Search found 38 matches
- 2011/09/30 23:36:32
- Forum: CentOS 6 - General Support
- Topic: [SOLVED] 32-bit ISO too big for DVD
- Replies: 7
- Views: 2609
Re: 32-bit ISO too big for DVD
Thanks!
- 2011/09/30 17:30:21
- Forum: CentOS 6 - General Support
- Topic: [SOLVED] 32-bit ISO too big for DVD
- Replies: 7
- Views: 2609
[SOLVED] 32-bit ISO too big for DVD
Hi,
Just downloaded the 32 and 64 bit ISO. Burned the 64-bit ISO ok, the 32-bit ISO is not. It kept on saying image too big for DVD. I tried with DVD-R and DVD+R disks, with the same results...
Any idea?
Thanks!
Jane
Just downloaded the 32 and 64 bit ISO. Burned the 64-bit ISO ok, the 32-bit ISO is not. It kept on saying image too big for DVD. I tried with DVD-R and DVD+R disks, with the same results...
Any idea?
Thanks!
Jane
- 2011/05/06 23:00:39
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: [SOLVED] ssh passwordless login
- Replies: 8
- Views: 1751
[SOLVED]Re: ssh passwordless login
/var/log/secure will not show anything only if I have successfully login or cancelled the login...
Anyways... changed my strategy to hostbase authentication... I have now achieve my goal.
Thank you..
Anyways... changed my strategy to hostbase authentication... I have now achieve my goal.
Thank you..
- 2011/05/06 19:32:39
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: [SOLVED] ssh passwordless login
- Replies: 8
- Views: 1751
Re: ssh passwordless login
Hi,
Permission on the box's ~user/.ssh is correct - check.
/home folder is mounted as nfs for hostB.
Everything seems to be correct...
Other users are able to do ssh passwordless login. From hostA to hostB... This is what puzzles me.
any other thoughts... Thanks!
Permission on the box's ~user/.ssh is correct - check.
/home folder is mounted as nfs for hostB.
Everything seems to be correct...
Other users are able to do ssh passwordless login. From hostA to hostB... This is what puzzles me.
any other thoughts... Thanks!
- 2011/05/06 06:14:21
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: [SOLVED] ssh passwordless login
- Replies: 8
- Views: 1751
[SOLVED] ssh passwordless login
I have 2 centos systems. and have set up ssh passwordless login from Host A to Host B. Several users are able to ssh from hostA to hostb. But other users are not able to... I am very puzzled with this even with the new users I created I am not able to do ssh passwordless login. I've follow the instr...
- 2011/03/02 05:23:34
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: Connecting to Existing NFS Filesystem
- Replies: 4
- Views: 1018
Re: Connecting to Existing NFS Filesystem
make sure you have enabled access to the hosts to mount the nfs.
create or edit /etc/exports on you NFS server.
after editing the /etc/exports
run the following:
exportfs -a
then exportfs
then restart nfs server.
refer to: http://www.centos.org/docs/4/html/rhel-rg-en-4/s1-nfs-server-export.html
create or edit /etc/exports on you NFS server.
after editing the /etc/exports
run the following:
exportfs -a
then exportfs
then restart nfs server.
refer to: http://www.centos.org/docs/4/html/rhel-rg-en-4/s1-nfs-server-export.html
- 2011/03/02 05:21:08
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: managing user accounts
- Replies: 2
- Views: 489
managing user accounts
Hi, I manage some accounts. I would like to know the best way to disble linux accounts. When I disable account the following should happen: account disabled - user cannot login or ssh/ftp to the system email account disabled (no incoming mails) When I enabled the account the following should happen:...
- 2011/01/17 05:04:00
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: shared folder permissions
- Replies: 2
- Views: 597
shared folder permissions
Hi, I have a SHARE folder with the following permission: drwxrws--- 2 sales sales 4096 Jan 17 05:11 SHARE We use WinSCP or SCP to transfer files over to the SHARE folder. The files that are transferred always have the following permissions: -rw-r--r-- 1 jane sales 3792 Jan 17 01:39 start.txt Is ther...
- 2010/04/24 23:50:57
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: swap space best practice
- Replies: 3
- Views: 1498
swap space best practice
Hi again...
What would be the best practice in creating a swap space for a 16GB RAM server.
I found this formula:
M = Physical RAM
If M < 2
S = M *2
Else
S = M + 2
By following the formula, my swap space should be 18GB. Does anyone follow this scheme?
Thanks!
What would be the best practice in creating a swap space for a 16GB RAM server.
I found this formula:
M = Physical RAM
If M < 2
S = M *2
Else
S = M + 2
By following the formula, my swap space should be 18GB. Does anyone follow this scheme?
Thanks!
- 2010/04/24 21:48:04
- Forum: CentOS 5 - General Support
- Topic: disk quota on NFS mount
- Replies: 2
- Views: 742
disk quota on NFS mount
I am wondering if I can set diskquota on a nfs mount, instead of where the folder actually located.
e.g.
HOST1 - /dev/sdb1 /home
exports /home to HOST2
HOST2 - HOST1:/home /home
set quota from HOST2 for /home
Is this possible? I have not tried it, I wonder if anyone tried it.
Thank you,
e.g.
HOST1 - /dev/sdb1 /home
exports /home to HOST2
HOST2 - HOST1:/home /home
set quota from HOST2 for /home
Is this possible? I have not tried it, I wonder if anyone tried it.
Thank you,