For some reason 8.1 Mandrake Linux seems much slower than Windows 2000 with my cable modem. DSL reports test says they conferable speed with Windows2 though.
This is consistant slow with both of my boxes, at the same time. Linux used to be faster, but not with Mandrake. Any way to fix this? (17 Replies)
Sample Log file
IP.address Date&TimeStamp GET/POST URL ETC
123.45.67.89 MMDDYYYYHHMM GET myURL http://ABC.com
123.45.67.90 MMDDYYYYHHMM GET myURL http://XYZ.com
I have a very huge web server log file (about 1.3GB) that contains entries like the one above. I need to get the last entries of... (9 Replies)
Hi ,
I need to copy every day about 35GB of files from one file system to another.
Im using the cp command and its toke me about 25 min.
I also tried to use dd command but its toke much more.
Is there better option ?
Regards. (6 Replies)
Hi I have to grep for 2000 strings in a file one after the other.Say the file name is Snxx.out which has these strings.
I have to search for all the strings in the file Snxx.out one after the other.
What is the fastest way to do it ??
Note:The current grep process is taking lot of time per... (7 Replies)
I have read anecdotes about people installing RAID0 (RAID - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) on some of their machines because it gives a performance boost. Because bandwidth on the motherboard is limited, can someone explain exactly why it should be faster? (7 Replies)
Hi,
i have a log file of 8 GB size , i need to grep the count of a word which i give as an input , i mean to say to find the occurance of a word on that file.
grep is taking too much time ,can you please give me any command so that i can grep the word in a quicker way..
thanks,
... (16 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm new to the forum and to bash scripting. I did some stuff with VB.net, Batch, and VBScripting in the past, but because I shifted over to Linux, I am learning to script in Bash at this moment. So bear with me if I seem to script like a newbie, that's just because I am ;-)
OK, I... (9 Replies)
Is there a way to make this search faster? It takes about 30 minutes. Its a video so I figured I could say larger than 100 MB. It contains Mark so I added name. What else could I do to make the search faster?
find / -type f -name "*Mark*" -size +100M 2>/dev/null (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rsockd
RSOCKD(8) System Manager's Manual RSOCKD(8)NAME
rsockd - SOCKSified SOCKS server
SYNOPSIS
rsockd [ -ver | -i | -I ]
DESCRIPTION
rsockd is the SOCKSified version of the SOCKS server sockd. Functionally rsockd is identical to sockd except that it may (though not nec-
essarily has to) make use of other SOCKS servers to reach some destinations. A number of rsockd's can be strung together or organized in a
cascade or other more complicated structures to serve the needs of a particular network configuration and restrictions. Obviously this
complicates the issues and make the setup and maintenance of the firewall more difficult. So use sockd instead whenever you can.
This document only describes the features of rsockd that are different from sockd. You should read sockd(5) carefully to gain a basic
understanding of of how the SOCKS server works.
When rsockd receives a request, it checks the request again its configuration (in exactly the same way that sockd does) to decider whether
the request is to be accepted. The primary difference between sockd and rsockd is in how they establish connection to the destination host
of a accepted request. sockd assumes that it can connect directly to the destination host and proceeds to do so. rsockd makes no such
assumption. Instead, it consults another configuration file to decide whether it can connect directly to the particular destination host or
whether it has to use a proxy connection through another SOCKS server. In other words, it behaves just like a versatile SOCKS client in
this regard. Therefore rsockd requires not only the SOCKS server configuration file /etc/sockd.fc or /etc/sockd.conf to decide whether to
accept or reject a request, but also the client configuration file /etc/socks.fc or /etc/socks.conf to decide how to reach the destination
host. If it is a multi-homed version and supports RBIND, it also needs the route file /etc/sockd.fr or /etc/sockd.fr to decide which net-
work interface to use for a connection.
Look at it in a different way, you can think of sockd as a special case of rsockd, one which can connect directly to all destination hosts.
In fact, an rsockd using the client configuration consisting of only this line
direct ALL 0.0.0.0
is functinally identical to the regular sockd.
Anther thing to mention is related to the use of identd. Only the SOCKS server which the requesting host directly connects to can find out
the identity of the real user. Suppose user x on host C connects to rsockd on server B which in turn connects to sockd on server A in order
to reach destination z. Host B can query identd on host C to find out whether the user is indeed x. To host A, the request appears to orig-
inate from user x on host B. An identd query from Host A to host B returns the userid that owns the rsockd process on host B, not the real
user x.
OPTIONS
See sockd(8).
EXAMPLES
The follwoing is an example of the client configuration file. See related man pages for examples on server configuration and route files.
# /etc/socks.conf for rsockd of domain rnd.xyz.com
#
# Use proxy connection through SOCKS server on socks.market.xyz.com
# to reach hosts within market.xyz.com
sockd @=socks.market.xyz.com .market.xyz.com 0.0.0.0
#
# Use direct connect to all other hosts within xyz.com
direct .xyz.com 0.0.0.0
#
# Use proxy connection through SOCKS server on gateway.xyz.com
# to reach all others
sockd @=gateway.xyz.com ALL 0.0.0.0
FILES
/etc/sockd.fc, /etc/sockd.conf, /etc/sockd.fr, /etc/sockd.route, /etc/socks.fc, /etc/socks.conf, /etc/inetd.conf, /etc/services,
/var/adm/messages, /etc/syslog.conf
SEE ALSO sockd(8), socks_clients(1), sockd.conf(5), sockd.route(5), socks.conf(5), make_sockdfc(8), make_sockdfr(8), dump_sockdfc(8),
dump_sockdfr(8)AUTHOR
Ying-Da Lee, ylee@syl.dl.nec.com
May 6, 1996 RSOCKD(8)