> On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 2:54 PM Kenneth Porter
> wrote:
>>
>> Is there some way to see the RPM changelog entries for a prospective yum
>> update? Ideally I'd like to see just the entries that are newer than the
>> version of the package I already have.
>>
>> I saw a new kernel in today's yum-cro
> On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 12:08:56PM +0100, isdtor wrote:
>> Are there any documented best practices for using NFS home
>> directories on laptops? Right now, and this is on CentOS 7, when I
>> disconnect the machine from the network, the desktop freezes, and I
>> can't even tell if the machine swit
> On 8/7/20 5:30 AM, Phil Perry wrote:
>> On 07/08/2020 10:01, Johnny Hughes wrote:
>>> On 8/7/20 3:46 AM, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
Le 07/08/2020 à 09:40, Alessandro Baggi a écrit :
> Probably many users have not updated their machines between the bug
> release and
> the resolution (t
> Once upon a time, Alessandro Baggi said:
>> you are right but is not UEFI a standard and it shouldn't work the
>> same on several vendors? I ask this because this patch broken all my
>> uefi workstations.
>
> The great thing about standards is there's so many to choose from! Also
> relevant: ht
> On 8/6/20 12:30 PM, Jack Bailey via CentOS wrote:
>> On 2020-08-06 08:45, J Martin Rushton via CentOS wrote:
>>> You'll need to upgrade to CentOS8.
>>>
>>> C7 is at rsync 3.1.2-10, and will not go above 3.1.2 ever.
>>>
>>> C8.2 is at 3.1.3-7, C8 will always be on 3.1.3
>>>
>>> Martin
>>
>> Anothe
> Le 04/08/2020 à 08:31, lpeci a écrit :
>> I had the same problem with my UEFI bios machine and I fixed it so for
>> Centos 7:
>>
>> 1) Boot from an rescue linux usb
>>
>> 2) When the rescue system is running:
>>
>> 2.1) #chroot /mnt/sysimage
>>
>> 3) Config network:
>>
>> 3.1) # ip addr a
> Hi,
>
> I've got a task to have a small number of laptops netboot Linux over
> WiFi. The kernel is loaded off the USB stick of cource, it's off topic
> for now.
>
> The WPA-supplicant daemon is started early by dracut off initrd. It
> works. Mostly.
>
> The problem is that upon shutdown systemd t
Hi,
>
> I've noticed that there are several systemd unit files in CentOS 7 and 8
> with the optionAfter=syslog.targetin the [Unit] section, but since systemd
> version 198 syslog.target has not existed.I deduce from this that
> "After=syslog.target" is ignored by systemd and can therefore be remov
> On 7/19/20 10:41 PM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>> On 7/13/20 6:40 PM, Emmett Culley via CentOS wrote:
>>>> I need to set the umask for apache to 002. I've tried every idea I've
>>>> found on the internet, but nothing make a difference. Mo
> On 7/13/20 6:40 PM, Emmett Culley via CentOS wrote:
>> I need to set the umask for apache to 002. I've tried every idea I've
>> found on the internet, but nothing make a difference. Most suggest that
>> I put "umask 002" in /etc/sysconfig/httpd, but that doesn't seem to make
>> a difference. O
> On 2020-07-13 15:01, hexp...@hexpeek.com wrote:
>> On 2020-07-13 04:04, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>> BTW: I strongly suggest to change back the assignment of BINDIR in the
>>> Makefiles.
>>> ...
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Simon
>
> On 2020-07-12 05:57, Mogens Kjaer wrote:
>> On 7/10/20 4:10 PM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>> Thanks for the tool, I've created RPMs of it:
>>>
>>> http://www.invoca.ch/pub/packages/hexpeek/
>>
>> The package generates a symlink /u
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA512
>
> hexpeek: a hex editor for huge files
>
> Occasionally I need to work with huge binary files. Over the years I've
> tried many different tools and never found one that was exactly what I
> wanted. In my experience most hex editors either (1) do
> On 21/06/20 1:23 pm, John Pierce wrote:
>> but the build process should be the same, no?I can't believe RH
>> would
>> use a completely different build process for the release than for the
>> beta/development stuff.
>
> The packages still have to be built as a whole, they need to go through
>
> Am 17.06.20 um 12:28 schrieb John Horne:
>> On Sun, 2020-06-07 at 23:36 +0200, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote:
>>> I have some scripts using certwatch from the crypto-utils package. This
>>> rpm seems to be unshipped with EL8. Any ideas whats the "new" tool to
>>> check pem cert files?
>>>
>> Hi,
> Hi,
>
> I just read this blog article from austrian Linux expert Michael Kofler.
> For
> those among you who don't know the guy, he's my home country's number one
> Linux
> expert (known as "der Kofler") and most notably the author of a series of
> excellent books about Linux over the last 25 yea
> At 03:47 PM 6/16/2020, Kenneth Porter wrote:
>>The rule is in the wrong chain. The INPUT chain affects packets that
>>terminate at the same machine. You want to block packets that will
>>be passed on to the Internet, so your rule needs to be in the
>>FORWARD chain. (The OUTPUT chain affects packe
>
>
> Il 16/06/20 08:11, Alessandro Baggi ha scritto:
>>
>>
>> Il 16/06/20 06:21, Gordon Messmer ha scritto:
>>> On 6/15/20 7:06 PM, Jay Hart wrote:
If I do 'systemctl start httpd', apache will start right up. But
during boot, it doesn't and I
get the resulting errors below.
>>
> --On Friday, June 05, 2020 1:39 PM -0700 John Pierce
>
> wrote:
>
>> don't most packages create a .rpmnew file if you've modified the
>> previous
>> package file ?
>
> That file is created AFTER you've made edits, and reflects only the state
> of the file in the latest package. So it's not clear
Hi
> On Thu, May 28, 2020 19:38, Robert Nichols wrote:
>
>> What output do you get from:
>>
>> file -s /dev/mapper/vg_voinet01-lv_log
>> lsblk -f /dev/mapper/vg_voinet01-lv_log
>>
>
> file -s /dev/mapper/vg_voinet01-lv_log
> /dev/mapper/vg_voinet01-lv_log: symbolic link TO '../DM-5'
> dm
> Hi all,
>
> I can't believe that I can't find the answer to this one. I have a perl
> script which is called by xinetd.
>
> I want that perl script to be able to detect the remote IP address of the
> caller.
>
> I presumed that it would be an environment variable but I could be wrong.
> I've fou
> Actually you are not correct.
>
>
> 1st: I didn't quote the wikipedia article, someone sent that as an
> answer to my previous post.
>
> (similar mindset probably, as in your response)
>
> 2: You are wrong, broadcast packets, like for example DHCP, and also
> WOL (if UDP), can be routed, by
> On Wed, 2020-05-06 at 10:26 -0500, Robert G (Doc) Savage via CentOS
> wrote:
>> On Tue, 2020-05-05 at 19:25 -0500, Robert G (Doc) Savage via CentOS
>> wrote:
>> > I'm about ready to run "dnf erase *mate*" and try re-installing
>> > MATE
>> > from scratch from the GNOME3 desktop. Is that possible
" or with "s" or "1" as a
kernel boot option.
For what you want to do not a single reboot is required.
Regards,
Simon
>
> On 5/13/2020 12:48 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>>> I'm having some difficulty finding a method
Hi,
> I'm having some difficulty finding a method to shrink my /home to expand
> my /. They both correspond to LVMs. It is my understanding that one
> cannot shrink a xfs filesystem. One must back it up (xfsdump), remove
> (lvremove) redefine it and then restore it back (xfsrestore).
>
> Okay,
Hi,
> Folks
>
> I've been trying to convert my systems to Centos 8, seeing the EOL on
> the horizon a few years away. One of my systems is a Mac-Mini, and
> support for that has been discontinued. I'm wondering what the
> community suggests among these alternatives:
>
> 1) Stay with Centos 7 ev
> Le 12/05/2020 à 16:10, James Pearson a écrit :
>> Patrick Bégou wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I need some help with NFSv4 setup/tuning. I have a dedicated nfs server
>>> (2 x E5-2620 8cores/16 threads each, 64GB RAM, 1x10Gb ethernet and 16x
>>> 8TB HDD) used by two servers and a small cluster (400
Hi,
> Thanks Simon,
> Of course we are not sure but we have a strong feeling :
> - We tried the restore in loop (14) and all worked fine when firewall is
> disabled.- We tried the restore several times but no more 2 succeed
> restore at a row when firewall is enabled.
> We also tried :
>
>- -
> Hello,
> Here is the context during the problem occurs :
>
> We have a new machine running on centos 8.From this machine, we restore a
> postgresql dump on an other machine runnning on centos 7.After several
> hoursof running, restore fails due to a disconnection (no route to
> host).But, if we d
> --On Tuesday, April 28, 2020 9:35 PM +0200 Simon Matter via CentOS
> wrote:
>
>> If I don't find usable RPMs for CentOS 8 I'm going to build our own as I
>> do for other things as well. But I just can't believe they don't already
>> exist.
>
> On Tue, Apr 28, 2020 at 7:35 PM Simon Matter via CentOS
> wrote:
>> If I don't find usable RPMs for CentOS 8 I'm going to build our own as I
>> do for other things as well. But I just can't believe they don't already
>> exist.
>
> I'v
> Hi,
>
> We're running some web apps on CentOS 6 on Tomcat 6 shipped by the
> distribution.
>
> As time goes by we'd like to move on to CentOS 8 and Tomcat 9 or whatever
> is appropriate.
>
> My question is, what do others use now that Tomcat is not shipped anymore
> with CentOS?
>
> Do you run so
Hi,
We're running some web apps on CentOS 6 on Tomcat 6 shipped by the
distribution.
As time goes by we'd like to move on to CentOS 8 and Tomcat 9 or whatever
is appropriate.
My question is, what do others use now that Tomcat is not shipped anymore
with CentOS?
Do you run some JBoss/WildFly ins
> Am 27.04.20 um 17:31 schrieb Simon Matter via CentOS:
>>> On 4/27/20 8:27 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> I've read the Fedora modularity docs but am still missing the big
>>>> picture
>>>> someh
> On 4/27/20 8:27 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've read the Fedora modularity docs but am still missing the big
>> picture
>> somehow. Hope someone can clarify things for me.
>>
>> What I'm most wondering: does modularity h
Hi,
I've read the Fedora modularity docs but am still missing the big picture
somehow. Hope someone can clarify things for me.
What I'm most wondering: does modularity have any influence on the RPM
packages at all. I mean, is there anything inside a RPM package which says
it belongs to a module o
>> Hello Everyone,
>>
>> Since rebooting my Centos 6.10 Openvz server "daisy" yesterday, I am
>> getting horrible system performance. /var/log/messages is full of
>> HDIO_GET_IDENTITY failed for /dev/sdb. The latest entries look like
>> this:
>>
>> Apr 22 08:51:32 daisy kernel: [141224.655699] CT
> Hello Everyone,
>
> Since rebooting my Centos 6.10 Openvz server "daisy" yesterday, I am
> getting horrible system performance. /var/log/messages is full of
> HDIO_GET_IDENTITY failed for /dev/sdb. The latest entries look like this:
>
> Apr 22 08:51:32 daisy kernel: [141224.655699] CT: 1005: st
> On Thu, 9 Apr 2020 at 09:34, Simon Matter wrote:
>
>> > On Thu, 9 Apr 2020 at 08:40, Simon Matter via CentOS
>>
>> > wrote:
>> >
>> >> > On Thu, Apr 09, 2020 at 11:06:45AM +0200, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>> >> >> Which lead
> Hi,
>
> I got an alert from Yum-Cron this morning:
>
> Failed to check for updates with the following error message:
> Failed to build transaction:
> sclo-php72-php-pecl-imagick-3.4.4-1.el7.x86_64
> requires libMagickCore.so.5()(64bit)
> sclo-php72-php-pecl-imagick-3.4.4-1.el7.x86_64 requires
> l
> On Thu, 9 Apr 2020 at 08:40, Simon Matter via CentOS
> wrote:
>
>> > On Thu, Apr 09, 2020 at 11:06:45AM +0200, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>> >> Which leads me to the more general question of: enable CR on a
>> >> production
>> >> server, yes
> On Thu, Apr 09, 2020 at 11:06:45AM +0200, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>> Which leads me to the more general question of: enable CR on a
>> production
>> server, yes or no?
>
> Not on production. Only for testing.
I'm not sure. Running production environments without CR enabled means
you're running wi
> On Mon, Apr 06, 2020 at 09:26:18AM -0400, Jonathan Billings wrote:
>> If you use /etc/systemd/system/cron.d/service.d/override.conf, the
>
> I meant /etc/systemd/system/crond.service.d/override.conf, sorry.
Thanks, I was just thinking about how the path is constructed here.
Simon
_
> Il 06/04/20 11:54, Georgios ha scritto:
>> Hi there!
>> I had a similar problem recently with grub. No idea why it doesnt work.
>> Try using grubby instead of grub2-mkconfig if you want the system to
>> keep your kernel parameters between boots.
>>
>> Something like:
>>
>> sudo grubby --args="i91
> On Mon, 6 Apr 2020 at 06:59, Tobias Kirchhofer
> wrote:
>
>> On 6 Apr 2020, at 12:21, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
>>
>> > On Mon, 6 Apr 2020 at 04:16, Tobias Kirchhofer
>> > wrote:
>> >
>> >> On 5 Apr 2020, at 21:20, Tobias Kirchhofer wrote:
>> >>
>> >> we experience difficulties with crond
ile or directory
> Refer to the mount.cifs(8) manual page (e.g. man mount.cifs)
> [root@plexvm ~]#
>
> Le ven. 3 avr. 2020 à 19:15, Simon Matter via CentOS a
> écrit :
>
>> > That was my initial setup before trying the abbreviations, but anyway:
>> >
>> > [roo
Hi,
> I think i might have solve it.
>
> For some reason grub2-mkconfig doesnt work. (Have no idea why)
Is this on CentOS 7?
Well, yes, I remember that it didn't work for me when I installed new
servers one or two years ago, that was with CentOS 7 and they were my
first EFI installs.
>
> I man
> That was my initial setup before trying the abbreviations, but anyway:
>
> [root@plexvm ~]# nano /etc/fstab
> [root@plexvm ~]# cat /etc/fstab
>
> #
> # /etc/fstab
> # Created by anaconda on Fri Apr 3 14:02:23 2020
> #
> # Accessible filesystems, by reference, are maintained under '/dev/disk/'.
>
> Hi.
> Im trying to set intel_iommu=on on kernel parameters at grub but for
> some reason it doesnt work.
>
> I edit /etc/default/grub file and i add the parameter.
>
> then i run grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/efi/EFI/centos/grub.cfg and then i
> reboot.
When you look at /boot/efi/EFI/centos/grub.cfg,
> I set for graphical mode, I get the login screen, I change to KDE, and
> the screen goes black, then after minutes, gray with a cursor, and
> that's it - I left it overnight, no change.
>
> Brand new install (as of yesterday). Missed any "agree to license", and
> missed choosing software. Manuall
> Hi all,
>
> I'm tearing my hair off trying to understand the difference between C7 &
> C8
> for mounting a cifs FS with fstab
>
> I'm building a Plex media server on C8 and duplicated the fstab entries
> over from my current C7 installation
> My data (music & movies) are on CIFS shares on a Synol
> Once upon a time, Valeri Galtsev said:
>> On 4/3/20 8:34 AM, John Pierce wrote:
>> >Do note, backup systems that use rsync or similar file by file copies
>> of a
>> >running system do not make coherent atomic snapshots, so things like
>> >relational databases should be excluded from those, and b
, privileged or confidential or otherwise legally exempt from
> disclosure. If you are not the named addressee, you are not authorized to
> read, print, retain, copy or disseminate this message or any part of it.
> If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender
> immed
> On Wed, Mar 25, 2020 at 02:49:24PM +0100, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've discovered a bug in rsync which leads to increased CPU usage and
>> slower transfers in many situations.
>>
>> When syncing with compression (-z), certain file
> On Wed, 25 Mar 2020, Leroy Tennison wrote:
>
>> Since you state that using -z is almost always a bad idea, could you
>> provide the rationale for that? I must be missing something.
>
> I can't speak to that, but the obvious workaround is to use ssh's
> compression instead of rsync's:
>
> rsync -
> On Wed, 2020-03-25 at 14:39 +, Leroy Tennison wrote:
>> Since you state that using -z is almost always a bad idea, could you
>> provide the rationale for that? I must be missing something.
>>
> I think the "rationale" is that at some point the
> compression/decompression takes longer than th
Hi,
I've discovered a bug in rsync which leads to increased CPU usage and
slower transfers in many situations.
When syncing with compression (-z), certain file types should not be
compressed during the transfer because they are already compressed. The
file types which are not to be compressed can
Hi,
> Hi list,
>
> I'm building a NFS server on top of CentOS 8.
> It has 8 x 8 TB HDDs and 2 x 500GB SSDs.
> The spinning drives are in a RAID-6 array. They are 4K sector size.
> The SSDs are in RAID-1 array and with a 512bytes sector size.
>
>
> I want to use the SSDs as a cache using dm-cache.
> James Pearson wrote:
>>
>> J Martin Rushton via CentOS wrote:
>>>
>>> On 16/01/2020 20:37, Steve Clark wrote:
On 01/16/2020 03:30 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
> Once upon a time, Kay Schenk said:
>> I kept getting messages that my old Flash Player 31 was obsolete so
>> I went in searc
> On 09/02/2020 23:55, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>
> Hi Nicolas,
>
> [snip]
>
>> Maybe there's a reason to make NetworkManager more or less mandatory
>> from now on, but I don't see it. So I thought I'd rather ask on this
>> list.
>
> Like you, I read about NetworkManager becoming the default tool for
> Hi,
> I've done the following:
> - Copy usr content with rsync to another partition:
>
> rsync -av --partial --progress /usr/ /mnt
I won't comment on you real question but just want to suggest to really
add -H to the rsync here as there are hardlinks in /usr you really want to
keep.
Simon
>
>
> On 1/24/20 8:02 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> The redhat access page comes up in both google and duckduckgo when I
>>>> put
>>>> in the entire 4 lines of the error message. You still have to login
>
> On 1/24/20 8:02 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> The redhat access page comes up in both google and duckduckgo when I
>>>> put
>>>> in the entire 4 lines of the error message. You still have to login
>
> On Tuesday, January 28, 2020 1:50:57 PM CET Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
>> On Sun, 26 Jan 2020 at 20:45, hw wrote:
>> > > I'm not sure I understand what you are asking.
>> >
>> > It is about VOIP calls via SRTP being interrupted at irregular
>> intervals.
>> > The intervals appear to depend on t
> On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 8:54 AM Ger van Dijck
> wrote:
>
>> But when trying to do a fresh install or a netinstall (both Centos 7) I
>> get the following message :
>>
>> [ 0.123604] ACPI:SCI(ACPI GSI 9) not registered
>> [28.595238] systemd[1] Caught , dump core as pid 75
>> [28.595814] systemd[
>
>> I noticed a strange behaviour (don't know if this is the wanted
>> default). If I try ,from normal user shell, to run command like "reboot"
>> or "shutdown -h now" system will reboot/shutdown. This happens on tty
>> console, on xfce terminal and ssh session.
>
> I've just created a normal user
>
> Il 24/01/20 15:11, Simon Matter via CentOS ha scritto:
>>> Hi list,
>>>
>>> I installed on my workstation C8.1 (1911) and performed a minimal
>>> install and then installed XFCE from EPEL.
>>>
>>> I noticed a strange behaviour (d
> Hi list,
>
> I installed on my workstation C8.1 (1911) and performed a minimal
> install and then installed XFCE from EPEL.
>
> I noticed a strange behaviour (don't know if this is the wanted
> default). If I try ,from normal user shell, to run command like "reboot"
> or "shutdown -h now" system
>
>
>
>>The redhat access page comes up in both google and duckduckgo when I put
>>in the entire 4 lines of the error message. You still have to login to
>>see the solution.
>>
>>https://www.google.com/search?client=ubuntu&channel=fs&q=+Problem+1%3A+conflicting+requests+++-+nothing+provides+modu
> On 1/22/20 3:57 PM, Gary Stainburn wrote:
>> I have managed to find out what happened in the yum update and it turns
>> out it was a mess. It looks like the server ran out of memory in the
>> middle and things then started to fail. Any advice on how to recover
>> from this would be greatly appr
> Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>
>>> We are seeing a problem that occurs ~5% of the time when rebooting
>>
>> I see such issues on a quite large multi user system but when this
>> happens, after forced restarts for kernel updates, I usually don't have
> We are seeing a problem that occurs ~5% of the time when rebooting
I see such issues on a quite large multi user system but when this
happens, after forced restarts for kernel updates, I usually don't have
the time to analyze and play doctor on it. My "solution" now is to simply
reboot the serve
> On 1/16/20 5:03 PM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
>> On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 11:08 PM Peter wrote:
>>
>>> On 17/01/20 8:06 am, Lamar Owen wrote:
On 1/16/20 6:49 AM, Peter wrote:
> On 16/01/20 4:14 am, Brian Stinson wrote:
>> Release for CentOS Linux 8 (1911)
>>
>> We are pleased to
> I have managed to find out what happened in the yum update and it turns
> out it was a mess. It looks like the server ran out of memory in the
> middle and things then started to fail. Any advice on how to recover from
> this would be greatly appreciated
I may sound old school but my suggestio
> On 1/21/20 10:10 AM, david wrote:
>> At 08:52 AM 1/21/2020, David G. Miller wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On 1/21/20 9:35 AM, david wrote:
Folks
In a test Centos 8 installation as a guest of VirtualBox on Windows
10, I want to install ffmpeg, and support for exfat. They're not in
the
> On Fri, 17 Jan 2020 14:39:19 +0100, Simon Matter via CentOS
> wrote:
>
>> Anything in the logs about what was going on? If you reboot this server
>> again and again, does the problem show up again?
>
> This is shared hosting servers that is in production with custome
> On Thu, 16 Jan 2020 15:34:43 +0100, Stephen John Smoogen
> wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 16 Jan 2020 at 07:58, Asle Ommundsen
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Tonight I upgraded two CentOS 8 boxes to CentOS 8.1 (1911). Then after
>>> a
>>> reboot of the first server the network was unavailable. In IPMI cons
> I renamed my volume with vgrename however I didn't complete the other
> steps.
> Mainly update fstab and intiramfs. Once I booted, I was dropped on the
> Dracut shell. From here I can see the newly rename VG and I can lvm lvscan
> as well as activate it, lvm vgchange -ay.
IIRC this could all be
> I am unable to locate systemd-coredump service on CentOS 7.5. It is not
> listed under "systemctl -a" and also I'm unable to locate the associated
> unit file (folder /usr/lib/systemd/system/ ). Am I missing any package
> which installs this service?
I don't really understand what you are lookin
> our new Server with AMD EPYC and super micro board reboots ramdonly.
> There is no error message before the reboot in /var/log/messages.
Anything in the hardware logs of the server like memory error or so? Any
watchdog on the servers acting bad?
We run CentOS 7 and KVM on AMD Opteron and AMD EPY
> Hi! I have a minimal installation of centos8 + packages for freeipa as a
> vbox vm. there is something strange with the firewall rules :
I'm not sure but does CentOS 8 still use iptables?
Regards,
Simon
>
> [root@ldap ~]# iptables -S
> -P INPUT ACCEPT
> -P FORWARD ACCEPT
> -P OUTPUT ACCEPT
>
>
> Hi list,
>
> I've installed C8 on my workstation. I configured my network devices
> (two bridges, two nics) using nmcli. Now that NM is the default I tried
> it. On C7 I always disabled it.
>
> I noticed some problem:
>
> 1) During the boot, also if NetworkManager-wait-online.service status is
>
> Hello,
>
> I'm not seeing free range routing (frr) packages for CentOS 8.
>
> The RHEL8 docs say frr is the replacement for quagga.
>
> https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/configuring_and_managing_networking/setting-your-routing-protocols_configuring-and-
>
>
> On 2019-10-18 10:27, Jonathan Billings wrote:
>> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 09:23:38AM -0500, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
>>> And last but not least: I got used to some way of interaction with
>>> computer,
>>> and that way is most productive for me after very long use. I don't
>>> want to
>>> blend i
Hi,
> So, I have a client that has an internal use application that needs an
> ancient version of libc5. That's not a typo; libc5. Before the server
> that ran it died about a year and a half ago (said server was an AMD
> K6-2/450 with a 6GB Western Digital Caviar drive that had been spinning
>
> On Thu, 19 Sep 2019, Jerry Geis wrote:
>
>> I installed my first UEFI disk yesterday. Seemed to go fine. CentOS 7.6
>> x86_64
>> I then took that disk "out" of that machine and put it another machine -
>> it
>> seems to not even boot.
>> I put the original disk back in that machine and it boots f
Wow, thanks for the detailed recipe!
How did we deserve this when it was so easy in the past :-)
> On Aug 5, 2019, at 6:57 PM, Fred Smith
> wrote:
>>
>> no core file (yes, ulimit is configured)
>
> That’s nowhere near sufficient. To restore classic core file dumps on
> CentOS 7, you must:
>
> 1
> On Fri, Aug 02, 2019 at 02:43:30PM -0400, Fred Smith wrote:
>> On Fri, Aug 02, 2019 at 02:38:05PM -0400, Jon LaBadie wrote:
>> > On Fri, Aug 02, 2019 at 10:19:49AM -0400, mark wrote:
>> > > Fred Smith wrote:
>> > > > On Fri, Aug 02, 2019 at 09:28:23AM -0400, mark wrote:
>> > >
>> > > > One thing
> Hi
>
> I need some advice what to do next, even if someone tells me to
> check out (an)other mailing list(s), tuning site or point me in a better
> direction how to solve my annoying problem: one server is much faster
> for certain tasks although on "shitty" hardware.
>
> I have tried many things
>
>
> On 2019-07-01 10:01, Warren Young wrote:
>> On Jul 1, 2019, at 8:26 AM, Valeri Galtsev
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> RAID function, which boils down to simple, short, easy to debug well
>>> program.
>
> I didn't intend to start software vs hardware RAID flame war when I
> joined somebody's else opinion.
>> You seem to be saying that hardware RAID can’t lose data. You’re
>> ignoring the RAID 5 write hole:
>>
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID#WRITE-HOLE
>>
>> If you then bring up battery backups, now you’re adding cost to the
>> system. And then some ~3-5 years later, downtime to swap the
> On Mon, 1 Jul 2019, Warren Young wrote:
>
>> If you then bring up battery backups, now you’re adding cost to the
>> system. And then some ~3-5 years later, downtime to swap the battery,
>> and more downtime. And all of that just to work around the RAID write
>> hole.
>
> Although batteries have
>>
>>
>>
> IMHO, Hardware raid primarily exists because of Microsoft Windows and
> VMware esxi, neither of which have good native storage management.
>
> Because of this, it's fairly hard to order a major brand (HP, Dell, etc)
> server without raid cards.
>
> Raid cards do have the performance boos
> Okay, some minutes before I post this question - the update was pushed to
> mirror.centos.org and an announcement was published:
> https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2019-June/023321.html
>
> But the actually question still remains:
> Which steps are between 'RedHat published an u
> Ok, we used to get this occasionally on cluster nodes, and we just got it
> on a fileserver (very bad). The system is discovered to be unresponsive:
> it doesn't ping, and plugging a console in, you can see that it's not
> dead, but there nothing at all on the screen, nor does it respond to even
> James Pearson wrote:
>> James Pearson wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> I'm currently trying to reboot a CentOS 7.5 workstation (to complete an
>>> upgrade to 7.6), but it is 'stuck' while shutting down with 'A stop
>>> job is running for ...' - the counter initially gave a limit of '1min
>>> 30s' -
>>> but eac
> On Tue, May 14, 2019 at 10:13:35AM +0800, qw wrote:
>> I use the wifi adaptor, Edimax AC1200, and its driver can be
>> downloaded from
>>
>> 'http://www.edimax.com.tw/edimax/download/download/data/edimax/tw/download/for_home/wireless_adapters/wireless_adapters_ac1200_dual-band/ew-7822ulc'.
Looki
> On 11/05/19 2:05 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>> Am 10.05.2019 um 11:12 schrieb Nux! :
>>>> I maintain a desktop oriented repo for CentOS and last I checked a
>>>> year
>>>> or so ago, I got over 150k+ unique IPs with yum user agent down
> Am 10.05.2019 um 11:12 schrieb Nux! :
>>
>> I maintain a desktop oriented repo for CentOS and last I checked a year
>> or so ago, I got over 150k+ unique IPs with yum user agent downloading
>> stuff from it.
>>
>> It's a bit anecdotal as perhaps not all are actual desktop users and
>> some users
> On 09/05/2019 09:09, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote:
>>> The price we pay.. :)
>>
>> Do you say that paying RH customers already received new firefox
>> packages?
>>
>> Regards,
>> Simon
>>
>
> No, Red Hat have not yet released any upd
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