User Chopper3 - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-01T01:10:28Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/user/4511 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1554240/echo-in-a-bash-script-changing-md5-to-md5 0 echo in a bash script changing '--md5' to '?-md5' Chopper3 2009-10-12T12:19:42Z 2009-10-12T12:30:45Z <p>Hi, I'm writing a VMWare ESX automated build script and I'm falling at the last hurdle, probably as I'm really not strong at scripting.</p> <p>I need to secure Grub so in my script I have a like saying;</p> <pre><code>echo "password --md5 password-converted-to-md5" &gt;&gt; /boot/grub/grub.conf </code></pre> <p>This unfortunately places the following into this file;</p> <pre> password ?-md5 password-converted-to-md5 </pre> <p>I know it's a simple one for some of you guys but I've been googling for hours and I'm getting frustrated.</p> <p>Thank you very much in advance.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/759501/tpc-or-other-db-benchmarks-for-ssd-drives/761875#761875 4 Answer by Chopper3 for TPC or other DB benchmarks for SSD drives Chopper3 2009-04-17T19:36:06Z 2009-04-17T19:36:06Z <p>I've been testing and using them for a while and whilst I have my own opinions (which are very positive) I think that Anandtech.com's testing document is far better than anything I could have written, see what you think;</p> <p><a href="http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3532" rel="nofollow">http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3532</a></p> <p>Regards,</p> <p>Phil.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/611694/which-one-should-i-choose-x86-or-x64-architecture-while-installing-windows-20/611805#611805 0 Answer by Chopper3 for Which one should I choose? X86 or X64 Architecture ? (while installing Windows 200X server OS on a Dell PC GX680) Chopper3 2009-03-04T18:18:36Z 2009-03-04T18:18:36Z <p>I've just checked on the Dell site, couldn't find any references to the GX600 but there weren't any Vista/W2K8 drivers available for the GX620/630 in 32-bit, let alone 64-bit, flavours.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/543939/what-would-be-the-best-option-performance-wise-between-1-10k-rpm-disk-and-2-7k/548980#548980 0 Answer by Chopper3 for What would be the best option, performance wise, between 1 10k rpm disk and 2 7k rpm disks in striped raid Chopper3 2009-02-14T11:41:26Z 2009-02-14T11:41:26Z <p>If you only care about speed then the verociraptor is a great drive but I'd suggest you consider the very latest 7.2k SATA disks, they're really very fast indeed these days and of course have a lot more capacity. Presumably SSD is out of the budget?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/535367/hardware-sizing-thumb-rules/548975#548975 0 Answer by Chopper3 for Hardware Sizing - Thumb Rules Chopper3 2009-02-14T11:37:51Z 2009-02-14T11:37:51Z <p>If you have the luxury of not having to deploy to all 1,000 users on day one then I'd be tempted to use virtualisation to help you with this problem. I'd first build the servers on bare-metal and check they're functionally as you need. Then use whatever VM software you like's P2V converter to convert from Physical to Virtual disk image. I'd then remove the server's original disks and store them safely, stick some new ones inside, install your hypervisor of choice, add the converted VM, fire it up, add the para tools for your VM/OS and see how you get on. If your server works then what you've given yourself is portability. You can start with a hundred or so users, measure the load, extrapolate and make some assumptions. Then add more users, test your assumptions and so on. If you get to 1,000 users and there's room to spare then great, you can stay with the virtual environment (pros: good DR options, portability; cons: you lose some performance) or go back to the bare-metal build knowing it'll handle the work. If your tin's getting hot then you can either move the VM to bigger/better/faster hardware very easily or copy the VM to another physical VM host and cluster like that.</p> <p>I know that doesn't answer your questions directly but I'm not sure there are rules of thumb for this really as there's a huge fluctuation in per-user-load based on so many factors.</p> <p>If you have a month or so until you have to order your servers you might consider the new Nehalem-based Xeons - they're really worth the wait.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/504448/graphics-card-for-opengl-shader-development/514070#514070 1 Answer by Chopper3 for Graphics card for OpenGL shader development Chopper3 2009-02-05T00:48:18Z 2009-02-05T00:48:18Z <p>I was with you until you say 'fits into a laptop', generally you don't have a lot of choice with laptop GPUs, you certainly can't just go chopping and changing as you can with a desktop machine. My advice would be to get the best machine you can afford with a top-end ATI or NVidia card (ideally an ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4850X2 or 48xx or NVidia 98xx xxx card). You're not looking at a low price though, you can't have everything.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/327946/whats-a-good-system-for-storing-hard-drive-images/504209#504209 1 Answer by Chopper3 for What's a good system for storing hard drive images Chopper3 2009-02-02T18:11:10Z 2009-02-02T18:11:10Z <p>Have you considered Virtualisation of one form or another? This is what thousands of other developers are using for compatibility testing. It's quick, cheap and pretty good. That said if you want to have your OS running on 'bare metal' then just 'Ghosting' to a big USB drive from a boot CD should give you what you want, bit of a faff though to be honest.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/460337/hardware-requirements-for-net-application-in-production-server/504149#504149 1 Answer by Chopper3 for Hardware requirements for .net Application in Production server Chopper3 2009-02-02T17:54:06Z 2009-02-02T17:54:06Z <p>10k requests per second is pretty hardcore, unless they're very light requests you're going to need multiple servers clustered. Speak to your hardware vendor of choice in detail about your requirements, it's not possible for anyone to help out much more without spending a lot more time with you understanding the requirements better.</p> <p>Thanks.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/359384/how-do-you-determine-the-hardware-needed-for-a-server/504124#504124 0 Answer by Chopper3 for How do you determine the hardware needed for a server? Chopper3 2009-02-02T17:47:46Z 2009-02-02T17:47:46Z <p>It depends how important your customer's perception is and available budget.</p> <p>If you have little budget I'd add more memory, it's very inexpensive at the moment, especially if you use 4GG modules (the 8GB ones are more than twice as expensive at the 4GB ones where I live).</p> <p>If you have a little more then think about getting a quad-core or dual-quad-core system.</p> <p>If you have a bit more still get a good disk controller, ideally a SAS one with hardware RAID.</p> <p>If customer perception is paramount then get a HP or IBM with redundant power supplies and all of the above, also consider trunking your NICs too if you can be bothered.</p> <p>Best of luck.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/397894/hardware-infrastructure-for-public-web-application/504108#504108 0 Answer by Chopper3 for hardware infrastructure for public web application Chopper3 2009-02-02T17:42:09Z 2009-02-02T17:42:09Z <p>There's really two ways to answer this question, what differentiates them is budget.</p> <p>One is to properly design this solution, prototype it, benchmark the prototype, extrapolate anticipated user load, add overhead and scale accordingly. This takes time, costs but gives you a supportable solution that serves your customers well.</p> <p>The other is to just give something, anything a go and fix the problems as they come along. This is quicker and cheaper but might be a headache for a while and might p*** off your customers.</p> <p>Basically it comes down to budget.</p> <p>Best of luck.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/377420/throwing-hardware-at-software-problems-which-way-do-you-lean/378418#378418 2 Answer by Chopper3 for Throwing hardware at software problems – Which way do you lean? Chopper3 2008-12-18T16:32:57Z 2008-12-18T16:32:57Z <p>I'm an infrastructure scaling engineer, not a programmer, and although spending your way out of a bottleneck is never a long-term solution it is often a quicker and cheaper way to deal with immediate performance issues than coding your way out of the same problem.</p> <p>One reason for this is the decrease in cost of hardware combined with the constant increase in performance/£$ plus the fact that coding costs only ever rise (let's ignore offshoring for the moment). Another reason is the risk to deployment fix timescales; generally you can find out how quickly you can buy performance-increasing hardware, have it delivered, installed and commissioned. This is far from the case with coding, it's very often a total mystery at the start of a performance problem how long to code your way out of it.</p> <p>Sometimes it's just not worth the time and hassle to fix a problem with a compiler than it is with the latest memory/disk/processor etc. That's why not every soldier is a sniper, cannon-fodder is cheaper.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/165383/optimal-raid-setup-for-sql-server/169328#169328 1 Answer by Chopper3 for Optimal RAID setup for SQL server Chopper3 2008-10-03T23:37:17Z 2008-10-03T23:37:17Z <p>Given the small size of the database I would use four 15krpm 2.5" SFF SAS disks, setup as two separate RAID 1 mirrors. I'd run them through something like an Adaptec 5805 PCI-e x 8 SAS controller. I'd put the data on one array and the logs on another for safety. Bar memory-mapping the whole database, a very large/expensive SAN or using SSDs I'm pretty convinced this will be just about the quickest setup for the money.</p> <p>Hope this helps.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/108072/bare-metal-virtualisation-for-the-desktop/126459#126459 1 Answer by Chopper3 for Bare-metal virtualisation for the desktop Chopper3 2008-09-24T10:50:49Z 2008-09-24T10:50:49Z <p>I'm a huge fan of the various VMWare products myself (and even vaguely impressed by Hyper-V) and I totally go with what the guys above state. That said there's something I'd like you to appreciate first before your start with whatever VM software. Client virtual machines are 'given' a fixed set of hardware by the host OS - a number of processors of a certain type, a chipset of a certain type, NICs of a certain type, video card etc (the specific types vary by product/version). These 'emulated' components are almost always what are needed for most client VM's functioning as servers as they generally don't really need too much specialised hardware. But if you're main desktop is going to run as a client VM you need to consider if the limitations of those virtual components will eventually cause you problems. Take gaming as an example, few host OS's expose a DX9-capable virtual GPU to their client VMs, meaning no gaming for you. The same goes for sound hardware, you generally get a 'base' sound card (if any all), and its emulation is often a very low priority job, so you can forget about 5.1 sound, same for things like hardware-emulated video decoding, your client VM just doesn't know that your hardware can do this so doesn't try.</p> <p>I hope you understand these limits, for a server environment this is ideal of course, all server VM clients can use the same known, stable drivers. But many people want their client desktop machines to be much more under their control.</p> <p>One option you might consider would be to use Windows Server 2008 with Hyper-V, I've used it but not for many months. It has a different model from VMWare and allows you to use 2008 as your host (so you get to access all your hardware like normal) and have client VMs on top of this. In this way it's more like the 'desktop virtualisation' systems such as VMWare Workstation, Fusion and a few others but I'm aware you asked the question in relation to 'Bare Metal VMs'.</p> <p>Hope this helps,</p> <p>Phil.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/123575/how-to-get-the-temperature-of-motherboard-of-a-pc-and-other-hardware-statistics/126276#126276 1 Answer by Chopper3 for How to get the temperature of motherboard of a PC (and other hardware statistics)? Chopper3 2008-09-24T09:52:28Z 2008-09-24T09:52:28Z <p>As AndrewJFord suggest these methods vary from vendor to vendor, indeed from part to part, but I'll make some generalisations if that's ok.</p> <ol> <li>As far as I know all current mainstream processors by Intel, AMD and IBM have on-board thermal sensors with known exposed APIs for reading this data. I'm no expert in these APIs so don't know how similar they are but I'd be surprised if Intel's and AMDs API are that much different. If I were you I'd search for an open-source 'system management tool'(there are a few like this written as Apple Widgets by the way) and see how they do it.</li> <li>Motherboards vary a hell of a lot, some have extensive thermal senesoring, some none and all will have fairly different APIs. I'd start by contacting the support people at the company who makes your mobo-of-choice.</li> <li>In general I believe that only very high-end 15krpm SAS disks have built-in thermal sensors, I know that some mid-range systems have sensors taped to their case at the hub and report that back to the mobo. Really not sure on how to get at this info but again I'd start by speaking with the same people as the question above.</li> </ol> <p>Now I'm a big HP user and all of their kit is instrumented by something called 'Insight Management Agents', of which there are versions available for Windows and most Linux's. What they do is gather all the system information from all their sensors (proc, memory, mobo, fans, disks etc) and expose that via an SNMP-based polling API or via an alert-based SNMP/SMTP/MAPI interface. I dare say IBM/Dell etc will have their own equally good and functionally similar versions but I don't know them sorry. If your machines are 'off-brand'/made-from-kit or you have no control then I'm not aware of any single method of getting at all this information easily.</p> <p>I hope this has been of some help.</p> <p>Phil.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/81020/whats-your-development-setup-talking-right-now-to-my-boss/81749#81749 1 Answer by Chopper3 for What's your development setup? (Talking right now to my boss) Chopper3 2008-09-17T10:18:07Z 2008-09-17T10:18:07Z <p>I do a fair amount of VM work one way or another and use a HP xw6400 workstation with 2 x quadcore E5345 Xeons, 16GB and mirrored Seagate 1TB 7200.11 disks. Generally I run XP x64. Hope this helps.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/56706/what-kind-of-surge-protector-ups-should-one-get/56758#56758 0 Answer by Chopper3 for What kind of surge protector/UPS should one get? Chopper3 2008-09-11T14:51:19Z 2008-09-11T14:51:19Z <p>Pretty much any UPS is better than none at all - obviously if you have a 800+ watt monster you probably need to put a little effort into choosing the right one for you but if you just have a 'normal' desktop or a desktop and laptop combo then any of those cheap'ish ones you can pick up will really help. Before UPS prices came down to current levels I was never a fan of surge protectors on their own, now UPSs are so cheap I'd always go that way.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/55129/can-usb-devices-directly-access-hardware/56141#56141 0 Answer by Chopper3 for Can USB devices directly access hardware? Chopper3 2008-09-11T09:40:29Z 2008-09-11T09:40:29Z <p>One way a USB device could affect a system on its own would be if it was badly-designed/rogue/broken and was pulling the various interface signals inappropriately. For instance a device could sporadically pull the ground or +5v line out of step and hold them there, depending on the design of the overall system this could cause wider problems.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/54607/what-are-the-best-movies-about-geeks-programmers-hackers-for-inspiration/54679#54679 5 Answer by Chopper3 for What are the best movies about Geeks/Programmers/Hackers. (for inspiration) Chopper3 2008-09-10T16:55:56Z 2008-09-10T16:55:56Z <p>I have yet to see an accurate representation of real computer use in TV or film - every movie geek seems to be capable of instantly calling up a revolving 3D model of any given building in the world, usually with heat-signature images of the occupants. This makes me feel inadequate :(</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/54612/fast-disk-cloning/54667#54667 1 Answer by Chopper3 for Fast Disk Cloning Chopper3 2008-09-10T16:53:01Z 2008-09-10T16:53:01Z <p>Possibly silly question, but are these disks on the same controller/channel etc? some controllers aren't very good at concurrent operations.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/54651/what-other-sites-use-badge-reputation-systems/54659#54659 2 Answer by Chopper3 for What other sites use badge/reputation systems. Chopper3 2008-09-10T16:50:59Z 2008-09-10T16:50:59Z <p>or basketball moves; slam-dunk etc</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10600/whats-the-best-database-storage-device/54603#54603 0 Answer by Chopper3 for What's the best database storage device? Chopper3 2008-09-10T16:37:41Z 2008-09-10T16:37:41Z <p>Eric, perhaps you could look at some form of SAN in the near future - even the cheapest systems offer some form of snapshot system. In the scenario you mentioned this would have allow you to have restored to a previous snapshot of your data in moments. The HP MSA2000fc box is quite cheap and offers some of these services, as do many other manufacturers of course.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10600/whats-the-best-database-storage-device/53736#53736 1 Answer by Chopper3 for What's the best database storage device? Chopper3 2008-09-10T10:11:15Z 2008-09-10T10:11:15Z <p>Although SAS-based DAS is likely to be quickest for a single DB server (ideally with 15krpm 2.5 inch SFF disks in a RAID 10 configuration) for most systems you lose a lot of the advantages that a SAN can bring. For that reason I'd always build databases with dual FC (4 or 8Gbps fibre links) adapters into dual SAN switches, connected to a dual-controller SAN array. Not only will this scenario be very quick indeed but it will open up the options to utilise the various snapshot techniques that these boxes have to offer. These can enable'live-live' DB replication between sites for DR, instant database restoration and excellent capacity expansion/reduction with no impact on the server/s themselves. Hope this helps, let me know if I can add any more.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/42514/which-hardware-to-buy-for-a-new-linux-server-system/43625#43625 1 Answer by Chopper3 for Which hardware to buy for a new Linux server system? Chopper3 2008-09-04T12:26:20Z 2008-09-04T12:26:20Z <p>I have a huge amount of respect for HP's 'pizza-box' DL-3xx series servers and their equivilant BL 'blade' servers. I work for a decent sized company and we now have several thousand of these blades running SLES and SLES on VMWare ESX 3.5 with astonishing stability, I know you want Ubuntu but I thought I should answer anyway. Good luck and feel free to ask any follow up questions on this kit as required.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1554240/echo-in-a-bash-script-changing-md5-to-md5/1554315#1554315 Comment by Chopper3 on echo in a bash script changing '--md5' to '?-md5' Chopper3 2009-10-12T13:11:23Z 2009-10-12T13:11:23Z You were right, thank you - I'd written the script using MS notepad and for some reason the first hyphen was displayed fine in notepad but as an accented 'u' in nano - lovely old MS eh! thanks again chaps. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1554240/echo-in-a-bash-script-changing-md5-to-md5 Comment by Chopper3 on echo in a bash script changing '--md5' to '?-md5' Chopper3 2009-10-12T12:59:03Z 2009-10-12T12:59:03Z I used MS Notepad but will now check using nano/vi - thanks.