I'm not sure if this has been included in a fix pack yet, but another
timesaver if you are receiving "Aborted" following "dsmc" with the 5.3
client is to download the following interim fix:
ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/storage/tivoli-storage-management/patches/client/
v5r3/Linux/LinuxzSeries/v532/.
I opened a PMR with Tivoli on the installation problems. Here is the
response:
The README is incorrect regarding the installation steps when the 64 bit
API is required. It is still required to have the 32 bit API installed
when using the 32 bit B/A Client. Please uninstall the B/A Client,
> ---
> From: ADAMS Steven
> Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2006 10:46:12 AM
> Subject: Smbfs module not supported
> Auto forwarded by a Rule
>
When I mount an smb file system through any linux instance the smbfs
kernel module taints the kernel with the message "k
Tim,
> I was planning on using FTP rather than NFS
I believe there is a feature (or bug) with installing via FTP whereby the
location specified in the install is relative to the home directory of the
FTP user. So if the FTP user were tim and the home directory is /u/tim,
then if you specify /sles
It may work better to create the NFS export space and mount it RW from an
ASCII client workstation - then build the install tree from the ASCII
client.
On 3/14/06, Michael MacIsaac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Tim,
>
> > is the "-e" meaningful on a Linux system
> I believe that is recommended
I was planning on using FTP rather than NFS (since I don't have NFS set
up). I probably will end up with ASCII / EBCDIC issues, I imagine, unless
everything is done in binary by the installer (which, if it assumes ASCII
systems, it could do). Since I'm not running the actual script - I don't
beli
Tim,
> is the "-e" meaningful on a Linux system
I believe that is recommended in the SuSE documentation. On Linux the -e
flag is used to enable interpretation of the backslash-escaped characters.
And there does not appear to be any more backslashed characters in the
script, so you can probably saf
I'm looking at trying to use my z/OS FTP server for my installation of
the evaluation version of SLES9. While reading the mksles9root.sh script
to determine what I might need to do manually, I notice the mk_order_files
function does:
echo -e "/$sles/CD1 /$sles/CD1" > yast/instorder
echo
Ruddy,
I was in the same position. Our security people would freak if I tried
to install BitTorrent. Go to ftp://centos.upi.iki.fi/pub/centos/. Thanks
to Pasi Pirhonen for making this option available.
Peter
-Original Message-
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Bruce Gui wrote:
> Hello everyone, is there anyone know the task of z/Linux base team? and
> what are the daily jobs?
> what tools will be used to finish the daily jobs?
Our daily jobs is to port the kernel, binutils, libc, gcc compiler and
such. We maintain architecure specific code in those proje
John Summerfied wrote:
> I believe bittorrent doesn't force you to share, but then I've not used it.
Bittorrent does always "share" in a sense that it uploads parts of the file
it is currently dowloading. Bittorrent is a popular download method for oss,
because it saves server bandwidth (cost). As
On 3/14/06, John Summerfied <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I believe bittorrent doesn't force you to share, but then I've not used it.
The clients I have seen do share the portion of the file you already
downloaded while you are downloading the last bits and pieces. When I
downloaded the CentOS DVD
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