Search found 791 matches

by moredruid
Thu Apr 07, 2011 4:39 am
Forum: Testers
Topic: Wireless in Fedora - Newbie
Replies: 4
Views: 3637

Re: Wireless in Fedora - Newbie

What an interesting answer. and perfectly valid. Amahi is mostly userspace programs and as such only uses fedora as it's base. This is a real Fedora issue, and on the Fedora IRC your problem might be responded to within a few minutes. Windows analogy: you wouldn't ask Adobe how to install your Wind...
by moredruid
Sat Apr 02, 2011 9:56 am
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: Some beginer questions (-:
Replies: 2
Views: 1522

Re: Some beginer questions (-:

1.Is the VPN connection Encrypted? yes 2.When starting the VNC server, it prompt "couldn't find "xauth" on your PATH", please advise. it means that the X authorising mechanism isn't in the search path of your profile. You should look on the VNC IRC/forums for more info 3.Is there...
by moredruid
Sat Apr 02, 2011 9:52 am
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: BOOT is full
Replies: 10
Views: 4760

Re: BOOT is full

hmmm you could try the following: create a folder on a big disk, e.g. /var/hda/files/myupdate then create a symlink in /boot to that folder: cd /boot ln -s /var/hda/files/myupdate update You should do everything as root user to be on the safe side. /boot/upgrade is AFAIK only needed for the new kern...
by moredruid
Thu Mar 31, 2011 7:07 am
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: BOOT is full
Replies: 10
Views: 4760

Re: BOOT is full

nice, now only 24M of the 194M is used on /boot

I should hope that 170M is sufficient for a dist-upgrade. You may want to pop by the Fedora IRC to ask, here is a bit on the Fedora Wiki regarding this issue.
by moredruid
Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:58 am
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: BOOT is full
Replies: 10
Views: 4760

Re: BOOT is full

yup, that's what I was looking for. you have a 200M /boot partition (kinda small). if your system boots normally you can remove the following files: initramfs-2.6.32.21-168.fc12.x86_64.img initramfs-2.6.32.21-170.fc12.x86_64.img config-2.6.32.21-168.fc12.x86_64.img config-2.6.32.21-170.fc12.x86_64.i...
by moredruid
Thu Mar 31, 2011 2:52 am
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: BOOT is full
Replies: 10
Views: 4760

Re: BOOT is full

Hmm seems I've not clearly stated my question.

please post the output of "df -h"

and post the output of "cat /etc/fstab"

you should get separate things.
by moredruid
Thu Mar 31, 2011 12:30 am
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: BOOT is full
Replies: 10
Views: 4760

Re: BOOT is full

Since /boot is usually a separate filesystem (and not reported in the Amahi storage pool I think) this can happen.
Could you post the results of "df -h" and the contents of your /etc/fstab?

I can then propose a strategy to clean things up properly.
by moredruid
Wed Mar 30, 2011 11:47 pm
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: My Server is crashed after reboot??
Replies: 6
Views: 2774

Re: My Server is crashed after reboot??

1. Ok question: When i reboot my Server next time. How should i do that? Console and init 6 ? That is one of several options: reboot shutdown -r telinit 6 should all do the same 2. When I want to Update the Server. Can i press: Ctrl + Alt + F2 and then init 3 and then yum update yum If you run a gr...
by moredruid
Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:55 pm
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: My Server is crashed after reboot??
Replies: 6
Views: 2774

Re: My Server is crashed after reboot??

It probably means the LVM headers or disk headers are inconsistent.

you should be able to figure out which Logical Volumes you have on your system by examining your /etc/fstab file - cat /etc/fstab - you should look for entries starting with /dev/mapper/
by moredruid
Mon Mar 28, 2011 11:13 pm
Forum: Beginners and Newbies
Topic: My Server is crashed after reboot??
Replies: 6
Views: 2774

Re: My Server is crashed after reboot??

This means that your filesystem seems to be inconsistent. Fill in the root password. Then type "lvs" you'll see an overview of the logical volumes you have on the system and in which volume group they belong. run the following command: fsck -f /dev/<volumegroup name>/<logicalvolumename> if...