Formated disk Posted: 01 Dec 2004 09:22 AM PST "DragonFire" <hku.hk> skrev i meddelandet news:cokuk6$6k0$cs.hku.hk... The biggest beta test in the world ( Window$ ) overwrite the MBR no questions asked during install. If you want to keep the RH installation you can boot from the RH cd/floppy and repair LILO or GRUB whatever RH was using. ( I think RH has GRUB as default ) |
Please help with XP Professional dual boot Posted: 30 Nov 2004 08:32 PM PST Michael Stevens wrote: .... many computers come with that hidden 30 meg partition: it is a MAINTENANCE partition, with tools to check the machine out: memory test, disk test, etc. -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> There once was a Scot named McAmeter With a tool of prodigious diameter. It was not the size That cause such surprise; 'Twas his rhythm -- iambic pentameter. |
command line/script to setup ntpd Posted: 30 Nov 2004 08:17 PM PST On Wed, 01 Dec 2004 04:28:56 GMT, Bit Twister wrote: forgot to add /etc/ntp.conf which will also need your time server FQDN or ip addy. |
5-button Optical PS/2 intellimouse Posted: 30 Nov 2004 01:19 PM PST In message <asfrd.1008731$ops.worldnet.att.net>, Norm Dresner wrote: You've got different numbers on the bottom of yours. Mine claims to be: Microsoft IntelliMouse Optical USB & PS2 Compatible (using PS/2) P/N X08-70388 PID 55250-OEM-0221522-0 No idea what's significant about any of that but it is also working via a KVM switch to Linux, Win2K, OS/2 and even Mac OS X (via a nice little PS/2 to USB converter). The wheel even works on most Mac apps. Last item, I'm currently using FC2 Linux, although it's worked on previous RedHat stuff as well. -- Dave mail da org (without the space) http://www.llondel.org/ So many gadgets, so little time... |
Windows network with Linux Server Posted: 30 Nov 2004 01:51 AM PST Maximilian Schwerin wrote: http://www.linuxselfhelp.com/HOWTO/SMB-HOWTO.html -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> Once, adv.: Enough. |
Rescuing data before an imminent hard disk failure Posted: 29 Nov 2004 11:44 PM PST Jules wrote: .... here here !!!! -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> All I want is a warm bed and a kind word and unlimited power |
Gentoo hardlocks on keyboard use! Posted: 29 Nov 2004 10:10 PM PST OSU wrote: [snip] The continous beep is an interesting clue. My guess is that it's overheating and what you're hearing is the temperature alarm (either from lm_sensors or from the BIOS itself). Check system temps and ambient temp next time you have a lockup. (FWIW, I saw similar symptoms once when a heatsink retention clip had broken and the heatsink suddenly fell of the CPU. It had worked fine for ages but died suddenly and wouldn't go more than a few minutes without locking up. But that's understandable when the heatsink is nowhere near the CPU!) |
Debian Setup Accessing NTFS Posted: 29 Nov 2004 07:11 PM PST On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 03:11:52 GMT, Lionel Hanners <net> wrote: $grep ntfs /etc/fstab /dev/hda5 /mnt/hda5 ntfs ro,gid=disk,noexec,umask=027 0 0 Substitute hdb1 for hda5, umask might as well be 0227, if you don't have writing to ntfs compiled into the kernel the "ro" is unnecessary. Make sure you add users that should have access to group "disk" or the appropriate group. If you don't want the partition to mounted by default on booting add the "noauto" option. I have Debian 3.0r2, writing to ntfs was still considered risky and I'd assume you'd have to recompile the kernel to get write access. I assume there is still no write access by default (the last I'd checked, writing was still risky and running chkdsk/scandisk was required after any any writes.) man mount, and man fstab have lots of useful information. Michael C. -- com http://mcsuper5.freeshell.org/ If we cease to judge this world, we may find ourselves, very quickly, in one which is infinitely worse. - Margaret Atwood |
RH AS V3 Posted: 29 Nov 2004 06:37 PM PST In comp.os.linux.setup Ana C. Dent <com>: Shouldn't be a problem, you might need to change the BIOS not to halt on errors, to be able to boot headless. You should configure your boot-loader to output anything to serial and connect the system serial to some other box/terminal server/etc. Check the rh docs how to go about it. A system that has a remote BIOS redirection (LAN/serial) would be the best for running completely headless, sadly not all x86 systems allow that, there are some add on cards, which aren't really cheap. -- Michael Heiming (X-PGP-Sig > GPG-Key ID: EDD27B94) mail: echo qr | perl -pe 'y/a-z/n-za-m/' #bofh excuse 3: electromagnetic radiation from satellite debris |
need help with Sun's Star Office Posted: 29 Nov 2004 04:46 PM PST mjt wrote: ......^^^^^ .... oops. you "can" get ... -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> I think that I shall never see A billboard lovely as a tree. Perhaps, unless the billboards fall I'll never see a tree at all. -- Ogden Nash |
External MIDI ports disappeared! Posted: 29 Nov 2004 03:59 PM PST RRB <com> wrote: [snip] What card model and driver are you using? Thanks... -- PLEASE post a SUMMARY of the answer(s) to your question(s)! Unless otherwise noted, the statements herein reflect my personal opinions and not those of any organization with which I may be affiliated. |
How can I make Linux box as Router? Posted: 29 Nov 2004 03:14 PM PST Santa wrote: Or, if the machine is doing nothing other than routing packets, check out one of http://ipcop.sf.net or http://www.smoothwall.org Cheers, mvdw -- ..oOO Matt van de Werken -- Cricket, Linux, Electronics Enthusiast OOo.. o0 Linux 2.6.8-gentoo-r3-mvdw -- Dual Athlon MP1800+ -- Wed, 01 Dec 2004 6:58PM 0o |
X crashes with GeForce FX 5200 Posted: 29 Nov 2004 10:01 AM PST Andrew P. Billyard wrote: .... file:/usr/src/linux/Documentation/sysrq.txt http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Keyboard-and-Console-HOWTO-8.html#ss8.6 -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> The bureaucracy is expanding to meet the needs of an expanding bureaucracy. |
MBR after dual boot Posted: 29 Nov 2004 09:26 AM PST George wrote: I have never used Fedora or grub, so I don't know. But if the Fedora boot CD gives you an option to install grub, then that should do what you want. Good luck, jimbo |
Two distributions sharing /home Posted: 29 Nov 2004 09:26 AM PST Jules <this.yahoo.co.uk> wrote: .... to check if that is actually your problem, you can 'cd' to the home directories of the users and issue 'ls -al'. If the user and group names are shown, everything is fine. If you see numbers instead of names, you have the problem described. Yours, Laurenz Albe |
Display is not centered... Its 2004!! Posted: 29 Nov 2004 09:24 AM PST Jules wrote: i suspect, since vendors give info to m$, they have an advantage over the "guesswork" that might have to happen for a given "unknown" monitor or that possibly when polling doesnt reveal any useful information. if you've ever used xvidtune, you know you can "move" the display around. technically, the modeline values can be 'correct', but logically (ie, visually to the eye) the values are incorrect - IOW, the display can be shifted "off screen", but the values are still correct. even with the well-known monitor i have, some distros, during the install, i get a shifted display, so i merely use the X config file from a well-known running system :) as far as windows "getting it right", have you ever installed it from scratch without vendor drivers? more times than many, i cant get a better resolution than 640 until drivers are obtained!! -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> .... A booming voice says, "Wrong, cretin!", and you notice that you have turned into a pile of dust. |
newbie advise server setup Posted: 29 Nov 2004 06:25 AM PST On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 00:48:52 +0000, KJ wrote: I forgot to throw in a plug for Ubuntu linux [www.ubuntulinux.org]. It's based on Debian and snap to install and maintain. |
(no subject) Posted: 29 Nov 2004 05:34 AM PST until it is too late. As has already happened repeatedly: the government will use this National Spying Apparatus to crush political protests, and monitor the politically incorrect. In the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s... and the 1990s. Question: Why argue against something that would catch crime? Answer: ECHELON is so invasive we lose all privacy. It is infinitely abusable. It has been abused repeatedly. CALEA takes us into the abyss. Would monitoring really turn up that many violations? Meaning: is it really that effective a mechanism? ************************************************** **************************** On Monitoring -- ---------- I am a traffic analysis person. Internet email. Company spook. Boo. The bad news: getting people fired. The good news: really great Internet humor is picked up too. From the land of "Put the shrimp on the barby, Marlene:" I was travelling on a tram the other day and in one seat there was an old digger (Australian soldier or ex soldier) reading his newspaper. Across from him was a juvenile with a spikey mohawk haircut coloured pink, green, orange and yellow. The old digger kept looking over h |
partition restoration Posted: 29 Nov 2004 05:19 AM PST Loknath Bharti wrote: so, you HAD a 10gig partition with an ext3 filesystem. you "came to know"? what does that mean? so the previous ext3 filesystem had 5gig of data on it? use the backup you made before creating the partition with the reiserfs filesystem on it. the ONLY hope that i see happening is to mark the partition with an ext3 filesystem and try a recovery tool to get the files off of it. however, i doubt this will work. your second option is to use a tool to read the disk directly, as you've already attempted. -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> Large cats can be dangerous, but a little pussy never hurt anyone. |
How to use the floppy drive under linux? Posted: 28 Nov 2004 11:02 PM PST On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 15:02:30 +0800, kff wrote: If you loaded the mtools package mdir, mcopy, mcd, mdel..... another method mkdir /mnt/floppy mount -t auto /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy ls /mnt/floppy umount /mnt/floppy For extra points man mount man umount man fstab Fstab entry example: /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy auto noauto,owner,kudzu 0 0 |
How to determine the size of cylinder? Posted: 28 Nov 2004 08:28 PM PST Lew Pitcher <ca> wrote in news:BjRqd.12106$bellglobal.com: [snip] This is bogus, of course, and has nothing to do with the physical number of cylinders, heads, or or sectors on the disk. Only the vendor's data sheet will give you the physical information. -- - Mark -> -- |
2.4.9 woes Posted: 28 Nov 2004 10:03 AM PST Chiefy wrote: .... hmmm. 2.6.9 can conjure up some odd thoughts ... ???? .... http://www.mail-archive.com/org/msg00569.html -- << http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> Why is it that there are so many more horses' asses than there are horses? - G. Gordon Liddy |
Max memory of Fedora Core 3 Posted: 28 Nov 2004 06:51 AM PST Dear Sir, No need to re-comile kernel if install 4GB MEM? Jackson On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 18:55:57 +0200, Markku Kolkka <fi> wrote: _________________________________________ Usenet Zone Free Binaries Usenet Server More than 120,000 groups Unlimited download http://www.usenetzone.com to open account |
How to set up a Linux machine that occupies the minimum memory footprint ? Posted: 28 Nov 2004 04:46 AM PST begin Jean-David Beyer dedi ki: Opteron motherboards too. Only, as I gather (I'm still a student on this), Opterons additionally have Numa arrangement option to boost performance: Each CPU concurrently accesses its own local memory in Numa, as opposed to sharing a single bus serially in shared memory systems. And it's still possible to use all the memory from within any CPU (via inter-CPU Hyper Transport mechanism). For this to work, the OS should have CPU and memory affinity, aka NUMA capable kernel (the doc above says only "memory affinity" but it also takes CPU affinity if I'm not mistaken). Linux does that. So, for a general purpose system Opteron/Numa makes a good deal. Though it doesn't help the OP much, as he needs all the RAM from within a single process. I reckon this is due to the fact that the north bridge (MMU) is integrated into amd-64 CPUs, which is a very good thing as it speeds up memory access compared to the off-chip north bridge on AthlonXP and Xeons. So you need the CPU in its place to access related memory. Nevertheless, considering the price diff between an Itanium or Xeon-EM64T and an Opteron or Athlon64, a dual Amd-64 setup could cost the same as a single Itanium. -- Abdullah | aramazan@ | Ramazanoglu | myrealbox | ________________| D.0.T cöm |__ |
I have 40GB Hard drive, RH Linux installed, how can I install two more flavors? Posted: 27 Nov 2004 12:18 PM PST mjt <ru> writes: ]Santa wrote: ]> I have 40GB HD, I installed RH Linux, I need to install Debian anb ]> SuSE, How can I partition the current disk for two more flavors, ]> appreciated for commands and help. You do not say how you partitioned the disk in the first place. Wipe the disk. place three partitions, each of size 5GB, which will be the / directories of each ofthe three distros. Make the rest of the disk into one partition which you can call /common Into /common you will place home, and othr common stuff. Then install each of the distros into their partition. Afterwards, do mv /home /home.old mkdir /common/home ln -s /common/home /home mv /home.old/* /common/home ]... use the partitioning tools during the install ]process for those ]-- ]<< http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/ >> ]Slang is language that takes off its coat, ]spits on its hands, and goes to work. |