At some point hitherto, Mark Polhamus hath spake thusly:
> Are there any conventions for the use of syslog facility codes LOG_LOCAL0
> thru LOG_LOCAL7?
That depends on how you define convention; those facilities are used
as generic syslog facilities, allowing for the ability of the system
admini
On Tue, 17 Sep 2002, Mark Polhamus wrote:
> Pppd apparently uses LOG_LOCAL2. (Does anyone know if that is compiled in or
> in some configuration file that I haven't found?). Any other examples of
> popular software that is using one of the local codes?
Cisco's PIX, I believe, uses them. And
Are there any conventions for the use of syslog facility codes LOG_LOCAL0 thru
LOG_LOCAL7?
Pppd apparently uses LOG_LOCAL2. (Does anyone know if that is compiled in or
in some configuration file that I haven't found?). Any other examples of
popular software that is using one of the local cod
>
> I know the kernel also needs "autodetection" enabled, however I can't
> seem to find that option in the kernel config. Anyone know where
> that is?
> --
It used to be that you had to apply the RAID patches in order to get
auto-detection. That may still be true, what does the Software-RAID HO
In a message dated: Tue, 17 Sep 2002 15:32:31 EDT
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>On Tue, 17 Sep 2002, at 2:23pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> I want to mirror all the file systems on all 4 drives ...
>
> AFAIK, this is not supported in the Linux "md" driver. It should be
>pretty easy to do, but it ha
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>
>Hi all,
>
>I'm playing around with sw RAID under Linux. I have a system which
>has 4 IDE drives which I want to install onto. I want to mirror all
>the file systems on all 4 drives, such that if any one drive
>fails, the system should be able to boot from the next
On Tue, 17 Sep 2002, at 2:23pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I want to mirror all the file systems on all 4 drives ...
AFAIK, this is not supported in the Linux "md" driver. It should be
pretty easy to do, but it has not been done.
> ... such that if any one drive fails, the system should be ab
Either your installer has to handle this or you are going to have to do it
manually after install. Also I don't know if the SW RAID driver really
supports thisI know you can mirror a drive, I don't know if you can
mirror it two three other disks.
Also keep in mind that while read performance
Not sure how Debian handles it, but RH allows you to create SW RAID
devices during install. You may be able to fake it from Debian
by dropping to a shell and creating the RAID partition right after
it boots.
I'm not sure how it handles the situation of the primary master failing
and dropping the
Hi all,
I'm playing around with sw RAID under Linux. I have a system which
has 4 IDE drives which I want to install onto. I want to mirror all
the file systems on all 4 drives, such that if any one drive
fails, the system should be able to boot from the next bootable
device.
However, I se
One suggestion is that you have a cdrom and a hard drive
on each chain. By having both the cdrom and the
cd-writer on the same chain, you will run into problems
should you try to copy a disk, drive to drive. Also, by
putting the hard drives on different chains, you will
increase the speed of th
In a message dated: Mon, 16 Sep 2002 23:26:50 EDT
"Derek D. Martin" said:
>At some point hitherto, [EMAIL PROTECTED] hath spake thusly:
>> Once again, I've been too busy to plan a meeting or contact any of
>> those I know who might speak.
>
>Don't you pretty much just goof off all day at work
http://spineless.org/~mod/pix/octoberMoon.jpg
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