L TEXT indexes do. Sorry my mistake.
OK, just leave key_buffer at the default 16M?
No. Make key_buffer 256M and then restart Mysql or update it from the
commandline. You're starving Mysql for resources. Fix this first. Then
you can mess around with tables and engines.
kashani
fresh made sense.
kashani
0x.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_on_zSeries
kashani
of days to keep per folder. I deal
with all my lists that way. 180 days for gentoo and down to 30 days for
Mythtv. All the archives are searchable so no point in duplicating the
data locally.
kashani
provider, then finding a
different one you do like is quite simple.
Exactly what Alan said. It's not worth it and no registar will let you
do it on one IP.
kashani
cache.
Once restarted Bind on ns00 (and made it part of the runlevel) the prod
server checked in and all was well.
The lessons:
Monitor *all* of your DNS infrastructure
DNS can break even with a large distributed system and it is never
pretty.
kashani
nd doc and includes a number of
config entries to make troubleshooting and running ISP type name servers
easier and safer.
http://en.gentoo-wiki.com/wiki/BIND
kashani
ystem into loosely coupled pieces only one of which is
being changed, then the other system becomes a part of the total system
and we must write a hypothetical journal for the entire system in order
to achieve a consistent rollback."
kashani
s. Use the same filesystem
you use on all your other servers.
kashani
On 9/7/2011 5:25 AM, Pandu Poluan wrote:
On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 01:15, kashani wrote:
On 9/6/2011 10:26 AM, Pandu Poluan wrote:
So, can anyone recommend me a filesystem that fulfills my following needs:
Scenario: vFirewall (virtual Firewall) that is going to be deployed at
my IaaS Cloud
filesystem. It's a fairly common practice on database servers
though the gains are relatively minor. I'm not sure how much it would
affect logging, but it would be fairly easy to test.
kashani
S web interface does with CUPS
configuration.
In Samba's case the config is pretty simple if you ignore printing
which you should. Just add the IP range, setup a share, and add some
accounts or leave it public. Probably take longer to setup a gui.
kashani
solves most of this stuff quicker.
kashani
less help Google, mailing lists, etc become. At that
point your own experience and 5-10 minutes of testing is going to
produce better results.
kashani
over three
years is a better deal than paying for equivalent power in the cloud.
2. Latency. You're increasing it.
3. Cloud performance varies. Networks split, machines run slow, it
happens. You'll have more consistent performance on your own machines.
It's getting better, but it's still something with which to be aware.
Migrating to virtual servers makes some sense, but you need to look at
it on a case by case basis.
kashani
why that setting is unknown. I suspect you didn't
put it in the right place in your config. Also your drive will fill up
with Mysql bin logs after serveral months with Mythtv without it working.
[mysqld]
# this settings must come after [mysqld] to take affect
expire_logs_days = 10
max_binlog_size = 100M
kashani
looking.
Would somebody please give me some hints which packages I should be
looking at, and perhaps any use flags I might need.
TVM
+1 for VirtualBox and more importantly being able to use Vagrant with it.
http://vagrantup.com/docs/getting-started/index.html
kashani
or adding drives.
In regards to filling up partitions monitoring, cron, and logrotate are
your friends. I email at 70% and page at 80%.
kashani
. Ricer continues to mean "spending inordinate amount of
time and money for performance modifications that generally do very
little for performance and a lot to reduce reliability while poorly
understanding the system as a whole." At least that's my interpretation
of the definition.
kashani
les. The frontend cgi script is a little lame,
but you can try some of the other frontends. The emerge flags are ...
extensive.
http://collectd.org/
kashani
e the same.
kashani
snapshot
which makes it only an option on the slave.
kashani
ing a dumb is the most reliable
way to get your data into 5.1.
As other people have pointed out you'll need to revdep-rebuild or
preserve the older client libs.
kashani
On 9/2/2010 11:12 AM, Mick wrote:
On Thursday 02 September 2010 06:10:05 kashani wrote:
On 9/1/2010 1:00 PM, Aniruddha wrote:
On Tuesday 31 August 2010 20:30:55 Mick wrote:
But this is apparently not the proper way, because after
restarting the server, apache does not show my web-page
e default my.cnf changed for the worse in Gentoo's 5.1.x ebuild.
Try making a copy of your original my.cnf and put it into place once
you've upgraded. Else you may need to modify the mysql home and data
paths in the new my.cnf to reflect where the database are actually
installed.
kashani
IP. If you're running multiple accounts, like
kashani-list@ and kashani@ in my case, you'll want at least 20. Same
thing applies if you're running webmail for multiple account because all
account access will originate from localhost.
kashani
of to much traffic.
I'd be interested in how many people still have access to a news server
these days. I don't and I'm not particularly interested in having to pay
for access when email works well enough.
kashani
en output about restarting it.
kashani
On 11/28/2010 12:30 PM, Grant wrote:
I'm told I need to run mysqld with --skip-grant-tables. I'm used to
using Gentoo's mysql initscript. Should 'mysqld --skip-grant-tables'
work?
You can add it to /etc/mysql/my.cnf and restart. Remove it and restart
again when you've finished.
kashani
On 11/29/2010 5:46 AM, Grant wrote:
You can add it to /etc/mysql/my.cnf and restart. Remove it and restart again
when you've finished.
kashani
That worked perfectly, thank you.
I've run mysql_upgrade successfully and all of the warnings have
disappeared from the mysql log file
them for inet-domain at all.
I'm using "netstat -l" or "netstat -ln". Is there some other option I
need? I didn't see one.
You need -p for "process".
What Bill said. You'll probably want to try sudo netstat -lnp and sudo
netstat -lnpt which just shows TCP ports.
kashani
in
place. And safer.
kashani
On 12/29/2010 1:36 PM, Tanstaafl wrote:
On 2010-12-29 3:50 PM, kashani wrote:
On 12/29/2010 9:14 AM, Tanstaafl wrote:
I'm updating an old system I inherited that has postfixadmin 2.1
installed, and I have a question about the vacation user entry in
/etc/passwd...
I would consider a
ay. Unless the language you're familiar
with is completely unsuitable, I'd say familiarity trumps language
features. YMMV.
kashani
plain not
working. I think this was over five years ago and doubtfully thing have
improved, but I definitely wasn't impressed at the time.
kashani
I found out recently that my
Intel T6600 while 64bit can only run 32bit guests.
3. You're running vbox 3.1.8 which is stable for x86 while vbox 3.2.12
is stable for amd64. Is your host OS 32bit?
kashani
On 1/12/2011 12:04 AM, Valmor de Almeida wrote:
System uname:
linux-2.6.34-gentoo-r12-x86_64-intel-r-_core-tm-_i7_cpu_l_6...@_2.13ghz-with-gentoo-1.12.14
Timestamp of tree: Sat, 20 Nov 2010 15:45:01 +
That chip looks okay. http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=43563
kashani
it VM support after a
machine goes to sleep. Rebooting fixes the problem temporarily. If you
notice that behavior you may want to go ahead with any BIOS upgrade to
see if that fixes it.
kashani
Mysql problems. This is a fairly
common problem in my experience. The simplest solution is:
sudo mkdid -p /home/mysql
sudo chown -R mysql: /home/mysql
vi /etc/mysql/my.cnf and change to tmpdir = /home/mysql/
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql restart
Yes, tmpdir is *not* a dynamic variable so you will have to restart
Mysql to make this change.
kashani
wastage.
Much like authors who proudly declare that they spent 7 years writing some
magnum opus. It's a sure bet they were drunk of 6.5 of them :-)
Not a compiler or system libs.
"whenever I undertake a large emerge such as chromium or openoffice"
OpenOffice. Nuff said.
kashani
thing into RAM until it's
full. However alerting on 5% swap usage does work fairly well.
kashani
have swap devices of 64GB each.
kashani
/0136.html
As far as I can tell it comes down to cluster size, bitness of your OS,
and amount of RAM you're willing to dedicate to managing swap.
kashani
?
kashani
On 1/21/2011 11:27 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
On Friday 21 January 2011 11:12:34 kashani wrote:
On 1/21/2011 10:53 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
so, why are you doing soemthing incredible stupid in the first place?
How about you go have some coffee, maybe have a banana to even out the
* between the passwd file and main.cf.
5. Once you're this far it's time to test all the way through.
make sure you can send from the localhost machine
sendmail -v s...@address.com
.
Once you're sure that works test from another machine on the network.
Ideally it should just work if you've done all the steps.
kashani
On 1/23/2011 11:23 AM, Alex Schuster wrote:
Relaying does not work yet, I get a "Relay access denied (in reply to
RCPT TO command)" error. But my initial goal is reached, I can send mail
to {root,wonko}@wonkology.org. That's all I wanted.
Many many thanks kashani! Your howto is
an't say I've ever needed anything more than mailq | grep |awk |
postsuper -d - in order to delete mail from the Postfix queues. What
sort of things are your trying to do other than delete a lot of spam or
bounces?
kashani
On 1/23/2011 4:26 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 02:02 on Monday 24 January 2011, kashani did
opine thusly:
On 1/23/2011 12:20 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
It manages it's own queues beautifully. But, and this makes me sad, it
doesn't really want *me* to m
x27;d test that the cron works correctly
beforehand. Nothing worse than locking yourself out *and* realizing your
cron has a path issue.
kashani
ut 3 lines lines in its config file.
Stroller.
I dont't think you have followed the thread correctly. The OP did say
he had a user/pass in his ssmtpd.conf which I assumed was for accessing
the final relay host. That was the reason for the extra lines.
kashani
e has a number of good examples
http://www.posluns.com/guides/hedchek.html
kashani
When you forget to sudo vi you can use w!! which pipes writing the file
though sudo. You get some term gunk, but it does work.
kashani
de you followed your virtual domains are
going to be under virtual_mailbox_domains rather than transport.
I'd add the virtual aliases into the db for ham and spam, if you're
using PostfixAdmin you can add spam and ham in as accounts that are
created automatically wheneven a new d
out Apache, PHP,
Postfix, Mysql, etc. otherwise known as things I do care about.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
You might
search around a bit and see if anyone has posted some pattern matching
Postfix/Mysql queries... I had the DBA write the complex ones we user
which are not solving the same problem you are.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ate a hash of the vhosts for
fast lookups. I'd assume Apache has some less efficient fallback code to
hash configs or it would fail to build without one or the other.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
5% of any partition for root. I'm guessing you're not root.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ebuild:
Add back in pcre #141609.
I suspect that's the issue, that your new grep is missing pcre, though
it's hard to tell since you didn't mention which version of grep you
have installed. Additionally pcre became a use flag in 2.5.1a-r1
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
gt; (0xe000)
libz.so.1 => /lib/libz.so.1 (0xb7f8d000)
libssl.so.0.9.8 => /usr/lib/libssl.so.0.9.8 (0xb7f59000)
libcrypto.so.0.9.8 => /usr/lib/libcrypto.so.0.9.8 (0xb7e58000)
libaprutil-0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libaprutil-0.so.0 (0xb7e45000)
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
y straightforward. Gentoo does have
some unique issues because the Gentoo "system" is fairly stripped down
so things like dig, telnet, or ftp are missing until you add them.
That's much of the appeal to many people.
emerge bind-tools to get nslookup, dig, host, etc.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
d SQL syntax which made
the queries you could do much more powerful, 2.3 was actual sendmail
style milters that didn't need to be requeued.
I've been really happy with Postfix over the past 4 years.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
n a much larger maildir
based system I can speak from experience when I say maildir is vastly
superior in almost all ways.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
cess as well as the network scripts if you restart your
interfaces often.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
esystem at some
indeterminate point in the future appeals to you. :-)
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
(with
HyperThreading enabled), 512Mb.
IIRC Open Office is very RAM dependent and the minimum recommended is
2GB to compile it in a reasonable amount of time.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ll and maintain PHP just so I
can use Squirrelmail. It sounds like I may need to though. Does
anyone prefer another webmail client to Squirrelmail?
- Grant
I've run squirrel, horde, and roundcube. I like roundcube best. It's
probably the simplest to setup and the cleanest interf
relaxing with just a hint of
cinnamon. :)
I suspect you're doing *:443 in more than one place. SSL can not use
named based vhosts. You need multiple IPs to do multiple ssl vhosts
correctly.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
fore the
request for the domain so you'll default to first ssl vhost Apache
loaded for that IP.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
s what you
need to do. You'll need to echo ">=dev-lang/php-5" >>
/etc/portage/package.mask to keep from installing PHP5 or better.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
myself and would be interested in
some enlightenment. However I do know that 5.0.30, which appears to be
enterprise, has a number of high thread/concurrency Innodb fixes that
many of us 5.0 beta test^H^Husers have been waiting for.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
t's likely that Mediawiki's updates require alter,
create, drop, and file access which might be why they say to use an
account with root privileges.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Jerry McBride wrote:
Can someone tell me the major differences between mysql and mysql-community?
Thank you, in advance...
P.S. before you beat me up too badly, I've googled this one to death and not
found anything that satisfies my curiousity.
The answer at the moment appears to be that the
clear at this point. In any case the issues are a bit more complicated
than where your support comes from at least at the high end. For your
general web-app either would be fine.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
config and set the socks proxy to be
127.0.0.1:1080 and you're done.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
have similar tools.
mysql -u root -p
LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE '/firbird.csv'
INTO TABLE new_table
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
LINES TERMINATED BY '\n'
(column_name1, column_name2, column_name3);
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
anything on the server side.
If you don't set an IP with -D then it uses localhost which is what
you'd want in this case.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
f 4.x without moving to 5.0 or better.
echo ">=dev-lang/php-5" >> /etc/portage/package.mask
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
John covici wrote:
Also, what did work was >dev-lang/php-5 I wish there was a way to see
what it was ignoring, etc.
emerge eix
eix -pv php
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
/apache2/mod_proxy.h
mod_proxy is part of Apache2 core so it's already installed.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
rewrites links to work cleanly with
mod_proxy and is based off the work in mod_accessibility and does not
actually do any proxying.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ve realized it is part of Apache2 and you
can't turn it on or off via use flags. If only you cared to study a
little before berating a new user.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
nnodb_file_per_table, so that
each table gets it's own ibdata file in the form of
lib/mysql/$db/$table.idb. It performs better and it is a bit easier to
tell how big your db is on disk or which db is using all your disk.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
raw performance
matters it might be worth your time to try 64bit again, else I'd
probably leave well enough alone.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
7;re calling the
Helix format. You can also skip installing win32/real codecs and
download the codecs directly from mplayer in their essential codecs
pack, but you might need to massage them into place on Gentoo. I'm not
sure why the Gentoo ebuild requires the realplayer package to get the
uires the least CPU in my experience and that
may make things faster.
You can also buy a standard IDE to laptop harddrive converter cable for
under $10. Plug you laptop hard drive into your desktop, start you
desktop, mount the laptop drive, and rsync away between your disk.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
d use http-replicator. That would be far less
bandwidth than trying to keep a local dist server current.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
s that
consider more than just a simple system.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
and usually no
RAID processing since they're doing it in the driver.
I've had good luck with 3ware cards and whatever OEM Adaptec AAC RAID
card Dell includes in their machines these days.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
since and haven't run into it again.
In any case a chmod 755 / fixed it.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
permissions on /mnt/gentoo when expending out which is the only
other logical idea I can come up with it.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
sasl
-authdaemond and just run a normal system. Everything will default to
local system accounts, though you might need to config
/etc/sasl2/smtpd.conf to do that. I do this on my personal box and
haven't had any issues over the past 3 1/2 years.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
probably the
preferred method for getting the functionality, but it's a little ambiguous.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
upport for it or changing the config.
gah.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Since I'm build yet another
virtual mail system this weekend I might be able to do a few tests and
update some fo the virtual how-tos on the wiki.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
= $myhostname # or maybe $mydomain
inet_interfaces = all
mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, localhost
mynetworks_style = subnet
mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8, 10.10.10.0/24
edit /etc/main/aliases
run newaliases
/etc/init.d/postfix restart
rc-update add postfix default
You're done.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
attempt to use
Windows as a backend. *shudder*
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
network unless you
don't allow local machines to relay. Your server will likely care much
more about the src IP being in the allow list than using J Random domain
as the sender.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
domain.com ESMTP Postfix
helo localhost
250 popmail.domain.com
mail from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
250 Ok
rcpt to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
250 Ok
data
354 End data with .
Subject: Test test all day long
Test test while I sing this song
.
250 Ok: queued as 9791056D706
quit
221 Bye
Connection closed by foreign host.
kashani
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
he lame ass winmodem raid cards. You'll have driver
issues and they basically emulate a software raid badly.
kashani
--
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