So, easy fix, the ca_stag2 was a staging DB that was not needed and was not current. The whole thing appears to have corrupted. So I simply "moved" that entire directory to /tmp (just in case I had to put it back) and then MySQL could fire up.
You can get a switch to give you all traffic on a mirrored port on the switch. This would allow you to see all the traffic on that other port. normally you would mirror the uplink port.
Yepp. That's typically where you'd put your IDS if you didn't have requirements that it be an in-line.
Doing an upgrade from Fedora 29 to Fedora 30 and you get...
Error:
Problem: package pix-1.8.2-1.fc29.x86_64 requires libexiv2.so.26()(64bit), but none of the providers can be installed
- exiv2-libs-0.26-12.fc29.x86_64 does not belong to a distupgrade repository
- problem with installed package pix-1.8.2-1.fc29.x86_64
(try to add '--skip-broken' to skip uninstallable packages)
This seems to happen with most normal workstation installs of Fedora. Easiest thing to do is simply remove Pix.
sudo dnf remove pix -y
Your update should work fine after that.
I don't ever use it. But, yeah it is there by default.
Going to wait until we need some more desktops, then re-look at what Ryzens we can see and try
Seriously consider the normal AMDs, too. The A line. That's the line meant for business use. Ryzens are too expensive for normal office use, they are high performance CAD, power user, or gaming procs.
We do our best to deliver calls over G722 and follow your preferred priority (based on what you put in your SIP), but when we can't get the call delivered over G722, we fall back to G711.
These are not cockpit settings. what good would that do you?
Cockpit is meant to manage the server as a whole, so I would assume with the CLI interface from cockpit you could send the virsh commands to set this.
That is just a terminal session, so of course, not a cockpit CLI (ie a command line for managing cockpit only)
Ah, obviously I didn't explain myself clearly.
I meant using the console to send the virsh commands to set this from within the Cockpit webpage.
Right, that would of course work because it is simply a normal terminal session to the box. Just accessed via the Cockpit GUI instead of SSH or locally.
This doesn't have anything to do with new equipment, but when the time changes in the fall, everyone in Atlanta forgets that they know how to drive in the dark.
Take the average intelligence level, let 6 months pass. Now what's the % that remember how to do any given thing?
If NE Ohio and winter is any indication, it's about 5%, grrr.
Looks like the ER‑8‑XG could also be a good fit if you prefer the EdgeRouter series over the Unifi stuff. Also slightly less expensive, and better performance.