point onwards.
So, use journalctl to look for log entries for chronyd:
journalctl -b -u chronyd
And look for the lines that indicate the clock was reset:
chronyd<[pid]>: System clock was
stepped by seconds
Log entries before that as
o be in UTC) is set to the BIOS clock at boot.
AFAIK, the variable in /etc/adjtime is not looked at as /etc may not
have been mounted yet (don't know this for sure, but it seems to work
like that).
From then on, the BIOS clock is ignored as far as the OS is concerned.
NTP clients (chronyd) keep
On 11/18/18 1:22 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 16/11/18 12:17 pm, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/15/18 4:54 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> On 11/16/18 7:37 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>> On 11/15/18 3:00 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
>>>>> On 11/15/2018 03:17 PM, Rick S
ntact the Gimp people at their mailing list or whatever and
file a suggestion that grey-on-grey is a terrible UI decision and they
really should rethink that choice. Then change to a scheme you're
comfortable with and move on.
---
On 11/15/18 4:54 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/16/18 7:37 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/15/18 3:00 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
>>> On 11/15/2018 03:17 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>> In Linux
>>>> case, it expects UTC. In Windows, it expects local time.
>>
On 11/15/18 3:00 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 11/15/2018 03:17 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> In Linux
>> case, it expects UTC. In Windows, it expects local time.
>
> I haven't had to deal with this for years, but if memory serves, there's
> a place where you can tell L
On 11/15/18 2:40 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/16/18 6:17 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/15/18 2:00 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> On 11/16/18 4:50 AM, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>>> On 14/11/18 8:46 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>>> On 11/14/18 5:32 AM, Step
or cronyd or whatever to sync the
system clock to UTC, then use "sudo hwclock -w" to set the hardware
clock from the system clock. The journal and everything is based on
the system clock, which is what cronyd "pokes". The hardware clock is
just there to give the system c
emd -name "*razer*"
and if that fails to find anything:
find /etc/systemd -name "*razer*"
Once you find it, then:
systemctl disable
if you MAY use it again (via "enable" or "link"), or
systemctl mask
if you don't plan to ever use it a
On 11/12/18 12:49 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 9/11/18 8:28 pm, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
>> On Fri, 2018-11-09 at 00:08 +, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>> On 11/8/18 2:41 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
>>>> On Fri, 2018-11-09 at 08:02 +1100, Stephen Morris
e.
To clarify, if the user you logged in as is an administrator (part of
the "wheel" group), then the authentication is asking for YOUR password,
not root's.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri
On 11/8/18 5:54 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 1:46 AM Rick Stevens wrote:
>>
>>>>>> If disabling SELinux fixes the connection issue, I'd sure-as-tootin'
>>>>>> file a bugzilla about it.
>>>>> I need to remove
On 11/8/18 4:50 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/9/18 8:48 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/8/18 4:27 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> On 11/9/18 8:16 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>> If disabling SELinux fixes the connection issue, I'd sure-as-tootin'
>>>>
On 11/8/18 4:27 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/9/18 8:16 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> If disabling SELinux fixes the connection issue, I'd sure-as-tootin'
>> file a bugzilla about it.
>
> I need to remove this phrase from my "it goes without saying" list.
ms themselves.
Dunno. I suspect this is one of the "corner cases" that doesn't get
strongly tested in the release process.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340
ore NTP got caught up
would assume the old, local hardware clock time (and be way off), then
the clock gets buggered by NTP and the log entries start making sense
from that point.
This is all surmise on my part, of course.
-------
u connect?
>
> Thanks, Ed. I did issue the command you recommend, but with no
> success. I guess the Permissive mode does not completely disable
> Selinux.
In my experience, no, permissive mode does not disable all of SELinux's
blocks, and _especially_ stuff having to to
On 11/8/18 1:09 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 9/11/18 7:03 am, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/8/18 11:38 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> On 11/9/18 3:12 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>>> That oughta do it. And no, the GUI doesn't offer this setting that I
>>>>
On 11/8/18 11:38 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/9/18 3:12 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> That oughta do it. And no, the GUI doesn't offer this setting that I can
>> find.
>
> Interesting. I don't have a Gnome system up at 03:30 but KDE has that option
> availab
r.
That oughta do it. And no, the GUI doesn't offer this setting that I can
find. Both IPV4 and IPV6 default to "method: auto".
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340
eveloper's list that ANY spin they offer that doesn't compose should be
a blocker, but was met with deafening silence.
> I realize there's a powerful faction at Redhat that insists that Gnome
> is the One True Way. They're wrong.
At least you do have other options wit
oidStudio window looks shifted towards the left
>>>> - the XFCE's Applications Menu takes long to appear the first time
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>>
>>>> Marco
>>>
>>> Libre Office 6 Calc "blinks" at
On 11/7/18 4:14 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 11/8/18 7:55 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> Yes, HW clock set to GMT (well, technically UTC) for Linux is standard.
>> The local time is computed based on your timezone. I have the HW clock
>> set to UTC on all my machines and I see the
in, I believe it was to ensure any background tasks writing to
system volumes were "done". The typical command was
sync;sync;shutdown -h now
or (if you're as ancient as I am)
sync;sync;init 0
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems
HW clock set to GMT (well, technically UTC) for Linux is standard.
The local time is computed based on your timezone. I have the HW clock
set to UTC on all my machines and I see the correct local time in my
logs.
A UTC hardware clock will confuse the hell out of Windows. If you dual-
boot Windows a
; sync
> umount $StickTarget
You could do
sync -f $StickTarget;sync -f $StickTarget
umount $StickTarget
to only sync the USB stick. I'm not sure your really need the second
sync. IIRC you need to "sync;sync" before shutdown in case there's
some
On 11/7/18 12:21 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
> On 11/7/18 11:53 AM, David A. De Graaf wrote:
>> When a new Fedora is released, I immediately fetch the Live Xfce
>> Spin .iso. As a Gnome hater, I want to avoid that entrapment.
>> I've always found Xfce perfectly suited for me
a "stable" release like RHEL or CentOS (or
Ubuntu LTS, for example).
Eventually, Fedora accumulates enough stability and feature changes that
a snapshot of it gets "frozen", tweaked, and becomes the next major
release of RHEL. A tweaked version of F18 (I think) was the basis f
On 11/6/18 2:02 PM, Paul Allen Newell wrote:
>
>
> On 11/06/2018 01:05 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> On 11/6/18 12:40 PM, Paul Allen Newell wrote:
>>>
>>> On 11/06/2018 11:46 AM, George Avrunin wrote:
>>>> On Tue, 6 Nov 2018 11:07:22 -0800, Paul Allen Ne
I should have dug deeper. Apologies.
No worries. Just was curious. What was the system you checked on that
DIDN'T list the options? In my last email I showed seven systems, and
only CentOS 7 didn't list them.
Full optionsFull options
F29 Full optionsFull options
CentOS 7No options No options
Ubuntu 17 Full optionsFull options
Ubuntu 18 Full optionsFull options
So, of the seven OSes I checked, onl
gt; make sure it is done writing?
As far as I know, there's no way to reliably tell if everything has
been flushed to the media. The sync command above shouldn't return until
it's complete, so if you include it in your script, you should be
gt; make sure it is done writing?
As far as I know, there's no way to reliably tell if everything has
been flushed to the media. The sync command above shouldn't return until
it's complete, so if you include it in your script, you should be
9 versus F28,
but caching can confuse things. I/O will be slower, but things will be
coherent.
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@a
ux-policy* and relabel your filesystems ("sudo /bin/touch
/.autorelabel" and reboot).
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340 Yahoo: origrps2 -
-
RX packets 1162 bytes 180876 (176.6 KiB)
RX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 frame 0
TX packets 1595 bytes 11 (119.3 KiB)
TX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 carrier 0 collisions 0
So the most likely thing is the
update schedule, but lags a bit behind due to the extra work they have
to do to rebrand things.
Yes, Github is owned by Microsoft, but the sources for CentOS are on a
git server at the CentOS farm (https://git.centos.org), NOT on Github.
Red Hat puts nothing they generate on Github. Neithe
he fstrim service has failed. I can
> understand the service being flagged a failing for all processes failed,
> but if some work then I would have expected a warning that a subset of
> what it was doing didn't work. That's the way I write my programs when I
> consider them to
ngs to see if that's the case.
Also verify that the USB stick you're futzing with is, indeed, USB3
compliant and that all OTHER devices using that port are USB3. The port
will slow down to accommodate the slowest device on it.
---
nd takes getting used to. And remember,
under that cute, glitzy desktop, OSX is simply BSD Unix. (S! Don't
tell anyone! It's a secret!)
--
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigitalri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2ICQ: 226437340
On 10/30/18 1:37 PM, Greg Woods wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Oct 29, 2018 at 1:33 PM Rick Stevens <mailto:ri...@alldigital.com>> wrote:
>
>
> Do big IBM (or any) mainframes still exist?
>
>
> You can still buy S/390's, but the big money is not in mainfr
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