RHEL5 and ext4
Using RHEL5.5 in order to upgrade an ext3 volume to ext4:
- yum install e4fsprogs
- umount <mountpoint>
- tune4fs -O extents,uninit_bg,dir_index <device>
- e4fsck <device>
- mount -t ext4 <device> <mountpoint>
Using RHEL5.5 in order to upgrade an ext3 volume to ext4:
It’s possible that politics is like fishing; without experience (or a good guide) it can have a steep learning curve. Hence my plan at today’s meeting of the Winchester local Liberal Democrat Conference was to listen much more than I talked. I have been to very few overtly political events and I have much to learn.
The event was not at all what I expected; it was well attended but the average age was higher than I envisaged. Approaching my mid-thirties, my young daughter often makes me feel old – today however I felt young! Also the format was not what I imagined. Instead of a mini version of the national conference with impassioned debate and voting on controversial motions it was a cosy chat with councillors discussing their plans and general agreement (mostly via post-it note) on motions to be voted on at the national conference.
There were issues raised that tempted me to talk – in particular the cost of housing in Winchester but, at least on this occasion, I kept quiet. Firstly because I wasn’t keen for most of the membership’s first sight of me to be disagreement in a very consensual atmosphere. I would very much have liked Barton Farm to have been built on but the Liberal Democrat council opposed it. Given I own a flat about 500m from the proposed site, my support might be slightly unexpected but I am (by most standards) fairly well paid and struggled to buy a house in Winchester – most people are less fortunate!
I was slightly sad that a motion at the national conference in support of equal marriage rights was not discussed. It seems self-evident to me that the discrimination in our current laws should be changed but maybe it was not discussed because it would have been unanimously supported.
This was all new territory for me and I hope to attend more party meetings in the future (Em’s shift patterns allowing) so hopefully I’ll feel like one of the natives soon – it wasn’t what I expected but everyone was very welcoming.
So from being a fish out of water to hauling fish out of water… After the politics I went fishing. We hadn’t arranged it in advance but I met my Dad at the coast. It was a warm summer’s evening perfect for mackerel and there were shoals of them teeming along the shore. We could have caught as many as we liked. I stopped at four, plenty for my (small) family – Dad (unusually) chose to go up to double figures as he wanted some for neighbours. It’s not always as easy as this evening but the fish combined with the weather and the views made everything seem perfect. I’m even starting to feel like I know what I’m doing – at least with a mackerel rod!
On Fedora 13, the NFS client tries to use NFSv4 by default. When talking to the old (AIX-based) NFS servers at work the mount command failed with:
mount.nfs: Remote I/O error
In order to be able to mount the NFS shares I had to add -o vers=3 to my mount command.
Days after the Digital Economy Bill (more details) was made law, I’m still incredibly angry and frustrated about the stitch-up that saw both the Tories and Labour rush an extremely bad bill into law, forcing their MPs to vote for it after a derisory debate with a three-line whip.
I understand that with the state of the economy, the deficit, Afghanistan the Digital Economy Bill might not be the top priority in this election. Apparently however, it’s important enough to railroad into the statue book with controversial amendments being added days before becoming law. Watching the passage of the bill was an eye-opening experience….
Everyone should watch a parliamentary debate on something they know about, finance, shipbuilding whatever. See how gvt “works”. #debill
This law was not made the way I expected law to be passed. What I expected was neatly summed up by Cameron Neylon:
Representative democracy bases its existence on the assumption that the full community can not be effectively involved in an informed and considered criticism of proposed bills and that it is therefore of value to both place some buffer between raw, and probably ill informed public opinion, and actual decision making. This presumes that MPs, particularly party spokespersons take the time to become expert on the matter of bills they represent.
Instead what I witnessed in debates in the House of Commons was a scarily ill-informed, rushed mess which was typified when it emerged that the “Minister for Digital Britain”, who is in charge of this travesty thought that the IP in “IP address” stands for Intellectual Property
There were MPs who “got it” from all parties, exemplified by the Labour back-bencher Tom Watson but only the Lib Dems voted against the bill as a party and even then, many did not turn up to vote!
I am not angry because I file-share illegal files. I do not. Copyright violation is already an offence. As that well-known bastion of communist hippies, the Telegraph, says:
In the past the lawyers had to go after the infringers, with actual proof. Remember being innocent until proven guilty? That’s out now. Now, the holder of the internet account (Mum, Dad, Granny and the small business that can’t afford the legal fees) will be held to account for what happens over their connection.
Aside from the eye-watering insight into how law is made, I’m cross for a number of reasons:
” In April last year, Sweden’s internet traffic took a dramatic 30 per cent dip as the country’s new anti-file sharing law came into effect. Before this, Sweden, the home of the Pirate Bay, had been a hotbed of illegal trade in movies and music.
But several months later traffic levels started to surpass the old levels. Consultancy firm Mediavision found that the accessing of illegally shared movies, TV shows and music simply recovered. But there was one crucial difference. Much of the internet traffic was now encrypted.”
So if you’ve made it through this far, I’m hoping you agree with some of what I’m saying. So what can we do? A number of things:
If you have better ideas, let me know in the comments….