I just ran out of space on my hard disk so i turnd off my vm and added 100gb of extra space now i booted the vm up but the system does not see the new size.
What do i need to do so that the os sees the 100 extra gb?
After spending seven hours configuring a complex EC2 instance, uploading 2GB of files, tweaking configurations and PHP scripts and installing my SSL certificates -
WHERE THE *(&^&*(#&*(^ IS THAT INSTANCE?!
All was lovely, all was joyous, and I wanted to be able to use snapshots so I added EBS to my account. When I went to launch the existing instance it was DESTROYED.
Unfortunately, although I succeeded in changing the nameservers at godaddy to point to the ones suggested, all that happened was that the domain cannot be found at all.
I am new to this Turnkey shops where we get so many appliances on freeeee.....
Currently i want to integrate the redmine project management website on my one of the small scale project on subdomain.
As i have my official web site where i want to create the subdomain with redmine project management and want to set the complete script of this so that i can access directly the complete website on my own domain.
I looking to put 16 - 3 TB harddrives together in a server. All together there will be 48 TB of space on the harddrives. Is this ok for the Lamp Stack setup. I saw somewhere that starting from Ubuntu 9.1 the default setup is ext4 which supports a 1 exabyte volume which is 1 million TB.
Also this might be a stupid question but is the numbering of the stack equated to the version of Ubuntu being used. Like LampStack 11.3 for example is using Ubuntu 11.3?
tklbam only backs up files for a base installation. If you install new packages/configurations they may not get backed up. For example I added odbc to an image and when I did a restore odbc wasn't there.
Is there a way to automaticlly have tklbam figure out that there are new files that need to be backed up after an installation.
At the very least, people need to know about this so they don't learn about the hard way.