Install Perl CPAN on CentOS troubleshooting Net::LDAP Rumi, June 20, 2012June 20, 2012 First we need to make sure our perl modules are all there and up to date. We can do this easily by Running perl -MCPAN -e –shell Let it run. Answer “no” when it asks about Manual configuration. Once it stops you'll be at the cpan prompt….type install Bundle::CPAN this will install many perl modules for you. Answer “yes” to any dependency questions. When you get to the question about “libnet”….answer “no”. Once you are finished…hit “enter” to exit….it'll run for a few seconds more and then bring you back to the cpan prompt. For good measure let's type install Net::LDAP (it should be up to date) Related Administrations Configurations (Linux) CentOSCPANPerl
Permanently add Static Route in Linux September 4, 2020September 4, 2020 Static routing is the process of manually entering the routes to the routing table to reach a particular destination. Basically two commands are used in Linux to add routes. The first command is the old traditional route add and second is the IP route command. Earlier we learned how to… Read More
Software RAID 1 on Windows 2003 May 7, 2009May 7, 2009 This series of articles will show how to set up software RAID on a Windows Server 2003 system. Before you do anything with your disks, make sure you have a good backup. We will start with one Basic drive, create a RAID1 set on a new drive we install, remove… Read More
Large file split and join in linux July 19, 2021 Let’s assume we have a large file of 102 GB and named as “vzdump-lxc-103-2021_07_19-12_05_06.tar.lzo”. We’d like to split this large file into 10GB of partial file. Let’s apply the split command as below- split -b 102400M vzdump-lxc-103-2021_07_19-12_05_06.tar.lzo repo. Wait for a while, the execution continues, and once over, you’ll find… Read More