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Unexpected restart on dmesg | less scrolling - Forums Linux

Unexpected restart on dmesg | less scrolling - Forums Linux


Unexpected restart on dmesg | less scrolling

Posted: 27 Sep 2005 08:37 AM PDT

Jody <rr.com> wrote: 

The question must be asked "wy do you ask that"? It has to read the
code of less from SOMEWHERE, no? And it has to search SOMEWHERE to
find that somewhere no? And the somewhere that it is searching is a
file system on your faulty disk, no? Hence corrupt. Hence not in an
expected state. And it has to place other stuff in SWAP, no? And that
swap is where? Somewhere?

Fix that.

Peter

Getting signal 15 after boot

Posted: 27 Sep 2005 03:32 AM PDT

com wrote: 

Well, fix rpc.statd. Do you care? It's not going to be much use to you,
I daresay!
 

So what? Are you saying that your startup script is sensitive to
errors? Well, then you either have to make the error go away, or
don't bother starting rpc.statd, or make the startup script not care
about any errors.

Why are you running rpc.statd?

Peter

How to delete files/folders owned by nobody user on a web server

Posted: 26 Sep 2005 11:42 AM PDT

In comp.os.linux.setup DB2 Knowledge Base <com>: 
 

That's simple but needs root permissions to setup once, just make
those users member of an additional group, set SGID (chmod) bit
on the top directory and make it owned root.<additional_group>
with write permission for the group.

--
Michael Heiming (X-PGP-Sig > GPG-Key ID: EDD27B94)
mail: echo qr | perl -pe 'y/a-z/n-za-m/'
#bofh excuse 389: /dev/clue was linked to /dev/null

Setting up a software RAID-5 file-serverbox: to ECC or not to ECC?

Posted: 26 Sep 2005 05:30 AM PDT

Thanks!

It's not so much a desktop but a dedicated file server for a combined
household of a couple of people.

And yes, I am talking about SATA. I'm currently thinking of housing the
entire array in a separate tower and just bundling the wires back into
the actual server. That'll allow for much better airflow throughout
both the server and the HD-tower.

Anyway, thanks for your advice!

SUSE 9.3 display problems after install

Posted: 25 Sep 2005 07:26 PM PDT


"Enrique Perez-Terron" <no> wrote in message
news:home.lan...
 

I'm afraid not. Uninstalling the OpenGL libraries breaks *LOTS* of
dependencies, such as OpenOffice. I count 642 dependencies rooted in
xorg-x11-Mesa-libGL alone on a FC4 box. And if you've deleted them, the
NVidia installer detects the missing files and silently fails to install its
own libraries.

It's an *AMAZINGLY* complex, and fundamentally stupid, installer, forced to
do odd things by NVidia's decision to keep its libraries and driver secrets
very secret indeed.


two gigabit interfaces with Samba?

Posted: 25 Sep 2005 05:09 PM PDT


"Lars Müller" <com> wrote in message
news:com...
 

Ahh. Dual hosting. You were having problems with "ping", though. Solve that
problem first.
 

So you want to plug eth1 in, and have it be another IP address on the same
subnet, right? Were you intending to make the Samba server show up as two
distinct servers, and each serve different content?

If not, don't bother. Since the IP addresses are on the same subnet, the
Samba server will try to report both of them as the same server name unless
you get very cute in your setups, and cause all *SORTS* of interenting
interlocks between IP addresses each pretending to be the same server and
sharing the same file locking and file accesses.

However, it should be possible to add the second IP address and run *OTHER*
high bandwidth services from the other addresses. If you run heavily used
NFS or HTTP or FTP or DNS services, putting them on another IP address and
separate 100BaseT network seems reasonable.

If eth1 is physically working, it should be possibly to duplicatge
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 to ifcfg-eth1, edit it
appropriately, and restart your network with the init script to see if the
other port works correctly.


Suse, nforce4 and sata drive.

Posted: 24 Sep 2005 10:33 AM PDT

Well, the Grub bootsplash looks nicer :)

Seriously, I rather like 10 - I'm currently running RC1 on a Dell
laptop and on a three desktops. Just installed it to a friend's machine
yesterday, which was about a 6-click install.

It automagically detected everything: sound, video, mouse, network ...
on one of these $197 Fry's no-name AMD boxes (came pre-installed with
Linspire, which we promptly tossed).

They also installed eXPensive and had a heck of a time getting the
sound and network up and running.

Anyway, RC1 is my primary boot-to version, preferring it to the 9.2 and
9.3 installs I have available. Even considering it's an RC1 release, I
think it's "ready".

lvm: how to check the status

Posted: 23 Sep 2005 01:20 PM PDT

com wrote: 
 

It's not "dead info"! Will you cease blaming other people?

Other people (like myself, and the others who are explaining the obvious
to you) have no trouble in understanding that /proc/lvm provides info
WHEN IT IS THERE, something which depends on a multitude of (obvious)
things.

Peter

Dial on demand

Posted: 22 Sep 2005 10:33 PM PDT


Moe Trin wrote: 
[snip] 

Thanks for the really useful reply, Moe. Sorry about the delay in
responding, but it took me a while to carry out the test you proposed.

/etc/resolv.conf just has two nameserver lines for the IP addresses of
the DNS servers that my isp gave me.

This is what tcpdump showed -

'11:45:15 IP 155.239.110.127 > 224.0.0.22: igmp v3 report, 1 group
record(s)'

The first address is the one that my ISP dynamically assigned to me.
According to what I have read, the second address is a multicast
address. Here is a quote that I found -

'IGMP (configured on a router) periodically sends out IGMP general
queries. A host responds to these queries with IGMP membership reports
for groups that it is interested in.'

I am not using a router. It is a plain FC4 box, not connected to a lan,
with a modem for dialup to the ISP.

It is running IP-Masquerading, which I have set up according to the
latest HOWTO, as I want to use the machine as an internet server for a
small lan. The HOWTO gives details of two firewall setups - one very
simple one for testing, and one much stronger one for the real world.
At this stage I am using the simple one.

Let me know if there is any other information I can provide.

Any assistance will be much appreciated.

Frank Millman