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backup_active = 1
05 backup = 192.168.1.232
06 heartbeat = 1
07 heartbeat_port = 539
08 keepalive = 6
09 deadtime = 18
10 network = direct
11 debug_level = NONE
12 monitor_links = 1
13 syncdaemon = 1
14
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saved in /home/khess/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.
09 the key fingerprint is:
10 6d:2c:04:dd:bf:b2:de:e1:fc:52:e9:7f:59:10:98:bb khess@windows
11 The key's randomart image is:
12 +--[ RSA 2048]----+
13 | .. . o
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/ceph/$name.keyring
04 [mon]
05 mon data = /srv/mon.$id
06 [mds]
07 [osd]
08 osd data = /srv/osd.$id
09 osd journal = /srv/osd.$id.journal
10 osd journal size = 1000
11 [mon.a]
12 host = alice
13 mon
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Include {
13 File = /usr/sbin
14 Options {
15 Signature = MD5
16 }
17 }
18 Exclude {
19 File = /var/lib/bacula
20 File = /tmp
21 }
22 }
23
24 Messages {
25 Name = Daemon
26
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bandwidth measurements as follows:
Kilobytes are written as k or kb.
Megabytes are written as m or mb.
However, I'm more comfortable using kilobits and megabits. These terms are notated
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into Linux when Linus Torvalds added it to kernel version 2.6.19. GFS2 was thus a later entry to the kernel than the comparable OCFS2, which made it into kernel 2.6.16.
In the kernel, GFS relies