Displaying 7 results from an estimated 7 matches for "shush".
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shash
2016 Feb 13
2
heads up: /boot space on kernel upgrade
On Sat, February 13, 2016 2:50 pm, John R Pierce wrote:
> On 2/13/2016 12:19 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
>> It is interesting to observe how perceptions are changing over time.
>> Decade or two ago we were partitioning small then drives (thus loosing
>> some of the space) just to separate regular users from those places
>> vital
>> for secure and reliable running of
2016 May 06
3
Internal RAID controllers question
Dear Experts,
one of the RAID threads today prompted me ask everybody.
Which internal hardware RAID controllers will survive some future to come
in your estimate. First of all my beloved 3ware finally seems to have
passed away. After multiple acquisitions and becoming part of LSI and
getting bought with LSI, it probably became non operational. Namely, the
latest 3ware cards have ancient
2017 Jun 07
4
C7, systemd, say what?!
On 06/07/2017 11:24 AM, James Hogarth wrote:
>
> Mark stop with the flame baiting please.
>
> This is nothing systemd specific - and keep in mind /var/tmp is a
> persistent temp area unlike /tmp which as it's tmpfs by default is of
> course emptie don boot.
I would wholeheartedly disagree. This IS something systemd specific. I
have never seen init.d blow itself up over
2010 Aug 17
11
EVERYONE USING DOVECOT PLEASE SIGN: Thanks, Administrators of Dovecot!
With the release of dovecot 2.0, the community of the Dovecot mailling
list, and us at Shelton Computers, would sincerely like to thank the
developers of Dovecot. For, if it were not for you, we would be stuck
with Courier and would not have the impressive features of Sieve, as
opposed to the unmanageable scripts, by end users, of maildrop.
*Our gratitude goes to, but not limited to:*
*Timo
2016 Feb 11
9
heads up: /boot space on kernel upgrade
I have a CentOS 6 machine that was initially installed as CentOS 6.4
in May of 2013. It's /boot filesystem is 200M which, IIRC, was the
default /boot size at the time.
The most recent kernel update (2.6.32-573.18.1.el6) fails because of
lack of space in /boot. The workaround is edit /etc/yum.conf, reduce
installonly_limit from 5 to something lower (I used 3), remove the
oldest kernel via
2015 Jul 03
1
installing Cents os server 7.0
...,
the track pad just works, and Bluetooth just works. At the moment all
of those things when running any Linux distro make the system next to
unusable for more than a few hours. So because choices, including
Apple's choice to keep so much of their hardware proprietary and their
hardware vendors shushed, and my choice to buy this hardware, as a
consequence my experience of software freedom is more limited.
I'm not asserting rights.
I?ve got a SecureCRT window constantly open to the CentOS box I
develop on, I?m making a CentOS 7.1 USB stick right now in the
background, and I?m about to...
2015 Jul 02
2
installing Cents os server 7.0
On Thu, Jul 2, 2015 at 4:06 PM, Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote:
> On Jul 2, 2015, at 9:51 AM, Chris Murphy <lists at colorremedies.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On 07/01/2015 05:10 PM, Jonathan Billings wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Nope. CentOS 5, 6 and 7 all support dual-boot.
>>
>> Considering CentOS 7, at least, doesn't include ntfsprogs,