User Accounts
October 6, 2008 at 11:38pm
For any wondering, I removed the user section of the site, I decided that maintaining user accounts was a little overkill. Your comments are still there, and you can still comment, the creation of a profile just has been removed, if you have any thoughts, let me know.

Busy Life I Have
May 25, 2008 12:49am in life

It's been a busy week for me, busy with work and doing internationalization support. It's challenging, although a little annoying that every solution continues to breed new problems, although things are looking much better now, so hopefully that will maybe speed things up a little come next week.

I had a barbeque tonight, burgers came out well, but I got a lot left over...cheeseburgers all week!

I think one of my projects for tomorrow and Monday is going to be a SLIGHT overhaul of my server. I think I'm going to switch over to Ubuntu 8.04 64 bit. I've had good experiences with 64 bit Linux, unfortunately there were a few applications that gave me issues under 64 bit, most notably, flash. Well since its my server, that is a non-issue as I don't need flash to work as I'm not using it to watch the latest YouTube videos, I'm simply just using it to host files, and serve as a web and database server amongst other things. Such is the beauty of Linux, all my data will be safe as I just need to go over the system drive. Yes Windows can do it too, but I always found it to be simpler under Linux.

So far I like where my new project is going, not gonna say much more than that, but when its closer to being finished, I think it will be pretty nice.

Happy Day of the Jedi!


Tags: ubuntu, linux, server, bbq

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Grand Theft Auto IV and Other Things
May 06, 2008 12:34pm in life

Despite my initial skepticism on GTA IV, that's pretty much all I've been playing over the past week. Grand Theft Auto IV is a lot of fun and is notably better than the previous iterations even though I can't wholly put my finger on why. The open world part is fun, and the story so far is done pretty well. And let us not forget the multiplayer. So if you ever see me on, feel free to join up or invite me to play some multiplayer. I will say the game is very addicting.

I finally was able to get my music collection of my dead hard drive so I was definitely happy about that. The thought of losing the collection I've built up over the last 5 years was definitely scary so I'm glad I now have a backup solution in place as well as my now 1.6TB worth of space on my server. All I now need to do with my server is populate my SVN trees.

I'm thinking I should have gotten NASA to recover my data. After what they did with the one hard drive on board Columbia, they should be able to get data off anything.


Tags: harddrive, server, gta

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New Plan
April 22, 2008 10:07am in tech

Well so far, I have been unsuccessful in retrieving anything off my dead drive, but I still have a few more tricks up my sleeve. But sadly, the tricks are slowly running out so I'm not exactly thrilled at the prospect of losing everything. Keeping hope though.

I've pretty much decided what I'm doing in the aftermath of my hard drive failure. Without my 400GB drive, my server is almost at its storage limit so I'll need to get a replacement. I plan on picking up a 1TB SATA hard drive and dumping that into my server. I'll be doing some moving of data around to allow for better room alotments, and since Hardy Heron (Ubuntu 8.04) comes out in a couple days, I'll reformat the root partition and bring my server back online.

Anyway, wish me luck


Tags: server, harddrive, dataloss

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Learn From Me and Backup Your Data
April 21, 2008 12:06am in tech

I write this in hopes that anyone who reads this learns from my shortsightedness. Saturday I went and started up iTunes on my desktop to listen to some music. Well, my network share was unavailable. I figured that samba on my server just needed to be restarted. I restarted Samba, no luck. I look at the uptime, 91 days...I figure maybe my server just needs the rare restart. To make a long story short, the 400GB hard drive that stores my server uploads, music, and documents just went to shit. Bad sector somewhere and I couldn't read anything off the hard drive. Immediately I went out and got a 500GB external hard drive to use for backup. I thought great, now I can backup my music and other important stuff, as well as use it for Time Machine on my Macbook Pro. I manage to get into the hard drive, but am still unable to successfully do much more than that. I now have the hard drive in an enclosure connected to my Mac in hopes of repairing it with fsck but so far it's been unsuccessful.

I'm hoping and praying that I can get it working just long enough to transfer the data, but so far it looks bleak. If this is unsuccessful, I might try the freezer trick, but we shall see. I'm crossing my fingers.

On a side note, I like Time Machine, I just have one comment on it. Time Machine will back up everything on your drive except that which you choose to exclude. Personally, I don't care if Time Machine backs up my system files as I can always just reformat in the rare situation that I have to reformat. What I wish it did was only back up the folders you set it to, rather than backup everything that you don't exclude. Oh well though, seems to be a nice tool either way.

So my final point that I want to make is just this. If you value your data, find a way to back it up. Be it the periodic burn to DVD/CD or whether it be to an external hard drive. Whatever your method or choice of methods, just do it, you'll thank yourself later.


Tags: sucks, dataloss, server

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Setting Up a Home File Server Part 2
March 28, 2008 12:45pm in tech

Last week I showed you how to set up a home file server using Ubuntu Linux, this week I'll show you how to do the same thing only this time using Microsoft Windows XP.

The first thing you need is to make sure that your system has the minimum system requirements to run XP. They aren't nearly as high as Vista's so you should be okay.

Processor: 300MHz AMD/Intel
Memory: 128MB
Hard Drive: 1.5GB space

Those of course are the minimum requirements, personally I would reccommend the following

Processor: 600MHz AMD/Intel
Memory: 256MB
Hard Drive: 100GB (same as I recommended for Ubuntu for system and storage space)

The first thing to do of course would be to install Windows XP, so put your XP disc into the drive and turn on your PC. After it gets past the BIOS, it should prompt you to press a key to enter setup. So press a key and enter setup.

**Note: If it doesn't prompt you, it probably means its trying to boot off the hard drive first, in which case you need to go into the BIOS and change the boot order. See your motherboard or PC instructions for how to do that on your individual machine.

So go on through the setup and follow the prompts. When it gets to the hard drive partitioning and where to install Windows, set aside 10-20GB for the Windows partition leaving the rest for data storage, we'll set that up later. For the rest of the setup, just follow the prompts as they're presented to you. Make sure to note what you named your computer.

Ok, I'm now going to assume you completed the setup and are now looking at your Windows Desktop.  The first thing you're going to want to do is install Anti-Virus software. If you have your own, go ahead and use that, otherwise feel free to try out ClamWin, its free and pretty good. Make sure to get the latest virus definitions. The next thing to do is to install all of the updates for XP. You can just go to Microsoft Update to do that. Make sure to go there several times and restarts later to make sure you have all the updates. (yes it's annoying but sadly unavoidable)

I'll now assume your computer now has antivirus installed and all the latest updates so we're ready to go. If you right click on My Computer and click Manage, the computer management window pops up.

Click on Disk Management towards the bottom. You'll be presented with the disk management tool.

You should see your C partition and next to it you should see unpartitioned space. (it won't look just like mine so don't worry) You want to right click it and select Format. Create a partition on it taking up all the free space. The partition should be Primary NTFS partition. Let it do its thing and when its done, you should have a new drive letter for the partition.

Ok, now that your data storage partition is all set up, open up My Computer. In the Tools menu at the top, select Folder Options. In the View tab, scroll all the way to the bottom and uncheck Use Simple Sharing. Apply your changes and close the box.

Now go into your data partition and create the folder structure you want to set up. Once you have all the folders created, right click on the folders you want to share and click on Sharing and Security.

 

Give your share a name. You can give it a comment too if you want, but its not required. Next thing to do is to click the Permissions button.

You can leave Everyone there if you want, just make sure to only give read access. Otherwise just click Everyone and then click Remove. Now you need to add your user. First, click the Add button.

Type in your username and then click OK. Now we want to give your user the ability to write to the share. If you don't need or want this, ignore the following step. Click on your username and click the checkbox Full Control. All the boxes should then be checked under the Allow column, so hit Apply and then OK. Repeat the steps on any other shares you want to make, just make sure you note the share names.

OK, your server is pretty much all set up, all you now need to do is map them on your normal machine. From last week here's the set of instructions.

In windows, go to Start - Run and type in:

\\servername\share

Where servername is the computer's name, which you set during the install process. So for my photo share if I named my server "Darker" then I would enter:

\\darker\photos

This should then ask you for a username and password (the one you set up using the smbpasswd command earlier), or if your windows username and password are the same as the samba username and password you set, then it should just bring up an explorer window with your share. In Windows, you have the option of mapping shares to drives so a share would be given an actual drive letter like a hard drive and DVD drive are given. To do this, right click on My Computer and select 'Map Network Drive'. The following dialog box should come up.

The first field will let you choose which drive letter to assign it to, it doesn't matter so pick one. (it won't let you choose one that's already in use). The second field is where you type in your share name, which we went over in the last paragraph. The final checkbox determines whether the share should connect every time you log in. Since I'm going to assume that you want to be able to access the share all the time, you can just leave it checked. Just click 'Finish'. If it asks for a username and password, then enter it, otherwise it should pop up an explorer window showing the contents of the share.

So there you have it, you now have your very own file server to host your files on. While this may sound obvious to some, in order for people to be able to access the shares you create, you must keep the server turned on.

Again, if you have any questions, comments, need clarification, or have an alternative method, feel free to let me know.


Tags: windows, microsoft, howto, server

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