Month: February 2010

  • Linux Software Raid Notes – Replacing Drives

    This post is going to be somewhat of a “link dump” for me of some pages that I’ve been perusing lately. After playing with RT (request tracker) – I added a few ticket items for the home network. Now, if you’ve been a longtime reader and sorted through ALL of these posts here you’ll know that I’ve made use of software raid on the home systems. Why? Linux software raid seems fairly reliable (so far – 2 years +). It doesn’t depend on a specific piece of hardware. In short IF the worst happens and the array fails I should be able to retrieve data from an individual drive more easily than if it were hardware raid. I’m using Raid Level 1 (cloning/mirroring) and ext3 is the filesystem on top. I’ve had some slight problems with one drive in both the Desktop and server arrays and both arrays had been degraded for some time. My goal was ultimately redundancy and to eliminate the disruption that hard drive failures have given over the last few years.

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  • Lessons Learned from the Massive Westhost Outage this Week

    If you didn’t know, this has been a tumultuous week for clients of Westhost, my internet service provider. Their Primary data center is located in Utah and they share that space with a sister brand VPS.net. The datacenter is a Tier IV center managed by Consonus. Saturday afternoon there was a yearly fire equipment/alarm/suppression system test. The third party technician failed to follow procedures and one actuator remained on the output system for the gas that is designed to suppress fires in the building. When the system was re-armed there was a sudden release of the gaseous fire suppressant. At that same moment hundreds of hard drives died. Now, Inergen is what was used and the gases themselves shouldn’t be a problem. In this case, and judging from what I’ve read, the problem was with the sudden and intense change in air pressure caused by the release. That point is somewhat moot though, the end result is hundreds of dead and damaged hard drives.

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  • WaveEgreetings.com Scam? or Legit?

    This afternoon I received an email that said the following…

    Welcome to Midwave Products LLC!

    Congratulations Avery,

    This e-mail is to confirm your recent/successful WaveEGreetings.com
    order! Log in online and get instant access to hundreds of E-Greeting
    Cards!

    Billing Telephone Number: **********

    As part of your service with the WaveEGreetings.com program, you will
    receive:
    Unlimited access to ecards for every occasion!
    Send greetings to your friends and family.
    Create unique and personalized greetings.

    Your WaveEGreetings.com account can be accessed by going to
    www.waveEgreetings.com/login.asp and entering in your username and
    password below;
    username: ****************
    password: *************

    For your convenience you will be billed a monthly fee of $14.95 on your
    local phone bill for the phone number you provided which is **********.
    Although, there is no affiliation with your local phone company, these
    charges will appear on your local telephone bill on the Transaction
    Clearing bill page as being billed on behalf of Midwave Products, LLC.
    There is no long term contract and the service can be cancelled at any
    time.

    If you have questions or concerns and need to contact customer service
    just simply reply to this e-mail and we will be happy to assist you.

    You can cancel the service by calling 866-982-3699or by emailing us at
    support@waveEgreetings.com and include your home telephone number or
    simply reply to this email stating “cancel”. Or write us at PO Box 17598
    Suite# 77145, Baltimore, Maryland 21297-1598.

    Thank you and Congratulations on joining WaveEGreetings.com

    Sincerely,
    WaveEGreetings.com Customer Support
    —————————————-

    AT&T ENDUSERS:You have the right to dispute the Midwave Products LLC
    charges billed on your local telephone bill. You are not legally
    responsible for Midwave Products LLC charges incurred by minors or
    vulnerable adults without your consent. Your local telephone service
    will not be disconnected because you fail to pay a charge by Midwave
    Products LLC except that nonpayment of certain regulated
    telecommunication charges may result in disconnection of service in
    Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, South Carolina and
    Tennessee. Enhanced Telecommunications Service Providers may employ
    other agencies to collect delinquent charge, even if your local phone
    company has previously adjusted them from your telephone bill.

    My first thought was that this was a phishing email and I checked out the links in the message and the site of waveEgreetings.com because….

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  • Windows XP Stop 0x0000007B Error Booting into Safe Mode

    A recent malware removal session gave a very frustrating error in trying to boot into safe mode. I was unable to boot into safe mode, safe mode with networking or even safe mode with the command prompt. The Stop Error was a Stop 0x0000007B Error. The instructions on the screen talk about running chkdsk on the drive (which I did.) There were a few things found and corrected, but the problem was still there. On investigation I went into the registry editor (regedit) and found that the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\SafeBoot registry key had been emasculated. There were two subkeys for minimal and network profiles…. So… I found a way to rebuild them.

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