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Blogrotate #21: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Spring has sprung, the grass is riz. I wonder where them birdies is. Welcome to Blogrotate. It’s Good Friday here in Ottawa, a holiday for us. For this reason it’s going to be a short one this week. That and the fact that it’s 25C and sunny here. :)

Operating Systems

Closure sweet closure. It’s been 7 years but SCO has finally lost it’s silly lawsuit against Novell. Novell smugly posted the results on their site with Decision in the SCO Group vs. Novell Jury trial. For us linux users they state for the record Read the rest of this entry . . .

Blogrotate #20: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Good evening and welcome to the late night edition of Blogrotate. It’s been hectic around here but I did not want to skip a week so I am burning the midnight oil. There was a lot of action in the world of IT this week, here’s a few tidbits we took notice of.

Operating Systems

The Var Guy is reporting that Novell has rejected a bid by Elliott Associates to take over the company for a reported 1.8 billion dollars. Novell Rejects Takeover Bid… But Welcomes Other Bidders has the full story with some links to the back story as well.

The arguments are done and the deliberation begins in SCO vs Novell. The world yawns in anticipation. No Verdict Today, the Final Day, in SCO v. Novell – Deliberations Begin Again Tuesday – Updated at GrokLaw has the details. “Fine lawyering” indeed.

Internet

Tom Krazit at C-Net news reports that DNS registrar GoDaddy may be following in Google’s footsteps, steps that lead out of China. More details and source material links are in GoDaddy to stop registering domains in China

Security

The CanSecWest conference started this week in Vancouver BC, Canada. With it came the 4th annual Pwn2Own contest wherein hackers ply their exploits against various targets. Read the rest of this entry . . .

Blogrotate #19: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Good morning and welcome once again to the (usually) weekly round-up of news that matters to Sys Admins. We missed last week for reasons previously stated, client work always comes first. This week was yet another fast and furious week so let’s get started.

Operating Systems

In case anyone was wondering about SCO vs. Linux it is still going on. If anyone has a lot of free time on their hands and is interested in lost causes, check out SCO vs. Linux: The story so far at The H Online. Even more details can be found at the prolific GrokLaw in Summary of SCO v IBM.

If you are running Max OSX you may be vulnerable to at least 20 major security flaws in you system. Read the rest of this entry . . .

Blogrotate #18: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Is it Friday already? Where does the time go? Lots of stuff going on this week–here’s a few of the things that I found interesting.

Operating Systems

Russia Today-TV announced the existence of “Red Star”, the new OS developed in North Korea and based on Linux. I found this by way of Slashdot of course, citing the source as The Korea herald. According to the article it looks very much like the Windows UI, and features a “My Country” icon that allows connection to Korea’s closed internet-like network and the Woori office application. Slightly more information can be found there in the article N. Korea develops own OS.

The upcoming Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx) has had the third alpha version released. Read the rest of this entry . . .

Blogrotate #17: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Good afternoon and welcome to another edition of the usually, mostly, kind of weekly news for System Administrators. I was on a much needed holiday for the last couple of weeks. Many thanks to Tim for filling in on the last one. What with clients’ priorities and February being a short month, we did not have the cycles to get a blog out last week, and this one will be short because, frankly, the IT news world has been a bit slow of late. With that I shall cease my preface and move on to . . . 

Operating Systems

The Phoronix media site is reporting that the end may be near for Open Solaris since the purchase of Sun by Oracle. Oracle has been quiet on its plans for the free/open source version of its Solaris operating system, and the Service Life Status for OpenSolaris Operating System Releases does show the GA (General Availability) phase support as “TBD“. See a little more info in Oracle Still To Make OpenSolaris Changes. This one will be worth watching and I’ll update the blog when more is available. Read the rest of this entry . . .

Blogrotate #15: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Good morning and welcome to a new Blogrotate. We missed last week’s edition because last week was insanely busy. We take customer service very seriously here at Pythian, so when there is a conflict between client issue and a blog, the client always wins out. ‘Nuff said.

It’s been another busy week here and shows no sign of slowing, but here’s a few of the things we found interesting this week.

Operating Systems

The H Online is reporting that Linus Torvalds named one of the 100 most influential inventors by “The Britannica Guide to the World’s Most Influential People”. More info can be found there, as well as a link to some free sample pages from the book. Of course, Bill Gates was also on the list.

Could it be that Microsoft ranks third in Linux sales? Read the rest of this entry . . .

Blogrotate #14: The Weekly Roundup of News for System Administrators

Happy Friday and welcome once again for news from the whacky world of IT. Big Thanks to Tim for pushing out last week’s edition. I was busy banging my head against a particularly nasty wall. If you think my head looks bad, you should see the wall.

I was at the Ottawa VMWare Mini Conference yesterday. It was quite interesting. There were some good keynotes by some good speakers. I especially enjoyed the breakout speaker from Cisco about their direction in the years to come, and I think I drooled a little when he was talking about the Nexus 5000 switch (578 ports ought to be enough for anyone). Also news to me was the Nexus 1000v virtual switch which is a plugin replacement for the standard vSphere 4.0 virtual switch and includes a full Cisco IOS for management. I also really enjoyed the breakout with the Ottawa Senators IT team describing their progression from physical to virtual servers, their challenges, business needs, and lessons learned. There was a lot more, including an enjoyable one by the EMC rep. I’m trying to get my slides and notes together and will likely post more on the mini-con at a later time. I won a door prize! Go me!
Read the rest of this entry . . .

VNC Viewer Free Edition 4.1.2 for X: “Connection reset by peer (104)”

Today I tested OracleVM (OVM) templates on their own distribution of Oracle Enterprise Linux (OEL) 5 with seeded VNC Viewer Free Edition 4.1.2 for X. All went fine, but the VNC connection to virtual machine was not painless as I expected.

[root@oram ~]# rpm -qa "vnc|xen"
kernel-xen-2.6.18-128.el5
xen-3.0.3-80.el5
kmod-gfs-xen-0.1.31-3.el5
kmod-cmirror-xen-0.1.21-10.el5
vnc-4.1.2-14.el5
kmod-gnbd-xen-0.1.5-2.0.1.el5
vnc-server-4.1.2-14.el5

On a brand new OEL5 system with virtualization support, I have created a new virtual machine with a fresh OEL4 (plain OS), and set appropriate memory for the virtual domain using the Xen management user interface commands. I also checked if the VNC port was allocated with the command virsh dumpxml:

Read the rest of this entry . . .

Installing Oracle 11gR1 on Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope

Welcome, readers! It’s time for another update to our series of posts on installing Oracle on Ubuntu Linux. In this edition, we’ll be installing Oracle 11g R1 on Ubuntu 9.04, both 32-bit.

This time, I’ve used VirtualBox to run a virtual machine (VM) to perform our work. (Virtualization has a number of advantages; in this case, I made several trial installs, trying different combinations and configurations. Having a pristine, basic set-up accelerated the whole process, since I didn’t had to reinstall from scratch on every new attempt.)

You might want to review the previous editions of this series, as there are technical references on this text fully detailed on previous posts. See these HOWTOs for Ubuntu:

Since we’re installing on a VM, we’ll be using Ubuntu 9.04 32-bit Server edition, , so let’s download it and check the MD5sum:

user@jackalope:/media/trezentos/downloads$ md5sum ubuntu-9.04-server-i386.iso
20480057590ff8b80ad9094f40698030  ubuntu-9.04-server-i386.iso
user@jackalope:/media/trezentos/downloads$

Download Oracle Database 11g Release 1 (11.1.0.6.0), and verify the provided cksum:

Read the rest of this entry . . .

Virtualizing MySQL

I had so much to say in response to a recent post asking about virtualization from Jennifer Glore that I realized it was long enough to be a blog post.

It really depends on what you’re looking to do. Many companies don’t have the money and staff to have an in-house data center with proper power and network redundancy; others don’t want the depreciation associated with owning computer hardware (even if they leased space in a data center, they’d have to buy equipment to put in it).

Some reasons to virtualize:
1) you need a fresh machine and cannot wait to order a new one or re-purpose an older one.
2) your need for machines/services fluctuates (and again, re-purposing takes time). This need can be as broad as employee desktops or as specialized as needing extra machines for a qa cycle.
3) you own resources that are not being utilized to the fullest extent — virtualization can sometimes make more or better use of these resources.
4) you need to easily re-create an exact environment and do not want to worry about hardware differences.

Here at The Pythian Group, we have clients using many different types of virtualization.

A few clients are using MySQL on Amazon’s EC2 platform. The biggest advantage is also one of the biggest disadvantages — before EBS (elastic block storage) was offered, the threat of a reboot wiping the filesystem clean meant that we really had to ensure that we had:

1) redundancy
2) a catalog of what was needed on the machine — everything from users to perl modules. This can be done either by using a machine image, documenting a setup and recreating the machine manually, or via automation. By using tools like CFEngine or Puppet to control machine configurations, our clients have the added benefit of more standardized installations and layouts. As well, pushing a change (say, adding a new hire’s public key into an authorized_keys file) is made much much more easy.

The downside is, of course, the work to set up tools such as this. However, they are fairly common best practices, and are almost always good to implement.

The clients that are using Amazon EC2 are happy with the service they get; One client I work with especially closely moved to EC2 because they had a bad experience with their hosting provider. I cannot speak to pricing, but I do know that being able to just *have* another machine up and running in minutes is very useful … periodic work such as load testing and qa cycles work really well.

We also have many clients who “virtualize” MySQL by running more than one instance on a server. A few clients have a replication slave that has 2 instances — one as a read-only reporting instance, and another as an instance to backup, doing a cold backup — stopping the instance, copying the files, starting the instance back up. Other clients have 4-5 MySQL instances running on one machine, for developers to have individual database instances to write code against and as backups for 4-5 different physical machines.

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