Allegedly, on or about 01 April 2015, Angelo Moreschini sent:
> I read that FEDORA is for: Flexible Extensible Digital Object
> Repository Architecture
I think that's, most likely, a story made up after the project was
named. I'm quite sure that it's named Fedora as a pun about the name of
a ha
On 04/01/2015 05:53 AM, Angelo Moreschini wrote:
Hi Tim,
I understand your explanation... that is exactly the answer to my
question..
Being I a beginner.., I just would understand better the philosophy of
Linux.
(I read that FEDORA is for: Flexible Extensible Digital Object
Repository Archit
Hi Tim,
I understand your explanation... that is exactly the answer to my
question..
Being I a beginner.., I just would understand better the philosophy of
Linux.
(I read that FEDORA is for: Flexible Extensible Digital Object Repository
Architecture)
still thank you
Regards
On Wed, Apr 1, 2
On Wed, 2015-04-01 at 09:03 +0300, Angelo Moreschini wrote:
>- they are services (even if they are very common and important)
> that have to be installed...
Only if you need them.
Just looking at what you've mentioned, previously. I'll make some
*general* comments about them.
SMART - if you
OK!
So :
- systemctl is the (dynamic) evolution of traditional way to mange the
services.
( and instead to use the 'service' command is betterto use
'systemctl' )
- they are services (even if they are very common and important) that
have to be installed...
Thank y
On 03/31/2015 09:05 AM, Angelo Moreschini wrote:
Hi,
I am learning Linux and, just in order to do exercises, I wanted to
monitor the functioning of services that, I thing, should run on fedora.
So, with the command : service *smartd* status
I got :
Redirecting to /bin/systemctl status *smar
Hi,
I am learning Linux and, just in order to do exercises, I wanted to monitor
the functioning of services that, I thing, should run on fedora.
So, with the command : service *smartd* status
I got :
Redirecting to /bin/systemctl status *smartd.service*
● smartd.service - Self Monitoring and