On Sat, May 24, 2014 at 8:24 PM, John Griffith
wrote:
> On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 10:16 PM, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>> ...
>> Previous versions of OpenStack used 'lvm_type=default' to signify a
>> wipe. Current versions use 'volume_clear=zero' or
>> &
Hi All,
This is a follow up to the recent question on wiping.
Previous versions of OpenStack used 'lvm_type=default' to signify a
wipe. Current versions use 'volume_clear=zero' or
'volume_clear=shred'.
For current versions, 'zero' is a single pass and writes 0's; while
'shred' uses three passes
I'm setting up another test installation. I'm working on Ubuntu with
Havana using
http://docs.openstack.org/havana/install-guide/install/apt/content/.
According to the OpenStack Installation Guide, the example uses a
Controller with Keystone, Glance and Nova. Freat job on those
documents, btw. (S
On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 4:54 PM, Jay Pipes wrote:
> On 12/23/2013 04:32 PM, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>>
>> > This security breach is happening right now here and I
>> > don't know what can I do to fix it, or what should I type
>> > on a BUG at Launchpad...
> This security breach is happening right now here and I
> don't know what can I do to fix it, or what should I type
> on a BUG at Launchpad...
Ubuntu has made it all but impossible to file bug reports. Their circular
redirects are worse than a telephone menu system that takes you down a
bunch of d
On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 1:19 PM, Kuo Hugo wrote:
> Hi Cedric,
>
> As John said, you should try both to find which is the best choice for you.
> I'm not gonna to tell you which is the best choice for you. It depends on
> your use cases. I think the following evaluation items is a good beginning.
>
On Mon, Nov 4, 2013 at 9:12 AM, Chris Friesen
wrote:
> On 11/03/2013 08:39 PM, Qixiaozhen wrote:
>
>> In my opinion, we should rethink the way of wiping the data in the
>> volumes. Filling in the device with /dev/zero with “dd” command was the
>> most primitive method. The standard scsi command “
-management-revealed-part-two.aspx
[2] B ́edrune and Sigwald,
http://esec-lab.sogeti.com/dotclear/public/publications/11-hitbamsterdam-iphonedataprotection.pdf
[3] Wei, Grupp, Spada, Swanson,
https://www.usenix.org/legacy/event/fast11/tech/full_papers/Wei.pdf
> -Original Message-
&g
On Fri, Nov 1, 2013 at 8:33 PM, David Hill wrote:
> Hello John,
>
> Well, if it has an impact on the other volumes that are still being
> used by
> some other VMs, this is worse in my opinion as it will degrade the service
> level
> of the other VMs that need to get some work done. If t
rizzly on 12.04, but for new install you should
> go with the new release Havana
>
> -Jon
>
> On Wed, Oct 23, 2013 at 2:07 PM, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>> I'm working from Jackson's OpenStack Cloud Computing book. I 'm
>> setting up a test installation, but I
I'm working from Jackson's OpenStack Cloud Computing book. I 'm
setting up a test installation, but I'm failing at (page 12):
add-apt-repository ppa:openstack-ppa/milestone
The error is (with a long URL, that I won't type correctly):
Cannot access PPA () to get PPA information, please
che
Hi All,
I'm looking at https://github.com/openstack.
How does one checkout all the common source code? Or do we have to
cherry pick one item at a time? For example, I would consider the
"common" sttuff to include the base installation, anything to manage
vms, and anything needed to support comput
Not sure if this made anyone's radar
-- Forwarded message --
From: G. S. McNamara
Date: Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 4:20 PM
Subject: [Full-disclosure] [Django] Cookie-based session storage
session invalidation issue
To: full-disclos...@lists.grok.org.uk
FD,
I’m back!
Django version
Thanks Clint, Stuart, and Adam.
On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 8:44 PM, Adam Young wrote:
> On 09/30/2013 08:11 PM, Stuart Longland wrote:
>>
>> On 30/09/13 14:52, Clint Dilks wrote:
>>>
>>> I think if you understand the components you can get things working of
>>> any of the distributions. The problem
I want to install OpenStack in a test lab. Nearly all the major
distros offer OpenStack in some form or another.
Are there any Linux distributions that are more amicable to OpenStack
software? I'm interested in both up-to-date OpenStack gear, and
ease-of-use from the value added stuff provided by
On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 2:18 AM, Mahardhika Gilang <
mahardika.gil...@andalabs.com> wrote:
> When i put https on it, error come up
> Authorization Failure. Authorization Failed: [Errno 1] _ssl.c:504:
> error:140770FC:SSL routines:SSL23_GET_SERVER_HELLO:unknown protocol
>
SSL/TLS is not enabled on
u want a free SSL/TLS certificate trusted by many (most?)
browsers for external users, then check out Eddy Nigg's StartCom.
(Most of the cost is in revocation, so that's where StartCom charges
for its services. Brilliant!).
Jeff
> -Original Message-
> From: Jeffrey Walto
On Thu, Sep 5, 2013 at 12:40 AM, Somanchi Trinath-B39208
wrote:
>
> Can we use Keystone as Certificate Authority. Kindly help me in
I can't answer if it can be used to issue certs, but I can tell you it
should not be. That portion of the infrastructure needs to be
segregated with a well defined se
Hi All,
Forgive my ignorance here...
I'm interested in wathcing " Samsung Case Study: Using Openstack to
support a massive mobile ecosystem". Its page is at
http://openstacksummitapril2013.sched.org/event/53d7397197a93f5ce87ba79a971d3a45#.Uh_1LLw3bXs.
When I click on the title link (green backgr
to a mobile device should always use maximum
compression (and never send uncompressed data)? In this use case, I
don't care about clients that can't be compliant (they can just die).
Thanks in advance (and my apologies if this should be sent to dev).
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