On 1/29/22 20:36, Robert Nichols wrote:
If I could find any way to set the client's domain name, I would.
Nothing I try has any effect on the domain name.
When I try to set a FQDN with hostnamectl, then "hostnamectl" (with no
arguments) shows that FQDN as the static hostname, but "hostname
--fq
On 30/01/2022 12:36, Robert Nichols wrote:
On 1/29/22 8:25 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 1/29/22 17:20, Ed Greshko wrote:
In the initial posting by Robert he wrote:
"I have no nfs-idmapd service running"
Right, but on recent kernels, the client doesn't use rpc.idmapd, it uses
"nfsidmap". T
On 1/29/22 8:25 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 1/29/22 17:20, Ed Greshko wrote:
In the initial posting by Robert he wrote:
"I have no nfs-idmapd service running"
Right, but on recent kernels, the client doesn't use rpc.idmapd, it uses
"nfsidmap". The fact that rpc.idmapd isn't running doesn'
On 1/29/22 17:20, Ed Greshko wrote:
In the initial posting by Robert he wrote:
"I have no nfs-idmapd service running"
Right, but on recent kernels, the client doesn't use rpc.idmapd, it uses
"nfsidmap". The fact that rpc.idmapd isn't running doesn't really tell
us anything.
"all users a
On 30/01/2022 07:44, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 1/28/22 23:32, Ed Greshko wrote:
But I do have nfs-idmapd.service with "Domain = localdomain" in its
configuration file.
If I change that to "Domain = local" and restart nfs-idmapd.service I do get
[root@fedora ~]# nfsidmap -d
local
But everything
My laptop crashed to the point it won't boot, so I ended up burning Fedora 35
Workstation on a LiveUSB and re-installing. When the install ended, it told me
that it had failed to install the boot loader and the system wasn't bootable.
I know that I created a /boot, but I don't know if I needed
On 1/28/22 23:32, Ed Greshko wrote:
But I do have nfs-idmapd.service with "Domain = localdomain" in its
configuration file.
If I change that to "Domain = local" and restart nfs-idmapd.service I
do get
[root@fedora ~]# nfsidmap -d
local
But everything works no matter what the setting
https
On Sat, 29 Jan 2022 12:48:21 -0500
Todd Zullinger wrote:
> If there isn't an easier way to move the dock, maybe the
> dash-to-dock extension could be useful?
>
> https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/307/dash-to-dock/
>
> That doesn't look to be packaged for fedora, so you'd need
> to install
Hi,
Matt Morgan wrote:
> Hi. I recently upgraded to Fedora 35. I would like to change two behaviors
> back to what I had before:
>
> 1) when I mouse up to the hot corner, the application dock is now at the
> bottom of the screen. How can I get the dock to position itself vertically
> along the le
Hi. I recently upgraded to Fedora 35. I would like to change two behaviors
back to what I had before:
1) when I mouse up to the hot corner, the application dock is now at the
bottom of the screen. How can I get the dock to position itself vertically
along the left side of the screen? I've tried a
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