On 08/27/2014 09:42 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
I'd want to configure persistent static routes, ie in config files, but I
can't configure static routes, I tested:
[root@centos7 ~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/routes-enp0s3
ADDRESS0=10.10.10.0
NETMASK0=255.255.255.0
GATEWAY0=192.168.1.1
On 08/27/2014 06:07 PM, SilverTip257 wrote:
On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 10:54 PM, Reinhard Dunkel dun...@sciencesoft.net
wrote:
I used CentOS 5 for years. Suddenly, it takes one second holding a
keyboard key until it shows on the screen:
Is this system accessible via SSH?
Does the behavior
This has happened to me in the past. It is not an OS problem, it was for me a
hardware issue. One or both of two things may be causing this problem.
Some USB keyboards require more power than others. My USB keyboard would
exhibit
these same symptoms when plugged into a hub that was powered
On Sunday, August 24, 2014 06:45:14 Daniel J Walsh wrote:
On 08/23/2014 10:45 AM, Bill Gee wrote:
On Friday, August 22, 2014 08:50:26 Daniel J Walsh wrote:
On 08/21/2014 10:03 AM, Bill Gee wrote:
On Thursday, August 21, 2014 12:00:03 centos-requ...@centos.org wrote:
Re: [CentOS] SELinux
On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 07:05:49AM -0500, Bill Gee wrote:
Another curious thing is that it all works perfectly when I run-parts
/etc/cron.daily from a root login. Why should SELinux regard that as
different from when it is run by cron???
Cron runs processes in a different SELinux domain
On Thursday, August 28, 2014 08:24:32 Jonathan Billings wrote:
On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 07:05:49AM -0500, Bill Gee wrote:
Another curious thing is that it all works perfectly when I run-parts
/etc/cron.daily from a root login. Why should SELinux regard that as
different from when it is run
On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 08:16:58AM -0500, Bill Gee wrote:
But that means that SELinux contexts are NOT stable ... They are
NOT the same for all instances of a process. It seems to me that
defeats the whole purpose of SELinux.
I think you're confusing the account the process is running under
On Thursday, August 28, 2014 10:20:06 Jonathan Billings wrote:
On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 08:16:58AM -0500, Bill Gee wrote:
But that means that SELinux contexts are NOT stable ... They are
NOT the same for all instances of a process. It seems to me that
defeats the whole purpose of SELinux.
After upgrading the kernel package, my Centos 7 server didn't boot.
Here is a small summary:
old kernel = kernel-3.10.0-123.4.4.el7.x86_64 (everything just fine)
new kernel = kernel-3.10.0-123.6.3.el7.x86_64
root partition is on a primary partition, NOT on a LVM volume
/var partition is on
EasyBCD is an extra software, just google it.
Kai
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On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 6:32 AM, David Both db...@millennium-technology.com
wrote:
This has happened to me in the past. It is not an OS problem, it was for
me a
hardware issue. One or both of two things may be causing this problem.
Some USB keyboards require more power than others. My USB
I have two openvz servers running Centos 6.x both with 32GB of RAM.
One is an Intel Xeon E3-1230 quad core with two 4TB 7200 SATA drives
in software RAID1. The other is an old HP DL380 dual quad core with 8
750GB 2.5 SATA drives in hardware RAID6. I want to figure out which
one has better random
On 28 August 2014 19:22, Matt matt.mailingli...@gmail.com wrote:
750GB 2.5 SATA drives in hardware RAID6. I want to figure out which
one has better random I/O performance to host a busy container. The
IOZone is your friend. It can generate all sorts of I/O patterns and
then create you some
Hello,
Try to use fio - http://git.kernel.dk/?p=fio.git;a=summary
You may use my rpm - fio-2.0.10-1.el6.x86_64.rpm
http://yum.aclub.net/pub/linux/centos/6/umask/x86_64/fio-2.0.10-1.el6.x86_64.rpm
or rebuild this src.rpm fio-2.0.10-1.el6.src.rpm
On Thu, August 28, 2014 3:30 am, Reinhard Dunkel wrote:
On CentOS 5, I use command su to show a root shell. On CentOS 7, su no
longer works and I use ssh root@localhost instead. (I have not tried
SSH to access my CentOS systems remotely yet.)
I believe, [on CentOS 7] the user should be in
Am 28.08.2014 um 20:58 schrieb Ilyas --:
Hello,
Try to use fio - http://git.kernel.dk/?p=fio.git;a=summary
fio is available through EPEL.
Alexander
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On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 10:29:50AM -0500, Bill Gee wrote:
Hmmm... OK, let's go back to my original goal. I want
logwatch to include the output of hddtemp /dev/sda and virsh
--list all in its daily reports. How is that to be accomplished?
Based on what you said above, I think the way
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