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How To Set Up Software RAID1 On A Running LVM System (Incl. GRUB Configuration) (Debian Etch)

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Mar 25, 2008 2:16 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Debian
This guide explains how to set up software RAID1 on an already running LVM system (Debian Etch). The GRUB bootloader will be configured in such a way that the system will still be able to boot if one of the hard drives fails (no matter which one).

Install OpenWRT, Chillispot, FreeRadius Based Managed Hotspot(s) Including PayPal Payment Gateway

  • HowtoForge; By Hanno Schupp (Posted by falko on Mar 23, 2008 10:33 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
If you have ever tried to implement one of the hotspot HowTos on this and other sites, it might have dawned on you that this is not an easy feat to accomplish. Amazingly most solutions also leave out the most important part – how to get paid by the punters using the hotspot. Some will offer prepaid solution or access tickets that need to be printed, but this will require staff being involved on the premises. And in particular, once you want to offer a professional service and not just a toy concept it gets tricky – and expensive. Just imagine all the servers you need to provide redundant and load balanced freeradius, mysql and web servers. It is generally not worth the effort and expense for just one hotspot – unless of course you are willing to accept outages, unhappy customers etc.

The Perfect Desktop - PC-BSD 1.5

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Mar 20, 2008 12:38 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
This document describes how to set up PC-BSD v1.5. This release is based upon FreeBSD 6.3 and uses KDE 3.5.8 as default desktop environment. Taken from the PC-BSD page: PC-BSD is a complete desktop operating system, which has been designed with the "casual" computer user in mind. It offers the stability and security that only a BSD-based operating system can bring, while as the same time providing a comfortable user experience, allowing you to get the most out of your computing time. With PC-BSD you can spend less time working to fix viruses or spyware and instead have the computer work for you.

Installing The Open Source Ticket Request System (OTRS) On Fedora 8

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Mar 18, 2008 1:45 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Fedora
This document describes how to set up the Open Ticket Request System (OTRS) on Fedora 8. Taken from the OTRS page: "OTRS is an Open source Ticket Request System (also well known as trouble ticket system) with many features to manage customer telephone calls and e-mails. The system is built to allow your support, sales, pre-sales, billing, internal IT, helpdesk, etc. department to react quickly to inbound inquiries."

Speed Up Your System With Preload On Fedora 8

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Mar 16, 2008 5:56 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Fedora
This document describes how to install preload on Fedora 8. preload is an adaptive readahead daemon. It monitors applications that users run, and by analyzing this data, predicts what applications users might run, and fetches those binaries and their dependencies into memory for faster startup times.

Zimbra Collaboration Suite Open Source Edition On CentOS

  • HowtoForge; By Chris Christensen (Posted by falko on Mar 13, 2008 9:33 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Red Hat
This tutorial shows how to set up Zimbra Collaboration Suite - Open Source Edition on CentOS. This tutorial covers installation of CentOS, dependencies for ZCS and setup of Split DNS when working behind a firewall. This tutorial is based on the way I set this server up and is only a suggestion. It carries no guarantees and it is highly suggested that you do this on a test server first to verify functionality. If you don't have a test server available you should download VMWare Server 1.0 and perform this tutorial on a test virtual server.

Creating Snapshot-Backups with BackerUpper On Ubuntu 7.10

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Mar 11, 2008 7:48 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
BackerUpper is a tool similar to Apple's TimeMachine. It is intended to create snapshot-backups of selected directories or even your full hard drive. From the BackerUpper project page: "Backerupper is a simple program for backing up selected directories over a local network. Its main intended purpose is backing up a user's personal data." This article shows how to install and use BackerUpper on Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon).

Virtual Users And Domains With Postfix, MailScanner, Mailwatch & MySQL On CentOS 5.1

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Mar 9, 2008 6:09 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Red Hat
This document describes how to set up a Postfix mail server that is based on virtual users and domains on CentOS 5.1 so that it works with MailScanner and Mailwatch. The resulting system provides a web interface (Mailwatch) where you can manage quarantined emails, train SpamAssassin, edit the white- and blacklist, view configuration files and the detailed MySQL database status.

Monitoring Multiple Systems With munin (Debian Etch)

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Mar 6, 2008 6:02 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Debian
In this article I will describe how you can monitor multiple systems with munin. munin produces nifty little graphics about nearly every aspect of your server (load average, memory usage, CPU usage, MySQL throughput, eth0 traffic, etc.) without much configuration. I will install the munin client on all systems that are to be monitored (including the munin server itself); the munin clients will then report to the munin server.

Virtual Hosting Howto With Virtualmin On CentOS 5.1

  • HowtoForge; By Andrew Colin Kissa (Posted by falko on Mar 4, 2008 6:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Red Hat
This tutorial shows how to set up a CentOS 5.x server to offer all services needed by virtual web hosters. These include web hosting, smtp server with (SMTP-AUTH and TLS, SPF, DKIM, Domainkeys), DNS, FTP, MySQL, POP3/IMAP, Firewall, Webalizer for stats.

Setting Up A High-Availability Load Balancer With HAProxy/Heartbeat On Fedora 8

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Mar 2, 2008 9:19 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Fedora
This document describes how to set up a two-node load balancer in an active/passive configuration with HAProxy and heartbeat on Fedora 8. The load balancer acts between the user and two (or more) Apache web servers that hold the same content. The load balancer passes the requests to the web servers and it also checks their health. If one of them is down, all requests will automatically be redirected to the remaining web server(s). In addition to that, the two load balancer nodes monitor each other using heartbeat. If the master fails, the slave becomes the master - users will not notice any disruption of the service. HAProxy is session-aware - you can use it with any web application that makes use of sessions like forums, shopping carts, etc.

Back Up Your Files With Fwbackups On Fedora 8

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Feb 28, 2008 10:41 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Fedora
This document describes how to set up, configure and use Fwbackups on a Fedora 8 desktop. The result is an easy-to-use backup system for desktop usage. Fwbackups creates partial backups which can be stored locally or on a removable device. You have also the option to run scheduled backups.

Server Monitoring With munin And monit On Mandriva 2008.0

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Feb 26, 2008 4:21 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Mandriva
In this article I will describe how you can monitor your Mandriva 2008.0 server with munin and monit. munin produces nifty little graphics about nearly every aspect of your server (load average, memory usage, CPU usage, MySQL throughput, eth0 traffic, etc.) without much configuration, whereas monit checks the availability of services like Apache, MySQL, Postfix and takes the appropriate action such as a restart if it finds a service is not behaving as expected. The combination of the two gives you full monitoring: graphic that lets you recognize current or upcoming problems, and a watchdog that ensures the availability of the monitored services.

Network Diagnostic Tool (NDT) On Ubuntu 7.10 Server

  • HowtoForge (Posted by falko on Feb 24, 2008 8:35 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
This guide will walk you through the setup process for implementing NDT running under Ubuntu 7.10 Server. For those unfamiliar with NDT, it is a network performance testing application. NDT will measure the throughput between your server and the desktops that you run the java client from.

Mail Server Setup With Exim, MySQL, Cyrus-Imapd, Horde Webmail On Centos 5.1

  • HowtoForge; By Andrew Colin Kissa (Posted by falko on Feb 21, 2008 8:22 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Red Hat
This guide describes the installation and configuration of a mail system on Centos 5.1 with SELinux enabled for enhanced security. This system will be able to service HTTP, HTTPS, SMTP, TLS, SMTP-AUTH, IMAP, POP3 clients and is virtual enabled allowing more than one domain to be served from the system.

Master-Master Replication With MySQL 5 On Fedora 8

This document describes how to set up master-master replication with MySQL 5 on Fedora 8. Since version 5, MySQL comes with built-in support for master-master replication, solving the problem that can happen with self-generated keys. In former MySQL versions, the problem with master-master replication was that conflicts arose immediately if node A and node B both inserted an auto-incrementing key on the same table. The advantages of master-master replication over the traditional master-slave replication are that you do not have to modify your applications to make write accesses only to the master, and that it is easier to provide high-availability because if the master fails, you still have the other master.

How To Install mod_ruby On Various Linux Distributions For Use With ISPConfig (2.2.20 And Above)

Starting with version 2.2.20, ISPConfig has built-in support for Ruby. Instead of using CGI/FastCGI, ISPConfig depends on mod_ruby being available in the server's Apache. This article explains how to install mod_ruby on various Linux distributions supported by ISPConfig.

How To Configure Remote Access To Your Ubuntu Desktop

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Feb 14, 2008 12:10 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
This guide explains how you can enable a remote desktop on an Ubuntu desktop so that you can access and control it remotely. This makes sense for example if you have customers that are not very tech-savvy. If they have a problem, you can log in to their desktops without the need to drive to their location. I will also show how to access the remote Ubuntu desktop from a Windows XP client and an Ubuntu client.

Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS) Open Source Edition v5.0 On Debian Etch

  • HowtoForge; By Oliver Meyer (Posted by falko on Feb 12, 2008 9:27 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Debian
This document describes how to set up the Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS) Open Source Edition v5.0 on Debian Etch. The resulting system provides a full featured collaboration-suite with many features that I cannot list all here - please have a look at the feature list. It also comes with a nice (themeable) AJAX web interface for administration and user access.

Installing The eZ Publish CMS On An Ubuntu 7.10 Server

  • HowtoForge; By Falko Timme (Posted by falko on Feb 10, 2008 8:52 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
eZ Publish is one of the most well known and widespread web content management systems. Because its setup is not trivial, this tutorial shows how to install eZ Publish on an Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon) server.

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