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On 25/08/15 23:09, Fabian Arrotin wrote:
> On 25/08/15 20:39, Alice Wonder wrote:
>> julie70773 [at] loverhearts.com
>
>> Responded off-list to message on the list, spam with content
>> that is not suitable for minors.
>
>> It is possible subscribed
On Tue, 25 Aug 2015, Sachin Gupta wrote:
Thank you so much!!!
It worked.
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 8:04 PM, Barry Brimer wrote:
Thanks for reply.
I replaced break=y with init=/bin/sh.
In that case case system just hangs with the following message.
"Freeing unused kernel memory : 400k freed
Thank you so much!!!
It worked.
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 8:04 PM, Barry Brimer wrote:
> Thanks for reply.
>>
>> I replaced break=y with init=/bin/sh.
>> In that case case system just hangs with the following message.
>> "Freeing unused kernel memory : 400k freed".
>>
>> Thanks!!
>> Sachin
>>
>> O
Thanks for reply.
I replaced break=y with init=/bin/sh.
In that case case system just hangs with the following message.
"Freeing unused kernel memory : 400k freed".
Thanks!!
Sachin
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 7:16 PM, Barry Brimer wrote:
My grub.conf is as following.
title Linux Init Break
ke
Thanks for reply.
I replaced break=y with init=/bin/sh.
In that case case system just hangs with the following message.
"Freeing unused kernel memory : 400k freed".
Thanks!!
Sachin
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 7:16 PM, Barry Brimer wrote:
> My grub.conf is as following.
>>
>> title Linux Init Brea
My grub.conf is as following.
title Linux Init Break
kernel /vmlinuz root=/dev/sda6 ro rootwait break=y
initrd /initrd.gz
What I expect is by adding *break=y* to cmdline,
init will pause early in the boot process and launch an
interactive sh shell which can be used for troubleshooting purposes.
On 08/26/2015 08:14 AM, Tim Dunphy wrote:
> Well, look at the lines in my script that I'm showing here. That's exactly
> what I'm doing. Copying up my public key so that later in the script (which
> I didn't show, no need to I think) is to cat the public key into place and
> make sure there are pro
Hello Everyone,
My grub.conf is as following.
title Linux Init Break
kernel /vmlinuz root=/dev/sda6 ro rootwait break=y
initrd /initrd.gz
What I expect is by adding *break=y* to cmdline,
init will pause early in the boot process and launch an
interactive sh shell which can be used for troubles
On 08/25/2015 04:22 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
binary compatibility has /never/ been a goal of the linux/gpl
architects/authors. in fact, it seems like they make design decisions
to discourage it.
I don't think that's true. Development in GNU/Linux is highly
de-centralized, and some projects
On 8/25/2015 3:48 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
sure, thats always possible but exist there some backward
compatibility switch when compiling against a newer glibc?
binary compatibility has /never/ been a goal of the linux/gpl
architects/authors. in fact, it seems like they make design decisions
t
Am 26.08.2015 um 01:04 schrieb Johnny Hughes :
> On 08/25/2015 05:48 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
>> Am 25.08.2015 um 19:17 schrieb Nicolas Thierry-Mieg
>> :
>>>
>>> On 08/25/2015 07:11 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
>>>
>>> So the easiest solution would be that the vendor (2)
>>> build the software on a C6
On 08/25/2015 05:48 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
> Am 25.08.2015 um 19:17 schrieb Nicolas Thierry-Mieg
> :
>>
>> On 08/25/2015 07:11 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
>>>
>>> The support of this vendor (2) is willing to provide
>>> such OS support for there products.
>>>
>>> The same was also offered by a differ
Am 25.08.2015 um 19:17 schrieb Nicolas Thierry-Mieg
:
>
> On 08/25/2015 07:11 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
>>
>> The support of this vendor (2) is willing to provide
>> such OS support for there products.
>>
>> The same was also offered by a different vendor (1), they just recompiled
>> there softwa
On 08/25/2015 04:29 PM, Jeff Spahr wrote:
> What's CentOS's policy on keeping up with RHEL software collections
> releases? It looks like just the 1.0 release is available on CentOS. 1.1,
> 1.2, and 2.0 have been released on the RHEL side.
>
> Is there anything I can do to help with this effort?
Hello again,
Not sure I have this down 100% but it appears that the main LVM config file
( /etc/lvm/lvm.conf ) has been changed on August 13, 2015 on a number of
machines we have - all of them configured for automatic yum updates. So I
presume that could be a change that came as part an update - p
I have a similar problem in Fedora (see
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1234317) but nobody seems to
take care of it. Hope that Centos is more responsive :-)
2015-08-25 21:45 GMT+02:00 Steve Atkins :
> Afraid I'm new enough at this I'm still in the learning curve.
> I re-booted into a
On 8/25/2015 2:22 PM, James A. Peltier wrote:
This is probably going to sound a bit crazy, but did anyone else receive an
e-mail after replying the sed question from someone with inappropriate content
from one Julie Anna? I'm just wondering if it was only me. It was in fact
quoting the CentO
What's CentOS's policy on keeping up with RHEL software collections
releases? It looks like just the 1.0 release is available on CentOS. 1.1,
1.2, and 2.0 have been released on the RHEL side.
Is there anything I can do to help with this effort?
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_
This is probably going to sound a bit crazy, but did anyone else receive an
e-mail after replying the sed question from someone with inappropriate content
from one Julie Anna? I'm just wondering if it was only me. It was in fact
quoting the CentOS list with the appropriate subject that I appli
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On 25/08/15 20:39, Alice Wonder wrote:
> julie70773 [at] loverhearts.com
>
> Responded off-list to message on the list, spam with content that
> is not suitable for minors.
>
> It is possible subscribed under different address.
>
> IP of offending s
>
> Don't try to automate your password like this for scp or other
> ssh-related apps. Generate and use a public/private keypair instead and
> your script will then be able to connect without prompting for a password.
Well, look at the lines in my script that I'm showing here. That's exactly
wha
On 08/26/2015 04:51 AM, Tim Dunphy wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm trying to echo my password into some commands inside of a bash script.
> But I think I'm going about it incorrectly.
>
> Here's the top part of my script:
>
> #!/bin/bash
> pub="~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub"
> dps_pass="my_pass"
> ssh="/usr/bin
Hello listmates,
I have encountered a rather peculiar situation.
We have a Centos 6 VM (64 bit) running on a VMware vSphere 5.5 server. It
was running just fine until one day I decided to reboot it and it just
would not boot up. Effectively, dracut failed to initialize the LVM, much
like under th
>
> Use expect?
yep! Expect should work.
Thanks
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 12:56 PM, Eero Volotinen
wrote:
> Use expect?
>
> Eero
> 25.8.2015 7.52 ip. "Tim Dunphy" kirjoitti:
>
> > Hey guys,
> >
> > I'm trying to echo my password into some commands inside of a bash
> script.
> > But I think I'
Afraid I'm new enough at this I'm still in the learning curve.
I re-booted into a previous kernel version and now the CD/DVD is on the
list (under computer) but properties reveal "unknown" for every area.
Seems strange because it knew all about the Asus drive when I first
installed the system.
Have you tried manually mounting it?
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of
Steve Atkins
Sent: Tuesday, August 25, 2015 2:28 PM
To: CentOS@centos.org
Subject: [CentOS] Where's My CD/DVD?
Hello,
I recently upgraded from CentOs 6
Hello,
I recently upgraded from CentOs 6.6 to 6.7 and among others oddities, my
CD/DVD drive has disappeared from the system. it lights up when I
insert a disc and appears to be reading, but that's it.
Any thoughts? Many thanks!
-steve
___
CentOS
julie70773 [at] loverhearts.com
Responded off-list to message on the list, spam with content that is not
suitable for minors.
It is possible subscribed under different address.
IP of offending spam :
Received: from mx2.loverhearts.com (mx2.loverhearts.com [45.55.128.151])
(using TLSv
On 08/25/2015 11:21 AM, Alice Wonder wrote:
cat file.txt |\
sed -e s?"foo"?"bar"?g |\
sed -e s?"dirty"?"clean?" |\
> file2.txt
I don't understand why you'd quote that way. Though unlikely, you could
potentially match a filename in the working directory, and hose the sed
command.
On 08/25/2015 11:02 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
Additionally, you can avoid using "cat" to make the script more
efficient. You'll start fewer processes, and complete more quickly. cat
is almost never needed unless you actually need to con"cat"enate
multiple files.
I sometimes like to use cat
On 08/25/2015 10:50 AM, Jerry Geis wrote:
cat my_file.txt | sed 's/CANCELID/$CHANGE/' > cancel.txt
sed doesn't perform environment variable expansion. That is to say that
when you instruct sed to substitute "$CHANGE" for "CANCELID", "$CHANGE"
is a literal string that will be substituted.
b
On 8/25/2015 10:50 AM, Jerry Geis wrote:
--- This is the two line script
CHANGE="1234"
cat my_file.txt | sed 's/CANCELID/$CHANGE/' > cancel.txt
---
and the my_file.txt has:
CANCELID
it gets changed to $CHANGE instead of the actual value 1234 .
I tried
- Original Message -
| I am trying to use sed to change a value in a pipe.
|
| --- This is the two line script
| CHANGE="1234"
|
| cat my_file.txt | sed 's/CANCELID/$CHANGE/' > cancel.txt
| ---
|
| and the my_file.txt has:
| CANCELID
|
| it gets
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 1:50 PM, Jerry Geis wrote:
> I am trying to use sed to change a value in a pipe.
>
> --- This is the two line script
> CHANGE="1234"
>
> cat my_file.txt | sed 's/CANCELID/$CHANGE/' > cancel.txt
> ---
>
> and the my_file.txt has:
> CA
I am trying to use sed to change a value in a pipe.
--- This is the two line script
CHANGE="1234"
cat my_file.txt | sed 's/CANCELID/$CHANGE/' > cancel.txt
---
and the my_file.txt has:
CANCELID
it gets changed to $CHANGE instead of the actual value 1234 .
What are you trying to do? Copy your public key out to use it for future
authentication? Use ssh-copy-id to set it up the first time? Or look at
the package sshpass.
On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 12:58 PM, zep wrote:
>
>
> On 08/25/2015 12:51 PM, Tim Dunphy wrote:
> > Hey guys,
> >
> > I'm trying
On 08/25/2015 07:11 PM, Leon Fauster wrote:
Am 25.08.2015 um 16:31 schrieb Eero Volotinen :
25.8.2015 4.03 ip. "Leon Fauster" kirjoitti:
In the hope that some skilled developers are here:
We have a commercial product that do not run under CentOS6
/lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' no
Am 25.08.2015 um 16:31 schrieb Eero Volotinen :
> 25.8.2015 4.03 ip. "Leon Fauster" kirjoitti:
>
>>
>> In the hope that some skilled developers are here:
>>
>> We have a commercial product that do not run under CentOS6
>>
>> /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' not found
>>
>> Is it possibl
On 08/25/2015 12:51 PM, Tim Dunphy wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm trying to echo my password into some commands inside of a bash script.
> But I think I'm going about it incorrectly.
>
> Here's the top part of my script:
>
> #!/bin/bash
> pub="~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub"
> dps_pass="my_pass"
> ssh="/usr/bin/
Use expect?
Eero
25.8.2015 7.52 ip. "Tim Dunphy" kirjoitti:
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm trying to echo my password into some commands inside of a bash script.
> But I think I'm going about it incorrectly.
>
> Here's the top part of my script:
>
> #!/bin/bash
> pub="~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub"
> dps_pass="my_pas
Hey guys,
I'm trying to echo my password into some commands inside of a bash script.
But I think I'm going about it incorrectly.
Here's the top part of my script:
#!/bin/bash
pub="~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub"
dps_pass="my_pass"
ssh="/usr/bin/ssh"
scp="/usr/bin/scp"
for i in 10.10.10.2{5,6}
do
echo "xfrin
Does Centos 7 use /etc/sysconfig/network or is this replaced by some
systemctl set of commands.
For example I know to set my host name with:
hostnamectl set-hostname nevia.htt-consult.com
But I don't know if this is the same as
cat
On 08/25/2015 11:16 AM, John Hodrien wrote:
On Tue, 25 Aug 2015, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
I looked at the manpage and I don't know how to figure out what usb
bridge to specify.
Almost always I find "-d sat" is what you want with USB connected disks.
Thanks. That did the trick.
_
On 08/25/2015 07:31 AM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
How about virtualization and running on supported platform?
Or docker, or another chroot environment containing the required
libraries...
___
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CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org
On Tue, 25 Aug 2015, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
I looked at the manpage and I don't know how to figure out what usb bridge to
specify.
Almost always I find "-d sat" is what you want with USB connected disks.
jh
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
On a headless C7 server (actually a pogoplug with the Redsleeve 7
distro), I have a usb attached backup drive (what other type of drives
can you have on a pogoplug other than usb? :) ).
I had reformated the partition as ext4:
# parted /dev/sdb print
Model: WD My Book 1230 (scsi)
Disk /dev/sdb:
The story so far:
Even though I've got clamav-server-systemd installed I can't find any units
etc to enable me to control clamd via systemctl.
When I ran clamd in a terminal it complained that it couldn't
find /etc/clamd.conf which made sense as it didn't exist.
I copied /etc/clam.d/exim.conf
How about virtualization and running on supported platform?
Eero
25.8.2015 4.03 ip. "Leon Fauster" kirjoitti:
>
> In the hope that some skilled developers are here:
>
> We have a commercial product that do not run under CentOS6
>
> /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' not found
>
> Is it possi
On 08/25/2015 09:02 AM, Leon Fauster wrote:
> In the hope that some skilled developers are here:
>
> We have a commercial product that do not run under CentOS6
>
> /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' not found
>
> Is it possible to compile software (compile switch?) on a system that
> uses a
On Tuesday 25 August 2015 14:44:55 Mihamina Rakotomandimby wrote:
> Does the directory /var/run/clamav-milter/ exist and is it traversable
> and writable by the clamav user is running as?
> Socket creation mostly doesnt include recursive operation (creating the
> directory)
It looks like I'm bark
On 08/25/2015 04:36 PM, Gary Stainburn wrote:
so I've edited that file to comment out the 'example' line. In here it defines
the socket as
/var/run/clamav-milter/clamav-milter.socket
However, after saving this file the service still fails to start and the
socket still doesn't exist
Does the d
[root@ollie2 ~]# find / -iname clamd.sock
[root@ollie2 ~]# systemctl list-unit-files --type=service
[.]
clamav-milter.service enabled
exim.serviceenabled
spamassassin.serviceenabled
[.]
[root@ollie2 ~]# ps ax|gr
On 08/25/2015 04:16 PM, Gary Stainburn wrote:
connect to UNIX socket (/var/run/clamd.exim/clamd.sock): No such file
If you try to locate that file, do you find it somewhere?
When you list services (units) and grep with clamav, do you find some?
___
Me again,
I'm still building my new mail server and I'm struggling getting clamav and
exim to talk to each other.
I've installed:
clamav-server-0.98.7-1.el7.x86_64
clamav-lib-0.98.7-1.el7.x86_64
clamav-0.98.7-1.el7.x86_64
clamav-milter-0.98.7-1.el7.x86_64
clamav-data-0.98.7-1.el7.noarch
clamav-
In the hope that some skilled developers are here:
We have a commercial product that do not run under CentOS6
/lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' not found
Is it possible to compile software (compile switch?) on a system that
uses a newer glibc but in such a way that can be used (executed)
Hello
I have a CentOS 6.6 Server with 13 disks in a RAID 6. Some weeks ago, i
upgraded it to 17 disks, two of them configured as spare. The reshape worked
like normal in the beginning. But at 69% it stopped.
md2 : active raid6 sdj1[0] sdg1[18](S) sdh1[2] sdi1[5] sdm1[15] sds1[12]
sdr1[14] sdk1
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