/me erasing everything at this point and taking off the systemd crew,
since this will have no relevance to them...
Testing the hook feature out using git rev (finally got it built)...
I added this line to my config...
lxc.mount.entry=tmpfs /srv/lxc/private/Plover/dev.tmp tmpfs defaults 0 0
On Sat, 2012-10-27 at 13:40 -0400, Michael H. Warfield wrote:
/me erasing everything at this point and taking off the systemd crew,
since this will have no relevance to them...
Testing the hook feature out using git rev (finally got it built)...
I added this line to my config...
On Sat, 2012-10-27 at 13:51 -0400, Michael H. Warfield wrote:
On Sat, 2012-10-27 at 13:40 -0400, Michael H. Warfield wrote:
/me erasing everything at this point and taking off the systemd crew,
since this will have no relevance to them...
Testing the hook feature out using git rev
Hi,
I'd welcome advice on whether there's a sane, relatively simple way to take
a backup copy of a CentOS 6 system, which happens to be sitting on a
partition on a Ubuntu 12.04 VMware VM, and set it up to run in a container
there. It's been a year since I've done anything with LXC. I see that
'Twas brillig, and Michael H. Warfield at 26/10/12 18:18 did gyre and
gimble:
What the hell is this? /var/run is symlinked to /run and is mounted
with a tmpfs.
Yup, that's how /var/run and /run is being handled these days.
It provides a consistent space to pass info from the initrd over to
On Sat, 2012-10-27 at 19:44 +0100, Colin Guthrie wrote:
'Twas brillig, and Michael H. Warfield at 26/10/12 18:18 did gyre and
gimble:
What the hell is this? /var/run is symlinked to /run and is mounted
with a tmpfs.
Yup, that's how /var/run and /run is being handled these days.
It