07-29-2010
Bump...any more help on this? Thanks
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
How in AIX 5.1 can I access a windows shared drive without using NFS. I have looked into cifs but I can not seem to find the package that I need to install for AIX 5.1 if anyone can give me any further direction please let me know. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: chefsride
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2. AIX
Hi All,
I am basically new to this forum as well as AIX. To share some huge files between 2 servers I thought of creating a shared Directory in my AIX machine to access it in Solaris. I am very new to this AIX. Help me out how can u share a directory in AIX to access (mount) it on Solaris.
Hope... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: babuchoudary_g
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3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
this is probably a bit dumb ...but i read somewhere that one of the nfs versions can be mounted on a windows 2003 server ..if yes ..does anyone know how this can be achieved (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tarunicon
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4. AIX
Hello,
I've been using AIX cifs to mount windows XP shares with no problems till now.
Now it's Windows Server 2008 R2 - no go:
mount -v cifs -n host1/user1/pass1 /share1 /mountpt1
There was an error connecting the share or the server.
Make sure the lsdev command shows that device nsmb0 is in... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: vilius
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5. AIX
Are there any special requirements/tools needed for a AIX server to see (copy data) a Windows share? Only need 1-way copy (Windows-to-AIX). (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: kirkb
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6. AIX
Hi
i have some problem to mount a Windows Server 2008 R2 share on AIX. I found the artikel 157701-aix-cifs-mount-windows-server-2008-share on the Forum (cant post the Link) witch decribe my situation but there is no solution.
I can mount a share to a Windows 2003 SP2 Server but not to 2008 R2... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: MrTee
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7. Solaris
Hi,
I am trying to access a NFS shared directory on Solaris 10 Server from a client which is RHEL 4 Server.
On the NFS Server, in /etc/dfs/, I added following line to dfstab file.
& then ran the following
On the client machine, while running the mount command, I am... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: SunilB2011
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8. Red Hat
Hi,
I am trying to access a NFS shared directory on Solaris 10 Server from a client which is RHEL 4 Server.
On the NFS Server, in /etc/dfs/, I added following line to dfstab file.
share -F nfs -o rw /var/share
& then ran the following
svcadm -v enable -r... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: SunilB2011
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9. AIX
Hi,
How can we share a AIX drive on to Windows 2012 server. or vise versa.
Note: Not using NFS/CIFS/samba. (*we are not able to use samba/NFS/CIFS for some reason)
Requirement: How to have real time file sharing over the network between Windows and UNIX
Do you guys have any ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: System Admin 77
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10. Solaris
I have a Solaris 10 server, I'm trying to mount a share from a Windows nfs server. If I add this entry (tst-walnut:/test_sap_nfs - /majid nfs - yes rw,soft) to my /etc/vfstab, then I can mount, but when I create a file by root:root, the file owner changes to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Hiroshi
1 Replies
STUD(8) BSD System Manager's Manual STUD(8)
NAME
stud -- The Scalable TLS Unwrapping Daemon
SYNOPSIS
stud [--tls] [--ssl] [-c ciphers] [-b host,port] [-f host,port] [-n cores] [-r path] [-u username] [--write-ip] [--write-proxy]
certificate.pem
DESCRIPTION
stud is a network proxy that terminates TLS/SSL connections and forwards the unencrypted traffic to some backend. It's designed to handle
10s of thousands of connections efficiently on multicore machines.
stud has very few features -- it's designed to be paired with an intelligent backend like haproxy or nginx. It maintains a strict 1:1 con-
nection pattern with this backend handler so that the backend can dictate throttling behavior, maxmium connection behavior, availability of
service, etc.
The only required argument is a path to a PEM file that contains the certificate (or a chain of certificates) and private key. It should also
contain DH parameter if you wish to use Diffie-Hellman cipher suites.
The options are as follows:
--tls Use TLSv1 (default).
--ssl Use only SSLv3 and no TLSv1.
-c ciphers
Set allowed ciphers using the same format as openssl ciphers. For example, you can use RSA:!COMPLEMENTOFALL.
-b host,port
Define backend. Default is 127.0.0.1,8000. Incoming connections will be unwrapped and sent to this IP and port.
-f host,port
Define frontend. Default is *,8443. Incoming connections will be accepted to this IP and port and will be sent to the backend
defined above.
-n cores
Use cores worker processes. Default is 1.
-r path
Chroot to the given path. By default, no chroot is done.
-u username
Set GID/UID after binding the socket. By default, no privilege is dropped.
--write-ip
Write 1 octet with the IP family followed by the IP address in 4 (IPv4) or 16 (IPv6) octets little-endian to backend before the
actual data.
--write-proxy
Write HaProxy's PROXY (IPv4 or IPv6) protocol line before actual data.
SEE ALSO
ciphers(1SSL), dhparam(1SSL), haproxy(1)
AUTHORS
stud was originally written by Jamie Turner (@jamwt) and is maintained by the Bump server team. It currently provides server-side TLS termi-
nation for over 40 million Bump users.
BSD
September 23, 2011 BSD