Automatically detect when a file has reached a size limit
I would like to send an email when a file reach a certain size limit.
I would like to send an email when a file reach a certain size limit.
When using ss with -p option, user/pid/fd column jumps underneath the particular line. For instance this is it what I’m actually seeing:
ext4 has a feature called dir_index enabled by default, which is quite
susceptible to hash-collisions.
I have a CSV file users.csv with a list of userNames, userIDs, and other data:
On the GNU Project webpage, there’s a subsection called “All GNU packages” which lists the various software in the GNU project.
I have a device that I need to connect to over SSH. The device is connected to my workstation via a direct ethernet connection. I’m attempting to assign the connected device an IP address somehow that I can SSH to, however all of the guides I’m finding have the user configure the IP from whatever device they’re working with (namely Raspberry Pi’s and so on). This is not something I can do with this device as I’ve no physical interface to work with.
I’m building a headless Steam gameserver which utilises Steam in-home streaming to let two people play at the same time. The multiseat part of the setup is done and functional, but getting it to work wireless is quite troublesome.
I tried to grow my LVM (on luks) root partition with
While following instructions, I loaded a module which creates an input device “Monitor of Null Output” and an output device “Null Output” using this command:
Can someone explain the difference between the UUID’s reported by blkid and mdadm? On one of our CentOS systems, for example: