So I mounted an ISO of MEPIS 11 in /mnt/temp, having understood that I can access the files. Well, no, I can't--not really. Almost all the files in the distro are part of the 1.2 GB "mepis" file that comprises the bulk of what's in the iso. I thought I would be able to look inside the distro's guts if I mounted the iso, which would probably have been helpful in explaining why my remastered copies of the ISO weren't any smaller even after I removed a large amount of the applications. (I wanted to modify MEPIS 11 to make it fit onto a CD.) If I can't do this, what is the practical use of mounting the iso and looking at the files?
I have a web server whos DocumentRoot is:/tmp/wwwNow, /temp/www/fake/ is a directory that contains a series of other files/folders.What I want to do is access the files in /temp/www/fake as if they were in the root directory (/temp/www/)For example:
could either be located in "/temp/www/test.php" -or- located in "/temp/www/fake/test.php"
so "http://127.0.0.1/test.php" would essentially call both directories. Is this possible? Whould I do this through apache or through the actual file system somehow? (Like some sort of symbolic link?) I would love to hear your input.
I am attempting to setup linux in my embedded environment. I wanted to output the console display though the tty serial port and the vt. Since I don't have a frambuffer hw driver yet, I just wanted to use the vfb as a temp.
So, this is what I did in my configuration file: CONFIG_CMDLINE="console=ttyS0,115200n8 console=tty0 mem=126M video=vfb:" CONFIG_VT=y CONFIG_FB=y CONFIG_FB_VIRTUAL=y CONFIG_DUMMY_CONSOLE=n CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_VGA_CONSOLE=n
I would expect the tty output to go to the uart as well as the virtual-console; this does not seem to be the case, as no vt functions are called when I execute prompt commads - I can see the console in my serial terminal, and this all works fine.
Here are extracts from my boot: Kernel command line: console=ttyS0,115200n8 console=tty0 mem=126M video=vfb: ... Console: colour dummy device 80x30 console [tty0] enabled ... Console: switching to colour frame buffer device 80x25 fb0: Virtual frame buffer device, using 1024K of video memory Serial: 8250/16550 driver, 4 ports, IRQ sharing disabled serial8250.0: ttyS0 at MMIO 0x3e000000 (irq = 99) is a 16550A console [ttyS0] enabled serial8250.0: ttyS1 at MMIO 0x3e001000 (irq = 9 is a 16550A serial8250.0: ttyS2 at MMIO 0x3e002000 (irq = 97) is a 16550A ...
Here are my console binding results: / # cat /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon0/bind 0 / # cat /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon0/name (S) dummy device / # cat /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind 1 / # cat /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/name (M) frame buffer device / #
we have 2 linux desktop m/c as server and we use amc n windows as clients....we get more temp files like .AppleDoueble, ":2edstore".i need to remove these temp files periodically with the script. how to write a script to remove these temp files.....
I have an K10 AMD CPU and unfortunately it has a borked temp sensor. I have figured out that if I subtract 8 from value stored in /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/temperature that the result is very close to being spot on. The problem is I have no idea to do this and conky has no built in way to do this.
The data stored in /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/temperature looks like this:
How to find the filesize of a flash which is not exactly stored in the temp but redirected by a fd. flash31 -> /tmp/FlashXXvsg1uY (deleted) directory is /proc/processid Chrome is downloading a flash and I can see in the proc directory the flash file, How can I see the current file size of such a file ?
Just the last day or so, I've noticed a long pause when I boot my laptop, with lots of disk activity. dmesg says:
[Code]...
Why would there be a 15-second pause (during which the disk is slammed) between mounting root and mounting swap? During this time I see nothing but a blank purple screen, there are no cycling dots or text scroll. Is this normal and I'm just freaking out over nothing because there's no indicator of progress? GRUB default boot options: quiet splash nomodeset video=uvesafb:mode_option=1920x1200-24,mtrr=3,scroll=ywrap vt.handoff=7
I am having permissions errors every time I try to mount a windows host. I have a linux server and all the windows computers can see that computer and its files, but we wanted to start backing up the linux machine to one of our other computers. so I tried to mount one of the computers. here is the sequence of events:
Code: $mount -t cifs //192.168.1.194/Admin$ /mnt/Anita-comp password: (I have no password so I left it blank) Mount error (13): Permission Denied I tried all sorts of passwords we use around the office and none of them worked.
I then decided to try mounting one of our other computers. this one looked like it worked fine. no error messages at all. (I left password blank) so I look in my filesystem and the mounted drive is not in the /mnt/Anita-comp file. What gives?
i have added the hardware sensors monitor to the panel and enabled....but i can only enabled my hardisk temp(i.e. hddtemp)...but there is no option of cpu.....how can i enable my cpu temp??
is it possible to have the tmp or temp folders assigned elsewhere. I am actually looking to stick them in the shm folder since there is enough memory to throw around the place ..
using acpi -t I noticed that my CPU temperatur is at around 60C while just using Google Chrome in Fedora 15. In Windows7 doing the same thing, my CPU is at 50C.
Do you know maybe a little trick to lower the CPU load or how I can detect which background apps are not needed in F15/Gnome3?
In fact, F15 is running much much faster than Windows on my UL30V Laptop...
I have got a Dell Latitude E6420 and I run Fedora 15 on it. Almost everything works fine except that I can not get correct CPU temperature with, for example, the sensors command.
Where are temp files stored in SuSE 11.0? I am trying to find all of those videos and .jpgs and other miscellaneous files I've downloaded in the past, and which are now only taking up space on my hard drive. I'd like to clean out all of that. I have looked in both /tmp and in /.kde but don't see what I'm looking for.
just downloaded gkrellm and I go to set the temperature sensors and I get "No Sensors Detected" now I've never dealt with something of this nature before so can anyone tell me where I might begin with this one?
i've recently been required to monitor my cpu's temp. for one, i have no idea how to do so, and for another i'd like to do so by continually seeing the temperature displayed on the top menu bar, similarly to how you can setup graphs displaying your cpu use, memory, etc.
I'm looking at conky and my cpu frequency is fluctuating really fast (in a relatively narrow range) but from second to second I can see a 2-3 degree change, is this even possible? It seems like the sensors aren't working right if they are showing changes that fast.
Is it possible to read the host cpu's temperature from a virtual guest?
(1) Where host = ubuntu desktop and guest = ubuntu server, and
(2) Where host = windows xp and guest = ubuntu server?
Typically I would read the contents of /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THRM/temperature on host ubuntu desktop. I guess its more tricky when running ubuntu on windows host. What I am trying to do is shutdown guest if host cpu temperature is greater than certain value.
Any good ideas for a GUI program that monitors temp for CPU and hard drive? I'd prefer one that is like a system monitor that can show trends on a graph (like CPU usage, etc). It is irritating that you can't even add a silly app to the panel because UNE is locked (ERR, Ubuntu, what were you thinking? Give US the choice! Rant over) So far, I have just written a quick script after installing lm-sensors and hddtemp and run the necessary setup routines that will show me, but I would like some of the history data.
The new splash screen would fly by in two shakes without, the dots moving left to right.And I was looking at more blackness than purple. So what I did was this without installing a slower uvesa v86d update. I used that as a reference point instead. This is what me Grub2 looks like: /etc/default/grub