17 – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 22 Feb 2016 02:45:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png 17 – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Arch Home Server Challenge | LAS 313 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/57622/arch-home-server-challenge-las-313/ Sun, 18 May 2014 16:19:39 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=57622 Coming up on this week’s episode of The Linux Action Show! Arch Linux can make the perfect Home Server, we’ll share our tips to build the ultimate home server running the latest software, powered by Arch Linux. Plus Ubuntu rocks the OpenStack summit, a first look at Syncthing (the fully OSS Bittorrent Sync killer), results […]

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Coming up on this week’s episode of The Linux Action Show!

Arch Linux can make the perfect Home Server, we’ll share our tips to build the ultimate home server running the latest software, powered by Arch Linux.

Plus Ubuntu rocks the OpenStack summit, a first look at Syncthing (the fully OSS Bittorrent Sync killer), results from our Btrfs poll, our picks…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:


\"DigitalOcean\"


\"Ting\"

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— Show Notes: —

Ultimate Arch Home Server:


\"System76\"

Brought to you by: System76

Ubuntu 12.10 – Quantal Quetzal – End of Life reached on May 16 2014

Arch Home Server Install Notes:

\"Arch

  • My Arch server philosophy comes down to one word: Focus
  • Outside of a few exceptions, an Arch server should be an absolutely lean machine, with only the packages required to perform a specific function.
  • Additional functions should be spun out into separate VMs when possible. VMs are cheap, containers are even cheaper.
  • We use a Template with a base Arch install, with the correct uids for NFS, the correct groups, and the basic file system mounts entered to fstab. This also simplifies the Arch deployment process.

  • The best server is a headless server, with no GUI. When you toss out the GUI, the usability playing field for setting up a server gets leveled out to nearly flat.

  • The invaluable amount of help that comes from the Arch Wiki in many ways gives Arch a usability boost over other possible distributions for a headless home server.

Arch Installation Quick Reference Guide by jmac217

So over the past few months or so I\’ve been just been throwing often-used commands and links into a Google Document to get me up and running quickly when I want to spin up a new Arch installation.

  • [Google Doc Install Guide by jmac217][https://docs.google.com/document/d/1RC41PnZFX7en8L3l0AYLXQKFsC2kxFrZjxQ1Q36AP-k/edit?usp=sharing]

Proxmox

  • Proxmox supports a mix of KVM Virtual Machines, and Linux containers.
  • Arch currently (I believe due to a systemd bug) runs best in KVM, not in a container.
  • Arch might make a better Linux Container candidate after that bug is fixed.

  • Our Proxmox box is a Core i7 rig, with 1TB of internal RAID0 storage.

  • Important data is stored on the NFS FreeNAS box.
  • We run one Arch VM from the internal 1TB, and one from the NFS mount.

NFS Setup

  • FreeNAS was our selection for the back-end storage.

  • A btrfs powered server was considered, but upon a mighty reflection induced by our recent poll, ZFS seemed like the wiser choice.

  • ZFS does work on Linux, but the utility aspect of FreeNAS appeals.

  • When the application stuff is handled by front end systems, the backend storage should be a simple, reliable, and appliance like as possible. FreeNAS offers a lot of that, with a native ZFS implementation, backed by a trusted company – iXsystems.

  • Install NTP on both ends

  • In Arch use systemd to mount the NFS share
  • Create a common UID on the NFS server and Client. This makes file permissions much simpler. Have everything owned by your “media” user in your “media” share.

SABnzbd

\"SABnzbd

  • Configured SABnzbd to work off the NFS mount.

  • sabnzb modify it to allow network connections:

/opt/sabnzbd/sabnzbd.ini

CouchPotato.

  1. packer -S couchpotato-git

  2. cd /usr/lib/systemd/system

  3. nano couchpotato.service – edit to run as root

  4. chown -R root:root /opt/couchpotato

  5. systemctl enable couchpotato

  6. systemctl start couchpotato

Default port is 5050

SickBeard

  • SickBeard requires you have some usenet index search APIs. It’s built in search is limited.

  • Set SickBeard to ping Plex to update once a download completes.

Monitorix

\"Monitorix

SSMTP

  • SSMTP is a program to deliver an email from a local computer to a configured mailhost (mailhub). It is not a mail server (like feature-rich mail server sendmail) and does not receive mail, expand aliases or manage a queue. One of its primary uses is for forwarding automated email (like system alerts) off your machine and to an external email address.

  • A lot of server side applications (and the next item down in this list) need to use smtp to send you an email notification. When you have automated processes happening at all different hours of the day, often kicked off my some script running headless in the background, it’s sorta a necessary evil.

  • /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf

Logwatch

  • Logwatch is a powerful and versatile log parser and analyzer. Logwatch is designed to give a unified report of all activity on a server, which can be delivered through the command line or email.

  • A key part of set it and forget it is having your system alert you when it needs help, so you can address it before it becomes a disaster.

Syncthing

  • Per-user config files, example:

/home/studio/.syncthing/config.xml


— Picks —

Runs Linux

ExoMars Mission, Runs Linux

Desktop App Pick

Castawesome

Castawesome is live screencasting tool for Linux. With it you can broadcast video and audio from your desktop to Twitch.tv/Justin.tv, Hitbox.tv and YouTube

Weekly Spotlight

Syncthing

Syncthing replaces Dropbox and BitTorrent Sync with something open, trustworthy and decentralized. Your data is your data alone and you deserve to choose where it is stored, if it is shared with some third party and how it\’s transmitted over the Internet.


— NEWS —

Canonical Goes BIG at

This year more than 5,000 people showed up to the OpenStack conference, and 1,780 people filled out a survey that drills into how they\’re using OpenStack. Many of the respondents (60%) came from companies that employ fewer than 500 people, while a dwindling percentage was derived from users at companies that employ more than 1,000 people, compared to the October 2013 user survey (34%, down from 39%).

The Orange Box is an innovative, custom designed micro cluster chassis, envisioned by Canonical, and contract manufactured by TranquilPC Limited. The chassis includes a small cluster of Intel NUC (Next Unit of Computing) boards, and is particularly well suited for portable demonstration and local prototyping of cloud workloads. The Orange Box, manufactured in the UK to exacting standards is available to order and ships internationally (free of charge).

Each Orange Box chassis contains:

  • 10x Intel NUCs
  • Specifically, the Ivy Bridge D53427RKE model

Each Intel NUC contains

  • i5-3427U CPU
  • Intel HD Graphics 4000
  • 16GB of DDR3 RAM
  • 120GB SSD root disk
  • Intel Gigabit ethernet
  • D-Link DGS-1100-16 managed gigabit switch with 802.1q VLAN support

All 10 nodes are internally connected to this gigabit switch

In aggregate, this micro cluster effectively fields 40 cores, 160GB of RAM, 1.2TB of solid state storage, and is connected over an internal gigabit network fabric. A single fan quietly cools the power supply, while all of the nodes are passively cooled by aluminum heat sinks spanning each side of the chassis.

The first node, node0, additionally contains:

  • An Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6235 WiFi adapter
  • A 2TB HDD (spinning)
  • USB and HDMI ports are wired and accessible from the rear of the box
  • Access to the USB/HDMI of nodes1-9 is accessible from the underside of the unit

  • Six GBE LAN ports (all connected to the internal switch) are exposed to the rear panel, for external access, or even clustering of multiple Orange Boxes together.

  • Mark introduces the Orange Box: https://youtu.be/aEYCjHCderM?t=13m33s

Canonical offers \’Chuck Norris Grade\’ OpenStack private cloud service

\"Ubuntu

This new offering is called Your Cloud. For $15 per day per host, \”Ubuntu offers all the software infrastructure, tools, and services you need to have your own cloud at your fingertips. Built by experts on Ubuntu OpenStack, fully managed and with 24/7 monitoring.\”

Canonical Juju DevOps tool coming to CentOS and Windows

\"Juju

It\’s hard to shock an audience at a technical conference. Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Ubuntu Linux and its parent company Canonical, managed it several times in his OpenStack Summit keynote speech. No news may have been more surprising than that Canonical had ported its Juju DevOps program to its rival\’s operating systems: Red Hat\’s CentOS and Microsoft\’s Hyber-V and Windows Server 2012.

Ubuntu\’s Unity 8 Desktop To Be Release As Separate Flavor?

“The desktop team would like to add a new flavour (we don’t plan to have any formal releases at this point) of Ubuntu which contains the Unity 8 desktop and the new applications which have been developed for the touch project.

The initial intention is to provide a product which developers can use to figure out the work that’s required to make a desktop product based on this software usable, and to create a space for experimentation to figure out the best ways of carrying out the required integration.”

Linux Mint will stick to LTS release

The decision was made to stick to LTS bases. In other words the development team will be focused on the very same package base used by Linux Mint 17 for the next 2 years.

It will also be trivial to upgrade from version 17 to 17.1, then 17.2 and so on.
Important applications will be backported and we expect this change to boost the pace of our development and reduce the amount of regressions in each new Linux Mint release.

This makes Linux Mint 17.x very important to us, not just yet another release, but one that will receive security updates until 2019, one that will receive backports and new features until 2016 and even more importantly, the only package base besides LMDE which we’ll be focused on until 2016.

Our traffic doubled lately and all our stats are on the raise, and we don’t know why. Maybe it’s related to the the end-of-life of Windows XP. We’re not really sure

Antergos\’ Release Candidate plus Partnering with Numix

Antergos is partnering with the Numix Project to create an exclusive edition of Numix Themes for our desktops (both GTK and QT). In this RC, you will be able to enjoy some premature advances of this agreement in the form of the icon theme. We’re not sure if the rest of the design will be make it into this release or if it will be postponed until next stable release.

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Fedora 17 Review | LAS | s22e01 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/19962/fedora-17-review-las-s22e01/ Sun, 27 May 2012 13:04:08 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=19962 Is Fedora the crazy dancing hippy of Linux distributions? Or just two guys with one Hat? Tune in to find out!

The post Fedora 17 Review | LAS | s22e01 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Is Fedora the crazy dancing hippy of Linux distributions? Or just two guys with one Hat? Tune in to find out!

PLUS: Our thoughts on Linux Mint 13 and how to stash your home folder on it’s own partition!

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

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News:

Fedora 17 Review:

  • The Fedora 17 release criteria: “The install completes, the installed system works”
  • LVM out of the box + Solid advanced installation options are nice to see compared to Ubuntu
  • No Chromium? Is this the 1930s?
  • GNOME 3.4
  • Linux Kernel 3.3
  • Top features for “desktop” users of Fedora 17
  • ABRT back-trace de-duplication service to reduce the number of duplicate bug reports submitted automatically upon experiencing a crash
  • A tool for customizing fonts on a per language-basis on desktops using fontconfig
  • Haskell Platform 2011.4
  • Support for EXT4 file-systems beyond 16 terabytes in size
  • A Non-Uniform Memory Alignment Daemon
  • Virtualization sandbox support
  • Supporting OpenStack’s Quantum virtual networking service
  • Fedora now uses the Unified structure of organizing the file system. It means, that several directories like “/bin”, “/lib” and “/sbin” have been moved to “/usr/bin” etc. respectively.

What’s Bryan Doin?

Chris’ Stash:

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Matt’s How-to:

Dedicated Home Partitioning

As you discussed during the howto segment, there is a bit flexibility to setting up your partitions. When setting up partitions for Ubuntu, I recommend the following setup.

  1. Choose Try Ubuntu, then run Gparted.

  2. If you have two drives attached, you will have two drives available from the pull down menu. Select the one you wish to use for your / and swap.

  3. Right click select on the unallocated space, choose new.

  4. With the new dialog open, choose the Ext4 file system, Extended partition, and place swap in the label. For the partition size, choose double the amount of your RAM. If you have 2 Gbs of RAM (2048 Mbs), then make the swap 4 Gbs. This will make you suspending your PC much smoother and lessen the likelihood of system crashing on resume. Leave the other options alone, click Add.

  5. Still with the system drive selected, next you’ll right click on the unallocated space and choose new.

  6. For the partition size, choose the remainder of the space available for that drive. This will be the larger unallocated space available, of the two visible. Select Primary partition, and place / in the label. Leave the other options alone, click Add.

  7. Now go back to top right of Gparted and toggle the second drive you’ve decided to use as a /home partition.

  8. For the partition size, choose the remainder of the space available for that drive. This will be the larger unallocated space available, of the two visible. Select extended partition, and place /home in the label. Leave the other options alone, click Add.

  9. With all of this done, click the green check mark at the top of Gparted. This will apply all of your settings changes.

  10. Start the installer. Click on continue until you come to the Erase everything or Something Else options. Choose Something Else.

  11. You will now see different partitions laid out before you. Below the drive designations, you will see actual “free space” areas, broken up into three sections. The smallest, is your swap. The other two will be your / and /home options.

  12. The smallest free space, should be at the top of the list. Click it, then click on Add.
    The only option you change here is the pulldown menu to select Swap Area. Then click Ok.

  13. The next free space in the list, should be the one I designated as the system partition. Click it, then click on Change. The only options you change here is the Use As Ext4, toggle format and the pulldown menu to select to / . Click Ok.

  14. The last one in the list, is going to be for /home. Click it, then click on Add. Now select the mount point as /home. Click Ok. NOTE: The home partition should only be selected to format is it’s brand new. For future installs, you will want to click on it in this dialog, make sure format is NOT selected, in the future.

  15. Make sure at the bottom of the dialog box, you’ve chosen to place the bootloader in the system selected hard drive. While we can also rely on the /boot option in partitioning, it’s rarely used for home systems.

  16. Now choose Install Now. You’re all done!

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