I install an external disk on my sun solaris 8
this went fine and I was able to access all filesystem on the disk. the new disk is mounted on /local
then 6 hours later
files under /local/files was 1 byte in size
at the same time I received the following
error message in... (4 Replies)
My site has a few sun solaris server including out NIS server and NFS server on solaris machines. we also have few suse linux and redhat linux machine.
All our home directory is on our NFS server(sun Solaris) and this is automounted through /etc/auto_master and /etc/auto_home this worked fine... (1 Reply)
Hello folks... have a problem here hopefully can find some direction with... we have a network using NIS authentication and automount for home dirs and other shared resources. Recently migrated some of our shares off of an EMC Celerra to an Openfiler solution. All of the clients in the NIS domain... (0 Replies)
When i export the directory where the data really is, i can specify which hosts can mount it. On the remote server i create a mount point directory and then mount it to the source servers directory (that has the data).
I need to run my script on Server X , i would login there and type in the... (11 Replies)
I am working on a CentOS release 6.4 server which has two mounted NAS devices, one with 20 x 3TB HDD running in FreeBSD with Zfs2 and one NAS which I don't know much about, but which has 7 HDDs in RAID-6.
I was running tar -zxvf on a tarball that is 80Mb with 50,000 small files inside. Even... (4 Replies)
Dear friends,
I have been facing an issue with one of my red hat unix machine, suddenly lost to switch sudo users. My all colleagues lost to switch to access sudo users.
Then, we have realized its related to NAS issue which does not allowing to write the file. because of this we got so many... (1 Reply)
Gents,
I have NAS File System mounted in Solaris as \Sysapp with size 8 TB
the problem once the backup stared it is impacting the performance of the OS.
Do you have any idea how to can we backup this FS with fast scenario without impacting the OS.
Backup type : Netbackup (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: AbuAliiiiiiiiii
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
rlm_ippool_tool
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8) System Manager's Manual RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)NAME
rlm_ippool_tool - dump the contents of the FreeRadius ippool database files
SYNOPSIS
If an ipaddress is specified then that address is used to limit the actions or output.
rlm_ippool_tool [-a] [-c] [-o] [-v] session-db index-db [ipaddress]
Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress
rlm_ippool_tool -n session-db index-db ipaddress nasIP nasPort
Update old format database to new.
rlm_ippool_tool -u session-db new-session-db
DESCRIPTION
rlm_ippool_tool dumps the contents of the FreeRADIUS ippool databases for analyses or for removal of active (stuck?) entries.
Or with the -n argument adds a usage entry to the FreeRADIUS ippool databases.
OPTIONS -a Print all active entries.
-c Report number of active entries.
-r Remove active entries.
-v Verbose report of all entries.
-o Assume old database format (nas/port pair, not md5 output).
-n Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress.
-u Update old format database to new.
EXAMPLES
Given the syntax in the FreeRadius radiusd.conf:
ippool myippool {
range-start = 192.0.2.0
range-stop = 192.0.2.255
[...]
session-db = ${raddbdir}/ip-pool.db
ip-index = ${raddbdir}/ip-index.db
}
To see the number of active entries in this pool, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -c ip-pool.db ip-index.db
13
To see all active entries in this pool, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -a ip-pool.db ip-index.db
192.0.2.5
192.0.2.82
192.0.2.244
192.0.2.57
192.0.2.120
192.0.2.27
[...]
To see all information about the active entries in the use, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -av ip-pool.db ip-index.db
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2e8 - ipaddr:192.0.2.5 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x17c - ipaddr:192.0.2.82 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x106 - ipaddr:192.0.2.244 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x157 - ipaddr:192.0.2.57 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2d8 - ipaddr:192.0.2.120 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x162 - ipaddr:192.0.2.27 active:1 cli:0 num:1
[...]
To see only information of one entry, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -v ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.0.2.1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x90 - ipaddr:192.0.2.1 active:0 cli:0 num:0
To add an IP address usage entry, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -n ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.0.0.1 172.16.1.1 0x90
rlm_ippool_tool: Allocating ip to nas/port: 172.16.1.1/144
rlm_ippool_tool: num: 1
rlm_ippool_tool: Allocated ip 192.0.2.1 to client on nas 172.16.1.1,port 144
SEE ALSO radiusd(8)AUTHORS
Currently part of the FreeRADIUS Project (http://www.freeradius.org) Originally by Edwin Groothuis, edwin@mavetju.org
(http://www.mavetju.org)
Mailing list details are at http://www.freeradius.org/
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)