Showing headlines posted by bob
« Previous ( 1 ... 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 ... 1141 ) Next »Develop your own filesystem with FUSE
FUSE lets you develop a fully functional filesystem that has a simple API library, can be accessed by non-privileged users, and provides a secure implementation. And, to top it all off, FUSE has a proven track record of stability.
How To Run Your Own Git Server With GitlabHQ On Debian 7 (Wheezy)
This document describes how to install and configure Git and GitHub.
Wind River Linux taps Yocto 1.7, adds binary option
Wind River announced a new version of Wind River Linux based on Yocto Project 1.7 code, and featuring new binary deployment and security assessment options.
Making the case for OpenStack, mentoring, and more
Interested in keeping track of what's happening in the open source cloud? Opensource.com is your source for what's happening right now in OpenStack, the open source cloud infrastructure project.
read more
Open source “Dronecode” UAV platform project launches
The Linux Foundation launched a collaborative “Dronecode Project” aimed at creating a shared open source platform for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). The not-for-profit Linux Foundation announced the Dronecode Project at its Embedded Linux Conference Europe in Düsseldorf today. Among the collaborative project’s first members is 3D Robotics, which is contributing technology from its widely used […]
What's in a name in open source?
What does community mean to you?
Community is an overloaded word, it can mean anything. Community can mean just people who use your product. Or maybe it's those who build your product, or maybe it's the business partners who are using it. Or maybe it's those who are blogging about it.
read more
How to monitor and troubleshoot a Linux server using sysdig
What is the first thing that comes to mind when you need to track system calls made and received by a process? You'll probably think of strace, and you are right. What tool would you use to monitor raw network traffic from the command line? If you thought about tcpdump, you made an excellent choice […]Continue reading...
The post How to monitor and troubleshoot a Linux server using sysdig appeared first on Xmodulo.
Related FAQs:
How to configure Nagios for audio alerts and mobile notifications
How to monitor common services with Nagios
How to set up MailScanner, Clam Antivirus and SpamAssassin in CentOS mail server
How to set up Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE) in Linux
How to harden Apache web server with mod_security and mod_evasive on CentOS
Oracle hires former SAP exec for cloudy push
'We know Larry said cloud was gibberish, and insane, and idiotic, but...'
Oracle has bagged itself a global head to manage the cloudy portfolio just a week after chief techie and erstwhile CEO Larry Ellison talked up the bets the company is placing behind the as-a-service model.…
Rebellion sees Chromium reverse plans to dump EXT filesystem
EXT 2, 3 and 4 binned on removable media in Google's latest OS
The Chromium project has decided that the EXT family of filesystems are surplus to requirements.… and then they changed their minds...
Netflix streaming comes to Chrome for Fedora
If you’re a Netflix subscriber, you’ve probably tried to stream video on Linux systems like Fedora. And as with many for-pay services, your experience varied. As of the latest Google […]
Debian Wheezy: Split and resize Xen disk image
Background
One of my Xen virtual servers needed to have its 400G disk split and resized over the weekend, and I wanted to keep downtime to a minimal. The disk had 240G used, 235G of which was a /backup directory, and the remaining 5G dedicated to a regular Debian Linux installation. I wanted to split the disk into a two disks - a 20GB disk containing the Linux system, and a 300G disk to mount as /backup. Then I could apply my DRBD setup to replicate that 300G backup partition to a separate 2nd backup machine.
Multiple screens for your conference presentation
In two weeks the All Things Open conference will be taking place in Raleigh, North Carolina. Penguins from all over will be gathering together to share ideas. And as one of the presenters this year, I started wondering, in what ways can you open source a conference presentation?
read more
read more
What it takes to make a cloud deployment successful
Mark Voelker is no stranger to the OpenStack community. As a technical leader at Cisco and a co-founder of the Triangle OpenStack Meetup, Mark gets to see OpenStack from a lot of different lenses.
What's Happening above Your Head?
In the past, I've covered various astronomy packages that help you explore the universe of deep space. But, space starts a lot closer to home. It actually begins a few hundred miles above your head. There are lots of things in orbit right above you.
Open source interest at Pinterest
As I looked around the 2014 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing career fair (PDF) floor, I stopped by the Pinterest booth and learned that open source software plays a big role at the company. And even better, Pinterest now plays a big role in the world of open source software, too.
Tough little Haswell-powered Linux box does 4K2K HDMI
Axiomtek’s eBOX560-880-FL is a compact embedded PC with a choice of Intel Haswell dual-core SoCs, plus temperature, vibration, and IP40 ingress protection.
Keys to turn your open source project into a business
Broadly speaking, there are two types of open source software. The free software, which has a reciprocity requirement in it. Open source software which doesn't.
read more
GNOME on Wayland in Fedora 21
Fedora 21 will come with GNOME 3.14, which already runs reasonably well on Wayland. Want to find out? It’s super easy to try it out! Let’s take a look at […]
How to configure peer-to-peer VPN on Linux
A traditional VPN (e.g., OpenVPN, PPTP) is composed of a VPN server and one or more VPN clients connected to the server. When any two VPN clients talk to each other, the VPN server needs to relay VPN traffic between them. The problem of such a hub-and-spoke type of VPN topology is that the VPN.
Kernel 3.17 and kdbus the kernel column
Jon Masters summarises the latest happenings in the Linux kernel community, including ongoing work towards the 3.17 kernel
« Previous ( 1 ... 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 ... 1141 ) Next »