Hello,
In Centos 7 (and RHEL 7) when one would connect a drive, or USB stick,
an icon wold appear on the (gnome) desktop.
Is that just something that was turned off (like anything else)? or is
that not around anymore?
If it is, how can it be turnd on again, that when logged in, and a
> Are you using the MD devices as Physical Volumes ?If ues, then create a
PV from that NVME and then pvmove.
>Best Regards,Strahil Nikolov
more /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md126 : active raid1 sdb3[2] sda3[0]
1866465280 blocks super 1.2 [2/2] [UU]
bitmap: 4/14 pages [16KB],
Are you using the MD devices as Physical Volumes ?If ues, then create a PV from
that NVME and then pvmove.
Best Regards,Strahil Nikolov
On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 21:16, Jerry Geis wrote: I
have older SATA disks (2 of them size 2T) in a software raid config
running CentOS 7.
/dev/md127 is
Hello NIki,
Juste enable postfix-sasl in jail.conf:
[postfix-sasl]
filter = postfix[mode=auth]
port = smtp,465,submission,imap,imaps,pop3,pop3s
logpath = %(postfix_log)s
backend = %(postfix_backend)s
enabled = true
maxretry = 3
findtime = 172800
bantime = 3600
And enable recidive too:
Le 31/03/2021 à 21:35, Gionatan Danti a écrit :
>
> Finally, I would leave the current rsnapshot backups in-place: you will simply
> copy from a virtual machine rather than from a bare metal host. I found
> rsnapshot really useful and reliable, so I suggest to continue using it even
> if
>
Il 2021-03-31 14:41 Nicolas Kovacs ha scritto:
Hi,
Up until recently I've hosted all my stuff (web & mail) on a handful of
bare
metal servers. Web applications (WordPress, OwnCloud, Dolibarr, GEPI,
Roundcube) as well as mail and a few other things were hosted mostly on
one big
machine.
I have older SATA disks (2 of them size 2T) in a software raid config
running CentOS 7.
/dev/md127 is / and xfs
/dev/sda2 is swap
/dev/md126 is /home and xfs
I desire to get a new (single) NVME 4T disk.
What is the correct way to copy the software raid to a single "new" NVME
disk ?
then expand
> Hi,
>
> Up until recently I've hosted all my stuff (web & mail) on a handful of
> bare
> metal servers. Web applications (WordPress, OwnCloud, Dolibarr, GEPI,
> Roundcube) as well as mail and a few other things were hosted mostly on
> one big
> machine.
>
> Backups for this setup were done using
On 31.03.21 14:41, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
Hi,
Up until recently I've hosted all my stuff (web & mail) on a handful of bare
metal servers. Web applications (WordPress, OwnCloud, Dolibarr, GEPI,
Roundcube) as well as mail and a few other things were hosted mostly on one big
machine.
Backups for
What *I* do for backing up KVM VMs is that I use LVM volumes, not QCOW2
images. Then I take a LVM "snapshot" volume, then mount that locally /
readonly on the host and use tar (via Amanda). Another option is to install
Amanda's client on the VM itself and use Amanda to use tar (running on
On Wed, 31 Mar 2021 at 08:41, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Up until recently I've hosted all my stuff (web & mail) on a handful of
> bare
> metal servers. Web applications (WordPress, OwnCloud, Dolibarr, GEPI,
> Roundcube) as well as mail and a few other things were hosted mostly on
> one big
Hi,
Up until recently I've hosted all my stuff (web & mail) on a handful of bare
metal servers. Web applications (WordPress, OwnCloud, Dolibarr, GEPI,
Roundcube) as well as mail and a few other things were hosted mostly on one big
machine.
Backups for this setup were done using Rsnapshot, a
Chris,
On Tue, Mar 30, 2021 at 4:41 PM Jerry Geis wrote:
> under CentOS 7 - I use "alias" like eth1:0 for an alias network. Remove
> the file restart network - and back to normal. Now I am trying to us
> NetworkManager.
>
> I can 'add' the network fine. however - when I remove the network
>
On Wed, 31 Mar 2021 at 05:11, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
> Hi,
>
> More often than not, when installing CentOS, I choose manual partitioning
> and
> then apply the KISS principle, with a very simple partitioning scheme that
> looks more or less like this:
>
> * /boot partition: 500 MB, ext2
> *
On 31.03.21 11:30, Simon Matter wrote:
Hi,
More often than not, when installing CentOS, I choose manual partitioning
and
then apply the KISS principle, with a very simple partitioning scheme that
looks more or less like this:
* /boot partition: 500 MB, ext2
* swap partition: equivalent
> Hi,
>
> More often than not, when installing CentOS, I choose manual partitioning
> and
> then apply the KISS principle, with a very simple partitioning scheme that
> looks more or less like this:
>
> * /boot partition: 500 MB, ext2
> * swap partition: equivalent to amount of RAM
> * root
Hi,
More often than not, when installing CentOS, I choose manual partitioning and
then apply the KISS principle, with a very simple partitioning scheme that
looks more or less like this:
* /boot partition: 500 MB, ext2
* swap partition: equivalent to amount of RAM
* root partition:
Sorry, re-read your question and realise my suggestion would only help you get
SASL authentication working.
> On 31 Mar 2021, at 09:19, Jamie Burchell wrote:
>
> I'm pretty sure I encountered this and needed to yum install
> cyrus-sasl-plain to resolve it.
>
>> On 29 Mar 2021, at 20:31,
I'm pretty sure I encountered this and needed to yum install cyrus-sasl-plain
to resolve it.
> On 29 Mar 2021, at 20:31, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> My main mail server is running CentOS 7 with Postfix and Dovecot.
>
> Last week I was surprised to see that Postfix had some troubles on
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