The local provider has given us a fixed IP so we can have a web server for the car club's domain.
I will be using a Dell 2400 desktop computer with a 1.8 GHz Pentium 4 processor, 1 GB RAM, 40 GB hard drive and a DVD drive.
I want to use command line, not GUI and FTP the club's car pictures from my home.
My only Linux experience was sparse use of Red Hat 2.05 which is now 15 years old and not secure.
If the structure and folders are the same, Can I use CentOS 5.11 or 6.6
Thank you,
people call me Cousin
Hello
My harddrive on my home server computer seems to have corrupted, likly due to some recent power outtages (using it as a home nas, game server, nothing important really)...
It was previously running windows 7 because I took the harddrive from my old computer, but now as I have to format it anyway I might as well do it right.
Since my server does not have a CD drive (that works) I am hoping for a way to intall Debian onto the harddrive from my main computer (running windows 8).
I have plugged it in, and the drive seems fully functional.
I'm not very skilled with Linux, and am completely on bare ground. My googling has not come up with an answer that I have understood yet.
TL;DR - How do i install Debian onto a secondary harddrive plugged into my computer take this drive and put it into another computer and boot from it?
hi guys,
i want to back up my centos server that has a few virtual machines on it...i read that some people were saying dd is a very good way to do this. but a lot of people dont cause of fear of the command line.
i would like to write a script that backus up the entire hard drive to a ext usb hard drive.
i have a couple of questions though.
1) am i better off using a cloning software like acronis or storage craft.
2) can dd also restore a system to a bootable state or is it really just a backup.
3) can you still use the system while it is backing up?
thanks...
OK this is kinda long, so I will shorten it as much as I can, as to not be long-winded.
My current network at home:
1 - CentOS 7 desktop (server)
1 - Ubuntu 14.04 desktop
1 - Fedora 21 laptop
2 - Windows 7 desktops
some other various windows boxes also that don't get used regularly, but are on the network.
My 2 Linux desktops (which I use as servers, but they really aren't) have shared folders on them, which I share to the network via Samba (CIFS). I use Samba because Linux is smarter than Windows and Windows won't read NFS, so I share them as Samba so all devices can see them.
Generally speaking, if I share the folders on each box as 0777, I have no issues. But lately I have been wanting to implement some better security, so I wanted to SETGID and chown the shared folders from the local machine to a specific group, then change the folders to 2774.
My problem is that I keep getting permissions errors when trying to connect from the other Linux machines, and sometimes the Windows machines also. My main question is: do I CHMOD 2774 the local mount-point before mounting it? Or so I CHMOD 2774 the shared folder on the other server, then mount it locally to a folder whose permissions are different? Or do I CHMOD both of them the same?
basically the uis and gid ownerships change on a local folder when I mount a shared drive to that folder, so when I try to write or sometimes read that local folder, I get permissions errors.
I can provide any additional info needed.
Hi Everyone,
We are using Dell Power Edge R510 server as a central storage in Linux network. I have configured RAID6 on 10 near-line SAS hard disks. Using NFS i have exported one directory and mounted it on other machines.
Recently we are facing one problem, when anyone read/write big file (2-3GB)from NFS drive,others feel very slow access to that drive. Sometime we can't open simple text file till complete read/write process.
I have remounted NFS drive but still problem as it is.
Can anyone help me to solve this problem.
I have an old Pentium 3 all in one computer. This computer will have one dedicated use, which is to watch video streamed over the network from a Slingbox type device. My only requirement is that I can run VLC to play the MPEG2-TS stream. I also want VLC to automatically paly and audio CD when it is placed in the CD drive. Therefore I really don’t require many codecs. My only other requirement is that I will need to load drivers for a wireless remote or something so that I can control VLC.
At the moment the PC does the above with windows XP, but it takes far too long to load. As I only want the computer to perform this one task, what Linux distro would people suggest for the quickest boot? I have so far tried puppy but it still takes a while to load. Does anyone have any suggestions where to go from here?
I am very new to Linux so will need something which is not too hard to setup.
I have a hp xw4300 workstation with a Pentium D 64bit processor. It has Win XP Pro 32 bit on it now. HP no longer provides linux drivers and the linux required official version required is RHEL WS 4. I want to use this as a home file server. Is there any free version that supports this hardware?
http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/doc/p...r_na-c00384617
Pentium D
4 GB RAM
4 x 1 TB HDs
TIA for any suggestions.
Computer:i5,8G,2x500GB HD. one of 500GB hard drive, /dev/sda, is installed Linux Mint Rebecca with 20GB boot/470GB home EXT4/10GB swap. I want to add one more 500GB hard drive, /dev/sdb, to create RAID 1 with old one. Is it possible? and How to command?
amazon purchase,8.2 linux os will not advance to upgrade from 8.2 to latest software upgrade, will not allow a donation,can only do a google search,on gnome. this is on a compaq desktop pro 3 intell processor, 80 gig hard drive, direct eithernet connection. being a newbe to linux ???? very confused, what do i have to do to upgrade to the latest linux upgrade os system. thanks, bigmoose
Want to format a 1 TB Western Digital drive in an old dell 32 bit machine. Machine has Lubuntu installed and a Virtual machine on which which is loaded Windows 7 (32 bit).
Machine does not "see" the new 1 TB (SATA) drive after I physically install it in the machine.
I have other windows and Linux machines. I have some drive cradles in which I can connect to (windows) USB ports.
Is it possible to use the old Dell machine to format the new drive?
(It appears that this question has been answered before. So I will check those materials as well.)
Thanks for any assistance.
Geoffrey Wolfe
Hi, please excuse any misunderstanding about the title.
I'm an experienced computer user, but not with Linux. As a matter of fact, even with Windows, I only do so much at the command prompt.
I am looking for a very fast (boot and etc.) Linux system, that has nothing more than a command prompt. No X-Windows. However, I would like to configure X-Windows immediately after an installation.
I noticed the LFS project. Very cool, but way too complex for me. It is exactly what I'm looking for, except, I would like the basic system to already be proven, maybe even with security updates.
The biggest most important thing is (ONLY WHAT I WANT). I don't want dozens of browsers, a hundred text editors, or any other cool or stupid open source or commercial software. I simply am looking for what Dos 6.22 was in Linux.
There are many distros. Can you guys help me pick one out that is light, secure and ready to be configured to run X windows or X-Free or Xorg, I'm not sure what the best is right now.
PS: I'm a linux noob, but I have had several decent installations of Ubuntu, and some experience with the command line, including compiling software, but still a beginner.