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Saturday, 04 September 2010
Disk Based Backups With Amanda On Debian Etch PDF Print
Articles - Devices
Courtesy: Jenag  
This document describes how to set up Amanda (The Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver) on Debian Etch. For this tutorial I chose Ubuntu v7.04 as a backup-client. The resulting system provides a flexible backup-system with many features. It will be able to back up multiple hosts via network to various devices. I chose the disk based backup for this howto.
 
SuPHP On Fedora 7 Or CentOS 5 With ISPConfig PDF Print
Articles - Linux installation topics
Courtesy: James  

The steps describe how to set up suPHP on Fedora 7 or CentOS 5 with ISPConfig. After the successful installation, the system will support suPHP with ISPConfig.

What is suPHP?

suPHP is a tool for executing PHP scripts with the permissions of their owners. It consists of an Apache module (mod_suphp) and a setuid root binary (suphp) that is called by the Apache module to change the uid of the process executing the PHP interpreter.

 
Cacti With Xampp On Ubuntu PDF Print
Articles - Linux installation topics
Courtesy: qoodos  
This is a simple setup of Cacti, so that you don’t really need a "Linux" expert to maintain it. Please note that Cacti can also be installed on Windows and guides for both these installations are available on the net. This guide is just a repeat of how Cacti was set up.
 
Why are Linux and Mac OS X safer? PDF Print
Articles - Virus
Courtesy: GHarris  

Opinion To mess up a Linux box, you need to work at it; to mess up your Windows box, you just need to work on it, writes SecurityFocus columnist Scott Granneman.

We've all heard it many times when a new Microsoft virus comes out. In fact, I've heard it a couple of times this week already. Someone on a mailing list or discussion forum complains about the latest in a long line of Microsoft email viruses or worms and recommends others consider Mac OS X or Linux as a somewhat safer computing platform. In response, another person named, oh, let's call him "Bill," says, basically, "How ridiculous! The only reason Microsoft software is the target of so many viruses is because it is so widely used! Why, if Linux or Mac OS X was as popular as Windows, there would be just as many viruses written for those platforms!"

Of course, it's not just "regular folks" on mailing lists who share this opinion. Businesspeople have expressed similar attitudes ... including ones who work for anti-virus companies. Jack Clarke, European product manager at McAfee, said, "So we will be seeing more Linux viruses as the OS becomes more common and popular."

 
A Linux firewall primer PDF Print
Articles - Networking
Courtesy: qoodos  
You've heard the familiar arguments: commercial firewall products are overpriced; proprietary firewall code leaves you at the mercy of a vendor's timetable in the event of a security hole; the cost of underlying hardware/software platform for Windows is high and puts you on an escalating upgrade path. As your company's key IT decision-maker you can't afford to spend money needlessly nor ignore even temporary security issues, so you're thinking seriously about deploying a Linux-based firewall solution. What do you need to know?
 
The short life and hard times of a Linux virus PDF Print
Articles - Virus
Courtesy: qoodos  
Why aren't the existing Linux viruses anything more than a topic for conversation? Why don't they affect you in your daily computing in the way that MS viruses affect Windows users?

There are several reasons for the non-issue of the Linux virus. Most of those reasons a Linux user would already be familiar with, but there is one, all important, reason that a student of evolution or zoology would also appreciate.
 
Ubuntu: 32-bit v. 64-bit Performance PDF Print
Articles - Linux
Courtesy: GHarris  
While 64-bit support is now considered common for both Intel and AMD processors, many Linux (as well as Windows) users are uncertain whether to use a 32-bit or 64-bit operating system with there being advantages for both paths. With this being the last Phoronix article for 2006, we decided to take this opportunity to look at this common question of whether to use 32-bit or 64-bit software. In this article, we will be comparing the i386 and x86_64 performance with Ubuntu 6.10 Edgy Eft and Ubuntu 7.04 Feisty Fawn Herd 1 to see how the numbers truly stack up.
 
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Special Note
The first Linux systems were completed in 1992 by combining system utilities and libraries from the GNU project with the Linux kernel, which led to the coining of the term GNU/Linux. From the late 1990s onward Linux gained the support of corporations such as IBM, Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, and Novell. Since then Linux is growing day by day and today it is about to beat Microsoft Windows OS in all means.
 
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