...
Code Block |
---|
voyage:~# ps ux | grep pinger2 root 5613 0.0 0.4 2400 1060 ? Ss 03:00 0:00 /bin/sh -c cd /usr/local/share/pinger; \ perl /usr/local/share/pinger/pinger2.pl > /usr/local/share/pinger/pingerCronStat.stdout 2> \ /usr/local/share/pinger/pingerCronStat.stderr root 5614 0.2 2.5 9048 6604 ? S 03:00 0:02 perl /usr/local/share/pinger/pinger2.pl root 6091 0.0 2.1 9048 5408 ? S 03:16 0:00 perl /usr/local/share/pinger/pinger2.pl root 6105 0.0 2.1 9048 5408 ? S 03:16 0:00 perl /usr/local/share/pinger/pinger2.pl root 6157 0.0 0.1 1640 512 pts/1 R+ 03:17 0:00 grep pinger2 |
We verified that the host recovered after a power cycle.
- It pinged so the host was up,
- http://140.105.28.27/cgi-bin/ping_data.pl responds so Apache works.
- Submitting the request fetched appropriate data (i.e the latest was current within 30 mins, note the time-stamps are in Unix epoch time and are GMT.
Configuration
Logging onto the Host
Give yourself an IP in the same network as the ePinger machines. For example, you can give yourself 140.105.28.30 with netmask 255.255.255.128. You can then connect with any network cable to the Alix board and follow the instructions you already have. Of course, keep in mind that if you change the IP of the eth port on the right (as seen from the back) then you need to be on the same network to communicate with it.
Ethernet
Here is how to setup the network interface on the ALIX board:
- login as root
- remountrw
- cd /etc/network/
- vi interfaces
- just copy what is already there for eth0 and change the IPs.
- /etc/init.d/networking restart (this will restart the networking
services) - ifconfig (to check if everything is OK).
That should be it.
Keep in mind that eth0 is the plug on the right (there is sticker too), while eth1 is the one on the left.
After reboot, it takes some time before you are able to ssh. Don't panic (I did).
When you setup eth1, you should disable eth0. In this way it answers to ssh much faster. And at then end, they don't use both eth ports. On the other side, it's a good idea to have both for local troubleshooting.
Apache Logs
The Apache log rotation should be set up. This section just explains it a bit more:
1) check apache logs files:
ls /etc/log/apache/*.log
2) change directory:
cd /etc/logrotate.d
3) edit file: "apache" and change first line: /etc/log/apache/*.log
(default is /var/log/apache/*.log)
4) run: logrotate -f /etc/logrotate.conf
5) check that logs have rotated:
ls /etc/log/apache/.