boot.iso should be enough to get you going. You should be able to find it on most fedora mirrors. The one I just downloaded was only 147 megabytes.
This is great for installing on older systems that don’t have a DVD rom. The whole image is 681MB. You can install more software after installing the base system.
blah blah, mediawiki http://blog.rootninja.com, And finally, “To complete the installation, move config/LocalSettings.php to the parent directory.” just like it says…
Oooo an irc client… i hate the state that most of the sugar software is in. I just feel like it’s all forced, I mean what’s the big deal anyway? Is it just my XO that’s slow and boring? I’m about to put Linux on the XO, and sugar on a regular Intel desktop. How backwards is that?! Maybe sugar will be usable on a real machine.
This howto will get bugzilla with ALL of the optional modules installed on Fedora 10. If you just want a barebones bugzilla up and running, you might want to read the whole thing and then just look for the required parts. Otherwise, you can follow me through the install and end up with all the bells and whistles.
The checksetup.pl script will tell you what you’re missing and what you need to install to get bugzilla up and running. But the problem is it pushes you to use perl’s package management to build the perl modules which may or may not work. I think it’s best to use YUM to install and manage all of your packages and not to mix and match both. This will help to avoid conflicting packages and seemingly random complaints of a package missing when it’s not.
I can’t find any installation procedures or prebuilt rpm’s for Fedora 10, so i’m going to make my own, so here goes. … whole lotta stuff here … And finally, start opennms.
Fedora 8 has just reached the end of support. If you insist on doing a yum upgrade instead of just saving your home partition and reinstalling the rest, here’s how to do the upgrade. It might help if you keep your fingers crossed while doing all the typing.
I …
gdmsetup is missing from Fedora 9 and 10. You’ll have to do it all from the commandline. Your gui was just a little hand-holding for the command-line handicapped anyway.
Here’s all I was looking to do:
[daemon]
TimedLoginEnable=true
TimedLogin=theuser
But the