Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
On May 23, 2013, at 11:09 AM, Michael Sierchio wrote: > On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 5:33 AM, Warren Block wrote: > >> .. > >> One thing mentioned earlier is that ZFS wants lots of memory. 4G-8G >> minimum, some might say as much as the server will hold. >> >> > Not necessarily so - deduplication places great demands on memory, but that > can be satisfied with dedicated cache devices (on SSD for performance and > safety reasons). Without dedup, the requirements are more modest. The rule of thumb for DeDupe is 1GB physical RAM for every 1TB of capacity. The issue is that the DeDupe metadata table must live in the ARC for good performance. The discussion I have seen on the ZFS lists indicates that L2ARC is not really adequate for this, so adding cache devices (SSD's) don't really help. On the other hand, you can use ZFS without DeDupe with as little as 2GB of total system RAM (depending on what else the system is doing). In my experience, the amount of RAM depends on the amount of I/O not the amount of storage. I find between 1GB and 3GB space for the ARC is adequate. -- Paul Kraus Deputy Technical Director, LoneStarCon 3 Sound Coordinator, Schenectady Light Opera Company ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
On 5/23/2013 7:14 AM, saeedeh motlagh wrote: thanks for your reply. you know i have a sensitive server and unfortunately it is located some where that power outage happens much. so i want guarantee my data and avoid data lost and file corruption in my server. Get a good reliable UPS. Test it regularly, the batteries do fail. Test to make sure that it will work, unplug it and let the computer drain the battery to time it. Consider that the battery will degrade over time. One thing google does is put a 12V battery inside the chassis to help with the power backup, you might look into it. i do not have any problem in RAM and hardware. i don't know which approach is more suitable for my server. using soft-update or ZFS. please help me to select the best one. If power failure is an issue, you have no guarantee of data loss protection unless you use networked storage to a safe place. UFS soft updates protects against file system corruption in case of power loss, no guarantees of individual file consistency. ZFS guarantees no silent failures, it doesn't guarantee protection, only that you'll know about it. There is no filesystem that can guarantee you won't lose data in a power failure. Hard drives are known to lie about what's been physically synced to disk out of cache in order to improve speed. If the power goes out at the wrong time, you can lose data. ZFS can find a corrupted file and tell you, everything else won't. If you have a back up of that file, you can restore it. thank you so much On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 4:28 PM, Warren Block wrote: On Thu, 23 May 2013, saeedeh motlagh wrote: hello every body i have a question about fixing file corruption in freebsd. now i have freebsd8.2 and some times file corruption happened on it. this issue has a heavy cost for me and i want to avoid it or fixit it completely. so my question is: is it better to upgrade my freebsd to 9.1 and use soft update or migrate from UFS to ZFS? That's a judgement call, which means "it depends". i heard so much about soft update -that is added in freebsd9.1- which can fix file corruption in acceptable way with low cost but i don't know how much is reliable and efficient. Several things: Soft updates have been around for quite a while. Soft updates journaling is the new addition. Neither of these address file corruption. Their purpose is to make sure the filesystem does not get corrupted, but individual files could still contain bad data. in the other hand, i think migration from UFS to ZFS can be another solution. as i read ZFS is is created to solve all the problems related integrity file system. is it reliable enough in comparison soft-update? now, i want to know which solution is better and why? Again, it depends. Does the target system have enough RAM for ZFS? If the file corruption is due to a hardware problem or an application writing bad data, no filesystem can prevent that. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 5:33 AM, Warren Block wrote: > .. > One thing mentioned earlier is that ZFS wants lots of memory. 4G-8G > minimum, some might say as much as the server will hold. > > Not necessarily so - deduplication places great demands on memory, but that can be satisfied with dedicated cache devices (on SSD for performance and safety reasons). Without dedup, the requirements are more modest. Softupdates guarantee metadata consistency, but do nothing to address data integrity. ZFS has copy-on-write semantics (which solve a problem that even hardware RAID can't), and end-to-end checksums to detect/prevent data corruption (large drives will have uncorrectable bit errors over their lifetime). - M ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
On Thu, 23 May 2013, saeedeh motlagh wrote: you know i have a sensitive server and unfortunately it is located some where that power outage happens much. so i want guarantee my data and avoid data lost and file corruption in my server. i do not have any problem in RAM and hardware. The lack of a UPS can be considered a hardware problem. i don't know which approach is more suitable for my server. using soft-update or ZFS. please help me to select the best one. Please don't top-post, as it makes responding to your message more difficult. One thing mentioned earlier is that ZFS wants lots of memory. 4G-8G minimum, some might say as much as the server will hold. But resilient filesystems still can't prevent data corruption. Fix the power problem with a UPS. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
On Thu, 23 May 2013 16:44+0430, saeedeh motlagh wrote: > thanks for your reply. > > you know i have a sensitive server and unfortunately it is located some > where that power outage happens much. so i want guarantee my data and avoid > data lost and file corruption in my server. Maybe you should also invest in a decent UPS. > i do not have any problem in RAM and hardware. > > i don't know which approach is more suitable for my server. using > soft-update or ZFS. please help me to select the best one. > > thank you so much > > On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 4:28 PM, Warren Block wrote: > > > On Thu, 23 May 2013, saeedeh motlagh wrote: > > > > hello every body > >> > >> i have a question about fixing file corruption in freebsd. > >> > >> now i have freebsd8.2 and some times file corruption happened on it. this > >> issue has a heavy cost for me and i want to avoid it or fixit it > >> completely. so my question is: > >> > >> is it better to upgrade my freebsd to 9.1 and use soft update or migrate > >> from UFS to ZFS? > > > > That's a judgement call, which means "it depends". > > > >> i heard so much about soft update -that is added in freebsd9.1- which can > >> fix file corruption in acceptable way with low cost but i don't know how > >> much is reliable and efficient. > > > > Several things: > > > > Soft updates have been around for quite a while. > > Soft updates journaling is the new addition. > > Neither of these address file corruption. Their purpose is to make sure > > the filesystem does not get corrupted, but individual files could still > > contain bad data. > > > > in the other hand, i think migration from UFS to ZFS can be another > >> solution. as i read ZFS is is created to solve all the problems related > >> integrity file system. is it reliable enough in comparison soft-update? > >> > >> now, i want to know which solution is better and why? > > > > Again, it depends. Does the target system have enough RAM for ZFS? If > > the file corruption is due to a hardware problem or an application writing > > bad data, no filesystem can prevent that. -- +---++ | Vennlig hilsen, | Best regards, | | Trond Endrestøl, | Trond Endrestøl, | | IT-ansvarlig, | System administrator, | | Fagskolen Innlandet, | Gjøvik Technical College, Norway, | | tlf. mob. 952 62 567, | Cellular...: +47 952 62 567, | | sentralbord 61 14 54 00. | Switchboard: +47 61 14 54 00. | +---++___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
thanks for your reply. you know i have a sensitive server and unfortunately it is located some where that power outage happens much. so i want guarantee my data and avoid data lost and file corruption in my server. i do not have any problem in RAM and hardware. i don't know which approach is more suitable for my server. using soft-update or ZFS. please help me to select the best one. thank you so much On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 4:28 PM, Warren Block wrote: > On Thu, 23 May 2013, saeedeh motlagh wrote: > > hello every body >> >> i have a question about fixing file corruption in freebsd. >> >> now i have freebsd8.2 and some times file corruption happened on it. this >> issue has a heavy cost for me and i want to avoid it or fixit it >> completely. so my question is: >> >> is it better to upgrade my freebsd to 9.1 and use soft update or migrate >> from UFS to ZFS? >> > > That's a judgement call, which means "it depends". > > > i heard so much about soft update -that is added in freebsd9.1- which can >> fix file corruption in acceptable way with low cost but i don't know how >> much is reliable and efficient. >> > > Several things: > > Soft updates have been around for quite a while. > Soft updates journaling is the new addition. > Neither of these address file corruption. Their purpose is to make sure > the filesystem does not get corrupted, but individual files could still > contain bad data. > > > in the other hand, i think migration from UFS to ZFS can be another >> solution. as i read ZFS is is created to solve all the problems related >> integrity file system. is it reliable enough in comparison soft-update? >> >> now, i want to know which solution is better and why? >> > > Again, it depends. Does the target system have enough RAM for ZFS? If > the file corruption is due to a hardware problem or an application writing > bad data, no filesystem can prevent that. > -- *Sa.M* ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
On Thu, 23 May 2013, saeedeh motlagh wrote: hello every body i have a question about fixing file corruption in freebsd. now i have freebsd8.2 and some times file corruption happened on it. this issue has a heavy cost for me and i want to avoid it or fixit it completely. so my question is: is it better to upgrade my freebsd to 9.1 and use soft update or migrate from UFS to ZFS? That's a judgement call, which means "it depends". i heard so much about soft update -that is added in freebsd9.1- which can fix file corruption in acceptable way with low cost but i don't know how much is reliable and efficient. Several things: Soft updates have been around for quite a while. Soft updates journaling is the new addition. Neither of these address file corruption. Their purpose is to make sure the filesystem does not get corrupted, but individual files could still contain bad data. in the other hand, i think migration from UFS to ZFS can be another solution. as i read ZFS is is created to solve all the problems related integrity file system. is it reliable enough in comparison soft-update? now, i want to know which solution is better and why? Again, it depends. Does the target system have enough RAM for ZFS? If the file corruption is due to a hardware problem or an application writing bad data, no filesystem can prevent that. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
file corruption solution (soft-update or ZFS)
hello every body i have a question about fixing file corruption in freebsd. now i have freebsd8.2 and some times file corruption happened on it. this issue has a heavy cost for me and i want to avoid it or fixit it completely. so my question is: is it better to upgrade my freebsd to 9.1 and use soft update or migrate from UFS to ZFS? i heard so much about soft update -that is added in freebsd9.1- which can fix file corruption in acceptable way with low cost but i don't know how much is reliable and efficient. in the other hand, i think migration from UFS to ZFS can be another solution. as i read ZFS is is created to solve all the problems related integrity file system. is it reliable enough in comparison soft-update? now, i want to know which solution is better and why? thanks in advance s.motlagh ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
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Aha, just thought of a solution.... Games: src for gtk!
guys, as some of you know i have been learning gtk by actually doing and by asking help. i need help now with the range slider widgets. i need to have the user select at least four things rat range from 1 to 100. i have found at updated one gtk v 1.2 demo to at least v 2.0. i would still like to see more examples. i have already found one game that got me on the right page for one thing. all that's left is my Options and File. The file asks whether to "Save" things to disk or two quit. the options sets things like "words-per-minute",pitch, and amplitude or volume does anybody know of any game that uses gtk in C that shows how to do multiple ranges? of course, the port does have to be a game, but that seems most likely. thanks in advance, gary -- Gary Kline kl...@thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix Voice By Computer (for Universal Access): http:/www.thought.org/vbc The 8.57a release of Jottings: http://jottings.thought.org Twenty-five years of service to the Unix community. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On 15/01/2012 17:50, Paul Beard wrote: > The app configurations are not this granular: hostname and port are > configured but there is nothing that makes clear that IF you specify > localhost, you WILL BE using a domain socket which MUST BE > /tmp/mysql.sock and IF you move it or your distribution prefers some > other location you MAY NOT use localhost as you are now using a TCP > socket which shouldn't require a hostname but because of the way the > app is written, it does. You can specify an alternate socket location in your connection parameters. For the command line client, it is: mysql -S /var/run/mysql/sock This doesn't help if you say 'mysql -h localhost' and get diverted to use the default socket though -- in that case you can have a .my.cnf file containing (inter-alia) [client] socket = /var/run/mysql/sock For the various language APIs, you generally need to specify a DSN string -- usually this looks something like mysql:database=$database;host=$hostname;port=$port but for a socket connection you could say instead: mysql:database=$database;mysql_socket=/var/run/mysql/sock ... assuming that whoever wrote the application you're using made it sufficiently flexible as to be able to accept something like that. Cheers, Matthew -- Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 7 Priory Courtyard Flat 3 PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate JID: matt...@infracaninophile.co.uk Kent, CT11 9PW signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Re: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On 15/01/2012 17:20, Chuck Swiger wrote: > If you specify a hostname and port via "--host=localhost > --port=3306", then you are describing a TCP socket. There is no > pathname involved. You could connect regardless of where mysqld is > putting the socket. Some MySQL clients will gratuitously change a connection attempt to localhost to use the /tmp/mysql.sock unix domain socket because it does perform a bit faster, and it seems they don't expect their users to just ask for a socket connection explicitly. You can test this fairly simply: set up your server with 'skip-networking' temporarily and try making client connections to it. Of course, for some language API's there's no option but to use a network socket -- Java being a case in point -- but that's the exception rather than the rule. To force the command line mysql(1) client to use a network connection to localhost you need to use the --protocol=TCP argument Cheers, Matthew -- Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 7 Priory Courtyard Flat 3 PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate JID: matt...@infracaninophile.co.uk Kent, CT11 9PW signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Re: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On Jan 15, 2012, at 9:20 AM, Chuck Swiger wrote: > You're confusing two things which are different. At the risk of boring everyone on this list, I think I understand it as far as I need to: I am not the developer of the app(s) that seem to generate this issue. > If you specify a path via "--socket=/tmp/mysqld.sock", you are describing a > UNIX domain socket. While you can also specify "--host=localhost", that > would be ignored because it it implicit. If you change where the socket > lives in mysqld config or CLI options, you need to change where the clients > look for the socket as well. > > If you specify a hostname and port via "--host=localhost --port=3306", then > you are describing a TCP socket. There is no pathname involved. You could > connect regardless of where mysqld is putting the socket. If I gave the impression I didn't understand this, my mistake. The app configurations are not this granular: hostname and port are configured but there is nothing that makes clear that IF you specify localhost, you WILL BE using a domain socket which MUST BE /tmp/mysql.sock and IF you move it or your distribution prefers some other location you MAY NOT use localhost as you are now using a TCP socket which shouldn't require a hostname but because of the way the app is written, it does. Put another way, if you specify localhost, the port is ignored: I just tested this by setting the port to with a symlink to the socket placed in /tmp. It worked fine. If you change the location of the socket, you MUST use a TCP socket which mean identifying the host by name, not as localhost, even if it is localhost. There is no way to specify the location of the domain socket. It must be in /tmp. Note I am not arguing that the use of localhost requires a named domain socket, in UNIX, just that it does in this app. I learned a couple of things here. I hope I can make them clear to the people who need 'em. -- Paul Beard Are you trying to win an argument or solve a problem?
Re: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On Jan 15, 2012, at 8:43 AM, Paul Beard wrote: > Useful clarification but a UNIX domain socket sounds less like networking and > more like interprocess communication, i.e., something explicitly tied to a > single host. Yes, that's right. > There is a "skip networking" option for MySQL that references the domain > socket for use by processes on the same host but doesn't accept connections > on port 3306. That also sounds familiar. > There's no indication that using localhost will default to a domain socket > which will explicitly be looked for in /tmp and if you put it anywhere else, > you must specify a hostname to access the TCP socket. You're confusing two things which are different. If you specify a path via "--socket=/tmp/mysqld.sock", you are describing a UNIX domain socket. While you can also specify "--host=localhost", that would be ignored because it it implicit. If you change where the socket lives in mysqld config or CLI options, you need to change where the clients look for the socket as well. If you specify a hostname and port via "--host=localhost --port=3306", then you are describing a TCP socket. There is no pathname involved. You could connect regardless of where mysqld is putting the socket. > I'll quote your definition in the bug report as it seems crystal clear. I would have said that the documentation seem clear as well: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/multiple-server-clients.html http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/multiple-unix-servers.html ...but there's evidently some confusing aspect. Regards, -- -Chuck ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On Jan 15, 2012, at 8:17 AM, Chuck Swiger wrote: > Something looking for a network location specified as a host and port (ie, > localhost:3306) is using a TCP socket. Something looking for > /tmp/mysqld.sock is using a UNIX domain socket. > > Changing the path to the UNIX domain socket will have no effect upon the port > used by the TCP socket, or vice versa. > Useful clarification but a UNIX domain socket sounds less like networking and more like interprocess communication, i.e., something explicitly tied to a single host. There is a "skip networking" option for MySQL that references the domain socket for use by processes on the same host but doesn't accept connections on port 3306. There's no indication that using localhost will default to a domain socket which will explicitly be looked for in /tmp and if you put it anywhere else, you must specify a hostname to access the TCP socket. I'll quote your definition in the bug report as it seems crystal clear. -- Paul Beard Are you trying to win an argument or solve a problem?
Re: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On Jan 14, 2012, at 5:18 PM, Paul Beard wrote: > Turns out some applications won't work if you move the socket if they are > configured to access localhost. Seems like a misunderstanding of networking > if you can specify a port number in a configuration file but the application > looks to the filesystem for the socket. There is no way to specify a file > location so it seems doomed to fail — as it did. Something looking for a network location specified as a host and port (ie, localhost:3306) is using a TCP socket. Something looking for /tmp/mysqld.sock is using a UNIX domain socket. Changing the path to the UNIX domain socket will have no effect upon the port used by the TCP socket, or vice versa. Regards, -- -Chuck ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock]
On Jan 14, 2012, at 11:15 AM, Chuck Swiger wrote: > Anyway, doesn't the mysql port want to keep the socket under > /var/run/mysql/mysqld.sock or some such, to avoid issues with /tmp? Turns out some applications won't work if you move the socket if they are configured to access localhost. Seems like a misunderstanding of networking if you can specify a port number in a configuration file but the application looks to the filesystem for the socket. There is no way to specify a file location so it seems doomed to fail — as it did. The apps in question are net-mgmt/cacti and net-mgmt/cacti-spine. -- Paul Beard Are you trying to win an argument or solve a problem?
Re: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock
On Jan 14, 2012, at 10:17 AM, Paul Beard wrote: > I would be interested in knowing how those permissions got changed. Someone or something running as root changed them. > I rebooted the system early on in the process as I kept seeing messages like > this: > 120114 9:39:04 [ERROR] Can't start server : Bind on unix socket: Permission > denied > 120114 9:39:04 [ERROR] Do you already have another mysqld server running on > socket: /tmp/mysql.sock ? > > Those are rubbish as error messages as they don't say the file can't be > created or give any indication of the actual problem. The meaning seems obvious enough; mysqld was unable to bind to the socket, which is what perror() meant with "Permission denied": 13 EACCES Permission denied. An attempt was made to access a file in a way forbidden by its file access permissions. Either /tmp was unwritable for mysqld due to not having 1777 perms, or /tmp/mysql.sock probably already existed but was owned by root and not the user mysqld runs as. Anyway, doesn't the mysql port want to keep the socket under /var/run/mysql/mysqld.sock or some such, to avoid issues with /tmp? Regards, -- -Chuck ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock
On Jan 14, 2012, at 11:15 AM, Chuck Swiger wrote: > The meaning seems obvious enough; mysqld was unable to bind to the socket, > which is what perror() meant with "Permission denied": Really? I read this: > 120114 9:39:04 [ERROR] Do you already have another mysqld server running on > socket: /tmp/mysql.sock ? as "there is an existing socket that seems to be in use: what's up with that?" The message references a file that does not exist (but that mysql will cheerfully remove if found). There was no existing socket. Those two lines, taken together, tell me that a. mysql can't run without a socket and b. it thinks another process is running, bound to a socket that doesn't exist. Clear as mud. How about [ERROR] socket: /tmp/mysql.sock not found and/or [ERROR] socket:/tmp/mysql.sock could not be created perhaps with a helpful hint about permissions. If this was unusual, that would be one thing but I found quite a few references to the problem before I found the solution. Maybe it's a housekeeping thing but why would mysql need to destroy the file it uses for a socket and then recreate it when it could simply examine it and reuse it? > Anyway, doesn't the mysql port want to keep the socket under > /var/run/mysql/mysqld.sock or some such, to avoid issues with /tmp? Apparently not, as I commented out any reference to it in my.cnf and still saw the same messages about /tmp/mysql.sock. It seems to work if spelled out explicitly. -- Paul Beard Are you trying to win an argument or solve a problem?
Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock
Woke up to a screenful of error messages about failed mysql backups and found that for some reason, mysql was refusing to run at all. The issue was not just a missing mysql.sock but an inability to create one. I could do it by hand or at least create a file with the same name and permissions but it would be removed on the next attempt and then not replaced. Turns out the permissions on /tmp were not right. I didn't note them beforehand but setting them 1777 solved it. I would be interested in knowing how those permissions got changed. I rebooted the system early on in the process as I kept seeing messages like this: 120114 9:39:04 [ERROR] Can't start server : Bind on unix socket: Permission denied 120114 9:39:04 [ERROR] Do you already have another mysqld server running on socket: /tmp/mysql.sock ? Those are rubbish as error messages as they don't say the file can't be created or give any indication of the actual problem. This is all more a problem for the mysql developers than FreeBSD but I am posting it to the list in case anyone else gets bitten by it. -- Paul Beard Are you trying to win an argument or solve a problem?
Re: Best solution to install zfs on root for FBSD 9 [SOLVED]
Le 20 déc. 2011 à 18:42, Ivan Klymenko a écrit : > В Tue, 20 Dec 2011 18:11:36 +0100 > bsd пишет: > >> Hi, >> >> I would like to know if there is an "official" howto that could help >> me in the process of installing zfs on root. >> >> I will need a raid 1 configuration and plan to use the whole disks to >> be part of the pool. >> >> How far can we go with the installer ? >> >> Do I have to use gpart ? >> >> What is best way to achieve this ? >> >> >> Any recent and up to date pointer will be welcome. >> >> >> Thx. >> > http://wiki.freebsd.org/RootOnZFS/GPTZFSBoot > http://www.aisecure.net/2011/05/01/root-on-zfs-freebsd-current/ Ok thanks for your posting. There is an update for the post mentioned up there which is exactly what I was looking for : http://www.aisecure.net/2011/11/28/root-zfs-freebsd9/ Thx everyone. –– -> Grégory Bernard Director <- ---> www.osnet.eu <--- --> Your provider of OpenSource appliances <-- –– OSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetO ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Best solution to install zfs on root for FBSD 9
On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 12:11 PM, bsd wrote:> I would like to know if there is an "official" howto that could help me in the process of installing zfs on root. I have specifically used this documentation with great success: http://wiki.freebsd.org/RootOnZFS/GPTZFSBoot/Mirror You can also look at this link for more information: http://wiki.freebsd.org/RootOnZFS -Corey Smith ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Best solution to install zfs on root for FBSD 9
В Tue, 20 Dec 2011 18:11:36 +0100 bsd пишет: > Hi, > > I would like to know if there is an "official" howto that could help > me in the process of installing zfs on root. > > I will need a raid 1 configuration and plan to use the whole disks to > be part of the pool. > > How far can we go with the installer ? > > Do I have to use gpart ? > > What is best way to achieve this ? > > > Any recent and up to date pointer will be welcome. > > > Thx. > http://wiki.freebsd.org/RootOnZFS/GPTZFSBoot http://www.aisecure.net/2011/05/01/root-on-zfs-freebsd-current/ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Best solution to install zfs on root for FBSD 9
Hi, I would like to know if there is an "official" howto that could help me in the process of installing zfs on root. I will need a raid 1 configuration and plan to use the whole disks to be part of the pool. How far can we go with the installer ? Do I have to use gpart ? What is best way to achieve this ? Any recent and up to date pointer will be welcome. Thx. –– -> Grégory Bernard Director <- ---> www.osnet.eu <--- --> Your provider of OpenSource appliances <-- –– OSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetOSnetO ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution for school lab just a thought
Hello all. Sergio. Would you mind to contact me offline (maybe some people in the list won't be interested) I help communities and non profit (very poor) organizations here and would like to know more about your schema and results. Here also we get "donattions" of hardware. The old 386 and so, computers that big companies do not use anymore and with that we have to work. We are also trying to giving the kids a chance to learn something else so they can compete in a hard job market. Thanks in advance Jorge Biquez jbiq...@intranet.com.mx At 04:09 p.m. 31/10/2011, Mario Lobo wrote: On Monday 31 October 2011 10:56:44 Sergio de Almeida Lenzi wrote: > > You should look into the Freebsd port qjail. At our school lab all the > > pcs have ms/windows on the hard drive with the "putty" client installed. > > Students use putty to get logged into a jail on a single Freebsd system. > > Each student can practice installing ports, packages, or one of the > > desktop window environments in their private jail. The goal being to > > teach students to be system administrators. > > Humm Interesting... > In my case the computers runs FreeBSD (diskless) and they need do > access > windows system. > In a public school, where the $$$ is the main problem, I think this is > the solution. > Here the school has computers (a lot) that receives from donation, > projects... from time to time > the problem is the software... > What to teach to children??? word, exel, powerpoint, msn??? is this > teaching??? > > I think that children (and teenagers too), must face problems and > resolve them. > the world belongs tho those that work in group. those who can get > answers, > so an account in a desktop environment (in my case: gnome) with several > program > languages, internet access, text composing (libreoffice), postscript > printing (cups), > some IDE (anjuta, eclipse), multimedia (ffmpeg, avidemux2, openshot, > dvdstyler) > can make the difference. They can download small videos from their > phones, and > produce digital media, share it on DVDs... the home lesson is send via > email (everyone > has email).. One problem is hand-witten... no one wants to hand write > now... > > Those who foresee the future, can learn how to code GUI interface, and > so produce > software for the community. They can learn how to install admin FreeBSD > servers, > share files in the network, use webdav to share files in internet... and > so on... > > There is a need for people with this knowledge... The society will buy > from the > students as long as they produce good software.. > > What is the other alternative??? finish high school and than look for a > job??? > XXI century there is no jobs, there will be working people... Those who > can > succeed working for himself will rule.. That is what I teach to my > boys... > They worked hard (12 years)... and now they rule.. > > Do you really think that this world crisis will end in 10 years??? > > Just a thought... > > Sergio > Picture an arrow whistling through the wind, undisturbed, and hitting the bullseye dead in its perfect center, That's what your thought is to me, Sergio. +10 ! Thank you. -- Mario Lobo http://www.mallavoodoo.com.br FreeBSD since 2.2.8 [not Pro-Audio YET!!] (99% winblows FREE) ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution for school lab just a thought
On Monday 31 October 2011 10:56:44 Sergio de Almeida Lenzi wrote: > > You should look into the Freebsd port qjail. At our school lab all the > > pcs have ms/windows on the hard drive with the "putty" client installed. > > Students use putty to get logged into a jail on a single Freebsd system. > > Each student can practice installing ports, packages, or one of the > > desktop window environments in their private jail. The goal being to > > teach students to be system administrators. > > Humm Interesting... > In my case the computers runs FreeBSD (diskless) and they need do > access > windows system. > In a public school, where the $$$ is the main problem, I think this is > the solution. > Here the school has computers (a lot) that receives from donation, > projects... from time to time > the problem is the software... > What to teach to children??? word, exel, powerpoint, msn??? is this > teaching??? > > I think that children (and teenagers too), must face problems and > resolve them. > the world belongs tho those that work in group. those who can get > answers, > so an account in a desktop environment (in my case: gnome) with several > program > languages, internet access, text composing (libreoffice), postscript > printing (cups), > some IDE (anjuta, eclipse), multimedia (ffmpeg, avidemux2, openshot, > dvdstyler) > can make the difference. They can download small videos from their > phones, and > produce digital media, share it on DVDs... the home lesson is send via > email (everyone > has email).. One problem is hand-witten... no one wants to hand write > now... > > Those who foresee the future, can learn how to code GUI interface, and > so produce > software for the community. They can learn how to install admin FreeBSD > servers, > share files in the network, use webdav to share files in internet... and > so on... > > There is a need for people with this knowledge... The society will buy > from the > students as long as they produce good software.. > > What is the other alternative??? finish high school and than look for a > job??? > XXI century there is no jobs, there will be working people... Those who > can > succeed working for himself will rule.. That is what I teach to my > boys... > They worked hard (12 years)... and now they rule.. > > Do you really think that this world crisis will end in 10 years??? > > Just a thought... > > Sergio > Picture an arrow whistling through the wind, undisturbed, and hitting the bullseye dead in its perfect center, That's what your thought is to me, Sergio. +10 ! Thank you. -- Mario Lobo http://www.mallavoodoo.com.br FreeBSD since 2.2.8 [not Pro-Audio YET!!] (99% winblows FREE) ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution for school lab just a thought
> You should look into the Freebsd port qjail. At our school lab all the > pcs have ms/windows on the hard drive with the "putty" client installed. > Students use putty to get logged into a jail on a single Freebsd system. > Each student can practice installing ports, packages, or one of the > desktop window environments in their private jail. The goal being to > teach students to be system administrators. Humm Interesting... In my case the computers runs FreeBSD (diskless) and they need do access windows system. In a public school, where the $$$ is the main problem, I think this is the solution. Here the school has computers (a lot) that receives from donation, projects... from time to time the problem is the software... What to teach to children??? word, exel, powerpoint, msn??? is this teaching??? I think that children (and teenagers too), must face problems and resolve them. the world belongs tho those that work in group. those who can get answers, so an account in a desktop environment (in my case: gnome) with several program languages, internet access, text composing (libreoffice), postscript printing (cups), some IDE (anjuta, eclipse), multimedia (ffmpeg, avidemux2, openshot, dvdstyler) can make the difference. They can download small videos from their phones, and produce digital media, share it on DVDs... the home lesson is send via email (everyone has email).. One problem is hand-witten... no one wants to hand write now... Those who foresee the future, can learn how to code GUI interface, and so produce software for the community. They can learn how to install admin FreeBSD servers, share files in the network, use webdav to share files in internet... and so on... There is a need for people with this knowledge... The society will buy from the students as long as they produce good software.. What is the other alternative??? finish high school and than look for a job??? XXI century there is no jobs, there will be working people... Those who can succeed working for himself will rule.. That is what I teach to my boys... They worked hard (12 years)... and now they rule.. Do you really think that this world crisis will end in 10 years??? Just a thought... Sergio ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution for school lab
Sergio de Almeida Lenzi wrote: I use a solution that is: 1) a "large" Freebsd box (phenon X4,8Gb of memory, 1TB disk) 2) OS=Freebsd 8.2 with all gnome2.32 installed 3) Virtualbox 10.x installed in FreeBSD 4) NT 2003 server with unlimited number of users on rdp (the iso is in internet or torrent). 5) internet connection Here this would cost about US$400 Install the system using zfs, insert all users can hold about 1000 users Setup FreeBSD to boot diskless (and so will run on all the old machines in your place) using either pxe or custom CD. The users will use Gnome interface, and those who wants windows, can use via rdesktop, pointing on the NT server on the same machine. You will need a swith with ONE gigabit port, and the others is 100Mbits... This setup you have: about 1200 applictions (from the FreBSDports), some include: java, eclipse, python, c, c++, multimedia, web browing, office, printing, email, chat, calculator, vector drawing, dia (visio), raster image editor (gimp), monodevelop(.NET devel framework), sql (postgresql), sql administration (pgadmin3). Reliable, fast, rock solid, central administration... It just works [] Sergio You should look into the Freebsd port qjail. At our school lab all the pcs have ms/windows on the hard drive with the "putty" client installed. Students use putty to get logged into a jail on a single Freebsd system. Each student can practice installing ports, packages, or one of the desktop window environments in their private jail. The goal being to teach students to be system administrators. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: [OFFTOPIC] Solution for school lab
On 30/10/2011 10:01, Peter wrote: Hi, I am about to setup a small PC lab for teaching operating systems. Since computers will need to be used for teaching Windows/Unix(FreeBsd)/Linux(Novell) I need to find a way: 1. Systems to coexists on the same hardware 2. Easily restore system images to the initial state. 1) A very robust if slightly more expensive way is a separate disk for each OS. Many more recent (last 3 or 4 years?) motherboards have an option during POST to choose a boot device so you don't need to go into the BIOS setup screens. This system has the advantage that OS's are completely separate from each other. 2) Clonezilla. (Not very relevant aside... Back in the day of pentium 1's and 2 dual channel IDE controllers I solved this same problem with 3 hard disks, each set to be master, on a home made IDE cable with an extra connector so the three disks were plugged into the primary controller, and a 3 position rotary switch so only one disk would power up at a time. It took a bit of experimentation to find three disks that could coexist but it worked really well as long as one didn't switch over while the machine was on. I think I had FreeBSD, Windows and Netware). Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution for school lab
> Consider installing VMWare ESXi and instances of whatever operating system > you like. We have template operating systems we copy to new/replacement > instances. You can export your disks to the instances but with all things > you gain some, you loose some. with the small machine (phenon 4, 8Gb), and vmware, the sistems is slow... and the MB does not accept more than 8GB. Besides I would need a version of each operating system for VMWARE.. and I do not know if vmware can be used for free. If even in a school you can, in other places you cannot, so I would cope with several platforms... Here I run a business based on FreeBSD, and the less different solutions the better... > > As someone else mentioned, consider netboot. The booted instance can do > whatever they want to your hardware but disks are likely to have to be > re-initialized each time, which is fine if you are using disks for swap > and other temporary things. I use PXE because it is in the firmware of the MB... (almost always have)... some very old computers, does not boot anything but: floppy, cd, or HD... I choose CD.. one CD, boot all machines... Netboot is great too... > > With regard to VirtualBox, someone needs to fix it (probably just update > the port). The network driver (IIRC) eats memory. Strange I have been using it in a day basis, and never had problems with that... the machine sometimes suffer power failure (3 months, or 1 month period).. I use FreeBSD 8.2 in zfs... with zmirror, and daylly snapshots... so I can go back anything till 5 days ago... Anyway, thanks for the information [] Sergio ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Solution for school lab
On Sun, 30 Oct 2011, Sergio de Almeida Lenzi wrote: I use a solution that is: 1) a "large" Freebsd box (phenon X4,8Gb of memory, 1TB disk) 2) OS=Freebsd 8.2 with all gnome2.32 installed 3) Virtualbox 10.x installed in FreeBSD 4) NT 2003 server with unlimited number of users on rdp (the iso is in internet or torrent). 5) internet connection Here this would cost about US$400 Install the system using zfs, insert all users can hold about 1000 users Setup FreeBSD to boot diskless (and so will run on all the old machines in your place) using either pxe or custom CD. The users will use Gnome interface, and those who wants windows, can use via rdesktop, pointing on the NT server on the same machine. You will need a swith with ONE gigabit port, and the others is 100Mbits... This setup you have: about 1200 applictions (from the FreBSDports), some include: java, eclipse, python, c, c++, multimedia, web browing, office, printing, email, chat, calculator, vector drawing, dia (visio), raster image editor (gimp), monodevelop(.NET devel framework), sql (postgresql), sql administration (pgadmin3). Reliable, fast, rock solid, central administration... It just works Consider installing VMWare ESXi and instances of whatever operating system you like. We have template operating systems we copy to new/replacement instances. You can export your disks to the instances but with all things you gain some, you loose some. As someone else mentioned, consider netboot. The booted instance can do whatever they want to your hardware but disks are likely to have to be re-initialized each time, which is fine if you are using disks for swap and other temporary things. With regard to VirtualBox, someone needs to fix it (probably just update the port). The network driver (IIRC) eats memory. [] Sergio ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Solution for school lab
I use a solution that is: 1) a "large" Freebsd box (phenon X4,8Gb of memory, 1TB disk) 2) OS=Freebsd 8.2 with all gnome2.32 installed 3) Virtualbox 10.x installed in FreeBSD 4) NT 2003 server with unlimited number of users on rdp (the iso is in internet or torrent). 5) internet connection Here this would cost about US$400 Install the system using zfs, insert all users can hold about 1000 users Setup FreeBSD to boot diskless (and so will run on all the old machines in your place) using either pxe or custom CD. The users will use Gnome interface, and those who wants windows, can use via rdesktop, pointing on the NT server on the same machine. You will need a swith with ONE gigabit port, and the others is 100Mbits... This setup you have: about 1200 applictions (from the FreBSDports), some include: java, eclipse, python, c, c++, multimedia, web browing, office, printing, email, chat, calculator, vector drawing, dia (visio), raster image editor (gimp), monodevelop(.NET devel framework), sql (postgresql), sql administration (pgadmin3). Reliable, fast, rock solid, central administration... It just works [] Sergio ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: [OFFTOPIC] Solution for school lab
On 30 Oct 2011, at 10:01, Peter wrote: > Hi, > > I am about to setup a small PC lab for teaching operating systems. Since > computers will need to be used for teaching > Windows/Unix(FreeBsd)/Linux(Novell) I need to find a way: > > 1. Systems to coexists on the same hardware > 2. Easily restore system images to the initial state. > Diskless booting perhaps, along the lines of this project at ICL in London. http://www.ukuug.org/newsletter/19.2/#hpc_f_andy_ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: [OFFTOPIC] Solution for school lab
On Sun, 30 Oct 2011 12:01:20 +0200 Peter wrote: > Hi, > > I am about to setup a small PC lab for teaching operating systems. Since > computers will need to be used for teaching > Windows/Unix(FreeBsd)/Linux(Novell) I need to find a way: > > 1. Systems to coexists on the same hardware > 2. Easily restore system images to the initial state. > > > I do not want we to turn into Windows only lab.I was thinking in for > some Citrix solutions but I wonder if there is other way we can > accomplish this task. > > Thanks in advance. > > Peter For 1. you can always setup triple-boot machines, for 2. you can use Clonezilla, for instance. -- Rares Aioanei ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
[OFFTOPIC] Solution for school lab
Hi, I am about to setup a small PC lab for teaching operating systems. Since computers will need to be used for teaching Windows/Unix(FreeBsd)/Linux(Novell) I need to find a way: 1. Systems to coexists on the same hardware 2. Easily restore system images to the initial state. I do not want we to turn into Windows only lab.I was thinking in for some Citrix solutions but I wonder if there is other way we can accomplish this task. Thanks in advance. Peter ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
RW wrote: > > > > You can use videolan / vlc. It allows you to multicast video too. > > > In September 2011 BSD Magazine you have some examples about that. > > > > I like vlc on Linux/Windows machines. But installing it to a streaming > > server is a pain. Even if you disable all options in "make config", it > > still tries to build scores of dependencies including some components > > of the X Window system. Not nice. > > did you try setting WITH_SERVER_ONLY? Actually, setting WITH_SERVER_ONLY only sets 4 options WITHOUT_LUA=yes WITHOUT_QT4=yes WITH_RUNROOT=yes WITHOUT_XCB=yes which I have set anyway. The number of dependencies is still appalling. In fact, I have found a solution with ffmpeg, the example command lines are: ffmpeg -i file.mp3 -acodec copy -f rtp rtp://239.8.8.8:5000 -re ffmpeg -f oss -i /dev/dsp -acodec mp2 -f rtp rtp://239.8.8.8:5000 -re ffmpeg should be compiled WITH_LAME. Multicast stream playback has been tested with vlc (Windows XP, Fedora Linux) and mplayer (FreeBSD 8). In more detail in Russian: http://victor-sudakov.dreamwidth.org/68437.html http://victor-sudakov.dreamwidth.org/68975.html http://victor-sudakov.dreamwidth.org/69243.html -- Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
On Fri, 16 Sep 2011 10:57:04 +0700 Victor Sudakov wrote: > > You can use videolan / vlc. It allows you to multicast video too. > > In September 2011 BSD Magazine you have some examples about that. > > I like vlc on Linux/Windows machines. But installing it to a streaming > server is a pain. Even if you disable all options in "make config", it > still tries to build scores of dependencies including some components > of the X Window system. Not nice. did you try setting WITH_SERVER_ONLY? ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
Eduardo Morras wrote: > > > >I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and > >multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be > >played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. No sophisticated > >codecs needed, plain PCM would do. > > > >Can you advise something? I know that in theory there are many ways to > >implement this, but I am especially interested in personal first-hand > >experience, success stories or good white papers. Please no > >lmgtfu-type replies. Thanks very much in advance. > > You can use videolan / vlc. It allows you to multicast video too. In > September 2011 BSD Magazine you have some examples about that. I like vlc on Linux/Windows machines. But installing it to a streaming server is a pain. Even if you disable all options in "make config", it still tries to build scores of dependencies including some components of the X Window system. Not nice. Now I am experimenting with ffmpeg (with ffserver and without) with moderate success. -- Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
Alejandro Imass wrote: > > > > > A quick look at Icecast showed that it does not support multicast either. > > It this true? If so, Icecast is completely useless for my scenario. > > > > AFAIK very few media streamers (or none) actually support real IPv4 > (Class D) Multicast. They support what is known as "application > multicast" akin to a multi-process/multi-threaded Web server. > > I don't know much about real IPv4 Multicast but I've heard it's not > that easy to do in the real world and would probably require > coordination with your ISP unless you're multicasting in a private > networks. I use multicasting in a corporate network. > Again, IMHO because I've never even attempted multicasting. It's fun and very pleasing aesthetically :) At least on Cisco. As to the original question. I have had some success with multimedia/ffmpeg, at least this: ffmpeg -i file.mp3 -acodec copy -f rtp rtp://239.8.8.8:5000 -re does send a multicast stream which can be listened to with VLC (but not mplayer for some reason) on multiple hosts. Now I need to figure out how to stream live sound from /dev/dsp. All my attemps to record sound from a USB audio interface have resulted so far in a severely distorted growl instead of normal voice. Does anybody know how to figure out the sampling rate and other parameters of the sound card? "cat /dev/sndstat" does not output anything really useful. > > Why do you need multicasting anyway? To save bandwidth mostly, and it's fun to setup :). Taking into account that I have PIM working across all our WAN links (an in-house monitoring/alarm system relies thereupon), it would be nice to use this infrastructure for sound too. -- Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
On Mon, Sep 12, 2011 at 1:57 AM, Victor Sudakov wrote: [...] > > A quick look at Icecast showed that it does not support multicast either. > It this true? If so, Icecast is completely useless for my scenario. > AFAIK very few media streamers (or none) actually support real IPv4 (Class D) Multicast. They support what is known as "application multicast" akin to a multi-process/multi-threaded Web server. I don't know much about real IPv4 Multicast but I've heard it's not that easy to do in the real world and would probably require coordination with your ISP unless you're multicasting in a private networks. Again, IMHO because I've never even attempted multicasting. Why do you need multicasting anyway? -- Alejandro Imass ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
On Sun, Sep 11, 2011 at 1:14 PM, Victor Sudakov wrote: > Alejandro Imass wrote: >> > >> > I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and [...] > Alejandro, correct me if I am wrong but AFAIK Icecast works with mp3 Yep, actually ogg Vorbis and Theora basically and also MP3 ano other over shoutcast, AFAIK, > files. Can it really read audio from /dev/dsp? I don't need mp3, I Icecast needs a "source client" to feed the stream. I use Internet DJ on a separate machine to feed to the Icecast server and distribute from there to almost any player. [...] -- Alejandro ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
At 08:21 09/09/2011, Victor Sudakov wrote: Colleagues, I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. No sophisticated codecs needed, plain PCM would do. Can you advise something? I know that in theory there are many ways to implement this, but I am especially interested in personal first-hand experience, success stories or good white papers. Please no lmgtfu-type replies. Thanks very much in advance. You can use videolan / vlc. It allows you to multicast video too. In September 2011 BSD Magazine you have some examples about that. HTH ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
Victor Sudakov , 2011-09-09 08:21 (+0200): > I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and > multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be > played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. Does the old LBL vat tool still work on modern system? http://ee.lbl.gov/vat/ I haven't used it for 15 years or so but it worked back then. Also, the Robust Audio Tool (rat) might still work. Seems to need work to get it running on FreeBSD according to their website but it used to work on FreeBSD. Again, it was over ten years ago I used this. It seems to live here nowadays: http://mediatools.cs.ucl.ac.uk/nets/mmedia/wiki/RatWiki#RobustAudioToolRAT Quotes: RAT require no special features for point-to-point communication, just a network connection and a soundcard. For multiparty conferencing RAT uses IP multicast and therefore all participants must reside on a multicast capable network. ... RAT is a cross platform tool which is now available for Linux and WinXP. In the past it was also maintained for use a variety of operating systems including: FreeBSD, HP-UX, IRIX, NetBSD, Solaris, SunOS, and Windows 95/NT. Users are welcome to test and contribute code for any of these other OSes. Please let us know or contribute to the wiki. -- http://hack.org/mc/ Use plain text e-mail, please. HTML messages silently dropped. OpenPGP welcome, 0xE4C92FA5. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
Alejandro Imass wrote: > > > > I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and > > multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be > > played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. No sophisticated > > codecs needed, plain PCM would do. > > > > Can you advise something? I know that in theory there are many ways to > > implement this, but I am especially interested in personal first-hand > > experience, success stories or good white papers. Please no > > lmgtfu-type replies. Thanks very much in advance. > > > > I doubt people in this list are the lmgtfu type! > > I use Icecast on FBSD and it works great. A quick look at Icecast showed that it does not support multicast either. It this true? If so, Icecast is completely useless for my scenario. -- Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
Alejandro Imass wrote: > > > > I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and > > multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be > > played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. No sophisticated > > codecs needed, plain PCM would do. > > > > Can you advise something? I know that in theory there are many ways to > > implement this, but I am especially interested in personal first-hand > > experience, success stories or good white papers. Please no > > lmgtfu-type replies. Thanks very much in advance. > > > > I doubt people in this list are the lmgtfu type! > > I use Icecast on FBSD and it works great. Alejandro, correct me if I am wrong but AFAIK Icecast works with mp3 files. Can it really read audio from /dev/dsp? I don't need mp3, I would prefer to multicast simple PCM data. Even 8 bit PCM (64 Kbit/s) would do. -- Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Need an audio multicasting solution
On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 2:21 AM, Victor Sudakov wrote: > Colleagues, > > I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and > multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be > played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. No sophisticated > codecs needed, plain PCM would do. > > Can you advise something? I know that in theory there are many ways to > implement this, but I am especially interested in personal first-hand > experience, success stories or good white papers. Please no > lmgtfu-type replies. Thanks very much in advance. > I doubt people in this list are the lmgtfu type! I use Icecast on FBSD and it works great. For the client though we use Ubuntu with idjc and Jack. Probably Jack works well on FBSD (http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/audio/jack_mixer/) and you could run everything on a single node, but from my experience with Jack on Linux, it probably ain't gonna be easy. Nevertheless, the _usual_ way is having your *cast daemon on a server with ample bandwidth and the client(s) is separate node. For us, the Icecast FBSD server + idjc/Jack on Linux is a great combination but YMMV. Regards, -- Alejandro Imass > -- > Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN > sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru > ___ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" > ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Need an audio multicasting solution
Colleagues, I need a solution to read sound from a soundcard (/dev/dsp) and multicast it into the network, for the multicast audio stream to be played on FreeBSD, Linux and Windows workstations. No sophisticated codecs needed, plain PCM would do. Can you advise something? I know that in theory there are many ways to implement this, but I am especially interested in personal first-hand experience, success stories or good white papers. Please no lmgtfu-type replies. Thanks very much in advance. -- Victor Sudakov, VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN sip:suda...@sibptus.tomsk.ru ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: high performance open source DHCP solution?
On Tue, 19 Jul 2011 23:26:55 -0300, Rogelio wrote: R> The free DHCP solution, ISC, seems to be having scaling issues (i.e. R> handling only about 200 DHCPDISCOVER and 20 DHCPRENEW requests), and I R> was wondering if anyone had any open source suggestions of solutions R> that could scale much better? 1. May be it is possible to decrease load of DHCP server by increasing lease time. If address pool is the limit, adaptive-lease-time-threshold option in ISC dhcpd may be useful. 2. Which dhcpd version is used? According to changelog 4.2 has some performance improvements. -- Anton Yuzhaninov ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: high performance open source DHCP solution?
In the last episode (Jul 19), Rogelio said: > The free DHCP solution, ISC, seems to be having scaling issues (i.e. > handling only about 200 DHCPDISCOVER and 20 DHCPRENEW requests), and I > was wondering if anyone had any open source suggestions of solutions > that could scale much better? 200 per second sounds like pretty good performance, but you haven't given any info about your setup either. Are you disk bound or CPU bound at this point? -- Dan Nelson dnel...@allantgroup.com ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
high performance open source DHCP solution?
The free DHCP solution, ISC, seems to be having scaling issues (i.e. handling only about 200 DHCPDISCOVER and 20 DHCPRENEW requests), and I was wondering if anyone had any open source suggestions of solutions that could scale much better? (Ideally, I could find a free version of a solution like Nominum, but I know that's asking for much.) Anyone have any suggestions? -- Also on LinkedIn? Feel free to connect if you too are an open networker: scubac...@gmail.com ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Professional mapping solution for Education and Research
Having trouble viewing this email ? http://www.articque.com/mailing/2010/101011-geocampus-en/index.html?utm_source=articque&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=geocampus-en = GEOCAMPUS An initiative of ARTICQUE Solutions Group = Your FREE thematical MAPPING solution = Students and Teachers, get your free professionnal mapping solution. Universities and Schools, get a preferential price to equip your IT classrooms. Get your free C&D license : http://www.geocampus.com/en/home.html?utm_source=articque&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=geocampus-en = In accordance with the french law of June 21, 2004 (article L345) and the european guideline 2002/58/CE dated July 12, 2002, you have full access to the data regarding your privacy and can indicate your unwillingness to receive information by unsubscribing instantly at desinscript...@articque.com ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
MacIP Gateway Solution for FreeBSD?
I'm running FreeBSD 7.2 (FreeBSD janet.weif.net 7.2-RELEASE FreeBSD 7.2-RELEASE #1: Sat Oct 31 16:21:25 MDT 2009 ch...@janet.weif.net:/usr/src/sys/i386/compile/JANET i386) with netatalk installed so I can connect my old Macintosh Quadra 605 to the FreeBSD machine to share files. I would like to get the Mac internet access, but I need a Macintosh IP Gateway installed on the network somewhere. there was a package called macipgw, but that fails to compile on FreeBSD 7. Does anyone have an updated version of macipgw, or does anyone know of another port to handle this? Keith S. -- from my mac to yours... Keith Seyffarth mailto:w...@weif.net http://www.weif.net/ - Home of the First Tank Guide! http://www.rpgcalendar.net/ - the Montana Role-Playing Calendar http://www.miscon.org/ - Montana's Longest Running Science Fiction Convention Talk MisCon: http://www.miscon.org/forums/ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
On 7/4/2010 4:43 PM, bsd wrote: > Hello, > > I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic servers > (7) based on two operating systems : > > - FreeBSD (6 - 7 // soon 7 - 8) > - Ubuntu 8.04 LTS > > These servers are hosting some strategic components mainly related to DNS > infrastructure and databases. > > > For the moment I am backing up these server using network based backup > solution: > > - A "duplicity" based solution which backs up key directories in my > infrastructure on a remote FTP server provided by my hosting company. > - A "dump" of some key components which I am doing on regular basis for > FreeBSD servers. > - Duplicity is also used for the Ubuntu servers. > - Databases are replicated "live" on a remote server using "slony" for the > most strategic ones (Postgres DB) and using mysql dump export for MySQL. > > > • I am not a 100% sure these solutions will allow me to restart rapidly from > a crash, specially for Ubuntu servers. > • I would like to know which solution(s) you have deployed at what cost for > what results ? > > I am actually considering couple of different solutions > > - SAIT solution and backula. > - Disk based solution (maybe also with backula). > … > > > I have couple of servers that will reach their end of life that could be > recycled as backup solution at a very convenient price… > > > Thanks for you help. > > > Gregober ---> PGP ID --> 0x1BA3C2FD > bsd @at@ todoo.biz Followup FYI: http://www.mondorescue.org/ -- Tim Daneliuk tun...@tundraware.com PGP Key: http://www.tundraware.com/PGP/ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
krad writes: In my experience dedup requires a fairly large amount of juice so if your backups are large I hope you machines are big on ram The way tarsnap does it is not that intensive. I have used in an old 900Mhz machine with less than 640MB of RAM and it worked well. I think the program computes some sort of hash for blocks of data and then the server checks to see if it already has that block. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
On 8 July 2010 05:10, Francisco Reyes wrote: > bsd writes: > > I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic >> servers (7) based on two operating systems : >> > > Depending on how much data you are trying to backup and whether an internet > backup solution would work, you may want to take a look at tarsnap: > http://www.tarsnap.com/ > > Works on both FreeBSD and Linux. It has deduplication capabilities within a > server. You can do several backups as "full" and the service will only store > what has changed. > > ___ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to " > freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" > In my experience dedup requires a fairly large amount of juice so if your backups are large I hope you machines are big on ram ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
bsd writes: I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic servers (7) based on two operating systems : Depending on how much data you are trying to backup and whether an internet backup solution would work, you may want to take a look at tarsnap: http://www.tarsnap.com/ Works on both FreeBSD and Linux. It has deduplication capabilities within a server. You can do several backups as "full" and the service will only store what has changed. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
> I used to use tapes, I have changed for disks, it is much much faster > and easier. And cheaper! In a 3U enclosure you can have 16 disks, for > 32TB of storage. > A sun x4500 can get 48 drives in 4u. Its intel based so should run freebsd ok if you want to. Not sure what the max drive size is but you should be looking at about ~30-70 TB depending on drive size and array configuration ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
Hi, >> I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic >> servers (7) based on two operating systems : >> >> - FreeBSD (6 - 7 // soon 7 - 8) >> - Ubuntu 8.04 LTS I am running amanda as a centralized backup solution for FreeBSD, Linuxes and Windows. Amanda server is a dedicated machine with 7.5 TB disks (about 2300 USD assembly machine, gives me over 4 weeks or daily incremental backup, but the duration really depends on your usage). The more sensitive services I also backup using the protocol own duplication (master-slave database, DNS replication, etc.) With MySQL server replication, you can have the slave server running your actual database and ready to go in case the primary crashes. If the availability of the service is really critical, you must consider an high-availability solution, not only a backup. With that I have all the needed information to restore a faulty service. >> - SAIT solution and backula. I used to use tapes, I have changed for disks, it is much much faster and easier. And cheaper! In a 3U enclosure you can have 16 disks, for 32TB of storage. >> ∙ I am not a 100% sure these solutions will allow me to restart rapidly >> from a crash, specially for Ubuntu servers. Depends on how you define rapidly... Backup and high availability have different/complementary roles: the first one assures that no data are lost, the second assures that the service will always be available. You know your needs :) Best regards, Olivier ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
On 4 July 2010 23:18, Tim Daneliuk wrote: > On 07/04/10 16:43, bsd wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic >> servers (7) based on two operating systems : >> >> - FreeBSD (6 - 7 // soon 7 - 8) >> - Ubuntu 8.04 LTS >> >> These servers are hosting some strategic components mainly related to DNS >> infrastructure and databases. >> >> >> For the moment I am backing up these server using network based backup >> solution: >> >> - A "duplicity" based solution which backs up key directories in my >> infrastructure on a remote FTP server provided by my hosting company. >> - A "dump" of some key components which I am doing on regular basis for >> FreeBSD servers. >> - Duplicity is also used for the Ubuntu servers. >> - Databases are replicated "live" on a remote server using "slony" for the >> most strategic ones (Postgres DB) and using mysql dump export for MySQL. >> >> >> • I am not a 100% sure these solutions will allow me to restart rapidly >> from a crash, specially for Ubuntu servers. >> • I would like to know which solution(s) you have deployed at what cost >> for what results ? >> >> I am actually considering couple of different solutions >> >> - SAIT solution and backula. >> - Disk based solution (maybe also with backula). >> … >> >> >> I have couple of servers that will reach their end of life that could be >> recycled as backup solution at a very convenient price… >> >> >> > > I wrote a simple shell-based solution for this problem some time ago. It > (and FreeBSD > instructions) can be found: > > http://www.tundraware.com/Software/tbku/ > > > I am able to recover a production server (DNS, dhcp, http, sendmail, > etc...) in under > 30 minutes using this technique. > > ___ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to " > freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" > we use an rsync based solution at work. All the files are basically rsyncd onto a big opensolaris filer backed with zfs. We then snapshot each hosts file system after the completed backup. It then gives us an incremental forever backup so is generally quite fast to do. Restores are also fairly fast depending on the size of the data set. For a full restore I boot into the new box on a liveusb os, partition/slice, newfs, mount and push the rsync back. All fairly easy and quick. With regard to database backups, we run all our mysql and oracle dbs on zfs. This allows us to put a global write lock on the db and flush everything to disk. We then snapshot the db zfs fs and remove the write lock. Alternatively if its a mysql slave, we just stop the slave, flush and snap. This means we can take hot backups of all our dbs with minimal impact. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
On 07/04/10 16:43, bsd wrote: Hello, I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic servers (7) based on two operating systems : - FreeBSD (6 - 7 // soon 7 - 8) - Ubuntu 8.04 LTS These servers are hosting some strategic components mainly related to DNS infrastructure and databases. For the moment I am backing up these server using network based backup solution: - A "duplicity" based solution which backs up key directories in my infrastructure on a remote FTP server provided by my hosting company. - A "dump" of some key components which I am doing on regular basis for FreeBSD servers. - Duplicity is also used for the Ubuntu servers. - Databases are replicated "live" on a remote server using "slony" for the most strategic ones (Postgres DB) and using mysql dump export for MySQL. • I am not a 100% sure these solutions will allow me to restart rapidly from a crash, specially for Ubuntu servers. • I would like to know which solution(s) you have deployed at what cost for what results ? I am actually considering couple of different solutions - SAIT solution and backula. - Disk based solution (maybe also with backula). … I have couple of servers that will reach their end of life that could be recycled as backup solution at a very convenient price… I wrote a simple shell-based solution for this problem some time ago. It (and FreeBSD instructions) can be found: http://www.tundraware.com/Software/tbku/ I am able to recover a production server (DNS, dhcp, http, sendmail, etc...) in under 30 minutes using this technique. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Global backup solution for FBSD & Ubuntu
Hello, I am trying to build a global backup solution for couple of strategic servers (7) based on two operating systems : - FreeBSD (6 - 7 // soon 7 - 8) - Ubuntu 8.04 LTS These servers are hosting some strategic components mainly related to DNS infrastructure and databases. For the moment I am backing up these server using network based backup solution: - A "duplicity" based solution which backs up key directories in my infrastructure on a remote FTP server provided by my hosting company. - A "dump" of some key components which I am doing on regular basis for FreeBSD servers. - Duplicity is also used for the Ubuntu servers. - Databases are replicated "live" on a remote server using "slony" for the most strategic ones (Postgres DB) and using mysql dump export for MySQL. • I am not a 100% sure these solutions will allow me to restart rapidly from a crash, specially for Ubuntu servers. • I would like to know which solution(s) you have deployed at what cost for what results ? I am actually considering couple of different solutions - SAIT solution and backula. - Disk based solution (maybe also with backula). … I have couple of servers that will reach their end of life that could be recycled as backup solution at a very convenient price… Thanks for you help. Gregober ---> PGP ID --> 0x1BA3C2FD bsd @at@ todoo.biz ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: freenas-like solution for aoe?
In the last episode (Mar 20), Vadkan Jozsef said: > Does anybody know a FreeNAS-like solution, that supports AoE? - Ata over > Ethernet? You can get iSCSI with the net/istgt port, which should perform better than AoE. -- Dan Nelson dnel...@allantgroup.com ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
freenas-like solution for aoe?
Does anybody know a FreeNAS-like solution, that supports AoE? - Ata over Ethernet? Thank you! ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: I want to submit a solution to solve a bug
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 6:20 PM, Jeff Mo wrote: > Hello, > > I found the solution about why this bug occurs. > <http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=125239&cat=> Make use of Submit Followup link. > I would like to contribute my knowledge to FreeBSD website but do not > know where to start. > Can you let me know what's the next step if I want to submit a solution? ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
I want to submit a solution to solve a bug
Hello, I found the solution about why this bug occurs. <http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=125239&cat=> I would like to contribute my knowledge to FreeBSD website but do not know where to start. Can you let me know what's the next step if I want to submit a solution? Thank, -- Jeff Mo Santa Clara University Linux+, SCJP, SCWCD, MCSD ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Can't figure out recursion problem in bash/freebsd - reply/solution to all helpers
On Fri, 08 Jan 2010 11:23:33 +0100 "Bernard T. Higonnet" wrote: > #! /bin/sh >... > I shall be bold: this strikes me as a bug in bash. Am I off my nut > here? If it is a bug, it's a bug in /bin/sh, not bash. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: Can't figure out recursion problem in bash/freebsd - reply/solution to all helpers
Hello, There were two approaches offered to my problem 1) changing my script: it runs if the "cd .." is moved from the end of the script into the then clause of the if statement === #! /bin/sh echo Starting in `pwd` for hoo in *; do echo Found item $hoo if [ -d "$hoo" ]; then echo Pushing $hoo cd $hoo $0 cd .. else echo Processing file $hoo fi echo Going to next item done echo Finishing in `pwd` # cd .. was here in original script === I shall be bold: this strikes me as a bug in bash. Am I off my nut here? 2) use find instead for the traversing of the file hierarchy === find $PWD -type f -execdir processingscript {} \; === I have tried both methods and on a small sample (10,000 files going only 3 deep) and there were no meaningful differences in execution time. Thanks to all Bernard Higonnet ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: [one] solution found (Was: [kl...@thought.org: Re: Openoffice3 and aspell])
On Sat, Jan 02, 2010 at 01:09:31AM -0800, Gary Kline wrote: > > About an hour ago things started working, and this time I made > notes. ((__NOTE__: The thesaurus stuff is 28.0MB and harder to > retrieve; I'll try later.)) > > Here is a cut and paste of my notes on getting en_US.oxt to install > and work: > > Left mouse click on "Insert" top bar, go down to File at the last entry of > the dropdown. [it may take several seconds.] > > A widget/window/dialogue will open in your cwd with a list of files that > should include the spell-checking file, en_US.oxt. Scroll down the list > and click on this file. Then click the "Insert" button on the dialog. You > may need to restart OOo at least once until the checker starts underlining > misspelled words. > > > If anyone onlist can find WiRWib.oxt, the thesaurus file, I may > be able to make it available on a server somewhere in the States. > > -gdk > > > Update, just minutes ago I got the wibwir.oxt file downloaded. But (to twist an old saying), there may be no there, there. It is only ~16megs, not 28megs. And since this is only version 0.03, it isn't worth sweating. cheers, gary -- Gary Kline kl...@thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix http://jottings.thought.org http://transfinite.thought.org The 7.79a release of Jottings: http://jottings.thought.org/index.php ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
[one] solution found (Was: [kl...@thought.org: Re: Openoffice3 and aspell])
- Forwarded message from Gary Kline - Date: Fri, 1 Jan 2010 23:41:00 -0800 From: Gary Kline Subject: Re: Openoffice3 and aspell To: Neil Short Cc: Adam Vande More , freebsd-questions@freebsd.org The main reason I upgraded to OOo-311 was to have a functional spellchecker. I can't find any, even tho but clicking around I found ``en_US.oxt'' which is a zip file. The HElp file does not jibe with what's there in the File -> Wizards ... . Anyway, Adam, the extension you listed turns out to be the file I downloaded. How-to install the thing and get it working!? gary > > > > ___ To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" - End forwarded message - About an hour ago things started working, and this time I made notes. ((__NOTE__: The thesaurus stuff is 28.0MB and harder to retrieve; I'll try later.)) Here is a cut and paste of my notes on getting en_US.oxt to install and work: Left mouse click on "Insert" top bar, go down to File at the last entry of the dropdown. [it may take several seconds.] A widget/window/dialogue will open in your cwd with a list of files that should include the spell-checking file, en_US.oxt. Scroll down the list and click on this file. Then click the "Insert" button on the dialog. You may need to restart OOo at least once until the checker starts underlining misspelled words. If anyone onlist can find WiRWib.oxt, the thesaurus file, I may be able to make it available on a server somewhere in the States. -gdk -- Gary Kline kl...@thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix http://jottings.thought.org http://transfinite.thought.org The 7.79a release of Jottings: http://jottings.thought.org/index.php ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: solution: getting a Motorola Razr V3 to work as a GSM modem on FreeBSD
> On Thu, 5 Nov 2009 13:15:24 -0500, Mark Stosberg wrote: > > For software to send the pages, I use the "gammu" port. > > > > I ran "gammu-config" for the initial setup, and then moved the > > resulting file from /root/.gammurc to the more standard > > location: /etc/gammurc > > FreeBSD separates configuration files for the system (/etc > subtree) and for additional ports (/usr/local/etc subtree), > so /usr/local/etc/gammurc would, in my opinion, be the > correct place for this file. I agree. However, the related man pages didn't reference this option. This seems like a place where the code and docs could use a small patch to work this way on FreeBSD. (Or maybe it already works this way, and the docs don't reflect it). I suppose in my case, I could still move the config file to /usr/local/etc/ and then symlink it from /etc/, which would meet the requirements of the software, and also meet the expectations of someone expecting a standard FreeBSD layout. > Many thanks, Mark, this really sounds interesting and useful, > a very good combination. :-) You are welcome. I have been running a hosting business on FreeBSD since about 1997 and it has worked very well for us. Mark -- http://mark.stosberg.com/ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: solution: getting a Motorola Razr V3 to work as a GSM modem on FreeBSD
Allow me a quite formal addition: On Thu, 5 Nov 2009 13:15:24 -0500, Mark Stosberg wrote: > For software to send the pages, I use the "gammu" port. > > I ran "gammu-config" for the initial setup, and then moved the > resulting file from /root/.gammurc to the more standard > location: /etc/gammurc FreeBSD separates configuration files for the system (/etc subtree) and for additional ports (/usr/local/etc subtree), so /usr/local/etc/gammurc would, in my opinion, be the correct place for this file. > I thought I would share this in case anyone else ran into the same > problem I did trying to get a USB modem to work when they plugged into > FreeBSD! Many thanks, Mark, this really sounds interesting and useful, a very good combination. :-) -- Polytropon Magdeburg, Germany Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0 Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ... ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: SSO solution in ports?
On Thu, 2009-07-16 at 10:52 -0400, John Almberg wrote: > I am trying to build a set of web applications that are accessed > through a web portal that uses a Single Sign On (SSO) solution. Combine your SSO (LDAP mostly, Kerberos is a waking nightmare) with a 2FA/TFA (Second Factor Authentication) solution such as grid cards, FOBs, or an OTP password list. I recommend Entrust IdentityGuard. Our pam_radius works fine with it, and web application can run NSS functionality out of LDAP and PAM functionality out of Entrust's SOAP-XML Authentication API. ~BAS ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: SSO solution in ports?
Well, after a week of looking, I think I am going to go with a CAS solution, rubycas-server and rubycas-client. This supports several methods of authentication, including SQL, ActiveDirectory, LDAP, and GoogleAccounts. SQL is probably good enough for my application at the moment, but the LDAP option might come in handy someday. And it integrates nicely with Rails apps, which is my target platform. I looked at OpenID, which Rails also has good support for, but to my mind, it's just too complicated for the average user to use. I remember the first time I had to set one up, it was quite difficult to understand what it was they were looking for. I think it would scare away the average, non-technical, website user. Thanks for the ideas! Brgds: John On Jul 16, 2009, at 1:03 PM, Mel Flynn wrote: On Thursday 16 July 2009 06:54:39 Bill Moran wrote: In response to John Almberg : I am trying to build a set of web applications that are accessed through a web portal that uses a Single Sign On (SSO) solution. Problem is, there are MANY competing SSO solutions. Since building the client side of the SSO system is more than enough for me, I was wondering if there are any SSO servers in ports that I can just install and use? A CAS solution would be the best, but I'll look at anything. The most widely supported I know of is LDAP, and OpenLDAP works pretty well. That won't really work as LDAP can't read a browser cookie or maintain session information. LDAP is a good choice as storage backend. Your best bet is probably to use an OpenID based solution, as support for this sign on method is growing in web applications, so you lessen the chance of having to maintain your custom glue into the application. The security/phpmyid port is one implementation that allows you to run your own OpenID server. http://openid.net/ -- Mel ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions- unsubscr...@freebsd.org" ~~ Websites and Marketing for On-line Collectible Dealers ~~ IDENTRY, LLC John Almberg - Managing Partner (631) 546-5079 jalmb...@identry.com www.identry.com ~~ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: SSO solution in ports?
On Thursday 16 July 2009 06:54:39 Bill Moran wrote: > In response to John Almberg : > > I am trying to build a set of web applications that are accessed > > through a web portal that uses a Single Sign On (SSO) solution. > > Problem is, there are MANY competing SSO solutions. Since building > > the client side of the SSO system is more than enough for me, I was > > wondering if there are any SSO servers in ports that I can just > > install and use? A CAS solution would be the best, but I'll look at > > anything. > > The most widely supported I know of is LDAP, and OpenLDAP works pretty > well. That won't really work as LDAP can't read a browser cookie or maintain session information. LDAP is a good choice as storage backend. Your best bet is probably to use an OpenID based solution, as support for this sign on method is growing in web applications, so you lessen the chance of having to maintain your custom glue into the application. The security/phpmyid port is one implementation that allows you to run your own OpenID server. http://openid.net/ -- Mel ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: SSO solution in ports?
On 7/16/09, Bill Moran wrote: > In response to John Almberg : > >> I am trying to build a set of web applications that are accessed >> through a web portal that uses a Single Sign On (SSO) solution. >> Problem is, there are MANY competing SSO solutions. Since building >> the client side of the SSO system is more than enough for me, I was >> wondering if there are any SSO servers in ports that I can just >> install and use? A CAS solution would be the best, but I'll look at >> anything. > > The most widely supported I know of is LDAP, and OpenLDAP works pretty > well. Kerberos (4 or 5) is synonymous with single sign on. Kerberos support is not as integrated with services as LDAP is. I am almost the paranoid security type and I don't know if SSO is really a "good idea" (TM). You obtain someone's *weak* password because they don't want complexity, now the systems are wide open to them. System Login/Email are the two that bug me most. "If I have your system login password, I have your email password too. Then anything else you hook into SSO is also known" So I battle myself every day with the mindset if SSO is truly a worthwhile thing to look at, or if it should be at *most* two SSOs, one for system login, one for "everything else" Sorry to pull off on that tangent, but it seems nobody considers the downside to SSO, and it's been nagging at me. --Tim ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: SSO solution in ports?
In response to John Almberg : > I am trying to build a set of web applications that are accessed > through a web portal that uses a Single Sign On (SSO) solution. > Problem is, there are MANY competing SSO solutions. Since building > the client side of the SSO system is more than enough for me, I was > wondering if there are any SSO servers in ports that I can just > install and use? A CAS solution would be the best, but I'll look at > anything. The most widely supported I know of is LDAP, and OpenLDAP works pretty well. -- Bill Moran http://www.potentialtech.com http://people.collaborativefusion.com/~wmoran/ ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
SSO solution in ports?
I am trying to build a set of web applications that are accessed through a web portal that uses a Single Sign On (SSO) solution. Problem is, there are MANY competing SSO solutions. Since building the client side of the SSO system is more than enough for me, I was wondering if there are any SSO servers in ports that I can just install and use? A CAS solution would be the best, but I'll look at anything. Any tips or ideas, much appreciated. -- John ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Re: installing ports xorg - Unknown solution
Heh, there were too many factors as possible culprits in the system. Glen Barber's command started to run, until I cancelled it when my laptop battery died... :D I'm not 100% sure what the problem was, but here's what I did... . The PC has a msk ethernet device, which I wasn't 100% sold I'd use it, . It's also behind a Linux-based firewall (corporate purchase) that ... doesn't always want to work, . I re-csup'd ports, it updated some stuff, but nothing in x11/ . I forgot it for the weekend, went into work, slapped it onto our other network (which isn't behind the Linux firewall), and initiated an install.. it started . Keeping it on the other network, I finished xorg, then installed kde4 with repeated fetch timeouts on both installs. . Remembered I had a broadcom ethernet card... installed it. . Finished installing everything, and is now my primary desktop at work. So, either the bad csup, odd msk ethernet, or the (VERY fustrating) Linux firewall was at fault. Not sure what, but all is working now. --Tim ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Solution: Re: [Trouble Ticket #190456] AutoReply: freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 246, Issue 39
# idiot autoresponder on freebsd lists, 1/21/2009 :0 * ^From:.*supp...@aebc.com /dev/null -- David Kelly N4HHE, dke...@hiwaay.net Whom computers would destroy, they must first drive mad. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Thanks for solution re: Can't remove directory
Mr. Chuck: I found your post, [1]http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2005-January/0 70766.html, re. "system immutable flags" via Google. Just want to say thanks. :-) Sincerely, Ron W. [2]ron.wingfi...@archaxis.net 501-920-7860 cell (best way) 501-228-4798 home References 1. http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2005-January/070766.html 2. mailto:ron.wingfi...@archaxis.net ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
Intro to a cool new webb-tv solution
Dabber Newsletter Dabber | Newsletter December 2008 Example player | White paper pdf | IQube our new partner Hi, Since our last update, we have prepared a first example of the kind of online video= solutions we offer. It's a player with an intuitive, 3-dimensional navigat= ion - a cool and easy way to showcase your online video content: This is the golden age of online video. More and more of us are creating it= , watching it and telling our friends all about it. Mainstream media giants= , organizations of all sizes and individual Internet users alike are litera= lly setting the online world in motion. Video on the web is becoming a natu= ral part of our lives, enabling us to do a lot of different things easier, = faster and better: discovering what's new and rediscovering the things we'v= e missed, telling our stories and communicating our brands, realizing our l= ife-long dreams of having our own TV show and running for president. Over the last few years, a lot of companies offering online video platfor= ms have emerged. What separates us from them is who we are. Whereas most of= our competitors focus on technology and developing the ultimate one-platfo= rm-fit-all video service, our focus is on every aspect of the enterprise th= at you would be undertaking; on you getting exactly the kind of product and= help that you need, at a cost that you can afford. Dabber is an Internet start-up, offering online video solutions that are in= novative, affordable, easy to use and easy to manage. With a background in the contemporary art scene as well as in web production, we combine the latest in technology with an understanding of what makes = good content. Daniel Daboczy & Eric Weber, founders White paper (pdf) For more information about our services, please download the Dabber white paper. IQube is our new partner We're proud to present IQube as a new partner. IQube is one of the Nordic r= egion´s leading centres for entrepreneurship and early stage growth compa= nies. www.iqube.se Dabber's development continues at rapid pace We're still in development, but feel free to contact us in the meanwhile, o= r check out our web site for updates! www.dabber.tv daniel [at] dabber.tv +46 736 26 9985 To unsubscribe, please forward this email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: CARP-Like Solution With Machines On Different Networks?
On Nov 17, 2008, at 7:57 AM, Alex Kirk wrote: After doing some research on the matter, it looks like CARP would be a winning solution - but only if the backup system was on the same network segment as the primary box. Given that there's no money to colocate a second backup system at the same facility as the main machine (and protection against failure at the colo facility is one of the primary drivers for the failover setup), however, it looks like CARP wouldn't be useful. If you can't or aren't willing to pay for a second machine, I doubt that any clustering solution is going to be workable for you, frankly. Most of the high-availability clusters I know about depend either on a multipath SAN or NAS setup to provide a common filestorage point for cluster members to synchronize with (the "quorum" drive for M$ clustered SQL server, similar for Sybase ASE cluster or Oracle Parallel Server [now Oracle RAC]), or require something like a hardware loadbalancer (Foundry ServerIron, NetScaler, etc) which acts to distribute transactions only onto the parts of the cluster which are up and working. That said, are there any solutions which behave similarly to CARP that I could use for a pair of machines connected solely via the Internet? For now, I'd even be happy if there was some way to simply do TCP port-level proxying, so to speak (i.e. connections come in to a given machine, and are proxied to the main system if it's up, but go to the backup box if not)? Thanks in advance for any advice you can provide. TCP level proxying is suitable for shared read-only distribution of traffic (ie, such as static web content going against a pool of webservers, all of which can serve any of the traffic coming their way). IPFW + natd can do this much via: -redirect_address localIP[,localIP[,...]] publicIP These forms of -redirect_port and -redirect_address are used to transparently offload network load on a single server and distribute the load across a pool of servers. This function is known as LSNAT (RFC 2391). For example, the argument tcp www1:http,www2:http,www3:http www:http means that incoming HTTP requests for host www will be trans- parently redirected to one of the www1, www2 or www3, where a host is selected simply on a round-robin basis, without regard to load on the net. ...but this paradigm simply won't work for content-aware traffic (ie, anything which has a per-user "session") and it definitely won't work for a database. MySQL clustering is a less expensive possibility than most of the vendors listed above (M$ SQLServer EE is $25K per CPU, Oracle RAC is $60K per CPU), but even so Sun wants to bill at $2500 per day for a week of consulting to set it up for you. Regards, -- -Chuck ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
CARP-Like Solution With Machines On Different Networks?
Hello All, I'm attempting to put a redundant fail-over system in place for a machine that I manage for a non-profit organization of modest budget. For the time being, I'm most interested in having MySQL and HTTP connections roll over to a backup system in the event that the primary machine goes down for some reason, and then return control to the primary box once it returns - nothing particularly fancy. After doing some research on the matter, it looks like CARP would be a winning solution - but only if the backup system was on the same network segment as the primary box. Given that there's no money to colocate a second backup system at the same facility as the main machine (and protection against failure at the colo facility is one of the primary drivers for the failover setup), however, it looks like CARP wouldn't be useful. That said, are there any solutions which behave similarly to CARP that I could use for a pair of machines connected solely via the Internet? For now, I'd even be happy if there was some way to simply do TCP port-level proxying, so to speak (i.e. connections come in to a given machine, and are proxied to the main system if it's up, but go to the backup box if not)? Thanks in advance for any advice you can provide. Alex Kirk This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: DHCP release/renew lease - elegant solution?
On Mon, Oct 20, 2008 at 03:26:39PM +0200, Mel wrote: > On Friday 17 October 2008 23:24:00 Nerius Landys wrote: > > > I have an always-on FreeBSD box which is connected to the internet. > > My ISP is some cable company and the IP address is determined via > > DHCP; I used to always get the same IP address but recently the > > address seems to be changing very frequently whenever I reboot the > > machine. > > If this is an always on machine, it makes no sense, unless the ISP is > doing agressive accounting on there IP's: > - give out a lease for x hours > - but invalidate it anyway after > Doing a periodic dhclient -r would probably fix your problem, though > the correct solution would be to complain with your ISP and switch to > the competition if they don't get their stuff together. It would help if Nerius would spend some time in the system logs and dhclient man page to determine the state when his machine goes deaf. I suspect firewall rules using static host IP address. Believe I have also see this happen with natd, Once Upon A Time natd needed to be restarted when the external IP address changed. Is possible for dhclient to do this automatically. As for a static IP address, many ISPs charge extra for this feature. One ISP I deal with rotates our IP address every 18 to 48 hours and isn't courteous enough to do it on a regular schedule or wait until off hours. Means we have a couple of minutes of down time most every day when the router recovers. -- David Kelly N4HHE, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Whom computers would destroy, they must first drive mad. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: DHCP release/renew lease - elegant solution?
On Friday 17 October 2008 23:24:00 Nerius Landys wrote: > I have an always-on FreeBSD box which is connected to the internet. My ISP > is some cable company and the IP address is determined via DHCP; I used to > always get the same IP address but recently the address seems to be > changing very frequently whenever I reboot the machine. > > My problem is that recently, after being on for a day or so, the internet > connection to the FreeBSD box breaks down, it stops working or becomes very > intermittent/flaky. I then reboot the machine, and thereafter it usually > uses a new IP address and the internet connection returns fo running fine. > There is no need to reboot the cable modem. If this is an always on machine, it makes no sense, unless the ISP is doing agressive accounting on there IP's: - give out a lease for x hours - but invalidate it anyway after http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: DHCP release/renew lease - elegant solution?
On Fri, 17 Oct 2008 14:24:00 -0700 "Nerius Landys" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >The -r flag explicitly releases the current lease, and once > the lease >has been released, the client exits. > > I could put this into a crontab and run it every 12 hours. However, > this does not seem like a very elegant solution to my problem. I am > wondering whether there is a more elegant solution. Before you look for a more elegant solution I suggest you try the inelegant solution and see if it actually works. At the moment all you really know is that rebooting fixes the problem. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
DHCP release/renew lease - elegant solution?
I have an always-on FreeBSD box which is connected to the internet. My ISP is some cable company and the IP address is determined via DHCP; I used to always get the same IP address but recently the address seems to be changing very frequently whenever I reboot the machine. My problem is that recently, after being on for a day or so, the internet connection to the FreeBSD box breaks down, it stops working or becomes very intermittent/flaky. I then reboot the machine, and thereafter it usually uses a new IP address and the internet connection returns fo running fine. There is no need to reboot the cable modem. My goal is to do some dhclient magic which will automatically fix this problem without needing a reboot of the machine. If possible, I would like to have the same IP address as often as possible, but I'm not sure that this is possible. My FreeBSD version is 5.5, so it uses the ISC DHCP client, but the details between the current DHCP client and mine are probably insignificant. My /etc/dhclient.conf file is empty. I have been reading man pages, and it seems that the way to release, get a new IP address is this: dhclient -r dhclient fxp0 An except from my dhclient man page: The client normally doesn't release the current lease as it is not required by the DHCP protocol. Some cable ISPs require their clients to notify the server if they wish to release an assigned IP address. The -r flag explicitly releases the current lease, and once the lease has been released, the client exits. I could put this into a crontab and run it every 12 hours. However, this does not seem like a very elegant solution to my problem. I am wondering whether there is a more elegant solution. Thanks in advance. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
rsync via cron or raid? Brian ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Mel wrote: I think once you and R1soft step out of the "I need a block level device" paradigm, you will see that modifying ggate with a "copy and fall through" mode, as well as a mechanism to block writes to the local provider, when the remote provider wants to write is the best solution all around and your best bet to get support for it. Right now, ggate does "intercept and redirect", but the concept of copy and fall through is not that far away. Bringing the R1soft devs in contact with the FreeBSD geom list and having them browse the sys/geom/ggate sources to see how trivial it is to hook into filesystem operations would be the course of action I'd recommend. Would it be too much to ask if you can send this information to R1Soft and refer to the post I linked? I just dont think that I can be an efficient gateway of information here :) Thanks, Evren ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Jeremy Chadwick wrote: What I'm saying is that Linux has the upper hand here. More eyes, more people, more developers, larger community, larger vendor support, and much **much** faster turn-around time on fixes/bugs. We can sit here and argue about those facts all we want (it's the equivalent of doing burn-outs in an AMC Pacer in a parking lot -- wasted time, zero gain), but nothing changes the facts. Sorry, I had to remove the whole bunch of text that you wrote :) but I get the point. I think it is a funny historical fact that BSD was commercially licensed way too long to allow Linux to be developed at first place. If BSD was not commercial at that times, Linus Torvalds probably wouldnt have started writing the Linux kernel. Thus we wouldnt be having this sort of conversation now and it might as well be that Microsoft wouldnt have become so huge. If we look at this from that point of view then eventually all BSD and Linux etc. are bound to disappear in time and Microsoft will stand all alone. But things can change one step at a time. I prefer(or try) to look at this positively. I thought it wouldnt hurt to ask for help if somebody could contact r1soft and perhaps ask a pile of money to develop a driver. It would have been a win-win situation eh? Right. We're definitely talking about snapshots, at least in concept. The fact that you're able to restore data within *minutes* is pretty impressive. I'm curious what sort of disk requirements are needed though (I guess it depends on how often changes happen on the filesystem). Well it is not so fine grained (5 to 10 minutes intervals as mentioned). http://www.r1soft.com/CDP.html (there is more information in the link above, with links to outside sources on the concept such as wikipedia articles etc.) I know some large hosters who use this technology with Linux servers. As a matter of fact the only reason they went with Linux instead of FreeBSD is because they cant get CDP with FreeBSD. I can ask how much space it is using and return back to you. But if you think about it for a second, a traditional backup program would copy the whole file even if there was 1 byte changed in it. Lets say 10mbyte file and 1 byte is changed. R1soft copies only 1 byte. Sure enough the tables can turn around if the filesystem was modified really a lot. But it looks like this type of solution is mostly effective (at least I didnt see anywhere that anybody is complaining that it is using too much disk space yet). The best is, all it would take for FreeBSD users to be able to utilize this technology is a driver to interface with r1soft agent and buy a license. Now I am not expecting anybody to write this for free or nobody is obligated to help. I just dont know anybody who can help so I thought I would drop in a line here so... I for one have never correlated snapshots and backup restorations (bare-metal recovery). I consider them completely separate things, and handled *very* differently. I have a feeling that no one's done this on FreeBSD because the amount of effort required is quite large. Someone did mention HAMMER on DragonflyBSD, but I have no knowledge of it or what it provides -- that said, Matt (Dillon)'s stuff is usually very, very good. I also dont know much about HAMMER either. But it doesnt look like it will make mainstream usage anytime soon on FreeBSD if it ever does. Actually I found a nice document here: http://www.dragonflybsd.org/hammer/hammer.pdf http://www.dragonflybsd.org/hammer/index.shtml It depends on how the filesystem is done. For example, with UFS2+SU snapshots, snapshot generation can take literally hours: completely unreasonable. While with ZFS, snapshot generation usually takes 2-3 seconds -- even on massive changes (e.g. take a snapshot, then rm a 600MB ISO image, then compare present vs. snapshot -- the diff is something like 40KBytes). Yes, but r1soft backup can restore a single file at a consistent state without restoring the whole filesystem from a graphical user interface and can restore mysql databases at a table level. While I agree that there might be different solutions that I dont know about, it just takes a driver to get this functionality on current FreeBSD systems without everybody to change to ZFS or HAMMER. One has to think, would people change their filesystems or install a driver? :) I would rather pay license fee to a backup program and use the driver. The price of the software is very well justified if I can return back to 5min before in my backups. The data I might loose is much more expensive. I'm sorry for sounding anti-FreeBSD, but the reality is that people should use whatever solutions work best for them -- if that's using Windows, Solaris, or Linux, great! Remember that open-source is about choice: and choice means supporting the possibility that someone chooses something else. Blind one-sided advocacy
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Roland Smith wrote: On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: Hello, Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup for FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. I don't think so. The closest thing I know of is rsnapshot (http://www.rsnapshot.org/). My solution is to run rsync in a cron job. In my situation this takes about 5 minutes for approximately 100GB of data. The time it takes will obviously depend on the rate of change in the data. You could also use local snapshots with mksnap_ffs(8), to solve the "oh shit I deleted my files" situation. Thanks I am using BackupPC for such task already. Although it takes more than 5 minutes to traverse millions of files using rsync independent of if they were changed or not (since rsync has to scan all the files to detect what is changed or not even if it only checks modification times, this takes time for so many files). I just was curious about if anybody could contact r1soft and ask for a pile of money to implement a driver for FreeBSD, since I couldnt do it even if I wanted to :) Thanks, Evren ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Sorry for once more but: you can make incremental backups every x minutes with Bacula too .. it only takes one or two minutes on my box to scan for changed files for ~150GB (even faster if you tweak it a bit). It's not really a "true" continuous backup solution, but it's perfectly possible to restore directories/files for changes which occurred x minutes ago, and with retention periods of x days/months/years. On Mon, 2008-10-06 at 19:38 +0200, Roland Smith wrote: > On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: > > Hello, > > > > Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup for > > FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. > > I don't think so. The closest thing I know of is rsnapshot > (http://www.rsnapshot.org/). > > My solution is to run rsync in a cron job. In my situation this takes > about 5 minutes for approximately 100GB of data. The time it takes will > obviously depend on the rate of change in the data. > > You could also use local snapshots with mksnap_ffs(8), to solve the "oh > shit I deleted my files" situation. > > Roland ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
On Monday 06 October 2008 19:07:30 Evren Yurtesen wrote: > First of all, I am not an r1soft advocate, but they seem to be making a > software which is popular and affordable and interested in giving > FreeBSD support... r1soft is not the issue here, the problem is that > there is no way to do near continuous backups on FreeBSD servers. > > Jeremy Chadwick wrote: > > That said, I'd like to know exactly how "low-level" R1Soft's software > > truly is. dump(8), AFAIK, is "block-level" -- and that's a userland > > program. Does R1Soft's software *truly* require kernel-land? I have > > more to say on that issue (not against R1Soft, but speaking with regards > > to the current state of FreeBSD's developer count) if it truly does. > > I think you might not have understood the concept of near continuous > backups. The R1Soft backup monitors the filesystem operations So does ggate. But read on. > So it has to know what is written and when to be able > to back it up. The dump command simply reads/writes the blocks. It cant > only read changed blocks. It has to read the whole thing (inefficient). But Jeremy's point being, dump(8) does not need /dev/special_device to read/write at block level. > >> Continuous backups as well as bare-metal-restore seem to be a key > >> feature for many hosters. > > > > Regarding continuous backups: the GEOM gate class could be used for > > this. Meaning, I think it could be used as an alternate to R1Soft's > > software. > > The GEOM gate allows mirroring to a remote machine, am I not right? That > would be more or less same as same as using RAID. The continuous backup > (or near continuous) means that you can restore the filesystem to a > point like 15 minutes ago, or 1 hour ago. Besides, I hear geom might > have network delay problems and it is much more complicated setup to > build two machines in mirror configuration just for backup purposes as > well as you cant restore to a point in the past. I think once you and R1soft step out of the "I need a block level device" paradigm, you will see that modifying ggate with a "copy and fall through" mode, as well as a mechanism to block writes to the local provider, when the remote provider wants to write is the best solution all around and your best bet to get support for it. Right now, ggate does "intercept and redirect", but the concept of copy and fall through is not that far away. Bringing the R1soft devs in contact with the FreeBSD geom list and having them browse the sys/geom/ggate sources to see how trivial it is to hook into filesystem operations would be the course of action I'd recommend. -- Mel Problem with today's modular software: they start with the modules and never get to the software part. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
I see it happen, it's bizarre -- suddenly out of no where comes this one fellow (we'll call him Bob), appearing on a mailing list with a bunch of patches. Heard of him before? Nope, but here he is, and somehow he engineered all of this. What's his background? I don't know, maybe some old guy who lives in a cave and has been studying BSD code in the steam tunnels; who knows. It's like they literally come out of the woodwork, while I don't see this sort of behaviour with Linux. With Linux, it's often "Hi I work for , we're adding support for Linux, I need some help with regards to the following kernel piece..." and they've got responses from 20 people in 24 hours. What I'm saying is that Linux has the upper hand here. More eyes, more people, more developers, larger community, larger vendor support, and much **much** faster turn-around time on fixes/bugs. We can sit here and argue about those facts all we want (it's the equivalent of doing burn-outs in an AMC Pacer in a parking lot -- wasted time, zero gain), but nothing changes the facts. >>> Continuous backups as well as bare-metal-restore seem to be a key >>> feature for many hosters. >> >> Regarding continuous backups: the GEOM gate class could be used for >> this. Meaning, I think it could be used as an alternate to R1Soft's >> software. > > The GEOM gate allows mirroring to a remote machine, am I not right? That > would be more or less same as same as using RAID. The continuous backup > (or near continuous) means that you can restore the filesystem to a > point like 15 minutes ago, or 1 hour ago. What you're talking about sounds like filesystem snapshots, with an *immense* amount of granularity. Enterprise-level filers have this capability (I'm talking Network Appliance), and UFS2 with softupdates have it (called snapshots; but please be aware that there are *HUGE* problems with it, and it should not be relied upon for this kind of functionality) -- but nothing that can be restored within *minutes*. Even Netapp filers do not have that kind of granularity -- the amount of disk it would require would be astounding. Netapp filers often do snapshot generation hourly or nightly (it's configurable how often); minutes is unheard of. ZFS also has snapshot capability, but does not have real-time filesystem mirroring capabilities over a network (keyword: real-time). > Besides, I hear geom might > have network delay problems and it is much more complicated setup to > build two machines in mirror configuration just for backup purposes as > well as you cant restore to a point in the past. Well, GEOM gate is the only thing I know of which replicates filesystems over a network in real-time. >> Regarding bare-metal restoration I'm not aware of how to do that under >> FreeBSD, Linux, or even Solaris "with ease". In most cases, companies >> develop their own PXE-booting environments which wipe the disks and >> reinstall + restore data as they see fit. There is no "standard". > > OK. Actually there is more than one solution which can do > bare-metal-restores for FreeBSD also. However those solutions at best > rely on nightly backups of the filesystems. With R1Soft, you can restore > the system to only few minutes before the total meltdown. > > Unrelated to bare metal restore, with normal backups you are not taking > backups of files which are created/deleted often. For example this can > be customer mails or if a hacker hacks the box and removes his trails. > Even sometimes customers upload some file and remove from their computer > the same they and then accidentally remove from the server. With R1Soft > backup the data would go into the backup server right away and you an > restore every single file independent of when it was put or removed. Right. We're definitely talking about snapshots, at least in concept. The fact that you're able to restore data within *minutes* is pretty impressive. I'm curious what sort of disk requirements are needed though (I guess it depends on how often changes happen on the filesystem). >>> FreeBSD is loosing users because of this issue. >> >> Why does the "number of FreeBSD users" matter? Quantity does not >> necessarily represent quality. > > Thats a perfectly fine statement. But a quality product would be nothing > without users. As well as this problem effects the quality. Consider a > system which has sensitive data which shouldnt get lost, with continuous > data protecton you can restore such failed system to only few minutes > before the failure point. Doing this is currently impossible with > FreeBSD. Best we can do is to return to previous snapshot taken (
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: > Hello, > > Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup for > FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. I don't think so. The closest thing I know of is rsnapshot (http://www.rsnapshot.org/). My solution is to run rsync in a cron job. In my situation this takes about 5 minutes for approximately 100GB of data. The time it takes will obviously depend on the rate of change in the data. You could also use local snapshots with mksnap_ffs(8), to solve the "oh shit I deleted my files" situation. Roland -- R.F.Smith http://www.xs4all.nl/~rsmith/ [plain text _non-HTML_ PGP/GnuPG encrypted/signed email much appreciated] pgp: 1A2B 477F 9970 BA3C 2914 B7CE 1277 EFB0 C321 A725 (KeyID: C321A725) pgpy2oCjkIRDg.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
First of all, I am not an r1soft advocate, but they seem to be making a software which is popular and affordable and interested in giving FreeBSD support... r1soft is not the issue here, the problem is that there is no way to do near continuous backups on FreeBSD servers. Jeremy Chadwick wrote: That said, I'd like to know exactly how "low-level" R1Soft's software truly is. dump(8), AFAIK, is "block-level" -- and that's a userland program. Does R1Soft's software *truly* require kernel-land? I have more to say on that issue (not against R1Soft, but speaking with regards to the current state of FreeBSD's developer count) if it truly does. I think you might not have understood the concept of near continuous backups. The R1Soft backup monitors the filesystem operations and backs up written blocks. So it has to know what is written and when to be able to back it up. The dump command simply reads/writes the blocks. It cant only read changed blocks. It has to read the whole thing (inefficient). Continuous backups as well as bare-metal-restore seem to be a key feature for many hosters. Regarding continuous backups: the GEOM gate class could be used for this. Meaning, I think it could be used as an alternate to R1Soft's software. The GEOM gate allows mirroring to a remote machine, am I not right? That would be more or less same as same as using RAID. The continuous backup (or near continuous) means that you can restore the filesystem to a point like 15 minutes ago, or 1 hour ago. Besides, I hear geom might have network delay problems and it is much more complicated setup to build two machines in mirror configuration just for backup purposes as well as you cant restore to a point in the past. Regarding bare-metal restoration I'm not aware of how to do that under FreeBSD, Linux, or even Solaris "with ease". In most cases, companies develop their own PXE-booting environments which wipe the disks and reinstall + restore data as they see fit. There is no "standard". OK. Actually there is more than one solution which can do bare-metal-restores for FreeBSD also. However those solutions at best rely on nightly backups of the filesystems. With R1Soft, you can restore the system to only few minutes before the total meltdown. Unrelated to bare metal restore, with normal backups you are not taking backups of files which are created/deleted often. For example this can be customer mails or if a hacker hacks the box and removes his trails. Even sometimes customers upload some file and remove from their computer the same they and then accidentally remove from the server. With R1Soft backup the data would go into the backup server right away and you an restore every single file independent of when it was put or removed. FreeBSD is loosing users because of this issue. Why does the "number of FreeBSD users" matter? Quantity does not necessarily represent quality. Thats a perfectly fine statement. But a quality product would be nothing without users. As well as this problem effects the quality. Consider a system which has sensitive data which shouldnt get lost, with continuous data protecton you can restore such failed system to only few minutes before the failure point. Doing this is currently impossible with FreeBSD. Best we can do is to return to previous snapshot taken (which might be a day old). This is an important design criteria since restoring the lost data might be time consuming and expensive. Thge issue is not even r1soft, they are just the most popular company giving such solution, only if there was at least one backup solution which could provide near continuous data protection... In addition to this, near continuous backups create less load on boxes with a lot of reads but little writes. Standart backups have to scan all the files to detect which files were changed. I'm sorry for sounding anti-FreeBSD, but the reality is that people should use whatever solutions work best for them -- if that's using Windows, Solaris, or Linux, great! Remember that open-source is about choice: and choice means supporting the possibility that someone chooses something else. Blind one-sided advocacy is very damaging to the open-source model and concept. I agree, and please dont shoot the messenger :) I just have a bunch of customers who would use FreeBSD but not using only because of this problem. In addition to that I myself would like to use near continuous backups as well. I was just trying to inform the FreeBSD community here so if somebody can have some time to divert to giving the right advices to r1soft then we all could benefit from it. It doesnt even have to be free even, with a reasonable price they can probably hire somebody to work for building the basics of this feature. So the real question is,
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 05:36:32PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: > Jeremy Chadwick wrote: >> On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: >>> Hello, >>> >>> Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup >>> for FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. >>> >>> R1soft says they need help to develop FreeBSD support in their >>> product. Do you know anybody who can help r1soft on this issue? >>> >>> Please see: http://forum.r1soft.com/showpost.php?p=3414&postcount=9 >> >> Would the GEOM gate class handle this? See ggatec(8) and ggated(8). >> > > I am not saying it is impossible. They just need somebody to put them to > right track I guess. I personally cant do that. It would be nice if > somebody who has knowledge in this area contacts r1soft. At the very > least r1soft seems to be willing to communicate on this issue. First and foremost, the URL you gave is terse and out of context. Let people read the entire thread: http://forum.r1soft.com/showthread.php?p=3414 So let me throw around some ideas. First and foremost, David appears to be saying "We'll take FreeBSD seriously if we can get proper documentation, and it needs to be thorough, that explains how to interface with devices on a block level so we can perform block-level backups and write our software appropriately". AFAIK we don't have any documentation that outlines that in a clear, concise manner. With regards to "providing protocol documentation and letting the open-source community write the software", R1Soft is generally right. Time and resources are the biggest problem with open-source; do not think for a moment that just because millions of users can look at source code means they understand it, or even know how to write it, or will even *want* to. The majority do/will not. That said, I'd like to know exactly how "low-level" R1Soft's software truly is. dump(8), AFAIK, is "block-level" -- and that's a userland program. Does R1Soft's software *truly* require kernel-land? I have more to say on that issue (not against R1Soft, but speaking with regards to the current state of FreeBSD's developer count) if it truly does. I'm somewhat surprised that their software focuses on Linux and Windows and not Solaris and Linux, especially given that they're interested in "dedicated server markets". Solaris is always the first OS that comes to my mind when talking about hardcore server operating systems. > Continuous backups as well as bare-metal-restore seem to be a key > feature for many hosters. Regarding continuous backups: the GEOM gate class could be used for this. Meaning, I think it could be used as an alternate to R1Soft's software. Regarding bare-metal restoration I'm not aware of how to do that under FreeBSD, Linux, or even Solaris "with ease". In most cases, companies develop their own PXE-booting environments which wipe the disks and reinstall + restore data as they see fit. There is no "standard". > FreeBSD is loosing users because of this issue. Why does the "number of FreeBSD users" matter? Quantity does not necessarily represent quality. I'm sorry for sounding anti-FreeBSD, but the reality is that people should use whatever solutions work best for them -- if that's using Windows, Solaris, or Linux, great! Remember that open-source is about choice: and choice means supporting the possibility that someone chooses something else. Blind one-sided advocacy is very damaging to the open-source model and concept. -- | Jeremy Chadwickjdc at parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB | ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Julien Cigar wrote: Bacula ? http://www.bacula.org I use it at work to backup linux and freebsd boxes and it works like a charm. On Mon, 2008-10-06 at 04:20 -0700, Jeremy Chadwick wrote: On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: Hello, Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup for FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. R1soft says they need help to develop FreeBSD support in their product. Do you know anybody who can help r1soft on this issue? Please see: http://forum.r1soft.com/showpost.php?p=3414&postcount=9 Would the GEOM gate class handle this? See ggatec(8) and ggated(8). Bacula does not support continuous backups as far as I know. It has to scan all the files to find new/changed files to backup. The r1soft agent monitors file system writes and backs up changed parts immediately. This does allow r1soft backup to restore the system to its latest state (10-15minutes ago state, thus continuous backup is achieved) as it continually updates the backups. Also has much less stress on the systems where the writes are not so much since it doesnt have to check every file at each backup cycle. Also r1soft cdp has support for MySQL where you can easily restore mysql data in table level if required. It is as well supported by a wide variety of web hosting automation systems for example H-Sphere ( http://www.parallels.com/hsphere/ ) etc. through plugins. Please see the info about continuous data protection: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_Data_Protection Otherwise I am currently using BackupPC (which is pretty good in my opinion and easier to use compared to Bacula) to take nightly backups of the servers. Thanks, Evren ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Jeremy Chadwick wrote: On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: Hello, Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup for FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. R1soft says they need help to develop FreeBSD support in their product. Do you know anybody who can help r1soft on this issue? Please see: http://forum.r1soft.com/showpost.php?p=3414&postcount=9 Would the GEOM gate class handle this? See ggatec(8) and ggated(8). I am not saying it is impossible. They just need somebody to put them to right track I guess. I personally cant do that. It would be nice if somebody who has knowledge in this area contacts r1soft. At the very least r1soft seems to be willing to communicate on this issue. Continuous backups as well as bare-metal-restore seem to be a key feature for many hosters. FreeBSD is loosing users because of this issue. Thanks, Evren ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: continuous backup solution for freebsd?
Bacula ? http://www.bacula.org I use it at work to backup linux and freebsd boxes and it works like a charm. On Mon, 2008-10-06 at 04:20 -0700, Jeremy Chadwick wrote: > On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 12:58:30PM +0300, Evren Yurtesen wrote: > > Hello, > > > > Is there a known continuous backup solution similar to r1soft backup for > > FreeBSD? I googled a lot but couldnt find anything. > > > > R1soft says they need help to develop FreeBSD support in their product. > > Do you know anybody who can help r1soft on this issue? > > > > Please see: http://forum.r1soft.com/showpost.php?p=3414&postcount=9 > > Would the GEOM gate class handle this? See ggatec(8) and ggated(8). > ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"