3748
Comment:
|
1200
Make this slim and trim
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 1: | Line 1: |
= Deleuze = | = Introduction = |
Line 3: | Line 3: |
This machine donated by Justin Leitgeb seems real nice. Buffered disk throughput is about 1.5 GB/s. Raw disk reads are 60 MB/s for the two 36 GB disks and 120 MB/s for the 4-disk array. Not bad at all. | [[TableOfContents]] |
Line 5: | Line 5: |
== Tasks done == | = Special topic pages about the new set-up = |
Line 7: | Line 7: |
* Removed excessive packages, cleaned up the system * Installed ''changetrack'' to monitor all config file changes. The program uses ''rcs'' and automatically keeps previous revisions. It is ran from ''cron'' on a daily basis. * Installed ''debsums'' to monitor file md5sums * Installed Courier IMAP and IMAP-SSL * Installed LDAP for user authentication. The system is currently configured to use LDAP and fallback to the usual ''/etc/'' files. Admin users will be added locally on all machines and will be able to log in even when LDAP is not operational. * Installed MIT Kerberos 5 * Fixed date/time on the system. Installed ''ntpd'' * Installed TLS support for LDAP. Certificate file is ''/etc/ldap/server.pem'', and ldap/ldaps ports are 389/636. * Installed Linux 2.6.18.3-grsec with 2.6.18-mm3 patches (2) for megaraid. * The patches and source tree installed, along with the .deb generated, is under /usr/src/ntk2. I set up sockets groups as on fyodor (7070-7072). SMP, with hyperthreading enhancements, is enabled. I also installed a bunch of packages that someone were uninstalled while I was gone (e.g., gcc). I also fixed the sudoers, wheel group, and admin home directories. --NathanKennedy * Kerberos works. == TODO == In order of implementation (soonest first): * LDAP working with kerberos. Documentation on this is lacking. -- DavorOcelic * Fix resolv.conf on both servers to have multiple good DNS servers for now, set it to use localhost once BIND is running and configured. * Install AFS (need to repeat the reading on AFS and how it really works. Also it will influence the decision how to format ''/dev/sdb'' in the system) -- DavorOcelic * Install MySQL and PostgreSQL (input from AFS step and admin discussion needed to see how to exactly configure this) -- DavorOcelic * Install BIND -- DavorOcelic * Review kernel configuration and install testnet. -- DavorOcelic * See why db4.2 recover takes a long time on LDAP restart if anything is modified in the directory -- DavorOcelic * Install and configure Apache, to serve static web content only. * Get domtool2 working (this to be done concurrent with mire). == Problems == * With ''debsums'', once you break md5sum of a config file, the file keeps being reported as mismatching even if you completely regenerate md5sums for a package!! -- DavorOcelic * The logical volume for /dev/sdb is supposed to be a 4-drive raid array, each drive ~73GB. Right now it seems to be configured as RAID1 mirroring the two drives, for a capacity of ~146G (see dmesg, for instance). This would be faster and the volume would be 73G bigger if it was set up as RAID5. I might need to do this from console, and I need to talk to Justin about it, since he set up the logical volumes and I thought he said that sdb was RAID5. --NathanKennedy = Custom software = * DomtoolTwo * Vmail tools * Web portal * Watchdog process to kill resource hogs These are my responsibility. Right now, I'm waiting for the more traditional stuff to be set up and stable before beginning. --AdamChlipala = Global TODO = * Make ca@hcoop.net e-mail address working. It's the address used in the certificate files. |
* AndrewFileSystem: Using our new shared filesystem * BackupInfo: Information on how to recover deleted files from our off-site backups. * DaemonAdmin: Daemon-specific pages aimed at admins * DomTool: Administering and using the new domtool * IpAddresses: Listing of IPs that we use (nonpublic). * NewSystemHardware: Information on the new hardware * TaskDistribution: What each sysadmin is responsible for * SoftwareArchitecturePlans: Plans for software installation * SystemArchitecturePlans: Plans regarding our hardware * OnSiteStuff: Checklist for the next on-site visit to the new machines. * OneTimeCosts2007: Costs associated with the new servers through April 2007 * HcoopAddresses: Physical addresses relevant to us |
Line 55: | Line 23: |
* To connect to hcoop's ldap server using ''gq'', create a SSH tunnel: ''' ssh -p 2222 -f -N -L 389:localhost:389 USERNAME@69.90.123.51''', and then connect to ''localhost:389'' in ''gq''. | * To connect to hcoop's ldap server using ''gq'', create a SSH tunnel: ''' ssh -f -N -L 389:localhost:389 USERNAME@deleuze.hcoop.net''', and then connect to ''localhost:389'' in ''gq''. * For the description of the actual authentication scheme, see AuthenticationScheme. |
Introduction
Special topic pages about the new set-up
AndrewFileSystem: Using our new shared filesystem
BackupInfo: Information on how to recover deleted files from our off-site backups.
DaemonAdmin: Daemon-specific pages aimed at admins
DomTool: Administering and using the new domtool
IpAddresses: Listing of IPs that we use (nonpublic).
NewSystemHardware: Information on the new hardware
TaskDistribution: What each sysadmin is responsible for
SoftwareArchitecturePlans: Plans for software installation
SystemArchitecturePlans: Plans regarding our hardware
OnSiteStuff: Checklist for the next on-site visit to the new machines.
OneTimeCosts2007: Costs associated with the new servers through April 2007
HcoopAddresses: Physical addresses relevant to us
Global Notes
To edit LDAP database from a GUI tool, use gq program
To connect to hcoop's ldap server using gq, create a SSH tunnel: ssh -f -N -L 389:localhost:389 USERNAME@deleuze.hcoop.net, and then connect to localhost:389 in gq.
For the description of the actual authentication scheme, see AuthenticationScheme.