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Thread: The Linux Help and Tutorial Thread

  1. #301
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    Quote Originally Posted by D_A View Post
    I'd have to look it up but all the reporting stuff in Solaris is available in the Linux version of top, you just need to use the right flags ... which I don't remember. I'm sure you can configure top's default to show whatever you want, but again I don't remember the syntax etc. man top is your friend.
    Linux top man page does not explain several things. Found some here.

    I did use top on Solaris but Solaris has many tools for monitoring system hardware and software. Some if not most have probably been ported to Linux by now but I need to do some searching first.

    @OC. I did use the cc_config.xml and nice value dropped from 19 to 10 but us shows 0.0% and nice shows 95-99%.
    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-12-2013 at 05:23 PM.

  2. #302
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    Quote Originally Posted by OldChap View Post
    Jim, Command line is the easiest way I know Poppa posted at start of his update linux thread or there is the D_A post on the using Linux thread

    http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...ely-site-Linux

    http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...=1#post5024891

    whichever you like.

    hard to tell if any improvement due to change to MCM1

    Poppa, edit to my previous too
    Thanks OC and PG for the info.

    OC, I don't know if its just this one WU, but I just saw one of my first MCM1 WU's take 2hrs and 42 min past the estimated time to complete(total time to complete was 7hrs 2 minutes). I'll be watching the MCM1 WU's tonight to see if this reoccurs. So far I think I've only completed MCM1 WU's on one rig so I don't know if its rig dependent, WU dependent and/or Linux dependent.
    Desktop rigs:
    Oysterhead- Intel i5-2320 CPU@3.0Ghz, Zalman 9500AT2, 8Gb Patriot 1333Mhz DDR3 RAM, 120Gb Kingston V200+ SSD, 1Tb Seagate HD, Linux Mint 17 Cinnamon 64 bit, LG 330W PSU

    Flying Frog Brigade-Intel Xeon W3520@2.66Ghz, 6Gb Hynix 1066Mhz DDR3 RAM, 640Gb Hitachi HD, 512Mb GDDR5 AMD HD4870, Mac OSX 10.6.8/Linux Mint 14 Cinnamon dual boot

    Laptop:
    Colonel Claypool-Intel T6600 Core 2 Duo, 4Gb 1066Mhz DDR3 RAM, 1Gb GDDR3 Nvidia 230M,240Gb Edge SATA6 SSD, Windows 7 Home 64 bit




  3. #303
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    Took me awhile to remember then find it but here is a package of utilities to monitor the system. Nothing friendly about these utilities. But very powerful. Depends how far down the rabbit hole ya want to go. It is deep......

    sysstat docs and tutorial. You can write to a file and use isag to plot graphs from the datafile.

    sudo apt-get install sysstat isag

    I should add both top and sysstat get their info from /dev/proc which is where the kernel accounting is written. So you will be getting info from the same place just with stsstat you can configure it to get data over time as well as more specific data.
    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-12-2013 at 07:00 PM.

  4. #304
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    Quote Originally Posted by PoppaGeek View Post
    Took me awhile to remember then find it but here is a package of utilities to monitor the system. Nothing friendly about these utilities. But very powerful. Depends how far down the rabbit hole ya want to go. It is deep......
    I think Dave just bailed on this discussion!

    Some incredibly powerful tools available in Linux, lots of stuff ported in from Solaris, BSD, System V etc, but the user is expected to step up with the power tools not the other way around. They're not for newbies.

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  5. #305
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    Dave? In this thread? You messing with me right?

    I get why people want to use Mint. It's fine but if you want to squeeze the absolute most from your system install Ubuntu server. No X, no GUI. I don't know how many times D_A has said it but X does use some CPU. I run 2 crunchers on Ubuntu server. I see 99.65 and 99.99 in BoincTasks and 99-100 in top.Uses less memory and disk space too. With Boinctui you can use a monitor. I run headless and use ssh.

    I thought Dave married Bill Gates daughter or cousin? No? Just bros I guess.

  6. #306
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    Found this site;

    Unix & Linux Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for users of Linux, FreeBSD and other Un*x-like operating systems.. It's 100% free, no registration required.
    Search by text or tags like /command-line /ubuntu /bash

    Answers are voted up or down and best answers highlighted.
    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-12-2013 at 08:59 PM.

  7. #307
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    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-12-2013 at 09:12 PM.

  8. #308
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    Click image for larger version. 

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  9. #309
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    Yep you're younger but I am prettier.

    OK OC your turn.

  10. #310
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    Quote Originally Posted by PoppaGeek View Post
    Yep you're younger but I am prettier.

    OK OC your turn.
    I don't recall saying I was pretty

    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  11. #311
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    The comfort of the GUI is worth the small percentage to us stubblies

    I just took a fresh look at all 3 rig's results for the last 100 results with the single cpu rig, now running 16 threads, biased to 50% of the results.

    I see cpu time of 429.91 and real time of 430.68 or 0.77 of an hour in about 430 hours (~46 mins in 25800 mins) so losing 1 min every 560 mins

    In my book that is good enough and seems to show that allowing the scheduler to do the scheduling is no bad thing..... at least on a dedicated cruncher.


    My Biggest Fear Is When I die, My Wife Sells All My Stuff For What I Told Her I Paid For It.
    79 SB threads and 32 IB Threads across 4 rigs 111 threads Crunching!!

  12. #312
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    Quote Originally Posted by D_A View Post
    I don't recall saying I was pretty
    It's ok your boyish figure and youthful vigor makes up for it.



    My boyish figure and anything to do with vigor is a distant memory, and with dementia there ain't much of that either....

    Being pretty is all I have.


    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-13-2013 at 11:06 AM.

  13. #313
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    Poppa,

    I'm not sure that any photos of me even exist. I shall have to get the camera out.

    You WILL be disappointed.


    My Biggest Fear Is When I die, My Wife Sells All My Stuff For What I Told Her I Paid For It.
    79 SB threads and 32 IB Threads across 4 rigs 111 threads Crunching!!

  14. #314
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    I found a how-to that might help some folk:

    http://theoatmeal.com/blog/fix_computer
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

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  15. #315
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    Quote Originally Posted by D_A View Post
    I found a how-to that might help some folk:

    http://theoatmeal.com/blog/fix_computer
    OMG that's funny.

    But at least now I know that I didn't change distros enough.

  16. #316
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    Quote Originally Posted by OldChap View Post
    Poppa,

    I'm not sure that any photos of me even exist. I shall have to get the camera out.

    You WILL be disappointed.
    hmm that is interesting. Tell me do you see anything when you look in a mirror?

  17. #317
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    Quote Originally Posted by PoppaGeek View Post
    OMG that's funny.

    But at least now I know that I didn't change distros enough.
    I find it interesting that Linux users are assumed to be able to produce their own CPUs from scrap silicon that run on light from Saturn. I'd at least need some fencing wire, duct tape and maybe a few cable ties to sling that lot together.

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  18. #318
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    Your lesson for today.










    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-13-2013 at 07:33 PM.

  19. #319
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    A rather powerful program for managing files on a Linux system that has been around a long time is Midnight Commander. Between it and Boinctui they would make a Ubuntu Server pretty easy to manage.

    sudo apt-get install mc



  20. #320
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    why not apt-get install wife --no-install-recommends

    I like large posteriors and I cannot prevaricate

  21. #321
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    Quote Originally Posted by Evantaur View Post
    why not apt-get install wife --no-install-recommends
    Because that doesn't stop dependencies, just the recommended extra packages.

    Also:

    Click image for larger version. 

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  22. #322
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  23. #323
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    Command line user.

    Yesterday



    Today


    His name, Igor.
    Uses command line since age 3.
    His beard grew over nite.
    When he walks the barren tundra of Siberia
    female polar bears offer themselves to him.
    Male polar bears offer him meat from their kills.
    Wolves sing ballads of his shell scripting skills.
    The ground quakes and vibrates at the sound of his voice.
    The clouds clear when he looks skyward.
    No human has ever looked him in the eyes. And lived.
    Windows users flee his presence, Mac users faint.
    He is Igor. He uses the command line. Fear him.
    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 11-14-2013 at 08:57 AM.

  24. #324
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    I spent several hours trying to get backports working on Mint the other night using the graphic package managers. Could not get either to show me anything but the one boinc 7.0.27. I know there is a 7.0.65 in the backports for Precise and I am sure someone else can get it to work. I couldn't.

    This a.m. I spent maybe 20 minutes, mostly reading and squinting, bad morning, but got what I wanted using only the command line.


    First determine which release of Ubuntu or Mint you are running.


    NOTE: I am using precise so you will need to replace precise with the version of Ubuntu you are running.

    To find from command line in Ubuntu:

    poppageek@A8356srv:~$ lsb_release -a
    No LSB modules are available.
    Distributor ID: Ubuntu
    Description: Ubuntu 12.04.3 LTS
    Release: 12.04
    Codename: precise
    If you are running Mint you are still running a version of Ubuntu.

    Mint 15 is raring
    Mint 14 is quantal
    Mint 13 is precise

    If you run lsb_release in MInt you will get the Mint release name. For Mint 15 you will see Olivia. Olivia is Ubuntu raring. So use raring-backports. http://www.linuxmint.com/oldreleases.php Use to convert Mint versions to Ubuntu.

    ================================================== ================================================== =======

    So for my Ubuntu server 12.04.3 LTS I added

    Code:
    deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise-backports main restricted universe multiverse
    to /etc/apt/source.list

    To find what backports are available:

    poppageek@A8356srv:~$ sudo apt-cache show boinc-client
    Package: boinc-client
    Priority: optional
    Section: universe/net
    Installed-Size: 1315
    Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
    Original-Maintainer: Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
    Architecture: amd64
    Source: boinc
    Version: 7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1
    Depends: libboinc7 (= 7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1), libc6 (>= 2.15), libcurl3 (>= 7.16.2-1), libgcc1 (>= 1:4.1.1), libstdc++6 (>= 4.1.1), libx11-6, libxss1, zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), debconf (>= 0.5) | debconf-2.0, python, adduser, ca-certificates
    Recommends: ia32-libs
    Suggests: boinc-manager, x11-xserver-utils, libcuda1, libcuda1-ia32
    Filename: pool/universe/b/boinc/boinc-client_7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1_amd64.deb
    Size: 423410
    MD5sum: 3a50a666e5c0564a3d809c0b198f4b78
    SHA1: 831826426d174cfac605ab9667bccdd99708e5c3
    SHA256: 79f28f9242eeff1037194a624b4a564848b0b8a33d5bc57885 9ea859b05f2a70
    Description-en: core client for the BOINC distributed computing infrastructure
    The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC) is a
    software platform for distributed computing: several initiatives of
    various scientific disciplines all compete for the idle time of
    desktop computers. The developers' web site at the University of
    Berkeley serves as a common portal to the otherwise independently run
    projects.
    .
    This package contains the BOINC core client program that is required
    to participate in any project that uses BOINC. A central server
    distributes work units and collects results via this client. When
    attaching a local machine to a project, this client will also
    dynamically download the scientific data and executables to be then
    wrapped by the BOINC core client.
    Homepage: http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
    Description-md5: 9bd4f63a5f0f805b9edce1e36fefff24
    Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
    Origin: Ubuntu

    Package: boinc-client
    Priority: optional
    Section: universe/net
    Installed-Size: 1656
    Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
    Original-Maintainer: Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
    Architecture: amd64
    Source: boinc
    Version: 7.0.27+dfsg-5ubuntu0.12.04.1
    Depends: libc6 (>= 2.15), libcurl3 (>= 7.16.2-1), libgcc1 (>= 1:4.1.1), libssl1.0.0 (>= 1.0.0), libstdc++6 (>= 4.1.1), libx11-6, libxss1, zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), debconf (>= 0.5) | debconf-2.0, python (>= 2.3), adduser, ca-certificates
    Recommends: ia32-libs
    Suggests: boinc-app-seti, boinc-manager, x11-xserver-utils, libcuda1, libcuda1-ia32
    Breaks: udev (<< 136-1)
    Filename: pool/universe/b/boinc/boinc-client_7.0.27+dfsg-5ubuntu0.12.04.1_amd64.deb
    Size: 566610
    MD5sum: 57b66e402305e82cfbd11ccb753af689
    SHA1: 4039dbf5f95c5f89f8a55c06d148ba24e9f240b8
    SHA256: 9ca76c5ba918b050b69aa5b00a5c3902ce7fe242541561a398 700d7517875e38
    Description-en: core client for the BOINC distributed computing infrastructure
    The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC) is a
    software platform for distributed computing: several initiatives of
    various scientific disciplines all compete for the idle time of
    desktop computers. The developers' web site at the University of
    Berkeley serves as a common portal to the otherwise independently run
    projects.
    .
    This package contains the BOINC core client program that is required
    to participate in any project that uses BOINC. A central server
    distributes work units and collects results via this client. When
    attaching a local machine to a project, this client will also
    dynamically download the projects application's program to be then
    wrapped by the BOINC core client.
    Homepage: http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
    Description-md5: 695051a1bfbe6b50d23def8c4e222a29
    Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
    Origin: Ubuntu

    Package: boinc-client
    Priority: optional
    Section: universe/net
    Installed-Size: 1651
    Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
    Original-Maintainer: Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
    Architecture: amd64
    Source: boinc
    Version: 7.0.24+dfsg-1
    Depends: libc6 (>= 2.15), libcurl3 (>= 7.16.2-1), libgcc1 (>= 1:4.1.1), libssl1.0.0 (>= 1.0.0), libstdc++6 (>= 4.1.1), libx11-6, libxss1, zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), debconf (>= 0.5) | debconf-2.0, python (>= 2.3), adduser, ca-certificates
    Recommends: ia32-libs
    Suggests: boinc-app-seti, boinc-manager, x11-xserver-utils, libcuda1, libcuda1-ia32
    Breaks: udev (<< 136-1)
    Filename: pool/universe/b/boinc/boinc-client_7.0.24+dfsg-1_amd64.deb
    Size: 565426
    MD5sum: fd744dcdbe09d0bf82219085e7142910
    SHA1: 5cc6fe3bd2822eb9e5e69b747065fdb8dfd1b442
    SHA256: 4deb9f58bb217de0a6fff376c9391ab1a923a85a6013562213 49e89a21fb42b0
    Description-en: core client for the BOINC distributed computing infrastructure
    The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC) is a
    software platform for distributed computing: several initiatives of
    various scientific disciplines all compete for the idle time of
    desktop computers. The developers' web site at the University of
    Berkeley serves as a common portal to the otherwise independently run
    projects.
    .
    This package contains the BOINC core client program that is required
    to participate in any project that uses BOINC. A central server
    distributes work units and collects results via this client. When
    attaching a local machine to a project, this client will also
    dynamically download the projects application's program to be then
    wrapped by the BOINC core client.
    Homepage: http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
    Description-md5: 695051a1bfbe6b50d23def8c4e222a29
    Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
    Origin: Ubuntu
    So there are 3 versions of boinc available via ubuntu-backports using the apt-get commands.

    Now to only see what is in Backports:

    poppageek@A8356srv:/etc/apt$ sudo apt-cache show boinc-client/precise-backports
    Package: boinc-client
    Priority: optional
    Section: universe/net
    Installed-Size: 1315
    Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
    Original-Maintainer: Debian BOINC Maintainers <pkg-boinc-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
    Architecture: amd64
    Source: boinc
    Version: 7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1
    Depends: libboinc7 (= 7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1), libc6 (>= 2.15), libcurl3 (>= 7.16.2-1), libgcc1 (>= 1:4.1.1), libstdc++6 (>= 4.1.1), libx11-6, libxss1, zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), debconf (>= 0.5) | debconf-2.0, python, adduser, ca-certificates
    Recommends: ia32-libs
    Suggests: boinc-manager, x11-xserver-utils, libcuda1, libcuda1-ia32
    Filename: pool/universe/b/boinc/boinc-client_7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1_amd64.deb
    Size: 423410
    MD5sum: 3a50a666e5c0564a3d809c0b198f4b78
    SHA1: 831826426d174cfac605ab9667bccdd99708e5c3
    SHA256: 79f28f9242eeff1037194a624b4a564848b0b8a33d5bc57885 9ea859b05f2a70
    Description-en: core client for the BOINC distributed computing infrastructure
    The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC) is a
    software platform for distributed computing: several initiatives of
    various scientific disciplines all compete for the idle time of
    desktop computers. The developers' web site at the University of
    Berkeley serves as a common portal to the otherwise independently run
    projects.
    .
    This package contains the BOINC core client program that is required
    to participate in any project that uses BOINC. A central server
    distributes work units and collects results via this client. When
    attaching a local machine to a project, this client will also
    dynamically download the scientific data and executables to be then
    wrapped by the BOINC core client.
    Homepage: http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
    Description-md5: 9bd4f63a5f0f805b9edce1e36fefff24
    Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
    Origin: Ubuntu
    To install from backports.

    Code:
    sudo apt-get install boinc-client/precise-backports
    Installs 7.0.65+dfsg-3~ubuntu12.04.1 from backports.

    See next post for condensed instructions on adding line to /etc/apt/source.list

    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 12-02-2013 at 11:39 AM.

  25. #325
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    Installing backport versions of boinc-client Condensed to only instructions: Read previous post to determine which version you have. Mine is precise.

    Backup up config file:

    Code:
    sudo cp /etc/apt/sources.list /etc/apt/sources.list.backup

    Edit /etc/apt/source.list

    Add to bottom of file

    Code:
    deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise-backports main restricted universe multiverse
    REPLACE precise with the codename of the version of Ubuntu you are using. Above post for info on Mint codenames.

    To see current backport version of boinc-client

    Code:
    sudo apt-cache show boinc-client/precise-backports
    To install current backport version

    Code:
    sudo apt-get install boinc-client/precise-backports
    ================================================== ==

    Another way to append the line to /etc/apt/source.list

    change precise-backports to your version. Backup file first.

    Code:
    sudo cp /etc/apt/sources.list /etc/apt/sources.list.backup
    Then add line to /etc/apt/source.list

    Code:
    echo -e "deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise-backports main restricted universe multiverse" >> /etc/apt/sources.list
    It is a good idea to backup config files before editing them. It is REAL easy to mistype something.

    Please copy and paste from the CODE boxes. Forum software keeps adding the [URL] tag whenever it sees http://
    Last edited by PoppaGeek; 12-02-2013 at 11:26 AM.

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