Displaying 20 results from an estimated 8000 matches similar to: "Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file"
2015 Feb 16
2
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
On Mon, Feb 16, 2015 at 12:07 AM, Michael Schumacher
<michael.schumacher at pamas.de> wrote:
> Btw., are you sure you want to use XFS for a mail server? I made some
> tests about a year ago and found that EXT4 is by the factor 10 faster
> compared to XFS. The tests I performed were using the "maildir" style
> postfix installation that results in many thousands files in
2015 Feb 15
4
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
Everyone,
I am putting together a new mail server for our firm using a SuperMicro
with Centos 7.0. When performed the install of the os, I put 16 gigs of
memory in the wrong slots on the mother board which caused the
SuperMicro to recognize 8 gigs instead of 16 gigs. When I installed
Centos 7.0, this error made the swap file 8070 megs instead of what I
would have expected to be a over 16000
2015 Feb 16
0
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
On 2015-02-15, Gregory P. Ennis <PoMec at PoMec.Net> wrote:
>
> I am putting together a new mail server for our firm using a SuperMicro
> with Centos 7.0. When performed the install of the os, I put 16 gigs of
> memory in the wrong slots on the mother board which caused the
> SuperMicro to recognize 8 gigs instead of 16 gigs. When I installed
> Centos 7.0, this error made
2015 Feb 16
1
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 17:37 -0800, Keith Keller wrote:
> On 2015-02-15, Gregory P. Ennis <PoMec at PoMec.Net> wrote:
> >
> > I am putting together a new mail server for our firm using a SuperMicro
> > with Centos 7.0. When performed the install of the os, I put 16 gigs of
> > memory in the wrong slots on the mother board which caused the
> > SuperMicro to
2015 Feb 16
0
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
On 16/02/2015 10:04, Chris Murphy wrote:
> This is a recent benchmarking using Postmark which supposedly
> simulates mail servers. XFS stacks up a bit better than ext4.
> http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=linux-3.19-ssd-fs&num=3
>
> A neat trick for big busy mail servers that comes up on linux-raid@
> and the XFS list from time to time, is using md
2015 Feb 16
4
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
On Mon, Feb 16, 2015 at 6:47 AM, Eliezer Croitoru <eliezer at ngtech.co.il> wrote:
> I am unsure I understand what you wrote.
> "XFS will create multiple AG's across all of those
> devices,"
> Are you comparing md linear/concat to md raid0? and that the upper level XFS
> will run on top them?
Yes to the first question, I'm not understanding the second
2015 Feb 16
0
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
Morning Gregory,
Sunday, February 15, 2015, 6:42:32 PM, you wrote:
> I am putting together a new mail server for [...]
> I am using the default xfs file system on the other partitions. Is
> there a way to expand the swap file? If not, then is this problem
> sufficiently bad enough for me to start over with a new install. I do
> not want to start over unless I need to.
I think
2015 Feb 16
0
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
On Mon, Feb 16, 2015 at 10:21 AM, Chris Murphy <lists at colorremedies.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 16, 2015 at 6:47 AM, Eliezer Croitoru <eliezer at ngtech.co.il> wrote:
>
>> I am unsure I understand what you wrote.
>> "XFS will create multiple AG's across all of those
>> devices,"
>> Are you comparing md linear/concat to md raid0? and that
2015 Feb 16
0
Centos 7.0 and mismatched swap file
Thanks Chris for the detailed response!
I couldn't understand the complex sentence about XFS and was almost
convinced that XFS might offer a new way to spread across multiple disks.
And in this case it's mainly me and not you.
Now I understand how a md linear/concat array can be exploited with XFS!
Not related directly but given that XFS has commercial support, it can
be an advantage
2007 Sep 24
2
parted - is there a problem
Everyone,
I recently added a 300gig Seagate sata drive on a Centos 5.0 and have a
couple of questions.
The drive was recognized with the device as /dev/sdc. The system came
with some SCCI drives that are labeled as /dev/sda and /dev/sdb. I was
surprised that the sata drives used sdc. Are the sata drives considered
more like SCCI or IDE drives?
The real problem occurred when I tried to
2014 Nov 28
2
CentOs 7.0 and reboot failure
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
>
> On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
> Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
>
> > I also changed the boot level to 5.
>
> Do you mean the runlevel? If so, are you sure that you changed it correctly?
>
> Centos 7 doesn't use runlevels set in inittab like previous
2014 Nov 23
5
CentOs 7.0 and reboot failure
Everyone,
I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
point. I have a small Gateway SX2855-UB12P.
I have a critical hurdle in that when I try a reboot or when I do a
'shutdown now -r' command the system will start a reboot process but
hangs right after the os choices are presented.
My
2014 Dec 01
6
CentOs 7.0 and reboot failure
On 01/12/14 18:36, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
>> On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
>>> Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
>>>
>>> On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
>>> Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
>>>
>>>> I also changed the boot level to 5.
2015 Nov 02
3
Changing the centos name on boot
On Mon, November 2, 2015 11:43 am, Mike - st257 wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 7:40 AM, Ramaseshan S <ramaseshan at fractalio.com>
> wrote:
>
>> I have been playing around with customizing the centos to create a spin
>> for
>> my workplace.
>> I am using centos 6.6 minimal, and trying to change the centos name to
>> some
>> random string.
2014 Nov 23
2
CentOs 7.0 and reboot failure
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> I also changed the boot level to 5.
Do you mean the runlevel? If so, are you sure that you changed it correctly?
Centos 7 doesn't use runlevels set in inittab like previous versions did. I see that fact is actually noted in /etc/inittab, along with the expected way to do it.
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~
2015 Nov 02
2
Changing the centos name on boot
I have been playing around with customizing the centos to create a spin for
my workplace.
I am using centos 6.6 minimal, and trying to change the centos name to some
random string.
I have been able to change the name in the grub using grub.conf, but the
name while the system is booting, I am not able to find a reference to that.
Can somebody help me with that ?
Attached screenshot.
Anyhelp with
2014 Nov 23
1
CentOs 7.0 and reboot failure
On 11/23/2014 12:02 PM, Edward M wrote:
>
> On 11/23/2014 10:58 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
>> Everyone,
>>
>> I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
>> test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
>> point. I have a small Gateway SX2855-UB12P.
>>
>> I have a critical hurdle in that when I try
2007 Aug 30
15
ZFS, XFS, and EXT4 compared
I have a lot of people whispering "zfs" in my virtual ear these days,
and at the same time I have an irrational attachment to xfs based
entirely on its lack of the 32000 subdirectory limit. I''m not afraid of
ext4''s newness, since really a lot of that stuff has been in Lustre for
years. So a-benchmarking I went. Results at the bottom:
2013 Feb 03
5
The moving of VNC port from 580n to 590n
On my 'older' systems that include Centos 5.5 and Fedora 12, vncserver
is running on ports 580n where n is defined by userid in the
/etc/sysconfig/vncserver
I just spent a bit of time getting it working on my new Centos 6.3
server and found it listening on ports 590n.
When did the change occur?
And guess I should test out where it is on Fedora 17...
2011 May 20
3
SSD for Centos SWAP /tmp & /var/ partition
Has anyone actually used a SSD in a Centos setup?
My little experiment with a s/h WD drive for /tmp and SWAP
partitions kicked the bucket on Wednesday, when the poor WD
drive caught the click-of-death. It was a s/h drive
to start with and lasted about 4 months. But that was
without the /var/log/ partition being written to it, as I
mounted that back onto /var/log from the original drive.
So