On Sat, 12 May 2007 17:36:24 +0200
Herbert Poetzl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, May 12, 2007 at 09:13:19AM +0200, Jan Zuchhold wrote:
> > The problem is caused by running out of space on /tmp.
> > You mount that on tmpfs, specified in fstab in the
> > vserver-config dir:
> >
> > none
Guillaume Pratte wrote:
Hello,
A quick question. What are the acceptable characters in a vserver name?
I would suppose [a-z][A-Z] + '_' and '-' are ok, but are accents, spaces
and other characters acceptable?
I'd like to say yes, but I haven't tried it. It's a bug if it doesn't work.
--
Dan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
thanks ,
i setup the beast and have yum installed but..:
bash-3.00# yum update
Setting up Update Process
Setting up repositories
not using ftp, http[s], or file for repos, skipping - Null is not a valid
release or hasnt been released yet
Cannot find a valid baseurl fo
> thanks ,
>
>
> i setup the beast and have yum installed but..:
>
> bash-3.00# yum update
> Setting up Update Process
> Setting up repositories
> not using ftp, http[s], or file for repos, skipping - Null is not a valid
> release or hasnt been released yet
> Cannot find a valid baseurl for repo:
On Sat, May 12, 2007 at 09:13:19AM +0200, Jan Zuchhold wrote:
> Hello,
>
> > I made a package of my guest 'gis' (about 465 MB):
> > /etc/vservers/gis (config of the image)
> > /vservers/gis (home of the guest images)
> >
> > http://www.archit.uni-karlsruhe.de/geoserver/vserver.tar.bz2
>
> ok, i'v
i am installing a workstation which i have no plans to use as a vserver host
however there may be that possibility in the mid to far future...
are the kernels produced with the vserver patches 'improved' over std kernels
and generally work better? or is it by its nature causing slight overhead
Hello,
> I made a package of my guest 'gis' (about 465 MB):
> /etc/vservers/gis (config of the image)
> /vservers/gis (home of the guest images)
>
> http://www.archit.uni-karlsruhe.de/geoserver/vserver.tar.bz2
ok, i've tried it.
The problem is caused by running out of space on /tmp. You mount th