“system” User must have full permissions on the partition, so
Windows server backup can see that .
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Monday, December 29, 2014
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Get started with FreeBSD: A brief intro for Linux users
If you've never tried FreeBSD, take a few minutes now -- you might be surprised
Among the legions of Linux users and admins, there seems to
be a sort of passive curiosity about FreeBSD and other *BSDs. Like commuters on
a packed train, they gaze out at a less crowded, vaguely mysterious train
heading in a slightly different direction and wonder what traveling on that
train might be like -- for a moment. The few who cross over find themselves in
a place that is equal parts familiar and foreign. And the strange parts can be
scary.
For those who've known only Linux, FreeBSD has places of
darkness and confusion. But if you know what they are going in, it's easy
enough to get past them. I've been a BSD guy since the heady days of BSDi and
SunOS, so let me give you a brief introduction. You might be surprised at how
much you like it.
First off, modern FreeBSD does not automatically mean you
need to compile everything. While old habits die hard and many veteran FreeBSD
users still build their entire OS from source, most FreeBSD users these days
opt for binary installs and package installation. It’s faster, of course, and
the benefits of custom compilation are fewer on newer hardware.
The easiest way to get a test FreeBSD box up and running is
to download a boot-only ISO and fire up a VM. FreeBSD is available in
production and legacy releases, not unlike Ubuntu’s LTS scheme. FreeBSD
8.4-Release and 9.3-Release are considered legacy, while 10.1-Release is
production. If you want to be as current as possible, go with 10.1, but
9.3-Release should be good for most everyone. This brief walkthrough is based
on 9.3.
Boot from the boot-only ISO and you’ll soon see an install
screen. You can boot the LiveCD version, grab a shell, or install FreeBSD.
Let’s install it. Set the keyboard, pick a host name, and
take the defaults on the distribution selection dialog. This will install a
basic system with the ports tree, which we might want to have for custom
compilations later. Next, we set up a NIC to download the install packages,
which should be self-explanatory, then choose a mirror site -- the closer the
better.
Next comes disk partitioning. This is where some Linux users
get the willies; FreeBSD is different enough from Linux to throw them for a
loop. Fundamentally, however, it’s the same: We define partitions and configure
swap and mount points. We can even configure labels and use ZFS, but for this
test, let’s select guided partitioning. This will set up a boot partition, swap
partition, and a main partition mounted as root.
Once the partitions have been formatted, the installer will
pull down the distribution files and install them on the disk. On a reasonably
fast Internet connection, this will take a surprisingly short period of time —
only a few minutes on a 20Mb circuit. You can set the root password, time zone,
and a few startup options (take the default to have sshd start), and add a user
or two if you like (note that root login via SSH is disabled by default). Then
exit and reboot into your fresh FreeBSD installation.
After the reboot, log in as root, or as a user and su to
root, and do some basic housekeeping. First, run freebsd-update fetch to
download all the update patches. In a minute or two, you’ll see a list of what
files will be updated to bring the system to current. Now run freebsd-update
install to install the patches. Boom, you’re current.
Now, let’s install software we might need. We’ll be using
pkgng, the newer FreeBSD package management system. You’ll find it very easy to
use. Run pkg, and you’ll be prompted to install pkgng. Now run pkg update. Then
pkg search bash to see a list of packages matching the string bash. We can
install the bash shell with pkg install bash. We can install anything else the
same way. If we want to install a LAMP stack and Perl, we would issue pkg
install apache24 php5 mod_php5 mysql55-server php5-mysql perl5. Look familiar?
Note that you could as easily install PHP 5.3, 5.4, 5.5, or 5.6, or MySQL 5.1,
5.5, or 5.6.
When we install these packages, they install by default
under /usr/local. This includes the startup scripts, which will be in
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/. Configurations are usually in /usr/local/etc, and
binaries in /usr/local/bin. Core system utilities like ssh and bind, however,
will be under /usr, with configurations in /etc.
Of utmost importance in FreeBSD is /etc/rc.conf. This is
where the bulk of basic system configuration is handled; it's also where we set
interface IP addresses and tell the system what services to start. You can’t
really install and start a system service with FreeBSD without also enabling it
in /etc/rc.conf. This tends to result in fewer problems with services that
don’t start on reboot because an admin forgot to set them that way. If you set
apache24_enable=“YES” in /etc/rc.conf, then Apache will start at boot and
manually from the shell, but if you don’t set that, Apache won’t start either
way (well, unless you start it with /usr/local/etc/rc.d/apache24 onestart). You
can also set variables like socket file locations and command-line parameters
in /etc/rc.conf. All of your other daemons will behave this way — it’s a
one-stop shop for system configuration.
Then there’s pf, the fantastic FreeBSD firewall. Have a look
at /usr/share/examples/pf/pf.conf, copy it to /etc/pf.conf, and modify it as
needed. You’ll find it much simpler than iptables. The example file shows how
to do NAT, port redirection, and basic firewalling, and how to permit traffic
to reach certain ports. It really doesn’t get much easier than pass in on
$ext_if proto tcp to ($ext_if) port ssh, or adding IP addresses and subnets to
definable tables and referencing them with single rule. Seriously, pf is
fantastic.
Oh, and ports — the part that tends to concern Linux-only
folks. The FreeBSD ports and packages collection is a hierarchy of all software
available via the FreeBSD project. Organized into logical groups (lang, www,
mail, shells, security, and so forth), ports allows you to build and install
any of that software from source.
We already installed the ports collection, but we might as
well get it up to date. Run portsnap fetch to download the latest ports
snapshot, then portsnap extract to update the entirety of the ports tree.
To build a package, you only need to navigate into the ports
subdirectory and issue make. However, because we’re also using pkgng, we need
to tie the two together if we need to install from ports instead of pkgng. Edit
/etc/make.conf and add the line WITH_PKGNG="yes".
Generally speaking, we would only build from ports if the
package available from pkgng is missing compile-time options. For instance, we
might need package foo compiled with libbar support, but the foo package does
not have libbar support by default. Thus, we would find foo under /usr/ports
and issue make, which would prompt us for compile-time options. We’d select
libbar support, and the package and all dependencies would be built. Then
running make install would install foo, and pkgng would know all about it.
Running pkg info foo would give us all that information.
There’s plenty more to FreeBSD than this short intro, such
as enabling Linux software compatibility and using ZFS, but perhaps this
glimpse across the tracks is enough to convince a few Linux-only folks to take
a walk on the other side. There’s an awful lot to like about FreeBSD, and it’s
not as scary as you might think.
Source: InfoWorld by Paul Venezia
Sunday, December 14, 2014
How to enable Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager
The Intel Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager (Intel® HAXM) is a hardware-assisted virtualization engine that speed up Android app emulation on a host machine. HAXM allows for faster Android emulation on Intel VT enabled systems.(android emulator link jar of beans )
Now, if you want to enable this feature, you have to enter BIOS and usually in the configuration tab look for virtualization or VT-d and VT-x and enable them, save the change and exit ,it's done.
Labels:
android,
bios,
emulation,
emulator,
haxm,
intel,
jar of beans,
virtualization,
vt-d,
vt-x
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