On Tue, 16 Sep 2014 22:43:18 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Puppet seems to me a good product for a large site with 1000 hosts.
Not so much for ~20 or so. Plus puppet's language and configs get large
and hard to keep track of - lots and lots of directory trees with many
things mentioning other
On 17/09/14 03:01, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
On 09/16/2014 03:14 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
For some reason xfce-power-manager-1.3.1 does not satisfy what the local
install needs but 1.3.0 does. So portage wants to make it so.
Version 1.3.1 was removed from the tree, leaving only 1.3.0 to
On 2014-09-16 22:43, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Anyone here used ansible and at least one of puppet/chef?
What are your thoughts?
I've made several attempts over the years to get puppet going but never
really got it off the ground. Chef I stay away from (likely due to the
first demo of it I saw and
On 17/09/2014 03:30, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
We use bcfg2, and all I can say is to stay away. XML abuse runs rampant
in bcfg2. From what I've heard from other professional sysadmins, Puppet
is the favorite, but that's mostly conjecture.
XML. Ugh. OSSEC works like that too. The software itself
On Tuesday, September 16, 2014 10:43:18 PM Alan McKinnon wrote:
Anyone here used ansible and at least one of puppet/chef?
What are your thoughts?
I've made several attempts over the years to get puppet going but never
really got it off the ground. Chef I stay away from (likely due to the
On Tuesday, September 16, 2014 07:07:38 PM James wrote:
Hello,
By now many are familiar with my keen interest in clustering gentoo
systems. So, what most cluster technologies use is a distributed file
system on top of the local (HD/SDD) file system. Naturally not
all file systems,
On Monday, September 15, 2014 06:31:26 PM James wrote:
James wireless at tampabay.rr.com writes:
Any brave souls put FhGFS on a gentoo system?
Oops, I forgot the most interesting link of all. [1]
James
[1] http://moo.nac.uci.edu/~hjm/fhgfs_vs_gluster.html
I got a 404-error on this
On Monday, September 15, 2014 06:12:15 PM James wrote:
Howdy,
Any brave souls put FhGFS on a gentoo system? [1] It's a distributed File
System and some run it on top of ZFS or EXT4 or BTRFS, with
very positive results. It is in the process of going open source
from what I've read about.
On 17/09/2014 07:46, Hans de Graaff wrote:
On Tue, 16 Sep 2014 22:43:18 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Puppet seems to me a good product for a large site with 1000 hosts.
Not so much for ~20 or so. Plus puppet's language and configs get large
and hard to keep track of - lots and lots of
On 17/09/2014 09:07, Tomas Mozes wrote:
On 2014-09-16 22:43, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Anyone here used ansible and at least one of puppet/chef?
What are your thoughts?
I've made several attempts over the years to get puppet going but never
really got it off the ground. Chef I stay away from
On 17/09/2014 09:34, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Tuesday, September 16, 2014 10:43:18 PM Alan McKinnon wrote:
Anyone here used ansible and at least one of puppet/chef?
What are your thoughts?
I've made several attempts over the years to get puppet going but never
really got it off the ground.
On Tue, 16 Sep 2014 19:30:36 -0600, Joseph wrote:
I'm trying to backup crontab from various boxes to files, so I'm using
(run once a month) 11 01 * * 5 crontab -l
/home/joseph/business/backup/crontabs/syscon7_joseph_crontab
but I can from bash: cannot overwrite existing file
Do you have
On Wed, 17 Sep 2014 03:40:37 + (UTC), James wrote:
You can often do it without touching the ebuild at all by putting
post_src_unpack() {
cd ${S}
epatch_user
}
in /etc/portage/env/category/package[-version]
Nice trick to know. But,
I do not have an
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 10:12:52 AM Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 17/09/2014 09:34, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Tuesday, September 16, 2014 10:43:18 PM Alan McKinnon wrote:
Anyone here used ansible and at least one of puppet/chef?
What are your thoughts?
I've made several attempts
On Tue, Sep 16, 2014 at 10:43:18PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Puppet seems to me a good product for a large site with 1000 hosts.
Not so much for ~20 or so.
I find that for a few machines, puppet is overkill. For a lot of
machines, puppet can become unmanageable - with puppet master and
Hi,
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to allow for reverse tethering
from my (rooted) Android phone?
Many thanks for a hint,
Helmut
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 12:19:37 PM Eray Aslan wrote:
On Tue, Sep 16, 2014 at 10:43:18PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Puppet seems to me a good product for a large site with 1000 hosts.
Not so much for ~20 or so.
I find that for a few machines, puppet is overkill. For a lot of
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:24:36 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to allow for reverse tethering
from my (rooted) Android phone?
Many thanks for a hint,
Helmut
What do you mean with reverse tethering?
That your mobile uses the network
On 09/17/2014 11:43:28 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:24:36 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to allow for reverse
tethering
from my (rooted) Android phone?
Many thanks for a hint,
Helmut
What do you mean with reverse
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:46:12 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 09/17/2014 11:43:28 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:24:36 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to allow for reverse
tethering
from my
On 09/17/2014 11:50:58 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:46:12 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 09/17/2014 11:43:28 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:24:36 AM Helmut Jarausch
wrote:
Hi,
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:53:52 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 09/17/2014 11:50:58 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:46:12 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 09/17/2014 11:43:28 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:24:36 AM Helmut
On Wed, 17 September 2014, at 10:53 am, Helmut Jarausch
jarau...@igpm.rwth-aachen.de wrote:
…
My mobile should be able to use the (wired) network connection of my Gentoo
box.
My GenToo box doesn't have a wireless card.
I'd like to connect my mobile to the USB port of my Gentoo box and
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 12:05:37 PM Stroller wrote:
On Wed, 17 September 2014, at 10:53 am, Helmut Jarausch jarau...@igpm.rwth-
aachen.de wrote:
…
My mobile should be able to use the (wired) network connection of my
Gentoo box.
My GenToo box doesn't have a wireless card.
On Wednesday 17 Sep 2014 11:14:28 J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:53:52 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 09/17/2014 11:50:58 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 11:46:12 AM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 09/17/2014 11:43:28 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On 17/09/2014 11:34, J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 12:19:37 PM Eray Aslan wrote:
On Tue, Sep 16, 2014 at 10:43:18PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Puppet seems to me a good product for a large site with 1000 hosts.
Not so much for ~20 or so.
I find that for a few
Helmut Jarausch jarausch at igpm.rwth-aachen.de writes:
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to allow for reverse
tethering from my (rooted) Android phone?
PPP over usb is the most probable route. PPP is basically
TCP/IP (usually over a serial link/prototol_carrier).
This might
On 2014-09-17 14:07, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Nagios btw has the same problem hence why I'm switching to Icinga 2
which fixes Nagios's config language once and for all.
Or you can use hostgroups/templates and have all your configuration in
files and in git. Depends what you like more.
On 2014-09-17 10:08, Alan McKinnon wrote:
That's almost exactly the same setup I have in mind.
How complex do the playbooks get in real-life?
The common role has about 70 tasks. It does almost everything covered in
the handbook plus installs and configures additional stuff like postfix,
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Samuli Suominen ssuomi...@gentoo.org wrote:
On 17/09/14 03:01, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
On 09/16/2014 03:14 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
For some reason xfce-power-manager-1.3.1 does not satisfy what the local
install needs but 1.3.0 does. So portage wants to make
On 17/09/2014 14:46, Tomas Mozes wrote:
On 2014-09-17 10:08, Alan McKinnon wrote:
That's almost exactly the same setup I have in mind.
How complex do the playbooks get in real-life?
The common role has about 70 tasks. It does almost everything covered in
the handbook plus installs and
On Wednesday 17 Sep 2014 13:31:53 James wrote:
Helmut Jarausch jarausch at igpm.rwth-aachen.de writes:
how do I need to configure my Gentoo box to allow for reverse
tethering from my (rooted) Android phone?
PPP over usb is the most probable route. PPP is basically
TCP/IP
On 17/09/14 16:16, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Samuli Suominen ssuomi...@gentoo.org wrote:
On 17/09/14 03:01, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
On 09/16/2014 03:14 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
For some reason xfce-power-manager-1.3.1 does not satisfy what the local
install
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 5:07 PM, Samuli Suominen ssuomi...@gentoo.org wrote:
On 17/09/14 16:16, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Samuli Suominen ssuomi...@gentoo.org
wrote:
On 17/09/14 03:01, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
On 09/16/2014 03:14 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
For
J. Roeleveld joost at antarean.org writes:
Distributed File Systems (DFS):
Local (Device) File Systems LFS:
Is my understanding correct that the top list all require one of
the bottom list?
Eg. the clustering FSs only ensure the files on the LFSs are
duplicated/spread over the
This is highly off-topic, and systemd-related, so if you don't want
your breakfast with a healthy amount of flames, skip it.
iTWire posted an interview with Linus Torvalds[1], where the Big
Penguin himself gave a succinct and pretty fair opinion on systemd.
The gist of it can be resumed in two
Le 16/09/2014 21:07, James a écrit :
By now many are familiar with my keen interest in clustering gentoo
systems. So, what most cluster technologies use is a distributed file
system on top of the local (HD/SDD) file system. Naturally not
all file systems, particularly the distributed file
On 17 September 2014 20:10:57 CEST, Hervé Guillemet he...@guillemet.org
wrote:
Le 16/09/2014 21:07, James a écrit :
By now many are familiar with my keen interest in clustering gentoo
systems. So, what most cluster technologies use is a distributed file
system on top of the local (HD/SDD)
Am 17.09.2014 um 18:06 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
This is highly off-topic, and systemd-related, so if you don't want
your breakfast with a healthy amount of flames, skip it.
iTWire posted an interview with Linus Torvalds[1], where the Big
Penguin himself gave a succinct and pretty fair
Am 17.09.2014 um 18:06 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
This is highly off-topic, and systemd-related, so if you don't want
your breakfast with a healthy amount of flames, skip it.
iTWire posted an interview with Linus Torvalds[1], where the Big
Penguin himself gave a succinct and pretty fair
On 09/17/14 20:36, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
[snip]
It's an interesting read; I highly recommend it.
[1]
http://www.itwire.com/business-it-news/open-source/65402-torvalds-says-he-has-no-strong-opinions-on-systemd
Now you use this to advertise for systemd?
Systemd fanbois are becoming
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 1:36 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
[snip]
Now you use this to advertise for systemd?
Systemd fanbois are becoming more and more desperate.
So, systemd is used (or it has been announced that is going to be
used) by default in all the major
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:02 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 1:36 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
[snip]
Now you use this to advertise for systemd?
Systemd fanbois are becoming more and more desperate.
So, systemd is used (or it has been announced
Canek Peláez Valdés caneko at gmail.com writes:
This is highly off-topic, and systemd-related, so if you don't want
your breakfast with a healthy amount of flames, skip it.
I think this is very much on Topic.
iTWire posted an interview with Linus Torvalds[1], where the Big
Penguin himself
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 03:55:56 PM James wrote:
J. Roeleveld joost at antarean.org writes:
Distributed File Systems (DFS):
Local (Device) File Systems LFS:
Is my understanding correct that the top list all require one of
the bottom list?
Eg. the clustering FSs only
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 2:27 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:02 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 1:36 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
[snip]
Now you use this to advertise for systemd?
Systemd
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 3:28 PM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Linus should make a clear, leadership statement that there will
always be a path for folks to use another mechanism besides systemd
in the linux kernel; This does not have to be a systemd vs cgroups
discussion, but it
As far as HDFS goes, I would only set that up if you will use it for
Hadoop or related tools. It's highly specific, and the performance is
not good unless you're doing a massively parallel read (what it was
designed for). I can elaborate why if anyone is actually interested.
We use Lustre for our
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:52 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 2:27 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:02 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 1:36 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
[snip]
Now
Today
EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS=--ask --deep --tree --verbose --jobs --load-average=5
emerge --keep-going --update --changed-use @world
generated
Calculating dependencies... done!
[ebuild R] x11-drivers/xf86-video-intel-2.21.15 USE=dri glamor* sna
udev -uxa -xvmc 1,932 kB
[ebuild N ]
Alec Ten Harmsel alec at alectenharmsel.com writes:
As far as HDFS goes, I would only set that up if you will use it for
Hadoop or related tools. It's highly specific, and the performance is
not good unless you're doing a massively parallel read (what it was
designed for). I can elaborate
On Sep 18, 2014 2:37 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann volkerar...@googlemail.com
wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 18:06 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
This is highly off-topic, and systemd-related, so if you don't want
your breakfast with a healthy amount of flames, skip it.
iTWire posted an interview with
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 3:43 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:52 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 2:27 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:02 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep
J. Roeleveld joost at antarean.org writes:
AFS has caching and can survive temporary disappearance of the server.
Excellent for low bandwidth connections. Most DFS have mechanisms to
deal with transient failures, but not as generaous on the time-scale
as AFS. I believe, if I recall correctly,
Rich Freeman rich0 at gentoo.org writes:
Uh, the only thing the Linux kernel does is spawn a single process as
PID 1 and offer a VERY STABLE system call interface for that and
future processes to make requests. Nobody is going to break sysvinit
if that happens to be the thing you tell Linux
On Wednesday 17 Sep 2014 22:03:14 Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
Yeah. So it happened with XFree86, aRts, esd, gnome-vfs, DCOP,
sendmail,
Aheam! Excuse me, but there's nothing wrong with sendmail! :-p
--
Regards,
Mick
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
On Sep 18, 2014 5:19 AM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Rich Freeman rich0 at gentoo.org writes:
Uh, the only thing the Linux kernel does is spawn a single process as
PID 1 and offer a VERY STABLE system call interface for that and
future processes to make requests. Nobody is
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
Publish perfomanced metrics; Choice; Unreasonable?
The classic open source answer to being told to do a lot of
work on publicly available data is
I'm sorry, I must have missed your link to the published data?
Sure it exist and I have just
On Sep 18, 2014 5:36 AM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
Publish perfomanced metrics; Choice; Unreasonable?
The classic open source answer to being told to do a lot of
work on publicly available data is
I'm sorry, I must have
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
Publish perfomanced metrics; Choice; Unreasonable?
The classic open source answer to being told to do a lot of
work on publicly available data
Ah, here is some of the tesing you are referring to?
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 5:46 AM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
Publish perfomanced metrics; Choice; Unreasonable?
The classic open source answer to being told to do a lot of
work on publicly available data
Ah, here is some of
Am 17.09.2014 um 23:03 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 3:43 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:52 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 2:27 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am
Am 17.09.2014 um 22:58 schrieb Mark David Dumlao:
On Sep 18, 2014 2:37 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com mailto:volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 18:06 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
This is highly off-topic, and systemd-related, so if you don't want
Am 17.09.2014 um 23:42 schrieb Mark David Dumlao:
On Sep 18, 2014 5:36 AM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com
mailto:wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com http://gmail.com writes:
Publish perfomanced metrics; Choice; Unreasonable?
The classic open
I like to use meld to copy file but meld does now preserve ownership of the
file that it copy.
rsyc does but how do I use rysnc to copy let say file that are newer then
certain date ?
I was trying to use:
find /home/myuser/oldir/* -mtime -60 -exec cp {} /home/myuser/newdir/ \;
but cp does not
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 6:41 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 23:42 schrieb Mark David Dumlao:
On Sep 18, 2014 5:36 AM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
Publish perfomanced metrics;
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
perfomanced metrics; Choice; Unreasonable?
work on publicly available data
Ah, here is some of the tesing you are referring
to?http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2014-March/017570.html
My position is that you're an idiot
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 5:18 PM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Rich Freeman rich0 at gentoo.org writes:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 3:28 PM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com
wrote:
Linus should make a clear, leadership statement that there will
always be a path for folks to use another
Joseph wrote:
I like to use meld to copy file but meld does now preserve ownership of
the file that it copy. rsyc does but how do I use rysnc to copy let say
file that are newer then certain date ?
I was trying to use:
find /home/myuser/oldir/* -mtime -60 -exec cp {} /home/myuser/newdir/
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 7:11 AM, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao madumlao at gmail.com writes:
You're the only one in this thread that's imposing on everyone
to produce anything. You're the only one in this thread that
SHOULD be producing anything. That's how open
On 09/18/14 02:14, Jouni Kosonen wrote:
Joseph wrote:
I like to use meld to copy file but meld does now preserve ownership of
the file that it copy. rsyc does but how do I use rysnc to copy let say
file that are newer then certain date ?
I was trying to use:
find /home/myuser/oldir/* -mtime
Mark David Dumlao wrote:
The code is out there. Freely available. Both systemd and sysvinit.
If you wanted to measure both, you could, literally, in the time it
took since you first posted in this thread till now you could have
measured several times and left mean comments about whichever
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 8:12 PM, Alec Ten Harmsel
a...@alectenharmsel.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao wrote:
The code is out there. Freely available. Both systemd and sysvinit.
If you wanted to measure both, you could, literally, in the time it
took since you first posted in this thread till now
On Wed, Sep 17 2014, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Wed, 17 Sep 2014 16:51:17 -0400, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
The following USE changes are necessary to proceed:
(see package.use in the portage(5) man page for more details)
# required by x11-libs/glamor-0.6.0
# required by
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 8:54 AM, Rich Freeman ri...@gentoo.org wrote:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 8:12 PM, Alec Ten Harmsel
a...@alectenharmsel.com wrote:
Mark David Dumlao wrote:
The code is out there. Freely available. Both systemd and sysvinit.
If you wanted to measure both, you could,
I'm trying to track down a bad bug in dhcpcd-6.4.4, so (unlike most days ;) I'm
paying close attention to the output of journalctl.
The confusing part is that the output of journalctl is *very* different
depending
on whether dhcpcd starts correctly during boot. Or not.
I think I may be shooting
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 8:26 AM, walt w41...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm trying to track down a bad bug in dhcpcd-6.4.4, so (unlike most days ;)
I'm
paying close attention to the output of journalctl.
The confusing part is that the output of journalctl is *very* different
depending
on whether
It is, but.
You'll have to get used to running and searching via journalctl instead of
processing the logs directly.
Journal is not persistent across reboots by default, but you can
reconfigure it to be. (just create /var/log/journal)
Last I recall you won't get fine-grained per-daemon space
On 09/17/2014 10:40 PM, Mark David Dumlao wrote:
Fact is if it's _you_ that seems to give a tweet about systemd speed,
so it's on _you_ to measure it, I don't really care what you think. The
fact that you think pid1's speed or resource usage might be a big deal
is very indicative on how
On 17/09/14 23:43, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:52 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 2:27 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
volkerar...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 17.09.2014 um 21:02 schrieb Canek Peláez Valdés:
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 1:36 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
On 18/09/14 03:12, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
Mark David Dumlao wrote:
The code is out there. Freely available. Both systemd and sysvinit.
If you wanted to measure both, you could, literally, in the time it
took since you first posted in this thread till now you could have
measured several
On 18/09/14 07:52, Samuli Suominen wrote:
Notably Gentoo has never used entire SysV, only the init part, not the
/etc.d/rc.d part
I meant /etc/rc.d of course. Typing error. Sorry.
On 18/09/2014 02:12, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
Mark David Dumlao wrote:
The code is out there. Freely available. Both systemd and sysvinit.
If you wanted to measure both, you could, literally, in the time it
took since you first posted in this thread till now you could have
measured several
On 18/09/2014 00:54, Joseph wrote:
I like to use meld to copy file but meld does now preserve ownership of
the file that it copy.
rsyc does but how do I use rysnc to copy let say file that are newer
then certain date ?
I was trying to use:
find /home/myuser/oldir/* -mtime -60 -exec cp {}
84 matches
Mail list logo