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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Help finding a Unix friendly RAID 1 backup Post 302509359 by Corona688 on Wednesday 30th of March 2011 03:15:07 PM
Old 03-30-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by c.wakeman
[code]ps aux | grep '[s]mbd'
output:
[/FONT][/COLOR]
Code:
root      6884  0.0  0.2  13916  4392 ?        Ss   Feb25   0:57 /usr/sbin/smbd -D
root      6954  0.0  0.0  12524  1000 ?        S    Feb25   0:00 /usr/sbin/smbd -D

Well, you're running Samba all right. That's the program your Windows clients are connecting to for files.

I have no idea what started it though, if the init system didn't. Maybe you shouldn't reboot your server until you find that out, it might default to 'off'. Has it ever been rebooted that you know of? Did it come back up without fuss?
Quote:
Would ps aux or ps ax by themselves be helpful?
Why not. Filter out anything obviously confidential though.
Quote:
I burned the gentoo minimal x86 LiveCD files onto a CD; I burned the ISO, CONTENTS, DIGESTS, and ASC file, is that correct?
An ISO file is a CD image. It becomes the entire CD. If you drag-and-dropped it onto the CD as a file it won't work.

You don't need the CONTENTS, DIGESTS, and ASC files. Those are just checksums to make sure there weren't any errors in your download.
Quote:
I simply wanted to practice. Is this faulty at some base level; as in, the file I burned won't work with Windows?
Windows can't stop any computer from doing whatever it pleases before it's even loaded.
 

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RDIFF-BACKUP-FS(1)					      General Commands Manual						RDIFF-BACKUP-FS(1)

NAME
rdiff-backup-fs - Filesystem for accessing rdiff-backup archives. SYNOPSIS
rdiff-backup-fs <mount_point> <repository> [repositories ...] [-option ...] DESCRIPTION
rdiff-backup-fs is a filesystem in userspace that reads rdiff-backup archives and provides convenient access. OPTIONS
--debug <0-4> Run rdiff-backup-fs in foreground with given verbosity of debug messages. -f, --full Store information about all revisions in memory. CAUTION: this may take a lot of memory if your archive contains many revisions. -l, --last Displays files from the most recent increment as directories, each holding every version of the file. CAUTION: this stores informa- tion about all revisions in memory and therefore may take a lot of memory if archive contains many revisions. -c <n>, --caching <n> How many files retrieved from the rdiff-backup archive may be cached by filesystem. By default rdiff-backup-fs will cache up to 10 files. If this switch is set to 0, no caching will be done. -r <n>, --revisions <n> How many revisions should be stored in memory for on demand revision retrieval. By default rdiff-backup-fs will store up to 10 revi- sions in memory. -d, --directory <path> Set directory for directory with temporary files. By default rdiff-backup-fs uses /tmp. -v, --version Print version of rdiff-backup-fs and exit. SEE ALSO
rdiff-backup(1) COPYRIGHT
rdiff-backup-fs is Copyright (c) 2007-2011 Filip Gruszczyski. rdiff-backup-fs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MER- CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. AUTHORS
Filip Gruszczyski <gruszczy@gmail.com> RDIFF-BACKUP-FS(1)
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