Hi Leland,
I did, I'm just far away timezone-wise ;-) It did not occur to me that you can
do tests in udev rules. What we ended up doing was access the file system
before IPLing the Linux and dropping in the individual dasd rules. We did this
because we were already accessing the fs for other
Linux on 390 Port LINUX-390@vm.marist.edu wrote on 2013-02-14 01:56:48:
From:
Leland Lucius lluc...@homerow.net
[..]
Note that adding kernel/module parameter dasd=autodetect should
achieve
the same result.
That's really weird. We always specify dasd=autodetect. I even just
http://www.i-programmer.info/news/144-graphics-and-games/5450-can-you-do-the-regular-expression-crossword.html
I think I have a headache.
--
This is a test of the Emergency Broadcast System. If this had been an
actual emergency, do you really think we'd stick around to tell you?
Maranatha!
All:
Someone may have seen this: I have a z/VM 5.4 LPAR configured. For some
reason I have to manually go into tcpmaint and turon on tcpip (using
xautolog). I can then connect via a 3270 client and log in. But for some
reason the connection breaks (I don't know why) and I have to log back on
can you send the tcpip console output?
you should find it on tcpmaint reader...
just use cp command q rdr all on tcpmaint to find the output and use
peek spoolid (for * to view the file.
hopefully the answer to your question is there...
Offer Baruch
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 7:57 PM, Cameron Seay
On Thursday, 02/14/2013 at 01:14 EST, Cameron Seay cws...@gmail.com
wrote:
Someone may have seen this: I have a z/VM 5.4 LPAR configured. For some
reason I have to manually go into tcpmaint and turon on tcpip (using
xautolog). I can then connect via a 3270 client and log in. But for
some
I will only post to one board in the future. It appears my problem was an
IP conflict. I changed the IP in PROFILE TCPIP and it has been up ever
since.
Thanks.
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 1:29 PM, Offer Baruch offerbar...@gmail.com wrote:
can you send the tcpip console output?
you should find it
I am trying to copy either of these guests and replicate them for a class I
am teaching:
USER LINUX001 LINUX001 1G 4G G
INCLUDE LNXDFLT
CPU 00
CPU 01
NICDEF F000 TYPE QDIO DEV 3 LAN SYSTEM VSWITCH1
MDISK 191 3390 0001 150 MM2001
MDISK 700 3390 0001 10016 MM2101
MDISK 701 3390 0001 10016 MM2201
A minidisk is a continuous range of cylinders on a real disk, that the guest
sees as a virtual disk. For example, the meaning of this:
MDISK 700 3390 0001 10016 MM2101
700 - this is the virtual address of the minidisk as seen by the Linux guest
3390 - this is the type of the real disk that the