[00:05] bug 236640 [00:05] Launchpad bug 236640 in debian-installer "iSCSI install fails under hardy" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/236640 [00:11] mathiaz: Yes, I am testing vmbuilder --ec2 [02:47] no wall on ubu server? [02:50] I did some searching but have not found anything recent on how to enable the second cpu on 8.04 server. I ram dmesg and it only shows 1 cpu, any suggestions? [02:54] i have a book that has some info on two cpus... [02:55] DCPom: Do you happen to remember the book's name? [02:57] it's called hacking linux, but it doesn't have much info [02:57] it says try installing the explicit SMP kernel: sudo apt-get install linux-686-smp [02:58] but it may be that your motherboard isn't compatible === MenZa_Aeris is now known as MenZa === PrivateVoid_ is now known as PrivateVoid [03:50] I did read some old information stating to install the SMP kernel, but then newer information stated that it was not neccesary to do anymore, this hardware is about 6 years old, (HP DL 360 G1), one thing i noticed in dmesg was that it was giving ACPI, and the box doesnt support it [06:37] im trying to get mysql to start, and its failing, and i can't for the life of me figure out why, and nothing is coming up in mysql.err or mysql.log, any ideas? [06:39] anything in /var/log/syslog? [06:41] actually found someone in #ubuntu with some stuff, one sec === Adri2000_ is now known as Adri2000 === freaky_t is now known as freaky[t] [13:53] Anyone here played much with GOsa? I run it under Debian Lenny, and have the basics running (ie. LDAP, Samba, posix, DHCP, DNS). I'm looking to get it managing more advanced stuff (eg. Asterisk, Fax, FAI, Squid etc...). Anyone attempting similar things? [14:58] Hi [15:50] how to configure the network interface of a vm (per virt-manager)? [15:50] source device is "-" [17:52] can i use a 10.0.X.X local IP or do i have to use 192.168.X.X [17:52] you can use 10.x.x.x, 192.168.x.x, or any other private lan assined ip range on your own lan [17:52] it's entirely up to you [17:53] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_network [17:54] how do i find out the 10.x.x.x address? [17:55] you pick whatever you want [17:55] it's your network [17:56] erm no [17:56] sorry [17:56] wrong room === abu is now known as hohoho [18:24] hi [18:24] some help needed === hohoho is now known as HuaHuaHua === HuaHuaHua is now known as noRegisteredNick [18:26] is there anyone alive? [18:30] !weekend | noRegisteredNick [18:30] noRegisteredNick: It's a weekend. Often on weekends, the paid developers, and a lot of the community, may not be around to answer your question. Please be patient, wait longer than you normally would, or try again during the working week. [18:46] ok, thx ScottK [18:56] hey, i have a wireless network set up with 4 macs. Each has an IP in the form 10.0.x.x. My ubuntu server is connected via ethernet to one of the macs and has the IP address 192.168.2.2. Is there a way to get the IP for the ubuntu box in the for 10.0.x.x? === socketbind is now known as szalonna [21:40] I have a question regarding software RAID 5 [21:40] I currently have a machine with 6 disks in RAID 5, with an ext3 filesystem [21:40] I want to add more disks to it, but my case is full, so I'd need to transplant all the hardware [21:41] If I don't hook all the drives up in the same order they're currently in, will the RAID still be recognized? [21:43] I don't mind if it has to rebuild itself, I just can't lose any data [21:43] I don't have anything large enough to back up the data, so this is an all or nothing task [21:46] err, [21:46] i don't think you can simply add disks to a raid set just like that [21:46] I've read up on it, you can add more disks with mdraid [21:47] i've never done md raid5, cpu load seems very high [21:48] well, I haven't really had much issue with that, though this is mostly a personal use system [21:48] nor have any of the hardware raid controllers been able to simply add disks into the set [21:48] I use samba to share with windows clients [21:48] and I can get as much as 80MB/s read [21:48] over gigabit lan [21:49] never really experimented [21:49] This is similar to what I want to do [21:49] http://scotgate.org/2006/07/03/growing-a-raid5-array-mdadm/ [21:50] I wouldn't try it online [21:50] that is pretty cool [21:50] but I can afford to go down for a day if that's what it takes [21:50] i would make a backup [21:50] then try it [21:51] Actually, that just sparked something [21:51] I could shut it down, then switch two of the disks [21:51] see if it comes back ok or not [21:52] if not, just switch back [21:53] or even just move one disk to another port [21:55] but yeah, performance is pretty good [21:55] I've never seen it get over what I'd consider idle, and I run an apache server on it with torrentflux [21:55] load averages less than 0.05 [23:26] how do i find out what servers are currently running? === mindframe_ is now known as mindframe [23:45] Is there a way to limit the amount of bandwidth usable by a given user on my server? I don't want anyone monopolizing the rather thin pipe I've got.