05-16-2017
Why a $200 mini-computer, and not a $15 garage gale piece of garbage?
Brand new computers, and especially brand-new mini anything, are the computers most likely to not have good support from a linux distribution (or from anyone, really). Its power supply is weird, its video card is weird, its processor is weird, its hard drive is weird, its ethernet ports are weird, its motherboard is weird, and it has no real I/O except USB. It's almost as bad as a PI. Not an actual computer, despite its lofty ratings.
Last edited by Corona688; 05-16-2017 at 07:31 PM..
This User Gave Thanks to Corona688 For This Post:
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
there are commands to monitor the memory, paging, io... how about network traffic. i mean commands to see whether the network traffic (LAN) is congested? the closest i got is netstat
thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: yls177
6 Replies
2. Cybersecurity
Hi,
Can someone give me the clue on how to capture network traffic at gateway.
Thanx (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kayode
2 Replies
3. Programming
I am developing a Network Appliation to monitor computers in a network.
Specs are
App monitors the current web page viewed in each system
App also can shutdown the computer in the network
App can show all process run by each computer in the network
I am now confused how to start my... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: valaparambil88
2 Replies
4. Infrastructure Monitoring
Hi all,
Got a strange one here, well not so much strange, different :-)
I need to work out if a server is particulary chatty, whether its talking / communicating heavily to a particular server, as Im planning to physically move the server to a different server, over a link. Hence the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sbk1972
6 Replies
5. HP-UX
I Colleagues,
Somebody can say me how to monitoring traffic in the network. also I am interested in monitoring memory. if somebody to know a guide with command advanced in unix welcome for me.
Thank you for adcanced. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: systemoper
0 Replies
6. Red Hat
How to monitor network device traffic using MRTG?
How can I add network devices in MRTG configuration to monitor? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: manalisharmabe
2 Replies
7. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
Hello,
I am working in office, where, more than 60 clients machines (only 16 machines are on windows) are there and one server Centos Server, I have configured clients with server, so that internet will be used form only one IP. Only 1 ip is assigned, but now a days, my client machines are... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: RedRocks!!
2 Replies
8. Infrastructure Monitoring
If I would like to know what connection , data , traffic in a network port ( eth0 ) , what can I do ?
ps. because I always found the network is very slow , so I would like what the network port is doing .
Thanks
Login ID ust3 is currently in read-only mode for multiple infractions. Creating... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ust03
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi All
I am resilience testing an application that is spread across multiple servers.
One thing I will need to do soon is throttle the network traffic for specific interfaces within the test cluster. Specifically, maybe make a connection take twice or three times as long to respond....
I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbq
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
verify_krb5_conf
VERIFY_KRB5_CONF(8) BSD System Manager's Manual VERIFY_KRB5_CONF(8)
NAME
verify_krb5_conf -- checks krb5.conf for obvious errors
SYNOPSIS
verify_krb5_conf [config-file]
DESCRIPTION
verify_krb5_conf reads the configuration file krb5.conf, or the file given on the command line, parses it, checking verifying that the syntax
is not correctly wrong.
If the file is syntactically correct, verify_krb5_conf tries to verify that the contents of the file is of relevant nature.
ENVIRONMENT
KRB5_CONFIG points to the configuration file to read.
FILES
/etc/krb5.conf Kerberos 5 configuration file
DIAGNOSTICS
Possible output from verify_krb5_conf include:
<path>: failed to parse <something> as size/time/number/boolean
Usually means that <something> is misspelled, or that it contains weird characters. The parsing done by verify_krb5_conf is more
strict than the one performed by libkrb5, so strings that work in real life might be reported as bad.
<path>: host not found (<hostname>)
Means that <path> is supposed to point to a host, but it can't be recognised as one.
<path>: unknown or wrong type
Means that <path> is either a string when it should be a list, vice versa, or just that verify_krb5_conf is confused.
<path>: unknown entry
Means that <string> is not known by verify_krb5_conf.
SEE ALSO
krb5.conf(5)
BUGS
Since each application can put almost anything in the config file, it's hard to come up with a watertight verification process. Most of the
default settings are sanity checked, but this does not mean that every problem is discovered, or that everything that is reported as a possi-
ble problem actually is one. This tool should thus be used with some care.
It should warn about obsolete data, or bad practice, but currently doesn't.
BSD
December 8, 2004 BSD