Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Deploying cloud based openvpn server easily

Openvpn is an opensource software application that implements virtual private network techniques to create secure point-to-point or site-to-site connections in routed or bridged configurations and remote access facilities. One of the usage of openvpn, is so that we can browse the web without exposing our public ip address. With cloud server nowadays, it is truly cheap and easy to own an openvpn server. In this tutorial, I will use vultr cloud provider to setup my openvpn server.


Create your vultr account here

Once created, login to your account. You will be presented with below dashboard


Click on the + button to create your new cloud server


Choose your desired server location, in my case I choose Singapore


For server type, click on Application tab, and choose openVPN


For server size, choose $5/month for time being. You can always upgrade it to bigger size, if there is a need in the future.


Leave options 4, 5 and 6 as default



Put in your desired server hostname



Click on Deploy Now to deploy the server



Wait while the server is being installed


Once the status turned to "Running", your openvpn server is ready.


Click on the server name, to see the details of your openvpn. Follow the url shown in the details of your server, to get to the openvpn login page


From there, you can download the client for your device, and start using your own, brand new openvpn server, with just $5 a month.



Enjoy :)





Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Adding new virtual hard disk to existing RHV virtual machine

Login to your RHV/RHEV/ovirt console




Enter your administrator username and password



Once inside, search for your VM name



Scroll down, and choose Disk tab



Add details of your new virtual hard disk and click OK once done.



Make sure that your newly created disk is listed in the Disk tab



Login to your vm, and run lsblk to check your newly created disk
# lsblk 
NAME              MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
...
vdc               252:32   0   200G  0 disk 



Create partition on the new disk
# cfdisk /dev/vdc
Choose New --> Primary --> Set size --> Write --> answer 'yes' --> Quit



Run lsblk again to check if your partition is successfully created 
# lsblk 
NAME              MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
...
vdc               252:32   0   200G  0 disk 
└─vdc1            252:33   0   200G  0 part 



Make filesystem for your partition, in this case I want an ext4 partition
# mkfs.ext4 /dev/vdc1 
mke2fs 1.42.9 (28-Dec-2013)
Filesystem label=
OS type: Linux
...
Writing superblocks and filesystem accounting information: done   



Once done, you can mount your partition wherever you want
# mount /dev/vdc1 /mnt
# df -Th /mnt/
Filesystem     Type  Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/vdc1      ext4  197G   61M  187G   1% /mnt



Score!!

Monday, August 13, 2018

Easily checking your domain name availability online

You can easily check this using an online NS checker by ping.eu


Fill in the domain that you would like to check in the white box as shown by the red arrow, like so:



You should be getting response like above, if the domain name is accessible.

If you are getting like below, the dns for that domain is down.


Saturday, August 4, 2018

Download rpm with dependencies without installing

The tool we are going to use is yum-utils. First, you need to install yum-utils


# yum install yum-utils

Then, use yumdownloader command, to download the package, adding --destdir for destination the files are going to be downloaded, and --resolve to make yumdownloader download the dependencies as well. For example, I want to download rpm for elinks, and its dependencies, to /tmp:

# yumdownloader --destdir=/tmp --resolve elinks

That's all folks, happy rpm downloading :)