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Open Standards Plan Needed for Government Open Source


There has been plenty of talk about the government reducing costs by following an open source strategy recently but TechEye has discovered that in practice the proprietary software companies are still appearing as top choice for IT procurement. MP Tom Watson is having a major challenge persuading a large scale shift to open source, despite [...]

Managing Resource in RHEL6 Part 1


The most prominent and for the hosting business, most important updates that are going to come out for Redhat Enterprise Linux are those introducing control groups in RHEL6. These have been around in a supported capacity since Fedora 8 but really wont be seen in full until the new Redhat build gets started. So, what [...]

The Potency of SQL Injection – A Technical Perspective


Most web developers know that they should sanitize their web input. However recent figures from the UK Security Breach Investigations Report 2010 indicate that 40 per cent of all website attacks are due to SQL injections. SQL injection attacks allow perpetrators to leak data, usually by making a web application perform a query it wasn’t [...]

Role Based Access Controls in Enterprise Linux 6


I’ve been really excited about the potential of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 (RHEL6/CentOS6) and the beta has not let me down. Most of the more prominent features are laid out at the Redhat website but one of the things it neglects to mention is how much more access control it comes with.

Measuring Driver Performance in Perf


A couple of weeks ago the Linux Kernel 2.6.35 was officially released. For me, this release hasn’t been as exciting as say, 2.6.30 but one thing that whet my appetite was the support for distributed incoming network load. But what’s the fuss all about? Here I demonstrate how spreading incoming network I/O over multiple CPUs [...]

The Unnoticed Internet Milestone


Last month a significant milestone was achieved, but it would have passed by most people unnoticed. The Apache HTTP Server announced its 15th anniversary.

Ubuntu 10.4 (Lucid Lynx) Beta 1 released


This week provides a little extra excitement in the world of Linux. The newest version of Ubuntu (10.4) has been released for testing!

Beauty in Numbers


Every day I deal with tens of critically important servers. Database servers, web servers, mail servers – pretty much any machine used in a live setup is important, which makes checking the health of the server critical too. Every decent application produces logs, but turning these logs into something that you actually want to check [...]

2 weeks until Karmic Koala (aka Ubuntu Server 9.10)


It’s been planned for months, the changes are all documented and even the next in line is already being worked on. None the less the excitement around the upcoming Ubuntu release is mounting! The new version of Ubuntu brings the usual bug fixes and package updates, but also lots of new software. This release includes [...]

Celebration of an Open Source Gem


Barely a few days ago the most recent version of one of the widest used security applications on the internet was released – OpenSSH 5.3. This little application has now reached it’s 10th birthday, and provides a set of tools which every system administrator who’s worth their salt uses daily. For the uninitiated (catch up [...]