Latest Server related questions

Score: 0
pizzavitdit avatar
Proxychains in Kali Linux didn't work even if I configured it properly
us flag

I just see the video that NetworkChuck made named "learning hacking? DON'T make this mistake!! (hide yourself with Kali Linux and ProxyChains)" and I wanted to try it out. I configured the file exactly the same and found some proxies and wrote them in the file:



proxychains.conf  VER 3.1
#
#        HTTP, SOCKS4, SOCKS5 tunneling proxifier with DNS.
#

# The option below identifies how the ProxyLis ...
Score: 0
Himanshu Poddar avatar
What is the difference between the private addresses on eth0 and eth1 on Digital Ocean?
ma flag

Here is the output of command ip a on my Digital Ocean server:

root@ubuntu-s-1vcpu-1gb-blr1-01:~# ip a
1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
    link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
    inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
    inet6 ::1/128 scope host
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft ...
Score: 10
Emoji avatar
Do SSL Certs containing two wildcards work (esp. on Let's Encrypt)?
vn flag

I want to include two wildcards in an SSL cert (will be) signed by Let's Encrypt: *.*.thost3.de. Will this cert match any hostnames matching that rule (e.g. example.example.thost3.de, hello.world.thost3.de), and can Let's Encrypt accept such wildcards exist in certs they signed?

Score: 0
Planet_Server avatar
Failed to start Berkeley Internet Name Domain...S). Centos7
in flag

I'm new to linux environment and trying to build a web hosting server for my few webistes. But my name servers are not pointing towards my server. I red many articles on many forums and used this command and it shows thsi error!

My Servers Public ip is: 103.159.66.155 and name servers are as follow:

ns98.planetserver.cloud
ns49.planetserver.cloud




systemctl status named.service

● named.servic ...
Score: 0
jla avatar
Mysql constantly writing to binlog, rapidly using up disk space
in flag
jla

My Ubuntu server started running a high amount of IO operations. The server has a few WordPress websites on it, but they get at most a few dozen views per day. In a couple of days 30GB of disk space was used.

Checking iotop

Running iotop showed that mysql was constantly writing to disk. A typical output was like this:

Total DISK READ:         0.00 B/s | Total DISK WRITE:       390.38 K/s
Current  ...
Score: 0
Emoji avatar
Wildcard in apache virtualhost sitename
vn flag

I want to use wildcards in Apache. What I actually want to do is:

  1. ServerName wiki-*.thost3.de, and the * must be accessible by further configurations.
  2. Provide the contents at /var/www/wiki/*, where * is the same as what * means on the first line.

How to do that?

Hmm... Actually, it's not limited to Apache configs, some external scripts could do the second step, but Apache config is the best when ...

Score: 0
Duncan Speel avatar
How to enable TUN in Ubuntu running in a docker container
us flag

So basically I'm running an Ubuntu container in docker, with the host system running Ubuntu Server 20.4 LTS, and the container running 22.4 LTS. My intended goal is to have a container to download torrents over a VPN in a container. Now I do not need to be able to access the torrents over web, so no access to my local network is needed. My problem is that anyway I install OpenVpn, WireGuard, or other VP ...

The Stunning Power of Questions

Much of an executive’s workday is spent asking others for information—requesting status updates from a team leader, for example, or questioning a counterpart in a tense negotiation. Yet unlike professionals such as litigators, journalists, and doctors, who are taught how to ask questions as an essential part of their training, few executives think of questioning as a skill that can be honed—or consider how their own answers to questions could make conversations more productive.

That’s a missed opportunity. Questioning is a uniquely powerful tool for unlocking value in organizations: It spurs learning and the exchange of ideas, it fuels innovation and performance improvement, it builds rapport and trust among team members. And it can mitigate business risk by uncovering unforeseen pitfalls and hazards.

For some people, questioning comes easily. Their natural inquisitiveness, emotional intelligence, and ability to read people put the ideal question on the tip of their tongue. But most of us don’t ask enough questions, nor do we pose our inquiries in an optimal way.

The good news is that by asking questions, we naturally improve our emotional intelligence, which in turn makes us better questioners—a virtuous cycle. In this article, we draw on insights from behavioral science research to explore how the way we frame questions and choose to answer our counterparts can influence the outcome of conversations. We offer guidance for choosing the best type, tone, sequence, and framing of questions and for deciding what and how much information to share to reap the most benefit from our interactions, not just for ourselves but for our organizations.