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quickreference:unix [2023/10/08 14:53] rodolicoquickreference:unix [2024/03/04 15:54] (current) rodolico
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 ===== Systems Administration ===== ===== Systems Administration =====
  
 +==== Partitioning large drives ====
 +
 +Drives greater than 2 Terabytes are not handled well by the standard //fdisk// application, so instead we use parted. Fun Fact!!! gparted is a nice little GUI interface to this. But, we're dealing with command line stuff here.
 +
 +This assumes we have a drive, sdg, that we want to set up with gpt and create one partition on. That partition will set up on optimal sector boundries, and use all of the space available.
 +
 +<code bash>
 +# remove all old file system information. Not necessary, but I do it just because I can
 +wipefs -a /dev/sdg
 +# make this a gpt disk. Will wipe out any other partitioning scheme
 +parted /dev/sdg mklabel gpt
 +# make a new partition on optimal sector boundries. This is a primary partition, and starts
 +# at the beginning of the disk (0%) and goes to the end of the disk (100%)
 +# I put that in quotes as, from what I've read, the percent symbol does not work well
 +# within the bash command line
 +# note, we are not telling it what file system to use, so it defaults to Linux
 +parted -a optimal /dev/sdg mkpart primary '0%' '100%'
 +# display the information on the disk
 +parted /dev/sdg print
 +# format as ext4, no reserved space, and a disk label marked 'backup'
 +mkfs.ext4 -m0 -Lbackup /dev/sdg
 +
 +</code>
 ==== Rapidly wipe multiple hard drives ==== ==== Rapidly wipe multiple hard drives ====
  
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 # for truly not sensitive information, this command wipes all the OS information # for truly not sensitive information, this command wipes all the OS information
-for drive in a b c d e f g do wipefs -a /dev/sd$drive done+for drive in a b c d e f g 
 +do 
 +   wipefs -a /dev/sd$drive 
 +done
 # but, to really remove in a way that takes tons of effort to recover, do this also # but, to really remove in a way that takes tons of effort to recover, do this also
-for drive in a b c d e f g ; do echo Cleaning sd%drive ;  dd if=/dev/zero | pv -petrs 580G | dd of=/dev/sd$drive done+for drive in a b c 
 +do 
 +   echo Cleaning sd%drive 
 +   dd if=/dev/zero | pv -petrs 580G | dd of=/dev/sd$drive 
 +done
 </code> </code>
  
-I then realized I had 7 drives which should be able to be accessed in parallel, and also the dd will wipe all the fs signatures anyway, so I changed my command to.+I had 7 drives to wipe, and this takes about 5 hours per drive, so a total of 35 hours. realized I could probably run all 7 processes in parallel since, on my system, the drive controller is a lot faster than any individual drive So I decided to use the //screen// command and see if I could make that work.
  
 <code bash wipedrives2.sh> <code bash wipedrives2.sh>
 #! /usr/bin/env bash #! /usr/bin/env bash
  
-for drive in a b c d e f g do screen dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sd$drive status=progress ; done+for drive in a b c d e f g 
 +do 
 +   screen -dmS sd$drive bash -c "dd if=/dev/zero | pv -petrs 580G | dd of=/dev/sd$drive
 +done
 </code> </code>
  
-Note: I have not done the parallel one yet. I'm waiting for the previous command to finishwhich is estimated to take about 35 hours (5 hours per drive). I'll update this with the results of trying the parallel method when I do. +Basically, we're using a bash for loop to grab all the drive names (I just used the last letter)running screen and immediately detaching the new process after telling it to run //bash -c// and the command after it in quotes (so it would not interpret the pipes in our current, non-screen shell). I'm running this right now, and //pv// is predicting it will be done in 11.5 hours, or less than a third of the timeBUT, it is really heating up the office with 7 drives being continuously written to at the same time.
- +
-Haven't done this yetThe +
  
 **Warning**: When SystemRescueCD boots, it tries to assemble any mdadm (software RAID) arrays, and since they are locked, //dd// and //wipefs// won't be able to write to them (maybe). In that case, do the following: **Warning**: When SystemRescueCD boots, it tries to assemble any mdadm (software RAID) arrays, and since they are locked, //dd// and //wipefs// won't be able to write to them (maybe). In that case, do the following:
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 </code> </code>
  
- 
- 
- 
-==== Check SSL Cert Expiration Date ==== 
- 
-Ever wondered when your SMTP SSL Certificates are up for renewal? A quick and dirty way of doing it from the command line was shown at [https://serverfault.com/questions/131627/how-to-inspect-remote-smtp-servers-tls-certificate#131628]. 
- 
-Note: the discussion covered other things, and is well worth a 5 minute read. 
- 
-<code bash> 
-printf 'quit\n' | \ 
-openssl s_client -connect smtp.example.com:25 -starttls smtp | \ 
-openssl x509 -dates -noout 
-</code> 
  
 ==== Rename Server ==== ==== Rename Server ====
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 <code bash> <code bash>
 # change the host name, and the postfix name if that is installed # change the host name, and the postfix name if that is installed
-sed -i.old 's/oldname/newname/g' /etc/hostname /etc/hosts /etc/mailname /etc/postfix/main.cf+sed -i.old 's/oldname/newname/g' 
 +   /etc/hostname 
 +   /etc/hosts 
 +   /etc/mailname 
 +   /etc/postfix/main.cf 
 +   /etc/camp/sysinfo-client/sysinfo-client.yaml \ 
 +   /etc/msmtprc
 /etc/init.d/hostname.sh start /etc/init.d/hostname.sh start
 # update the aliases, if they exist # update the aliases, if they exist
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   * https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/18/user_manual/files/access_webdav.html   * https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/18/user_manual/files/access_webdav.html
   * https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/create-a-freebsd-swap-file/   * https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/create-a-freebsd-swap-file/
 +  * https://www.mybluelinux.com/test-imap-with-telnet/
 +  * https://serverfault.com/questions/131627/how-to-inspect-remote-smtp-servers-tls-certificate#131628]
  
quickreference/unix.1696794786.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/10/08 14:53 by rodolico