Nilesh Vaghela is an AWS community hero and founder, ElectroMech Corporation, a cloud and open source company. According to him, contributing to open source is a rewarding act in itself. However, it needs commitment and there are many steps involved in the process, right from selecting a project to ensuring your contribution is noticed. In a conversation with Abbinaya Kuzhanthaivel ...
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Open-Source Web Servers: Performance on a Carrier-Class Linux Platform
Ibrahim F. Haddad Issue #91, November 2001 Ibrahim tests the performance of three open-source webservers on a typical Ericsson Research Linux clusterplatform. ARIES (Advanced Research on Internet E-Servers) is a project that started at Ericsson Research Canada in January 2000. It aimed at finding and prototyping the necessary technology to prove the feasibility of a clustered internet server that demonstrates ...
Read More »Linux and Samba in a Federal Lab
Brian Gollsneider Mike Martin Issue #90, October 2001 Using Linux and Samba for research on extremely small lasers called VCSELs. Linux and Samba recently answered the needs of the Army Research Lab (ARL) at Adelphi, Maryland. Our branch does state-of-the-art research into a specific type of lasers and amasses large amounts of data during the performance testing of these devices. ...
Read More »Open-Source Software at the Aerodynamics Laboratory
Steve Jenkins Issue #90, October 2001 Steve describes a typical aircraft experiment and the open-source software involved. Long ago, before the Open-Source Software (OSS) movement, before the World Wide Web, before the Free Software Foundation and GNU, I was hired by the Unsteady Aerodynamics Laboratory of the National Research Council of Canada to work with the data-acquisition system for their ...
Read More »An Introduction to OpenSSL Programming, Part I of II
Eric Rescorla Issue #89, September 2001 Do you have a burning need to build a simple web client and server pair? Here’s why OpenSSL is for you. The quickest and easiest way to secure a TCP-based network application is with SSL. If you’re working in C, your best choice is probably to use OpenSSL (http://www.openssl.org/). OpenSSL is a free (BSD-style ...
Read More »Taming the Wild Netfilter
David A. Bandel Issue #89, September 2001 Using Netfilter and ipchains to increase security on home systems. For those of you who have taken the plunge and upgraded from kernel 2.2.X (or even 2.0.X) to 2.4.X, congratulations. If, like a number of folks, you’re running some form of firewall using either ipchains or ipfwadm, your scripts may work fine. But ...
Read More »Passive-Aggressive Resistance: OS Fingerprint Evasion
Rob Beck Issue #89, September 2001 If we do not wish to fight, we can prevent the enemy from engaging us even though the lines of our encampment be merely traced out on the ground. All we need do is to throw something odd and unaccountable in his way. –Sun Tzu, The Art of War OS fingerprinting is a process ...
Read More »PostgreSQL Performance Tuning
Bruce Momjian Issue #88, August 2001 Tweak your hardware to get the most from this open-source database. PostgreSQL is an object-relational database developed on the Internet by a group of developers spread across the globe. It is an open-source alternative to commercial databases like Oracle and Informix. PostgreSQL was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1996, a ...
Read More »The Trials and Tribulations of Installing LinuxPPC 2000 Q4
Paul Barry Issue #88, August 2001 Read the manual before turning your Mac over to Linux. I recently wrote about using Mac OS X as my main desktop OS (see “Mac OS X: First Impressions” at http://www.linuxjournal.com/articles/misc/0035.html). Prior to working with Mac OS X (the X is read as ten), I ran a Mac OS 9/LinuxPPC dual-boot system. A longtime ...
Read More »Focus: Platforms
Richard Vernon Issue #88, August 2001 With this month’s feature articles we cover both hardware and software. The topic “platforms” is almost as broad as “computers” because anything upon which something else is dependent can be considered a platform. With this month’s feature articles we cover both hardware and software. Frequently, when people think platform they think processor architecture. And ...
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