I guess that this one might work do I have never tried it my self
http://psubuntu.com/ [1]
Regards
Per Qvindesland
E-mail: per(a)norhex.com [2]
http://www.linkedin.com/in/perqvindesland [3]
--- Original message follows ---
SUBJECT: Re: [CentOS] iso from rpm's
FROM: Dmitry Zaletnev
TO: "CentOS mailing list"
DATE: 24-07-2009 13:24
> On 07/24/2009 11:32 AM, Dmitry Zaletnev wrote:
> > > > I have downloaded from an ftp something like RHEL 5.3 ppc64
rpm's. Is there any way to make from them an installation iso?
> > > why not just download the iso's from redhat with the valid
subscription
> > > details you have?
> > Because the value of subscription is equal the value of my
PlayStation 3.
>
> rhel ppc64 does not work on the playstation
>
> didnt we already have this conversation earlier though ?
> --
> Karanbir Singh : http://www.karan.org/ : 2522219@icq
> _______________________________________________
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS(a)centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>
thank you
--
Dmitry
Здесь спама нет http://mail.yandex.ru/nospam/sign
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Links:
------
[1] http://psubuntu.com/
[2] http://webmail.norhex.com/#
[3] http://www.linkedin.com/in/perqvindesland
Hi all,
I'm currently searching for a PCI modem that will be used to receive faxes. I've tried out a few modems but they all use conexant chipsets, which need out-of-tree kernel drivers and currently doesn't work here (kernel oops when the installation script modprobes the driver).
Does anyone know of a PCI modem that works out of the box with in-tree kernel drivers?
Thanks,
Glenn
Hello Everyone
I work for a University Department that has a high number of Linux
Desktop Users. Currently we provide a users home directory via NFS from
a file server. Generally it works well for us, but I have been asked to
look at our options for expanding the storage we have available.
So I thought one of the first things I had better do is consider are
there alternatives to the way we do things now that could be better for us.
My initial research suggests that the only real alternative to NFS in
this context is ISCSI or perhaps the combination of ISCSI and GFS.
So I was wondering has anyone on this list in a similar field implement
ISCSI for home directories instead of NFS? And if so would you be able
to give me some idea of the costs/ benefits of doing this?
Thank you for your time and any insights you are willing to share.
I have a CentOS 5.2 installation with gcc 3.4.6 as the default. I'd
like to upgrade the entire gcc tool chain, including libraries, to 4.x in
order to build some software that requires 4.1.0 or better. Can I do this
easily through yum? If I upgrade to 5.3 will I get gcc 4.x by default?
Thanks,
Patrick
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Today's Topics:
1. CESA-2009:1159 Moderate CentOS 3 i386 libtiff - security
update (Tru Huynh)
2. CESA-2009:1159 Moderate CentOS 3 x86_64 libtiff - security
update (Tru Huynh)
3. CESA-2009:1163 Critical CentOS 3 i386 seamonkey - security
update (Tru Huynh)
4. CESA-2009:1163 Critical CentOS 3 x86_64 seamonkey - security
update (Tru Huynh)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2009 00:35:54 +0200
From: Tru Huynh <tru(a)centos.org>
Subject: [CentOS-announce] CESA-2009:1159 Moderate CentOS 3 i386
libtiff - security update
To: centos-announce(a)centos.org
Message-ID: <20090722223554.GB30813(a)sillage.bis.pasteur.fr>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory CESA-2009:1159
libtiff security update for CentOS 3 i386:
https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2009-1159.html
The following updated file has been uploaded and is currently syncing to
the mirrors:
i386:
updates/i386/RPMS/libtiff-3.5.7-33.el3.i386.rpm
updates/i386/RPMS/libtiff-devel-3.5.7-33.el3.i386.rpm
source:
updates/SRPMS/libtiff-3.5.7-33.el3.src.rpm
You may update your CentOS-3 i386 installations by running the command:
yum update libtiff\*
Tru
--
Tru Huynh (mirrors, CentOS-3 i386/x86_64 Package Maintenance)
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xBEFA581B
I have a perl script which runs from a cron job. How would you limit
the amount of RAM that this script is allowed to consume? Is there a
ulimit setting that will accomplish this? If so does ulimit have to
be run each time the script is run, or is there a way to set it
permanently?
Has anyone knocked up a script to monitor for interface errors before?
i know i can look at the interface statistics with ethtool -S but i
wonder if anything has something that looks at the last value for this
statistic and then can alert if they increase?
any thought how to solve this? it has to be host based and cant be on
the switch
thanks
Hi,
I have been trying to install CentOS 5.1, 5.2,and 5.3 and the HP
server but to no success. It starts loading well the on trying to load
the cciss driver, the machine hangs there and refuses to move on.
Any help will help quite alot.
Thanks