How to list processes belonging to a network namespace?
I am on Ubuntu 12.04, and the ip utility does not have ip netns identify <pid> option, I tried installing new iproute, but still, the option identify doesn’t
seem to be working!.
I am on Ubuntu 12.04, and the ip utility does not have ip netns identify <pid> option, I tried installing new iproute, but still, the option identify doesn’t
seem to be working!.
I want to test different variants of TCP in Linux Ubuntu. I have Ubuntu 14.04 LTS with Kernel version 3.14. When I check the available congestion control algorithm using the following command sysctl net.ipv4.tcp_available_congestion_control I get only: cubic and reno. However, I want to test other variants like Hybla, HighSpeed. If I run the menuconfig I can select the variants which I want and compile the Kernel. But in my case, I already have the kernel compiled so is it possible to have some Linux package which contains TCP variants as loadable kernel modules?
Is it enough to see getfacl giving no error, or do I have to check some other place to see whether or not ACLs are supported by the file systems?
I’m planning a backup strategy based on rsnapshot.
I have been advised by many senior Unix/Linux Administrators to go through “The Linux Documentation Project” on the site www.tldp.org.
I have a personal folder /a/b on the server with permission 700. I don’t want others to list the contents in /a/b. The owner of /a is root.
I reinstalled a fresh debian 10 on an old x86 system with 512MB RAM (everything works ok).
Available memory is 431MB. (No graphic card plugged right now)
If two processes are connected by a pipe,
I mounted a FAT32 drive onto my Linux computer using the following terminal command:
Is there a command like