Hi,
I recently did some benchmarking on a Rackspace VM and was surprised that
bonnie++ showed a read throughput of almost 500MB/sec. Does anyone have an
idea how they achieve these speeds in a shared environment? While you can
achieve this with a RAID easily these days once you have lots of VMs
Hola!
yo para backups de directorios y bases de datos en mysql uso las
tareas metidas dentro de crontab ( crontab -e ), además son cifradas.
backups
# volcado de la base de datos
# MySQL se vuelca todos los días al directorio /home/pulsarbase/base
# hacer backup de una base de datos en
Patrick Lists пишет:
Hi,
I need to sign a bunch of RPM packages that have interdepencies:
build #1, sign #1, install #1, build #2, sign #2, install #2 etc.
Based on the info in bz436812 [1] I have created the key (RSA sign only,
4096bit, no sub keys) and put this in .rpmmacros:
i have:
SERVER A
SERVER B
with full root permisson [ssh, etc]
each server has a folder.
i want to backup a folder in SERVER A.
are there any backup methods, that meets these two requirements? :
1) running from e.g.: a cronjob
2) when running, it just checks the folder in SERVER A and SERVER
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 04:17:42AM -0800, S Mathias wrote:
are there any backup methods, that meets these two requirements? :
Rsync will handle this situation perfectly. man rsync for
information and working examples.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
S Mathias said the following on 11/12/10 13:17:
are there any backup methods, that meets these two requirements? :
rsync metts and exceeds the requirements
you can run rsync over ssh to secure the data transfer and rsync can transfer
only the diff
It's ok, that i can use this, when i want an incrementing sequence, in a given
way:
# {START..END..INCREMENT}
$ for i in {0..10..2}; do echo Welcome $i times; done
Welcome 0 times
Welcome 2 times
Welcome 4 times
Welcome 6 times
Welcome 8 times
Welcome 10 times
$
but what's the magic for this? :
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 06:34:25AM -0800, S Mathias wrote:
# {START..END..INCREMENT}
$ for i in {0..10..2}; do echo Welcome $i times; done
but what's the magic for this? :
$ MAGIC; do echo Welcome $i times; done
Welcome 0 times
Welcome 1 times
Welcome 4 times
Welcome 5 times
Welcome 8
On 12/11/2010 03:41 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 06:34:25AM -0800, S Mathias wrote:
You might just have to hard-code the sequence:
for i in 0 1 4 5 8 9; do
You can use seq (see: man seq)
for i in `seq FIRST INCREMENT LAST` ; do
echo $i
done;
--
Athmane
Jason Pyeron wrote:
[mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of m.r...@5-cent.us
Almost there on getting the current US fed PIV cards working
properly (and
We are going to have to do the same here very soon. If I can help in the
effort please let me know.
Thanks. My manager actually
On 12/11/2010 03:41 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 06:34:25AM -0800, S Mathias wrote:
You might just have to hard-code the sequence:
for i in 0 1 4 5 8 9; do
This outputs:
for i in $(seq 0 4 16); do seq $i 1 $i+1; done
0
1
4
5
8
9
12
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We've had very good experiences with our NetGear ReadyNAS devices but
I'm in the market for something new. The NetGear's aren't the cheapest
On 12/11/10 8:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We've had very good experiences with our NetGear ReadyNAS devices but
I'm in the market for
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 6:31 PM, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote:
On 12/11/10 8:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We've had very good
bingo. :)
Thanks!!! :)
--- On Sat, 12/11/10, Mihai T. Lazarescu mtl...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Mihai T. Lazarescu mtl...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CentOS] bash increment in a given way
To: centos@centos.org
Date: Saturday, December 11, 2010, 4:05 PM
On 12/11/2010 03:41 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 8:34 AM, S Mathias smathias1...@yahoo.com wrote:
It's ok, that i can use this, when i want an incrementing sequence, in a
given way:
# {START..END..INCREMENT}
$ for i in {0..10..2}; do echo Welcome $i times; done
Welcome 0 times
Welcome 2 times
Welcome 4 times
Am 11.12.2010 um 17:38 schrieb Rudi Ahlers:
Yes, I know. But the problem I have with NetApp is that it's not build
for a smaller market. i.e. a client looking to start small and scale
as he needs, and can afford to.
The NetGear's allow exactly just that. One can start small and grow as
Hi :)
On Saturday 11 December 2010 17:38 Rudi Ahlers wrote
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 6:31 PM, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote:
On 12/11/10 8:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than
On 12/11/10 8:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
Maybe I'm just not shopping around enough, or maybe I prefer to well
known brands, I don't know.
oh, another. NexSAN ... this is more SAN block storage than NAS file
storage, but you can put a NFS server between your NAS clients and it
for NAS
On 12/11/10 9:29 AM, Rafa Grimán wrote:
What about a DIY NAS with an off the shelf server and storage array?
and how do you avoid single-point-of-failure?if that COTS goes down,
your storage is offline, and you've lost any writes in progress.
enterprise storage has fully redundant
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 11:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers r...@softdux.com wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We've had very good experiences with our NetGear ReadyNAS devices but
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 10:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers r...@softdux.com wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We've had very good experiences with our NetGear ReadyNAS devices but
On Saturday 11 December 2010 18:37 John R Pierce wrote
On 12/11/10 9:29 AM, Rafa Grimán wrote:
What about a DIY NAS with an off the shelf server and storage array?
and how do you avoid single-point-of-failure?if that COTS goes down,
your storage is offline, and you've lost any writes in
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We're using two different products that qualify under that heading.
For NAS devices, which are our primary backup medium, we use the QNAP
On 12/10/2010 02:05 AM, John Doe wrote:
What about: '--passphrase-file file' ?
If you're going to put the key and its passphrase file on the same host,
you might as well not encrypt the key at all. You're better off
encrypting the filesystem that contains the key.
If you decide to use a
On Sat, 2010-12-11 at 18:15 +0200, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
EMC AX4 SAN (iSCSI)
We've had very good experiences with our NetGear ReadyNAS devices
On Dec 11, 2010, at 11:15 AM, Rudi Ahlers r...@softdux.com wrote:
If you use any NAS (or a SAN) devices, what do you use? And I'm
referring more to larger scale network storage than your home PC or
home theater system.
We've had very good experiences with our NetGear ReadyNAS devices but
Go EMC. Support is solid and the units are well designed.
But-But - they run Windows on the low-end stuff, don't they?
;-)))
Rainer
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CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Dec 11, 2010, at 5:11 PM, Rainer Duffner rai...@ultra-secure.de wrote:
Go EMC. Support is solid and the units are well designed.
But-But - they run Windows on the low-end stuff, don't they?
;-)))
I think they run embedded windows on some of their high-end stuff as well.
If done
On 12/11/2010 09:24 AM, Rainer Duffner wrote:
With 100TB, DIY is out of the question ;-)
I wouldn't say that. It would be...challenging...but not out of the
question.
But Aberdeen (note - I have no financial interest. They are simply
someone I've seen marketing Linux based SAN/NAS machines
On Saturday 11 December 2010 23:50 Jerry Franz wrote
On 12/11/2010 09:24 AM, Rainer Duffner wrote:
With 100TB, DIY is out of the question ;-)
I wouldn't say that. It would be...challenging...but not out of the
question.
I don't see why it's out of the question. Why should it be? Nowadays
On 11/12/10 13:17, S Mathias wrote:
i have:
SERVER A
SERVER B
with full root permisson [ssh, etc]
each server has a folder.
i want to backup a folder in SERVER A.
are there any backup methods, that meets these two requirements? :
1) running from e.g.: a cronjob
2) when running, it
hello list!
I am attempting to setup haproxy using a shared up I am trying to
setup using the heartbeat package that I currently have installed:
[r...@virtcent01:~]#rpm -qa | grep heartbeat | grep -v -e stonith -e pils
heartbeat-2.1.4-11.el5
heartbeat-2.1.4-11.el5
I have /etc/ha/.d authkeys
Sorry I forgot to finish the story!!! :)
And the interface doesn't appear to be sharing the address:
[r...@virtcent01:~]#ip addr sh eth0
2: eth0: BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 1000
link/ether 00:16:36:22:92:70 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 192.168.1.23/24
On Fri, Dec 10, 2010 at 2:20 PM, James B. Byrne byrn...@harte-lyne.ca wrote:
Please forgive my ignorance but I need a explanation of how to
accomplish the following since I cannot figure it out from the
documents.
I have a Ruby script with a shebang line that looks like this:
#!/usr/bin/env
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 12:24 PM, Rainer Duffner rai...@ultra-secure.de wrote:
The other question is if it actually works.
Too many of the low-cost devices eat the data on the drives, when the
motherboard or the controller fries...
With luck, you can read the data on one of the drives...
If
IBM sells some nice one rack units as well.
speaking of.anyone have any experience with the IBM DS3500 storage?
I've been considering the DS3500 for my dev lab storage. These come
24x2.5 (or 12x3.5) SAS 2U boxes with redundant storage controllers
that have 2x2 SAS host ports and either
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