1222906782 Q * nou Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222907419 J * nou Chaton@causse.larzac.fr.eu.org 1222907927 Q * quinq Remote host closed the connection 1222909235 J * ntrs_ ~ntrs@77.29.64.234 1222909426 J * cryptronic1 ~oli@p4FD2D241.dip.t-dialin.net 1222909720 Q * ntrs_ Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222909796 Q * cryptronic Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222910459 J * doener_ ~doener@i577B8F08.versanet.de 1222910561 Q * doener Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222911342 Q * nou Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222912253 J * nou Chaton@causse.larzac.fr.eu.org 1222912817 J * cryptronic ~oli@p4FD2FFB5.dip.t-dialin.net 1222913022 Q * nou Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222913181 Q * cryptronic1 Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222913472 Q * ruskie Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222913737 J * ruskie ~ruskie@ruskie.user.oftc.net 1222914419 J * nou Chaton@causse.larzac.fr.eu.org 1222915539 Q * androsch Read error: Connection reset by peer 1222917434 J * ktwilight_ ~ktwilight@138.122-66-87.adsl-dyn.isp.belgacom.be 1222917434 Q * ktwilight Read error: Connection reset by peer 1222918676 Q * derjohn_mob Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222919340 M * Bertl off to bed now .. have a good one everyone! 1222919345 N * Bertl BErtl_zZ 1222919350 N * BErtl_zZ Bertl_zZ 1222921803 Q * hparker Quit: Read error: 104 (Peer reset by connection) 1222924192 Q * ruskie Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222924849 J * derjohn_mob ~aj@e180220102.adsl.alicedsl.de 1222924975 J * ruskie ~ruskie@ruskie.user.oftc.net 1222925023 J * ntrs_ ~ntrs@77.29.72.158 1222925906 Q * nkukard Quit: Leaving 1222926172 Q * ruskie Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222927205 J * nkukard ~nkukard@196.212.73.74 1222927224 J * ruskie ~ruskie@ruskie.user.oftc.net 1222927288 Q * ghislainocfs2 Read error: Connection reset by peer 1222927309 J * ghislainocfs2 ~Ghislain@LPuteaux-151-41-11-129.w217-128.abo.wanadoo.fr 1222927313 Q * ruskie 1222927367 J * nas ~chatzilla@opengw.lga.net.sg 1222927442 Q * derjohn_mob Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222927585 Q * ntrs_ Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222927907 J * pmenier ~pme@LNeuilly-152-22-72-5.w193-251.abo.wanadoo.fr 1222928692 Q * larsivi Quit: Konversation terminated! 1222929886 J * dna ~dna@5-217-dsl.kielnet.net 1222932410 J * larsivi ~larsivi@85.221.53.194 1222932878 Q * dna Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222934744 J * ruskie ruskie@ruskie.user.oftc.net 1222936188 M * nas guys 1222936189 M * nas is there a cleaner way to respawn a process without editing the inittab 1222936218 M * daniel_hozac 1222936343 J * ghislainocfs21 ~Ghislain@adsl2.aqueos.com 1222936498 M * ghislainocfs21 hi daniel, hi all 1222936641 Q * ghislainocfs2 Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222936691 M * ghislainocfs21 ping 1222937000 J * derjohn_mob ~aj@92.116.6.40 1222937098 M * daniel_hozac hello ghislainocfs21 1222938057 J * ghislainocfs2 ~Ghislain@LPuteaux-151-41-11-129.w217-128.abo.wanadoo.fr 1222938388 Q * ghislainocfs21 Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222939027 M * Guy- nas: sure, use runit or the 'daemon' program 1222939384 M * nas guys 1222939410 M * nas Guy: what i mean is to automatically start the process when it stopped 1222939423 M * nas can the runit and daemon prog do this? 1222939458 M * nas i am using debian 1222940054 J * quinq ~quinq@quinq.eu.org 1222940057 M * quinq Bonjour :) 1222940676 J * ViRUS ~mp@p579B4C60.dip.t-dialin.net 1222941056 M * ghislainocfs2 bonjour ;) 1222941249 M * quinq ^^ 1222941334 M * Guy- nas: yes, both runit and daemon can do this 1222941345 M * Guy- nas: but so can while : ; do program; done 1222942021 Q * puck Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222942424 J * puck ~puck@leibniz.catalyst.net.nz 1222942432 M * nas guy ok thanks 1222942436 M * nas i will try 1222942463 M * Guy- nas: runit offers several advantages like the ability to _stop_ the program if you don't want it up anymore :) 1222942472 Q * nas Quit: ChatZilla 0.9.83 [Firefox 3.0/2008061015] 1222944695 J * lilalinux ~plasma@80.69.41.3 1222944852 Q * pmenier Quit: Konversation terminated! 1222946125 Q * brc Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222946867 Q * nou Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222947021 J * pmenier ~pme@LNeuilly-152-22-72-5.w193-251.abo.wanadoo.fr 1222947637 J * friendly ~friendly@ppp59-167-92-32.lns2.mel6.internode.on.net 1222948323 Q * xdr Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222948794 Q * SpComb Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222950290 Q * Aiken Remote host closed the connection 1222951038 Q * friendly Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222951130 N * Bertl_zZ Bertl 1222951384 M * Bertl morning folks! 1222951445 M * ktwilight_ mornin' Bertl :) 1222951765 J * dna ~dna@5-217-dsl.kielnet.net 1222952134 M * ghislainocfs2 hello bertl 1222952145 M * ghislainocfs2 how things going in vserver land ? 1222952406 M * Bertl not so bad I think ... didn't get around doing a lot recently .. 1222952705 M * ghislainocfs2 i am curious :) do you think the cpu limiting in the new version is making progress or do the kernel dev continue to move the target too much ? 1222952809 M * ghislainocfs2 ps: the 127.0.0.1 fature of the new version is a real blessing :) 1222952843 J * brc bruce@72.20.27.65 1222952856 J * SpComb terom@zapotek.paivola.fi 1222953150 M * Bertl well, mainline provides the cfs and cgroup scheduling in recent kernels 1222953172 M * Bertl so you can already 'limit' the cpu for a guest within the abilities of the cfs scheduler 1222953201 M * Bertl what you cannot do with that (yet?) is to apply hard limits to guest 1222953223 M * ghislainocfs2 oh yes i wanted to know if hard limiting was possible or needed test or anything 1222953228 M * ghislainocfs2 ok 1222953249 M * ghislainocfs2 :) if you want to do some test on this part i could help 1222953267 M * ghislainocfs2 anyway the cpu affinity and cgroup allready provide a good way to mitigate this 1222953270 M * Bertl daniel_hozac: you remember the guy who wanted the 2.6.27-pre patch? did he provide some updates on xfs (as he said he would do)? 1222953286 M * daniel_hozac not that i've seen. 1222953307 M * Bertl okay, neither did I, just wanted to ask, maybe I missed it :) 1222953355 M * Bertl ghislainocfs2: well, it would be interesting to test and describe a few cfs setups (options, possible setups, limitations) on the wiki 1222953378 M * Bertl ghislainocfs2: for the hard limits, we need to port the TB scheduler to cfs 1222953565 M * ktwilight_ what about xfs? 1222953640 M * ghislainocfs2 ok, i will make some test and report, the best way is to use cpuburn like command i guess ? 1222953711 M * Bertl ktwilight_: it's kind of broken (again) in 2.6.27-rc* 1222953753 M * Bertl the xfs folks keep rewriting a bunch of functions over and over again on every kernel release (like they don't know how they would like to implement them) 1222953776 M * Bertl and I'm kind of inclined to drop xfs support until it stabilizes 1222953778 M * ktwilight_ :( 1222953796 M * ktwilight_ well, i notice that they have been addding alot of xfs stuff into .27 1222953841 M * ktwilight_ how about .26? 1222953846 M * Bertl works there 1222953852 Q * sid3windr Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222953855 M * ktwilight_ any particular reason to build vserver on .27 instead? 1222953887 M * Bertl no idea, it was more that somebody asked for a patch for a .27-rc* 1222953918 M * Bertl (and said, he'd do the port if necessary, and wanted to fixup xfs, IIRC) 1222953923 M * ktwilight_ oh 1222954057 M * Bertl BuGless: any news on the xfs stuff? 1222954063 J * sid3windr luser@bastard-operator.from-hell.be 1222955296 Q * larsivi Quit: Konversation terminated! 1222955350 J * geb ~geb@220.4.82-79.rev.gaoland.net 1222955375 M * geb hi 1222955501 M * BuGless Bertl, it's running, though haven't checked all vserverisms yet, it should be done by this weekend 1222955527 M * Bertl okay, let me know when you have an update/patch available to check 1222955598 M * BuGless Will do 1222957631 J * C14r_ ~C14r@h58173.serverkompetenz.net 1222957651 Q * C14r Read error: Connection reset by peer 1222957666 Q * bzed Remote host closed the connection 1222957671 J * bzed ~bzed@devel.recluse.de 1222958045 J * stationone ~stationon@h-74-1-164-226.miatflad.covad.net 1222958196 M * stationone i added 9 virtual IP addresses on my host and one of my guests. inside /etc/vservers/guest-server/interfaces I have the folders that have the interface information. What folder name I should use for these new virtual IP addresses? 1222958479 M * stationone anyone> 1222958481 M * stationone ? 1222958557 M * geb hum 1222958588 M * geb 2seg 1222958588 M * geb sec 1222958593 M * geb you can look at http://www.nongnu.org/util-vserver/doc/conf/configuration.html 1222958640 M * geb you should add something like 1222958676 M * geb $vserver-conf-dir/interface/0/ $vserver-conf-dir/interface/1/ 1222958699 M * geb with a file "dev" and a file "ip" in each 1222958766 M * stationone geb: yes, I have those configured already. But what name I should use for the folders that will contain the virtual ip address information? 1222958816 M * geb hum i am not sure i understand your question 1222958836 M * geb /etc/vserver/$name-of-a-virtual-server/interface 1222958853 M * geb for example i have 1222958855 M * geb /etc/vservers/ssh/interfaces 1222958856 M * geb /etc/vservers/ssh/interfaces/0 1222958856 M * geb /etc/vservers/ssh/interfaces/0/dev 1222958856 M * geb /etc/vservers/ssh/interfaces/0/ip 1222958856 M * geb /etc/vservers/ssh/interfaces/0/prefix 1222958863 M * geb and my vserver is named ssh 1222958869 M * geb (sorry for the flood) 1222958883 M * stationone hold on let me paste something in pastebin 1222958943 M * stationone http://pastebin.centos.org/22224 1222958965 M * stationone when I do ifconfig at the root context thats what I get 1222959023 M * geb ok, and what do you want to do ? 1222959036 M * stationone i then added those virtual ip address to the guest like the following: 1222959048 M * stationone naddress --add --nid 5005 --ip 10.0.0.59/24 1222959076 M * stationone the virtual ips are working properly 1222959104 M * stationone do I need to create folders too for these new virtual ips ? 1222959110 M * stationone and what name I should use 1222959181 M * geb i am sorry i don't know naddress 1222959197 M * geb so it will be difficult to help you 1222959281 M * geb anybody else ? 1222959372 M * stationone to add the virtual ips i did the following at the root context 1222959388 M * stationone ifconfig eth0:1 10.0.0.59 netmask 255.255.255.0 up 1222959407 M * stationone then I appended that virtual ip to the guest that will be using the virtual ip 1222959424 M * stationone naddress --add --nid 5005 --ip 10.0.0.592/24 1222959453 M * stationone my question is, do I need to create a folder inside /etc/vserver/$name-of-a-virtual-server/interface ? 1222959556 M * geb if you want you can do: echo "eth0:1" > /etc/vserver/$name-of-a-virtual-server/interface/0/dev && echo "10.0.0.222" > /etc/vserver/$name-of-a-virtual-server/interface/0/ip 1222959571 M * geb with this, when you type b 1222959593 M * geb vserver foo start it will create the interface and give it to the vserver 1222959637 M * stationone so any eth0:x ip should go inside the 0 folder 1222959669 M * geb no first ip/alias/virtual/interface should go on the 0 folder, the second and 1 etc 1222959697 M * geb hum sorry 1222959714 M * geb no first ip/alias/virtual/interface should go on the 0 folder, the second in 1/ folder etc 1222959737 M * geb for example i have that: 1222959739 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces 1222959739 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/0 1222959739 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/0/dev 1222959739 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/0/ip 1222959739 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/1 1222959740 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/1/ip 1222959741 M * geb /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/1/dev 1222959779 M * stationone if you have that, where you will put eth0:1 ? 1222959848 M * geb in 2/dev 1222959865 M * geb and 192.1680.x in 2/ip 1222959887 M * stationone humm 1222959905 M * geb if you use vserver build it will create those dir for you 1222959958 J * kir ~kir@swsoft-msk-nat.sw.ru 1222959995 M * stationone geb: but 2/dev is not for eth2 ? 1222960014 M * geb don't care about the number 1222960020 M * geb it s just an index 1222960033 M * stationone ic 1222960043 M * geb the 0 dir will define the first interface in the vserver, 1 the second etc 1222960066 M * geb i can be ethx ethx:y dummyx etc 1222960078 M * stationone so I can have the following: 1222960090 M * stationone /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/0:1/dev 1222960096 M * stationone /etc/vservers/nexuo/interfaces/0:1/ip 1222960119 M * geb not sure it will work, maybe the script assume it is a numerical index 1222960124 M * geb betwen 0 and 255 1222960149 M * stationone ok 1222960181 M * geb /etc/vservers/vserver-name/interfaces/iface 1222960181 M * geb 'iface' is an arbitrary name for the interface; the value itself is not important but may be interesting regarding interface-creation and usage with chbind. Both happens in alphabetical order and numbers like '00' are good names for these directories. 1222960203 M * geb (from http://www.nongnu.org/util-vserver/doc/conf/configuration.html) 1222960207 M * geb sorry i have to go 1222960211 M * geb good luck ;) 1222960235 Q * geb Quit: Quitte 1222960240 M * stationone thanks 1222960741 M * Bertl nah, the name of the dir in interfaces doesn't matter 1222960773 Q * derjohn_mob Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222960778 M * Bertl i.e. you can also use more descriptive names, just note that they will be added in alphanumerical order, so 0,1,2,3 ... isn't that bad 1222960841 M * Bertl and if you want eth0:x (really an alias), you need to put the 'x' part in 'name' 1222960852 M * Bertl but note: you do not really need aliases nowadays 1222960932 M * stationone so these names are ok: 0 1 0_1 0_2 0_3 1222960944 M * Bertl yes, perfectly fine 1222960975 M * stationone and inside the dev files have eth0:1 eth9:2 and so on 1222960980 M * Bertl nope 1222960983 M * stationone i mean eth0:2 1222960988 M * Bertl they have eth0 1222961001 M * Bertl the '2' (if you really really want it) goes into 'name' 1222961019 M * stationone that 9 was a typo 1222961044 M * Bertl echo eth0 >0_2/dev 1222961053 M * Bertl echo 2>0_2/name 1222961069 M * Bertl but as I said, aliases are not required nor used anymore 1222961154 M * stationone so by just adding the virtual Ip on the root context and appending the ip using nadress to the guest server is good enough 1222961334 M * Bertl if you want to do that, you can put a 'nodev' instead of the 'dev' entry 1222961355 M * Bertl then the guest will only add (ala naddress) the IP to the guest, not assign it to an interface 1222961381 M * Bertl if you put the 'dev' entry tere, util-vserver will bring that IP up/down on guest start/Stop 1222961409 M * Bertl and note: there are no virtual IPs, they are all real ones :) 1222961475 M * stationone let me paste something on pastebin to be sure and not take more of your time, hold on 1222961526 Q * nkukard Quit: Leaving 1222961556 J * nkukard ~nkukard@196-209-158-110-ndn-esr-3.dynamic.isadsl.co.za 1222961867 Q * lilalinux Remote host closed the connection 1222961934 Q * sladen Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222961944 M * stationone Bertl: http://pastebin.centos.org/22227 1222962169 M * Bertl yep, looks fine, if you want those 4 IPs to be added/removed on guest startup 1222962207 M * Bertl if you want to configure them on the host, and 'just' use them on the guest, you would remove the 'dev' and 'name' files, and touch a 'nodev' in each interface dir 1222962208 M * stationone yes, I need them to be there if I do a restart on the guest 1222962315 J * xdr ~xdr@226-173-96-87.cust.blixtvik.se 1222962398 M * stationone Bertl: like this? http://pastebin.centos.org/22228 1222962524 M * Bertl well, you probably want to remove the dev from interface/0 too, unless you want util-vserver to add/remove that ip from eth0 on start/stop 1222962575 M * stationone all I want is to keep the same ips the way they are right now if I do a reboot or a restart on the guest server 1222962611 M * Bertl so you do not want to add/remove _any_ ip on guest start/stop, right? 1222962652 M * stationone what for? I just want to keep using the same ip addresses the way they are right now if I do a reboot or restart 1222962673 M * stationone when you say add/remove you mean bind unbind? 1222962684 M * Bertl nope, I mean add/remove on the host 1222962703 M * Bertl look, the mechanism is quite simple, let me explain it once again: 1222962727 M * Bertl the kernel does IP isolation for the guests 1222962752 M * Bertl you can assign a number of IPs to a guest, so that the guest is able to use them 1222962780 M * Bertl this assumes that the IP is available on the host, i.e. it has been added to some interface 1222962808 M * Bertl util-vserver helps with this, if you configure the guest to add/remove interfaces 1222962828 M * Bertl basically you have the following options (from util-vserver config) 1222962847 M * Bertl - let util-vserver add/remove the IP to a host interface on guest start/stop 1222962861 M * Bertl (this happens if you put any 'dev' entry into the interfaces/dir 1222962891 M * Bertl - have the IPs added by the host somehow (initscript/networking/manuall) 1222962895 J * dowdle ~dowdle@scott.coe.montana.edu 1222962908 M * Bertl (this is used when you touch a 'nodev' file in interfaces/dir) 1222962936 M * Bertl usually you want the guest ip to come up when you start the guest, and go down again, when you stop it 1222962950 J * docelic ~docelic@78.134.202.217 1222962951 M * Bertl (so the 'dev' case is more or less the default) 1222962972 M * Bertl does that make sense now? 1222962978 M * stationone yes 1222962994 M * stationone i think I will keep it like this: http://pastebin.centos.org/22227 1222963028 M * Bertl the choice is yours :) 1222963044 M * stationone thanks for the assistance 1222963098 J * ex ex@valis.net.pl 1222963240 M * Bertl you're welcome! 1222963566 Q * stationone Quit: Trillian (http://www.ceruleanstudios.com 1222963992 J * bonbons ~bonbons@2001:960:7ab:0:2c0:9fff:fe2d:39d 1222964117 J * sladen paul@starsky.19inch.net 1222965660 Q * xdr Remote host closed the connection 1222966820 Q * pmenier Quit: Konversation terminated! 1222966894 J * hparker ~hparker@linux.homershut.net 1222967233 J * the_hydra the_hydra@61.5.104.47 1222968175 Q * ViRUS Quit: If there is Artificial Intelligence, then there's bound to be some artificial stupidity. (Thomas Edison) 1222969188 Q * the_hydra Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222969188 J * chigital ~chigital@tmo-115-1.customers.d1-online.com 1222969452 Q * chigital 1222969471 J * chigital ~chigital@tmo-115-1.customers.d1-online.com 1222969899 Q * chigital Quit: Leaving 1222969951 J * chigital ~chigital@tmo-115-1.customers.d1-online.com 1222970009 Q * chigital 1222970034 J * chigital ~chigital@tmo-115-1.customers.d1-online.com 1222970221 Q * kir Quit: Leaving. 1222971503 M * Bertl off for now ... bbl 1222971508 N * Bertl Bertl_oO 1222973641 Q * yang autokilled: Take your warez somewhere else. If you feel an error has been made, please contact support@oftc.net. (2008-10-02 18:54:00) 1222974172 J * captiancrash ~usefulgee@70.159.118.70 1222974185 Q * dowdle Quit: Konversation terminated! 1222974393 J * dowdle ~dowdle@scott.coe.montana.edu 1222974998 Q * docelic Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222977752 M * ktwilight_ gah, so annoying! lenny has sysklogd has dependency on klogd! i had to give it CAP_SYS_ADMIN then apt-get -f install then remove the bcap :( talk about extra work.... 1222977809 M * daniel_hozac does rsyslog show the same behavior? 1222977955 M * ktwilight_ rsyslog? 1222977963 M * ktwilight_ don't have it in debian, i think. 1222977974 M * ktwilight_ can't find it at least. 1222978082 M * ktwilight_ at least there's a deb bug report #437213 but no fix :/ 1222978111 M * daniel_hozac it's in lenny. 1222978194 M * ktwilight_ oh, i see what you mean :) 1222978312 M * ktwilight_ "Starting with Lenny, Debian will use rsyslog instead of sysklogd by default." ah interesting :) 1222978394 M * ktwilight_ am replacing all my guests with it, would be easier on the long run :) 1222978409 M * ktwilight_ thanks daniel_hozac 1222978581 Q * captiancrash Remote host closed the connection 1222979823 J * derjohn_mob ~aj@e180220102.adsl.alicedsl.de 1222980549 Q * bonbons Quit: Leaving 1222980875 J * ntrs ~ntrs@77.29.192.108 1222981355 J * captiancrash ~usefulgee@70.159.118.70 1222981381 J * Aiken ~Aiken@ppp118-208-28-181.lns2.bne1.internode.on.net 1222982986 Q * ntrs Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222984399 J * androsch ~androsch@dslb-084-060-216-245.pools.arcor-ip.net 1222986849 Q * ard Ping timeout: 480 seconds 1222986863 N * Bertl_oO Bertl 1222986867 M * Bertl back now ... 1222991199 M * Bertl off to bed now ... have a good one everyone! 1222991206 N * Bertl Bertl_zZ 1222991833 Q * dna Ping timeout: 480 seconds