Slamhound, thanks for this post.
I have a similar setup with 3 monitors and 2 NVIdia cards.
I had everything working nicely in 8.10.. and it has since gone all downhill for me.
I'll have...
Type: Posts; User: smileypaul; Keyword(s):
Slamhound, thanks for this post.
I have a similar setup with 3 monitors and 2 NVIdia cards.
I had everything working nicely in 8.10.. and it has since gone all downhill for me.
I'll have...
Usually the hardware supplier will supply a utility to monitor the RAID.
With 3ware, the utility is tw_cli , what type of raid card do you have?
I could be way off here, but tried changing your repositories to hardy and doing an apt-get dist-uprade ?
Ensure you have the proper repositories available and updated.
Those could have also been superceeded (sp?) by something a bit newer.
same, 3ware cards without issue!
I had a similar problem, off the top of my head I can't remember how I fixed the permissions problem, I'll have to check the smb.conf file when I get home.. something is telling me "umask 022" fixed...
Permissions problem?
Backing up data?
Use cron and rsync, or even cp -Ruv.
examples:
rsync -avzru /dir/to/be/backed/up /destination
or
dd could be used to clone the disk.. Just make sure you aren't cloning a mounted partition..
use ddrescue.. then gparted live to resize the partition.
It will clone what you have.
clonezilla will also do a great job.
Any specific error you get after booting?
Grub error?
Could be something as silly as changing the Hard drive mode in the BIOS from AHCI to IDE.
Try and provide a few more details.
This can be achieved by denying them access to "sudo"
Do a bit of research, I believe you'll have to take him out of the admin group, and do a bit of work in the /etc/sudoers file.
Hopefully...
Could be a permissions problem?
What happens when you run the script manually?
I too would be greatly interested in this..
Same issue..
32 bit Ubuntu.. I can hear the congo sound upon startup.. but no sound thereafter:(
same Intel HDA
Upgrade through the upgrade manager.
Stay on 32 bit.. theres no appreciable difference in 64bit.
Then a simple permissions change should work
Before mounting the drive;
chown username /mountpoint
chgrp username /mountpoint
chmod 700 /mountpoint
Then depending on the filesystem, simply...
Does the drive you are trying to "protect" contain system files? or is it just a drive you use for storing media etc?
Probably lookin at drive encryption.
TrueCrypt comes to mind, although theres many different ways to do this.
You could also just change the permissions on the drive.. 700? (-rwx------)
that...
Should be an option in the ftp config to follow symlinks
then add a symlink to each of their home directories
ln -s target source (i believe, might be source target)
Generally, by just editing /etc/crontab .. there is an option to run script as "user"
0 1 * * * root /etc/cron.daily/backup_script.sh
the script can obviousyl be kept anywhere.. not likely...
As said above.. use SSH to shut it down.
A free windows SSH client is PuTTy.
Google it, and download.
enjoy.
ps: clearly you must have the OpenSSH server installed
Just as a test, format each disk individually as ext3, and mount them...
Nasty user knows how to use ssh?
check
cat /var/log/auth.log | grep Accepted
that will show you all of the last succesful logins..(last will also work)
I doubt its a bug, probably just...
I cant guarantee the hardware is supported..
but generally its the bios that has a switch to enable or disable the C1E state.. which allows the processor to be operating at a slower rate..
The...