Karl R. Balsmeier wrote:
The installer still asks you if you want various options, -I don't seem to remember it having X.
One thing I can say however is that it's VERY HANDY for me to not have to burn 3 or 4 CD's, or the DVD, just to get a server deployed.
So thanks to the CentOS staff who came up with that clever idea. It is truly handy.
-karl
I just did a server install, actually a 2.4TB NAS using the first CentOS disk, but choosing a minimal install option. What's the difference between that option and the server CD??
Thanks!
Mark
On Wed, 2006-11-15 at 16:03 -0800, Mark Schoonover wrote: <snip>
I just did a server install, actually a 2.4TB NAS using the first CentOS disk, but choosing a minimal install option. What's the difference between that option and the server CD??
The only difference is the items that are available for install. Using only CD-1, you get a certain subset of programs available for install in the minimal install.
Using the ServerCD, you can select more programs to install off that CD than are in a minimal install, and all the programs you can select are on the ServerCD. If you only need programs off the ServerCD it helps to minimize the download after install. (You can even do a minimal install from the ServerCD too, if you want)
Once installed, each of these become just a normal CentOS install with different packages. You can use yum/up2date to add other programs to either type of install. It is merely a difference in packages that you can install from a given single CD.
Thanks, Johnny Hughes
On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 03:35, Johnny Hughes wrote:
I just did a server install, actually a 2.4TB NAS using the first CentOS disk, but choosing a minimal install option. What's the difference between that option and the server CD??
The only difference is the items that are available for install. Using only CD-1, you get a certain subset of programs available for install in the minimal install.
Just in case anyone doesn't know, you can download the full set of iso images to a directory on your LAN that is exported by NFS, burn only the first one to boot with 'linux askmethod' at the boot prompt, select NFS as the method and fill in the server info, and the installer will do all of the magic loopback mounting of the images over the network so you don't have to swap disks during the install.
But, the single disk server install is still a nice addition to the options.
Hi All
I am pretty new at this... I have loaded up a CentOS server and am trying to join it to the Active Directory 2003 domain but I am having no joy
Is there any step by step guides which I would be able to use or somebody that could help me?
Thanks
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hey,
Van Staden, Allan sagte:
I am pretty new at this... I have loaded up a CentOS server and am trying to join it to the Active Directory 2003 domain but I am having no joy
Is there any step by step guides which I would be able to use or somebody that could help me?
you need samba (winbind) and kerberos, take a look at
http://wiki.freeradius.org/FreeRADIUS_Active_Directory_Integration_HOWTO#Set...
ca mIke