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Using the Job Control of bash to send the process into the background:
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nJoy! 😉
Practical deep-dives on Linux, AI, and large language models. 290+ technical articles for developers, sysadmins, and AI engineers.
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Using the Job Control of bash to send the process into the background:
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nJoy! 😉
Simply do this:
SELECT UPDATE_TIME FROM information_schema.tables WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'dbname' AND TABLE_NAME = 'tabname'
nJoy ;-)
Simple and easy :
ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/UTC /etc/localtime
nJoy 😉
Google Chrome is an alternative web browser beside Mozilla Firefox. It’s free and open source. But the problem Google Chrome on Backtrack 5 is Google Chrome can’t run in root mode. We know that Backtrack run the root mode by default. If you run the Google Chrome it won’t work. So if you want to install and run Google Chrome in root this is the tutorial.
apt-get install chromium-browser
Access the Chrome directory
cd /usr/lib/chromium-browser
And here we go, open chromium-browser with hexaedit to edit the hexa code of chromium-browser
hexedit chromium-browser
It is sometimes required especially when managing many servers to recognize the hardware setup you are running on especially if you have a zoo of different animals.
Great tool for getting detailed hardware report including bios versions and memory / processor info :
dmidecode
While the output varies slightly across distros and sometimes you need to install it e.g.
yum -y install dmidecode
It is a great tool for understanding the underlying system and to know if you’re on a VM or not.
nJoy 😉
So the story goes like this :
wget http://sourceforge.net/projects/bacula/files/latest/download?source=files
tar zxvf bacula-*.tar.gz
cd bacula-<fiolder>
./configure –enable-client-only
make
make install
make install-autostart-fd
nJoy 😉
Step # 1: Stop the MySQL server process.
Step # 2: Start the MySQL (mysqld) server/daemon process with the –skip-grant-tables option so that it will not prompt for password.
Step # 3: Connect to mysql server as the root user.
Step # 4: Setup new mysql root account password i.e. reset mysql password.
Step # 5: Exit and restart the MySQL server.
Here are commands you need to type for each step (login as the root user):
# /etc/init.d/mysql stop
Output:
Stopping MySQL database server: mysqld.
# mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables &
Output:
[1] 5988 Starting mysqld daemon with databases from /var/lib/mysql mysqld_safe[6025]: started
# mysql -u root
Output:
Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g. Your MySQL connection id is 1 to server version: 4.1.15-Debian_1-log Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the buffer. mysql>
mysql> use mysql;
mysql> update user set password=PASSWORD("NEW-ROOT-PASSWORD") where User='root';
mysql> flush privileges;
mysql> quit
# /etc/init.d/mysql stop
Output:
Stopping MySQL database server: mysqld STOPPING server from pid file /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid mysqld_safe[6186]: ended [1]+ Done mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables
# /etc/init.d/mysql start
# mysql -u root -p
Voila !
nJoy 😉
In file named after the interface you want to use as gateway:
e.g. /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/route-eth0
Create entries :
ADDRESS=192.168.4.0
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
GATEWAY=192.168.1.250
NnJoy 🙂
Just a note to myself really !
route add -p 192.168.4.0 mask 255.255.255.0 192.168.1.250 metric 2
rsync –progress -ah –remove-sent-files –bwlimit=1000 source/ /target
nJoy 🙂