Hi,
are there packages replacing the ancient perl version in
Centos 7 with a more recent one, like 5.24? At least the
state feature is required.
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Warren Young schrieb:
On May 23, 2017, at 10:44 AM, hw wrote:
are there packages replacing the ancient perl version in
Centos 7 with a more recent one, like 5.24?
Since when is Perl 5.16 “ancient?” It’s only 4 years old.
CentOS 5 just left supported status, which shipped Perl 5.8.8 from
Paul Heinlein schrieb:
On Tue, 23 May 2017, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
hw wrote:
are there packages replacing the ancient perl version in
Centos 7 with a more recent one, like 5.24? At least the
state feature is required.
Perl 5.24 is available in SCL, in the centos-sclo-rh repository
Hi,
what´s the meaning of the PEERROUTES option in the networking
scripts? I couldn´t find that documented anywhere.
I managed to set up a bonding interface and when sending pings,
I´m getting redirection messages from the gateway unless I
manually add a route to the network. So I guess tha
Pete Biggs schrieb:
Thanks, I tried rh-perl, and it worked for a test. It does not replace the
existing
perl installation. You have to explicitly use that version.
Yes, that's how SCL works. A lot of system software uses perl (and
python and gcc) so replacing the installed version without
Pete Biggs schrieb:
If this sort of stance seems risible to you, you probably shouldn’t
be using CentOS. This is what distinguishes a “stable” type of OS
from a “bleeding edge” one.
When a version of a software has been released 20 years ago,
that doesn´t mean it´s more stable than a versi
Warren Young schrieb:
On May 24, 2017, at 6:02 AM, hw wrote:
Warren Young schrieb:
CentOS 5 just left supported status, which shipped Perl 5.8.8 from first
release to last
Living in the past seldwhen is a good idea.
I don’t propose to teach you about my problems — they are, after all
Warren Young schrieb:
On May 24, 2017, at 7:05 AM, hw wrote:
apache uses mod_perl
mod_perl was dropped from Apache in 2.4, and Red Hat followed suit with RHEL 7.
What is it using instead?
The rh-httpd24 does not seem to use a more recent version of
perl.
But there is a package
Paul Heinlein schrieb:
On Wed, 24 May 2017, hw wrote:
Paul Heinlein schrieb:
On Tue, 23 May 2017, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
> hw wrote:
> > > > are there packages replacing the ancient perl version in
> > Centos 7 with a more recent one, like 5.24? At least the
Johnny Hughes schrieb:
On 05/23/2017 11:44 AM, hw wrote:
Hi,
are there packages replacing the ancient perl version in
Centos 7 with a more recent one, like 5.24? At least the
state feature is required.
As a side note, here is why RHEL (and therefore CentOS, since we rebuild
RHEL source
Warren Young wrote:
On May 24, 2017, at 9:38 AM, hw wrote:
Warren Young schrieb:
On May 24, 2017, at 7:05 AM, hw wrote:
apache uses mod_perl
mod_perl was dropped from Apache in 2.4, and Red Hat followed suit with RHEL 7.
What is it using instead?
There are various options. We use
Warren Young wrote:
On May 24, 2017, at 1:58 PM, hw wrote:
It seems that lighttpd uses the perl version that is assigned in
the configuration
This is one of the advantages of Plack vs mod_perl, by the way: decoupling the
Perl version from the web server version.
while ignoring the
Hi,
I have a server using its 4 physical network interfaces
bonded, with the bonding interface added to a bridge. The
bridge has the IP, and three VMs are using the bridge. Two
of the VMs are running Debian, one is running Windoze 7.
CPU load caused by the qemu-kvm processes is way higher tha
Nikolaos Milas wrote:
On 2/6/2017 2:05 μμ, hw wrote:
That´s a good thing, though it can be difficult to run systems
using ancient software.
You may want to check the following paradigm (from another open source
perl-based application) to create a Perl environment within your system
Hi,
should NUMA be enabled in the BIOS of a server that has
two sockets but only a single CPU in one of the sockets?
From what I´ve been reading, it is unclear to me if NUMA
should be enabled only on systems with multiple CPUs in
multiple sockets or if multiple cores of a single CPU in
a single
Warren Young wrote:
On Jun 2, 2017, at 5:05 AM, hw wrote:
Warren Young wrote:
There are various options. We use mod_fcgid + Plack here.
I need to look into that when I have time.
I wonder if it wouldn’t have been faster to just backport the app to Perl 5.16?
How hard could it be
Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 06/02/2017 04:32 AM, hw wrote:
What may cause the high CPU load?
Offhand, it's hard to say. I don't see similar behavior. Can you post the libvirt XML
definitions for those VMs somewhere? pastebin maybe? What's the output of "rpm -qa
qemu\*
Hi,
how can I force the Centos 7 installer to use the particular
sunit and swidth values that are matching the hardware raid
device I´m installing on?
The installer forces me to reformat the partition I want to
install on :( It does not let me specify any options about
creating the file system
Matthew Miller wrote:
Please take a look at
http://www.itworld.com/article/3211046/linux/red-hats-boltron-snaps-together-a-modular-linux-server.html
and
https://fedoramagazine.org/announcing-boltron/
which has a walkthrough questionnaire at the bottom. Your feedback very
appreciated.
What´
Matthew Miller wrote:
On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 06:13:42PM +0200, hw wrote:
What?s the point of doing this with Fedora? It?s not like bugs
were fixed before Fedora is EOL and all reports are forgotten.
Many bugs are fixed in Fedora. Many more bugs are fixed in the
upstreams. Please remember
Phil Perry wrote:
However, I´m seeing the same bugs from years ago still unfixed in Centos.
That refers to libreoffice being unusably slow. This still doesn´t seem
to be fixed for Fedora, either, because it went EOL --- but I don´t know.
Agree on that. My previous 10 year old el5 install ran
Matthew Miller wrote:
On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 10:11:53PM +0100, Phil Perry wrote:
The issue I have here is even if I did file a bug, and the issue
were fixed, no sooner than it's fixed fedora updates to the next
version and introduces a whole bunch of new bugs, and so the cycle
continues. I play
Johnny Hughes wrote:
I personally have a Fedora machine that I keep updated and do some work
on all the time learning/testing. I just seamlessly upgraded it from
Fedora 25 to Fedora 26 using a couple of dnf commands .. awesome
experience actually.
Don´t get me started on Fedora updates. One o
Jonathan Billings wrote:
On Jul 28, 2017, at 1:56 PM, hw wrote:
Many bugs are fixed in Fedora. Many more bugs are fixed in the
upstreams. Please remember that Fedora is primarily an *integration*
project, and the best way to get bugs fixed is for the developers of
the code in question to be
Jonathan Billings wrote:
On Jul 28, 2017, at 1:56 PM, hw wrote:
Are you sure that all the added complexity and implicitly giving up a
stable platform by providing a mess of package versions is worth it? How
are the plans about dealing with bug reports, say, for squid 2.7, for
those who need
Matthew Miller wrote:
On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 07:56:41PM +0200, hw wrote:
Sure is: You get to manage your distribution yourself by picking the
versions of packages you figure might work together, which you are
supposed and required to do with Gentoo, especially when you run into
yet another
Warren Young wrote:
On Jul 28, 2017, at 11:56 AM, hw wrote:
Matthew Miller wrote:
On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 06:13:42PM +0200, hw wrote:
What?s the point of doing this with Fedora? It?s not like bugs
were fixed before Fedora is EOL and all reports are forgotten.
Many bugs are fixed in
that, but it didn´t have containers.
Why hasn´t a container manager like that already been invented? Or has it?
Wouldn´t it be much better being able to do this without needing containers?
Matthew Miller wrote:
On Wed, Aug 02, 2017 at 03:40:42PM +0200, hw wrote:
No, this isn't it it all. Mo
Mark Haney wrote:
On 08/02/2017 07:36 AM, hw wrote:
Don´t get me started on Fedora updates. One of the reasons to deprecate
Fedora was that upgrading had turned out to be unreliable and mostly
failing. Not being able to reliably upgrade disqualifies any distribution.
I hate to break it to
Matthew Miller wrote:
On Wed, Aug 02, 2017 at 02:04:54PM +0200, hw wrote:
Just wait and see how he will like the feedback he?s getting here ...
Trolling aside (fascist? really?), I've gotten valuable feedback from
several people which I really appreciate. I intend to continue to
engage
Mark Haney wrote:
On 08/02/2017 08:27 AM, hw wrote:
Jonathan Billings wrote:
I’m confused, are you talking about Gentoo, Fedora, CentOS or RHEL?
I´m talking about Centos here and am referring to experiences with other
distributions at the same time.
Like Gentoo is great but horrible to
Mark Haney wrote:
On 08/02/2017 10:57 AM, hw wrote:
It probably makes sense under the assumption that you do pretty much
everything in one container or another and that it doesn´t bother you
having to switch between all the containers to do something. That would
require something like a
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
So, I've mentioned that I've got an original netbook, circa 2009, and I'm
going to put CentOS on it. 32 bit. Not huge disk, old Atom processor, not
tons of memory. Any recommendations for a light-weight window manager?
Before I went to KDE, I used fvwm2, and all I'm going
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
I am building a new system using an Kingston 240GB SSD drive I pulled from my
notebook (when I had to upgrade to a 500GB SSD drive). Centos install went
fine and ran for a couple days then got errors on the console. Here is an
example:
[168176.995064] sd 0:0:0:0: [sd
Virus-free.
www.avast.com
<https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail&utm_term=link>
<#DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2>
On Wed, Aug 9, 2017 at 1:48 PM, hw wrote:
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
I am building
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
On 08/09/2017 01:48 PM, hw wrote:
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
I am building a new system using an Kingston 240GB SSD drive I pulled from my
notebook (when I had to upgrade to a 500GB SSD drive). Centos install went
fine and ran for a couple days then got errors on the
/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail&utm_term=icon
Virus-free.
www.avast.com
<
https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail&utm_term=link
<
Chris Murphy wrote:
Changing the subject since this is rather Btrfs specific now.
On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 5:41 AM, hw wrote:
Chris Murphy wrote:
On Wed, Aug 9, 2017, 11:55 AM Mark Haney wrote:
To be honest, I'd not try a btrfs volume on a notebook SSD. I did that on
a
couple of sy
Mark Haney wrote:
On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 1:00 PM, Chris Murphy
wrote:
Changing the subject since this is rather Btrfs specific now.
Sounds like a hardware problem. Btrfs is explicitly optimized for SSD,
the
maintainers worked for FusionIO for several years of its development. If
the dr
Warren Young wrote:
[...]
What do they suggest as a replacement?
Stratis: https://stratis-storage.github.io/StratisSoftwareDesign.pdf
Can I use that now?
The main downside to Stratis I see is that it looks like 1.0 is scheduled to
coincide with RHEL 8, based on the release dates of RHELs
Hi,
how do I connect to a VM running on a removte machine with some
sort of spice client? There doesn´t seem to be any spice client
available in Centos 7 that works.
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Felipe Salvador wrote:
On Wed, Aug 30, 2017 at 04:55:45PM +0200, hw wrote:
Hi,
how do I connect to a VM running on a removte machine with some
sort of spice client? There doesn´t seem to be any spice client
available in Centos 7 that works.
virt-viewer?
That only says it´s unable to
ke that decision for me, it needs to be fixed.
virt-viewer --connect qemu+ssh:///system
Regards,
Milos.
Quoting hw :
Felipe Salvador wrote:
On Wed, Aug 30, 2017 at 04:55:45PM +0200, hw wrote:
Hi,
how do I connect to a VM running on a removte machine with some
sort of spice client? Ther
Felipe Salvador wrote:
On Wed, Aug 30, 2017 at 08:05:18PM +0200, hw wrote:
In this case, no encryption is needed. That is my decision, and if spice thinks
it could make that decision for me, it needs to be fixed.
So I think you can replace
virt-viewer --connect qemu+ssh:///system
with[1
Hi,
is there a way to set multiple selinux attributes to files/directories?
I would like to share /var/spool/cups-pdf/SPOOL/, which has
'system_u:object_r:print_spool_t:s0' and would also need
'system_u:object_r:samba_share_t:s0'.
The point is that there will be files accumulating that only n
Kenneth Porter wrote:
On 9/6/2017 3:45 AM, ken wrote:
I think it would also be a disservice to users, for case-insensitive userids is
not what they'll find on web sites and web services throughout the rest of the
world, even on their own phones.
I agree with you on other points, but beware o
Hi,
is there anything that speaks against putting a cyrus mail spool onto a
btrfs subvolume?
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Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 09/07/2017 08:11 AM, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
This was always
problematic because DNS hostnames and email addresses in the RFC
standards were case insensitive
Not quite. SMTP is required to treat the "local-part" of the RCPT argument as
case-sensitive, and to pre
Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On 7 September 2017 at 16:07, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
Am 07.09.2017 um 20:07 schrieb hw:
Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 09/07/2017 08:11 AM, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
This was always
problematic because DNS hostnames and email addresses in the RFC
standards were
Alexander Dalloz wrote:
Am 07.09.2017 um 20:07 schrieb hw:
Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 09/07/2017 08:11 AM, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
This was always
problematic because DNS hostnames and email addresses in the RFC
standards were case insensitive
Not quite. SMTP is required to treat the
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/07/2017 01:57 PM, hw wrote:
Hi,
is there anything that speaks against putting a cyrus mail spool onto a
btrfs subvolume?
I might be the lone voice on this, but I refuse to use btrfs for anything, much
less a mail spool. I used it in production on DB and Web servers
alternative.
hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/07/2017 01:57 PM, hw wrote:
Hi,
is there anything that speaks against putting a cyrus mail spool onto a
btrfs subvolume?
I might be the lone voice on this, but I refuse to use btrfs for anything, much
less a mail spool. I used it in production
Matty wrote:
I think it depends on who you ask. Facebook and Netflix are using it
extensively in production:
https://www.linux.com/news/learn/intro-to-linux/how-facebook-uses-linux-and-btrfs-interview-chris-mason
Though they have the in-house kernel engineering resources to
troubleshoot problem
cause that just sucks. It wouldn´t even have any
advantage
in this case.
On 09/08/2017 08:07 AM, hw wrote:
PS:
What kind of storage solutions do people use for cyrus mail spools? Apparently
you can not use remote storage, at least not NFS. That even makes it difficult
to use a VM due to l
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
BTRFS isn't going to impact I/O any more significantly than, say, XFS.
But mdadm does, the impact is severe. I know there are ppl saying
otherwise, but I´ve seen the impact myself, and I definitely don´t want
it on that particular s
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/08/2017 09:49 AM, hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
I hate top posting, but since you've got two items I want to comment on, I'll
suck it up for now.
I do, too, yet sometimes it´s reasonable. I also hate it when the lines
are too long :)
I'm afraid you&
Valeri Galtsev wrote:
On Fri, September 8, 2017 9:48 am, hw wrote:
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
BTRFS isn't going to impact I/O any more significantly than, say, XFS.
But mdadm does, the impact is severe. I know there are ppl saying
otherwise, but I´ve see
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/08/2017 09:49 AM, hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
It depends, i. e. I can´t tell how these SSDs would behave if large
amounts of data would be written and/or read to/from them over extended
periods of time because I haven´t tested that. That isn
Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
Le 09/09/2017 à 15:14, Robert Nichols a écrit :
Every system that runs continuously for more that a few days will have
some pages that were used once when some long-running process started
and were never referenced again. Those pages will eventually migrate out
to swap, and
John R Pierce wrote:
And one may want to adjust stripe size to be resembling SSDs
internals, as default is for hard drives, right?
as the SSD physical data blocks have no visible relation to logical block
numbers or CHS, its not practical to do this. I'd use a fairly large stripe
size, like
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/08/2017 09:49 AM, hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
Probably with the very expensive SSDs suited for this ...
That´s because I do not store data on a single disk, without
redundancy, and the SSDs I have are not suitable for hardware
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/08/2017 01:31 PM, hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
I/O is not heavy in that sense, that´s why I said that´s not the application.
There is I/O which, as tests have shown, benefits greatly from low latency,
which
is where the idea to use SSDs for the relevant data has arisen
Valeri Galtsev wrote:
Thanks. That seems to clear fog a little bit. I still would like to hear
manufacturers/models here. My choices would be: Areca or LSI (bought out
by Intel, so former LSI chipset and microcode/firmware) and as SSD Samsung
Evo SATA III. Does anyone who used these in hardware R
Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 09/08/2017 11:06 AM, hw wrote:
Make a test and replace a software RAID5 with a hardware RAID5. Even with
only 4 disks, you will see an overall performance gain. I´m guessing that
the SATA controllers they put onto the mainboards are not designed to handle
all the data
Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 09/07/2017 12:57 PM, hw wrote:
Hi,
is there anything that speaks against putting a cyrus mail spool onto a
btrfs subvolume?
This is what Red Hat says about btrfs:
The Btrfs file system has been in Technology Preview state since the
initial release of Red Hat
John R Pierce wrote:
On 9/9/2017 9:47 AM, hw wrote:
Isn´t it easier for SSDs to write small chunks of data at a time?
The small chunk might fit into some free space more easily than
a large one which needs to be spread out all over the place.
the SSD collects data blocks being written and
Hi,
https://ctan.org/tex-archive/graphics/pstricks/contrib/pst-barcode/
says that pst-barcode is included in texlive.
I installed texlive, and it can´t find pst-barcode.sty. Is that a
bug in the packaging Centos does, or is texlive in Centos some
derelict version?
_
Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On 13 September 2017 at 09:25, hw wrote:
John R Pierce wrote:
On 9/9/2017 9:47 AM, hw wrote:
Isn´t it easier for SSDs to write small chunks of data at a time?
The small chunk might fit into some free space more easily than
a large one which needs to be spread
Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On 13 September 2017 at 11:42, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 09/13/2017 10:28 AM, hw wrote:
Hi,
https://ctan.org/tex-archive/graphics/pstricks/contrib/pst-barcode/
says that pst-barcode is included in texlive.
I installed texlive, and it can´t find pst-barcode.sty
Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On 13 September 2017 at 12:00, hw wrote:
It will depend on the type of SSD. Ones with large cache and various
smarts (SAS Enterprise type) can take many different sizes. For SATA
ones it depends on what the cache and write of the SSD is and very few
of them seem
Hi,
is there a way to get error messages created by CGI perl programs (not fastCGI)
logged with lighttpd? Apache used to put all errors into its error log and
lighttpd does not. That makes debugging rather difficult.
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hw wrote:
Hi,
is there a way to get error messages created by CGI perl programs (not fastCGI)
logged with lighttpd? Apache used to put all errors into its error log and
lighttpd does not. That makes debugging rather difficult.
For the record:
https://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd
Hi,
how do I allow CGI programs to print (using 'lpr -P some-printer
some-file.pdf') when
lighttpd is being used for a web server?
When selinux is permissive, the printer prints; when it´s enforcing, the printer
does not print, and I´m getting the log message '/bin/lpr: Permission denied'.
'g
Hi,
are there other things than disk I/O that may cause waitstates (as shown by
top, for example)?
What about network traffic?
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hw wrote:
Hi,
how do I allow CGI programs to print (using 'lpr -P some-printer
some-file.pdf') when
lighttpd is being used for a web server?
When selinux is permissive, the printer prints; when it´s enforcing, the printer
does not print, and I´m getting the log message '/bin/
Hi,
xfs is supposed to detect the layout of a md-RAID devices when creating the
file system, but it doesn´t seem to do that:
# cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md10 : active raid1 sde[1] sdd[0]
499976512 blocks super 1.2 [2/2] [UU]
bitmap: 0/4 pages [0KB], 65536KB chunk
#
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
I upgraded from 7.3 to 7.4 over the weekend. Everything went well
except that I can't login because the screen is black with a cursor.
If reboot boot the 7.3 kernel 3.10.0-514.26.2.el7.x86_64 kernel
everything works just fine, so my guess is that there's a kernel issue
Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On 20 September 2017 at 10:47, hw wrote:
Hi,
xfs is supposed to detect the layout of a md-RAID devices when creating the
file system, but it doesn´t seem to do that:
# cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md10 : active raid1 sde[1] sdd[0]
499976512
Chris Adams wrote:
Once upon a time, hw said:
xfs is supposed to detect the layout of a md-RAID devices when creating the
file system, but it doesn´t seem to do that:
# cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md10 : active raid1 sde[1] sdd[0]
499976512 blocks super 1.2 [2/2] [UU
Hi,
what keeps deleting files and directories under /var/run? Having them deleted
is extremely annoying because after a reboot, things are suddenly broken because
services don´t start.
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Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 09/20/2017 07:19 AM, hw wrote:
hw wrote:
Hi,
how do I allow CGI programs to print (using 'lpr -P some-printer
some-file.pdf') when
lighttpd is being used for a web server?
When selinux is permissive, the printer prints; when it´s enforcing,
the printer
does
as denied -- which I already
found out --- and I don´t have any idea how to allow it.
hw wrote:
Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 09/20/2017 07:19 AM, hw wrote:
hw wrote:
Hi,
how do I allow CGI programs to print (using 'lpr -P some-printer
some-file.pdf') when
lighttpd is being used for
Daniel Walsh wrote:
On 09/22/2017 06:58 AM, hw wrote:
PS: Now I found this:
type=PROCTITLE msg=audit(09/22/2017 12:08:29.911:1023) :
proctitle=/usr/lib/sendmail -t -oi -oem -fwawi-genimp
type=SYSCALL msg=audit(09/22/2017 12:08:29.911:1023) : arch=x86_64
syscall=setgroups success=no exit
Jim Perrin wrote:
Last week we noticed that the default scheduler isn't being set properly
in CentOS 7. I haven't checked this for CentOS 6, but it might be worth
exploring.
The TL;DR is unless you're running CentOS 7 on a laptop or as a virtual
guest, you should probably run 'tuned-adm profile
Hi,
how do I allow lighttpd access to a directory like this:
dr-xrwxr-x. lighttpd example unconfined_u:object_r:samba_share_t:s0
files_articles
I tried to create and install a selinux module, and it didn´t work.
The non-working module can not be removed, either:
semodule -r lighttpd-files_ar
Jim Perrin writes:
> [...]
> The change is immediate, however some processes may need to be restarted.
>
>> For example, 'virtual-host' is a good choice during the day when the server
>> is being used while 'balanced' --- or even 'powersave' --- could be used at
>> night when the server is idle.
Hi,
is there a way to set the I/O scheduler via a tuned profile?
If so, can the scheduler be set for different disks individually?
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m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Hi, folks,
Well, still more fun (for values of fun approaching zero):
1. Went to install CUDA 9.0... well, gee, there is *no* CUDA 9.0.
Even though I installed the 9 repo, all that I get is 8. I've
used their webform, and an waiting on a reply.
2
Roman Kennke writes:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to get MP4/H.264 playback in Firefox to work on my CentOS
> laptop (for vimeo).
>
> I installed the gstreamer plugins as described here:
>
> https://wiki.centos.org/TipsAndTricks/MultimediaOnCentOS7
>
> (No, I did not install Flash, VLC and all the ot
m.r...@5-cent.us writes:
> Original Message
> Subject: Re: [HEADS UP] Default value of SELinux boolean
> httpd_graceful_shutdown will changed.
> From:"Lukas Vrabec"
> Date:Fri, September 29, 2017 10:26
> To: de...@lists.fedora
Hi,
how can I prevent files/directories like /var/run/mariadb from being
deleted on reboot? Lighttpd has the same problem.
This breaks services and makes servers non-restartable by anyone else
but the administrator who needs to re-create the needed files and
directories every time and has to fig
Hi,
is there a way in Centos to find out if the Intel turbo mode will be
used?
Using the 'stress' utility and checking the frequency with cpupower
tells me that a CPU is running at it´s maximum frequency as reported by
cpupower --- and this frequency is less than the frequency it would run
at if
Hi,
HP says that what they call "NUMA split mode" should be disabled in the
BIOS of the Z800 workstation when running Linux. They are reasoning
that Linux kernels do not support this feature and even might not boot
if it´s enabled.
Since it apparently was years ago since they made this statement
John R Pierce writes:
> On 10/1/2017 8:38 AM, hw wrote:
>> HP says that what they call "NUMA split mode" should be disabled in the
>> BIOS of the Z800 workstation when running Linux. They are reasoning
>> that Linux kernels do not support this feature and even mi
John R Pierce writes:
> On 10/1/2017 9:10 PM, hw wrote:
>> I´m trying to download the PDF you pointed me to, but the download is
>> stalled. I´m running Centos 7.4, but perhaps there´s an explanation
>> in the PDF that might tell me what NUMA split mode is supposed to be.
Alexander Dalloz writes:
> Am 01.10.2017 um 17:21 schrieb hw:
>> Hi,
>>
>> how can I prevent files/directories like /var/run/mariadb from being
>> deleted on reboot? Lighttpd has the same problem.
>>
>> This breaks services and makes servers no
marcos valentine writes:
> You can try chattr?
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chattr
Wow, I never needed/used that. Being able to make files undeletable
might be a very useful thing ...
--
"Didn't work" is an error.
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Stephen John Smoogen writes:
> On 1 October 2017 at 11:34, hw wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> is there a way in Centos to find out if the Intel turbo mode will be
>> used?
>>
>> Using the 'stress' utility and checking the frequency with cpupower
>> t
Jose Maria Terry Jimenez wrote:
El 4/10/17 a las 17:45, david escribió:
Folks
A have a PCIe modem (Conexant ChipSet, PCI id = 14f1:2f83. It interfaces to my land-line
(POTS) telephone line in the United States. On Windows, I had a good answering machine
package (Ventafax) that reported Cal
Mark Haney writes:
> On 10/03/2017 01:12 PM, hw wrote:
>>
>>> See
>>>
>>> https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2016/09/20/managing-temporary-files-with-systemd-tmpfiles-on-rhel7/
>>>
>>> how to manage tmpfiles.
>> Thanks, I´ll look
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