Archive for the ‘linux’ Category

TorrentFlux and ClarkConnect

November 8, 2008

After a little trial and error, I got TorrentFlux installed on my ClarkConnect box. Awesome. Now I don’t have to worry about leaving my main PC running when I want to download a torrent… you know, like maybe Fedora or something?

I really, really wanted to try Amahi, but I like having ClarkConnect as a gateway, and I’m not confident enough in my linux admin skills to turn a fedora installation into a gateway by adding a second NIC, as suggested on the amahi-users list. I’m definitely not feeling the suggestion that I go buy a wireless router, just so that I can plug it in and disable dhcp and stuff.

However, the Personal Backup Appliance, and running on a “newer” code base are still options that appeal to me. I may yet give Amahi a try. There was a recent review on Linux.com, but the reviewer didn’t even have broadband internet, so I’m somewhat skeptical that it told me anything that I didn’t already know from reading it.

I still haven’t given in to the urge to just wipe and try Windows Home Server (which also has no official gateway mode). So, I guess that’s something. Since I have a “real” web server running now, it might be time to put up that picture gallery running out of my house. Maybe that will spell the end for my sensless attatchment to flickr as well.

Regarding that HDA-ized Personal Backup Appliance, I really do need to look into automating some kind of solution with ClarkConnect, or Amahi or something. I imagine that I’ll get there eventually.

The other issue is wireless support. I wouldn’t mind using a wirless adapter on the server to serve up my wireless network. The only wireless clients in my house are our Windows Moblie T-Mobile Shadow phones, and the 802.11b adapter in the MythTV DVR downstairs, grabbing guide information. However, I’m serving it up now with an old D-Link DWL-900AP+ 802.11b access point. I don’t think there’s any wireless N adapters that work in Linux, but if there are, I need to find them, and then I’ll probably update the one in the DVR, add one to my ClarkConnect box, and sing their praises.

Time to start searching google, I guess.

Rolling back to MythDora because of Charlie Brown

November 1, 2008

Vista Media Center has been great, except for some issues that don’t bother others but me:
- It runs on Windows Vista
- I have to do an ugly hack to get guide information for subchannels.

More importantly, it doesn’t give me the flexibility to do compression. I’m using a 120 GB drive, and OTA digital TV takes lots of space. BlueRay might be important down the line, but I’m watching on a SD television, I don’t have a blue-ray drive, or any movie discs. The fact that I’m using a Media Center remote works out well too, but I think I can get by with it working. Oh, and ` GB of RAM was inadequate at times… watching that circle just go around and around got old. RAM is cheap, but I wasn’t ready to get more RAM.

So, the straw that broke the camels back was my mom-in-laws request to record the “Great Pumpkin” episode of Charlie Brown. I accidentally recorded an hour of weather and news, because the guide information for the subchannel of ABC Broadcast Television was the same. (My fault, I should have checked… but I was busy… that’s why I built a DVR…)

I hate to take some thing that is working well, and kill it, but hey… I wasn’t a real Vista Fan anyway and I want to use this Schedules Direct subscription, and I wanted to run Linux, and Media Portal is still in their nearly-infinite 1.0 release candidate… blah blah.

I’m mostly concerned about getting an Internet connection to the TV. The supposedly-final straw that tipped me over to Vista was support for a wireless G card that I had. I’m going to stick a wireless b card in and see if that works after I install.

gimp-print-cups and a new gateway

October 18, 2008

Well, that gimp-print thing didn’t work. I couldn’t find a new printer in the admin tool. Oh well. maybe a reboot will fix it…

What’s that? one of the newtwork cards stopped working? Grr… the only thing worse than defective hardware is hardware that works intermittently. Sometimes I really miss my Apple hardware.

Fortunatly the box that has two 10/100 connections hasn’t been torn down… I take that, then set it up and re-copy my music to it, and my world of warcraft isntallation. I notice increased transfer speed. This box has a 2.8 GHz P4 a gig of DDR2 ram, and a 160 GB SATA hard drive. 10 MB/sec… Sigh, I’ll take it.

Then I move on to trying the same failure of gimp-print, and an internet search leads me to try gimp-print-cups.
[root@gateway ~]# apt-get install gimp-print-cups
Reading Package Lists…
Building Dependency Tree…
The following NEW packages will be installed:
gimp-print-cups
0 upgraded, 1 newly installed, 0 removed and 53 not upgraded.
Need to get 24.5MB of archives.
After unpacking 30.8MB of additional disk space will be used.
Get:1 ftp://rh.apt.clarkconnect.com System/os gimp-print-cups 4.2.7-2 [24.5MB]
Fetched 24.5MB in 45s (543kB/s)
Committing changes…
Preparing… ##################################################
gimp-print-cups ##################################################
Done.

Holy Cow! That works, but there’s a bunch of printers, none of which have any differentiation. They’re all Epson R300 something-or-other-gimp-print. But, I picked the first one, and the test page printed… but the sheet of paper fed through crooked :( .

Anyway. Looks like I’m good to go, other than needing for ClarkConnect to be based on a newer release of RHEL.

ClarkConnect, round 2

October 18, 2008

So, I fried a router… meh. I built a replacement. I also nabbed a gigabit switch for $20. Unfortunately, the hardware I tried to use for the router failed, and I had to use a “real machine” that only had 10/100 network bits in it.

I got the old hardware back up and running, and I also got some other parts together and ended up building a “home server” with ClarkConnect. Right now, it has two GigE cards (which is ridiculous, I know, since my incoming broadband is less than 10 Mbit) and a 30 GB laptop hard drive. Maybe some day, I’ll grab that little chenbro case and 4 terabyte drives that everyone is using for their custom WHS installs.

The machine is running off of the motherboard from a Compaq machine that I got from the Weldy’s 1.2 GHz Athlon and two sticks of 256 MB RAM. That combined with the laptop hard drive, and the gigabit nics being PCI probably contributed to the paltry backup speed of around 6.5 Megabytes per second. Oh well, I got my 11 GB of ripped CDs off of my comptuer, and I built a machine that can act as some sort of backup server.

Of course, I’ll need to add space, that 30 GB laptop drive is full, because I added the installer for World of Warcraft and some patches to it as well. That’ll be another adventure.

Also, I’ve never gotten the print server working on ClarkConnect. It is one of the few reasons I’m tempted to try out Amahi, just because I know Fedora better than RHEL, and that I know if I plug in my printer in Fedora, it will work. I posted a little help request on the ClarkConnect Forums:

http://www.clarkconnect.com/forums/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=111094&an=0&page=0#Post111094

I’m guessing I just need to get gutenprint installed, but I don’t really know how. Probably something easy like ssh-ing into the box and typing “apt-get install gutenprint”. Maybe I should just try that. LOL. I really don’t want to have to get out my usb print server. It is just one more thing that I need to plug into the wall.