Finally, I got it: [ 23:40 mex@4-moonshine 0 ] ~ $ ls sol-10-u2*.zip -rw-r–r– 1 root root 560051445 Jun 26 22:47 sol-10-u2-ga-x86-dvd-iso-a.zip -rw-r–r– 1 root root 560483400 Jun 26 22:52 sol-10-u2-ga-x86-dvd-iso-b.zip -rw-r–r– 1 root root 560681477 Jun 26 23:22 sol-10-u2-ga-x86-dvd-iso-c.zip -rw-r–r– 1 root root 560174980 Jun 26 23:25 sol-10-u2-ga-x86-dvd-iso-d.zip -rw-r–r–
WordPress and /server-status
WordPress has a nice feature called “Permalink“. This can improve the visibility or efficiency of your links (http://blog/monthly/post/13 is much nicer then http://blog?p=13). To achieve this, WordPress generates a .htaccess file to upload in your blog root directory. It processes all HTTP requests via the mod_rewrite module. Problem: all URLs
Solaris 10 6/06
Read on the Sun Microsystems website: Solaris 10 6/06 The next update of Solaris will be available for download on June 26, 2006. With ZFS officially supported!
Fedora Core 6 Test 1 (5.90) Now Available
Why “5.90” as release name? No idea.. Here is the official schedule.
Oracle + SunCluster + Backup = Danger
At work, we have a big Sun Cluster with 3 major business critical Oracle databases. Today I had to perform a short maintenance on one of those DBs. I switched off the resource group… Switched on… And a ping-pong game started between the nodes… 🙁 After x attempts, the resource
ZFS basics
A little Flash demo about ZFS core features: ZFS Basics at OpenSolaris.org.
Did you mean to search for: honey trap
I received a mail today to announce the new release of honeytrap. From the website: “Honeytrap is a network security tool written to observe attacks against TCP services. As a low-interactive honeypot, it collects information regarding known or unknown network-based attacks and thus can provide early-warning information.” I was googling
State-of-the-art storage solution
I found this funny post on RootPrompt: Mega Floppy 2006.
mount /very-very-big
I’m playing (is it the right word? 😉 ) with ZFS on a Solaris box where I just created a pool of 4.5TB in 15″! # df /media Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on media 4825057152 9 4825057117 1% /media # df -h /media Filesystem size used avail capacity
Sunray @ home
At work, we use Sunray Thin Clients (see a previous post). Based on a client-server schema, the clients uses lot of protocols such as BOOTP, DHCP, TFTP and more. For a few weeks, my goal was to use a Sunray at home: Just plug my smartcard and work on my