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  1. Dans le supermarché des médias privés, quelques milliardaires poursuivent leurs emplettes. Sur le service public, Radio France sacrifie l'environnement et l'enquête. État des lieux des dernières acquisitions. 💰 1/

    #splann #presse #milliardaire #oligarchie #democratie #journal #journalisme #redaction #média #bolloré #saadé #attal #kretinsky #arnault #enquete #environnement

  2. Dans le supermarché des médias privés, quelques milliardaires poursuivent leurs emplettes. Sur le service public, Radio France sacrifie l'environnement et l'enquête. État des lieux des dernières acquisitions. 💰 1/

    #splann #presse #milliardaire #oligarchie #democratie #journal #journalisme #redaction #média #bolloré #saadé #attal #kretinsky #arnault #enquete #environnement

  3. Dans le supermarché des médias privés, quelques milliardaires poursuivent leurs emplettes. Sur le service public, Radio France sacrifie l'environnement et l'enquête. État des lieux des dernières acquisitions. 💰 1/

    #splann #presse #milliardaire #oligarchie #democratie #journal #journalisme #redaction #média #bolloré #saadé #attal #kretinsky #arnault #enquete #environnement

  4. Dans le supermarché des médias privés, quelques milliardaires poursuivent leurs emplettes. Sur le service public, Radio France sacrifie l'environnement et l'enquête. État des lieux des dernières acquisitions. 💰 1/

    #splann #presse #milliardaire #oligarchie #democratie #journal #journalisme #redaction #média #bolloré #saadé #attal #kretinsky #arnault #enquete #environnement

  5. In the 90s and Aughts, #GNUlinux took over the infrastructure of the Internet.

    I have no experience with non-Gnu HTML servers, but I can only assume it worked as well as whatever was on the market, besides being Free. If it didn't have performance equity, or possibly an edge, it probably would not have happened, though it might still have, given the price.

    But in the end, it was a rout; now we choose between Nginx and Apache and S3 and some fringe exotics, there are no commercial players in HTML server software. People still make money by selling expertise of course, or renting out hardware, and they all use Free software.

    We are approaching the same being true for databases, but for whatever reasons, mersh players like Oracle still exist, primarily due to the way corporate brains work. I think C-levels see the continued existence of Gnu, let alone in their server rooms, as a mark of shame, and they will pay any amount to stop that pinko communish from spreading further.

    In the end, it will also be a rout, and it might even be a much quicker and more dramatic endgame than HTML was. Lovely day. Perhaps soon, given how stretched out Larry Ellison is at the moment, what with demolishing the media and so forth.

    What I'm seeing is a pattern that could be graphed with [X=time] and [Y=perceived usefulness of software], and it has two lines on it, one for [Free software] and one for [Commercial software].

    Very near the start, the Mersh line looks like a steep staircase, or just a cliff: It shoots straight up, holds position, maybe spikes upward again a few times as developers add features. Massive off the line advantage, because it has money paying skilled people to make it amazing. The line soars like that for a long while, but eventually, it starts to arc downwards, and eventually it craters. Exhibit A: Windows.

    The Free line, on the other hand, is just a gentle upward slope. And right as the Mersh line starts to taper off, the Free devs have been working on this code for years, and are really hitting their stride. At some point they hit feature parity, or in some cases surpass it. There might be a late spike, I guess, on the Free line, right where the general public starts to notice the rot in the Mersh, how it no longer seems to perform at levels that justify the price, which itself has steadily climbed and climbed.

    I wish I was informed enough to get that graph for HTML Servers, cause I think the pattern we would see there would be quite predictive.

    Anything you get from hard work instead of money, you keep. Nothing can take away something earned through work. This is true for an individual who stays home to play their music scales or study her math instead of going out to galavant. It's also true for a society that creates Free software. They will never enshittify Blender, because they can never disable its features to force anyone to pay to get them back.

    There is a running joke in our various outlets: The Year Of The Linux Desktop. It is a kind of all-in-one bit of Linux humour, functional as a setup, as a punchline, as a pwn, as an analogy for a fool's grand ambitions.

    I say, though, we've already hit a much more important year: The Year Of The Linux Gaming Console That Runs Your Windows Games, And Which Is Also A Full-On Linux Computer. You know what I'm talking about. Or maybe you don't, because you are not a gamer.

    Gamers have had a rough time of it lately, and hey, if you haven't, watch This Is England cause it's directly applicable to their situation.

    Ok did you watch it? You know what I'm gonna say if you did: #Skinheads had nothing to do with Fascism, until right wing political interests noticed that they were a good target for propagandization, because every other group was ignoring or reviling them already. After all, they (checks notes) hung out with West Indians and listened to that "Reggae" music. Filthy.

    Gamers were the same group in a whole other kind of world; ignored or reviled, seen as nothing but adolescent wastoids at best, but in possession of their own subculture that nobody who was not into games cared to really look at. They were all kinds of unattractive things that humans always are, but they were not particularly interested in politics, one way or another. Just like the pre-NF skins.

    But meanwhile, a lot of people still like games, and the Steam hardware products are delivering Linux into their lives via the very thing that had been keeping them anchored into Windows, seemingly permanently, with only locked-up consoles from IP trolls like Nintendo as their alternatives. Much as PCs in general have subsisted on Micoshit or that rotten fruit.

    The Linux Desktop absolutely is coming, and I'm thinking this is as good a year for me to call it as any. Not replacing Windows, but gaining a two-digit share of the "market". That Hare is looking pretty Sloppy and overworked, but those Tortoises keep coming.

    (as an aside, going all the way back to my C64, I have never understood the allure of cartridge consoles. Yes, the Nintendo kids could play Super Mario anytime they wanted, and that was... something. Super Mario Bros was a major, major thing in the arcade days, and putting it in their console was a deathblow to other game platforms. It is fascinating to me that just a few years ago, people managed to code a perfect clone of it for the 64 - I would never have believed that possible, but again, that steady upward line on the graph....)

  6. In the 90s and Aughts, #GNUlinux took over the infrastructure of the Internet.

    I have no experience with non-Gnu HTML servers, but I can only assume it worked as well as whatever was on the market, besides being Free. If it didn't have performance equity, or possibly an edge, it probably would not have happened, though it might still have, given the price.

    But in the end, it was a rout; now we choose between Nginx and Apache and S3 and some fringe exotics, there are no commercial players in HTML server software. People still make money by selling expertise of course, or renting out hardware, and they all use Free software.

    We are approaching the same being true for databases, but for whatever reasons, mersh players like Oracle still exist, primarily due to the way corporate brains work. I think C-levels see the continued existence of Gnu, let alone in their server rooms, as a mark of shame, and they will pay any amount to stop that pinko communish from spreading further.

    In the end, it will also be a rout, and it might even be a much quicker and more dramatic endgame than HTML was. Lovely day. Perhaps soon, given how stretched out Larry Ellison is at the moment, what with demolishing the media and so forth.

    What I'm seeing is a pattern that could be graphed with [X=time] and [Y=perceived usefulness of software], and it has two lines on it, one for [Free software] and one for [Commercial software].

    Very near the start, the Mersh line looks like a steep staircase, or just a cliff: It shoots straight up, holds position, maybe spikes upward again a few times as developers add features. Massive off the line advantage, because it has money paying skilled people to make it amazing. The line soars like that for a long while, but eventually, it starts to arc downwards, and eventually it craters. Exhibit A: Windows.

    The Free line, on the other hand, is just a gentle upward slope. And right as the Mersh line starts to taper off, the Free devs have been working on this code for years, and are really hitting their stride. At some point they hit feature parity, or in some cases surpass it. There might be a late spike, I guess, on the Free line, right where the general public starts to notice the rot in the Mersh, how it no longer seems to perform at levels that justify the price, which itself has steadily climbed and climbed.

    I wish I was informed enough to get that graph for HTML Servers, cause I think the pattern we would see there would be quite predictive.

    Anything you get from hard work instead of money, you keep. Nothing can take away something earned through work. This is true for an individual who stays home to play their music scales or study her math instead of going out to galavant. It's also true for a society that creates Free software. They will never enshittify Blender, because they can never disable its features to force anyone to pay to get them back.

    There is a running joke in our various outlets: The Year Of The Linux Desktop. It is a kind of all-in-one bit of Linux humour, functional as a setup, as a punchline, as a pwn, as an analogy for a fool's grand ambitions.

    I say, though, we've already hit a much more important year: The Year Of The Linux Gaming Console That Runs Your Windows Games, And Which Is Also A Full-On Linux Computer. You know what I'm talking about. Or maybe you don't, because you are not a gamer.

    Gamers have had a rough time of it lately, and hey, if you haven't, watch This Is England cause it's directly applicable to their situation.

    Ok did you watch it? You know what I'm gonna say if you did: #Skinheads had nothing to do with Fascism, until right wing political interests noticed that they were a good target for propagandization, because every other group was ignoring or reviling them already. After all, they (checks notes) hung out with West Indians and listened to that "Reggae" music. Filthy.

    Gamers were the same group in a whole other kind of world; ignored or reviled, seen as nothing but adolescent wastoids at best, but in possession of their own subculture that nobody who was not into games cared to really look at. They were all kinds of unattractive things that humans always are, but they were not particularly interested in politics, one way or another. Just like the pre-NF skins.

    But meanwhile, a lot of people still like games, and the Steam hardware products are delivering Linux into their lives via the very thing that had been keeping them anchored into Windows, seemingly permanently, with only locked-up consoles from IP trolls like Nintendo as their alternatives. Much as PCs in general have subsisted on Micoshit or that rotten fruit.

    The Linux Desktop absolutely is coming, and I'm thinking this is as good a year for me to call it as any. Not replacing Windows, but gaining a two-digit share of the "market". That Hare is looking pretty Sloppy and overworked, but those Tortoises keep coming.

    (as an aside, going all the way back to my C64, I have never understood the allure of cartridge consoles. Yes, the Nintendo kids could play Super Mario anytime they wanted, and that was... something. Super Mario Bros was a major, major thing in the arcade days, and putting it in their console was a deathblow to other game platforms. It is fascinating to me that just a few years ago, people managed to code a perfect clone of it for the 64 - I would never have believed that possible, but again, that steady upward line on the graph....)

  7. In the 90s and Aughts, #GNUlinux took over the infrastructure of the Internet.

    I have no experience with non-Gnu HTML servers, but I can only assume it worked as well as whatever was on the market, besides being Free. If it didn't have performance equity, or possibly an edge, it probably would not have happened, though it might still have, given the price.

    But in the end, it was a rout; now we choose between Nginx and Apache and S3 and some fringe exotics, there are no commercial players in HTML server software. People still make money by selling expertise of course, or renting out hardware, and they all use Free software.

    We are approaching the same being true for databases, but for whatever reasons, mersh players like Oracle still exist, primarily due to the way corporate brains work. I think C-levels see the continued existence of Gnu, let alone in their server rooms, as a mark of shame, and they will pay any amount to stop that pinko communish from spreading further.

    In the end, it will also be a rout, and it might even be a much quicker and more dramatic endgame than HTML was. Lovely day. Perhaps soon, given how stretched out Larry Ellison is at the moment, what with demolishing the media and so forth.

    What I'm seeing is a pattern that could be graphed with [X=time] and [Y=perceived usefulness of software], and it has two lines on it, one for [Free software] and one for [Commercial software].

    Very near the start, the Mersh line looks like a steep staircase, or just a cliff: It shoots straight up, holds position, maybe spikes upward again a few times as developers add features. Massive off the line advantage, because it has money paying skilled people to make it amazing. The line soars like that for a long while, but eventually, it starts to arc downwards, and eventually it craters. Exhibit A: Windows.

    The Free line, on the other hand, is just a gentle upward slope. And right as the Mersh line starts to taper off, the Free devs have been working on this code for years, and are really hitting their stride. At some point they hit feature parity, or in some cases surpass it. There might be a late spike, I guess, on the Free line, right where the general public starts to notice the rot in the Mersh, how it no longer seems to perform at levels that justify the price, which itself has steadily climbed and climbed.

    I wish I was informed enough to get that graph for HTML Servers, cause I think the pattern we would see there would be quite predictive.

    Anything you get from hard work instead of money, you keep. Nothing can take away something earned through work. This is true for an individual who stays home to play their music scales or study her math instead of going out to galavant. It's also true for a society that creates Free software. They will never enshittify Blender, because they can never disable its features to force anyone to pay to get them back.

    There is a running joke in our various outlets: The Year Of The Linux Desktop. It is a kind of all-in-one bit of Linux humour, functional as a setup, as a punchline, as a pwn, as an analogy for a fool's grand ambitions.

    I say, though, we've already hit a much more important year: The Year Of The Linux Gaming Console That Runs Your Windows Games, And Which Is Also A Full-On Linux Computer. You know what I'm talking about. Or maybe you don't, because you are not a gamer.

    Gamers have had a rough time of it lately, and hey, if you haven't, watch This Is England cause it's directly applicable to their situation.

    Ok did you watch it? You know what I'm gonna say if you did: #Skinheads had nothing to do with Fascism, until right wing political interests noticed that they were a good target for propagandization, because every other group was ignoring or reviling them already. After all, they (checks notes) hung out with West Indians and listened to that "Reggae" music. Filthy.

    Gamers were the same group in a whole other kind of world; ignored or reviled, seen as nothing but adolescent wastoids at best, but in possession of their own subculture that nobody who was not into games cared to really look at. They were all kinds of unattractive things that humans always are, but they were not particularly interested in politics, one way or another. Just like the pre-NF skins.

    But meanwhile, a lot of people still like games, and the Steam hardware products are delivering Linux into their lives via the very thing that had been keeping them anchored into Windows, seemingly permanently, with only locked-up consoles from IP trolls like Nintendo as their alternatives. Much as PCs in general have subsisted on Micoshit or that rotten fruit.

    The Linux Desktop absolutely is coming, and I'm thinking this is as good a year for me to call it as any. Not replacing Windows, but gaining a two-digit share of the "market". That Hare is looking pretty Sloppy and overworked, but those Tortoises keep coming.

    (as an aside, going all the way back to my C64, I have never understood the allure of cartridge consoles. Yes, the Nintendo kids could play Super Mario anytime they wanted, and that was... something. Super Mario Bros was a major, major thing in the arcade days, and putting it in their console was a deathblow to other game platforms. It is fascinating to me that just a few years ago, people managed to code a perfect clone of it for the 64 - I would never have believed that possible, but again, that steady upward line on the graph....)

  8. In the 90s and Aughts, #GNUlinux took over the infrastructure of the Internet.

    I have no experience with non-Gnu HTML servers, but I can only assume it worked as well as whatever was on the market, besides being Free. If it didn't have performance equity, or possibly an edge, it probably would not have happened, though it might still have, given the price.

    But in the end, it was a rout; now we choose between Nginx and Apache and S3 and some fringe exotics, there are no commercial players in HTML server software. People still make money by selling expertise of course, or renting out hardware, and they all use Free software.

    We are approaching the same being true for databases, but for whatever reasons, mersh players like Oracle still exist, primarily due to the way corporate brains work. I think C-levels see the continued existence of Gnu, let alone in their server rooms, as a mark of shame, and they will pay any amount to stop that pinko communish from spreading further.

    In the end, it will also be a rout, and it might even be a much quicker and more dramatic endgame than HTML was. Lovely day. Perhaps soon, given how stretched out Larry Ellison is at the moment, what with demolishing the media and so forth.

    What I'm seeing is a pattern that could be graphed with [X=time] and [Y=perceived usefulness of software], and it has two lines on it, one for [Free software] and one for [Commercial software].

    Very near the start, the Mersh line looks like a steep staircase, or just a cliff: It shoots straight up, holds position, maybe spikes upward again a few times as developers add features. Massive off the line advantage, because it has money paying skilled people to make it amazing. The line soars like that for a long while, but eventually, it starts to arc downwards, and eventually it craters. Exhibit A: Windows.

    The Free line, on the other hand, is just a gentle upward slope. And right as the Mersh line starts to taper off, the Free devs have been working on this code for years, and are really hitting their stride. At some point they hit feature parity, or in some cases surpass it. There might be a late spike, I guess, on the Free line, right where the general public starts to notice the rot in the Mersh, how it no longer seems to perform at levels that justify the price, which itself has steadily climbed and climbed.

    I wish I was informed enough to get that graph for HTML Servers, cause I think the pattern we would see there would be quite predictive.

    Anything you get from hard work instead of money, you keep. Nothing can take away something earned through work. This is true for an individual who stays home to play their music scales or study her math instead of going out to galavant. It's also true for a society that creates Free software. They will never enshittify Blender, because they can never disable its features to force anyone to pay to get them back.

    There is a running joke in our various outlets: The Year Of The Linux Desktop. It is a kind of all-in-one bit of Linux humour, functional as a setup, as a punchline, as a pwn, as an analogy for a fool's grand ambitions.

    I say, though, we've already hit a much more important year: The Year Of The Linux Gaming Console That Runs Your Windows Games, And Which Is Also A Full-On Linux Computer. You know what I'm talking about. Or maybe you don't, because you are not a gamer.

    Gamers have had a rough time of it lately, and hey, if you haven't, watch This Is England cause it's directly applicable to their situation.

    Ok did you watch it? You know what I'm gonna say if you did: #Skinheads had nothing to do with Fascism, until right wing political interests noticed that they were a good target for propagandization, because every other group was ignoring or reviling them already. After all, they (checks notes) hung out with West Indians and listened to that "Reggae" music. Filthy.

    Gamers were the same group in a whole other kind of world; ignored or reviled, seen as nothing but adolescent wastoids at best, but in possession of their own subculture that nobody who was not into games cared to really look at. They were all kinds of unattractive things that humans always are, but they were not particularly interested in politics, one way or another. Just like the pre-NF skins.

    But meanwhile, a lot of people still like games, and the Steam hardware products are delivering Linux into their lives via the very thing that had been keeping them anchored into Windows, seemingly permanently, with only locked-up consoles from IP trolls like Nintendo as their alternatives. Much as PCs in general have subsisted on Micoshit or that rotten fruit.

    The Linux Desktop absolutely is coming, and I'm thinking this is as good a year for me to call it as any. Not replacing Windows, but gaining a two-digit share of the "market". That Hare is looking pretty Sloppy and overworked, but those Tortoises keep coming.

    (as an aside, going all the way back to my C64, I have never understood the allure of cartridge consoles. Yes, the Nintendo kids could play Super Mario anytime they wanted, and that was... something. Super Mario Bros was a major, major thing in the arcade days, and putting it in their console was a deathblow to other game platforms. It is fascinating to me that just a few years ago, people managed to code a perfect clone of it for the 64 - I would never have believed that possible, but again, that steady upward line on the graph....)

  9. I am always serious when it comes to eating what we have grown.This is a fleshy pineaple from our lent garden,and I am happy always to share with visitors.
    Come one ,come all for the pineapple eating festivals with our organisation.Hahahahaa
    #photography #fediverse #linux #environment #hunger #fruits #gardening #foodproduction #socialimpact #agriculture #nutrition #mastodon #economics #sustainability #farming #feeding #people

  10. I am always serious when it comes to eating what we have grown.This is a fleshy pineaple from our lent garden,and I am happy always to share with visitors.
    Come one ,come all for the pineapple eating festivals with our organisation.Hahahahaa
    #photography #fediverse #linux #environment #hunger #fruits #gardening #foodproduction #socialimpact #agriculture #nutrition #mastodon #economics #sustainability #farming #feeding #people

  11. I am always serious when it comes to eating what we have grown.This is a fleshy pineaple from our lent garden,and I am happy always to share with visitors.
    Come one ,come all for the pineapple eating festivals with our organisation.Hahahahaa
    #photography #fediverse #linux #environment #hunger #fruits #gardening #foodproduction #socialimpact #agriculture #nutrition #mastodon #economics #sustainability #farming #feeding #people

  12. I am always serious when it comes to eating what we have grown.This is a fleshy pineaple from our lent garden,and I am happy always to share with visitors.
    Come one ,come all for the pineapple eating festivals with our organisation.Hahahahaa
    #photography #fediverse #linux #environment #hunger #fruits #gardening #foodproduction #socialimpact #agriculture #nutrition #mastodon #economics #sustainability #farming #feeding #people

  13. I am always serious when it comes to eating what we have grown.This is a fleshy pineaple from our lent garden,and I am happy always to share with visitors.
    Come one ,come all for the pineapple eating festivals with our organisation.Hahahahaa
    #photography #fediverse #linux #environment #hunger #fruits #gardening #foodproduction #socialimpact #agriculture #nutrition #mastodon #economics #sustainability #farming #feeding #people

  14. We are inviting everyone on #mastodon to support us in making our vision of a world where empowered youth drive a community transformation through green #agriculture ensuring resilient #ecosystem
    ,food secure families and thriving self sustainable communities become a reality in life.
    #photography #linux #environment #hunger #plants #biodiversity #ClimateAction #gardening #foodproduction #sustainability #socialimpact #economics #mushrooms #fediverse #soil #nature #food #zerohunger

  15. We are inviting everyone on #mastodon to support us in making our vision of a world where empowered youth drive a community transformation through green #agriculture ensuring resilient #ecosystem
    ,food secure families and thriving self sustainable communities become a reality in life.
    #photography #linux #environment #hunger #plants #biodiversity #ClimateAction #gardening #foodproduction #sustainability #socialimpact #economics #mushrooms #fediverse #soil #nature #food #zerohunger

  16. We are inviting everyone on #mastodon to support us in making our vision of a world where empowered youth drive a community transformation through green #agriculture ensuring resilient #ecosystem
    ,food secure families and thriving self sustainable communities become a reality in life.
    #photography #linux #environment #hunger #plants #biodiversity #ClimateAction #gardening #foodproduction #sustainability #socialimpact #economics #mushrooms #fediverse #soil #nature #food #zerohunger

  17. We are inviting everyone on #mastodon to support us in making our vision of a world where empowered youth drive a community transformation through green #agriculture ensuring resilient #ecosystem
    ,food secure families and thriving self sustainable communities become a reality in life.
    #photography #linux #environment #hunger #plants #biodiversity #ClimateAction #gardening #foodproduction #sustainability #socialimpact #economics #mushrooms #fediverse #soil #nature #food #zerohunger

  18. We are inviting everyone on #mastodon to support us in making our vision of a world where empowered youth drive a community transformation through green #agriculture ensuring resilient #ecosystem
    ,food secure families and thriving self sustainable communities become a reality in life.
    #photography #linux #environment #hunger #plants #biodiversity #ClimateAction #gardening #foodproduction #sustainability #socialimpact #economics #mushrooms #fediverse #soil #nature #food #zerohunger

  19. My #homelab server, which is accessible over the internet, stopped responding today. I walked back home and the server was fine from inside the house. After like five minutes, it was clear what the problem was: my ISP gave me a new lease and my external IP changed.

    So today I spent an hour or so and go a bash script running on a cronjob that double check to see if my DNS records match my homelab external IP and updates the DNS if they don't.

    Is this high availability? No, this is sustainable technology and owning your own platforms. There is no cloud, there's a macbook pro running #linux proped against a wall.

  20. New project: mosscap. I needed a small tool to automate certain shell tasks with a simple easy to use configuration system. I didn't find one that suited me, so I made my own.

    Miss so turns out to be pretty, powerful and flexible. You can parallelize tasks, have comprehensive logging, interactive abort between actions etc.

    Try it out: codeberg.org/scip/mosscap

    #golang #cli #automate #commandline #linux #yaml

  21. THIS IS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE!

    I think the SFTP server is down again. Expected files not in our INBOX and it happens on a semi-regular basis and usually after a weekend.

    On my Linux box I had a very simple CHRON setup to run a specific BASH script. On my work WIN11 machine I have automated running a specific program every Monday morning checking for a specific item.

    It should be trivial to do the same on the servers instead of buying software to verify that the servers are working.

    1. On several machines have an automated script launch in the morning at least twice a week. It sends one specific file to one or more other servers.

    2. The outside server(s) do the same thing on the same day and time.

    3. For every machine set up running a second set of scripts looking for incoming file(s) with the special names an hour or so later. If the INBOX is empty then use SENDMAIL with a notification that the expected file is not present. Do the same for each incoming file with enough information we know if it is the incoming server or outgoing server that is hosed.

    As I said... THIS ISN'T ROCKET SCIENCE. I have been doing this for many years and it gives the support team (myself & two others) notification several hours before the nightly runs that we are missing at least one file!

    #linux #windowserver #chron #scripts

  22. THIS IS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE!

    I think the SFTP server is down again. Expected files not in our INBOX and it happens on a semi-regular basis and usually after a weekend.

    On my Linux box I had a very simple CHRON setup to run a specific BASH script. On my work WIN11 machine I have automated running a specific program every Monday morning checking for a specific item.

    It should be trivial to do the same on the servers instead of buying software to verify that the servers are working.

    1. On several machines have an automated script launch in the morning at least twice a week. It sends one specific file to one or more other servers.

    2. The outside server(s) do the same thing on the same day and time.

    3. For every machine set up running a second set of scripts looking for incoming file(s) with the special names an hour or so later. If the INBOX is empty then use SENDMAIL with a notification that the expected file is not present. Do the same for each incoming file with enough information we know if it is the incoming server or outgoing server that is hosed.

    As I said... THIS ISN'T ROCKET SCIENCE. I have been doing this for many years and it gives the support team (myself & two others) notification several hours before the nightly runs that we are missing at least one file!

    #linux #windowserver #chron #scripts

  23. THIS IS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE!

    I think the SFTP server is down again. Expected files not in our INBOX and it happens on a semi-regular basis and usually after a weekend.

    On my Linux box I had a very simple CHRON setup to run a specific BASH script. On my work WIN11 machine I have automated running a specific program every Monday morning checking for a specific item.

    It should be trivial to do the same on the servers instead of buying software to verify that the servers are working.

    1. On several machines have an automated script launch in the morning at least twice a week. It sends one specific file to one or more other servers.

    2. The outside server(s) do the same thing on the same day and time.

    3. For every machine set up running a second set of scripts looking for incoming file(s) with the special names an hour or so later. If the INBOX is empty then use SENDMAIL with a notification that the expected file is not present. Do the same for each incoming file with enough information we know if it is the incoming server or outgoing server that is hosed.

    As I said... THIS ISN'T ROCKET SCIENCE. I have been doing this for many years and it gives the support team (myself & two others) notification several hours before the nightly runs that we are missing at least one file!

    #linux #windowserver #chron #scripts

  24. Записки импортозамещенца: как обеспечить централизованную аутентификацию в Linux, серверная часть для SSSD

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    habr.com/ru/companies/astralin

    #linux #freeipa #samba #activedirectory #sssd #импортозамещение #служба_каталога #системное_администрирование #учебный_процесс #astralinux

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    habr.com/ru/companies/astralin

    #linux #freeipa #samba #activedirectory #sssd #импортозамещение #служба_каталога #системное_администрирование #учебный_процесс #astralinux

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    habr.com/ru/companies/astralin

    #linux #freeipa #samba #activedirectory #sssd #импортозамещение #служба_каталога #системное_администрирование #учебный_процесс #astralinux

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    Привет, Хабр! Меня зовут Никита, и я являюсь инженером ИБ-компании «Экстрим безопасность». В предыдущей статье мы обсудили, что для централизованной аутентификации в Linux чаще всего используют службу SSSD, которая изначально разрабатывалась для FreeIPA, но поддерживает и другие бэкенды. Давайте познакомимся теперь внимательнее со всеми этими возможностями.

    habr.com/ru/companies/astralin

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