@matigo It's cute how some of the developer experience is still in Windows 2000 land while others are actually damned near bleeding edge.
@matigo I don't know why I had it in my head that code blocks weren't working. You even SAID they were explicitly.
@matigo It did have one then Linux said lp1 on fire and that was that.
// @thrrgilag
@matigo Sounds about right. The server spent a brief amount of time running RHEL4. When RHEL5 was released we redid it since I was in the area.
They've needed to update that hardware for a long, long time.
@matigo But you won't know how much it sucks until data entry clerks start hammering on it and plugging it 45.00 printers they got from Walmart.
// @thrrgilag
@matigo
If my experiences with doing a Linux distro from scratch and supporting it for a few hundred customers for a few years is any indicationā¦
Stick to pipe dream number 2.
// @thrrgilag
@matigo No. Corky from Pelham, AL. The girl who's posting issues lead me to discovering weirdness on their ancient RHEL5 server.
No messages logged anywhere. SMART reported no errors. But, there was weirdness so we put a bullet in it's head.
The drives in the RAID array, according to SMART, had power on uptimes of 92,000+ hours.
It was timeā¦.years ago
Of course, when the net result of dynamic zone updates is gaining the ability to ping CorkysiPhone ..
Why do I even bother enabling it?
Nagging suspicion something was wrong. Log into that remote server. Bind is using 130% CPU.
# chown -R named:named /var/named/chroot/var/named/dynamic
# restorecon -R /var/named/chroot/var/named/dynamic
# service named restart
Bind now using no CPU. Pffft. Who needs log files when you make the same stupid mistake over and over.