David Lockwood wrote these words on 12/06/05 06:26 CST:
Hi. Just starting to investigate the joys of hdparm.
Questions:
1. Just after this I got some corruption problems on my windows (ntfs)
partition.
Is there some
obvious optimisation missing?
Any idea why mine isn't working?
On Tue, 6 Dec 2005, David Lockwood wrote:
Hi. Just starting to investigate the joys of hdparm. I was doing some
data shifting between partitions and noticed (using mc, runlevel 3)
that the data transfer rate was only about 1.5MB/s (copying from an
ntfs partition to a reiserfs). Here's the
--- David Lockwood [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i.e. dma wasn't turned on at all.
So as a newbie I follow a few leads on hd optimising among the few
options not listed as dangerous in man hdparm and settle on
# hdparm -c 1 -X udma2
and transfer rate increased to about 2.8MB/s.
hdparm -c1 -u1
I am considering accepting a contract to provide backup data services to
small companies that require HIPAA conformance. I've done some
introductory investigation into the electronic data requirement and am
quickly being mired in tons of legalese.
The companies that are seeking this service are
On Tue, 2005-12-06 at 16:19 -0500, Erik Garrison wrote:
$ ssh 127.0.0.1
Connection closed by 127.0.0.1
The same happens when I try to login from a remote server, so it's
certainly not a local IP configureation issue.
This has happened to me when the permissions of the root home directory
On 12/6/05, Archaic [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Dec 06, 2005 at 04:19:15PM -0500, Erik Garrison wrote:
I'm somewhat perplexed about the configuration issues that might be going
on... The only helpful hints I've seen online have been to add the
hosts.allow and hosts.deny files. Any
On 12/6/05, S. Anthony Sequeira [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 2005-12-06 at 16:19 -0500, Erik Garrison wrote:
$ ssh 127.0.0.1
Connection closed by 127.0.0.1
The same happens when I try to login from a remote server, so it's
certainly not a local IP configureation issue.
This has
On 12/6/05, Erik Garrison [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 12/6/05, S. Anthony Sequeira [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 2005-12-06 at 16:19 -0500, Erik Garrison wrote:
$ ssh 127.0.0.1
Connection closed by 127.0.0.1
The same happens when I try to login from a remote server, so it's
On Tue, 6 Dec 2005, Jean-Philippe Mengual wrote:
Hi,
I've just installed XFree86 and KDE (core packages just now). So, as
said in the book, I configured the home directory with .xinitrc, where
I write:
exec startkde
I named my old .xinitrc as .xinitrc.old.
Maybe I didn't configure correctly
At 04:19 PM 12/6/2005 -0500, Erik Garrison wrote:
I've been trying to configure my openssh server for the past hour or
so. I'm running LFS 6.1. I have installed iptables, but made sure to
open port 22 for ssh.
I get:
$ ssh http://127.0.0.1127.0.0.1
Connection closed by
On 12/6/05, Erik Garrison [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've been trying to configure my openssh server for the past hour or so.
I'm running LFS 6.1. I have installed iptables, but made sure to open port
22 for ssh.
Your using LFS 6.1? What version of glibc and openssh do you have?
Could you run
On 12/6/05, Dan Nicholson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 12/6/05, Roger Merchberger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just went thru this, and googled my brains out for 2-3 days before
finally manually searching the BLFS-support archives and finding the
answer...
Turn off DNS access in the
On 12/6/05, Erik Garrison [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Confirmed, I have glibc-2.3.4, OpenSSH_4.1p1. I should've read the
errata before However, while turning off UseDNS does the trick,
turning UseDNS back on and making the directory /var/lib/sshd/lib does
not work. The crash returns exactly
mess-mate wrote:
Can anybody tell me how many place the installed package takes ( mega) ??
[EMAIL PROTECTED] init.d]# du -sh /opt/openoffice-2.0
229M/opt/openoffice-2.0
[EMAIL PROTECTED] init.d]#
-- DJ Lucas
--
http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/blfs-support
FAQ:
alter /etc/fstab - everything else should be OK I think?
Well, I could attempt to read your mind to determine what you are
subconsciously worrying about, but I think I'll just say
yes :) Oh, root= for your bootloader will need to refer to sdaX.
See - it was worth asking! I would have
Ian Macdonald wrote:
.
ERROR: Removing file ldapbe2.uno.so from file list.
ERROR: Removing file libxsec_fw.so from file list.
ERROR: Removing file libxsec_xmlsec.so from file list.
ERROR: Removing file libxmlsecurity.so from file list.
ERROR: Removing file xmlsec680en-US.res from file list.
Of Ken Moffat
I think this *might* be controlled by one of the SCSI
transport options
- there is some sort of deprecated option that conflicts with
SATA, but I'm on a ppc at the moment and I can't see it.
I'd noticed this deprecated option (conflicts with libata) but never
bothered to
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