Hey guys I wonder if it's possible to set classid on Ethernet interface via Powershell? I tried that on server 2k12 R2 via ifconfig but I get no results.
I'm running a Amahi server. It's basically a Fedora14 x64 installation. I'm looking for a good solution to backup my 200GB system drive on the server to an external USB/eSATA drive every night. I looked into using dd but since other things might be running on the server at the same time it didn't feel quite safe. I would like the backups to be incremental so the following backups after the initial one would be quite fast. The backup should also be bootable or prehaps be able to produce a bootable disk after booting from a CD or something.
I would also like the server to be able to do similar backups of my clients running Ubuntu, Windows 7 x64, Windows 7 Starter, OSX Lion, Windows XP and so on. So no applications backing up only shared folders or something like that. My guess is a client daemon would have to exist that would lock the system to allow backup of a Windows system drive that can otherwise be quite cranky.
Booting up a CD in a crashed client and connecting to the server restoring the latest backup and being up running is my ideal goal.
Is there anything out there that would fit these needs?
How do you hide the domain clients from seeing one another in the Network Browser? I don't want to disable Network Discovery because I would like to be able to maintain them, access their administrative shares and run installations remotely.
This command does not work.
net config server /hidden:yes
How do you guys get around this?
We have a Linux-based router which is currently working fairly well, but our network only has a 1.5 mbps incoming connection. The network is small, but during high load periods some systems can end up dominating the bandwidth. For example, a client downloading a file can easily saturate the connection leaving everyone else with barely any access to the outside world.
Naturally, I'd like to fix this. I believe a combination of iptables rules and tc is in order, but I have no idea how to go about distributing the bandwidth evenly across the clients.
It would be nice if there was a way to divide the bandwidth only across clients that are actually utilising the connection as well, rather than hard limit each connection to (bandwidth / number of clients).
My problem is that my FTP work great, exept when i upload files on a particular client server!
on this server happen that some files are uploaded fine and others not, they stop while uploading at half of it's size, then this error is displayed:
530 Sorry, the maximum number of clients (4) from your host are already connected. Unable to make a connection. Please try again.
Obviously this is not true, i'm the only one that is uploading!
Anyone had the same experience with this!?
PS: i have tried many different FTP, all display the same error or just hung up!
Thank's