On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 1:55 PM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us>
wrote:> Larry Martell wrote:
>> On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 11:42 AM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote:
>>> Larry Martell wrote:
>>>> On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 11:21 AM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us>
wrote:
>>>>> Larry Martell wrote:
>>>>>> We have 1 system ruining Centos7 that is the NFS
server. There are
> 50 external machines that FTP files to this server fairly
> continuously.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> We have another system running Centos6 that mounts the
partition the
> files are FTP-ed to using NFS.
>>>>> <snip>
>>>>> What filesystem?
>>>>
>>>> Sorry for being dense, but I am not a sys admin, I am
programmer and
> we have no sys admin. I don't know what you mean by your question. I
> am NFS mounting to what ever the default filesystem would be on a
> CentOS6 system.
>>>
>>> This *is* a sysadmin issue.
>>
>> I know it's a sysadmin issue. I wish we had one, but we don't
and I am
> the one being asked to fix things.
>
> Seriously, get a really good book on doing sysadmin work. 10 years ago, I
> was recommending O'Reilly's one, "Essential Systems
Administration", by
> Aeleen Frisch. It saved my butt, I assure you, 21 years ago, when I had
> the same thing happen.
I've done a lot of 'lite' sysadmin in my time, but it was way back
in
the Unix days on SunOS and even before that. I actually used to have
that book, as well as the 'Devil' book. But I've moved many times,
and
got rid of all my books as I was googling everything anyway. I have
worked with many really great sysadmins in my time, and I know how
valuable they are. So I would never pass myself off as one.
>>> Each partition is formatted as a specific type
>>> of filesystem. The standard Linux filesystems for Upsteam-descended
> have been ext3, then ext4, and now xfs. Tools to manipulate xfs will
> not work with extx, and vice versa.
> <snip>
>> I have no remote access to this system, only on site, so it will have
to
> wait until Monday for me to check. (The system is in Japan and I
> traveled from NY to Japan, where I am now, just to fix this issue.)
>
> Oh, geez, they want you to fix this... but you can't ssh in? This is
*so*
> stupid. Here, fix this, and before you start, let me put an eyepatch over
> one eye, ties one hand behind your back, and prevent you from using
> manpages....
A client of mine (who will remain nameless), has a client (who will
also remain nameless), and they are so concerned about corporate
espionage and loss of trade secrets, they do no permit any remote
access to their systems. They site is so locked down, you cannot bring
in any device of any kind.
> Best of luck, guy.
Thanks!