Le 04/04/2015 18:57, Bill Maltby (C4B) a écrit :
Been UNIX (programming and user) since 1978, Linux since some early
Slackware distributions, CentOS since 4.x. Will now be looking for
something staying truer to the original UNIX concepts but full-featured
and stable - may not be available, but I'
Hi,
The CentOS wiki sports a page about setting up software RAID1 on CentOS
5.x. There's a section about making both members of the RAID1 bootable
by setting up GRUB on both disks.
Now I wonder how this should be done on CentOS 6.x and 7. I have two
sandbox machines in my office, one running
Le 27/03/2015 20:30, Mark Haney a écrit :
But to give an example, we run several Ubuntu 14.04 LTS virtual machines
and I've have a dozen or so security related updates that I've not seen for
CentOS, like openssl (which I do have installed on it) and gnutls. I know
package names don't always mat
Hi,
The subject says it all. I'm currently busy installing a CentOS 7 based
desktop on a client's machine, an HP Compaq with an ATI video card.
# lspci | grep -i vga
01:05.0 VGA compatible controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
[AMD/ATI] RS780C [Radeon 3100]
I wanted to give the proprieta
Le 26/03/2015 11:27, Прокси a écrit :
Too bad it's not in English. It would be interesting to follow your
posts as you discover CentOS more and more, given that I also used
Slackware.
Well, the *nix bits are international :o)
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Le 25/03/2015 10:46, Lars Hecking a écrit :
rpm -q --changelog should give you an idea.
Thanks. That's exactly what I've been looking for. And perusing the
results gives me so many reasons to stick with CentOS.
Cheers,
Niki
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Hi,
RHEL/CentOS releases 5.x, 6.x and 7.x are all shipping reasonably recent
versions of Firefox ESR, Thunderbird ESR and LibreOffice. Until recently
I've been using Slackware Linux as a base system for client's desktops
and workstations. Since my primary aim is reliability, I always tried to
Le 24/03/2015 09:52, Phil Wyett a écrit :
RHEL version min/max specs can be found:
https://access.redhat.com/articles/rhel-limits
Thanks! That's exactly the document I was looking for.
Cheers,
Niki
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Le 24/03/2015 09:45, Ashish Yadav a écrit :
Try considering Bodhi and Puppy Linux also.
Thanks but no. As I already stated, I have my own blend of Slackware for
this. My question was: I want to install CentOS (and not $OTHER_DISTRO)
on these machines, so what are the minimum specs?
--
Micro
Le 24/03/2015 08:34, John R Pierce a écrit :
I'd be looking at something like TinyLinux or DamnSmallLinux on those.
I don't want anything else than CentOS for the job.
I used to install my own heavily customized version of Slackware on
these machines (http://www.microlinux.fr/slackware/), but
Hi,
I often have to deal with relatively obsolete hardware in schools,
public libraries, small town halls, etc. I still have a handful of
CentOS 5.x installations around for these, but I wonder what CentOS 6.x
desktop specs are, e. g. the minimum requirements (in terms of CPU and
RAM) to reas
Le 23/03/2015 17:26, Les Mikesell a écrit :
There is a real simple answer to privacy on facebook. Just don't post
anything there that you would not want to be public. Just like this
mail list.
I recently joined that list and wanted to publish a simple link to my
technical blog dedicated to Ce
Le 16/03/2015 17:59, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
On such a minimal client, I have these Samba packages installed:
[root@bernadette:~] # rpm -qa | grep samba
samba-common-4.1.1-38.el7_0.x86_64
samba-client-4.1.1-38.el7_0.x86_64
samba-libs-4.1.1-38.el7_0.x86_64
Unfortunately I can neither browse any
Le 16/03/2015 10:18, Earl A Ramirez a écrit :
I replicated your settings on a CentOS 7 on a KVM, I did not see the
samba server when I click on "Browse Network", however when I enter
smb:/// I was able to see the shares.
If Im not mistaken the 'nmb' service is responsible for browsing,
therefore
Le 16/03/2015 10:18, Earl A Ramirez a écrit :
I replicated your settings on a CentOS 7 on a KVM, I did not see the
samba server when I click on "Browse Network", however when I enter
smb:/// I was able to see the shares.
If Im not mistaken the 'nmb' service is responsible for browsing,
therefore
Hi,
I'm currently fiddling with Samba, trying to make it work on CentOS 7.
Before that, I ran Samba successfully in a mixed environment with
Slackware64 14.1 on the server and Slackware/Windows Seven on the client
side.
I have three sandbox machines running CentOS 7. One has a minimal
insta
Le 15/03/2015 20:09, Jay Leafey a écrit :
Like you I've mostly dealt with nVidia or Intel video. I had some
painful initial issues with the fglrx driver, but once I became more
accustomed to the quirks it was quite stable. The wiki at elrepo was
helpful. This was on desktop systems, I know the
Le 03/03/2015 14:00, Nux! a écrit :
Niki,
Look at dconf / gsettings.
HTH
Lucian
OK, I finally got around to play with it. It looks like GNOME 3 stores
all of its user settings in ~/.config/dconf/user. I tried copying that
over recursively to /etc/skel, and it works. New users get the exact
Hi,
I'm currently installing CentOS 7 on a client's Dell Inspiron laptop.
Here's the video card:
# lspci | grep -i vga
00:01.0 VGA compatible controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
[AMD/ATI] Wrestler [Radeon HD 6320]
Most of the time, I either have to deal with Intel or NVidia graphic
ch
Le 11/03/2015 16:55, Les Mikesell a écrit :
By the way - if you are new to Centos and RH-style in general
I'm not. In 2009 I published a book about Linux system administration
basics, based on CentOS 5.3.
http://tinyurl.com/no254g
That being said, I'm doing extensive RTFM to catch up with w
Hi,
I just configured SquidAnalyzer, a nifty little network statistics tool
that I'm using mainly in school networks to monitor network usage.
I want to run the '/usr/bin/squid-analyzer' script once a day. I took a
peek in /etc/cron.daily, and the package already installed an
/etc/cron.daily
Le 11/03/2015 12:52, Joseph L. Brunner a écrit :
Thanks for the info.
Any reason you're leaving slackware now?
Yes. As much as I appreciate Slackware's bone-headed philosophy, the
installer, the simple startup scripts, the general Keep-It-Simple
approach and the overall robustness, the absen
Le 11/03/2015 09:40, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
Unfortunately when I insert the correct version in the spec file, I get
this:
$ rpmbuild -ba --clean squidanalyzer.spec
error: line 5: Illegal char '-' in: Version:6.2-1
I'll answer that myself, since I just found the culprit. The
Hi,
I'm using the SquidAnalyzer network analysis tool in combination with
Squid. Up until now, I've been running Slackware Linux on my servers. I
built a custom package that installs SquidAnalyzer to
/var/www/vhosts/squidreport/html. Then I setup an Apache virtual host
for SquidAnalyzer's pag
Le 10/03/2015 12:08, Fabian Arrotin a écrit :
Yeah, as said, I built those initially, but haven't tracked those, so
if Epel updated some of the required packages, you'll have that issue.
Feel free to just exclude those conflicting packages from epel.repo
and that would normally work :
exclude=win
Le 10/03/2015 12:12, Fabian Arrotin a écrit :
While it "works" it's quite slow so probably better then to stick with
CentOS 6 and wait for something lighter than Gnome3/Gnome-shell as
Desktop Environment (xfce/mate/$other)
Until recently I've been using a beefed-up Xfce-on-steroids for older
h
Le 10/03/2015 01:52, Johnny Hughes a écrit :
We really should have this very soon after the 7.1 x86_64 release. I am
building all the packages for both as we do 7.1.
But, so far the new kernel is not building 32 bit:(
Thank you for your quick response. I am looking forward to that very much.
Le 08/03/2015 01:53, Nux! a écrit :
There are some 32bit RPMs (slightly older) here:
http://arrfab.net/attic/RPMS/7/x86_64/
I tried to install these, but I ran into some trouble. Here's what I
tried to do.
I'm using the yum-priorities plugin. The official CentOS repos are
configured with a
Le 09/03/2015 13:02, Johnny Hughes a écrit :
I was just getting ready to build those, I need them:) .. how about we
put them (or newer ones, if available) in i686 extras.
On a side note, I wonder when - and if - a 32-bit version of CentOS will
eventually become available. I'm managing a small
Le 07/03/2015 18:24, Ned Slider a écrit :
I'm guessing you are either going to need to build/install a 32-bit
version of wine or will need to find 64-bit versions of your Windows
applications.
Is it possible to build a 32-bit version of Wine on 64-bit CentOS 7 ? A
curt "yes" or "no" will do. E
Hi,
Up until recently, I've been running Wine 1.6.2 on my workstation under
Slackware64 14.1. I used it to emulate a handful of legacy apps that ran
under Windows XP. They worked perfectly with that setup.
After migrating the workstation from Slackware to CentOS 7, I installed
the Wine packa
Hi,
For some time I've fiddled with Debian and Ubuntu LTS. There's one
really nice feature for local networks: apt-cacher, a package proxy for
APT.
My company is in the remote South French countryside, and more often
than not, schools and public libraries only have some very limited
Interne
Le 06/03/2015 21:08, Les Mikesell a écrit :
The rpm should have configured logrotate:
rpm -q --list squid |grep logrotate
will show where the config file lands.
OK
The rpm should have created the squid user and group:
rpm -q --scripts squid
will show what it ran to do that.
OK
Unles
Hi,
I recently migrated my office's server from Slackware64 14.1 to CentOS
7. Right now I'm in the process of configuring the Squid web proxy. I
edited the default /etc/squid/squid.conf, and here's what I have so far:
--8<--
# /etc/squid/squid.c
Le 03/03/2015 19:25, Jonathan Billings a écrit :
One of the things that the nvidia driver adds is "nouveau.modeset=0
rdblacklist=nouveau" to the kernel arguments. Do you see them? I
know that we saw the kernel panic when the nouveau driver was loaded
on a el6.6 system with an NVidia K620, so
Le 03/03/2015 18:45, Scott Robbins a écrit :
This might have to do with the NVidia update, explained on the elrepo
pages.
http://elrepo.org/tiki/kmod-nvidia
You may have an older card that will require the 340xx versions of the
various NVidia tools.
No, it's a GT520 which is supposed to wor
Hi,
I wonder where - and eventually how - GNOME 3 stores its user
preferences. I'd like to create a custom user profile, with slightly
different settings than the default ones:
* don't show home folder on ~/Desktop
* don't show Trash
* use custom default wallpaper
* stretch wallpaper instead
Le 27/02/2015 16:01, m.r...@5-cent.us a écrit :
That's*weird* . Why would you even want "hidden" groups?
Weird and... not very intelligent. To say it politely.
:o)
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Hi,
Until last week, I could install a CentOS 7 based desktop using the
following approach:
1. Install minimal system.
2. yum groupinstall "X Window System"
3. yum install gdm gnome-classic-session gnome-terminal liberation-fonts
4. Install applications as needed.
This morning, the package
Le 26/02/2015 15:53, David Both a écrit :
Ok, I understand, now. I just leave multiple desktops in place and
switch between them as I want. But perhaps you have reasons to do it as
you do. That is one thing I really appreciate about Linux, the fact that
there are many, many ways to accomplish alm
st of the packages contained in a minimal
installation. This is easy, since I can do a minimal installation in a
virtual guest, and then run the following little script:
#!/bin/bash
#
# create_package_list.sh
#
# (c) Niki Kovacs, 2014
TMP=/tmp
RPMLIST=$TMP/rpmlist.txt
PKGLIST=$TMP/pkglist.txt
r
Le 26/02/2015 10:30, Leon Fauster a écrit :
# rpm -qa --last
Lists the last installed package first. That way back would be one way to strip
it down.
Here's a completely empiric approach, tried out on three different
machines. It's not perfect, but it's already quite usable :
https://kik
Le 25/02/2015 23:00, Peter a écrit :
I haven't tried this, but see if it works:
yum shell
remove *
install @minimal
run
I get "Package group minimal does not exist"
What now?
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Le 25/02/2015 20:18, Brian Mathis a écrit :
I don't think there's a single yum command that lets you roll back to the
packages the were installed at a given point in time.
Maybe a good idea would be to find one or a handful of packages that the
whole desktop and/or graphical subsystem depend
Le 25/02/2015 19:36, John R Pierce a écrit :
I install from the 'minimum' ISO, and get that off the bat, then just
install the packages I need with yum
I do the same, but my question is: how to do that the other way around?
Let's say you start from the base system, then install a couple doze
Hi,
I wonder if there's an easy way to strip down an installation to the
bare minimum, e. g. the packages you get when you select "minimum
installation".
In Slackware, the bone-headed package manager slackpkg has a few nice
options, among which 'slackpkg clean-system', which removes all
thi
Le 24/02/2015 08:41, Andrew Holway a écrit :
+1 for freeipa. It is an extremely well integrated domain controller with a
functionality similar to Microsoft Active Directory.
I want to thank everybody for their numerous and detailed answer posts
to this thread. Looks like FreeIPA is the way t
Le 24/02/2015 13:51, Jim Perrin a écrit :
Might also be worth mentioning that supposedly around the 7.2 timeframe,
gnome is scheduled to be bumped to a more modern version.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1174442
In theory this should put transparent terminal support back in
gnome-
ing loops?
I'm mainly using CentOS 7, but I'll also have to use CentOS 6.x since in
our school we have some older hardware that won't run 7.x.
Cheers from the sunny South of France,
Niki Kovacs
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Le 22/02/2015 16:19, Johnny Hughes a écrit :
terminator in the Nux!dextop repo for C7 has transparent backgrounds.
Thanks!
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T
Hi,
I like working with transparent terminals. Unfortunately, this feature
seems to have been removed from GNOME Terminal in CentOS 7.
Anybody knows if there's a workaround to get it back?
Cheers,
Niki
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Le 19/02/2015 13:00, Peter a écrit :
On 02/19/2015 11:58 PM, Niki Kovacs wrote:
What would be an orthodox way of handling this? Put
"net.ipv4.ip_forward=1" in /etc/sysctl.conf?
Yes.
Peter
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Le 19/02/2015 13:19, Dennis Jacobfeuerborn a écrit :
The other thing i would recommend is to replace the iptables script with
the iptables-service package. That package uses iptables-restore to load
the iptables rules from /etc/sysconfig/iptables on boot and you can use
iptables-save to store the
Hi,
I just migrated my office's server from Slackware64 14.1 to CentOS 7. So
far everything's running fine, I just have a few minor details to work out.
I removed the firewalld package and replaced it by a simple Iptables script:
--8<
#!/bi
Le 19/02/2015 11:03, Chris Murphy a écrit :
This is a false dichotomy. I reject it. There's too much fact to the
contrary. My mom has done an OS installation, she is most definitely
not an admin.
I'd say your mom is an admin in the sense that chickens fly and horses swim.
:o)
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Le 19/02/2015 05:43, Chris Murphy a écrit :
My personal view on installers is extremely biased toward the user
staying out of trouble, they shouldn't have to read documentation for
a GUI installer.
A *user* never has to even see - or use - an installer. A USER has to
USE a computer, by which
Le 18/02/2015 23:12, Chris Murphy a écrit :
What is NOT obvious: for single device installs, if you omit the size
in the create mount point dialog, the size of the resulting volume
will consume all remaining space. But since there's no way to preset
raid5 at the time a mount point is created (rai
Le 18/02/2015 23:12, Chris Murphy a écrit :
"installer is organized around mount points" is correct, and what gets
mounted on mount points? Volumes, not partitions.
Says who?
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o 106.8 GB, which is in effect the maximum available disk space
using RAID 5.
Usability anyone?
Cheers from the sunny South of France,
Niki Kovacs
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Le 18/02/2015 09:59, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
└─sdd3 8:51 0 76,4G 0 part
└─md127 9:127 0 229G 0 raid5 /
Any idea what's going on ?
Ooops, just saw it. /dev/sdd3 apparently has the wrong size.
As to why this is so, it's a mystery.
I'll investigate further in
Le 18/02/2015 09:24, Michael Volz a écrit :
Hi Niki,
md127 apparently only uses 81.95GB per disk. Maybe one of the partitions has
the wrong size. What's the output of lsblk?
[root@nestor:~] # lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
sda 8:00 232,9G 0 disk
├─sda1
Le 18/02/2015 08:09, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
Apparently no spare devices have been created. So why do I only have 226
GB of disk space under CentOS, when I had roughly 650 GB under Slackware?
An idea just crossed my mind. Could it be that 'df' is reporting a wrong
partition size o
Hi,
I just replaced Slackware64 14.1 running on my office's HP Proliant
Microserver with a fresh installation of CentOS 7.
The server has 4 x 250 GB disks.
Every disk is configured like this :
* 200 MB /dev/sdX1 for /boot
* 4 GB /dev/sdX2 for swap
* 248 GB /dev/sdX3 f
Le 16/02/2015 10:32, Nux! a écrit :
Currently Gnome 3 is OK with multiple monitors, especially when run in the "classic
mode".
Elrepo continues to be the recommended way to install nvidia drivers,
nvidia-detect will suggest the correct kmod you need e.g.:
yum install nvidia-detect && yum insta
Hi,
My workstation is currently running Slackware Linux 14.1 64-bit, and I'm
considering replacing that by CentOS 7, which I've already installed on
my laptop.
The PC has an NVidia GeForce GT 520 video card with two 19'' monitors
attached to it. I'm using the proprietary 'nvidia' driver.
I
Le 15/02/2015 16:38, Michael Volz a écrit :
Hi,
to my knowledge
echo "LC_COLLATE=fr_FR.UTF-8" >> /etc/locale.conf
is the right way to do that.
Unfortunately that didn't work. Putting LC_COLLATE in /etc/locale.conf
does nothing.
Now what?
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Le 15/02/2015 16:38, Michael Volz a écrit :
Hi,
to my knowledge
echo "LC_COLLATE=fr_FR.UTF-8" >> /etc/locale.conf
is the right way to do that.
Thanks! If I remember correctly, CentOS 5.x and 6.x had an
/etc/sysconfig/i18n file for that.
Cheers,
Niki
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Hi,
I'm running my CentOS 7 desktop in french. LANG is set to fr_FR.UTF-8.
In GNOME 3, the menu entries are listed in alphabetical order.
Unfortunately, entries beginning with an accented character (like
"Éditeur de texte") appear at the bottom of the list.
I know that in order to correct th
Le 14/02/2015 13:22, Earl A Ramirez a écrit :
I believe that you can change your desktop from 'Tweak Tool', which can
be found under | Application | Utilities, under the Desktop option you
will see Picture URI. On my desktop I simply right click on the desktop
and select 'Change Background'.
You
unds/gnome and /usr/share/backgrounds/images, but the
images don't appear in the wallpaper selection window.
Any suggestions?
Cheers,
Niki Kovacs
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Le 10/02/2015 17:20, m.r...@5-cent.us a écrit :
Please explicate - offlist is fine. I really dislike the naming
convention I was installing on a new HP dl560 g8, and it came up with
ensf1 (which is*great* fun if you're trying to do a pxeboot build)
The CentOS FAQ explains how to restor
Hi,
Our local school has a 100 % Slackware Linux network with two servers
and 14 desktop clients.
The main server is running Dnsmasq, and he's providing static IP
addresses to the desktop clients. Hostnames are also managed centrally.
All client machines only have this in /etc/hosts:
127.0
Le 10/02/2015 15:35, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
So far, no way to bring either eth0 or eth1 up. What am I doing wrong
here? Is NetworkManager now a mandatory part of the base system? Some
other mistake somewhere else? I'm a bit puzzled here.
I'll answer that myself, after some more exp
Hi,
I'm currently experimenting with CentOS 7 on a couple of installations.
I'm reasonably proficient with CentOS 5.x and 6.x.
I'd like to manage networking using a more traditional approach (Keep It
Simple Stupid). Here's what I tried so far, starting from a minimal install:
Install net-to
Le 10/02/2015 02:01, Chris Murphy a écrit :
It's useful to know what layout you want. The installer will neither
create, nor let you use, what it thinks are ill-advised layouts. The
main reason I can think of for pre-creating md devices is to use a
non-default chunk/strip size.
I'd like to be a
Hi,
When installing CentOS 7, is there a way to
1. leave the GUI installer and open up a console
2. create RAID arrays manually using mdadm --create
3. get back in the GUI installer and use the freshly created /dev/mdX
arrays?
I tried to do this, but the installer always exits informing me th
Le 09/02/2015 23:01, Eero Volotinen a écrit :
How about redhat documentation?
Yes, it's OK too. I didn't ask about all the existing documentation out
there. I was just curious about any specific recommendations you can
make, good books, good online documentation, etc.
Niki
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ions of CentOS Linux" and "The Definitive Guide to CentOS", both
from Apress.
Can anyone recommend anything similar on 7.x?
Cheers from South France,
Niki Kovacs
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Le 04/02/2015 18:48, m.r...@5-cent.us a écrit :
That directory, and that file, exist in CentOS, also, since 6. And the new
naming... it's*so* much easier to deal with... yeah, right, I'll run the
install, and wait till it hangs, so I can see that the NIC is named, what
was it, on that HP last mo
0-persistent-net.rules file, permutate the "eth0" and "eth1" entries
and then reboot.
How would I go about that under CentOS with traditional interface names?
The 70-persistent-net.rules file doesn't exist. Do I have to create it
from scratc
Le 11/12/2014 09:04, Sorin Srbu a écrit :
The procedure described onhttps://www.dropbox.com/install?os=lnx has worked for me
on several occasions before on CentOS 6.0 >> 6.5.
Haven't done it on 6.6 yet, but I doubt it'd be any different.
What problems have you run into??
I just tried it agai
Le 12/12/2014 06:14, Chris a écrit :
just use the Fedora RPM from Dropbox. It's working fine. The files
included and a German posting is at
http://chris-blog.net/2014/07/dropbox-unter-centos-installieren/
I just tested this on a fresh installation of CentOS 6.6 (in
VirtualBox). I downloaded t
Le 14/12/2014 15:02, Jonathan Billings a écrit :
Did you try the drivers provided by elrepo?
http://elrepo.org/tiki/wl-kmod
No. I read the CentOS wiki page here, which states that ELRepo doesn't
provide these drivers due to licence restrictions, and that the user has
to build them manually.
Hi,
I just installed CentOS 6.6 on my HP Pavilion DM1 laptop. The wireless
card is only poorly supported in the default setup, so I decided to
write an installation script for the Linux-STA driver, which works
perfectly.
https://github.com/kikinovak/centos/blob/master/6.x/broadcom-sta/broadc
Le 13/12/2014 15:22, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
Hi,
I just installed a fresh CentOS 6.6 desktop. It's a client's machine, it
is physically installed on a testbench in my office. Usually, when I
perform installations, I start with the base system on the testbench,
and once networking is con
Hi,
I just installed a fresh CentOS 6.6 desktop. It's a client's machine, it
is physically installed on a testbench in my office. Usually, when I
perform installations, I start with the base system on the testbench,
and once networking is configured, I SSH into it and then do all the
fine-tun
Le 11/12/2014 10:58, Liam O'Toole a écrit :
That procedure works for me up to and including 6.6. It would indeed be
helpful if the OP listed the particular problems they encountered.
I guess my mistake was to hunt down a Dropbox RPM package in various
third-party repos. I'll try the command-li
Hi,
I just spent a couple of unnerving hours trying to make Dropbox work on
CentOS 6.6.
Is there a way that
1. Actually works?
2. Doesn't include jumping through burning loops?
Cheers from the sunny south of France,
Niki
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Hi,
I'm currently experimenting with CentOS 7.0 in a few virtual guests,
trying to install a reduced GNOME desktop as well as a minimal KDE
desktop. I'm following this documentation:
http://www.dokuwiki.tachtler.net/doku.php?id=tachtler:centos_7_-_minimal_desktop_installation
I'm stuck at th
Hi,
I'm a 47-year-old Austrian living in South France, and the manager of a
small IT firm based on Linux and free software. A while back I have been
a CentOS user, I was proficient with versions 4.x and 5.x, and I even
published a book based on CentOS 5.x. After a stint on Debian, I based
all
Le 05/12/2014 19:03, Mark Milhollan a écrit :
Surely visiting the elrepo web site would have provided an answer even
more quickly. Still, the list came through for you.
I just found out my mistake. There was a "last modified" entry for 2012,
but this concerned only the FAQ page. Now I looked
Hi,
A company I do some teaching for has a load of legacy hardware, among
which a Dell Poweredge 1300 server. Rough specs: Pentium-III 500 MHz
processor, 110 MB RAM, 3 x 9 GB SCSI disks. This thing is a dinosaur,
and horribly loud, but apparently it takes a meteor strike to wipe it. I
like us
Le 04/12/2014 14:24, Ned Slider a écrit :
Sure is. Although you would probably be better off asking on the elrepo
mailing list rather than the CentOS list.
Anything you are particularly interest in?
Not really, but I've been a CentOS user for a few years. Then migrated
to Slackware, but it lo
Hi,
I'm currently installing CentOS 5.11 i386 on an old PC.
Is the ELRepo third-party repository still active and maintained?
Cheers,
Niki Kovacs
--
Microlinux - Solutions informatiques 100% Linux et logiciels libres
7, place de l'église - 30730 Montpezat
Web : http://www.microlin
Le 13/10/2014 13:36, Ron Loftin a écrit :
Of course, if you are interested in something that will help you to
organize your rules, there is always Shorewall ( Shoreline Firewall )
which I have used for years and found very effective and time-saving.
Thanks for the suggestion, I'll look into it.
Le 13/10/2014 11:11, Reindl Harald a écrit :
just write a bash script which resets and configures iptables with the
"iptables" command and at the end of the script call "/sbin/service
iptables save" which writes the current rules to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
and so at boot the rules get loaded atom
Hi,
I'm planning to use CentOS 6.x on a handful of LAN servers. So far I've
been using Slackware64 14.0 and 14.1 for the job.
I wonder what's the orthodox/recommended way of configuring and iptables
firewall with CentOS. I understand there's the
system-config-securitylevel-tui NCurses interf
Le 11/10/2014 11:03, Niki Kovacs a écrit :
# git push
error: The requested URL returned error: 403 Forbidden while accessing
https://github.com/kikinovak/centos/info/refs
fatal: HTTP request failed
Now I think there must be some missing component in my CentOS
installation, because my Slackware
Hi everybody,
I'm back to CentOS after a long period during which I've been using
mainly Slackware. I still use Slackware for teaching and for my local
clients (on servers and desktops), but right now, I'm planning to update
my own documentation about CentOS, which is still based on version 5.
Robert Heller a écrit :
>
> Will FAT support the larger external disks, such as the .5TB and larger?
>
I read the replies to my previous posts, and I get your point, since I
didn't know about the various limitations. It's probably due to the fact
that we're 100% GNU/Linux here. I haven't boote
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