This can be used on almost anything, since Gluster is a userspace tool, based on FUSE. This means that all Gluster appears as to any application is just a directory.
Applications don't need specific support for Gluster, so long as you can tell the application to use a certain directory for storage.
One application can be for redundant and scaled storage, including for within Docker and Kubernetes, LXC, Proxmox, OpenStack, etc or just your image/web/video files or even da........
sudo vi /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf.d/70-linuxmint.conf
Change this:
[SeatDefaults]
user-session=mate
allow-guest=false
To this:
[SeatDefaults]
user-session=mate
allow-guest=false
greeter-hide-users=true
greeter-show-manual-login=true
To see and apply your changes just restart light........
systemd is like the service manager for your Centos and other modern Linux distributions (including Debian/Mint/Ubuntu) allows you to enable services, stop them, restart them, check their status and even reboot your system.
The key commands or arguments you will use with systemctl are the following:
Unit Commands:
list-units [PATTERN...] List loaded units
&nbs........
I was asked to troubleshoot why a site wasn't loaded or responding properly, it turned out they were using some old javascript tracker from Bing/Microsoft that is no longer valid or working. You have to wait forever for it to time out but it really did disrupt the functionality of a very important site:
flex.atdmt.com
If you have the above code in javascript on your site remove or comment it out.........
pxe-32 tftp open timeout
The solution was to enable tftp in xinetd with "chkconfig tftp on".
See the troubleshooting below:
chkconfig --list
NetworkManager 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off
acpid 0:off&n........
catdoc.i386 : Decodes MS Word files into plain text or TeX format
I haven't figured out how to use it, it is really not clear or obvious but it should do the job if you can figure it out.
Usage:
catdoc [-vu8btawxlV] [-m number] [-s charset] [-d charset] [ -f format] files........
I've never understood how to enable and disable services for different run levels in Debian based distros, it's just weird, annoying and doesn't make sense. I much prefer chkconfig from RHEL.
Just install the package called 'rcconf' and be done with it. rcconf makes things easy for you.
apt-get install rcconf
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done........