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This month's answers created by:
[ Sayantini Ghosh, Amit Kumar Saha, Ben Okopnik, Kapil Hari Paranjape, Karl-Heinz Herrmann, René Pfeiffer, Neil Youngman, Rick Moen, Thomas Adam ]...and you, our readers!
Our Mailbag
Delete the contents
sunil pradhan [kumar22.sunil at gmail.com]
Fri, 11 Apr 2008 17:56:11 +0530
Hi Sir ,
Can you help me how to delete the contents of the file..
Thanks
Sunil Pradhan.
919986209798
[ Thread continues here (3 messages/1.67kB) ]
Scalable TCP Tuning
René Pfeiffer [lynx at luchs.at]
Mon, 31 Mar 2008 21:29:06 +0200
On Mar 31, 2008 at 0024 -0700, Erik van Zijst appeared and said:
> René Pfeiffer wrote: >> [...] >> - /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_low_latency controls if the data is forwarded >> directly through the TCP stack to the application buffer (=1) or not >> (=0). I have never benchmarked or compared this setting, thought it's >> always on on my laptop (as I noticed just now, I must have fiddled >> with sysctl.conf here). > > I'm not sure what that one does exactly, but the problem is not the > client-side, as it is fast enough to read the video from the socket. > Instead, it's the server-side that saturates the socket, filling up the > entire send buffer and thereby increasing the end-to-end time it takes for > data to travel from server to client.
I meant to try this on the server. I think it is designed to work on the client side, but I am not sure.
> The way our streaming solution works is by letting the server anticipate > congestion (blocking write calls) by reducing the video bitrate in > real-time. As a result, the send buffer is usually completely filled. For > that same reason, disabling Nagle's algorithm has no effect either: the send > buffer always contains more than one MSS of data.
I see.
> This is fine, but as I frequently get buffer underruns on networks with > highly fluctuating Bandwidth-Delay-Products, it looks like Linux is happy to > increase the send buffer's capacity when beneficial, but less so to decrease > it again when circumstances change.
Judging from the measurements I've seen when playing with the congestion algorithms, the Linux kernel seems to be able to decrease the sender window. However I think the behaviour is really targetted at having a full buffer and a suitable queue all of the time. You could check which one of the algorithms works best for your application and create another kernel module with the desired window behaviour. I make the distinction between buffer and window size since I believe that the congestion algorithms only affect the window handling, not the buffer handling.
>> - The application keeps its own buffer, but you can also influence the >> maximum socket buffers of the TCP stack in the kernel. >> http://dsd.lbl.gov/TCP-tuning/linux.html describes the maximum size >> of send/receive buffers. You could try reducing this, but maybe you >> can't influence both sides of the connection. > > Yes, I've been tempted to manually shrink the send buffer from the > application-level, but since the fluctuating bandwidth and delay justify a > dynamic buffer size, I'm reluctant to try and hardwire any fixed values in > user space.
Yes, I agree, having an algorithm doing that automatically would be more useful.
[ ... ]
[ Thread continues here (7 messages/12.56kB) ]
Sendmail and capacity
Dennis Veatch [dennisveatch at bellsouth.net]
Fri, 25 Apr 2008 10:34:49 -0400
Hi guys and gals.
I have what I thought would be a simple question. How do you figure out how many emails sendmail can process and not drive the load average over say 2 or 3? After much googling around and trying to glean information from the sendmail FAQs, etc I am still stumped. I know it depends on hardware configuration, the number of mailboxes, how many emails are sent and received for a given time frame, etc. But I can't even find a general rule of thumb to even get a ball park idea. Can ya help me out?
Perhaps I am approaching this from the wrong perspective as I realize the above statements are most likely way to general to give even a ball park answer, though if you could that would be great.
-- You can tuna piano but you can't tune a fish.
[ Thread continues here (7 messages/14.66kB) ]
Netcape to OpenLDAP Migration
top mungkala [pakin8 at gmail.com]
Tue, 22 Apr 2008 11:56:36 +0700
I'm beginning the project of upgraded mail hosting. In the process I have to migrate data in old Netscape LDAP server to an OpenLDAP server. I'm newbie in UNIX shell script and my task is mail address book migration. I have only one text file which has data like this:
dn: cn=ldap://:389,dc=yomo,dc=aaa,dc=bbb,dc=ccc cn: ldap://:389 objectclass: top objectclass: applicationprocess objectclass: ldapserver generation: 020000318055502 aci: (targetattr = "*")(version 3.0; acl "Configuration Adminstrators Group"; allow (all) groupdn = "ldap:///cn=Configuration Administrators, ou=Groups, o u=TopologyManagement, o=NetscapeRoot";) aci: (targetattr = "*")(version 3.0; acl "Configuration Adminstrator"; allow ( all) userdn = "ldap:///uid=admin,ou=Administrators, ou=TopologyManagement, o =NetscapeRoot";) aci: (targetattr = "*")(version 3.0; acl "Local Directory Adminstrators Group" ; allow (all) groupdn = "ldap:///ou=Directory Administrators, o=arc.net.my"; ) aci: (targetattr = "*")(version 3.0; acl "XXX Group"; allow (all)groupdn = "ld ap:///cn=slapd-yomo, cn=Netscape Directory Server, cn=Server Group, cn=yom o.aaa.bbb.ccc, ou=aaa.bbb.ccc, o=NetscapeRoot";) modifiersname: uid=admin,ou=Administrators,ou=TopologyManagement,o=NetscapeRoo t modifytimestamp: 20000318055506Z dn: un=RMohana4bdbd8,ou=sharonscy,ou=People,o=aaa.bbb.ccc,o=aaa.bbb.ccc,o=pab un: RMohana4bdbd8 objectclass: top objectclass: person objectclass: organizationalPerson objectclass: inetOrgPerson objectclass: pabperson memberofpab: AddressBook3e0c2d8 mail: [email protected] givenname: R. sn: Mohan cn: R. Mohan creatorsname: uid=msg-admin-1,ou=People,o=aaa.bbb.ccc,o=aaa.bbb.ccc modifiersname: uid=msg-admin-1,ou=People,o=aaa.bbb.ccc,o=aaa.bbb.ccc createtimestamp: 20050622142039Z modifytimestamp: 20050622142039Z
After I reviewed the files I found that each box entries has "objectclass: pabperson" is box entries of email address book so at first I want to detect the "objectclass: pabperson" and cut all its box entries. For each box entries is separated by the new line. please you give me any pointers on how to do this successfully by using shell script?
Thank You,
Toppu
[ Thread continues here (4 messages/5.54kB) ]
WEP: a 1-minute wonder
Ben Okopnik [ben at linuxgazette.net]
Mon, 14 Apr 2008 14:44:47 -0400
WEP, since pretty much its very beginning, was acknowledged as a stop-gap protocol. Seems that the gap has been bridged:
http://eprint.iacr.org/2007/120
Abstract: We demonstrate an active attack on the WEP protocol that is able to recover a 104-bit WEP key using less than 40.000 frames in 50% of all cases. The IV of these packets can be randomly chosen. This is an improvement in the number of required frames by more than an order of magnitude over the best known key-recovery attacks for WEP. On a IEEE 802.11g network, the number of frames required can be obtained by re-injection in less than a minute. The required computational effort is approximately 2^{20} RC4 key setups, which on current desktop and laptop CPUs is neglegible.
-- * Ben Okopnik * Editor-in-Chief, Linux Gazette * http://LinuxGazette.NET *
[ Thread continues here (9 messages/14.50kB) ]
how to create hard link
Ben Okopnik [ben at linuxgazette.net]
Sun, 6 Apr 2008 23:34:38 -0400
----- Forwarded message from kailas <[email protected]> -----
Date: 5 Apr 2008 08:41:39 -0000 From: kailas <[email protected]> Reply-To: kailas <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: how to create hard linkrespected sir, i required information about how to create hard link in linux with suatable examplewise.so please provide this information .
----- End forwarded message -----
-- * Ben Okopnik * Editor-in-Chief, Linux Gazette * http://LinuxGazette.NET *
[ Thread continues here (2 messages/1.61kB) ]
NT description
Petr Vavrinec [Petr.Vavrinec at seznam.cz]
Tue, 08 Apr 2008 08:10:54 +0200 (CEST)
Allmighty TAG,
How can I find out NetBIOS name and "NT description" (or "server string" in Samba terminology) of a windows box, knowing its IP address ?
"nmblookup -A <win_ip_address>" gives me the NetBIOS name. That's OK.
But the "server string" - I'm not able to find it anywhere Can you help me? Any info is greatly appreciated.
TIA, Petr
-- Petr Vavrinec E-Mail: [email protected] Vysice 8, 388 01 Blatna, CZECHIA Voice : +420 383490147--------------------------------------------------------------------
[ Thread continues here (4 messages/3.94kB) ]
Shell scripting Help
Amit Kumar Saha [amitsaha.in at gmail.com]
Wed, 16 Apr 2008 16:33:49 +0530
Hello all,
I have got a shell variable (passed as an argument) which stores some value such as:
$4 = 'abc,def'
Now, I want to replace all the ',' by a ' ' such that the resulting value is 'abc def'.
How do I do it?
This seems to be very basic, so PLEASE do not flame me
I tried doing this:
echo $4 > devlist.tmp #awk script to extract the fields (invididual devices) in the list awk 'BEGIN { FS = "," } ; {print $1, $2 }' devlist.tmp > awk_tmp.tmp devs='cat awk_tmp.tmp'; echo $devs
Seems like I am going now-where.
do suggest a solution!
regards, Amit
-- Amit Kumar Saha *NetBeans Community Docs Coordinator* http://amitsaha.in.googlepages.com http://amitksaha.blogspot.com
[ Thread continues here (15 messages/17.41kB) ]
sunversion on linux
Ben Okopnik [ben at linuxgazette.net]
Mon, 14 Apr 2008 13:12:20 -0400
----- Forwarded message from deepali wadekar <[email protected]> -----
Date: Mon, 14 Apr 2008 11:20:21 +0530 From: deepali wadekar <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: sunversion on linux
Hello sir I am Deepali Wadekar I am working as a linux admin as fresher. I was read some PDF of subversion. I install subversion on linux (rhel 4) but, how to accesse so please can u guide me, how to use of subversion. -- ************************************************** With Regards Miss Deepali Wadekar Mobile: 09225775467 [email protected] [email protected] **************************************************
----- End forwarded message -----
-- * Ben Okopnik * Editor-in-Chief, Linux Gazette * http://LinuxGazette.NET *
[ Thread continues here (2 messages/2.20kB) ]