Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Sun JRE Native 64-bit Plugin support in Firefox

Finally, 64-bit Linux computing is becoming usable for the masses, I'm sure the major distros will pick up on this and make this even easier for those without patience.

Anyway, Sun's JRE 6.0 Update 12 added 64-bit support. I recommend downloading Update 14 build 03 to get the latest and greatest. (as of this writing of course)

http://download.java.net/jdk6/index.html

I've not tried this in Vista 64 or XP 64bit.

Under Linux, download the 64-bit bin file, chmod it to run(I recommend the /opt directory), and it will extract and install itself. Then you only need to add a symbolic link in your firefox plugin directory to the libnpjp2.so file in the /lib/amd64 subdirectory of the newly installed JRE.

Here is what I did under Ubuntu 8.10:
cd /opt
sudo mv ~/Desktop/jre-6u14-ea-bin-b03-linux-amd64-10_mar_2009.bin ./
sudo chmod 777 jre-6u14-ea-bin-b03-linux-amd64-10_mar_2009.bin
sudo ./jre-6u14-ea-bin-b03-linux-amd64-10_mar_2009.bin
cd /usr/lib/mozilla/plugins
sudo ln -s /opt/jre1.6.0_14/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so

Taken from:

http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1011899

Thursday, February 5, 2009

How to Sort IP Addresses in Microsoft Excel

A strange combination of Excel tools will yield a method to sort a long list of IP Addresses. I'll start from copying a list from a Cisco Router ARP Table.

Here's how:

  1. Paste the ARP Table into Excel, it will be a long line of text all in one column.

  2. Select the column by clicking the letter at the top and run the "text to columns" tool.

  3. Run through the short wizard using a space deliminator, should yeild you with 5 or so columns, one for IP, one for MAC, and the others.

  4. Now, select the new column where the IP Addresses are, and run the same text to columns tool again, this time using a period as the deliminator.(you may want to first insert 3 blank columns to the right of the IP Address to make room for this new columnized data)

  5. Now, sort by lowest to highest using first octet, then by second octet, then by third octet, and then by fourth octet.

  6. Insert yet another column anywhere, and on line one use the CONCATENATE function as such(a1=first octet of first address, B1 as second of first, etc):

  7. =CONCATENATE(A1,".",B1,".",C1,".",D1)

  8. This should yield a cell with the address formatted properly. Select it and click the dot in the lower right hand corner of the selection and drag all the way down every row in your table, thereby copying the formula with relative cell modifications in your formula.

  9. Now, select all these addresses in this column, and copy them.

  10. By default, pasting them in another column will only paste formula data, so under Edit->Paste Special(or if you have 2007, click the arrow underneath the paste button) and select Paste Values.

  11. Tada! You can now delete all 5 of you intermediary columns.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Disable Vista's Media Center(Ultimate or Home Premium only)

Open a command prompt with admin rights(if you UAC turned on, just type cmd into the search bar of the start menu and hit Ctrl-Shift-Enter)

Type:
reg add HKLM\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\WindowsMediaCenter /v MediaCenter /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f

To re-enable it(not likely to happen ;-))
reg delete HKLM\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\WindowsMediaCenter /v MediaCenter /f

Monday, October 6, 2008

VHDMount Fun

I had the lovely privilege of re-formatting my home PC the other day. I regularly use Vista(so sue me) on my home PC and I used its built-in backup tools to backup all my files to my second harddrive, including a CompletePC backup.

What I found was that for the normal file backup and restore feature, when you go to restore, it will restore ALL FILES FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE BACKUP SET. Take this scenario

  • Backup Set Created(first backup made)

  • Backup

  • Backup

  • Files Deleted

  • Backup


If I restore from the last backup, the deleted files will be found in the backups. Thats fine, pretty useful if i wanna undelete a file from awhile ago...but I did not anticipate this behavior....especially since I cleaned/reorganized my music collection recently.

So, I decided to open the CompletePC backup, basically a snapshot of the entire OS drive(which i made right before my format). It saves itself as a VHD file, which I need a microsoft program called VHDMount to open/use.

To get this tool, I had to download Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1 from here. Start the install, and you will probably want to do a custom install and only select the VHDMount tool.

Then, I tried to use the tool via the CLI...but with my fresh Vista SP1 install, UAC was turned on, so I had to open my command prompt in admin mode....easiest way is to Click the Start globe, type cmd in the search, and hit Ctrl-Shift-Enter(C-S-E is a shortcut to run anything as admin in Vista). After opening an admin prompt, I ran the tool with the /p switch(run vhdmount /? if you want to learn all the switches). But, it kept giving me a failed message.

Hunting around the internets, I found a solution, it seems it couldn't "plug in" the vhd file because of a driver issue...and this solves it(at least for me!):

  1. Control Panel->Hardware->Install drivers for older devices with Add Hardware wizard(its hiding on the left panel)

  2. Hit next and do the Advanced option, Show all Devices, Have Disk. Point it to the VHDMount install directory(C:\Program Files\Microsoft Virtual Server\Vhdmount\ by default) and have it install the vhdbus.inf.

  3. It will install "Microsoft Virtual Server Storage Bus" device.

  4. Then I had to run vhdmount with the /p switch again...this time it will fail again, BUT windows will fuss about it finding a device it can't find the driver for.

  5. Go to device manager(its in control panel) and right click the unhappy device and install this same inf file from above for this device and voila! it works.

  6. The virtual drive should now automount to the first available driver letter.


I am happy. It works a treat after a bit of finesse.

As a bonus, here is a reg script that will allow you to mount VHD files using the context menu(put this into a file with a .reg extension, save it and double click to merge):
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD]
@="Virtual Hard Disk"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell]
@="Plug in"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell\Plug in]
@="&Plug in"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell\Plug in\command]
@="\"C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Virtual Server\\Vhdmount\\vhdmount.exe\" /p \"%1\""
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell\Unplug (discard changes)]
@="Unplug (&discard changes)"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell\Unplug (discard changes)\command]
@="\"C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Virtual Server\\Vhdmount\\vhdmount.exe\" /u /d \"%1\""
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell\Unplug (commit changes)]
@="Unplug (&commit changes)"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Virtual.Machine.HD\shell\Unplug (commit changes)\command]
@="\"C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Virtual Server\\Vhdmount\\vhdmount.exe\" /u /c \"%1\""
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.vhd]
@="Virtual.Machine.HD"

Friday, May 2, 2008

SNMP Traps now working

Well, continueing from the past two postings, I have figured out what the problem was with the sending of SNMP traps. Apparently trap2sink sends a SNMPv2 trap, while trapsink sends a SNMPv1 trap.

trapsink works, trap2sink does not work.

I do not know why, but I have tested this. With trapsink configured alerts are received in IT Assistant, with trap2sink configured, no alerts are seen in the alert log.

That solves that! I think I finally have a fully managed 64-bit Debian Server....whats next?