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Mike Chirico (mchirico@users.sourceforge.net) or (mchirico@comcast.net) Copyright (C) 2004 (GNU Free Documentation License) Last Updated: Thu Dec 28 16:42:50 EST 2006 The latest version of this document can be found at: http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/how_to_linux_and_open_source.htm or text version ( if you have trouble downloading the full document: over 140 pages ) http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt?download For tips on Gmail with Postix and Fetchmail http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/postfix_tutorial.html For tips on using SQLite (over 25 pages) http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_sqlite_tutorial.html?download For tips on MySQL reference: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_mysql.txt?download For a recommended reading list http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/Recommended_Reading.html?download For tips on upgrading RedHat 9 or 8.0 to 2.6.x src kernel http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_26.txt?download For tips on Comcast Email with Home Linux Box http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_COMCAST_EMAIL.txt?download **Note, if you want email notification after every 50 new tips have been added, then, click on the following link: https://sourceforge.net/project/filemodule_monitor.php?filemodule_id=120838 TIP 1: Is NTP Working? STEP 1 (Test the current server): Try issuing the following command: $ ntpq -pn remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter =================================================== tock.usno.navy 0.0.0.0 16 u - 64 0 0.000 0.000 4000.00 The above is an example of a problem. Compare it to a working configuration. $ ntpq -pn remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter ======================================================== +128.4.40.12 128.4.40.10 2 u 107 128 377 25.642 3.350 1.012 127.127.1.0 127.127.1.0 10 l 40 64 377 0.000 0.000 0.008 +128.91.2.13 128.4.40.12 3 u 34 128 377 21.138 6.118 0.398 *192.5.41.41 .USNO. 1 u 110 128 377 33.69 9.533 3.534 STEP 2 (Configure the /etc/ntp.conf): $ cat /etc/ntp.conf # My simple client-only ntp configuration. server timeserver1.upenn.edu # ping -a timeserver1.upenn.edu shows the IP address 128.91.2.13 # which is used in the restrict below restrict 128.91.2.13 server tock.usno.navy.mil restrict 192.5.41.41 server 128.4.40.12 restrict 128.4.40.12 server 127.127.1.0 # local clock fudge 127.127.1.0 stratum 10 driftfile /etc/ntp/drift restrict default ignore restrict 127.0.0.0 mask 255.0.0.0 authenticate no STEP 3 (Configure /etc/ntp/step-tickers): The values for server above are placed in the "/etc/ntp/step-tickers" file $ cat /etc/ntp/step-tickers timeserver1.upenn.edu tock.usno.navy.mil 128.4.40.12 The startup script /etc/rc.d/init.d/ntpd will grab the servers in this file and execute the ntpdate command as follows: /usr/sbin/ntpdate -s -b -p 8 timeserver1.upenn.edu Why? Because if the time is off ntpd will not start. The command above set the clock. If System Time deviates from true time by more than 1000 seconds, then, the ntpd daemon will enter panic mode and exit. STEP 4 (Restart the service and check): Issue the restart command /etc/init.d/ntpd restart check the values for "ntpq -pn", which should match step 1. ntpq -pn SPECIAL NOTE: Time is always stored in the kernel as the number of seconds since midnight of the 1st of January 1970 UTC, regardless of whether the hardware clock is stored as UTC or not. Conversions to local time are done at run-time. So, it's easy to get the time in different timezones for only the current session as follows: $ export TZ=EST $ date Mon Aug 2 10:34:04 EST 2004 $ export TZ=NET $ date Mon Aug 2 15:34:18 NET 2004 The following are possible values for TZ: Hours From Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) Value Description 0 GMT Greenwich Mean Time +1 ECT European Central Time +2 EET European Eastern Time +2 ART +3 EAT Saudi Arabia +3.5 MET Iran +4 NET +5 PLT West Asia +5.5 IST India +6 BST Central Asia +7 VST Bangkok +8 CTT China +9 JST Japan +9.5 ACT Central Australia +10 AET Eastern Australia +11 SST Central Pacific +12 NST New Zealand -11 MIT Samoa -10 HST Hawaii -9 AST Alaska -8 PST Pacific Standard Time -7 PNT Arizona -7 MST Mountain Standard Time -6 CST Central Standard Time -5 EST Eastern Standard Time -5 IET Indiana East -4 PRT Atlantic Standard Time -3.5 CNT Newfoundland -3 AGT Eastern South America -3 BET Eastern South America -1 CAT Azores DST timezone 0 BST for British Summer. +400 ADT for Atlantic Daylight. +500 EDT for Eastern Daylight. +600 CDT for Central Daylight. +700 MDT for Mountain Daylight. +800 PDT for Pacific Daylight. +900 YDT for Yukon Daylight. +1000 HDT for Hawaii Daylight. -100 MEST for Middle European Summer, MESZ for Middle European Summer, SST for Swedish Summer and FST for French Summer. -700 WADT for West Australian Daylight. -1000 EADT for Eastern Australian Daylight. -1200 NZDT for New Zealand Daylight. The following is an example of setting the TZ environment variable for the timezone, only when timezone changes go into effect. $ export TZ=EST+5EDT,M4.1.0/2,M10.5.0/2 Take a look at the last line "M10.5.0/2". What does it mean? Here is the documentation Mm.w.d This specifies day d (0 <= d <= 6) of week w (1 <= w <= 5) of month m (1 <= m <= 12). Week 1 is the first week in which day d occurs and week 5 is the last week in which day d occurs. Day 0 is a Sunday. The time fields specify when, in the local time currently in effect, the change to the other time occurs. If omitted, the default is 02:00:00. So this is what it means. M10 stands for October, the 5 is the fifth week that includes a Sunday (note 0 in M10.5.0/2 is Sunday). To see that it is the fifth week see the calendar below. The time change occurs a 2am in the morning. October Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Prove it. Take the following program sunrise, which can calcuates sunrise and sunset for an latitude and longitude. This program can be downloaded from the following location: http://sourceforge.net/direct-dl/mchirico/souptonuts/working_with_time.tar.gz Below is a bash script that will run the program for the next 100 days. #!/bin/bash # program: next100days Mike Chirico # download: # http://sourceforge.net/direct-dl/mchirico/souptonuts/working_with_time.tar.gz # # This will calculate the sunrise and sunset for # latitude 39.95 Note must convert to degrees # longitude 75.15 Note must convert to degrees lat=39.95 long=75.15 for (( i=0; i <= 100; i++)) do sunrise `date -d "+$i day" "+%Y %m %d"` $lat $long done Take a look at the following sample output. $ export TZ=EST+5EDT,M4.1.0/2,M10.5.0/2 $ ./next100days Sunrise 08-24-2004 06:21:12 Sunset 08-24-2004 19:43:42 Sunrise 08-25-2004 06:22:09 Sunset 08-25-2004 19:42:12 Sunrise 08-26-2004 06:23:06 Sunset 08-26-2004 19:40:41 Sunrise 08-27-2004 06:24:03 Sunset 08-27-2004 19:39:09 Sunrise 08-28-2004 06:25:00 Sunset 08-28-2004 19:37:37 Sunrise 08-29-2004 06:25:56 Sunset 08-29-2004 19:36:04 Sunrise 08-30-2004 06:26:53 Sunset 08-30-2004 19:34:31 Sunrise 08-31-2004 06:27:50 Sunset 08-31-2004 19:32:57 Sunrise 09-01-2004 06:28:46 Sunset 09-01-2004 19:31:22 Sunrise 09-02-2004 06:29:43 Sunset 09-02-2004 19:29:47 ..[values omitted ] Sunrise 10-28-2004 07:25:31 Sunset 10-28-2004 18:02:34 Sunrise 10-29-2004 07:26:38 Sunset 10-29-2004 18:01:19 Sunrise 10-30-2004 07:27:46 Sunset 10-30-2004 18:00:06 Sunrise 10-31-2004 06:28:53 Sunset 10-31-2004 16:58:54 Sunrise 11-01-2004 06:30:01 Sunset 11-01-2004 16:57:44 Sunrise 11-02-2004 06:31:10 Sunset 11-02-2004 16:56:35 Compare 10-30-2004 with 10-31-2004. Sunrise is an hour earlier because daylight saving time has ended, just as predicted. There is an easier way to switch between timezones. Take a look at the directory zoneinfo as follows: $ ls /usr/share/zoneinfo Africa Chile Factory Iceland Mexico posix UCT America CST6CDT GB Indian Mideast posixrules Universal Antarctica Cuba GB-Eire Iran MST PRC US Arctic EET GMT iso3166.tab MST7MDT PST8PDT UTC Asia Egypt GMT0 Israel Navajo right WET Atlantic Eire GMT-0 Jamaica NZ ROC W-SU Australia EST GMT+0 Japan NZ-CHAT ROK zone.tab Brazil EST5EDT Greenwich Kwajalein Pacific Singapore Zulu Canada Etc Hongkong Libya Poland SystemV CET Europe HST MET Portugal Turkey TZ can be set to any one of these files. Some of these are directories and contain subdirectories, such as ./posix/America. This way you don not have to enter the timezone, offset, and range for dst, since it has already been calculated. $ export TZ=:/usr/share/zoneinfo/posix/America/Aruba $ export TZ=:/usr/share/zoneinfo/Egypt Reference: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/date_calc.tar.gz?download Also see (TIP 27). Also see (TIP 103) using chrony which is very similiar to ntpd. Note time settings can usually be found in /etc/sysconfig/clock TIP 2: cpio works like tar, only better. STEP 1 (Create two directories with data ../dir1 an ../dir2) mkdir -p ../dir1 mkdir -p ../dir2 cp /etc/*.conf ../dir1/. cp /etc/*.cnf ../dir2/. Which will backup all your cnf and conf files. STEP 2 (Piping the files to tar) cpio works like tar but can take input from the "find" command. $ find ../dir1/ | cpio -o --format=tar > test.tar or $ find ../dir1/ | cpio -o -H tar > test2.tar Same command without the ">" $ find ../dir1/ | cpio -o --format=tar -F test.tar or $ find ../dir1/ | cpio -o -H tar -F test2.tar Using append $ find ../dir1/ | cpio -o --format=tar -F test.tar or $ find ../dir2/ | cpio -o --format=tar --append -F test.tar STEP 3 (List contents of the tar file) $ cpio -it < test.tar or $ cpio -it -F test.tar STEP 4 (Extract the contents) $ cpio -i -F test.tar TIP 3: Working with tar. The basics with encryption. STEP 1 (Using the tar command on the directory /stuff) Suppose you have a directory /stuff To tar everything in stuff to create a ".tar" file. $ tar -cvf stuff.tar stuff Which will create "stuff.tar". STEP 2 (Using the tar command to create a ".tar.gz" of /stuff) $ tar -czf stuff.tar.gz stuff STEP 3 (List the files in the archive) $ tar -tzf stuff.tar.gz or $ tar -tf stuff.tar STEP 4 (A way to list specific files) Note, pipe the results to a file and edit $ tar -tzf stuff.tar.gz > mout Then, edit mout to only include the files you want $ tar -T mout -xzf stuff.tar.gz The above command will only get the files in mout. Of couse, if you want them all $ tar -xzf stuff.tar.gz STEP 5 (ENCRYPTION) $ tar -zcvf - stuff|openssl des3 -salt -k secretpassword | dd of=stuff.des3 This will create stuff.des3...don't forget the password you put in place of secretpassword. This can be done interactively as well. $ dd if=stuff.des3 |openssl des3 -d -k secretpassword|tar zxf - NOTE: above there is a "-" at the end... this will extract everything. TIP 4: Creating a Virtual File System and Mounting it with a Loopback Device. STEP 1 (Construct a 10MB file) $ dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/disk-image count=20480 By default dd uses block of 512 so the size will be 20480*512 STEP 2 (Make an ext2 or ext3 file system) -- ext2 shown here. $ mke2fs -q or if you want ext3 $ mkfs -t ext3 -q /tmp/disk-image yes, you can even use reiser, but you'll need to create a bigger disk image. Something like "dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/disk-image count=50480". $ mkfs -t reiserfs -q /tmp/disk-image Hit yes for confirmation. It only asks this because it's a file STEP 3 (Create a directory "virtual-fs" and mount. This has to be done as root) $ mkdir /virtual-fs $ mount -o loop=/dev/loop0 /tmp/disk-image /virtual-fs SPECIAL NOTE: if you mount a second device you will have to increase the loop count: loop=/dev/loop1, loop=/dev/loop2, ... loop=/dev/loopn Now it operates just like a disk. This virtual filesystem can be mounted when the system boots by adding the following to the "/etc/fstab" file. Then, to mount, just type "mount /virtual-fs". /tmp/disk-image /virtual-fs ext2 rw,loop=/dev/loop0 0 0 STEP 4 (When done, umount it) $ umount /virtual-fs SPECIAL NOTE: If you are using Fedora core 2, in the /etc/fstab you can take advantage of acl properties for this mount. Note the acl next to the rw entry. This is shown here with ext3. /tmp/disk-image /virtual-fs ext3 rw,acl,loop=/dev/loop1 0 0 Also, if you are using Fedora core 2 and above, you can mount the file on a cryptoloop. $ dd if=/dev/urandom of=disk-aes count=20480 $ modprobe loop $ modprobe cryptoloop $ modprobe aes $ losetup -e aes /dev/loop0 disk-aes $ mkfs -t ext2 /dev/loop0 $ mount -o loop,encryption=aes disk-aes <mount point> If you do not have Fedora core 2, then, you can build the kernel from source with some of the following options (not complete, yet) reference: http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/cpearls/cpearls/src/posted_on_sf/acl/ehd.pdf?rev=1.1&view=log Cryptographic API Support (CONFIG_CRYPTO) generic loop cryptographic (CONFIG_CRYPTOLOOP) Cryptographic ciphers (CONFIG_CIPHERS) Enable one or more ciphers (CONFIG CIPHER .*) such as AES. HELPFUL INFORMATION: It is possible to bind mount partitions, or associate the mounted partition to a directory name. # mount --bind /virtual-fs /home/mchirico/vfs Also, if you want to see what filesystems are currently mounted, "cat" the file "/etc/mtab" $ cat /etc/mtab Also see TIP 91. TIP 5: Setting up 2 IP address on "One" NIC. This example is on ethernet. STEP 1 (The settings for the initial IP address) $ cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 DEVICE=eth0 BOOTPROTO=static BROADCAST=192.168.99.255 IPADDR=192.168.1.155 NETMASK=255.255.252.0 NETWORK=192.168.1.0 ONBOOT=yes STEP 2 (2nd IP address: ) $ cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0:1 DEVICE=eth0:1 BOOTPROTO=static BROADCAST=192.168.99.255 IPADDR=192.168.1.182 NETMASK=255.255.252.0 NETWORK=192.168.1.0 ONBOOT=yes SUMMARY Note, in STEP 1 the filename is "ifcfg-eth0", whereas in STEP 2 it's "ifcfg-eth0:1" and also not the matching entries for "DEVICE=...". Also, obviously, the "IPADDR" is different as well. TIP 6: Sharing Directories Among Several Users. Several people are working on a project in "/home/share" and they need to create documents and programs so that others in the group can edit and execute these documents as needed. Also see (TIP 186) for adding existing users to groups. $ /usr/sbin/groupadd share $ chown -R root.share /home/share $ /usr/bin/gpasswd -a <username> share $ chmod 2775 /home/share $ ls -ld /home/share drwxrwsr-x 2 root share 4096 Nov 8 16:19 /home/share ^---------- Note the s bit, which was set with the chmod 2775 $ cat /etc/group ... share:x:502:chirico,donkey,zoe ... ^------- users are added to this group. The user may need to login again to get access. Or, if the user is currently logged in, they can run the following command: $ su - <username> Note, the above step is recommended over "newgrp - share" since currently newgrp in FC2,FC3, and FC4 gets access to the group but the umask is not correctly formed. As root you can test their account. $ su - <username> "You need to '-' to pickup thier environment '$ su - chirico' " Note: SUID, SGID, Sticky bit. Only the left most octet is examined, and "chmod 755" is used as an example of the full command. But, anything else could be used as well. Normally you'd want executable permissions. Octal digit Binary value Meaning Example usage 0 000 all cleared $ chmod 0755 or chmod 755 1 001 sticky $ chmod 1755 2 010 setgid $ chmod 2755 3 011 setgid, sticky $ chmod 3755 4 100 setuid $ chmod 4755 5 101 setuid, sticky $ chmod 5755 6 110 setuid, setgid $ chmod 6755 7 111 setuid, setgid, sticky $ chmod 7755 A few examples applied to a directory below. In the first example all users in the group can add files to directory "dirA" and they can delete their own files. Users cannot delete other user's files. Sticky bit: $ chmod 1770 dirA Below files created within the directory have the group ID of the directory, rather than that of the default group setting for the user who created the file. Set group ID bit: $ chmod 2755 dirB TIP 7: Getting Infomation on Commands The "info" is a great utility for getting information about the system. Here's a quick key on using "info" from the terminal prompt. 'q' exits. 'u' moves up to the table of contents of the current section. 'n' moves to the next chapter. 'p' moves to the previous chapter. 'space' goes into the selected section. The following is a good starting point: $ info coreutils Need to find out what a certain program does? $ whatis open open (2) - open and possibly create a file or device open (3) - perl pragma to set default PerlIO layers for input and output open (3pm) - perl pragma to set default PerlIO layers for input and output open (n) - Open a file-based or command pipeline channel To get specific information about the open commmand $ man 2 open also try 'keyword' search, which is the same as the apropos command. For example, to find all the man pages on selinux, type the following: $ man -k selinux or the man full word search. Same as whatis command. $ man -f <some string> This is a hint once you are inside man. space moves forward one page b moves backward y scrolls up one line "yikes, I missed it!" g goes to the beginning q quits /<string> search, repeat seach n m mark, enter a letter like "a", then, ' to go back ' enter a letter that is marked. To get section numbers $ man 8 ping Note the numbers are used as follows (This is OpenBSD) 1 General Commands 2 System Calls and Error Numbers 3 C Libraries 3p perl 4 Devices and device drivers 5 File Formats and config files 6 Game instructions 7 Miscellaneous information 8 System maintenance 9 Kernel internals To find the man page directly, "ls" command: $ whereis -m ls ls: /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1 /usr/share/man/man1p/ls.1p To read this file directly, do the following: $ man /usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz If you want to know the manpath, execute manpath. $ manpath /usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man:/usr/local/share/man:/usr/local/pgsql/man:/usr/man:/usr/local/man TIP 8: How to Put a "Running Job" in the Background. You're running a job at the terminal prompt, and it's taking a very long time. You want to put the job in the backgroud. "CTL - z" Temporarily suspends the job $ jobs This will list all the jobs $ bg %jobnumber (bg %1) To run in the background $ fg %jobnumber To bring back in the foreground Need to kill all jobs -- say you're using several suspended emacs sessions and you just want everything to exit. $ kill -9 `jobs -p` The "jobs -p" gives the process number of each job, and the kill -9 kills everything. Yes, sometimes "kill -9" is excessive and you should issue a "kill -15" that allows jobs to clean-up. However, for exacs session, I prefer "kill -9" and haven't had a problem. Sometimes you need to list the process id along with job information. For instance, here's process id with the listing. $ jobs -l Note you can also renice a job, or give it lower priority. $ nice -n +15 find . -ctime 2 -type f -exec ls {} \; > last48hours ^z $ bg So above that was a ctl-z to suppend. Then, bg to run it in the background. Now, if you want to change the priority lower you just renice it, once you know the process id. $ jobs -pl [1]+ 29388 Running nice -n +15 find . -ctime 2 -exec ls -l {} \; >mout & $ renice +30 -p 29388 29388: old priority 15, new priority 19 19 was the lowest priority for this job. You cannot increase the priority unless you are root. TIP 9: Need to Delete a File for Good -- not even GOD can recover. You have a file "secret". The following makes it so no one can read it. If the file was 12 bytes, it's now 4096 after it has been over written 100 times. There's no way to recover this. $ shred -n 100 -z secret Want to remove the file? Use the "u" option. $ shred -n 100 -z -u test2 It can be applied to a device $ shred -n 100 -z -u /dev/fd0 CAUTION: Note that shred relies on a very important assumption: that the file system overwrites data in place. This is the traditional way to do things, but many modern file system designs do not sat- isfy this assumption. The following are examples of file systems on which shred is not effective, or is not guaranteed to be effective in all file system modes: * log-structured or journaled file systems, such as those supplied with AIX and Solaris (and JFS, ReiserFS, XFS, Ext3, etc.) Also see (TIP 52). TIP 10: Who and What is doing What on Your System - finding open sockets, files etc. $ lsof or as root $ watch lsof -i To list all open Internet files, use: $ lsof -i -U (See TIP 118) Also try fuser. Suppose you have a mounted file-system, and you need to umount it. To list the users on the file-system /work $ fuser -u /work To kill all processes accessing the file system /work in any way. $ fuser -km /work Or better yet, maybe you want to eject a cdrom on /mnt/cdrom $ fuser -km /mnt/cdrom If you need IO load information about your system, you can execute iostat. But note, the very first iostat gives a snapshot since the last boot. You typically want the following command, which gives you 3 outputs every 5 seconds. $ iostat -xtc 5 3 Linux 2.6.12-1.1376_FC3smp (squeezel.squeezel.com) 10/05/2005 Time: 07:05:04 PM avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %idle 0.97 0.06 1.94 0.62 96.41 Time: 07:05:09 PM avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %idle 0.60 0.00 1.70 0.00 97.70 Time: 07:05:14 PM avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %idle 1.00 0.00 1.60 0.00 97.39 vmstat reports memory statistics. $ vmstat $ ifconfig $ cat /proc/sys/vm/.. (entries under here) *NOTE: (TIP 77) shows sample usage of "ifconfig". Also (TIP 84) shows sample output of "$ cat /proc/cpuinfo". You can download iostat and other packages from (http://perso.wanadoo.fr/sebastien.godard/download_en.html). You also may want to look at iozone (TIP 178). Also $ cat /proc/meminfo $ cat /proc/stat $ cat /proc/uptime 1078623.55 1048008.34 First number is the number of seconds since boot. The second number is the number of idle seconds. $ cat /proc/loadavg 0.25 0.14 0.10 1/166 7778 This shows load at 1,5, and 15 minutes, a total of 1 current running process out from a total of 166. The 7778 is the last process id used. Ref: http://www.teamquest.com/resources/gunther/ldavg1.shtml Or current process open file descriptors $ ls -l /proc/self/fd/0 lrwx------ 1 chirico chirico 64 Jun 29 13:17 0 -> /dev/pts/51 lrwx------ 1 chirico chirico 64 Jun 29 13:17 1 -> /dev/pts/51 lrwx------ 1 chirico chirico 64 Jun 29 13:17 2 -> /dev/pts/51 lr-x------ 1 chirico chirico 64 Jun 29 13:17 3 -> /proc/26667/fd So you could, $ echo "stuff" > /dev/pts/51, to get output. Note, tree is also helpful here: $ tree /proc/self /proc/self |-- auxv |-- cmdline |-- cwd -> /work/souptonuts/documentation/theBook |-- environ |-- exe -> /usr/bin/tree |-- fd | |-- 0 -> /dev/pts/51 | |-- 1 -> /dev/pts/51 | |-- 2 -> /dev/pts/51 | `-- 3 -> /proc/26668/fd |-- maps |-- mem |-- mounts |-- root -> / |-- stat |-- statm |-- status |-- task | `-- 26668 | |-- auxv | |-- cmdline | |-- cwd -> /work/souptonuts/documentation/theBook | |-- environ | |-- exe -> /usr/bin/tree | |-- fd | | |-- 0 -> /dev/pts/51 | | |-- 1 -> /dev/pts/51 | | |-- 2 -> /dev/pts/51 | | `-- 3 -> /proc/26668/task/26668/fd | |-- maps | |-- mem | |-- mounts | |-- root -> / | |-- stat | |-- statm | |-- status | `-- wchan `-- wchan 10 directories, 28 files Need a listing of the system settings? $ sysctl -a Need IPC (Shared Memory Segments, Semaphore Arrays, Message Queue) status etc? $ ipcs $ ipcs -l "This gives limits" Need to "watch" everything a user does? The following watches donkey. $ watch lsof -u donkey Or, to see what in going on in directory "/work/junk" $ watch lsof +D /work/junk TIP 11: How to make a File "immutable" or "unalterable" -- it cannot be changed or deleted even by root. Note this works on (ext2/ext3) filesystems. And, yes, root can delete after it's changed back. As root: $ chattr +i filename And to change it back: $ chattr -i filename List attributes $ lsattr filename TIP 12: SSH - How to Generate the Key Pair. On the local server $ ssh-keygen -t dsa -b 2048 This will create the two files: .ssh/id_dsa (Private key) .ssh/id_dsa.pub (Public key you can share) Next insert ".ssh/id_dsa.pub" on the remote server in the file ".ssh/authorized_keys" and ".ssh/authorized_keys2" and change the permission of each file to (chmod 600). Plus, make sure the directory ".ssh" exists on the remote computer with 700 rights. Ok, assuming 192.168.1.155 is the remote server and "donkey" is the account on that remote server. $ ssh donkey@192.168.1.155 "mkdir -p .ssh" $ ssh donkey@192.168.1.155 "chmod 700 .ssh" $ scp ./.ssh/id_dsa.pub donkey@192.168.1.155:.ssh/newkey.pub Now connect to that remote server "192.168.1.155" and add .ssh/newkey.pub to both "authorized_keys" and "authorized_keys2". When done, the permission on (This is on the remote server) $chmod 600 .ssh/authorized_key* Next, go back to the local server and issue the following: $ ssh-agent $SHELL $ ssh-add The "ssh-add" will allow you to enter the passphrase and it will save it for the current login session. You don't have to enter a password when running "ssh-keygen" above. But, remember anyone with root access can "su - <username>" and then connect to your computers. It's harder, however, not impossible, for root to do this if you have a password. (Reference TIP 151) TIP 13: Securing the System: Don't allow root to login remotely. Instead, the admin could login as another account, then, "su -". However, root can still login "from the local terminal". In the "/etc/ssh/sshd_config" file change the following lines: Protocol 2 PermitRootLogin no PermitEmptyPasswords no Then, restart ssh /etc/init.d/sshd restart Why would you want to do this? It's not possible for anyone to guess or keep trying the root account. This is especially good for computers on the Internet. So, even if the "root" passwords is known, they can't get access to the system remotely. Only from the terminal, which is locked in your computer room. However, if anyone has a account on the server, then, they can login under their account then "su -". Suppose you only want a limited number of users: "mchirico" and "donkey". Add the following line to "/etc/ssh/sshd_config". Note, this allows access for chirico and donkey, but everyone else is denied. # Once you add AllowUsers - everyone else is denied. AllowUsers mchirico donkey TIP 14: Keep Logs Longer with Less Space. Normally logs rotate monthly, over writing all the old data. Here's a sample "/etc/logrotate.conf" that will keep 12 months of backup compressing the logfiles $ cat /etc/logrotate.conf # see "man logrotate" for details # rotate log files weekly #chirico changes to monthly monthly # keep 4 weeks worth of backlogs # keep 12 months of backup rotate 12 # create new (empty) log files after rotating old ones create # uncomment this if you want your log files compressed compress # RPM packages drop log rotation information into this directory include /etc/logrotate.d # no packages own wtmp -- we'll rotate them here /var/log/wtmp { monthly create 0664 root utmp rotate 1 } # system-specific logs may be also be configured here. Note: see tip 1. The clock should always be correctly set. TIP 15: What Network Services are Running? $ netstat -atup or $ netstat -ap|grep LISTEN|less This can be helpful to determine the services running. Need stats on dropped UDP packets? $ netstat -s -u or TCP $ netstat -s -t or summary of everything $ netstat -s or looking for error rates on the interface? $ netstat -i Listening interfaces? $ netstat -l (Tip above provided by Amos Shapira) Also see TIP 77. TIP 16: Apache: Creating and Using an ".htaccess" File Below is a sample ".htaccess" file which goes in "/usr/local/apache/htdocs/chirico/alpha/.htaccess" for this example AuthUserFile /usr/local/apache/htdocs/chirico/alpha/.htpasswd AuthGroupFile /dev/null AuthName "Your Name and regular password required" AuthType Basic <Limit GET POST> require valid-user </Limit> In order for this to work /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf must have the following line in it: # <Directory /usr/local/apache/htdocs/chirico/alpha> AllowOverride FileInfo AuthConfig Limit Options MultiViews Indexes SymLinksIfOwnerMatch IncludesNoExec <Limit GET POST OPTIONS PROPFIND> Order allow,deny Allow from all </Limit> <LimitExcept GET POST OPTIONS PROPFIND> Order deny,allow Deny from all </LimitExcept> </Directory> Also, a password file must be created $ /usr/local/apache/bin/htpasswd -c .htpasswd chirico And enter the user names and passwords. Next Reload Apache: $ /etc/init.d/httpd reload (Reference TIP 213 limit access to certain directories based on IP address). TIP 17: Working with "mt" Commands: reading and writing to tape. The following assumes the tape device is "/dev/st0" STEP 1 ( rewind the tape) # mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind STEP 2 (check to see if you are at block 0) # mt -f /dev/nst0 tell At block 0. STEP 3 (Backup "tar compress" directories "one" and "two") # tar -czf /dev/nst0 one two STEP 4 (Check to see what block you are at) # mt -f /dev/nst0 tell You should get something like block 2 at this point. STEP 5 (Rewind the tape) # mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind STEP 6 (List the files) # tar -tzf /dev/nst0 one/ one/test two/ STEP 7 (Restore directory "one" into directory "junk"). Note, you have to first rewind the tape, since the last operation moved ahead 2 blocks. Check this with "mt -f /dev/nst0". # cd junk # mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind # mt -f /dev/nst0 tell At block 0. # tar -xzf /dev/nst0 one STEP 8 (Next, take a look to see what block the tape is at) # mt -f /dev/nst0 tell At block 2. STEP 9 (Now backup directories three and four) # tar -czf /dev/nst0 three four After backing up the files, the tape should be past block 2. Check this. # mt -f /dev/nst0 tell At block 4. Currently the following exist: At block 1: one/ one/test two/ At block 2: three/ three/samplehere four/ At block 4: (* This is empty *) A few notes. You can set the blocking factor and a label with tar. For example: $ tar --label="temp label" --create --blocking-factor=128 --file=/dev/nst0 Notes But note if you try to read it with the default, incorrect blocking factor, then, you will get the following error: $ tar -t --file=/dev/nst0 tar: /dev/nst0: Cannot read: Cannot allocate memory tar: At beginning of tape, quitting now tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now However this is easily fixed with the correct blocking factor $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ tar -t --blocking-factor=128 --file=/dev/nst0 temp label Notes Take advantage of the label command. $ MYCOMMENTS="Big_important_tape" $ tar --label="$(date +%F)"+"${MYCOMMENTS}" Writing to tape on a remote 192.168.1.155 computer $ tar cvzf - ./tmp | ssh -l chirico 192.168.1.155 '(mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind; dd of=/dev/st0 )' Restoring the contents from tape on a remote computer $ ssh -l chirico 192.168.1.155 '(mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind; dd if=/dev/st0 )'|tar xzf - Getting data off of tape with dd command with odd blocking factor. Just set ibs very high $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ tar --label="Contenets of Notes" --create --blocking-factor=128 --file=/dev/nst0 Notes $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ dd ibs=1048576 if=/dev/st0 of=notes.tar The above will probably work with ibs=64k as well (Also see TIP 136) TIP 18: Encrypting Data to Tape using "tar" and "openssl". The following shows an example of writing the contents of "tapetest" to tape: $ tar zcvf - tapetest|openssl des3 -salt -k secretpassword | dd of=/dev/st0 Reading the data back: $ dd if=/dev/st0|openssl des3 -d -k secretpassword|tar xzf - TIP 19: Mounting an ISO Image as a Filesystem -- this is great if you don't have the DVD hardware, but, need to get at the data. The following show an example of mounting the Fedora core 2 as a file. $ mkdir /iso0 $ mount -o loop -t iso9660 /FC2-i386-DVD.iso /iso0 Or to mount automatically at boot, add the following to "/etc/fstab" /FC2-i386-DVD.iso /iso0 iso9660 rw,loop 0 0 Reference: http://umn.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/souptonuts/README_fedora.txt TIP 20: Getting Information about the Hard drive and list all PCI devices. $ hdparm /dev/hda /dev/hda: multcount = 16 (on) IO_support = 0 (default 16-bit) unmaskirq = 0 (off) using_dma = 1 (on) keepsettings = 0 (off) readonly = 0 (off) readahead = 256 (on) geometry = 16383/255/63, sectors = 234375000, start = 0 or for SCSI $ hdparm /dev/sda Try it with the -i option for information $ hdparm -i /dev/hda /dev/hda: Model=IC35L120AVV207-1, FwRev=V24OA66A, SerialNo=VNVD09G4CZ6E0T Config={ HardSect NotMFM HdSw>15uSec Fixed DTR>10Mbs } RawCHS=16383/16/63, TrkSize=0, SectSize=0, ECCbytes=52 BuffType=DualPortCache, BuffSize=7965kB, MaxMultSect=16, MultSect=16 CurCHS=16383/16/63, CurSects=16514064, LBA=yes, LBAsects=234375000 IORDY=on/off, tPIO={min:240,w/IORDY:120}, tDMA={min:120,rec:120} PIO modes: pio0 pio1 pio2 pio3 pio4 DMA modes: mdma0 mdma1 mdma2 UDMA modes: udma0 udma1 udma2 udma3 udma4 *udma5 AdvancedPM=yes: disabled (255) WriteCache=enabled Drive conforms to: ATA/ATAPI-6 T13 1410D revision 3a: 2 3 4 5 6 How fast is your drive? $ hdparm -tT /dev/hda /dev/hda: Timing buffer-cache reads: 128 MB in 0.41 seconds =315.32 MB/sec Timing buffered disk reads: 64 MB in 1.19 seconds = 53.65 MB/sec Need to find your device? $ mount or $ cat /proc/partitions or $ dmesg | egrep '^(s|h)d' which for my system lists: hda: IC35L120AVV207-1, ATA DISK drive hdc: Lite-On LTN486S 48x Max, ATAPI CD/DVD-ROM drive hda: max request size: 1024KiB hda: 234375000 sectors (120000 MB) w/7965KiB Cache, CHS=16383/255/63, UDMA(100) By the way, if you want to turn on dma $ hdparm -d1 /dev/hda setting using_dma to 1 (on) using_dma = 1 (on) (Also see TIP 122 ) List all PCI devices $ lspci -v 00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corp. 82845G/GL [Brookdale-G] Chipset Host Bridge (rev Subsystem: Dell Computer Corporation: Unknown device 0160 Flags: bus master, fast devsel, latency 0 Memory at f0000000 (32-bit, prefetchable) [size=128M] Capabilities: <available only to root> ... lots more ... Note, there is also lspci -vv for even more information. (Also see TIP 200) TIP 21: Setting up "cron" Jobs. If you want to use the emacs editor for editing cron jobs, then, set the following in your "/home/user/.bash_profile" EDITOR=emacs Then, to edit cron jobs $ crontab -e You may want to put in the following header #MINUTE(0-59) HOUR(0-23) DAYOFMONTH(1-31) MONTHOFYEAR(1-12) DAYOFWEEK(0-6) Note 0=Sun and 7=Sun # #14,15 10 * * 0 /usr/bin/somecommmand >/dev/null 2>&1 The sample "commented out command" will run at 10:14 and 10:15 every Sunday. There will be no "mail" sent to the user because of the ">/dev/null 2>&1" entry. $ crontab -l The above will list all cron jobs. Or if you're root $ crontab -l -u <username> $ crontab -e -u <username> Reference "man 5 crontab": The time and date fields are: field allowed values ----- -------------- minute 0-59 hour 0-23 day of month 1-31 month 1-12 (or names, see below) day of week 0-7 (0 or 7 is Sun, or use names) A field may be an asterisk (*), which always stands for ``first-last''. Ranges of numbers are allowed. Ranges are two numbers separated with a hyphen. The specified range is inclusive. For example, 8-11 for an ``hours'' entry specifies execution at hours 8, 9, 10 and 11. Lists are allowed. A list is a set of numbers (or ranges) separated by commas. Examples: ``1,2,5,9'', ``0-4,8-12''. Ranges can include "steps", so "1-9/2" is the same as "1,3,5,7,9". Note, you can run just every 5 minutes as follows: */5 * * * * /etc/mrtg/domrtg >/dev/null 2>&1 To run jobs hourly,daily,weekly or monthly you can add shell scripts into the appropriate directory: /etc/cron.hourly/ /etc/cron.daily/ /etc/cron.weekly/ /etc/cron.monthly/ Note that the above are pre-configured schedules set in "/etc/crontab", so if you want, you can change the schedule. Below is my /etc/crontab: $ cat /etc/crontab SHELL=/bin/bash PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin MAILTO=root HOME=/ # run-parts 01 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.hourly 02 4 * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.daily 22 4 * * 0 root run-parts /etc/cron.weekly 42 4 1 * * root run-parts /etc/cron.monthly TIP 22: Keeping Files in Sync Between Servers. The remote computer is "192.168.1.171" and has the account "donkey". You want to "keep in sync" the files under "/home/cu2000/Logs" on the remote computer with files on "/home/chirico/dev/MEDIA_Server" on the local computer. $ rsync -Lae ssh donkey@192.168.1.171:/home/cu2000/Logs /home/chirico/dev/MEDIA_Server "rsync" is a convient command for keeping files in sync, and as shown here will work through ssh. The -L option tells rsync to treat symbolic links like ordinary files. Also see [http://www.rsnapshot.org/] TIP 23: Looking up the Spelling of a Word. $ look <partial spelling> so the following will list all words that start with stuff $ look stuff stuff stuffage stuffata stuffed stuffender stuffer stuffers stuffgownsman stuffier stuffiest stuffily stuffiness stuffinesses stuffiness's stuffing stuffings stuffing's stuffless stuffs stuffy It helps to have a large "linuxwords" dictionary. You can download a much bigger dictionary from the following: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/linuxwords.1.tar.gz?download Note: vim users can setup the .vimrc file with the following. Now when you type CTL-X CTL-T in insert mode, you'll get a thesaurus lookup. set dictionary+=/usr/share/dict/words set thesaurus+=/usr/share/dict/words Or, you can call aspell with the F6 command after putting the folling entry in your .vimrc file :nmap <F6> :w<CR>:!aspell -e -c %<CR>:e<CR> Now, hit F6 when you're in vim, and you'll get a spell checker. There is also an X Windows dictionary that runs with the following command. $ gnome-dictionary TIP 24: Find out if a Command is Aliased. $ type -all <command> Example: $ type -all ls ls is aliased to `ls --color=tty' ls is /bin/ls TIP 25: Create a Terminal Calculator Put the following in your .bashrc file function calc { echo "${1}"|bc -l; } Or, run it at the shell prompt. Now "calc" from the shell will work as follows: $ calc 3+45 48 All functions with a "(" or ")" must be enclosed in quotes. For instance, to get the sin of .4 $ calc "s(.4)" .38941834230865049166 (See TIP 115 using the expr command) TIP 26: Kill a User and All Their Current Processes. #!/bin/bash # This program will kill all processes from a # user. The user name is read from the command line. # # This program also demonstrates reading a bash variable # into an awk script. # # Usage: kill9user <user> # kill -9 `ps aux|awk -v var=$1 '$1==var { print $2 }'` or if you want want to create the above script the command below will kill the user "donkey" and all of his processes. $ kill -9 `ps aux|awk -v var="donkey" '$1==var { print $2 }'` Check their cron jobs and "at" jobs, if you have a security issue. $ crontab -u <user> -e Lock the account: $ passwd -l <user> Remove all authorized_keys $ rm /home/user/.shosts $ rm /home/user/.rhosts $ rm -rf /home/user/.ssh $ rm /home/user/.forward or consider $ mv /home/user /home/safeuser Change the shell $ chsh -s /bin/true <user> Do an inventory $ find / -user <user> > list_of_user_files NOTE: Also see (TIP 10). To see all users, except the current user. Do not use the dash "ps -aux" is wrong but the following is correct: $ ps aux| awk '!/'${USER}'/{printf("%s \n",$0)}' or (ww = wide, wide output) $ ps auwwx| awk '!/'${USER}'/{printf("%s \n",$0)}' The following codes may be useful: D Uninterruptible sleep (usually IO) R Running or runnable (on run queue) S Interruptible sleep (waiting for an event to complete) T Stopped, either by a job control signal or because it is being traced. W paging (not valid since the 2.6.xx kernel) X dead (should never be seen) Z Defunct ("zombie") process, terminated but not reaped by its parent. For BSD formats and when the stat keyword is used, additional characters may be displayed: < high-priority (not nice to other users) N low-priority (nice to other users) L has pages locked into memory (for real-time and custom IO) s is a session leader l is multi-threaded (using CLONE_THREAD, like NPTL pthreads do) + is in the foreground process group Also see TIP 28. and TIP 89. TIP 27: Format Dates for Logs and Files $ date "+%m%d%y %A,%B %d %Y %X" 061704 Thursday,June 17 2004 07:13:40 PM $ date "+%m%d%Y" 06172004 $ date -d '1 day ago' "+%m%d%Y" 06162004 $ date -d '3 months 1 day 2 hour 15 minutes 2 seconds ago' or to go into the future remove the "ago" $ date -d '3 months 1 day 2 hour 15 minutes 2 seconds ' Also the following works: $ date -d '+2 year +1 month -1 week +3 day -8 hour +2 min -5 seconds' Quick question: If there are 100,000,000 stars in the visible sky, and you can count them, round the clock, at a rate of a star per second starting now, when would you finish counting? Would you still be alive? $ date -d '+100000000 seconds' Sooner than you think! This can be assigned to variables $ mdate=`date -d '3 months 1 day 2 hour 15 minutes 2 seconds ' "+%m%d%Y_%A_%B_%D_%Y_%X" ` $ echo $mdate 09182004_Saturday_September_09/18/04_2004_09:40:41 PM ^---- Easy to sort ^-------^----- Easy to read See TIP 28 below. See TIP 87 when working with large delta time changes -40 years, or -200 years ago, or even 1,000,000 days into the future. Also see (TIP 1) for working with time zones. TIP 28: Need Ascii Codes? For instance, for printing quotes: awk 'BEGIN { msg = "Don\047t Panic!"; printf "%s \n",msg }' or awk 'BEGIN { msg = "Don\x027t Panic!"; printf "%s \n",msg }' It's better to use \047, because certain characters that follow \x027 may cause problems. For example, take a look at the following two lines. The first line prints a "}" caused by the extra D in \x027D. The the line immediately below does not work as expected. awk 'BEGIN {printf("The D causes problems \x027D\n")}' However, the line below works fine: awk 'BEGIN {printf("The D does not cause problems \047D\n")}' Or if you wanted to use the date command in "awk" to print date.time.nanosecond.timezone for each line of a file "test". The following date can be used in awk because the single quotes are enclosed within the double quotes. date '+%m%d%Y.%H%M%S.%N%z' $ awk 'BEGIN { "date '+%m%d%Y.%H%M%S.%N%z'" | getline MyDate } { print MyDate,$0 }' < data But it's also possible to replace "+" with \x2B, "%" with \x25, and "d" with \x64 as follows: $ awk 'BEGIN { "date \x27\x2B\x25m\x25\x64\x25Y.\x25H\x25M\x25S.\x25N\x25z\x27" | getline MyDate } { print MyDate,$0 }' < test 07062004.113820.346033000-0400 bob 71 07062004.113820.346033000-0400 tom 43 07062004.113820.346033000-0400 sal 34 07062004.113820.346033000-0400 bob 89 07062004.113820.346033000-0400 tom 66 07062004.113820.346033000-0400 sal 99 For this example it's not needed because single quotes are used inside of double quotes; however, there may be times when hex replacement is easier. $ man ascii Oct Dec Hex Char Oct Dec Hex Char ----------------------------------------------------------- 000 0 00 NUL '\0' 100 64 40 @ 001 1 01 SOH 101 65 41 A 002 2 02 STX 102 66 42 B 003 3 03 ETX 103 67 43 C 004 4 04 EOT 104 68 44 D 005 5 05 ENQ 105 69 45 E 006 6 06 ACK 106 70 46 F 007 7 07 BEL '\a' 107 71 47 G 010 8 08 BS '\b' 110 72 48 H 011 9 09 HT '\t' 111 73 49 I 012 10 0A LF '\n' 112 74 4A J 013 11 0B VT '\v' 113 75 4B K 014 12 0C FF '\f' 114 76 4C L 015 13 0D CR '\r' 115 77 4D M 016 14 0E SO 116 78 4E N 017 15 0F SI 117 79 4F O 020 16 10 DLE 120 80 50 P 021 17 11 DC1 121 81 51 Q 022 18 12 DC2 122 82 52 R 023 19 13 DC3 123 83 53 S 024 20 14 DC4 124 84 54 T 025 21 15 NAK 125 85 55 U 026 22 16 SYN 126 86 56 V 027 23 17 ETB 127 87 57 W 030 24 18 CAN 130 88 58 X 031 25 19 EM 131 89 59 Y 032 26 1A SUB 132 90 5A Z 033 27 1B ESC 133 91 5B [ 034 28 1C FS 134 92 5C \ '\\' 035 29 1D GS 135 93 5D ] 036 30 1E RS 136 94 5E ^ 037 31 1F US 137 95 5F _ 040 32 20 SPACE 140 96 60 ` 041 33 21 ! 141 97 61 a 042 34 22 " 142 98 62 b 043 35 23 # 143 99 63 c 044 36 24 $ 144 100 64 d 045 37 25 % 145 101 65 e 046 38 26 & 146 102 66 f 047 39 27 ' 147 103 67 g 050 40 28 ( 150 104 68 h 051 41 29 ) 151 105 69 i 052 42 2A * 152 106 6A j 053 43 2B + 153 107 6B k 054 44 2C , 154 108 6C l 055 45 2D - 155 109 6D m 056 46 2E . 156 110 6E n 057 47 2F / 157 111 6F o 060 48 30 0 160 112 70 p 061 49 31 1 161 113 71 q 062 50 32 2 162 114 72 r 063 51 33 3 163 115 73 s 064 52 34 4 164 116 74 t 065 53 35 5 165 117 75 u 066 54 36 6 166 118 76 v 067 55 37 7 167 119 77 w 070 56 38 8 170 120 78 x 071 57 39 9 171 121 79 y 072 58 3A : 172 122 7A z 073 59 3B ; 173 123 7B { 074 60 3C < 174 124 7C | 075 61 3D = 175 125 7D } 076 62 3E > 176 126 7E ~ 077 63 3F ? 177 127 7F DEL TIP 29: Need a WWW Browser for the Terminal Session? Try lynx or elinks. $ lynx Or to read all these tips, with the latest updates $ lynx http://umn.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/souptonuts/How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt Or, better yet elinks. $ elinks http://somepage. You can get elinks at the following site: http://elinks.or.cz/ TIP 30: screen - screen manager with VT100/ANSI terminal emulation This is an excellent utility. But if you work a lot in Emacs, then, you should place the following in your ~./.bashrc alias s='screen -e^Pa -D -R' After loging in again (or source .bashrc) , type the following to load "screen": $ s If you're using the not using the alias command above, substitute CTL-a for CTL-p below. : CTL-p CTL-C To get a new session CTL-p " To list sessions, and arrow keys to move CTL-p SHFT-A To name sessions CTL-p S To split screens CLT-p Q To unsplit screens CLT-p TAB To switch between screens CLT-p :resize n To resize screen to n rows, on split screen Screen is very powerful. Should you become disconneced, you can still resume work after loggin in. $ man screen The above command will give you more information. TIP 31: Need to Find the Factors of a Number? $ factor 2345678992 2345678992: 2 2 2 2 6581 22277 It's a quick way to find out if a number is prime $ factor 7867 7867: 7867 TIP 32: Less is More -- piping to less to scroll backword and forward For large "ls" listings try the followin, then, use the arrow key to move up and down the list. $ ls /some_large_dir/ | less or $ cat some_large_file | less or $ less some_large_file TIP 33: C "indent" Settings for Kernel Development $ indent -kr -i8 program.c TIP 34: FTP auto-login. "ftp" to a site and have the password stored. For instance, here's a sample ".net" file in a user's home directory for uploading to sourceforge. Note, sourceforge will take any password, so m@temp.com is used here for login "anonymous". $ cat ~/.netrc machine upload.sourceforge.net login anonymous password m@temp.com default login anonymous password user@site It might be a good idea to change the rights on this file $ chmod 0400 ~/.netrc #!/bin/bash # # Sample ftp automated script to download # file to ${dwnld} # dwnld="/work/faq/unix-faq" cd ${dwnld} ftp << FTPSTRING prompt off open rtfm.mit.edu cd /pub/usenet-by-group/news.answers/unix-faq/faq mget contents mget diff mget part* bye FTPSTRING (Also see TIP 114 for ncftpget, which is a very powerful restarting ftp program) TIP 35: Bash Brace Expansion $ echo f{ee,ie,oe,um} fee fie foe fum This works with almost any command $ mkdir -p /work/junk/{one,two,three,four} TIP 36: Getting a List of Users on the System $ cut -d: -f1 /etc/passwd | sort TIP 37: Editing a Bash Command Try typing a long command say, then, type "fc" for an easy way to edit the command. $ find /etc -iname '*.cnf' -exec grep -H 'log' {} \; $ fc "fc" will bring the last command typed into an editor, "emacs" if that's the default editor. Type "fc -l" to list last few commands. To seach for a command, try typing "CTL-r" at the shell prompt for searching. "CTL-t" to transpose, say "sl" was typed by you want "ls". Hints when using "fc: in emacs: ESC-b move one word backward ESC-f move one word forward ESC-DEL kill one word backward CTL-k kill point to end CTL-y un-yank killed region at point TIP 38: Moving around Directories. Change to the home directory: $ cd ~ or $ cd To go back to the last directory $ cd - Instead of "cd" to a directory try "pushd" and look at the heading...you can see a list of directories. $ pushd /etc $ pushd /usr/local Then, to get back "popd" or "popd 1" To list all the directories pushed on the stack use the "dirs -v" command. $ dirs -v 0 /usr/local 1 /etc 2 /work/souptonuts/documentation/theBook Now, if you "pushd +1" you will be moved to "/etc", since is number "1" on the stack, and this directory will become "0". $ pwd /usr/local $ pushd +1 $ pwd /etc $ dirs -v 0 /etc 1 /work/souptonuts/documentation/theBook 2 /usr/local TIP 39: Need an Underscore after a Variable? Enclose the variable in "{}". $echo ${UID}_ Compare to $echo $UID_ Also try the following: $ m="my stuff here" $ echo -e ${m// /'\n'} my stuff here TIP 40: Bash Variable Offset and String Operators $ r="this is stuff" $ echo ${r:3} $ echo ${r:5:2} Note, ${varname:offset:length} ${varname:?message} If varname exist and isn't null return value, else, print var and message. $ r="new stuff" $ echo ${r:? "that's r for you"} new stuff $ unset r $ echo ${r:? "that's r for you"} bash: r: that's r for you ${varname:+word} If varname exist and not null return word. Else, return null. ${varname:-word} If varname exist and not null return value. Else, return word. Working with arrays in bash - bash arrays. $ unset p $ p=(one two three) $ echo -e "${p[@]}" one two three or $ echo -e "${p[*]}" one two three $ echo -e "${#p[@]}" 3 $ echo -e "${p[0]}" one $ echo -e "${p[1]}" two Also see (TIP 95) TIP 41: Loops in Bash The command below loops through directories listed in $PATH. $ path=$PATH: $ while [ $path ]; do echo " ${path%%:*} "; path=${path#*:}; done The command below will also loop through directories in your path. $IFS=: $ for dir in $PATH > do > ls -ld $dir > done drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 10 20:16 /usr/local/bin drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 13 23:12 /bin drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 40960 Jun 12 08:00 /usr/bin drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Feb 14 03:12 /usr/X11R6/bin drwxrwxr-x 2 chirico chirico 4096 Jun 6 13:06 /home/chirico/bin Other ways of doing loops: for (( i=1; i <= 20; i++)) do echo -n "$i " done Note, to do it all on one line, do the following: $ for (( i=1; i <= 20; i++)); do echo -n "$i"; done Below, is an example of declaring i an integer so that you do not have to preface with let. $ declare -i i $ i=5; $ while (( $i > 1 )); do > i=i-1 > echo $i > done 4 3 2 You can also use "while [ $i -gt 1 ]; do" in place of "while (( $i > 1 )); do" To get a listing of all declared values $ declare -i Try putting a few words in the file "test" $ while read filename; do echo "- $filename "; done < test |nl -w1 Or, using an array declare -a Array Array[0]="zero" Array[1]="one" Array[2]="two" for i in `seq ${#Array[@]}` do echo $Array[$i-1] done Also see (TIP 95 and TIP 133). TIP 42: "diff" and "patch". You have created a program "prog.c", saved as this name and also copied to "prog.c.old". You post "prog.c" to users. Next, you make changes to prog.c $ diff -c prog.c.old prog.c > prog.patch Now, users can get the latest updates by running. $ patch < prog.patch By the way, you can make backups of your data easily. $ cp /etc/fstab{,.bak} Now, you do your edits to "/etc/fstab" and if you need to go back to the original, you can find it at "/etc/fstab.bak". TIP 43: "cat" the Contents of Files Listed in a File, in That Order. SETUP (Assume you have the following) $ cat file_of_files file1 file2 $ cat file1 This is the data in file1 $ cat file 2 This is the data in file2 So there are 3 files here "file_of_files" which contains the name of other files. In this case "file1" and "file2". And the contents of "file1" and "file2" is shown above. $ cat file_of_files|xargs cat This is the data in file1 This is the data in file2 TIP 44: Columns and Rows -- getting anything you want. Assume you have the following file. $ cat data 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 How to you get everything in 2 columns? $ cat data|tr ' ' '\n'|xargs -l2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Three columns? $ cat data|tr ' ' '\n'|xargs -l3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 What's the row sum of the "three columns?" $ cat data|tr ' ' '\n'|xargs -l3|tr ' ' '+'|bc 6 15 24 33 27 or $ tr ' ' '\n' < data |xargs -l3|tr ' ' '+'|bc NOTE "Steven Heiner's rule": cat one_file | program can always be rewritten as program < one_file Note: thanks to Steven Heiner (http://www.shelldorado.com/) the above can be shortened as follows: $ tr ' ' '\n' < data|xargs -l3|tr ' ' '+'|bc Need to "tr" from the stdin? $ tr "xy" "yx"| ... | ... But there is a the "Stephane CHAZELAS" condition here "Note that tr, sed, and awk mail fail on files containing '\0' sed and awk have unspecified behaviors if the input doesn't end in a '\n' (or to sum up, cat works for binary and text files, text utilities such as sed or awk work only for text files). TIP 45: Auto Directory Spelling Corrections. To turn this on: $ shopt -s cdspell Now mispell a directory in the cd command. $ cd /usk/local ^-------- still gets you to -- | /usr/local What other options can you set? The following will list all the options: $ shopt -p TIP 46: Record Eveything Printed on Your Terminal Screen. $ script -a <filename> Now start doing stuff and "everything" is appended to <filename>. For example $ script installation $ (command) $ (result) $ ... $ ... $ (command) $ (result) $ exit The whole session log is in the installation file that you can later read and/or cleanup and add to a documentation. This command can also be used to redirect the contents to another user, but you must be root to do this. Step 1 - find out what pts they are using. $ w Step 2 - Run script on that pts. After running this command below everything you type will appear on their screen. $ script /dev/pts/4 Thanks to Jacques.GARNIER-EXTERIEUR@EU.RHODIA.COM for his contribution to this tip. Also reference TIP 208. TIP 47: Monitor all Network Traffic Except Your Current ssh Connection. $ tcpdump -i eth0 -nN -vvv -xX -s 1500 port not 22 Or to filter out port 123 as well getting the full length of the packet (-s 0), use the following: $ tcpdump -i eth0 -nN -vvv -xX -s 0 port not 22 and port not 123 Or to filter only a certain host say 81.169.158.205 $ tcpdump -i eth0 -nN -vvv -xX port not 22 and host 81.169.158.205 Just want ip addresses and a little bit of data, then, use this. The "-c 20" is to stop after 20 packets. $ tcpdump -i eth0 -nN -s 1500 port not 22 -c 20 If you're looking for sign of DOS attacks, the following show just the SYN packets on all interfaces: $ tcpdump 'tcp[13] & 2 == 2' TIP 48: Where are the GNU Reference Manuals? http://www.gnu.org/manual/manual.html Also worth a look the "Linux Documentation Project" http://en.tldp.org/ and Red Hat manuals http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/ TIP 49: Setting or Changing the Library Path. The following contains the settings to be added or deleted /etc/ld.so.conf After this file is edited, you must run the following: $ ldconfig See "man ldconfig" for more information. TIP 50: Working with Libraries in C Assume the following 3 programs: $ cat ./src/test.c int test(int t) { printf("%d\n",t); return t; } $ cat ./src/prog1.c /* program: prog1.c dependences: test.c compiling this program: gcc -o prog test.c prog1.c Note the libpersonal include should be remove if NOT using the library */ #include <libpersonal.h> #include <stdio.h> int main(int argc, char **argv) { test(45); } $ cat ./include/libpersonal.h extern int test(int); Prog1.c needs the test function in test.c To compile, so that both programs work together, do the following: $ cd src $ gcc -o prog test.c prog1.c -I../include However, if you want to create your own static library, then, run the following: $ mkdir -p ../lib $ gcc -c test.c -o ../lib/test.o $ cd ../lib $ ar r libpersonal.a test.o $ ranlib libpersonal.a or, the ar and ranlib command can be combined as follows: $ ar rs libpersonal.a test.o To compile the program with the static library: $ cd ../src $ gcc -I../include -L../lib -o prog1 prog1.c -lpersonal The -I../include tells gcc to look in the ../include directory for libpersonal.h. and -L../lib, tells gcc to look for the "libpersonal.a" library. $ cd .. $ tree src lib include src |-- prog |-- prog1 |-- prog1.c `-- test.c lib |-- libpersonal.a `-- test.o include `-- libpersonal.h This was a STATIC library. Often times you will want to use a SHARED or dynamic library. SHARED LIBRARY: You must recompile test.c with -fpic option. $ cd ../lib $ gcc -c -fpic ../src/test.c -o test.o Next create the libpersonal.so file. $ gcc -shared -o libpersonal.so test.o Now, compile the source prog1.c as follows: $ cd ../src $ gcc -Wl,-R../lib -L../lib -I../include -o prog2 prog1.c -lpersonal This should work fine. But, take a look at prog2 using the ldd command. $ ldd prog2 libpersonal.so => ../lib/libpersonal.so (0x40017000) libc.so.6 => /lib/tls/libc.so.6 (0x42000000) /lib/ld-linux.so.2 => /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x40000000) If you move the program prog2 to a different location, it will not run. Instead you will get the following error: prog2: error while loading shared libraries: libpersonal.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory To fix this, you should specify the direct path to the library. And in my case it is rather long $ gcc -Wl,-R/work/souptonuts/documentation/theBook/lib -L../lib -I../include -o prog2 prog1.c -lpersonal SPECIAL NOTE: The -R must always follow the -Wl. (-Wl,-R<directory>) They always go together TIP 51: Actively Monitor a File and Send Email when Expression Occurs. This is a way to monitor "/var/log/messages" or any file for certain changes. The example below actively monitors "stuff" for the work "now" and as soon as "now" is added to the file, the contents of msg are sent to the user mikechirico@hotmail.com $ tail -f stuff | \ awk ' /now/ { system("mail -s \"This is working\" mikechirico@hotmail.com < msg") }' Or, you can run a program, say get headings on slashdot from the program "getslash.php" which runs on "192.168.1.155" with account "chirico". Assuming you have ssh keys setup, then, the following will send mail from the output: $ ssh chirico@192.168.1.155 "./bin/getslash.php"|mail -s "Slash cron Headlines" mchirico@comcast.net See (TIP 80) for scraping the headings on slash dot and how to get a copy of "getslash.php". If you still want to use awk: $ ssh chirico@192.168.1.155 "./bin/getslash.php"| \ awk '{ print $0 | "mail -s \x27 Slash Topics \x27 mchirico@comcast.net "}' Note the "\x27" is a quote. Maybe you only want articles dealing with "Linux": $ ssh chirico@192.168.1.155 "./bin/getslash.php"| \ awk '/Linux/{ print $0 | "mail -s \x27 Slash Topics \x27 mchirico@comcast.net "}' For $60, you can get a numeric display from "delcom engineering" that you can send messages and data to. I get weather information off the internet and send it to this device. http://sourceforge.net/projects/delcom/ (Reference TIP 151 for ssh tips) TIP 52: Need to Keep Secrets? Encrypt it. To Encrypt: $ openssl des3 -salt -in file.txt -out file.des3 The above will prompt for a password, or you can put it in with a -k option, assuming you're on a trusted server. To Decrypt $ openssl des3 -d -salt -in file.des3 -out file.txt -k mypassword Need to encrypt what you type? Enter the following, then start typing and ^D to end. $ openssl des3 -salt -out stuff.txt TIP 53: Check that a File has Not Been Tampered With: Use Cryptographic Hashing Function. The md5sum is popular but dated $ md5sum file Instead, use one of the following; $ openssl dgst -sha1 -c file $ openssl dgst -ripemd160 -c file All calls give a fixed length string or "message digest". TIP 54: Need to View Information About a Secure Web Server? A SSL/TLS test. $ openssl s_client -connect www.sourceforge.net:443 Above will give a long listing of certificates. Note, it is also possible to get certificate information about a mail server $ openssl s_client -connect mail.comcast.net:995 -showcerts When you do the above command you get two certificates. If you copy past both certificates by taking the following contents include the begin and end show below: -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- .... -----END CERTIFICATE----- Then create files "comcast0.pem" and "comcast1.pem" out of these certificaties and put them in a directory "/home/donkey/.certs", then, with the openssl src package, in the "./tools/c_rehash" run $ c_rehash .certs Doing .certs comcast0.pem => 72f90dc0.0 comcast1.pem => f73e89fd.0 Now it's possible to have fetchmail work with these certs. # # # Sample .fetchmailrc file for Comcast # # Check mail every 90 seconds set daemon 90 set syslog set postmaster donkey #set bouncemail # # Comcast email is zdonkey but computer account is just donkey # poll mail.comcast.net with proto POP3 and options no dns user 'zdonkey' with pass "somethin35" is 'donkey' here options ssl sslcertck sslcertpath '/home/donkey/.certs' smtphost comcast.net # currently not used mda '/usr/bin/procmail -d %T' REFERENCE: http://www.openssl.org/ http://www.catb.org/~esr/fetchmail/fetchmail-6.2.5.tar.gz http://www.madboa.com/geek/openssl/ TIP 55: cp --parents. What does this option do? Assume you have the following directory structure . |-- a | `-- b | `-- c | `-- d | |-- file1 | `-- file2 `-- newdir Issue the following command: $ cp --parents ./a/b/c/d/* ./newdir/ Now you have the following: . |-- a | `-- b | `-- c | `-- d | |-- file1 | `-- file2 `-- newdir `-- a `-- b `-- c `-- d |-- file1 `-- file2 TIP 56: Quickly Locating files. The "locate" command quickly searches the indexed database for files. It just gives the name of the files; but, if you need more information use it as follows $ locate document|xargs ls -l The "locate" database may only get updated every 24 hours. For more recent finds, use the "find" command. TIP 57: Using the "find" Command. List only directories, max 2 nodes down that have "net" in the name $ find /proc -type d -maxdepth 2 -iname '*net*' Find all *.c and *.h files starting from the current "." position. $ find . \( -iname '*.c' -o -iname '*.h' \) -print Find all, but skip what's in "/CVS" and "/junk". Start from "/work" $ find /work \( -iregex '.*/CVS' -o -iregex '.*/junk' \) -prune -o -print Note -regex and -iregex work on the directory as well, which means you must consider the "./" that comes before all listings. Here is another example. Find all files except what is under the CVS, including CVS listings. Also exclude "#" and "~". $ find . -regex '.*' ! \( -regex '.*CVS.*' -o -regex '.*[#|~].*' \) Find a *.c file, then run grep on it looking for "stdio.h" $ find . -iname '*.c' -exec grep -H 'stdio.h' {} \; sample output --> ./prog1.c:#include <stdio.h> ./test.c:#include <stdio.h> Looking for the disk-hog on the whole system? $ find / -size +10000k 2>/dev/null Looking for files changed in the last 24 hours? Make sure you add the minus sign "-1", otherwise, you will only find files changed exactly 24 hours from now. With the "-1" you get files changed from now to 24 hours. $ find . -ctime -1 -printf "%a %f\n" Wed Oct 6 12:51:56 2004 . Wed Oct 6 12:35:16 2004 How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt Or if you just want files. $ find . -type f -ctime -1 -printf "%a %f\n" Details on file status change in the last 48 hours, current directory. Also note "-atime -2"). $ find . -ctime -2 -type f -exec ls -l {} \; NOTE: if you don't use -type f, you make get "." returned, which when run through ls "ls ." may list more than what you want. Also you may only want the current directory $ find . -ctime -2 -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec ls -l {} \; To find files modified within the last 5 to 10 minutes $ find . -mmin +5 -mmin -10 For more example "find" commands, reference the following looking for the latest version of "bashscripts.x.x.x.tar.gz": http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=79320&package_id=80711 See "TIP 71" for examples of find using the inode feature. " $ find . -inum <inode> -exec rm -- '{}' \; " If you don't want error messages, or need to redirect error messages "> /dev/null 2>&1", or see "TIP 81". TIP 58: Using the "rm" command. How do you remove a file that has the name "-". For instance, if you run the command "$ cat > - " and type some text followed by ^d, how does the "-" file get deleted? $ rm -- - The "--" nullifies any rm options. How do you delete the directory "one", all it's sub-directories, and any data? $ rm -rf ./one Note, to selectively delete stuff on a directory, use the find command "TIP 57". To delete by inode, see "TIP 71". TIP 59: Giving ownership. How do you give the user "donkey" ownership to all directories and files under "./fordonkey" ? $ chown -R donkey ./fordonkey TIP 60: Only Permit root login -- give others a message when they try to login. Create the file "/etc/nologin" with "nologin" containing the contents of the message. TIP 61: Limits: file size, open files, pipe size, stack size, max memory size cpu time, plus others. To get a listing of current limits: $ ulimit -a core file size (blocks, -c) 0 data seg size (kbytes, -d) unlimited file size (blocks, -f) unlimited max locked memory (kbytes, -l) unlimited max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited open files (-n) 1024 pipe size (512 bytes, -p) 8 stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192 cpu time (seconds, -t) unlimited max user processes (-u) 8179 virtual memory (kbytes, -v) unlimited Note as a user you can decrease your limits in the current shell session; but, you cannot increase. This can be ideal for testing programs. But, first you may want to create another shell "sh" so that you can "go back to where started". $ ulimit -f 10 Now try $ yes >> out File size limit exceeded To set limits on users, make changes to "/etc/security/limits.conf" bozo - maxlogins 1 Will keep bozo from loging in more than once. To list hard limits: $ ulimit -Ha To list soft limits: $ ulimit -Sa To restrict user access by time, day make changes to "/etc/security/time.conf" Also take a look at "/etc/profile" to see what other changes can be made, plus take a look under "/etc/security/*.conf" for other configuration files. TIP 62: Stupid "cat" Tricks. Also see (TIP 43). If you have multiple blank lines, squeeze these lines down to one, then, try the following: $ cat -s <file> Want to number the lines? $ cat -n <file> Want to show tabs? $ cat -t <file> Need to mark end of lines by "$"? The following was suggested by (Amos Shapira) $ cat -e <file> Want to see all the ctl characters? /* ctlgen.c Program to generate ctl characters. Compile: gcc -o ctlgen ctlgen.c Run: ./ctlgen > mout Now see the characters: cat -v mout Here's a sample output: $ cat -v mout|tail test M-v test M-w test M-x test M-y test M-z test M-{ test M-| test M-} test M-~ test M-^? */ #include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> int main() { int i; for(i=0; i < 256; ++i) printf("test %c \n",i); return 0; } TIP 63: Guard against SYN attacks and "ping". As root do the following: echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_syncookies Want to disable "ping" ? echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_echo_ignore_all Disable broadcast/multicast "ping" ? echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_echo_ignore_broadcasts And to enable again: echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_echo_ignore_all TIP 64: Make changes to .bash_profile and need to update the current session? $ source .bash_profile With the above command, the user does not have to logout. TIP 65: What are the Special Shell Variables? $# The number of arguments. $@ All arguments, as separate words. $* All arguments, as one word. $$ ID of the current process. $? Exit status of the last command. $0,$1,..$9,${10},${11}...${N} Positional parameters. After "9" you must use the ${k} syntax. Note that 0 is true. For example if you execute the following, which is true you get zero. $ [[ -f /etc/passwd ]] $ echo $? 0 And the following is false, which returns a 1. $ [[ -f /etc/passwdjabberwisnohere ]] $ echo $? 1 So true=0 and false=1. Sample program "mdo" to show the difference between "$@" and "$*" #!/bin/bash function myarg { echo "$# in myarg function" } echo -e "$# parameters on the cmd line\n" echo -e "calling: myarg \"\$@\" and myarg \"\$*\"\n" myarg "$@" myarg "$*" echo -e "\ncalling: myarg \$@ and myarg \$* without quotes\n" myarg $@ myarg $* The result of running "./mdo one two". Note that when quoted, myarg "$*", returns 1 ... all parameters are smushed together as one word. [chirico@third-fl-71 theBook]$ ./mdo one two 2 parameters on the cmd line calling: myarg "$@" and myarg "$*" 2 in myarg function 1 in myarg function calling: myarg $@ and myarg $* without quotes 2 in myarg function 2 in myarg function Example program "mdo2" shows how the input separator can be changed. #!/bin/bash IFS=| echo -e "$*\n" IFS=, echo -e "$*\n" IFS=\; echo -e "$*\n" IFS=$1 echo -e "$*\n" [chirico@third-fl-71 theBook]$ ./mdo2 one two three four five one two three four five one,two,three,four,five one;two;three;four;five oneotwoothreeofourofive TIP 66: Replace all "x" with "y" and all "y" with "x" in file data. $ cata data x y y x $ tr "xy" "yx" < data y x x y TIP 67: On a Linux 2.6.x Kernel, how do you directly measure disk activity, and where is this information documented? o The information is documented in the kernel source ./Documentation/iostats.txt o The new way of getting this info in 2.6.x is $ cat /sys/block/hda/stat 151121 5694 1932358 796675 37867 76770 916994 8353762 0 800672 9150437 Field 1 -- # of reads issued This is the total number of reads completed successfully. Field 2 -- # of reads merged, field 6 -- # of writes merged Reads and writes which are adjacent to each other may be merged for efficiency. Thus two 4K reads may become one 8K read before it is ultimately handed to the disk, and so it will be counted (and queued) as only one I/O. This field lets you know how often this was done. Field 3 -- # of sectors read This is the total number of sectors read successfully. Field 4 -- # of milliseconds spent reading This is the total number of milliseconds spent by all reads (as measured from __make_request() to end_that_request_last()). Field 5 -- # of writes completed This is the total number of writes completed successfully. Field 7 -- # of sectors written This is the total number of sectors written successfully. Field 8 -- # of milliseconds spent writing This is the total number of milliseconds spent by all writes (as measured from __make_request() to end_that_request_last()). Field 9 -- # of I/Os currently in progress The only field that should go to zero. Incremented as requests are given to appropriate request_queue_t and decremented as they finish. Field 10 -- # of milliseconds spent doing I/Os This field is increases so long as field 9 is nonzero. Field 11 -- weighted # of milliseconds spent doing I/Os This field is incremented at each I/O start, I/O completion, I/O merge, or read of these stats by the number of I/Os in progress (field 9) times the number of milliseconds spent doing I/O since the last update of this field. This can provide an easy measure of both I/O completion time and the backlog that may be accumulating. Note, this is device specific. TIP 68: Passing Outbound Mail, plus Masquerading User and Hostname. Here's a specific example: How does one send and receive Comcast email from a home Linux box, which uses Comcast as the ISP, if the local account on the Linux box is different from the Comcast email. For instance, the account on the Linux box is "chirico@third-fl-71" and the Comcast email account is "mchirico@comcast.net". Note both the hostname and username are different. So, the user "chirico" using "mutt", "elm" or any email program would like to send out email to say "donkey@comcast.net"; yet, donkey would see the email from "mchirico@comcast.net" and not "chirico@third-fl-71" but chirico@third-fl-71 would get the replies. For a full description of how to solve this problem, including related "sendmail.mc", "site.config.m4", "genericstable", "genericsdomain", ".procmailrc", and ".forward" files, reference the following: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_COMCAST_EMAIL.txt?download Included in the above link are instructions for building sendmail with "SASL" and "STARTTLS". TIP 69: How do you remove just the last 2 lines from a file and save the result? $ sed '$d' file | sed '$d' > savefile Or, as Amos Shapira pointed out, it's much easier with the head command. $ head -2 file And, of course, removing just the last line $ sed '$d' file > savefile (See REFERENCES (13)) How do you remove extra spaces at the end of a line? $ sed 's/[ ]*$//g' How do you remove blank lines, or lines with just spaces and tabs, saving the origional file as file.backup? $ perl -pi.backup -e "s/^(\s)*\n//" file TIP 70: Generating Random Numbers. $ od -vAn -N4 -tu4 < /dev/urandom 3905158199 TIP 71: Deleting a File by it's Inode Value. See (PROGRAMMING TIP 5) for creating the file, or $ cat > '\n\n\n\n\n\n\n' type some text ^D To list the inode and display the characters. $ ls -libt * To remove by inode. Note the "--" option. This will keep any special characters in the file from being interpreted at "rm" options. $ find . -inum <inode> -exec rm -- '{}' \; Or to check contents $ find . -inum <inode> -exec cat '{}' \; Reference: http://www.faqs.org/ftp/usenet/news.answers/unix-faq/faq/part2 TIP 72: Sending Attachments Using Mutt -- On the Command Line. $ mutt -s "See Attachment" -a file.doc user@domain.net < message.txt or just the message: $ echo | mutt -a sample.tar.gz user@domain.net Reference: http://www.shelldorado.com/articles/mailattachments.html Also see (TIP 51). TIP 73: Want to find out what functions a program calls? $ strace <program> Try this with "topen.c" (see PROGRAMMING TIP 5) $ strace ./topen TIP 74: RPM Usage Summary. Install. Full filename is needed. $ rpm -ivh Fedora/RPMS/postgresql-libs-7.4.2-1.i386.rpm To view list of files installed with a particular package. $ rpm -ql postgresql-libs /usr/lib/libecpg.so.4 /usr/lib/libecpg.so.4.1 /usr/lib/libecpg_compat.so.1 /usr/lib/libecpg_compat.so.1.1 /usr/lib/libpgtypes.so.1 ... Or, to get the file listing from a package that is not installed use the "-p" option. $ rpm -pql /iso0/Fedora/RPMS/libpcap-0.8.3-7.i386.rpm /usr/share/doc/libpcap-0.8.3/CHANGES /usr/share/doc/libpcap-0.8.3/LICENSE /usr/share/doc/libpcap-0.8.3/README /usr/share/man/man3/pcap.3.gz For dependencies listing, use the "R" option. $ rpm -qpR /iso0/Fedora/RPMS/libpcap-0.8.3-7.i386.rpm /sbin/ldconfig /sbin/ldconfig kernel >= 2.2.0 libc.so.6 libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.0) libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.1) libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.1.3) libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.3) openssl rpmlib(CompressedFileNames) <= 3.0.4-1 rpmlib(PayloadFilesHavePrefix) <= 4.0-1 To check the integrity, use the "-K" option. $ rpm -K /iso0/Fedora/RPMS/libpcap-0.8.3-7.i386.rpm /iso0/Fedora/RPMS/libpcap-0.8.3-7.i386.rpm: (sha1) dsa sha1 md5 gpg OK To list all packages installed. $ rpm -qa To find out which file a package belongs to. $ rpm -qf /usr/lib/libecpg.so.4.1 To uninstall a package $ rpm -e For building rpm packages reference the following: http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/library/l-rpm1/ To verify md5 sum so that you know it downloaded ok $ rpm -K *.rpm The following is a good reference: http://www.rpm.org/max-rpm/s1-rpm-install-additional-options.html TIP 75: Listing Output from a Bash Script. Add "set -x" #!/bin/bash set -x ls date Will list the files and output as follows: + ls ChangeLog CVS data test + date Thu Jul 1 20:41:04 EDT 2004 TIP 76: Using wget. Grap a webpage and pipe it to less. For example suppose you wanted to pipe the contents of all these tips, directly from the web. $ wget -O - http://sourceforge.net/direct-dl/mchirico/souptonuts/How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt|less TIP 77: Finding IP address and MAC address. $ /sbin/ifconfig Note the following output "eth0" and "eth0:1" which means two IP addresses are tied to 1 NIC (Network Interface Card). eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:50:DA:60:5B:AD inet addr:192.168.1.155 Bcast:192.168.99.255 Mask:255.255.252.0 UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 RX packets:982757 errors:116 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:116 TX packets:439297 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000 RX bytes:693529078 (661.4 Mb) TX bytes:78400296 (74.7 Mb) Interrupt:10 Base address:0xa800 eth0:1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:50:DA:60:5B:AD inet addr:192.168.1.182 Bcast:192.168.3.255 Mask:255.255.252.0 UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 RX packets:982757 errors:116 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:116 TX packets:439299 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000 RX bytes:693529078 (661.4 Mb) TX bytes:78400636 (74.7 Mb) Interrupt:10 Base address:0xa800 lo Link encap:Local Loopback inet addr:127.0.0.1 Mask:255.0.0.0 UP LOOPBACK RUNNING MTU:16436 Metric:1 RX packets:785 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 TX packets:785 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 collisions:0 txqueuelen:0 RX bytes:2372833 (2.2 Mb) TX bytes:2372833 (2.2 Mb) TIP 78: DOS to UNIX and UNIX to DOS. $ dos2unix file.txt And to go the other way from UNIX to DOS $ unix2dos unixfile See the man page, since there are MAC options. NOTE: If you're working file DOS files, you'll probably want to use "zip" instead of "gzip" so users on Windows can unzip them. $ zip test.zip test.txt TIP 79: Need to Run Interactive Commands? Try "expect". http://expect.nist.gov/expect.tar.gz This simple example waits for the input "hi", in some form before returning, immediately, "hello there!". Otherwise, it will wait for 60 seconds, then, return "hello there!". #!/usr/bin/expect set timeout 60 expect "hi\n" send "hello there!\n" Reference: http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/expect/chapter/ch03.html http://www.cotse.com/dlf/man/expect/bulletproof1.htm TIP 80: Using PHP as a Command Line Scripting Language. The following will grab the complete file from slashdot. #!/usr/bin/php -q <?php $fileName = "http://slashdot.org/slashdot.xml"; $rss = file($fileName) or die ("Cannot open file $fileName\n"); for ($index=0; $index < count($rss); $index++) { echo $rss[$index]; } ?> Note, if you want an example that parses the XML of slashdot, then, download the following: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/php_scripts.tar.gz?download TIP 81: Discarding all output -- including stderr messages. $ ls > /dev/null 2>&1 Or sending all output to a file $ someprog > /tmp/file 2>&1 Sometimes, find displays a lot of errors when searching through directories that the user doesn't have access to. To discard error messages "stderr", which is normally file descripter "2" work the following: $ find / -iname 'stuff' 2>/dev/null or to pipe results elsewhere $ find / -iname 'stuff' > /tmp/results_of_find 2>/dev/null Also see (TIP 118). TIP 82: Using MIX. D. Knuth's assembly language/machine-code instruction set used in his books to illustrate his algorithms. Download the source: http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=13897 $ ./configure $ make $ make install Documentation can be found at the following link. The link on sourceforge is not correct, but, the one below works. http://www.gnu.org/software/mdk/manual/ TIP 83: Gnuplot [ http://sourceforge.net/projects/gnuplot/ ]. This software is ideal for printing graphs. gnuplot> set term png gnuplot> set output 'testcos.png' gnuplot> plot cos(x)*sin(x) gnuplot> exit Or the following command can be put into "file" $ cat > file set term png set output 'testcos.png' plot cos(x)*sin(x) exit ^D Then, run as follows: $ gnuplot file Or, suppose you have the following file "/home/chirico/data". Comments with "#" are not read by gnuplot. # File /home/chirico/data # 2005-07-26 1 2.3 3 2005-07-27 2 3.4 5 2005-07-28 3 4 6.6 2005-07-29 4 6 2.5 And you have the following new "file" set term png set xdata time set timefmt "%Y-%m-%d " set format x "%Y/%m/%d" set output '/var/www/html/chirico/gnuplot/data.png' plot '/home/chirico/data' using 1:2 w linespoints title '1st col', \ '/home/chirico/data' using 1:3 w linespoints title '2nd col', \ '/home/chirico/data' using 1:4 w linespoints title '3rd col' exit You can now get a graph of this data running the following: $ gnuplot file TIP 84: CPU Information - speed, processor, cache. $ cat /proc/cpuinfo processor : 0 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 15 model : 2 model name : Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 2.20GHz stepping : 9 cpu MHz : 2193.221 cache size : 512 KB fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 2 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr bogomips : 4325.37 "bogomips" is a rough but good way to quickly compare two computer speeds. True it's a bogus reading; but, a "good enough" for government work calculation. See (TIP 10) for "vmstat" and "iostat". TIP 85: POVRAY - Making Animated GIFs To see this in action, reference: http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/povray/orbit.pov.html These are the basic command to create: $ povray orbit.ini -Iorbit.pov $ convert -delay 20 *.ppm orbit.gif By the way, convert is a program from imagemagick, and it can be downloaded from ( http://www.imagemagick.org ). The following is "orbit.pov" #include "colors.inc" #include "finish.inc" #include "metals.inc" #include "textures.inc" #include "stones.inc" #include "skies.inc" camera { location < 2, 3, -8 > look_at < 0, 0, 0 > focal_point <0, 0, 0> blur_samples 20 } light_source { < 0, 10, 0> color White area_light <2,0,0>,<0,0,2>, 2, 2 adaptive 1 fade_distance 8 fade_power 1 } sky_sphere { S_Cloud3 } plane { <0, 1, 0>, -1 texture { pigment { checker color Blue, color White } finish {Phong_Glossy} } } #declare ball0= sphere { <0.5, 0.5, 0>, 1 texture { T_Silver_1E pigment {Yellow} } } #declare ball1= sphere { <3, 2, 0>, 0.5 texture { T_Silver_1E pigment {Blue} } } #declare ball2= sphere { <3, 1, 0>, 1 texture { T_Silver_1E pigment {Green} } } object {ball0 rotate 360*clock*y} object {ball1 rotate 720*clock*y} object {ball2 rotate 360*(1 - clock)*y} And, "orbit.ini" follows: Output_File_Type=P Width=320 Height=240 Initial_Frame=1 Final_Frame=10 Antialias=true Subset_Start_Frame=1 Subset_End_Frame=10 Cyclic_Animation=on TIP 86: GPG -- GnuPG Reference: http://www.gnupg.org/documentation/faqs.html http://codesorcery.net/mutt/mutt-gnupg-howto http://www.gnupg.org/(en)/download/index.html (SCRIPT 4) on following link: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_common_script_commands.html?download Generage key: $ gpg --gen-key Generate public key ID and fingerprint $ gpg --fingerprint Get a list of keys: $ gpg --list-keys pub 1024D/A11C1499 2004-07-15 Mike Chirico <mchirico@comcast.net> sub 1024g/E1A3C2B3 2004-07-15 Encrypt $ gpg -r Mike --encrypt sample.txt This will produce "sample.txt.asc", which is a binary file. Note, I can use "Mike" because that's the name on the list of keys. Again, it will be a binary file. Encrypt using "ASCII-armored text" (--armor), which is probably what you want when sending "in" the body of an email, or some document. $ gpg -r Mike --encrypt --armor sample.txt or $ gpg -r Mike -e -a sample.txt or $ gpg --output somefile.asc --armor -r Mike --encrypt --armor sample.txt The above 3 statements will still produce "sample.txt.asc", but look at it, or "$ cat sample.txt.asc" without fear, since there are no binary characters. Yes, you could even compile a program "$ g++ -o test test.c" , then, "$ gpg --output test.asc -r Mike --encrypt --armor test". However, when decrypting make sure to pipe the results. $ gpg --decrypt test.asc > test Export "public" key: $ gpg --armor --export Mike > m1.asc Signing the file "message.txt": $ gpg --clearsign message.txt Sending the key to the "key-server" First, list the keys. $ gpg --list-keys /home/chirico/.gnupg/pubring.gpg v------------------ Use this with "0x" in front ------- pub 1024D/A11C1499 2004-07-15 Mike Chirico <mchirico@comcast.net> | sub 1024g/E1A3C2B3 2004-07-15 | | v---------------------------------------------------- $ gpg --send-keys 0xA11C1499 The above sends it to the keyserver defined in "/home/chirico/.gnupg/gpg.conf". Other key servers: wwwkeys.pgp.net search.keyserver.net pgp.ai.mit.edu When you go to your user-group meetings, you need to bring 2 forms of ID, and list your Key fingerprint. Shown below is the command for getting this fingerprint. $ gpg --fingerprint mchirico@comcast.net pub 1024D/A11C1499 2004-07-15 Key fingerprint = 9D7F C80D BB7B 4BAB CCA4 1BE9 9056 5BEC A11C 1499 uid Mike Chirico (http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/chirico/index.php) <mchirico@comcast.net> sub 1024g/E1A3C2B3 2004-07-15 Receving keys: The following will retrieve my mchirico@comcast.net key $ gpg --recv-keys 0xA11C1499 Special Note: If you get the following error "GPG: Warning: Using Insecure Memory" , then, " chmod 4755 /path/to/gpg" to setuid(root) permissioins on the gpg binary. NOTE: If using mutt, just before sending with the "y" option, hit "p" to sign or encrypt. It's possible to create a gpg/pgp email from the command line. For a tutorial on this, reference (SCRIPT 4) at the following link: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_common_script_commands.html?download TIP 87: Working with Dates: Steffen Beyer has developed a Perl and C module for working with dates This softare can be downloaded from the following location: http://www.engelschall.com/u/sb/download/pkg/Date-Calc-5.3.tar.gz $ wget http://www.engelschall.com/u/sb/download/pkg/Date-Calc-5.3.tar.gz $ tar -xzvf Date-Calc-5.3.tar.gz $ cd Date-Calc-5.3 $ cp ./examples/cal.c . $ gcc cal.c DateCalc.c -o mcal The file cal.c contains sample function calls from DateCalc.c. Note, "DateCalc.c" is just a list of functions and includes for "DateCalc.h" and "ToolBox.h". Or, and this may be easier, just download the following: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/date_calc.tar.gz?download The above link contains a few examples. TIP 88: Color patterns for mutt. The colors can be changed in the /home/user/.muttrc file. The first field begins with color, the second field is the foreground color, and the third field is the background color, or default. An example .muttrc for colors: # color patterns for mutt color normal white black # normal text color indicator black yellow # actual message color tree brightmagenta default # thread arrows color status brightyellow default # status line color error brightred default # errors color message magenta default # info messages color signature magenta default # signature color attachment brightyellow red # MIME attachments color search brightyellow red # search matches color tilde brightmagenta default # ~ at bottom of msg color markers red default # + at beginning of wrapped lines color hdrdefault cyan default # default header lines color bold red default # hiliting bold patterns in body color underline green default # hiliting underlined patterns in body color quoted cyan default # quoted text color quoted1 magenta default color quoted2 red default color quoted3 green default color quoted4 magenta default color quoted5 cyan default color quoted6 magenta default color quoted7 red default color quoted8 green default color quoted9 cyan default color body cyan default "((ftp|http|https)://|news:)[^ >)\"\t]+" color body cyan default "[-a-z_0-9.+]+@[-a-z_0-9.]+" color body red default "(^| )\\*[-a-z0-9*]+\\*[,.?]?[ \n]" color body green default "(^| )_[-a-z0-9_]+_[,.?]?[\n]" color body red default "(^| )\\*[-a-z0-9*]+\\*[,.?]?[ \n]" color body green default "(^| )_[-a-z0-9_]+_[,.?]?[ \n]" color index cyan default ~F # Flagged color index red default ~N # New color index magenta default ~T # Tagged color index cyan default ~D # Deleted Also see (TIP 190) TIP 89: ps command in detail Here are the possible codes when using state "$ ps -e -o state,cmd" PROCESS STATE CODES D uninterruptible sleep (usually IO) R runnable (on run queue) S sleeping T traced or stopped Z a defunct ("zombie") process < high-priority (not nice to other users) N low-priority (nice to other users) L has pages locked into memory (for real-time and custom IO) s is a session leader l is multi-threaded (using CLONE_THREAD, like NPTL pthreads do) + is in the foreground process group For instance: Note that the -o is for user defined, and -e is for select all process. $ ps -e -o pid,state,start,time,etime,cmd ... 9946 S 15:40:45 00:00:00 02:23:29 /bin/bash -i 9985 T 15:41:24 00:00:01 02:22:50 emacs mout2 10003 T 15:43:59 00:00:00 02:20:15 emacs NOTES 10320 T 17:38:42 00:00:00 25:32 emacs stuff.c ... You may want to command below, without the -e, which will give the process only under the current terminal. $ ps -o pid,state,start,time,etime,cmd Want to find what 's impacting your load? $ ps -e -o %cpu,pid,state,start,time,etime,%cpu,%mem,cmd|sort -rn|less $ ps aux USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND root 1 0.0 0.0 1380 480 ? S Aug04 0:00 init [3] root 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? SWN Aug04 0:00 [ksoftirqd/0] root 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? SW< Aug04 0:00 [events/0] root 4 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? SW< Aug04 0:00 [khelper] ... Or, if you want to see the environment add the -e option $ ps aeux ... chirico 2735 0.0 0.1 4400 1492 pts/0 S Aug04 0:00 -bash USER=chirico LOGNAME=chirico HOME=/home/chirico PATH=/usr/ chirico 2771 0.0 0.0 4328 924 pts/0 S Aug04 0:00 screen -e^Pa -D -R HOSTNAME=third-fl-71.localdomain TERM=xterm S chirico 2772 0.0 0.6 9476 6352 ? S Aug04 0:54 SCREEN -e^Pa -D -R HOSTNAME=third-fl-71.localdomain TERM=xterm S chirico 2773 0.0 0.1 4432 1548 pts/1 S Aug04 0:10 /bin/bash STY=2772.pts-0.third-fl-71 TERM=screen TERMCAP=SC|scre chirico 2797 0.0 0.1 4416 1496 pts/2 S Aug04 0:00 /bin/bash STY=2772.pts-0.third-fl-71 TERM=screen TERMCAP=SC|scre root 2821 0.0 0.0 4100 952 pts/2 S Aug04 0:00 su - root 2822 0.0 0.1 4384 1480 pts/2 S Aug04 0:00 -bash chirico 2862 0.0 0.1 4428 1524 pts/3 S Aug04 0:00 /bin/bash STY=2772.pts-0.third-fl-71 TERM=screen TERMCAP=SC|scre sporkey 2946 0.0 0.2 6836 2960 ? S Aug04 0:15 fetchmail chirico 2952 0.0 0.1 4436 1552 pts/5 S Aug04 0:00 /bin/bash STY=2772.pts-0.third-fl-71 TERM=screen TERMCAP=SC|scre chirico 3880 0.0 0.1 4416 1496 pts/6 S Aug05 0:00 /bin/bash STY=2772.pts-0.third-fl-71 TERM=screen TERMCAP=SC|scre root 3904 0.0 0.0 4100 956 pts/6 S Aug05 0:00 su - donkey donkey 3905 0.0 0.1 4336 1452 pts/6 S Aug05 0:00 -bash donkey 3938 0.0 0.2 6732 2856 ? S Aug05 0:14 fetchmail chirico 3944 0.0 0.1 4416 1496 pts/7 S Aug05 0:00 /bin/bash STY=2772.pts-0.third-fl-71 TERM=screen TERMCAP=SC|scre ... There is also a -f "forrest" option. Also note below " -bash" is the start of a login shell. $ ps aeuxwwf The ww option above gives a wide format with all variables. Use the above command if you plan to parse through a Perl script. Otherwise, it may be easier to do a quick read using the command below, without "ww". $ ps aeuxf ... root 2339 0.0 0.1 3512 1444 ? S Dec01 0:00 /usr/sbin/sshd root 25651 0.0 0.1 6764 1980 ? S Dec23 0:00 \_ /usr/sbin/sshd chirico 25653 0.0 0.2 6840 2236 ? S Dec23 0:14 \_ /usr/sbin/sshd chirico 25654 0.0 0.1 4364 1440 pts/4 S Dec23 0:00 \_ -bash USER=chirico LOGNAME=chirico HOME=/home/chirico chirico 25690 0.0 0.0 4328 920 pts/4 S Dec23 0:00 \_ screen -e^Pa -D -R HOSTNAME=third-fl-71.localdomain TERM=xterm root 2355 0.0 0.0 2068 904 ? S Dec01 0:00 xinetd -stayalive -pidfile /var/run/xinetd.pid ... It is also possible to list the process by command line. For example, the following command will only list the emacs processes. $ ps -fC emacs UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD chirico 5049 5020 0 May11 pts/13 00:00:00 emacs -nw Notes chirico 12368 5104 0 May12 pts/18 00:00:00 emacs -nw dnotify.c chirico 19792 18028 0 May13 pts/20 00:00:00 emacs -nw hello.c chirico 14034 27367 0 18:52 pts/8 00:00:00 emacs -nw How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt You may also want to consider using top in batch mode. Here the "-n 1" means refresh once, and the "b" is for batch. The "fmt -s" is to put it in a more readable format. $ top -n 1 b |fmt -s >>statfile TIP 90: Learning Assembly. Once you have written the source, assuming the file is "exit.s", it can be compiled as follows: $ as exit.s -o exit.o $ ld exit.o -o exit Here is the program: # #INPUT: none # #OUTPUT: returns a status code. This can be viewed # by typing # # echo $? # # after running the program # #VARIABLES: # %eax holds the system call number # (this is always the case) # # %ebx holds the return status # .section .data .section .text .globl _start _start: movl $1, %eax # this is the linux kernel command # number (system call) for exiting # a program movl $0, %ebx # this is the status number we will # return to the operating system. # Change this around and it will # return different things to # echo $? int $0x80 # this wakes up the kernel to run # the exit command After running this program, you can get the exit code. $ exit $? 0 That is about all it does; but, get the book for more details. The book is free. http://savannah.nongnu.org/download/pgubook/ TIP 91: Creating a sandbox for reiserfstune,debugreiserfs and ACL. Also see TIP 4. Assume you have a reisers files system created from a disk file, which means you have done something like the following: # dd if=/dev/zero of=disk-rfs count=102400 # losetup /dev/loop4 ./disk-rfs # mkfs -t reiserfs /dev/loop4 # mkdir /fs2 # mount -o loop,acl ./disk-rfs /fs2 Now, you can run reiserfstune. But, first you will need to umount fs2 # umount /fs2 # reiserfstune ./disk-rfs Or you can run the debug command # debugreiserfs -J ./disk-rfs Now, suppose you run through a lot of the debug options on http://www.namesys.com/ and you destroy this file. You can recreate the file and delete the loop device. # dd if=/dev/zero of=disk-rfs count=102400 # losetup -d /dev/loop4 # mount -o loop,acl ./disk-rfs /fs2 Now, try working with some of the ACL options - you can only do this with the latest kernel and tools -- Fedora Core 2 will work. Assume you have 3 users, donkey, chirico and bozo2. You can give everyone rights to this file system as follows: # setfacl -R -m d:u:donkey:rwx,d:u:chirico:rwx,d:u:bozo2:rwx /fs2 TIP 92: SpamAssassin - Setup. Step 1. Installing the SpamAssassin CPAN utility. You will need to do this as root. $ su - Once you have root privileges invoke cpan. # perl -MCPAN -e shell cpan> Now install with prerequisites policy set to ask. cpan> o conf prerequisites_policy ask cpan> install Mail::SpamAssassin You will get lots of output as the necessary modules are downloaded and compiled and installed. Step 2. Configuration. Edit the following "/etc/mail/spamassassin/local.cf" Here is a look at my file $ cat /etc/mail/spamassassin/local.cf # This is the right place to customize your installation of SpamAssassin. # # See 'perldoc Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf' for details of what can be # tweaked. # ########################################################################### # # rewrite_subject 0 # report_safe 1 # trusted_networks 212.17.35. # # Below added from book # You may want to set this to 5, then, work your way down. # Currently I have this 3 required_hits 3 # This determines how spam is reported. Currently safe email is reported # in the message. report_safe 1 # The will rewrite the tag of the spam message. rewrite_subject 1 # By default, SpamAssassin will run RBL checks. If your ISP already # does this, set this to 1. skip_rbl_checks 0 Step 3. Update .procmail. You should update the .procmail file as follows. Here is my /home/chirico/.procmail file. $ cat /home/chirico/.procmailrc PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin MAILDIR=/var/spool/mail DEFAULT=/var/spool/mail/chirico LOGFILE=/home/chirico/MailBAG MYHOME=/home/chirico # Must have folder MailTRASH TRASH=/home/chirico/MailTRASH # Will get everything from this mail :0 * ^From:.*sporkey@comcast.net $DEFAULT # Spamassassin :0fw * <300000 |/usr/local/bin/spamassassin Reference: http://pm-doc.sourceforge.net/ TIP 93: Make Graphs: using dot and neato. $ dot -Tpng dotfile -o myout.png To see the output reference the following: http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/code/myout.png Where "dotfile" is the following: $ cat dotfile digraph g { node [shape = record]; node0 [ label ="<f0> stuff | <f1> J | <f2> "]; node1 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> E | <f2> "]; node4 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> C | <f2> "]; node6 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> I | <f2> "]; node2 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> U | <f2> "]; node5 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> N | <f2> "]; node9 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> Y | <f2> "]; node8 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> W | <f2> "]; node10 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> Z | <f2> "]; node7 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> A | <f2> "]; node3 [ label ="<f0> | <f1> G | <f2> "]; "node0":f0 -> "node1":f1; "node0":f2 -> "node2":f1; "node1":f0 -> "node4":f1; "node1":f2 -> "node6":f1; "node4":f0 -> "node7":f1; "node4":f2 -> "node3":f1; "node2":f0 -> "node5":f1; "node2":f2 -> "node9":f1; "node9":f0 -> "node8":f1; "node9":f2 -> "node10":f1; } Checkout the following article: http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sid=7275 To download this software http://www.graphviz.org/ TIP 94: Makefile: working with conditions First note that all the indentations of the file must be a single tab. There cannot be any spaces, or make will not run. $ cat Makefile # Compiler flags sqliteLIB := $(shell ls /usr/local/lib/libsqlite.so) sqlite3LIB := $(shell ls /usr/local/lib/libsqlite3.so) # all assumes sqlite and sqlite3 are installed # test: ifeq ("$(sqlite3LIB)","/usr/local/lib/libsqlite3.so") @echo -e "True -- we found the file" else @echo "False -- we did not find the file" endif So, if I run make I will get the following output. $ make True -- we found the file This is because I have a file /usr/local/lib/libsqlite3.so on my system. Note how the assignment is made, with the shell command sqlite3LIB := $(shell ls /usr/local/lib/libsqlite3.so) TIP 95: Bash: Conditional Expressions if [ -e /etc/ntp.conf ] then echo "You have the ntp config file" else echo "You do not have the ntp config file" fi Now using an AND condition inside the [ ]. By the way, above, you can put the "then" on the same line as the if "if [ -e /etc/ntp.conf ]; then" as long as you use the ";". if [ \( -e /etc/ntp.conf \) -a \( -e /etc/ntp/ntpservers \) ] then echo "You have ntp config and ntpservers" elif [ -e /etc/ntp.conf ]; then echo " You just have ntp.conf " elif [ -e /etc/ntp/ntpservers ]; then echo " You just have ntpservers " else echo " you have neither ntp.conf or ntpservers" fi A few things to note above. Else if statement is written as "elif", and when dealing with "(" you will need to insert "\(". By the way "-o" can replace "-a" and the "-o" is for OR condition. AND can be done as follows too. if [ -e /etc/ntp.conf ] && [ -e /etc/ntp/ntpservers ] then echo "You have ntp config and ntpservers" elif [ -e /etc/ntp.conf ]; then echo " You just have ntp.conf " elif [ -e /etc/ntp/ntpservers ]; then echo " You just have ntpservers " else echo " you have neither ntp.conf or ntpservers" fi Conditional Expressions (files). -b file True if file exists and is a block file -c file True if file exists and is a character device file -d file True if file exists and is a directory -e file True if file exists -f file True if file exists and is a regular file -g file True if file exists and is set goup id -G file True if owned by the effective group ID -k file True if "sticky" bit is set and file exists -L file True if file exists and is a symbolic link -n string True if string is non-null -O file Ture if file exists and is owned by the effective user ID -p file True if file is a named pipe (FIFO) -r file True if file is readable -s file True if file has size > 0 -S file True if file exists and is a socket -t file True if file is open and refers to a terminal. -u file True if setuid bit is set -w file True if file exists and is writeable -x file True if file executable -x dir True if directory can be searched file1 -nt file2 True if file1 modification date newer than file2 file1 -ot file2 True if file1 modification date older than file2 file1 -ef file2 True if file1 and file2 have same inode Conditional Expressions (Integers). -lt Less than -le Less than or equal -eq Equal -ge Greater than or equal -gt Greater than -ne Not equal Example usage. #!/bin/bash { while read num value; do if [ $num -gt 2 ]; then echo $value fi done } < somefile Conditional Expressions (Strings). str1 = str2 str1 matches str2 str1 != str2 str1 does not matches str2 str1 < str2 str1 is less than str2 str1 > str2 str1 is greater than str2 -n str1 str1 is not null (length greater than 0) -z str1 str1 is null (las length 0) TIP 96: CVS: Working with cvs INITIAL REPOSITORY: To create a repository, and this is normally done by the system admin. This is NOT creating a project to checkout, but the location where everything will be stored! The initial repository! cvs -d repository_root_directory init Or here is a specific example: cvs -d /work/cvsREPOSITORY/ init Creating a directory tree from scratch. For a new project, the easiest thing to do is probably to create an empty directory structure, like this: $ mkdir sqlite_examples $ mkdir sqlite_examples/man $ mkdir sqlite_examples/testing After that, you use the import command to create the corresponding (empty) directory structure inside the repository: $ cd <directory> $ cvs -d repository_root_directory import -m "Created directory structure" yoyodyne/dir yoyo start Or, here is a specific example. $ cd sqlite_examples $ cvs -d /work/cvsREPOSITORY/ import -m 'test SQlite' sqlite_examples sqlite_examples start Now, you can delete the directory sqlite_examples, or go to another directory and type the following: $ cvs -d /work/cvsREPOSITORY/ co sqlite_examples COOL TOOLS: 1. cvsps 2. cvsreport cvsps which you can find at http://www.cobite.com/cvsps/cvsps-2.0rc1.tar.gz $ cvsps -f README_sqlite_tutorial.html TIP 97: Common vi and vim commands Command mode ESC dd delete u undelete y yank (copy to buffer) p/P p before cursor/P after cursor Ctl-g show current line number shft-G end of file n shft-G move to line n /stuff/ search n repeat in same direction N repeat in opposite direction /return repeat seach forward ?return repeat seach backward "dyy Yank current line to buffer d "a7yy Yank next 7 lines to buffer a or :1,7ya a Yank [ya] lines 1,7 to buffer a :1,7ya b Yank [ya] lines 1,7 to buffer b :5 pu b Put [pu] buffer b after line 5 "dP Put the content of buffer d before cursor "ap Put the contents of buffer a after cursor :1,4 w! file2 Write lines 1,4 to file2 :1,3 :set nu Display line numbers :set nonum Turns off display :e <filename> Edit a file in a new buffer vim :split :split <filename> :sp <filename> :split new ctl-w To move between windows ctl-w+ ctl-w- To change size ctl+wv Split windows vertically ctl-wq Close window :only To view only 1 window vim dictionary - put the following command in ~/.vimrc set dictionary+=/usr/share/dict/words set thesaurus+=/usr/share/dict/words Now, after you type a word <ctl-x><ctl-k><ctl-n> and to go back in the listing <ctl-p> butter<ctl-x><ctl-k><ctl-n> TIP 98: Using apt-get $ apt-get update $ apt-get -s install <pkage> <---- if everything is ok, then, remove the s Note you may want to use dpkg to purge if you have to do a reinstall. $ dpkg --purge exim4-base $ dpkg --purge exim4-config $ apt-get install exim4 $ dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config TIP 99: Mounting a cdrom on openbsd and installing packages $ mkdir -p /cdrom $ mount /dev/cd0a /cdrom $ cd /cdrom To add packages $ pkg_add -v <directory> Mounting a cdrom on linux to a user's home sub-directory: $ mkdir -p /home/chirico/cdrom $ mount /dev/cdrom /home/chirico/cdrom TIP 100: Creating a boot floppy for knoppix cd: $ dd if=/mnt/cdrom/KNOPPIX/boot.img of=/dev/fd0 bs=1440k References: http://www.knoppix.net/docs/index.php/BootFloppyHowTo For a lot of the knoppix how-to's http://www.knoppix.net/docs/index.php/ TIP 101: Diction and Style Tools for Linux http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/diction/ $ diction mytext|less Or, this can be done interactively $ diction This is more text to read and you can do with it what you want. (stdin):1: This is more text to read and you [can -> (do not confuse with "may")] do with it what you want. DESCRIPTION Diction finds all sentences in a document, that contain phrases from a database of frequently misused, bad or wordy diction. It further checks for double words. If no files are given, the document is read from standard input. Each found phrase is enclosed in [ ] (brackets). Suggestions and advice, if any, are printed headed by a right arrow ->. A sentence is a sequence of words, that starts with a capitalised word and ends with a full stop, double colon, question mark or exclaimation mark. A single letter followed by a dot is considered an abbreviation, so it does not terminate a sentence. Various multi-letter abbrevia- tions are recognized, they do not terminate a sentence as well. TIP 102: Using a mail alias. Suppose all root mail on your system to go to one root account root@main.com In the following file: /etc/aliases Add this line root: root@main.com Next, run newaliases [/usr/bin/newaliases] as follows: $ newaliases Special note: It's possible to send mail to more than one address. Suppose you want mail going to root@main.com above, plus you want it going to user donkey on the local system. root: root@main.com donkey TIP 103: Chrony - this service is similiar to ntp. It keeps accurate time on your computer against a very accurate clock in across a network with various time delays. Reference: http://go.to/chrony In the file "/etc/chrony/chrony.conf" add/replace the following server 146.186.218.60 server 128.118.25.3 server 128.2.129.21 Next start the chrony service $ /etc/init.d/chrony restart Next verify that this is working. It may take 20 or 30 minutes to update the clock. Shell command: # chronyc chronyc> sourcestats 210 Number of sources = 3 Name/IP Address NP NR Span Frequency Freq Skew Std Dev ======================================================================== b50.cede.psu.edu 2 0 64 0.000 2000.000 4000ms otc2.psu.edu 2 0 66 0.000 2000.000 4000ms FS3.ECE.CMU.EDU 2 0 64 0.000 2000.000 4000ms chronyc> It is probably best to let chrony do its work. However, if you want to set both the hardware and software clock, the following will work: Sets the hardware clock # hwclock --set --date="12/10/04 10:18:05" Sync the hardware clock to software # hwclock --hctosys Normally the system keep accurate time with the software clock. TIP 104: NFS mount SERVER (192.168.1.182) Make sure nfs is running on the server $ /etc/init.d/nfs restart At the server the contents of /etc/exports for allowing 2 computers (192.168.1.171 and 192.168.1.71) to access the home directory of this server. Note that read write (rw) access is allowed. $ cat /etc/exports /home 192.168.1.171(rw) /home 192.168.1.71(rw) Or, if you have a lot of clients on 192.168.1.* then consider the following: /home 192.168.1.0/255.255.252.0(rw) Next, still at the server, run the exportfs command $ exportfs -rv IPTABLES (lokkit). If you're using fedora with default lokkit firewall then you can put the following under "Other ports". Other ports nfs:tcp nfs:udp If the above does not work or you are not using lokkit IPTABLES (values in /etc/sysconfig/iptables on SERVER ) # NFS Need to accept fragmented packets and may not have header # so you will not know where they are coming from -A INPUT -f -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp -s 192.168.1.171 -m multiport --dports 111,683,686,685,1026,2049,2219 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p tcp -s 192.168.1.171 -d 0/0 --dport 32765:32768 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p udp -m udp -s 192.168.1.171 -m multiport --dports 111,683,686,685,1026,2049,2219 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.171 -d 0/0 --dport 32765:32768 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -f -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp -s 192.168.1.71 -m multiport --dports 111,683,686,685,1026,2049,2219 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p tcp -s 192.168.1.71 -d 0/0 --dport 32765:32768 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p udp -m udp -s 192.168.1.71 -m multiport --dports 111,683,686,685,1026,2049,2219 -j ACCEPT -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.71 -d 0/0 --dport 32765:32768 -j ACCEPT (Reference: http://nfs.sourceforge.net/nfs-howto/server.html) and (Reference: http://nfs.sourceforge.net/nfs-howto/security.html) CLIENT1 (192.168.1.171) $ mkdir -p /home2 $ cat /etc/fstab 192.168.1.182:/home /home2 nfs rw 0 0 $ mount -a -t nfs Or to do a one time mounting by hand $ mount -t nfs 192.168.1.182:/home /home2 Now /home2 on the client will be /home on the server Reference: http://nfs.sourceforge.net/nfs-howto/index.html MONITOR NFS: To monitor the client: $ nfsstat -c Also note you can "cat /proc/net/rpc/nfs" as well. To monitor the server (note the -s instead of the -c). $ nfsstat -s Also note you can "cat /proc/net/rpc/nfsd" as well. The following "cat" command is done on the NFS server, and shows which clients are mounting. This does not go with examples above. By the way, "root_squash" is the default, and means that root access on the clients is denied. So, how does the client root get access to these filesystems? You have to "su - <someuser>". $ cat /proc/fs/nfs/exports # Version 1.1 # Path Client(Flags) # IPs /home 192.168.1.102(rw,root_squash,sync,wdelay) /home squeezel.squeezel.com(rw,root_squash,sync,wdelay) /home 192.168.1.106(rw,root_squash,sync,wdelay) /home livingroom.squeezel.com(rw,root_squash,sync,wdelay) /home 10.8.0.1(rw,root_squash,sync,wdelay) /home closet.squeezel.com(rw,root_squash,sync,wdelay) (Reference: http://www.vanemery.com/Linux/NFSv4/NFSv4-no-rpcsec.html#automount ) TIP 105: Ports used for Microsoft products http://www.microsoft.com/canada/smallbiz/sgc/articles/ref_net_ports_ms_prod.mspx?pf=true Firewalling? http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/windowsserver2003/library/ServerHelp/428c1bbf-2ceb-4f76-a1ef-0219982eca10.mspx To find out common port mappings, take a look at "/etc/services" TIP 106: Man pages: If man pages are formatting incorrectly with PuTTY, try editing the "/etc/man.config" file with the following changes: NROFF /usr/bin/groff -Tlatin1 -mandoc NEQN /usr/bin/geqn -Tlatin1 (Reference TIP 7 for using man) TIP 107: Valgrind: check for memory leaks in your programs. (http://valgrind.org/) This is how you can run it on the program "a.out" for valgrind version 2.2.0 $ valgrind --logfile=valgrind.output --tool=memcheck ./a.out This is how you write the logfile "--log-file" for valgrind-3.0.1 $ valgrind --log-file=valgrind --leak-check=yes --tool=memcheck ./a.out With C++ programs with gcc 3.4 and later that use STL, export GLIBCXX_FORCE_NEW only when testing to disable memory caching. Remember to enable for production as this will have a performance penalty. Reference http://valgrind.org/docs/FAQ/ TIP 108: Runlevel Configuring. These two programs, run as root give you a ncurses GUI to what will run on your system on boot. # ntsysv # chkconfig Note, you can also set these manually. For example, normally you will have files in "/etc/init.d/" that will take parameters like "start","stop" "restart". Take a look at "/etc/init.d/mysql" this file will start and stop the mysql daemon. So, how does know which run levels, and the order it gets loaded in the run level to other programs? By the K<number> and S<number> values. $ ls /etc/rc3.d/*mysql /etc/rc3.d/K85mysql /etc/rc3.d/S85mysql So here on my system the start value is 85. Looking in /etc/rc3.d, which is run level 3, any program with a lower number S84something will get loaded before mysql. I manually set the run level as follows for mysql. # cd /etc/rc3.d # ln -s ../init.d/mysql S85mysql # ln -s ../init.d/mysql K85mysql # cd /etc/rc5.d # ln -s ../init.d/mysql S85mysql # ln -s ../init.d/mysql K85mysql Note that I could have chose other numbers as well. "ntsysv" gives you a graphical interface. This is a way of doing this with "chkconfig" at the command prompt. # chkconfig --list mysqld mysqld 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:on 4:off 5:on 6:off Above you can see it's on. Here's how we would have turned this on with chkconfig. # chkconfig --level 35 mysqld on TIP 109: File Alteration Monitor - Gamin a FAM replacement http://www.gnome.org/~veillard/gamin/ http://www.gnome.org/~veillard/gamin/sources/ ****** EXAMPLE NOT COMPLETE ***** Working with fam - file alteration monitor. Mail uses this to signify a change in a file's status. Below is the sample C program ftest.c which can be compiled as follows: $ gcc -o ftest ftest.c -lfam You will need to work with this as root # ./ftest <somefile absolute path> Reference: http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/tpl/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?db=man&fname=/usr/share/catman/p_man/cat3x/fam.z http://www.devchannel.org/devtoolschannel/04/05/13/2146252.shtml TIP 110: glibc - this is the main library used by C, and the following link below gives you examples on everything from sockets,math, date and time functions, user environment, and much more. http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_mono/libc.html How do you know which version of glibc you are running? #include <stdio.h> #include <gnu/libc-version.h> int main (void) { puts (gnu_get_libc_version ()); return 0; } TIP 111: nslookup and dig - query Internet name servers interactively. $ nslookup >chirico.org Server: 68.80.0.6 Address: 68.80.0.6#53 Name: chirico.org Address: 66.35.250.210 > The nslookup command will query the dns server is "/etc/resolve.conf" However, you can force a certain dns with "- server". For example the command below goes to the server named dilbert $ nslookup - dilbert > dig: dig gives you more information. You should probably use dig instead of nslookup. Below I am forcing the lookup from DNS 68.80.0.6 of the name chirico.org, and note that the query time is return too. $ dig @68.80.0.6 +qr chirico.org ; <<>> DiG 9.2.1 <<>> @68.80.0.6 +qr chirico.org ;; global options: printcmd ;; Sending: ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 55908 ;; flags: rd; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 0 ;; QUESTION SECTION: ;chirico.org. IN A ;; Got answer: ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 55908 ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 2, ADDITIONAL: 2 ;; QUESTION SECTION: ;chirico.org. IN A ;; ANSWER SECTION: chirico.org. 5538 IN A 66.35.250.210 ;; AUTHORITY SECTION: chirico.org. 30599 IN NS ns78.worldnic.com. chirico.org. 30599 IN NS ns77.worldnic.com. ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION: ns78.worldnic.com. 16022 IN A 216.168.225.218 ns77.worldnic.com. 7 IN A 216.168.228.41 ;; Query time: 155 msec ;; SERVER: 68.80.0.6#53(68.80.0.6) ;; WHEN: Thu Dec 23 07:48:23 2004 ;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 127 So what if you wanted to know what name the IP address 66.35.250.210 resolves to, when using dns 68.80.0.12. $ dig @68.80.0.12 -x 66.35.250.210 ... ;; ANSWER SECTION: 210.250.35.66.in-addr.arpa. 3600 IN CNAME 210.0/24.250.35.66.in-addr.arpa. 210.0/24.250.35.66.in-addr.arpa. 3600 IN PTR vhost.sourceforge.net. Above you can see it resolved to "vhost.sourceforge.net" Reference ( http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/DNS-HOWTO-5.html ) Also see TIP 223. TIP 112: Using GNU Autotools - so you can produce the familiar "./configure" "make" and "make install" commands. There is also a "make dist". The program sqlite3api.cc and the rest of this code can be found at http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/autotools.tar.gz?download A "Makefile.am" is required: bin_PROGRAMS = sprog sprog_SOURCES = sqlite3api.cc sprog_LDADD = @INCLUDES@ @SQLIBOBJS@ In addition, a "configure.in" file is required. Note, AC_CHECK_LIB will check the "libsqlite3.so" file for the "sqlite3_open" file. Note that "sqlite3", is a shortcut for "libsqlite3" by convention. If this file is not found, AC_CHECK_FILE looks for "/usr/local/lib/libsqlite3.a". If this is found, then, "-lsqlite3" is added to the LIBS environment variable. Also, "-I/usr/local/include" and "-L/usr/local/lib" will be added on the command line. This is common when some one does not have the library in the path. (See TIP 49) dnl Process this file with autoconf to produce a configure script. AC_INIT(sqlite3api.cc) AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE(sqliteprog, 1.0) AC_PROG_CXX CXXFLAGS='-Wall -W -O2 -s -pipe' AC_CHECK_LIB(sqlite3,sqlite3_open,[],found=no) if test "$found" = "no"; then AC_CHECK_FILE(/usr/local/lib/libsqlite3.a, found=yes) if test "$found" = "yes"; then LIBS="$LIBS -lsqlite3" INCLUDES="$INCLUDES -I/usr/local/include" EXTRALIB='-L/usr/local/lib' else echo "Are you SURE sqlite3 is installed?" fi fi SQLIBOBJS='-Wl,-R/usr/local/lib' AC_SUBST(INCLUDES) AC_SUBST(SQLIBOBJS) AC_SUBST(EXTRALIB) AC_OUTPUT(Makefile) To build the configure file, just run the following: $ aclocal $ autoconf $ touch NEWS README AUTHORS ChangeLog $ automake --add-missing Now if you want to make a tar.gz file "sqliteprog-1.0.tar.gz", then all you have to run is the following: $ make dist Note: did you ever want to save all the output from a ./configure? Well, it is automatically saved in the "config.log" file. In fact, this file may contain a lot more than what you saw on the screen. Also, you may need to rerun ./configure. But before you do, delete the "config.cache" file to get a clean build. TIP 113: EMACS - common emacs commands. M is the ESC C or c is the Ctl Shell - when working in a shell. "M-x rename-uniquely" is good for split screen editing. M-x rename-uniquely Use this for multiple shells (renames buffer so it's not the same shell) C-c C-z Send job in background (when working in a shell) C-c C-o commit-kill-output (gets rid of a lot of shell output) C-c C-r reposition at beginning of output C-c C-e reposition at end of output M-x send-invisible Hide passwords - use this before typing a password Note: if the shell prompt does not show up correctly, then, you may want to creat a ".emacs_bash" file with the following contents: PS1="emacs:\W \$ " Directories (C-x d) give you a directory listing. You know all those annoying "~" and "#" file that you get? You can easily delete these when in "dired" mode by hitting "~", then "d" to flag it for delete. Then, hit "x" to and confirm deletion. These are other command that work on highlighted files in "dired" mode. R rename v view Z compress the file + create directory Other common commands: c-x l list the line you are on, and how many lines in the document. You will get something like: Page has 4881 lines (4440 + 442), which means you are on the 4440 line. c-x rm bookmark make c-x rb bookmark bounce c-x rb notes c-x rb emacs c-x / <r> (save position in register <r>) c-x j <r> (jump to position in register <r>) c-x r SPC 1 (mark current point in register 1) c-x r j 1 (jump to marked point in register 1) c-x r t <string> (insert string into register) c-x r s 1 (save marked region in register 1) c-x r i 1 (insert marked region) c-x c-o (delete all blank lines, except one) c-x z (repeat the last command ... stop with an a) c-x zz (repeat the last command twice) rectangle --------- C-SPC goto the next region C-x C-x then, C-x r r "name of register" to insert the register C-x r i "name of register" macros: ------- c-x ( start macro c-x ) end macro c-x e execute macro mail: ----- c-x m mail c-c c-s send C-x C-e (insert "\n\nExtra Line of text") ;; chirico functions in .emacs ;; This creates an html template (defun my-html () (interactive) (insert "<html> <head> <META HTTP-EQUIV=\"Pragma\" CONTENT=\"no-cache\"> <META HTTP-EQUIV=\"Expires\" CONTENT=\"-1\"> </head> <body bgcolor=\"#ffffff\"> </body> </html>") ) Backspace issues when using "emacs -nw"? They putting the following in your "~/.emacs" file (global-set-key "\C-d" 'backward-delete-char) (global-set-key "\C-h" 'backward-delete-char) (global-set-key (kbd "DEL") 'delete-char) TIP 114: ncftpget - an intelligent ftp client (http://www.ncftp.com/). Also check your fedora or debian install. This package allows you to easily download packages from ftp sites. This is an example of connect to an ftp site, with a subdirectory, and downloading all in one command. $ ncftpget ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gcc/gcc-3.2.3/gcc-3.2.3.tar.gz Of if you want to get the fedora core 3 installs $ ncftpget ftp://ftp.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/fedora/linux/core/3/i386/iso/FC3* TIP 115: expr - evaluate expressions. You can use this on the command line $ expr 6 + 4 10 Note the spaces. Without spaces, you get the following: $ expr 6+4 6+4 If you're using "*", you'll need a "\" before it $ expr 10 \* 10 100 This also works for variables $ var1=34 $ expr $var1 + 3 37 or $ var1=2 $ var1=`expr $var1 \* 2` $ echo $var1 4 see (TIP 25) you can get the cosine(.23) $ var1=`echo "c(.23)"|bc -l` $ echo $var1 .97366639500537483696 You can also do substrings: $ expr substr "BigBear" 4 4 Bear And length of strings $ mstr="12345" $ expr length $mstr 5 Regular expressions $ expr "a3" : [a-z][1-9] 2 Or you can get a bit fancy $ myexpr="[a-z][1-9]" $ echo $myexpr [a-z][1-9] $ expr "a3" : $myexpr 2 This may not be the best way to find out if it is Friday, but it seems to work. It's more of an exercise in xargs. $ date Fri Dec 31 16:44:47 EST 2004 $ date|xargs -i expr {} : "[Fri]" 1 TIP 116: eval $ mypipe="|" $ eval ls $mypipe wc 6 6 129 Did you catch that? The above statement is the same as $ ls | wc Where "|" is put into the variable $mypipe (also see TIP 118) TIP 117: lxr, glimpse, patchset - tools for reading the kernel source This example puts some of the files in /home/src since my home partition is the largest. Plus, you do not want to over write the source in /usr/src/ If you want to put your files elsewhere just substitute /home/src for your desired directory. patchset -- download and setup $ export SRCDIR=/home/src $ cd $SRCDIR $ wget http://www.csn.ul.ie/~mel/projects/patchset/patchset-0.5.tar.gz $ export PATH=$PATH:$SRCDIR/patchset-0.5/bin Now edit "/home/src/patchset-0.5/etc/patchset.conf" and set WWW_USER to whatever your website runs as export WWW_USER=nobody Getting kernel source. The last step builds and asks a lot of questions. Enter yes to things that interest you, since this is what you will see in the source code. It is not going to build for booting. The "downlaod -p" is for downloading a patch. $ download 2.6.10 $ createset 2.6.10 $ make-kernel -b 2.6.10 glimpse -- download and setup $ mkdir -p /home/src/glimpse $ cd /home/src/glimpse $ wget http://webglimpse.net/trial/glimpse-latest.tar.gz $ tar -xzf glimpse-latest.tar.gz $ cd glimpse-4.18.0 $ ./configure; make $ make install lxr -- download and setup $ make -p /home/src/lxr $ cd /home/src/lxr $ wget http://heanet.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/lxr/lxr-0.3.1.tar.gz $ cd lxr-0.3 Edit "Makefile" and set PERLBIN to "/usr/bin/perl" or the where perl is on your system. Also set INSTALLPREFIX to "/var/www/lxr". Then, as root do the following: $ make install Apache changes Next edit the apache httpd.conf. On my system it is "/usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf", but if you did a fedora install I think this file is located at "/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf". Alias /lxr/ "/var/www/lxr/" <Directory "/var/www/lxr/"> Options ExecCGI Indexes Includes FollowSymLinks MultiViews AllowOverride all Order allow,deny Allow from all <Files ~ (search|source|ident|diff|find)> SetHandler cgi-script </Files> </Directory> lxr - continued "/var/www/lxr/http/lxr.conf" changes. The following contains my lxr.conf with changes made to almost every variable. Make sure you use your website in place of 192.168.1.71 # Configuration file. # Define typed variable "v", read valueset from file. variable: v, Version, [/var/www/lxr/source/versions], [/var/www/lxr/source/defversion] # Define typed variable "a". First value is default. variable: a, Architecture, (i386, alpha, m68k, mips, ppc, sparc, sparc64) # Define the base url for the LXR files. baseurl: http://192.168.1.71/lxr/http/ # These are the templates for the HTML heading, directory listing and # footer, respectively. htmlhead: /var/www/lxr/http/template-head htmltail: /var/www/lxr/http/template-tail htmldir: /var/www/lxr/http/template-dir # The source is here. sourceroot: /var/www/lxr/source/$v/ srcrootname: Linux # "#include <foo.h>" is mapped to this directory (in the LXR source # tree) incprefix: /include # The database files go here. dbdir: /var/www/lxr/source/$v/ # Glimpse can be found here. glimpsebin: /usr/local/bin/glimpse # The power of regexps. This is pretty Linux-specific, but quite # useful. Tinker with it and see what it does. (How's that for # documentation?) map: /include/asm[^\/]*/ /include/asm-$a/ map: /arch/[^\/]+/ /arch/$a/ Now you should be ready to run "make-lxr". Make sure the path is setup to patchset, which is repeated here. The last step take awhile. $ export SRCDIR=/home/src $ cd $SRCDIR $ export PATH=$PATH:$SRCDIR/patchset-0.5/bin $ make-lxr 2.6.10 Now you need to index the source. Below the ./glimpse_* file will be put in root. Checkout the -H option if you do not want them here on a temporary bases of if you run out of room. $ glimpseindex -o -t -w 5000 /var/www/lxr/source/2.6.10 >& .glimpse_out Since the above put the files under /root/.glimpse_* they should be moved $ mv /root/.glimps_* /var/www/lxr/source/2.6.10/. $ chown -R nobody.nobody ./.glimpse_* TIP 118: exec - you can change standard output and input without starting a new process. The exec redirect the output from ls and date to a file. Nothing is show on the terminal until "exec > /dev/tty" is performed $ exec > mfile $ ls $ date $ exec > /dev/tty This is an example of assigning file descriptor 3 to file "output3" for output, then, redirecting "ls" to this descriptor. Finally, file descriptor 3 is used for input, and the contents are read into the cat command. $ exec 3>output3 $ ls >& 3 $ exec 3<output3 $ cat <&3 ChangeLog CVS How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt.~1.193.~ mfile mfile2 mfile3 mftp output3 Could you redirect the output to 3 files and stderr? $ exec 3>output3 $ exec 4>output4 $ exec 5>output5 $ ls >& 3 >& 4 >& 5 >& 2 // Nope, can't do this. output3 output4 output5 Instead, you should do the following: $ ls | tee output3 | tee output4 |tee output5 Closing the "output" file descriptor $ >&3- Closing the "input" file descriptor $ 3<&- See what is still open on 0-10 $ lsof -a -p $$ -d 0-10 Recursion - the following counts to 5, then, quits. #!/bin/bash sleep 1 declare -x n let n=${n:=0}+1 [ $n -le 5 ] && echo "$n" && exec $0 There are some real-life applications for this technique, as follows: #!/bin/bash declare -x N declare -x n N=${N:=$(od -vAn -N1 -tu4 < /dev/urandom)} let n=${n:=0}+1 [ $(($n%2)) -eq 0 ] && echo "She Loves Me!" || echo "She Loves Me NOT!" [ $n -lt $N ] && exec $0 TIP 119: runlevel - need to know the current runlevel? $ who -r run-level 3 Dec 31 19:02 last=S Need to know the architecture? $ arch i686 TIP 120: at - executes commands at a specified time. A few examples here. The 1970 program will run next Auguest 2 even though the year 1970 has long past. $ at 6:30am Jan 12 < program $ at noon tomorrow < program $ at 1970 pm August 2 < program This is an interactive way to use the command: $ at now + 6 minutes warning: commands will be executed using (in order) a) $SHELL b) login shell c) /bin/sh at> ls at> date > /tmp/5min at> ^D job 3 at 2005-01-01 08:50 What jobs are in the queue? $ atq or $ at -l TIP 121: Creating a Manpage As root you can copy the following to /usr/local/man/man1/soup.1 which will give you a manpage for soup. .\" Manpage for souptonuts. .\" Contact mchirico@users.sourceforge.com to correct errors or omissions. .TH man 1 "04 January 2005" "1.0" "souptonuts man page" .SH NAME soup \- man page for souptonuts .SH SYNOPSIS soup .SH DESCRIPTION souptonuts is a collection of linux and open source tips. off for golf. .SH OPTIONS The souptonuts does not take any options. .SH SEE ALSO doughnut(1), golf(8) .SH BUGS No known bugs at this time. .SH AUTHOR Mike Chirico (mchirico@comcast.net mchirico@users.sourceforge.net) So, to view this man page $ man soup It's also possible to compress $ gzip /usr/local/man/man1/soup.1 For plenty of examples look at the other man pages. Also the following is helpful. The last one is a tutorial "man 7 mdoc" $ man manpath $ man groff $ man 7 mdoc TIP 122: dmesg - print out boot messages, or what is in the kernel ring buffer. If you missed the messages on boot-up, you can use dmesg to print them. $ dmesg > boot.msg Or to print, then, clear the ring # dmesg -c > boot.msg (also see TIP 20) TIP 123: gnus - emacs email nntp news reader (comcast as example with NO TLS or SSL) First check that you can connect to the news group: $ telnet newsgroups.comcast.net 119 Trying 216.196.97.136... Connected to newsgroups.comcast.net. Escape character is '^]'. 200 News.GigaNews.Com If you want to check for TLS or SSL see (TIP 54). Here is a very simple configuration example without encryption. It appears that comcast does not support ssl or TLS. In the "~/.emacs" file you would add the following to get comcast news groups (setq gnus-select-method '(nntp "newsgroups.comcast.net")) Then, create an "~/.authinfo" file with the following settings using you own username and password. machine newsgroups.comcast.net login borkey@comcast.net password borkeypass0rd Next create a "~/.newsrc" with your groups news.announce.newusers: comp.lang.c++.moderated! 1-500 comp.unix.programmer! 1-500 comp.unix.shell! 1-500 gnu.emacs.gnus! 1-500 Finally, create a "~/.gnus" with the following email settings for you (setq user-mail-address "mchirico@comcast.net") (defun my-message-mode-setup () (setq fill-column 72) (turn-on-auto-fill)) (add-hook 'message-mode-hook 'my-message-mode-setup) To get into gnus E-x gnus The following are common gnus commands RET view the article under the cursor A A (shift-a, shift a): List all newsgroups known to the server. l (lower-case L) : List only subscribed groups with unread articles. L : List all newsgroups in .newsrc file. g : See if new articles have arrived. Some commands for reading n next unread article p previous article SPC scroll down moves to next unread when at the bottom of the article del scroll up F follow-up to group on the article you are reading now. f follow-up to group without citing the article R reply by mail and cite the article r reply by mail without citing the article m new mail a new posting c Catchup C-u / t Show only young headers / t without C-u limits the summary to old headers T T toggle threading C-u g Display raw article hit g to return to normal view t Show all headers it's a toggle W w Wordwrap the current article W r Decode ROT13 a toggle ^ fetch parent of article L create a scorefile-entry based on the current article (low score) ? gives you information what each char means I like L but high score Commands to send email C-c C-c send message C-c C-d save message as draft C-c C-k kill message C-c C-m f attach file M-q reformat paragraph TIP 124: Sending Email from telnet Note, if you are on the computer you can sometime use the local loopback. In fact, sometimes you can only use the local loop back 127.0.0.1 in place of "bozo.company.com" 1 [mchirico@soup Notes]$ telnet bozo.company.com 25 2 Trying 192.168.0.204... 3 Connected to bozo.company.com. 4 Escape character is '^]'. 5 220 bozo.company.com ESMTP Postfix (Postfix-20010228-pl03) (Mandrake Linux) 6 HELO fakedomain.com 7 HELO fakedomain.com // server echo 8 250 bozo.company.com 9 MAIL FROM: test@fakedomain.com 10 MAIL FROM: test@fakedomain.com // server echo 11 250 Ok 12 RCPT TO: mchirico@someother.com 13 RCPT TO: mchirico@someother.com // server echo 14 250 Ok 15 DATA 16 DATA // echo 17 354 Enter mail, end with "." on a line by itself 18 This is a test message 19 This is a test message 20 to send 21 to send 22 . 23 250 2.0.0 j0B0uH3L018469 Message accepted for delivery Above on line 6 you can type in any domain name. Line 7 is an echo. All echos are listed in the comment field. TIP 125: IP forwarding, IP Masquerade # echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward # ipchains -F forward # ipchains -P forward DENY # ipchains -A forward -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j MASQ # ipchains -A forward -i eth1 -j MASQ This assumes that your internal network is 192.168.0.0 on eth1, and the internet is connected to eth0. (Also See TIP 182) TIP 126: Setting KDE as the default desktop manager Edit "/etc/sysconfig/desktop" to include the two lines: DESKTOP="KDE" DISPLAYMANAGER="KDE" TIP 127: Have a file and you do not know whay type it is (tar, gz, ASCII, binary) ? Use the file command. Below it is used on the file "mftp" $ file mftp mftp: Bourne-Again shell script text executable TIP 128: Software RAID: Two good references http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Software-RAID-HOWTO-1.html http://lists.us.dell.com/pipermail/linux-poweredge/2003-July/014331.html Note, you must setup grub for each RAID 1 device. Suppose you have 2 SCSI drives (sda and sdb). By default grub is setup on sda; but, you need to enable it for sdb (/dev/hdb for ide) as follows: grub>device (hd0) /dev/sdb grub>root (hd0,0) grub>setup (hd0) Checking if "/boot/grub/stage1" exists... no Checking if "/grub/stage1" exists... yes Checking if "/grub/stage2" exists... yes Checking if "/grub/e2fs_stage1_5" exists.. yes Running "embed /grub/e2fs_stage1_5 (hd0)"... 16 sectors are embedded. succeeded Running "install /grub/stage1 (hd0) (hd0)1+16 p (hd0,0)/grub/stage2 /grub/grub .conf"... succeeded. Done. grub> grub>quit Checking to see if everything is working: $ cat /proc/mdstat Checking the drives $ sfdisk -d /dev/sdb $ sfdisk -d /dev/sda $ fdisk -l /dev/sda "This will give general information" $ fdisk -l "General information for all drives" Adding raid (assume you want to add the first drive "sda1", or if it is the second drive then substitute "sda2" below ) $ raidhotadd /dev/md0 /dev/sda1 $ raidhotadd /dev/md1 /dev/sda2 $ raidhotadd /dev/md2 /dev/sda3 This is an example of an cat /proc/mdstat that is working. Note that there is a listing for both sda1[0] and sdb1[1] $ cat /proc/mdstat Personalities : [raid1] read_ahead 1024 sectors Event: 12 md0 : active raid1 sda1[0] sdb1[1] 104320 blocks [2/2] [UU] md1 : active raid1 sda2[0] sdb2[1] 1044160 blocks [2/2] [UU] md2 : active raid1 sda3[0] sdb3[1] 34411136 blocks [2/2] [UU] unused devices: <none> Compare that to this where md2 is missing sdb3 $ cat /proc/mdstat Personalities : [raid1] read_ahead 1024 sectors Event: 9 md0 : active raid1 sda1[0] sdb1[1] 104320 blocks [2/2] [UU] md1 : active raid1 sda2[0] sdb2[1] 1044160 blocks [2/2] [UU] md2 : active raid1 sdb3[1] <---- HERE 34411136 blocks [2/1] [_U] unused devices: <none> If you are rebuilding an array, you can watch it by doing the following: $ watch -n1 cat /proc/mdstat Need to know the raid setup? $ cat /etc/raidtab TIP 129: Resetting Redhat Linux Passwords using GRUB 1. Press 'e' 2. Press 'e' again 3. Append 'single' to the kernel version listing See http://linuxgazette.net/107/tomar.html TIP 130: mtr - matt's traceroute. This is an advanced traceroute that keeps [http://www.bitwizard.nl/mtr/] $ mtr www.yahoo.com Matt's traceroute [v0.52] third-fl-71.localdomain Thu Jan 20 11:05:57 2005 Keys: D - Display mode R - Restart statistics Q - Quit Packets Pings Hostname %Loss Rcv Snt Last Best Avg Worst 1. 192.168.1.1 0% 3 3 0 0 0 1 2. ??? 3. fe-2-6-rr01.willogrove5.pa.pa01 0% 3 3 8 7 7 8 4. srp-8-1-ar01.willowgrove1.pa.pa 0% 2 2 8 8 8 8 5. pos7-3-cr01.torresdale.pa.core. 0% 2 2 8 8 8 8 6. 12.119.53.53 0% 2 2 12 12 12 13 7. tbr1-p012401.phlpa.ip.att.net 0% 2 2 12 12 13 13 8. tbr1-cl8.n54ny.ip.att.net 0% 2 2 13 13 13 13 9. ggr2-p310.n54ny.ip.att.net 0% 2 2 12 12 13 14 10. so-1-0-0.gar4.NewYork1.Level3.n 0% 2 2 14 14 37 61 11. ae-1-54.bbr2.NewYork1.Level3.ne 0% 2 2 13 12 13 13 12. ge-0-3-0.bbr2.Washington1.Level 0% 2 2 19 19 19 19 13. ge-1-1-51.car1.Washington1.Leve 0% 2 2 18 18 19 20 14. 4.79.228.6 0% 2 2 21 19 20 21 15. UNKNOWN-216-109-120-201.yahoo.c 0% 2 2 21 20 20 21 16. w2.rc.vip.dcn.yahoo.com 0% 2 2 23 21 22 23 TIP 131: chfn - change finger information $ chfn Next you are asked for a password and user information. TIP 132: chsh - change login shell First, you may want to get a listing of all the possible shells. $ chsh -l /bin/sh /bin/bash /sbin/nologin /bin/ash /bin/bsh /bin/ksh /usr/bin/ksh /usr/bin/pdksh /bin/tcsh /bin/csh /bin/zsh TIP 133: bash - working with binary, hex and base 3. For the variable must be declare as an integer. Then specify the <base>#<value>. The example below is 22 in base 3. $ declare -i n $ n=3#22 $ echo $n 8 Base 16 (hex) $ declare -i n2 $ n2=16#a $ echo $n2 10 Base 8 (octal) $ declare -i n3 $ n3=8#11 $ echo $n3 9 Note 8+1=9 TIP 134: monitoring IP traffic. Try iptraf http://iptraf.seul.org/ TIP 135: enscript - convert text files to PostScript TIP 136: dd and tar - blocking factor. How to determine the blocking factor, block size so that tar and dd can work together. Step 1: Create a large file on local disk, in a directory "1" that will eventually be written to tape. This will be created with dd as follows: $ mkdir 1 $ dd if=/dev/zero of=disk-image count=40960 40960+0 records in 40960+0 records out $ cd .. Step 2: tar the directory and contents to tape. First rewind the tape. These examples use /dev/nst0 as the location of the tape. Make sure to substitute your values if needed. $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ tar --label="Test 1" --create --blocking-factor=128 --file=/dev/nst0 1 Step 3: Read data from the tape using a block size of 128k. If you get an I/O error, which could happend if you used a different blocking factor above, then, you may need to increase the bs to 256, or 512 etc. as needed. $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ dd if=/dev/nst0 bs=128k of=testblocksz count=1 0+1 records in 0+1 records out $ ls -l testblocksz -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 65536 Feb 9 10:41 testblocksz $ ls -lh testblocksz -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 64k Feb 9 10:41 testblocksz Note above that the size 65536 is equal to 64k. That "h" switch in "ls" is for human readable. Step 4: tar uses a multiplier of 512*blocking-factor to get block size. Again 512 * blocking-factor = block size used in dd command. Putting in the values, we see that 512 * 128 = 65536 Step 5: So what does this tell you? You can now use these numbers to "dd" files to tape. But, first tar will be used to create the file locally. $ tar --label="Test 1" --create --blocking-factor=128 --file=test.tar 1 Step 6: Send this to tape with the dd command. Remember 64k is equal to 65536. $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ dd if=test.tar bs=64k of=/dev/nst0 Step 7: Now test that it can be read with tar command using blocking-factor=128. Note the "t" command in tar is for tell. It will not write data. $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ tar -tvf /dev/nst0 --blocking-factor=128 V--------- 0/0 0 2005-02-09 10:38:20 Test 1--Volume Header-- drwxr-xr-x root/root 0 2005-02-09 10:34:10 1/ -rw-r--r-- root/root 20971520 2005-02-09 10:34:11 1/disk-image Step 8: Reading tape data with dd. Most of the time a high "ibs" input block size $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind $ dd if=/dev/nst0 of=outfromdd.tar ibs=64k 321+0 records in 41088+0 records out Step 9: Verify that outfromdd.tar can be read by tar with blocking-factor=128 $ tar -tvf outfromdd.tar --blocking-factor=128 V--------- 0/0 0 2005-02-09 10:38:20 Test 1--Volume Header-- drwxr-xr-x root/root 0 2005-02-09 10:34:10 1/ -rw-r--r-- root/root 20971520 2005-02-09 10:34:11 1/disk-image PULLING FILES: The dd command can be used to pull files. ssh target_address dd if=remotefile | dd of=localfile Or, a specific example of getting a file from a computer called hamlet. $ ssh root@hamlet dd if=/home/cvs/test | dd of=/home/storage/test GOING BACKWARD AND FORWARD ON TAPE: Go to end of data $ mt -f /dev/nst0 eod Previous record $ mt -f /dev/nst0 bsfm 1 Forward record $ mt -f /dev/nst0 fsf 1 Rewind $ mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind Tell $ mt -f /dev/nst0 tell (Reference TIP 151 - for how to get around firewalls) Below is a script that I use to backup computers via ssh. The tape drive is on "nis" and the extra space is on "hamlet". #!/bin/bash # Program to backup server remotely # Assume remote server is nis, you are on squeezel # # Recover from tape # # dd if=/dev/nst0 of=test.tar.gz bs=64k # filename="support1.$(date "+%m%d%y%H%M").tar.gz" DIRTOBACKUP=/var/www #tar cvzf - $DIRTOBACKUP | ssh root@nis '(mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind; dd of=/dev/nst0 bs=64k )' tar cvzf - $DIRTOBACKUP | ssh support1@hamlet "dd of=/home/support1/backups/${filename} " Another example program, below, pushes the last ".tar.gz" file to tape: #!/bin/bash # Program to push files to tape # # # Notes on recovering from tape # # dd if=/dev/nst0 of=test.tar.gz ibs=64k # or # $ ssh root@tapeserver "mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind" # $ ssh root@tapeserver "dd if=/dev/nst0 ibs=64k"|dd of=cvs1.tar.gz # # # # First rewind tape ssh root@tapeserver 'mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind' # # Grab only the last file file=$(find /home/cvs -iname 'cvs*.tar.gz'|sort|tail -n 1) dd if=${file}|ssh root@tapeserver 'dd of=/dev/nst0 bs=64k' TIP 137: Apache - redirecting pages. All changes are in httpd.conf RedirectMatch (.*)\.gif$ http://www.anotherserver.com$1.jpg Redirect /service http://foo2.bar.com/service TIP 138: samba mounts via ssh - mounting a samba share through an ssh tunnel, going through an intermediate computer, that accepts ssh. We'll call this intermediate computer middle [65.219.4.23], and we want to get to destination [192.168.0.81]. The user will be mchirico. STEP 1: $ mkdir -p /samba/share STEP 2: This has to be done as root, since we are using a lower port. $ ssh -N -L 139:192.168.0.81:139 mchirico@65.219.4.23 STEP 3: umount /samba/sales /bin/mount -t smbfs -o username=donkey,workgroup=donkeydomain, password=passw0rk1,port=139,dmask=770,fmask=660, netbiosname=homecpu //localhost/share /samba/share TIP 139: Music on Fedora Core -- How to play music on http://magnatune.com with "xmms". The following command will show the sound driver: $ lspci|grep -i audio STEP 1: Unmute amixer with the following command: $ amixer set Master 100% unmute $ amixer set PCM 100% unmute Note you can also get a graphical interface with "alsamixer" $ alsamixer h,F1 -- for help Esc -- exit Tab -- move to selections STEP 2: Test a sound file "*.au" with aplay. To quickly find files on your system use the "locate *.au" command. $ aplay /usr/lib/python2.3/test/audiotest.au STEP 3: Install "xmms-mp3-1.2.10-9.2.1.fc3.rf.i386.rpm" which does not come with Fedora because of GPL license restrictions. The latest version of this package can be found at the following url: http://rpmseek.com/rpm-pl/xmms-mp3.html $ rpm -ivh xmms-mp3-1.2.10-9.2.1.fc3.rf.i386.rpm STEP 4: Go to magnatun "http://magnatune.com/", select genre and make sure xmms is the default player. TIP 140: Routing -- getting access to a network 1 hop away. You are currently on the 192 network and you want access to the 172.21.0.0 network that has a computer straddling the two, with /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward set to 1. $ route add -net 172.21.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.0.204 To undo: $ route del -net 172.21.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.0.204 Now you can ping 172.21.0.21. Does not work? Go on to 192.168.0.204 and execute the following commands: $ echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward $ cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward 1 To Look at the the gateway, execute the following command. $ netstat -r References: http://lartc.org/lartc.html TIP 141: RAM disk -- creating a filesystem in RAM. $ mkfs -t ext3 -q /dev/ram1 4096 $ mkdir -p /fsram $ mount /dev/ram1 /fsram -o defaults,rw TIP 142: Create a Live Linux CDROM using BusyBox and OpenSSH. These steps are rather long. A complete tutorial is given at the following link: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/instructions_boot_system.txt TIP 143: SystemImager (http://www.systemimager.org/) SystemImager is software that automates Linux installs, software distribution, and production deployment. TIP 144: Mounted a filesystem in rescue mode, yet, you cannot read and write? Remount. $ mount -o remount / TIP 145: Nmap commands to check for Microsoft VPN connection. $ nmap -sO -p 47 vpn1.someserver.com $ nmap -sS -p T:1723 vpn1.someserver.com By the way, with nmap you can specify multiple ports. Below is an example of multiple ports; but, use the commands above for Microsoft VPN services. $ nmap -sS -p T:1723-3000 TIP 146: Perl and ssh - monitoring systems. The output from ssh can be parsed. Below is a simple procedure to just to read the ssh ouput into perl. #!/usr/bin/perl # $pid = open $readme, "ssh root\@hamlet df -lh|" or die "Could not ssh\n"; while(<$readme>) { print $_ } close $readme But note, you probably want to do something more complex. Below is a more robust example that bypassed all the fortune, heading junk that you may encounter when logging in. #!/usr/bin/perl # $pid = open $readme, "ssh root\@hamlet df -lh 2>/dev/null|" or die "Could not ssh\n"; while(<$readme>) { print $_ } close $readme NO! you CANNOT do bidirectional communication with the open statement. Note the "|" before and after below, which cannot be done. # Cannot do this! $pid = open $readme, "|ssh root\@hamlet df -lh 2>/dev/null|" or die "Could not ssh\n"; Below is a simple Perl example working with arrays: #!/usr/bin/perl @ArrayOfArray = ( [ "ant", "bee" ], [ "mouse", "mole", "rat" ], [ "duck", "goose", "flamingo" ], [ "rose","carnation","sunflower"], ); for $i ( 0 .. $#ArrayOfArray ) { for $j ( 0 .. $#{$ArrayOfArray[$i]} ) { print "Element $i $j is $ArrayOfArray[$i][$j]\n"; } } # Or this is another way to list elements foreach( @ArrayOfArray ) { foreach $i (0..$#$_) { print "$_->[$i] " } print "\n"; } Below is an example of working with Hash of Arrays: #!/usr/bin/perl # ./program < /etc/passwd while(<>){ next unless s/^(.*?):\s*//; $HoA{$1} = [ split(/:/) ]; } for $i (keys %HoA ) { print "$i: @{ $HoA{$i} } \n"; } Example of regular expression. This is my most used regular expression - I like this sample. See the "www.unix.org.ua" link at the end of this tip. "hot cross buns" =~ /cross/; print "Matched: <$`> $& <$'>\n"; # Matched: <hot > cross < buns> print "Left: <$`>\n"; # Left: <hot > print "Match: <$&>\n"; # Match: <cross> print "Right: <$'>\n"; # Right: < buns> If you're looking for Perl information, type "man perl", which will show you how to get even more information. Or better yet, take a look at the following link: http://www.unix.org.ua/orelly/perl/prog3/ch09_01.htm also http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/UnixReview/ For a quick example on using Perl with SQLite, see the following links: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/README_sqlite_tutorial.html?download or http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/1428/ or http://www.perl.com/pub/a/1999/09/refererents.html Standard input for files. This example will read from stdin, or open a file if given as an argument, and convert all "<" to "<" and ">" to ">", which can be handy when converting text files to html files. Note the "while(<>)" will take multiple file names on the command line. #!/usr/bin/perl while(<>) { s/&/&/g; s/</</g; s/>/>/g; s/</</g; s/>/>/g; print; } Perl Debugger is very useful for testing commands and works like an interpreter, just like python. So to get into the Perl Debugger execute the command below, "q" to quit. $ perl -de 0 Reference TIP 170 TIP 147: Shutdown # shutdown 8:00 -- Shutdown at 8:00 # shutdown +13 -- Shutdown after 13min # shutdown -r now -- Shutdown now and restart # shutdown -k +2 -- "The system is going DOWN to maintenance mode in 2 minutes!" The above is only a warning. # shutdown -h now -- Shutdown now and halt # shutdown -c -- Cancel shutdown TIP 148: ac - print statistics about users connect time $ ac -p -- print hour usage by user (individual) $ ac -dy -- print daily usage Options can also be combined $ ac -dyp TIP 149: Smart Monitoring Tools: Disk failing? Or want to know the temperature of your hard-drive? http://smartmontools.sourceforge.net/ For a good, quick tutorial, see the Linux Journal article http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6983 Below are some common commands: $ smartctl -i /dev/hda $ smartctl -Hc /dev/hda $ smartctl -A /dev/hda TIP 150: Monitor dhcp trafic - dhcpdump and tcpdump. Download dhcpdump $ wget http://voxel.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/mavetju/dhcpdump-1.5.tar.gz $ ./configure $ make && make install Once it's installed, you can monitor all dhcp traffic as follows, if done with root. $ tcpdump -lenx -i eth0 -s 1500 port bootps or port bootpc| dhcpdump The above assumes you are using eth0 (ethernet port 0). TIP 151: Breaking Firewalls with ssh A sample .ssh/config file (note this must have chmod 600 rights) ## Server1 ## Host 130.21.19.227 LocalForward 20000 192.168.0.66:80 LocalForward 22000 192.168.0.66:22 With the above "~/.ssh/config" file, after sshing into 130.21.19.227 it is then possible to ssh into nearby computers directly. $ ssh -l mchirico 130.21.19.227 $ scp -P 22000 authorized_keys* mchirico@localhost:. $ ssh -l mchirico localhost -p 22000 For the complete article reference the following link: http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/sshtips.htm TIP 152: Renaming files - suppose you want to rename all the ".htm" files to ".html" $ rename .htm .html *.htm Or, suppose you files file1, file2, file3 ... $ touch file1 file2 file3 file4 file5 file6 $ rename file file. file* The above command will give you "file.1", "file.2" ... "file.6" TIP 153: Renaming files with Perl - this is taken from "Programming Perl 3rd Edition" #!/usr/bin/perl # rename - change filenames $op = shift; for (@ARGV) { $was = $_; eval $op; die if $@; # next line calls built-in function, not the script rename($was,$_) unless $was eq $_; } The above Perl program can be used as follows: $ rename 's/\.orig$//' *.orig $ rename 'y/A-Z/a-z/ unless /^Make/' * Also reference: http://www.unix.org.ua/orelly/perl/prog3/ TIP 154: R project (http://www.r-project.org) To start R, just type "R" at the command prompt and "q()" to quit. Below 2 is raised to powers 0 through 6 and thrown into an array. $ R > N <- 2^(0:6) > N [1] 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 > There is a summary summary() command. > summary(N) Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max. 1.00 3.00 8.00 18.14 24.00 64.00 Note that the array begins as 1 and not 0 > N[1:3] [1] 1 2 4 TIP 155: ls - listing files by size, with the biggest file listed last $ ls --sort=size -lhr The above command sorts files by size, listing the contents in "h" human readable format in reverse order. Note the options: --sort={none,time,size,extension} TIP 156: Perl - program to clean up old versions of files #!/usr/bin/perl # Copyright (c) GPL 2005 Mike Chirico # This program deletes old files from several directories # and within each directory there must be x number of copies # each y number of bytes # sub delete_old_ones { $directory_and_file=$_[0]; $save_count=$_[1]; $bytes_in_file=$_[2]; # Don't change setting here of '-lt' $pid = open $readme, "ls -lt $directory_and_file|" or die "Could not execute\n"; while(<$readme>) { my @fields = split; # Make sure we have $save_count good ones with data if ($fields[4] > $bytes_in_file && $save_count > 0) { $save_count--; print "Kept files: $fields[4] $fields[8]\n"; } # delete the old ones if ($save_count <= 0 ) { print "Deleted files: $fields[4] $fields[8]\n"; unlink $fields[8]; } } close $readme; } @AofA = ( [ "/home/cvs/backups/*.gz", "6",196621 ], [ "/home/mail/backups/*.gz","5",34 ], [ "/home/snort/backups/*.gz","2",34 ], [ "/home/server1/backups/*.gz","2",34 ], [ "/home/actserver/backups/*.gz","2",34 ], [ "/home/server2/backups/*.gz","2",34 ], ); foreach( @AofA ) { &delete_old_ones($_->[0],$_->[1],$_->[2]); } Reference TIP 170 and the following link: http://www.unix.org.ua/orelly/perl/prog3/ TIP 157: Graphics and Visualization Software that runs on Linux http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Scientific-Computing-with-GNU-Linux/graphvis.html TIP 158: Keeping files in sync going both ways. Unlike rsync, this is not a one way mirror option. You will need ocaml installed first. $ wget http://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/ocaml-3.08/ocaml-3.08.3.tar.gz $ tar -xzf ocaml-3.08.3.tar.gz $ cd ocaml-3.08.3 $ ./configure $ make world $ make opt $ make install Next, get unison and put it in a different directory. [http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/] $ wget http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/download/stable/latest/unison-2.10.2.tar.gz $ tar -xzf unison-2.10.2.tar.gz $ cd unison-2.10.2 $ make UISTYLE=text $ su # cp unison /usr/local/bin/. Note, you have to copy the file manually. See the following article [http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7712] TIP 159: Dump ext2/ext3 filesystem information with "dumpe2fs". Perform the mount command and query away. $ dumpe2fs /dev/sda1 TIP 160: sysreport - a script that generates an HTML report on the system configuration. It gathers information about the hardware and is somewhat redhat specific. The utility should be run as root. $ /usr/sbin/sysreport TIP 161: Key Bindings Using bind. You can bind, say, ctl-t to a command. Add the following to you "~/.inputrc" file, just as it is typed below with quotes. "\C-t": ls -l Next, run the command $ bind -f .inputrc Or, you can do everything on the command line; however, it won't be there the next time you log in. Below is the way to do everything on the command line. $ bind -x '"\C-t":ls -l' To unbind use the "-r" option. Single quotes are not needed. $ bind -r "\C-t" Getting a list of all bindings can be done as follows, and not this can be redirected to the ".inputrc" file for further editing. $ bind -p > .inputrc TIP 162: awk - common awk commands. Find device names "sd" or with major number 4 and device name "tty". Print the record number NR, plus the major number and minor number. $ awk '$2 == "sd"||$1 == 4 && $2 == "tty" { print NR,$1,$2}' /proc/devices Find device name equal to "sound". $ awk '/sound/{print NR,$1,$2}' /proc/devices Print the 5th record, first field, in file test $ awk 'NR==5{print $1}' test Print a record, skip 4 records, print a record etc from file1 $ awk '(NR-1) % 4 == 0 {print $1}' file1 Print all records except the last one from file1 $ tac file1|awk 'NR > 1 {print $0}'|tac Print A,B,C ..Z on each line, cycling back to A if greater than 26 lines $ awk '{ print substr("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ",(NR-1)%26+1,1),$0}' file1 Number of bytes in a directory. $ ls -l|awk 'BEGIN{ c=0}{ c+=$5} END{ print c}' TIP 163: Configuring Remote Logging. If you have several servers on 192.168.1.0, you can setup remote logging as follows. MAIN LOG SERVER (192.168.1.81): Firewall - allow UDP port 514 on the main server that will receive the logs. $ iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.0/24 --dport 514 -j ACCEPT Edit "/etc/sysconfig/syslog" and add the "-r" option to SYSLOGD_OPTIONS as shown below. SYSLOGD_OPTIONS="-r -m -0" Note, the "-r" is to allow remote logging and "-m 0" specifies that that the syslog process should not write regular timestamps. I prefer to only write timestamps for the clients. Next, restart the logging process $ service syslog restart CLIENT LOG SERVER: Edit "/etc/syslog.conf" and add the ip address of the log server, or put in the hostname. *.* @192.168.1.81 Next, restart the logging process $ service syslog restart TIP 164: kudzu - hardware on your system. To probe the hardware on your system without doing anything, issue the following command. $ kudzu -p But wait, a lot of this information is already recorded in the following file /etc/sysconfig/hwconf You can also use lspci to list all PCI devices. $ lspci Also, take a look at the script /etc/sbin/sysreport, since this script has a lot of info gathering commands. You can pick and choose what you want, or run the complete report. If you just want information on the NIC $ ip link show eth0 2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 1000 link/ether 00:11:11:8a:be:3f brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff TIP 165: cfengine - a very power agent for monitoring and administrating both a single computer and or multiple computers. [ http://www.cfengine.org/ ] The following is a quick example on downloading and installing cfengine. $ ncftpget ftp://ftp.iu.hio.no/pub/cfengine/cfengine-2.1.15.tar.gz $ md5sum cfengine-2.1.15.tar.gz f03de82709f84c3d6d916b6e557321f9 cfengine-2.1.15.tar.gz $ tar -xzf cfengine-2.1.15.tar.gz You need to have a current version of BerkeleyDB (http://downloads.sleepycat.com/db-4.3.28.tar.gz). Note that BerkeleyDB has a funny install. You cd to the "build_unix" directory, then, Installing BerkeleyDB if needed: $ wget http://downloads.sleepycat.com/db-4.3.28.tar.gz $ tar -xzf db-4.3.28.tar.gz $ cd db-4.3.28/build_unix/ $ ../dist/configure make make install You also need a current version of OpenSSL. For instructions on how to install OpenSSL see (http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/postfix_tutorial.html). See (TIP 49) on putting "/usr/local/BerkeleyDB.4.3/lib" in the "/etc/ld.so.conf" file. Or once BerkeleyDB is installed, you can put the location on the command line as follows: Configuring cfengine with direct reference to BerkeleyDB.4.3. First cd to the cfengine source. $ ./configure --with-berkeleydb=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB.4.3/lib $ make $ make install Next create the following directories: $ mkdir -p /var/cfengine/bin $ mkdir -p /var/cfengine/inputs Copy needed files (cfagent, cfdoc, cfenvd, cfenvgraph, cfexecd, cfkey, cfrun, cfservd, cfshow): $ cp /usr/local/sbin/cf* /var/cfengine/bin You'll also need to generate keys. As root, execute the following: $ cfkey The command above will write the public and private keys in "/var/cfengine/ppkeys". You probably want (cfexecd, cfservd, and cfenvd) running on all servers. If you add the following to "/etc/rc.local" these daemons will start on reboot. # Lines in /etc/rc.local /usr/local/sbin/cfexecd /usr/local/sbin/cfservd /usr/local/sbin/cfenvd Also, make sure you run each command now as follows: $ /usr/local/sbin/cfexecd $ /usr/local/sbin/cfservd $ /usr/local/sbin/cfenvd Firewall settings must be adjusted to allows 5308 for tcp/udp. My local network is 192.168.1.0, so I'm opening it up for all my computers. $ iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.0/24 --dport 5308 -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s 192.168.1.0/24 --dport 5308 -j ACCEPT A set of keys needs to be on the server and hosts. For example, my key on "tape.squeezel.com" should be copied over to the server "squeezel.squeezel.com" as follows: This is done from tape.squeezel.com $ scp /var/cfengine/ppkeys/localhost.pub root@squeezel.squeezel.com:/var/cfengine/ppkeys/root-tape.squeezel.com.pub $ scp root@squeezel.squeezel.com:/var/cfengine/ppkeys/localhost.pub /var/cfengine/ppkeys/root-squeezel.squeezel.com.pub Also, "/var/cfengine/inputs/cfrun.hosts" on the server "squeezel.squeezel.com" must contain all the computers that will get updated. This is "cfrun.hosts" on "squeezel.squeezel.com" closet.squeezel.com tape.squeezel.com Once I'm done, from "tape.squeezel.com" I can run the following test: $ cfrun squeezel.squeezel.com -v TIP 166: cfengine - a quick example. This example will be run as root. You create the file "cfagent.conf" in "/var/cfengine/inputs/". The example below will checksum all the files in /home/chirico/deleteme/tripwire, it will also comment out the line "finger" in any file located in /tmp/testdir/stuff, also appending the command in this file " Edit change with cfengine". # /var/cfengine/inputs/cfagent.conf # # You run this with the following: # cfagent -vK control: actionsequence = ( files tidy editfiles ) ChecksumDatabase = ( /var/cfengine/cache.db ) # Below, true to update md5 ChecksumUpdates = ( true ) files: /home/chirico/deleteme/tripwire checksum=md5 recurse=inf /home/chirico/deleteme/tripwire/moredata checksum=md5 recurse=inf #/home/chirico/deleteme/tripwire/compress recurse=inf include=*.txt acti on=compress # If the database isn't secure, nothing is secure... /var/cfengine/cache.db mode=600 owner=root action=fixall tidy: /home/chirico/deleteme/tripwire pattern=*~ recurse=inf age=0 # You must put an age. 0 runs now. editfiles: { /tmp/testdir/stuff HashCommentLinesContaining "finger" AppendIfNoSuchLine "# Edit Change with cfengine " } A few further notes on the above. The command "actionsequence = ( files tidy editfiles) tells the order of what to execute. The heading "tidy:" deletes files, and of course, "editfiles" does the editing of files. To run the example, execute the following command. The "-K" causes the lock file to be ignored. $ cfagent -vK TIP 167: Implementing Disk Quotas - a quick example that can easily be done on a live system for testing. There is no need to reboot, since you'll be creating a virtual filesystem. Do the following as root. First create a mount point. # mkdir -p /quota Next, create 20M file. Since I have many of these files, I created a special directory "/usr/disk-img" # mkdir -p /usr/disk-img # dd if=/dev/zero of=/usr/disk-img/disk-quota.ext3 count=40960 The dd command above create a 20 MB file because, by default, dd uses a block size of 512 bytes. That makes the size: 40960*512=20971520. Next, format this as an ext3 filesystem # /sbin/mkfs -t ext3 -q /usr/disk-img/disk-quota.ext3 -F Add the following line to "/etc/fstab" /usr/disk-img/disk-quota.ext3 /quota ext3 rw,loop,usrquota,grpquota 0 0 Now, mount this filesystem # mount /quota Take a look at it: # ls -l /quota lost+found Now, run "quotacheck" # quotacheck -vug /quota You'll get errors the first time this is run, because you have no quota files. But, run it a second time and you'll see something similiar to the following: # quotacheck -vug /quota quotacheck: Scanning /dev/loop2 [/quota] done quotacheck: Checked 3 directories and 4 files Now take a look at the files: # ls -l /quota total 26 -rw------- 1 root root 6144 Jun 14 12:23 aquota.group -rw------- 1 root root 6144 Jun 14 12:23 aquota.user drwx------ 2 root root 12288 Jun 14 12:18 lost+found Next use "edquota" to grant the user "chirico" a certain quota # edquota -f /quota chirico This will bring up a menu, and here I have edited so that user "chirico" has a soft limit of 120*512=61K, and a soft limit of 2 inodes and a hard limit of 5. Disk quotas for user chirico (uid 500): Filesystem blocks soft hard inodes soft hard /dev/loop2 2 120 150 1 2 3 Next, turn quotas on with the following command: $ quotaon /quota If you need to turn off quotas, the command is "quotaoff -a" for all filesystems. You'll run into errors if you try to run quotacheck, say "quotacheck -avug" because this tries to unmount and mount the filesystem. You need to turn off quotas first "quotaoff /quota". Note you only need to run quotacheck once, or when doing maintenance after a system crash. To get a report on the quote, runn "repquota" as follows: $ repquota /quota *** Report for user quotas on device /dev/loop0 Block grace time: 7days; Inode grace time: 7days Block limits File limits User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace ---------------------------------------------------------------------- root -- 1189 0 0 2 0 0 chirico -+ 93 0 0 4 2 5 6days Note above that user "chirico" has used 4 on the file limits. This user has a hard limit of 5. So when this user tries to create 2 more files (bring this over the limit of 5) then he will get the following error as demonstrated below. [chirico@squeezel chirico]$ touch one [chirico@squeezel chirico]$ touch two loop0: write failed, user file limit reached. touch: cannot touch `two': Disk quota exceeded Now, if repquota (run by root) is executed it shows the following: $ repquota /quota *** Report for user quotas on device /dev/loop0 Block grace time: 7days; Inode grace time: 7days Block limits File limits User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace ---------------------------------------------------------------------- root -- 1189 0 0 2 0 0 chirico -+ 94 0 0 5 2 5 6days Note the "+" sign above. User "chirico" is above the File soft limits, and in this case above the hard limits. To warn user by sending email to them, run "warnquota", but you need check that "/etc/warnquota.conf" is setup correctly. For the example above, this file should look as follows: $ cat /etc/quotatab # # This is sample quotatab (/etc/quotatab) # Here you can specify description of each device for user # # Comments begin with hash in the beginning of the line # Example of description /dev/loop0: This is loopback device Just run the following as root: $ warnquota By the way, if you want to change the grace period, it can only be done on a filesystem basis. Not per user. $ edquota -t Users can run "quota" to see their usage as follows: [chirico@squeezel ~]$ quota Disk quotas for user chirico (uid 500): Filesystem blocks quota limit grace files quota limit grace /dev/loop0 94 0 0 5 10 50 As you can see from above, I changed my inode limit to 50. What about running this on the whole filesystem? Yes, below is an example where I'm running this on FC3, on the root of the filesystem "/". This assumes that you have installed the quota package. Try doing "rpm -q quota" to see if this package is installed. Step 1: Check to make sure the quota software is installed. You can either do a "whereis quota", or check for the rpm package. $ whereis quota whereis quota quota: /usr/bin/quota /usr/share/man/man1/quota.1.gz Checking for the rpm package. $ rpm -q quota quota-3.12-5 Step 2: Edit /etc/fstab and add usrquota and grpquota options for "/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00", which is shown on the first line below: /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 / ext3 defaults,usrquota,grpquota 1 1 LABEL=/boot /boot ext3 defaults 1 2 none /dev/pts devpts gid=5,mode=620 0 0 none /dev/shm tmpfs defaults 0 0 none /proc proc defaults 0 0 none /sys sysfs defaults 0 0 /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 swap swap defaults 0 0 Step 3: Remount the filesystem as follows: $ mount -o remount / Step 4: Run quotacheck with the "-m" option. Like the above statement, this will have to be run with root priviliges. This creates the quota database files, and it can take a long time if it is a large full filesystem. $ quotacheck -cugm / Step 5: This step is optional, but it's good to know if you need to recalculate quotas because of a system crash. It's demonstrated here, because at this point quota's have not been turned on. Again, note the "m" option below. $ quotacheck -avumg Step 6: Set limits for specific users or groups using the "edquota" command. Shown below is the command to setup quotas for user "chirico". Shown below this user has used 161560 blocks, he has a soft limit of 1161560 and a hard limit of 900000. He has used 3085 inodes and has a soft limit of 10000 and a hard limit of 12000. $ edquota -f / chirico Disk quotas for user chirico (uid 500): Filesystem blocks soft hard inodes soft hard /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 161560 1161560 900000 3085 10000 12000 You can put quotas on groups as well. The following is done as root. See (TIP 186 and TIP 6) for creating groups and adding users to groups. $ edquota -g share If you create a sharable directory for anyone in the group "share" (TIP 6), quota restrictions against group "share" will only apply to files added in the "/home/share" directory. When user "chirico" creates files in "/home/share" they also go against this user quota as well. However, when files are created in his home directory they do not go against the "share" group. Note - if you get errors when trying to run "edquota -g share", turn quotas off "quotaoff /" and run "quotacheck -avugm". Then, turn the quotas back on "quotaon /". You can see the status of the group quota with the following command: $ quota -g share Step 7: Turn on quotas with the "qutoaon" command. This command needs to be done with root privileges. $ quotaon / Step 8: Check "/etc/quotatab" file for the correct entries. Note that when you do the "mount" command the filesystem returned needs to match what is in the "quotatab" file. I have noticed that this is not the case by default. $ mount /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 on / type ext3 (rw,usrquota,grpquota) So the "/etc/quotatab" must contain the following line. /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00: This is the Volume group Step 9: Run "warnquota" as a check that the "/etc/quotatab" files is setup correctly. $ warnquota Step 10: Setup a daily cron job for running "warnquota". The following should be placed in "/etc/cron.daily" #!/bin/sh # Place this file in /etc/cron.daily # with rights 0755 /usr/sbin/warnquota EXITVALUE=$? if [ $EXITVALUE != 0 ]; then /usr/bin/logger -t warnquota "ALERT exited abnormally with [$EXITVALUE]" fi exit 0 References: http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-4-Manual/sysadmin-guide/ch-disk-quotas.html (TIP 6, TIP 186, and TIP 205) TIP 168: rdist - remote file distribution client program. You can use this program in combination with ssh. This program does more than just copy files. Once a file has been copied, you can dictate other actions to be performed. Or you can hold off copying all together if the destination is running low on inodes, or disk space. For the purpose of this example, all commands will been run on "squeezel.squeezel.com", and the computers that will be updated are "tape.squeezel.com" and "closet.squeezel.com". Obviously, you would substitute your computer names. It helps to setup ssh keys on each computer first. Reference [http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/sshtips.htm] and (TIP 12). Step 1: Create the Configuration file myDistfile Below is my sample "myDistfile". This file will access hosts "tape.squeezel.com" using username chirico and "closet.squeezel.com" with the username running this command, and copy the files "/home/chirico/file1" and "/home/chirico/file2" to the these two servers creating the directory ~/tmpdir if it doesn't exist. Once these files are updated, a mail check ("sendmail -bv") will be performed, and mail will be sent to "chirico@squeezel". This happens twice, once for each file. Note, the line "/home/chirico/file2 -> tape.squeezel.com" which moves the file "file2" to tape.squeezel.com renaming the file to "tapedest" in the directory "/home/chirico". Once this file is copied, the rights are modified to "chmod +r". Likewise, "/home/chirico/file2 -> closet.squeezel.com" copies the file file2, which is renamed as closetdest. # Contents of myDistfile HOSTS = ( chirico@tape.squeezel.com closet.squeezel.com ) FILES = ( /home/chirico/file1 /home/chirico/file2 ) ${FILES} -> ${HOSTS} # Directory tmpdir will be created if it doesn't exist install tmpdir ; special /home/chirico/file1 "/usr/sbin/sendmail -bv mchirico@gmail.com"; notify chirico@squeezel; /home/chirico/file2 -> tape.squeezel.com install /home/chirico/tapedest; special /home/chirico/tapedest "chmod +r /home/chirico/tapedest"; /home/chirico/file2 -> closet.squeezel.com install /home/chirico/closetdest; Step 2: Command from squeezel.squeezel.com to run myDistfile above Below is the command that will execute the contents in "myDistfile". This command is run from the computer "squeezel.squeezel.com". All output will go in the file "cmd1rdist.log". $ rdist -P /usr/local/bin/ssh -f ./myDistfile -l file=./cmd1rdist.log=all Obviously you want a secure copy (using scp), so the -P option uses ssh as your secure transport mechanism. TIP 169: Restricting root logins (/etc/securetty). ctl-alt-F4 will give you a prompt for tty3. Note that it is one number less. Take a look at the contents of "/etc/securetty". To prevent root from logging in on this device, take out tty3 from this listing. Note, you can always login as another user, then, su to root. Below is an example of the default "/etc/securetty" that allows root to login to everything. [root@squeezel ~]# cat /etc/securetty console vc/1 vc/2 vc/3 vc/4 vc/5 vc/6 vc/7 vc/8 vc/9 vc/10 vc/11 tty1 tty2 tty3 tty4 tty5 tty6 tty7 tty8 tty9 tty10 tty11 TIP 170: Perl map function. Try the following to get a quick take on this function, which increments each value in the array a; #!/usr/bin/perl @a = (1,2,3); map {$_++} @a; map { print "$_\n" } @a; or #!/usr/bin/perl @a = (1,2,3); map { print "$_\n"} map {++$_} @a; And you can easily make modifications, like reversing the order #!/usr/bin/perl @a = (1,2,3); map { print "$_\n"} reverse map {++$_} @a; Plus there is a grep() function that works on each element as well #!/usr/bin/perl @a = (1,2,3); map { print "$_\n"} reverse grep{ $_ > 3} map {++$_} @a; To get only odd numbers in reverse order: #!/usr/bin/perl @a = (1,2,3); map { print "$_\n"} reverse grep{ !($_ % 2)} map {++$_} @a; Reference: http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-road4.html TIP 171: Perl - subroutine call and shifting through variables. A simple and useful technique. #!/usr/bin/perl sub test { local $mval; while( $mval = shift ) { print " $mval\n"; } } test("one","two","three"); TIP 172: Tcp wrappers - First "/etc/hosts.allow" is check, and if there is an entry in this file, no more checking it done. If are no matches in "/etc/hosts.allow", the "/etc/hosts.deny" file is checked and if a match is found, that service is blocked for that host. Example "/etc/hosts.deny" file: sshd: 192.168.1.171 The above file blocks access to computer 192.168.1.171. It's also possible to run commands when someone from this computer tries to ssh in. This example sends mail. sshd: 192.168.1.171: spawn (echo -e "%d %h %H %u"| /bin/mail -s 'hosts.deny entry' root) Of course, you can also run commands in the "/etc/hosts.allow" if you wanted mail sent for a successful login. TIP 173: pgrep, pkill - look up or signal process based on name and other attributes. To quick find all instances of ssh running, for user root, execute the following command: $ pgrep -u root -l ssh To kill a process, or send a signal use the "pkill" option. For example, to make syslog reread its configuration file: $ pkill -HUP syslogd Another command command is "pidof" that can tell you how many processes are running. This can be useful for detecting DOS attacks. $ pidof sshd 4783 4781 30008 30006 29888 29886 2246 Above there are 7 sshd's running. Reference "Tcpdump, Raw Socket and Libpap Tutorial" at [http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/tcpdump_tutorial.html]. TIP 174: Password Cracking - tools to check your users passwords: John The Ripper http://www.openwall.com/john/ Crack http://www.crypticide.com/users/alecm/ Slurpie http://www.ussrback.com/distributed.htm TIP 175: Password Aging - setting the number of days a password is valid. $ chage -M 90 <username> TIP 176: Kernel Performance Tuning - /Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt documents kernel settings to improve performance. Below are some examples. overcommit_memory: 0 -- default estimates the amount of memory for malloc 1 -- kernel pretends there is always enough memory until it runs out 3 -- never overcommit $ cat /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory 0 page-cluster: The Linux VM subsystem avoids excessive disk seeks by reading multiple pages on a page fault. The number of pages it reads is dependent on the amount of memory in your machine. The number of pages the kernel reads in at once is equal to 2 ^ page-cluster. Values above 2 ^ 5 don't make much sense for swap because we only cluster swap data in 32-page groups. $ cat /proc/sys/vm/page-cluster 3 min_free_kbytes: This is used to force the Linux VM to keep a minimum number of kilobytes free. The VM uses this number to compute a pages_min value for each lowmem zone in the system. Each lowmem zone gets a number of reserved free pages based proportionally on its size. $ cat /proc/sys/vm/min_free_kbytes 3831 max_map_count: This file contains the maximum number of memory map areas a process may have. Memory map areas are used as a side-effect of calling malloc, directly by mmap and mprotect, and also when loading shared libraries. While most applications need less than a thousand maps, certain programs, particularly malloc debuggers, may consume lots of them, e.g., up to one or two maps per allocation. The default value is 65536. $ cat /proc/sys/vm/max_map_count 65536 Also see http://people.redhat.com/alikins/system_tuning.html TIP 177: IO Scheduler - /Documentation/block/as-iosched.txt documents kernel settings for disk performance. If you're not sure what partitions you have "$ cat /proc/partitions". This example assumes hda, and you can see some of the kernel settings: $ ls /sys/block/hda/queue/iosched back_seek_max back_seek_penalty clear_elapsed fifo_batch_expire fifo_expire_async fifo_expire_sync find_best_crq key_type quantum queued References: http://lwn.net/Articles/102505/ http://bhhdoa.org.au/pipermail/ck/2004-September/000961.html TIP 178: iozone -- getting data on disk performance (http://www.iozone.org/). This is a very comprehensive package. $ wget http://www.iozone.org/src/current/iozone3_242.tar $ tar -xf iozone3_242.tar $ cd iozone3_242/src/current $ make linux At this point you should read the documentation. There is no "make install". You copy it to each filesystem you want to run this program on. Below are some quick start commands. Good comprehensive test. $ iozone -a I prefer this for small filesystems. It limits the record size to 10000 and does the output in operations per second (higher numbers mean faster drive). $ ./iozone -a -s 10000 -O TIP 179: history - bash command to get a history of all commands typed. But, here is a way that you can get date and time listed as well. $ HISTTIMEFORMAT="%y/%m/%d %T " Defining the environment variable above give you the date/time info when you execute history: $ history ... 175 05/06/30 12:51:46 grep '141.162.' mout > mout2 176 05/06/30 12:51:48 e mout2 177 05/06/30 12:56:59 ls 178 05/06/30 12:57:02 ls 179 05/06/30 12:57:39 ls 180 05/06/30 12:57:49 ls -l 181 05/06/30 13:01:10 history 182 05/06/30 13:01:20 HISTTIMEFORMAT="%y/%m/%d %T " 183 05/06/30 13:01:23 history ... TIP 180: .config - Fedora Core getting the .config to rebuild the kernel. You can find this file, the ".config" file at the following location: $ ls "/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build/.config" Or, to see the contents $ cat "/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build/.config" This can be important, if you're planning to build your own kernel. TIP 181: Listing control key settings. $ stty -a speed 38400 baud; rows 0; columns 0; line = 0; intr = ^C; quit = ^\; erase = <undef>; kill = <undef>; eof = ^D; eol = <undef>; eol2 = <undef>; start = ^Q; stop = ^S; susp = ^Z; rprnt = ^R; werase = ^W; lnext = ^V; flush = ^O; min = 1; time = 0; -parenb -parodd cs8 -hupcl -cstopb cread -clocal -crtscts -ignbrk -brkint -ignpar -parmrk -inpck -istrip -inlcr -igncr icrnl ixon -ixoff -iuclc -ixany -imaxbel opost -olcuc -ocrnl -onlcr -onocr -onlret -ofill -ofdel nl0 cr0 tab0 bs0 vt0 ff0 isig icanon iexten -echo echoe echok -echonl -noflsh -xcase -tostop -echoprt echoctl echoke TIP 182: iptables DNAT and SNAT. You have a webserver on 192.168.1.71. When people query this webserver, you want them to goto 192.168.1.81, with no indication that they are going to another web server. In fact, they always make their web hits to 192.168.1.71. The following is the iptables commands: $ echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward $ iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -d 192.168.1.71 -p tcp --dport 80 -j DNAT --to 192.168.1.81 $ iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -d 192.168.1.81 -s 192.168.1.0/24 -p tcp --dport 80 -j SNAT --to 192.168.1.71 Change 192.168.1.0/24 to whatever source you expect the web browser to come in on. Below is the tcpdump showing all traffic is relayed via 192.168.1.71 [root@closet iptables]# tcpdump -nN port 80 17:34:58.790398 IP 192.168.1.102.1158 > 192.168.1.71.80: S 3620106373:3620106373(0) win 16384 <mss 1460,nop,nop,sackOK> 17:34:58.790465 IP 192.168.1.71.1158 > 192.168.1.81.80: S 3620106373:3620106373(0) win 16384 <mss 1460,nop,nop,sackOK> 17:34:58.790703 IP 192.168.1.81.80 > 192.168.1.71.1158: S 1973665156:1973665156(0) ack 3620106374 win 5840 <mss 1460,nop,nop,sackOK> 17:34:58.790720 IP 192.168.1.71.80 > 192.168.1.102.1158: S 1973665156:1973665156(0) ack 3620106374 win 5840 <mss 1460,nop,nop,sackOK> 17:34:58.790951 IP 192.168.1.102.1158 > 192.168.1.71.80: . ack 1 win 17520 17:34:58.790965 IP 192.168.1.71.1158 > 192.168.1.81.80: . ack 1 win 17520 17:34:58.791451 IP 192.168.1.102.1158 > 192.168.1.71.80: P 1:327(326) ack 1 win 17520 17:34:58.791472 IP 192.168.1.71.1158 > 192.168.1.81.80: P 1:327(326) ack 1 win 17520 17:34:58.791973 IP 192.168.1.81.80 > 192.168.1.71.1158: . ack 327 win 6432 Above the web client is on "192.168.1.102". You can see that the 1st server "192.168.1.71" then goes out to the 2nd server "192.168.1.81" on the second line. The third line shows the 2nd server "192.168.1.81" responding to the 1st server, and the forth line passes this data back to the web client "192.168.1.102". Note: You can save your current iptables setting with the following command: $ iptables-save > iptables_store The big advantage is that you can store the counters as well. $ iptables-save -c > iptables_store_w_cnts To restore the file, use the following: $ iptables-restore -c < iptables_store_w_cnts TIP 183: mailstats - display mail statistics. This file reads data from "/var/log/mail/statistics" [root@closet ~]# mailstats Statistics from Sat Jun 25 15:59:52 2005 M msgsfr bytes_from msgsto bytes_to msgsrej msgsdis msgsqur Mailer 4 1 2K 0 0K 0 0 0 esmtp 9 0 0K 1 2K 0 0 0 local ===================================================================== T 1 2K 1 2K 0 0 0 C 1 0 0 TIP 184: Profiling C Applications - Assume you have the following program p1.c: /* Program p1.c */ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> t1(int i) { printf("t1:%d\n", i); } t2(int j) { printf("t2:%d\n", j); } int main(void) { int i, j; for (i = 0; i < 5; ++i) { t1(i); for (j = 0; j < 2; ++j) { t2(j); } } } Compile the program as follows: $ gcc -pg -g -o p1 p1.c $ ./p1 t1:0 t2:0 t2:1 t1:1 t2:0 t2:1 t1:2 t2:0 t2:1 t1:3 t2:0 t2:1 t1:4 t2:0 t2:1 Next, to get the profile graph. $ gprof -p -b p1 Flat profile: Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds. no time accumulated % cumulative self self total time seconds seconds calls Ts/call Ts/call name 0.00 0.00 0.00 10 0.00 0.00 t2 0.00 0.00 0.00 5 0.00 0.00 t1 Above note the 10 calls to t2 and 5 calls to t1. TIP 185: CDPATH - this is a bash variable like PATH that defines a search path for the cd command. Suppose you have the following directory structure: /home/chirico/stuff |-- dirA `-- dirB Assume you define CDPATH as follows: CDPATH=/home/chirico/stuff Now, no matter what directory you are in if you use the cd command below you will automatically move to "/home/chirico/stuff/dirA". $ cd dirA Note you could be in "/etc" and will move directly to "/home/chirico/stuff/dirA". This command has the same format as PATH - multiple entries are separated by a colon. If the current directory contain a sub-directory dirA, then, it gets priority. The following is part of my .bash_profile CDPATH=/work/cpearls/src/posted_on_sf/:/work/souptonuts/documentation/:/home/chirico/deleteme/ export PATH CVS_RSH EDITOR JAVA_HOME CDPATH TIP 186: Groups - add groups and users to groups. The following shows how to create the group "share" and add the user "chirico" to this group. The following should be done as root, and assumes the account "chirico" already exits. $ groupadd share $ usermod -G share chirico Note the change made to "/etc/group" below: $ cat /etc/group|grep 'share' share:x:616:chirico If the user chirico is currently logged in, he should run the following command to immediately have group "share" rights. Or, the next time he logs in he will have access to this group. $ newgrp share Reference the following (TIP 6, TIP 167). TIP 187: oprofile - steps for running oprofile on Fedora. Step 1: Find out what version of the kernel you are running. $ uname -a Linux closet.squeezel.com 2.6.12-1.1398_FC4 #1 Fri Jul 15 00:52:32 EDT 2005 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux Step 2: Download the source in a chosen directory. Above, I'm running 2.6.12-1, but I'm going to go for 2.6.12.3, since it's a little later. You want the signed file as well. $ wget http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.12.3.tar.gz $ wget http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.12.3.tar.gz.sign Now, check the signature. $ gpg --verify linux-2.6.12.3.tar.gz.sign linux-2.6.12.3.tar.gz Step 3: Unpack the file. $ tar -xzf linux-2.6.12.3.tar.gz $ cd cd linux-2.6.12.3 Step 4: Copy the ".config" used to compile your previous kernel. You should find it in the following direcotry "/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build/.config". Copy it to the linux-2.6.12.3 directory. $ cp "/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build/.config" . Step 5: Run make as follows. It will ask for a few questions on "make oldconfig". The make installs below will have to be done with root privileges. $ make oldconfig $ make bzImage $ make modules $ make modules_install $ make install Step 6: Edit the "/boot/grub/grub.conf" and set default = 0 as shown below in this file. default=0 timeout=5 splashimage=(hd0,2)/grub/splash.xpm.gz hiddenmenu title Fedora Core (2.6.12.3) root (hd0,2) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.12.3 ro root=/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 rhgb quiet initrd /initrd-2.6.12.3.img title Fedora Core (2.6.12-1.1398_FC4) root (hd0,2) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.12-1.1398_FC4 ro root=/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 rhgb quiet initrd /initrd-2.6.12-1.1398_FC4.img title Fedora Core (2.6.11-1.1369_FC4) root (hd0,2) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.11-1.1369_FC4 ro root=/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 rhgb quiet initrd /initrd-2.6.11-1.1369_FC4.img title Other rootnoverify (hd0,1) chainloader +1 Step 7: Shutdown with the restart option. $ shutdown -r now Step 8: Run opcontrol. The commands below are done as root. My kernel was compiled in the following directory "/home/kernel/linux-2.6.12.3/", so I'll run opcontrol as follows: $ opcontrol --vmlinux=/home/kernel/linux-2.6.12.3/vmlinux Now start. $ opcontrol --start Using 2.6+ OProfile kernel interface. Reading module info. Using log file /var/lib/oprofile/oprofiled.log Daemon started. Profiler running. Shutdown opcontrol. $ opcontrol --shutdown Run report. $ opreport CPU: CPU with timer interrupt, speed 0 MHz (estimated) Profiling through timer interrupt TIMER:0| samples| %| ------------------ 156088 99.8746 vmlinux 60 0.0384 libc-2.3.5.so 30 0.0192 oprofiled 23 0.0147 libcrypto.so.0.9.7f 13 0.0083 bash 12 0.0077 screen 10 0.0064 sshd 9 0.0058 ssh 6 0.0038 ip_tables 6 0.0038 libncurses.so.5.4 5 0.0032 b44 5 0.0032 ext3 5 0.0032 ld-2.3.5.so 4 0.0026 ip_conntrack 4 0.0026 jbd 2 0.0013 grep 1 6.4e-04 libdns.so.20.0.2 1 6.4e-04 libisc.so.9.1.5 Reference the following for more documentation: http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/doc/ TIP 188: cyrus-imapd with Postfix using sasldb for authentication. For this example the server is tape.squeezel.com and the user is chirico. Step 1: $ yum install cyrus-imapd $ yum install cyrus-imapd-utils You need "cyrus-imapd-utils" for cyradm. Step 2: Edit /etc/imapd.conf configdirectory: /var/lib/imap partition-default: /var/spool/imap admins: cyrus sievedir: /var/lib/imap/sieve sendmail: /usr/sbin/sendmail hashimapspool: true # Chirico Commented the below line # sasl_pwcheck_method: saslauthd # Because using sasldb sasl_pwcheck_method: auxprop sasl_auxprop_plugin: sasldb # Chirico end change sasl_mech_list: PLAIN tls_cert_file: /usr/share/ssl/certs/cyrus-imapd.pem tls_key_file: /usr/share/ssl/certs/cyrus-imapd.pem tls_ca_file: /usr/share/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt Step 3: Create a user and password: $ saslpasswd2 -c -u `postconf -h myhostname` cyrus $ saslpasswd2 -c -u `postconf -h myhostname` chirico $ saslpasswd2 -c -u `postconf -h myhostname` allmail This will automatically create the file /etc/sasldb2. But look at the default rights, assuming you ran saslpasswd2 as root: $ ls -l /etc/sasldb2 -rw-r----- 1 root root 12288 Jul 31 09:50 /etc/sasldb2 We need to correct this in step 4. Step 4: $ chown root.mail /etc/sasldb2 $ ls -l /etc/sasldb2 -rw-r----- 1 root mail 12288 Jul 31 09:50 /etc/sasldb2 Step 5: Update "/etc/postfix/main.cf". Note in /etc/imapd.conf the configdirectory points to /var/lib/imap, and if I look at this directory I see the socket directory. However, after staring /etc/init.d/cyrus-imapd there will be a socket file "/var/lib/imap/socket/lmtp". (See step 6). mailbox_transport = lmtp:unix:/var/lib/imap/socket/lmtp mailbox_transport = cyrus Restart postfix. /etc/init.d/postfix restart Step 6: Start cyrus-imapd and look for the socket file. $ /etc/init.d/cyrus-imapd restart Shutting down cyrus-imapd: [ OK ] Starting cyrus-imapd: preparing databases... done. [ OK ] Now you should see the lmtp file: $ ls -l /var/lib/imap/socket/lmtp srwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jul 31 10:04 /var/lib/imap/socket/lmtp Step 7: Add users. Note, you may have to go back to step 3 to add them to /etc/sasldb2 as well. $ su - cyrus $ cyradm tape.squeezel.com tape.squeezel.com> cm user.chirico tape.squeezel.com> quit Now got back as root, and check that everything was created correctly. $ ls /var/spool/imap/c/user/ total 8 drwx------ 2 cyrus mail 4096 Jul 31 10:21 chirico Step 8: Run a mail test. We'll do this as root to the chirico account. $ mail -s 'First test' chirico first test . Now, still as root check the maillog. Normally everything should work. $ tail /var/log/maillog However, I got the following error below. Jul 31 10:29:03 tape postfix/cleanup[30124]: AE7CB1B34A4: message-id=<20050731142903.AE7CB1B34A4@tape.squeezel.com> Jul 31 10:29:03 tape postfix/qmgr[30120]: AE7CB1B34A4: from=<root@tape.squeezel.com>, size=315, nrcpt=1 (queue active) Jul 31 10:29:03 tape pipe[30128]: fatal: pipe_comand: execvp /cyrus/bin/deliver: No such file or directory If you get a similiar error, you may need to adjust the settting in /etc/postfix/master.cf # This is the problem in /etc/postfix/master.cf cyrus unix - n n - - pipe user=cyrus argv=/cyrus/bin/deliver -e -r ${sender} -m ${extension} ${user} My deliver file is the following $ ls -l /usr/lib/cyrus-imapd/deliver -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 846228 Apr 4 18:59 /usr/lib/cyrus-imapd/deliver So I need to change my /etc/postfix/master.cf as follows: # Fix because by deliver file is under /usr/lib/cyrus-imapd/deliver cyrus unix - n n - - pipe user=cyrus argv=/usr/lib/cyrus-imapd/deliver -e -r ${sender} -m ${extension} ${user} If changes were needed, like I had to do, restart postfix $ /etc/init.d/postfix restart Now, if everything works, you should start to see numbers in the spool directory like "1." and "2.". $ ls -l /var/spool/imap/c/user/chirico/ total 40 -rw------- 1 cyrus mail 545 Jul 31 10:44 1. -rw------- 1 cyrus mail 547 Jul 31 10:45 2. -rw------- 1 cyrus mail 1276 Jul 31 10:45 cyrus.cache -rw------- 1 cyrus mail 153 Jul 31 10:21 cyrus.header -rw------- 1 cyrus mail 196 Jul 31 10:45 cyrus.index Step 9: Local firewall. # imap iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.0/24 --dport 143 -j ACCEPT iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s 192.168.1.0/24 --dport 143 -j ACCEPT Step 10: Configure cyrus-imapd to start for run-level 3 and 5. # chkconfig --level 35 cyrus-imapd on HINTS - Something to watch out for: Something to watch out for: If a user creates a .forward file in their shell account with the following entry, then, mail will not get mail relayed to cyrus. "|exec /usr/bin/procmail" The /etc/maillog will show something like this: to=<chirico@squeezel.squeezel.com>, orig_to=<chirico>, relay=local, delay=0, status=sent (delivered to command: exec /usr/bin/procmail) Remove the ".forward" file from their home directory and you'll get the following: to=<chirico@squeezel.squeezel.com>, relay=cyrus, delay=0, status=sent (squeezel.squeezel.com) mutt with IMAP? (See TIP 190) TIP 189: expand - convert tabs to spaces in a file. $ expand How_to_Linux_and_Open_Source.txt > notabs TIP 190: mutt with imap - assume you have setup imap (see tip 188). Now how do you configure your ".muttrc" file to automatically connect, securely to the IMAP server? Below is an example of my ".muttrc" file. For this example, assume my password is "S0m3paSSw0r9". $ cat .muttrc set spoolfile = "imaps://chirico:S0m3paSSw0r9@squeezel.squeezel.com/ set imap_force_ssl=yes set certificate_file=~/.mutt/certificates/72d31154.0 Now, you want to copy the certificate as a "file.pem" and run "c_rehash" to convert this file to a number. See the article. See the following article on how to do this under the fetchmail section. http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/postfix_tutorial.html This is a quick summary of creating this key. $ openssl s_client -connect squeezel.squeezel.com:995 -showcerts > file.pem $ c_rehash ~/.mutt/certificates TIP 191: Apache - CGI scripts. There are two ways to enable CGI scripts. The second method is the prefered method. First way, the easy way. Look for the "http.conf" file. On Fedora Core, this file can be found under "/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf". Edit this file as follows to make "http://squeezel.squeezel.com/chirico-cgi/" execute scripts. ScriptAlias /chirico-cgi/ "/home/chirico/cgi-bin/" Second way, the better way. Instead of doing the above, make the following change in "/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf". <Directory /home/chirico/cgi-bin> Options +ExecCGI SetHandler chirico-cgi </Directory> Running a test script. Now copy the following test script into the directory "/home/chirico/cgi-bin" and change the rights to execute for the user running this. #!/bin/sh # Save as test.cgi # chown apache.apache test.cgi # chmod 700 test.cgi echo "Content-Type: text/html" echo echo "Hello world from user <b>`whoami`</b>! " TIP 192: Bash - using getopts for your bash scripts. #!/bin/bash while getopts "ab:cd:" Option # b and d take arguments # do case $Option in a) echo -e "a = $OPTIND";; b) echo -e "b = $OPTIND $OPTARG";; c) echo -e "c = $OPTIND";; d) echo -e "d = $OPTIND $OPTARG";; esac done shift $(($OPTIND - 1)) TIP 193: Sieve - creating sieve recipes with "sieveshell" The following sieve script put all jefferson.edu mail into the folder jefferson. This assumes that I have already created the IMP directory, or mail box (INBOX.jefferson), which can be done in mutt with the "C" command. Below is an example of finding "jefferson.edu" anywhere in the header. # This is a file named jefferson.siv require ["fileinto"]; if header :contains "Received" "from jefferson.edu" { fileinto "INBOX.jefferson"; stop; } Now, from the command propt execute "sieveshell" with the hostname of the imap server. My server is squeezel.squeezel.com, so I would execute the following: $ sieveshell squeezel.squeezel.com connecting to squeezel.squeezel.com Please enter your password:**** > put jefferson.siv > activate jefferson.siv > list jefferson.siv <- active script > quit Note the put brings in the script. And you need to activiate it. You can activate a sieve script for any user on your system if you are root. This is an example of activating a script for user chirico. Assume below the root prompt is "#". # sieveshell -a chirico -u chirico squeezel.squeezel.com You can also automate everything from a bash script. But note after the -e the commands, and not a file with the commands, follows within quotes. This is the script I use for my home system. #!/bin/bash sieveshell -a chirico -u chirico -e 'deactivate delete chirico.siv put chirico.siv activate chirico.siv list ' squeezel.squeezel.com References: http://wiki.fastmail.fm/index.php/SieveRecipes http://www.cyrusoft.com/sieve/#documents TIP 194: emacs - editing files remotely with tramp. Tramp comes with the latest version of emacs. That means if you're using Fedora core 4, with emacs, you have tramp. This is ideal for editing files on remote computers that do not use emacs. Edit the ".emacs" file and add the following line: (require 'tramp) (setq tramp-default-method "scp") Now, to edit a file on computer tape.squeezel.com (C-x, C-f) and enter the following in Find file: Find file:/chirico@tape.squeezel.com:test.txt References: http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/tramp/ TIP 195: trusted X11 forwarding - running gnome and KDE both on one screen, at the same time securely. The following assumes gnome is running on the current computer and "closet.squeezel.com" has KDE $ ssh -Y closet.squeezel.com $ startkde Or assume you want to run gnome on "closet.squeezel.com" $ ssh -Y closet.squeezel.com $ gnome-session By default Fedora Core allows ForwardX11 over ssh. Note you want to use the -Y option above and NOT -X. Suppose you want a remote "gnome-session" on ctl-alt-F12. Below is an example of getting the remote computer closet.squeezel.com, and you can still have the above configuration. First you must allow magic cookies for each server connection. $ MCOOKIE=$(mcookie) $ xauth add $(hostname)/unix:1 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 $MCOOKIE $ xauth add localhost/unix:1 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 $MCOOKIE Again, note that you have to add this for EACH connection. So if you wanted 2 as well $ MCOOKIE=$(mcookie) $ xauth add $(hostname)/unix:2 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 $MCOOKIE $ xauth add localhost/unix:2 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 $MCOOKIE On squeezel.squeezel.com create a new xterm. If :1 is take below try :2. The vt12 is for switching to ctl-alt-F12. $ xinit -- :1 vt12 Note, if you do not add the above cookies, you will get the follow error: Xlib: connection to ":1.0" refused by server Xlib: No protocol specified The screen may be hard to read. At this point ssh -Y to the remote computer. $ ssh -Y closet.squeezel.com $ gnome-session Yes, you will get errors about sound and some custom drivers is the remove computer has different hardware. After is loads, you can switch back and forth between session with (ctl-alt-F12) and (ctl-alt-F7) TIP 196: Suspend ssh session - you have just sshed into a computer "ssh -l user example.com", and you want to get back to the terminal prompt of the computer you started with. Escapte, by default with ssh is "~", so enter "~" followed by "ctl-z" to suspend. TIP 197: Quick way to send a text file $ sendmail -f mike.chirico@gmail.com mchirico@comcast.net < /etc/fstab TIP 198: size - determining the size of the text segment, data segment, and "bss" or uninitialized data segment. $ size /bin/sh /bin/bash text data bss dec hex filename 586946 22444 18784 628174 995ce /bin/sh 586946 22444 18784 628174 995ce /bin/bash Note above that "/bin/sh" and "/bin/bash" have equal text,data and bss numbers. It's highly likely that these are the same programs. $ ls -l /bin/sh lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Jan 14 2005 /bin/sh -> bash Yep, it's the same program. Here's a further definition of each segment. Text segment: The machine instructions that the CPU executes. This is usually read only and sharable. Data segment: Contains initialized variables in a program. You also know these as declarations and definitions. int max = 200; Uninitialized data segment: Think of this as a declaration only, or data that is only initialized by the kernel to arithmetic 0 or null pointers before program execution. char s[10]; TIP 199: Using the at command. Below is a simple example if running the ls command at 11:42am that will send mail -m to the user that executed it. We'll execute job1 defined as follows and set to be executable. $ cat ./job1 #!/bin/bash date >> /tmp/job1 The at command is listed below. For queue "-q" names you can only specify one letter. Here we're using x. The letter determines the priority with "a" the highest. $ at -q x -f ./job1 -m 11:54am job 3 at 2005-10-04 11:54 Now, if you execute the atq command, you'll get the following. $ atq 3 2005-10-04 11:54 x chirico It's also possible to execute jobs at the command line entering a ctl-d at the end of the input. $ at -q x -m 12:08pm at> ls -l at> who at> date at> ^D Or for a job to execute 1 minute from now. $ at -q x -m `date -d '1 minute' +"%H:%M"` at> ls -l at> date Important points: The atd daemon must be running. To check if it's running do the following: $ /etc/init.d/atd status Also, if there is an /etc/at.allow file, then only users in that file will be allowed to execute at. If /etc/at.deny exists but is empty and there is no /etc/at.allow, then, everyone can execute the at command. TIP 200: lsusb - command will display all USB buses and all devices connected. $ lsusb Bus 005 Device 003: ID 413c:2010 Dell Computer Corp. Bus 005 Device 002: ID 413c:1003 Dell Computer Corp. Bus 005 Device 001: ID 0000:0000 Bus 004 Device 001: ID 0000:0000 Bus 003 Device 003: ID 0fc5:1227 Delcom Engineering Bus 003 Device 002: ID 046d:c016 Logitech, Inc. Optical Mouse Bus 003 Device 001: ID 0000:0000 Bus 002 Device 001: ID 0000:0000 Bus 001 Device 001: ID 0000:0000 TIP 201: Memory fragmentation - if you suspect workload memory fragmentation issues and you want to monitor the current state of you system, then, consider looking at the output from /proc/buddyinfo on recent kernels. $ cat /proc/buddyinfo Node 0, zone DMA 541 218 42 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 Node 0, zone Normal 2508 2614 52 1 5 5 0 1 1 1 0 Node 0, zone HighMem 0 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 The following definition is taken from ./Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt in the Linux kernel source. Each column represents the number of pages of a certain order which are available. In this case, there are 0 chunks of 2^0*PAGE_SIZE available in ZONE_DMA, 4 chunks of 2^1*PAGE_SIZE in ZONE_DMA, 101 chunks of 2^4*PAGE_SIZE available in ZONE_NORMAL, etc... TIP 202: arp - Linux ARP kernel moduel. This command implements the Address Resolution Protocol. This is an example of the command. $ arp Address HWtype HWaddress Flags Mask Iface tape.squeezel.com ether 00:50:DA:60:5B:AD C eth0 squeezel.squeezel.com ether 00:11:11:8A:BE:3F C eth0 gw.squeezel.com ether 00:0F:66:47:15:73 C eth0 TIP 203: dbench - performance monitoring. So, how does your system react when the load average is above 600. Have you even seen a computer with a load average of 600? Well, this could be your chance. Reference: http://freshmeat.net/projects/dbench/ The following gives a load average of 10 on my system. $ dbench 34 If you want a higher load, just increase the number. TIP 204: /etc guide - a listing of common files in the /etc directory. /etc/exports: this file is used to configure NFS. /etc/ftpusers: the users on your system who are restricted from FTP login. /etc/motd: message of the day, which users see after login. /etc/named.conf: DNS config file. /etc/profile: common user information. /etc/inittab: this file contains runlevel start information. /etc/services: the services and their respective ports. /etc/shells: this contains the names of all shells installed on the system. /etc/passwd: this file contains user information. /etc/group: security group rights. TIP 205: logger - is a bash command utility for writing to /var/log/messages or the other files defined in /etc/syslog.conf. $ logger -t TEST more of a test here This is what shows up in /var/log/messages Oct 28 07:15:50 squeezel TEST: more of a test here TIP 206: accton, lastcomm - accouting on and last command. This is a way to monitor users on your system. As root, you would implement this as follows: $ accton -h Usage: accton [-hV] [file] [--help] [--version] The system's default process accounting file is /var/account/pacct. Note the default file location is /var/account/pacct so we'll turn it on system wide with the following command. $ accton /var/account/pacct Now take a look at this file. It will grow. To see command that are executed, use the lastcomm command. $ lastcomm The above command gives output for all users. To get the data for user "chirico" execute the following command: $ lastcomm --user chirico You can also get a summary of commands with sa. [chirico@big ~]$ sa 30 5.23re 0.00cp 10185k 11 4.83re 0.00cp 8961k ***other 8 0.13re 0.00cp 19744k nagios* 4 0.00re 0.00cp 2542k automount* 3 0.00re 0.00cp 680k sa 2 0.13re 0.00cp 17424k check_ping 2 0.13re 0.00cp 978k ping To turn off accounting, execute accton without a filename. $ accton TIP 207: CPU Temperature on a laptop. The following is the temperature of my Dell laptop. $ cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THM/temperature temperature: 58 C TIP 208: script -f with mkfifo to allow another user to view what you type in real-time. Step 1. Create a fifo (first in first out) file that the other user can view. For this example create the file /tmp/scriptout [chirico@laptop ~]$ mkfifo /tmp/scriptout Step 2. Have the second user, voyeur user, cat this file. Output will block for them until you complete step 3. The other user, voyer, is executing the command below. [voyeur@laptop ~]$ cat /tmp/scriptout Step 3. The original user runs the following command. [chirico@laptop ~]$ script -f /tmp/scriptout Script started, file is /tmp/scriptout Now anything typed, including a vi session, will be displayed to the voyeur user in step 2. See TIP 46. TIP 209: fsck forced on next reboot. To do this, as root issue the following commands. $ cd / $ touch forcefsck Now reboot the system, and when it comes up fsck will be forced on the system. $ shutdown -r now TIP 210: /dev/random and /dev/urandom differ in their random generating properties. /dev/random only returns bytes when enough noise has been generated from the entropy pool. In contrast /dev/urandom will always return bytes. Reference: http://sourceforge.net/direct-dl/mchirico/cpearls/simple_but_common.tar.gz (rand.c) TIP 211: Want to find out the speed of your NIC? (Full Duplex or Half), then use ethtool. [root@squeezel ~]# ethtool eth0 Settings for eth0: Supported ports: [ MII ] Supported link modes: 10baseT/Half 10baseT/Full 100baseT/Half 100baseT/Full 1000baseT/Half 1000baseT/Full Supports auto-negotiation: Yes Advertised link modes: 10baseT/Half 10baseT/Full 100baseT/Half 100baseT/Full 1000baseT/Half 1000baseT/Full Advertised auto-negotiation: Yes Speed: 100Mb/s Duplex: Full Port: Twisted Pair PHYAD: 1 Transceiver: internal Auto-negotiation: on Supports Wake-on: g Wake-on: d Current message level: 0x000000ff (255) Link detected: yes TIP 212: rpm install hang? You might need to delete the lock state information. $ nl /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit | grep rpm 720 rm -f /var/lib/rpm/__db* &> /dev/null Note the command $ rm -f /var/lib/rpm/__db* Because sometimes you will run "rpm -ivh somerpm" and it will just sit there. TIP 213: Apache - limit access to certain directories based on IP address in the httpd.conf file. You can do this completely from /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf which are shown below for multiple IP addresses. Note that all 3 setting are the same. 10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0 10.0.0.0/8 10 However, the following is different 10.0.0.0/24 only allows 10.0.0.1 to 10.0.0.254 Some complete settings in /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf <Directory /var/www/html/chirico/> Order allow,deny Allow from 10.0.0.0/8 # All 10. Allow from 192.168.0.0/16 # All 192.168 Allow from 127 # All 127. </Directory> Don't forget to reload httpd with the following command. $ /etc/init.d/httpd reload TIP 214: Open Files - determining how many files are currently open. $ cat /proc/sys/fs/file-nr 2030 263 104851 | | \- maximum open file descriptors | | | \- total free allocated file descriptors | (Total allocated file descriptors since boot) Note the maximum number can be set or changed. $ cat /proc/sys/fs/file-max 104851 To change this $ echo "804854" > /proc/sys/fs/file-max Note lsof | wc -l will report higher numbers because this includes open files that are not using file descriptors such as directories, memory mapped files, and executable text files. (Reference http://www.netadmintools.com/art295.html and also see the man page for this: man 5 proc ) TIP 215: Ctrl-Alt-Del will cause an immediate reboot, without syncing dirty buffers by setting the value > 0 in /proc/sys/kernel/ctrl-alt-del. $ echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/ctrl-alt-del (Reference: man 5 proc) TIP 216: Redefining keys in X using xev and xmodmap. The program xev, used in an X window terminal screen will display information on mouse movements, keys pressed and released. $ xev Now type shift-4 and you'll notice the event details below: KeyPress event, serial 29, synthetic NO, window 0x3800001, root 0x60, subw 0x0, time 55307049, (418,242), root:(428,339), state 0x1, keycode 13 (keysym 0x24, dollar), same_screen YES, XLookupString gives 1 bytes: (24) "$" XmbLookupString gives 1 bytes: (24) "$" XFilterEvent returns: False KeyRelease event, serial 29, synthetic NO, window 0x3800001, root 0x60, subw 0x0, time 55307184, (418,242), root:(428,339), state 0x1, keycode 13 (keysym 0x24, dollar), same_screen YES, XLookupString gives 1 bytes: (24) "$" So, if you want to redefine this key to say copyright, see (/usr/X11R6/include/X11/keysymdef.h) you would type the following. $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 13 = 4 copyright' To get the key back to the dollar, issue the following command. $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 13 = 4 dollar' By the way it's possible to define multiple key codes for a sigle key. You'll need to have a key defined as the Mode_switch. Perhaps you'd like to use the Windows key, or the key with the Microsoft logo on it, since you're using Linux. This key is keycode 115 $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 115 = Mode_switch' Now you could define 3 values to the shift-4. For this example use ld, Yen and dollar. $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 13 = 4 dollar sterling yen' So pressing the keys gives you the following: shift-$ (dollar sign) Windows-$ (lb sign) Windows-shift-$ (Yen sign) You could go crazy and redefine all you keys. (Thanks to hisham for this tip). TIP 217: Threads - which version of threads are you using? $ getconf GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION NPTL 2.3.90 For a history on threads used with gcc reference the following: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NPTL TIP 218: Screenshots using ImageMagick. If you want the entire screen, execute the following: $ import -window root screen.png Or to crosshair select the region with your mouse, execute the following instead. $ import screen.png KDE has the ability to take screenshots with the command below. $ ksnapshot GNOME likewise has a command too. $ gnome-panel-screenshot --delay 6 Visting ImageMagick again, the xwininfo command give window information and the id can be used to capture images with the import command. $ xwininfo xwininfo: Please select the window about which you would like information by clicking the mouse in that window. xwininfo: Window id: 0x1e00007 "chirico@squeezel:/work/svn/souptonuts - Shell - Konsole" Absolute upper-left X: 4 Absolute upper-left Y: 21 Relative upper-left X: 0 Relative upper-left Y: 0 Width: 880 Height: 510 Depth: 24 Visual Class: TrueColor Border width: 0 Class: InputOutput Colormap: 0x20 (installed) Bit Gravity State: NorthWestGravity Window Gravity State: NorthWestGravity Backing Store State: NotUseful Save Under State: no Map State: IsViewable Override Redirect State: no Corners: +4+21 -396+21 -396-493 +4-493 -geometry 880x510+0+0 Now use the import command with the Window id. My example is shown below. $ import -window 0x1e00007 id.miff And to quickly display this image that you just saved, use the display command. $ display id.miff TIP 219: File Access over SSH using FUSE (Filesystem in USErspace). This is a very good way to mount a remote filesystem locally. It's like a secure NFS mount, but you don't require admin privileges on the remote computer. You do need to have fuse-sshfs installed on the local computer that will perform the filesystem mount. The following works with Fedora Core 5. Only the users added to the fuse group can mout external drives. Below the user chirico is being added to the group fuse. $ yum install fuse-sshfs $ usermod -a -G fuse chirico You'll need to reboot. $ shutdown -r now Next I'm going to mount the remote filesystem v0.squeezel.com. This is done as user chirico on the local computer. I'm using root on the remote computer v0.squeezel.com because I want to mount the complete drive. $ mkdir v0 $ sshfs root@v0.squeezel.com:/ v0 $ cd v0 $ ls -l bin dev home lost+found media mnt opt q sbin srv tmp var boot etc lib master_backup misc net proc root selinux sys usr Now to unmount the filesystem $ fusermount -u /home/chirico/v0 Yes, you can mount the filesystem on boot. Below shows an example entry for /etc/fstab, but this only allows user on the current system to view what is is /mnt/v0. sshfs#root@v0.squeezel.com:/var/log /mnt/v0 fuse defaults 0 0 References: (http://fuse.sourceforge.net/sshfs.html) TIP 220: OpenVPN - A full-featured SSL VPN solution. The following demonstrates a very simple OpenVPN setup between two Fedora Core 5 computers big.squeezel.com 192.168.1.12 and tape.squeezel.com 192.168.1.155 As root install the package on both computers. $ yum -y install openvpn Setup on big.squeezel.com 192.168.1.12 $ iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.155 --dport 1194 -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -i tun+ -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -i tap+ -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -i tap+ -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A FORWARD -i tap+ -j ACCEPT Note - make sure you have commented out the following line in /etc/sysconfig/iptables # -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-host-prohibited Now from continuting with the commands that need to be executed on big.squeezel.com 192.168.1.12 do one of the following $ openvpn --remote tape.squeezel.com --dev tun1 --ifconfig 10.4.0.1 10.4.0.2 --verb 9 The above statement gives lots of errors. Once it's working you may want the following statement without the --verb 9 option. $ openvpn --remote tape.squeezel.com --dev tun1 --ifconfig 10.4.0.1 10.4.0.2 After you finish the setup commands for tape.squeezel.com immediately below, you'll be able to access tape.squeezel.com as 10.4.0.2. Setup on tape.squeezel.com 192.168.1.155 $ iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s 192.168.1.12 --dport 1194 -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -i tun+ -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -i tap+ -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A INPUT -i tap+ -j ACCEPT $ iptables -A FORWARD -i tap+ -j ACCEPT Note - again, make sure you have commented out the following line in /etc/sysconfig/iptables # -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-host-prohibited The openvpn commands are tape.squeezel.com are reversed from what is shown above. $ openvpn --remote big.squeezel.com --dev tun1 --ifconfig 10.4.0.2 10.4.0.1 --verb 9 Or $ openvpn --remote big.squeezel.com --dev tun1 --ifconfig 10.4.0.2 10.4.0.1 Now you can access all services and ports from big.squeezel.com on 10.4.0.1 for such services as MySQL, secure Web, imap, etc. A quick test is nmap as follows: $ nmap -A -T4 10.4.0.1 Starting Nmap 4.03 ( http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) at 2006-05-20 13:54 EDT Interesting ports on 10.4.0.1: (The 1671 ports scanned but not shown below are in state: closed) PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION 22/tcp open ssh OpenSSH 4.3 (protocol 2.0) 111/tcp open rpcbind 2 (rpc #100000) 3306/tcp open mysql MySQL (unauthorized) Nmap finished: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 7.116 seconds TIP 221: openssl - Some common commands. Finding the openssldir (Directory for OpenSSL files). $ openssl version -a|grep OPENSSLDIR OPENSSLDIR: "/etc/pki/tls" Connect to a secure SMTP server with STARTTLS, assuming the server name is squeezel.squeezel.com $ openssl s_client -connect squeezel.squeezel.com:25 -starttls Reference (http://www.madboa.com/geek/openssl/) TIP 222: Bash functions. This is easy, and I find it very useful to create bash functions for repeated commands. For example, suppose you want to create a quick bash function to cd to /var/log, tail messages and tail secure. You can create this function as follows: [root@v5 log]# m() m() > { cd /var/log { cd /var/log > tail messages tail messages > tail secure tail secure > } } Above I'm typing m() then hitting return. Note the echo on the next line followed by the prompt >. I then enter {. TIP 223: Stats on DNS Server. You can get stats on your DNS server. The following works for BIND 9: $ rndc stats On my system I see the output in "/var/named/chroot/var/named/data/named_stats.txt", which if an FC4 system. By the way, if you're using BIND 8, the command is "ndc stats", but that has a completely different format. Format of the output +++ Statistics Dump +++ (1153791199) success 297621 referral 32 nxrrset 21953 nxdomain 33742 recursion 28243 failure 54 --- Statistics Dump --- (1153791199) The number (1153791199) can be converted with the date command. $ date -d '1970-01-01 1153791199 sec' Tue Jul 25 02:33:19 EDT 2006 That's 1153791199 seconds since 1970-01-01 UCT. Which is 4 hours fast, from EDT. TIP 224: snmp - simple network monitoring protocol. The following steps setup snmp on Fedora Core 5. $ yum install net-snmp* Next add the following line in "/etc/snmp/snmpd.conf" at the bottom. rocommunity pA33worD Start the snmp service. $ /etc/init.d/snmpd restart Once started, from the command prompt, it's possible to get stats on the computer. $ snmpwalk -v 1 -c pA33worD localhost system Or $ snmpwalk -v 1 -c pA33worD localhost interface Or $ snmpgetnext -v 1 -c pA33worD localhost sysUpTime DISMAN-EVENT-MIB::sysUpTimeInstance = Timeticks: (26452) 0:04:24.52 Note the Timeticks is in 100th of a second. So the computer above has been running for 264.52 seconds. Reference( TIP 225 shows how to use MRTG for gathering snmp stats). http://www.net-snmp.org/tutorial/tutorial-5/commands/snmpv3.html TIP 225: MRTG - Multi Router Traffic Grapher. $ cfgmaker --output=/etc/mrtg/v5.squeezel.com \ ifref=ip --global "workdir:/var/www/html/mrtg/stats"\ pA33worD@v5.squeezel.com Reference: http://www.chinalinuxpub.com/doc/www.siliconvalleyccie.com/linux-hn/mrtg.htm TIP 226: Back Trace - This is a method of getting a back trace for all processes on the system. it assumes the following: a. Kernel was build with CONFIG_MAGIC_SYS-REQ enabled (which Fedora 5 kernels are) b. You can get direct access to the monitor. Step 1. Ctl-Alt-F1 (This brings you to the text console) Step 2. Alt-ScrollLock Ctl-ScrollLock Note above that's Alt-ScrollLock followed by Ctl-ScrollLock. You should see a lot of text on the screen. To fast to read, but don't worry the text will be in /var/log/messages at the end. On my system the ScrollLock key is next to the NumLock key. TIP 227: Ext3 Tuning - One advantage of Ext3 over Ext2 is directory indexing, which imporves file access in directories containing large files or when the directory contains many files. Directory indexing improves performance by using hashed binary trees. There are two ways to enable dir_index. First, find the device using the mount command. $ mount /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 on / type ext3 (rw) proc on /proc type proc (rw) sysfs on /sys type sysfs (rw) devpts on /dev/pts type devpts (rw,gid=5,mode=620) /dev/sda1 on /boot type ext3 (rw) <--- This is the one you want tmpfs on /dev/shm type tmpfs (rw) none on /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc type binfmt_misc (rw) sunrpc on /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs type rpc_pipefs (rw) automount(pid2001) on /net type autofs (rw,fd=4,pgrp=2001,minproto=2,maxproto=4) From the above command, the device used is /dev/sda1. Using the tune2fs command, directory indexing will only apply to directories created after running the command below. $ tune2fs -O dir_index /dev/sda1 However, if you want it to apply to all directories, use the e2fsck command as shown below: $ e2fsck -D -f /dev/sda1 You'll need to bypass the warning message. Reference: "Tuning Journaling File Systems: A small amount of effort an dtime can yield big results",by Steve Best. Linux Magazine, September 10, 2006. This author as has a very good book titled: "Linux Debugging and Performance Tuning." TIP 228: NIC bonding - binding two or more NICs to one IP address to improve performance. The following instructions were done on Fedora Core 5. Step 1. Create the file ifcfg-bond0 with the IP address, netmask and gateway. Shown below is my file. $ cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-bond0 DEVICE=bond0 IPADDR=192.168.1.12 NETMASK=255.255.255.0 GATEWAY=192.168.1.1 USERCTL=no BOOTPROTO=none ONBOOT=yes Step 2. Modify eth0, eth1 and eth2. Shown below are each one of my files. Note that you must comment out, or remove the ip address, netmask, gateway and hardware address from each one of these files, since settings should only come from the ifcfg-bond0 file above. I've chosen to comment out the lines, instead of removing, should I decide to unbond my NICS sometime in the future. $ cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 # Linksys Gigabit Network Adapter DEVICE=eth0 BOOTPROTO=none #HWADDR=00:12:17:5C:A7:9D #IPADDR=192.168.1.12 #NETMASK=255.255.255.0 #TYPE=Ethernet #GATEWAY=192.168.1.1 #USERCTL=no #IPV6INIT=no #PEERDNS=yes ONBOOT=yes # Settings for Bond MASTER=bond0 SLAVE=yes $ cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth1 # Linksys Gigabit Network Adapter DEVICE=eth1 BOOTPROTO=none #HWADDR=00:12:17:5C:A7:C9 #IPADDR=192.168.1.13 #NETMASK=255.255.255.0 ONBOOT=yes #TYPE=Ethernet USERCTL=no #IPV6INIT=no #PEERDNS=yes # # Settings for bonding MASTER=bond0 SLAVE=yes $ cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth2 # Linksys Gigabit Network Adapter DEVICE=eth2 BOOTPROTO=none #HWADDR=00:12:17:5C:A7:9D #IPADDR=192.168.1.12 #NETMASK=255.255.255.0 ONBOOT=yes #TYPE=Ethernet #GATEWAY=192.168.1.1 #USERCTL=no #IPV6INIT=no #PEERDNS=yes MASTER=bond0 SLAVE=yes Step 3. Set the load parameters for bond0 bonding kernel module. Append the following lines to /etc/modprobe.conf # bonding commands alias bond0 bonding options bond0 mode=balance-alb miimon=100 Step 4. Load the bond driver module from the command prompt. $ modprobe bonding Step 5. Restart the network, or restart the computer. Note I restarted to computer, since my NICs above had MAC assignments. $ service network restart # Or restart computer Take a look at the proc settings. $ cat /proc/net/bonding/bond0 Ethernet Channel Bonding Driver: v3.0.3 (March 23, 2006) Bonding Mode: adaptive load balancing Primary Slave: None Currently Active Slave: eth2 MII Status: up MII Polling Interval (ms): 100 Up Delay (ms): 0 Down Delay (ms): 0 Slave Interface: eth2 MII Status: up Link Failure Count: 0 Permanent HW addr: 00:13:72:80:62:f0 References: http://www.cyberciti.biz/nixcraft/vivek/blogger/2006/04/linux-bond-or-team-multiple-network.php Good, well written article describing the steps above. http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=24692&package_id=146474 Documentation for bonding that can also be found in the kernel ./Documentation/networking/bonding.txt TIP 229: /etc/nsswitch.conf - System Databases and Name Service Switch configuration file. This file determines lookup order of services. For example, to match a name to an IP address, an entry can be put into the /etc/hosts file. Or a DNS query can be made. What's the order? Normally, it's the entry in the /etc/hosts file. because /etc/nsswitch.conf contains the following setting hosts: files dns See man nsswitch.conf for more settings. THE FOLLOWING SECTIONS STARTS THE PROGRAMMING TIPS PROGRAMMING TIP 1: Simple open command that restarts the close if a signal occurs. Also note, the POSIX standards committee decided all new functions would not use errno and would instead directly return the error number in the function. A lot of functions return -1 on an error condition, then, set errno to the value of the error. This will still work for all the well known functions; but, it's changing. /* start of code open.c Compile gcc -o open open.c Reference (Look for simple_but_common_x.x.x.tar.gz): http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=79066 */ #include <stdio.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> /* for strerror(int errno) */ #include <errno.h> #define BUFLEN 100 extern int errno; int main (void) { int fp,error; char buf[BUFLEN+1]; if ((fp = open ("data", O_RDWR | O_CREAT, 0600)) == -1) { fprintf (stderr, "Can't open data: %s\n", strerror (errno)); return 1; } snprintf (buf, BUFLEN, "123"); write (fp, buf, strlen (buf)); // Restart close should a signal occur */ while((( error = close (fp) ) == -1) && (errno == EINTR)); if(error == -1) perror("Failed to close the file\n"); return 0; } /* end of open.c */ PROGRAMMING TIP 2: Example of setting the effective UID on a file /* start of code gcc uid_open.c -o uid_open su chown root.chirico uid_open chmod u+s uid_open exit Now you can run this as chirico and write to the root directory */ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <string.h> #include <unistd.h> int main() { int fd; if ((fd = open("/root/datajunk", O_RDWR | O_CREAT, 0600)) == -1) { fprintf(stderr, "Can't open file \n"); return 1; } write(fd, "0123456", strlen("0123456")); close(fd); return 0; } /* end of code */ PROGRAMMING TIP 3: Writing a C http post. For downloads reference: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/spider.tar.gz?download PROGRAMMING TIP 4: Writing a 2.6.x Kernel Module: Look for the latest version of "procreadwrite". This is a 2.6 kernel modules that demonstrates how to create /proc entires and write directly to user-land via tty. It's updated to reflect replacement of "current->tty" with "current->signal->tty". http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=79066 PROGRAMMING TIP 5: Creating a filename with '\n'. This goes with (TIP 71) /**** topen.c *********************************************************** Filenames can be created with any character except the null character and a slash. This example creates a file with returns '\n\n' There's a way to remove a file by inode: $ ls -libt * And, once you know the inode $ find . -inum <num> -exec mv '{}' goodstuff \; or $ find . -inum <num> -exec rm '{}' goodstuff \; or $ find . -inum <num> -exec cat '{}' \; Compile: gcc -o topen -Wall -W -O2 -s -pipe topen.c Reference: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/simple_but_common_0.0.14.tar.gz?download */ #include <stdio.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> /* for strerror(int errno) */ #include <errno.h> #define BUFLEN 100 extern int errno; int main (void) { int fp,error; char buf[BUFLEN+1]; if ((fp = open ("\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", O_RDWR | O_CREAT, 0600)) == -1) { fprintf (stderr, "Can't open data: %s\n", strerror (errno)); return 1; } snprintf (buf, BUFLEN, "123"); write (fp, buf, strlen (buf)); // Restart close should a signal occur */ while((( error = close (fp) ) == -1) && (errno == EINTR)); if(error == -1) perror("Failed to close the file\n"); return 0; } **Note, if you want email notification after every 50 new tips have been added, then, click on the following link: https://sourceforge.net/project/filemodule_monitor.php?filemodule_id=120838 PROGRAMMING TIP 6: Working With The Lemon Parser Generator. http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/souptonuts/lemon_examples.tar.gz?download PROGRAMMING TIP 7: copy command for std container output. #include <iostream> #include <list> #include <vector> #include <iterator> using namespace std; int main(void) { vector<int> v; list<int> l; v.push_back(1); v.push_back(2); copy(v.begin(),v.end(),ostream_iterator<int>(cout,"\n")); l.push_back(23); l.push_back(12); copy(l.begin(),l.end(),ostream_iterator<int>(cout,"\n")); } PROGRAMMING TIP 8: /* Copyright (c) 2005 Mike Chirico mchirico@comcast.net mchirico@users.sourceforge.net Example of using virtual functions. Note the use of "initialization lists" for assinging the variable first and last. Compile: g++ -o virtualfunc -Wall -W -O2 -s -pipe virtual_function.cc Download: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/simple_but_common_cpp.tar.gz?download */ #include <iostream> #include <string> #include <list> #include <algorithm> #include <iterator> #include <functional> using namespace std; class Employee { string first,last; public: Employee(const string& fn="John",const string& ln="Smith"): first(fn),last(ln) {} virtual void print() const { cout << "First name: " << first << ", Last name: " << last << endl; } virtual ~Employee() {} }; class Manager : public Employee { int level; list<Employee*> subordinates; public: Manager(const string& fn="Ivan",const string& ln="Stedwick", int lvl=1): Employee(fn,ln), level(lvl) {} void print() { cout << "Manager level: " << level << " "; Employee::print(); cout << "Supervises:" << endl; for_each(subordinates.begin(),subordinates.end(),mem_fun(&Employee::print)); cout << endl << endl; } void addstaff(Employee& staff){ subordinates.push_front(&staff); } void addstaff(Employee* staff){ subordinates.push_front(staff); } }; int main() { Employee p0("Lisa","Payne"); Manager m0; m0.addstaff(new Employee("Zoe","Bear")); /* uses void addstaff(Employee* staff) */ m0.addstaff(new Employee("Leah","Bopper")); m0.addstaff(new Employee("Abby","Chicken")); m0.addstaff(p0); /* void addstaff(Employee& staff) needed for this one */ m0.addstaff(new Employee()); m0.print(); return 0; } PROGRAMMING TIP 9: /* Named Constructor Idiom. Reference: http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/ctors.html#faq-10.6 */ #include <iostream> #include <cmath> using namespace std; class Point { public: static Point rectangular(float x, float y); static Point polar(float radius, float angle); float get_x() { return x_; } float get_y() { return y_; } private: Point(float x, float y); float x_, y_; }; inline Point::Point(float x, float y) : x_(x), y_(y) {} inline Point Point::rectangular(float x, float y) { return Point(x,y); } inline Point Point::polar(float radius, float angle) { return Point(radius*cos(angle),radius*sin(angle)); } int main(void) { Point p1 = Point::rectangular(5.7,1.2); Point p2 = Point::polar(5.7,1.2); cout << "(" << p1.get_x() << ", " << p1.get_y() << ")" << endl; cout << "(" << p2.get_x() << ", " << p2.get_y() << ")" << endl; } PROGRAMMING TIP 10: /* Copy_constructor_assignment.cc Copyright (c) 2004 GPL Mike Chirico, mchirico@comcast.net or mchirico@users.sourceforge.net Reference: "The C++ Programming Language", 3rd ed, by Stroustrup pg. 246. Download: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/cpearls/simple_but_common.tar.gz?download */ #include <iostream> class Name { public: char* s; }; class Table { Name *p; size_t sz; public: Table(size_t s=15) { p = new Name[sz=s]; for(size_t i=0; i< sz; ++i) p[i].s="****"; } Table(const Table &t); Table& operator=(const Table&); int prt(); void asgn(char* ts,size_t index); ~Table(){ delete[] p; } }; Table& Table::operator=(const Table &t) { if( this != &t) { delete[] p; p = new Name[sz=t.sz]; for(size_t i=0; i< t.sz; ++i) p[i]=t.p[i]; } return *this; } int Table::prt() { for(size_t i=0; i< sz; ++i) std::cout << p[i].s << " "; std::cout << std::endl; return 0; } /* asgn will increase the array of strings, if needed to size index+1, and add the string ts to position index. */ void Table::asgn(char* ts,size_t index) { if(index < sz ) { p[index].s=ts; }else if ( index >= sz ){ Name *tp; tp=p; p = new Name[index+1]; for(size_t i=0; i< sz; ++i) p[i].s=tp[i].s; delete [] tp; for(size_t i=sz; i < index; ++i)p[i].s="****"; p[index].s=ts; sz=index+1; } } int main(void) { Table t1; Table t2(5); // this is bigger than initial sz t1.asgn("myname",20); t1.prt(); t2.prt(); t1=t2; t1.prt(); t2.prt(); } REFERENCES: (1) http://www.tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/index.html (2) http://www.shelldorado.com/ (3) http://www.faqs.org/ftp/usenet/news.answers/unix-faq/faq/part1 (4) http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/library/l-rpm1/ (5) http://www-136.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/ (6) http://www.gnu.org/manual/manual.html (7) http://fedora.redhat.com/ (8) http://souptonuts.sourceforge.net/chirico/index.php (9) http://www.faqs.org/faqs/ (10) http://www.faqs.org/docs/linux_network/ (11) http://www.tml.hut.fi/~viu/linux/sag/sag-0.6.2.html/index.html (12) http://www.yolinux.com/TUTORIALS/LinuxTutorialSysAdmin.html (13) http://sed.sourceforge.net/grabbag/scripts/ SUMMARY: (1)(2)(3) Excellent resource for bash scripts. (4) rpm resource (6) GNU Manuals Online (7) Fedora (8) Authors Website (11)(12) System Admin (13) Excellent source of sed scripts HIGHLY RECOMMENDED BOOKS: "UNIX Network Programming, The Sockets Networking API", Volume 1, Third Edition. W. Richard Stevens, Bill Fenner, Andrew M. Rudoff. "UNIX Network Programming, Interprocess Communications", Volume 2, Second Edition. W. Richard Stevens. "UNIX SYSTEMS Programming, Communication, Concurrency, and Threads", Kay A. Robbins, Steven Robbins "Programming with POSIX Threads", David R. Butenhof. Addison-Wesley "The C++ Programming Language" Third Edition. Bjarne Stroustrup. Addison-Wesley. "C Programming Language" (2nd Edition), Second Edition, Kernighan and Ritchie "Advanced Linux Programming" by Mark Mitchell, Jeffrey Oldham, and Alex Samuel, of CodeSourcery LL. This book if free at the following resource: http://www.advancedlinuxprogramming.com/ "Accelerated C++, Practical Programming by Example" Andrew Koenig, Barbara E. Moo. Addison-Wesley. "C: A Reference Manual", Fifth Edition, Samuel P. Harbison, Guy L. Steele. "C++ Standard Library: A Tutorial and Reference, The", Nicolai M. Josuttis. Addison Wesley. "C++ Templates: The Complete Guide", David Vandevoorde, Nicolai M. Josuttis. Addison Wesley. "Exceptional C++: 47 Engineering Puzzles, Programming Problems, and Solutions", Herb Sutter. Addison Wesley. "More Exceptional C++", Herb Sutter. "Exceptional C++ Style: 40 New Engineering Puzzles, Programming Problems, and Solutions", Herb Sutter. Addison Wesley. "The Art of Computer Programming (TAOCP)", Vol 1,Vol 2, Vol 3. Donald E. Knuth. Addison-Wesley. "Programming Perl, 3rd Edition", Tom Christiansen, Jon Orwant, Larry Wall. O'Reilly. http://www.unix.org.ua/orelly/perl/prog3/ "Programming from the Ground Up", Jonathan Bartlett, Edited by Dominick Bruno, Jr. http://savannah.nongnu.org/download/pgubook/ "Expert C Programming", Peter van der Linden, Prentice Hall PTR. "C++ Coding Standards 101 Rules, Guidelines, and Best Practices", by Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu. http://www.gotw.ca/publications/c++cs/bibliography.htm "Linux Kernel Development: A practical guide to the design and implementation of the Linux kernel", by Robert Love, Sams Publishing. "C++ Template Metaprogramming: Concepts, Tools, and Techniques from Boost and Beyond", by David Abrahams and Aleksey Gurtovoy. Addison Wesley. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED: PHILOSOPHICAL "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values", Robert Pirsig. http://www.virtualschool.edu/mon/Quality/PirsigZen/index.html "Lila: An Inquiry Into Morals", Robert Pirsig. RECOMMENDED BOOKS: "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs", Harold Abelson, Gerald Jay Sussman, Julie Sussman. This book is free: http://mitpress.mit.edu/sicp/full-text/book/book.html and http://www.gnu.org/software/mit-scheme/ RECOMMENDED HOTOS: Linux Networking-HOWTO (Previously the Net-3 Howto) http://en.tldp.org/HOWTO/NET3-4-HOWTO.html CORRECTIONS: The following people made suggestions and corrections: - Jorge Fabregas <fabregasj@prtc.net> TIP 21 - Malcolm Parsons <malcolm.parsons@gmail.com> TIP 44 - Andreas Haunschmidt <Andreas.Haunschmidt@utanet.at> TIP 102, TIP 90 - P@draigBrady.com (Following links ) - Jacques.GARNIER-EXTERIEUR@EU.RHODIA.COM TIP 46 http://www.pixelbeat.org/cmdline.html http://www.pixelbeat.org/rotagator/linux.tips/rotagator.fortune http://www.pixelbeat.org/scripts/ - Tobias Nix <tobias.nix@gmail.com> TIP 12