GIGA+: Scalable Directories for Shared File Systems - 0 views
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GIGA+
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Swapnil V.Patil
File Explorer 2.0 - 0 views
The Kernel Boot Process : Gustavo Duarte - 0 views
NFS root with initrd and GRUB - 0 views
Webmin - 0 views
Linux.com :: Using ZFS though FUSE - 0 views
Blog/HOWTO: ZFS under Linux using FUSE - 0 views
Ubuntu Server Edition JeOS | Ubuntu - 0 views
Conduit - Trac - 0 views
JeOS - Community Ubuntu Documentation - 0 views
SwarmPlayer on Linux - 0 views
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Repositories
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deb http://ubuntu.p2p-next.org/ hardy main
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deb http://ubuntu.p2p-next.org/ hardy main
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KNOPPIX Japanese edition - 0 views
SourceForge.net: Cooperative Linux - 0 views
x11vnc: a VNC server for real X displays - 0 views
SSH On Same IP - Different Machines? - Ubuntu Forums - 0 views
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~/.ssh/config
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host computeraliasname hostname your.external.ip.number Port 12345 UserKnownHostsFile ~/.ssh/uniqefilename
XenFaq - Xen Wiki - 0 views
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4.1. A large warning message is displayed when I boot Linux, saying something about '/lib/tls'. What should I do? Do as the message advises! Some modern distributions ship with a 'TLS' version of glibc that is not fully compatible with Xen. To use Xen reliably and with maximum performance you must disable the incompatible glibc. You can easily do this by moving the /lib/tls directory (e.g., mv /lib/tls /lib/tls.disabled). Alternatively, install a Xen-specific GLIBC, see XenSpecificGlibc.
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