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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Redhat versus Ubuntu Linux distribution Post 302955973 by gandolf989 on Thursday 24th of September 2015 09:43:07 AM
Old 09-24-2015
I'm not sure, but I thought that you had to pay for a Redhat license if you want to use Redhat. Perhaps that is only if you want to use it for commercial purposes. If you are, then you should probably look into that. There are two other versions of Linux that would work as well. Centos is essentially a free clone of Redhat. You don't get the same support that you would get if you had a Redhat license, but it is essentially the same. There is also Scientific Linux, which is sponsored for the Fermi National Accelerator Lab.

https://www.scientificlinux.org/

Scientific Linux does have some differences in libraries, but it should work the same. Generally Redhat and Redhat clones use YUM for maintaining packages. I have Ubuntu at home. I have Oracle 11.2.0.2 installed and running, as well as mySQL, and a test version of Request Tracker that I am testing. It works fine for what I need. It just has more user friendly packages along with things that you would need for databases or web servers.
 

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PROOFD(1)						      General Commands Manual							 PROOFD(1)

NAME
proofd - PROOF (The Parallel ROOT Facility) DESCRIPTION
Using PROOF (The Parallel ROOT Facility) one can analyze trees in parallel on a cluster of computers. The PROOF system consists of the proofd(1) from-end program which is started via inetd(8). proofd takes care of user authentication and overlays itself then with the desired version of the proofserv(1) executable. The proofserv(1) is a basically the same as the ROOT interactive module root(1), except that it reads its commands from a socket instead of from the terminal. Since it is a remote server it will not do graphics and therefore is not linked with any graphics libraries (Motif, X11, etc.). SETTING UP PROOF
Since you need to handle sensitive system files, you need to have root (the user, not the program!) privileges. Also, it's recommended that you read the appropriate man(1) pages first. These are inetd(8) (the internet daemon), sysklogd(8) and syslog(3) (the system logger dae- mon), and init(8) (the SYSV process control initializer). In other words: Be very VERY carefull when installing proofd There, I said it. And ofcourse, no warrenties what so ever. 1 Make sure every node has ROOT installed. We'll assume you installed the ROOT applications in <bindir> (e.g. /usr/bin) and the PROOF configuration files in files in <proofdir>/etc (e.g. /usr/share/root/etc). 2 The TCP port 1094 was allocated by IANA, ( www.iana.org <Iwww.iana.org> ), to rootd, so add to /etc/services the lines: proofd 1093/tcp rootd 1094/tcp 3 On each node, add to /etc/inetd.conf the lines: proofd stream tcp nowait root <bindir>/proofd proofd <proofdir>/proof rootd stream tcp nowait root <bindir>/rootd rootd -i You can substitute the <proofdir> with any directory that holds your PROOF configuration, for example /etc/root/proof. However, it should be shared among all nodes in the cluster. 4 Restart inetd or force it to re-read the config file: kill -1 <inetd pid> If you use SYSV init(8) scripts, you can probaly just do /etc/init.d/inetd restart or whatever is appropriate for your system. 5 On the master node, add to /etc/syslog.conf the line: local5,local6.debug <proofdir>/log/proof.log and all slave nodes: local5,local6.debug @<master hostname> where <master hostname> is domain name of the master node. All PROOF syslog messages will be collected on the master node. Just make one node in the cluster the master, all others are slaves. 6 On all nodes, change the below lines in /etc/syslog.conf, *.info;mail.none;news.none;authpriv.none /var/log/messages to: *.info;local5,local6,mail.none;news.none;authpriv.none /var/log/messages 7 Create an empty <proofdir>/log/proof.log: echo "" > <proofdir>/log/proof.log 8 Restart syslogd or force it to re-read the config file: kill -1 <syslogd pid>. If you use SYSV init(8) scripts, you can probaly just do /etc/init.d/sysklogd restart or whatever is appropriate for your system. 9 Edit <proofdir>/etc/proof.conf to reflect your cluster configuration. See the example proof.conf file for more information. If you installed ROOT using some precompiled package (for example a Redhat Linux or a Debian GNU/Linux package), steps 2 to 4 may already be done for you. If you're running Linux, Steps 5 to 7 can be somewhat automated using the script proof-facility in <proofdir> of your distribution. This script uses syslog-facility(1), from the Linux syslog(1) distribution, and may run on other platforms as well - but no warrenties mind you! Step 9 is completely up to the user. EXAMPLE
That's it. To test PROOF try the following: root [1] gROOT->Proof("<master hostname>") root [2] gPROOF->Print() <shows information on the master and all active slave servers> root [3] .q FILES
<proofdir> The location of your PROOF data. In binary packages, like for Redhat LinuxI or Debian GNU/Linux, this will probably be /usr/share/root/proof. If you got a binary tar(1)-ball from the ROOT website, or a build it yourself without the static paths option, then this directory could be ROOTSYS/proof. However, you may set it to something else when starting your server. <proofdir>/etc This directory holds all the configuration files for your cluster(s). <proofdir>/etc/<cluster>.conf This is the cluster named <cluster> configuration file. See <proofdir>/etc/<cluster>.conf.sample for an example. <proofdir>/etc/motd This is Message-Of-The-Day file. See <proofdir>/etc/motd.sample for an example. <proofdir>/etc/noproof If this file is present, all PROOF services will be diabled. See <proofdir>/etc/noproof.sample for an example. <proofdir>/etc/proof.conf This is the PROOF configuration file. See <proofdir>/etc/proof.conf.sample for an example. ~/.rootnetrc.conf Configuration file for network access. Here you specify login names and pass word, so it MUST be read/write-able only by the user. See <proofdir>/etc/rootnetrc.conf.sample for an example. <proofdir>/log This directory holds the log files from the master and slaves. <proofdir>/log/proof.log Syslog(1) log file for PROOF. SEE ALSO
proofserv(1) , root(1) , rootd(1) More information can be found at the ROOT website: http://root.cern.ch <http://root.cern.ch> ORIGINAL AUTHORS
The ROOT team (see web page above): Rene Brun and Fons Rademakers COPYRIGHT
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as pub- lished by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library 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 Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foun- dation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Christian Holm Christensen <cholm@nbi.dk>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). ROOT
Version 3 PROOFD(1)
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