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I'm starting a new job soon with a manufacturer and supplier of fibre-optic multiplexers. I'm not expected to be a techie, but can anyone recommend some books on networking (not necessarily just optical) that would give me a good foundation. My current networking knowledge is minimal.
For a basic introduction to the internet and the full-stack of technologies... Take a look at Stevens' TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol I or Doug Comer's Internetworking with TCP/IP, Vol I. You should be able to find either one in your public library...
For cabling and network technician's books:
Comprehensive cabling info: Oliviero and Woodward's Cabling: The Complete Guide to Copper and Fiber-Optic Networking
In-depth coverage of ethernet (80% of what you'll probably be cabling): Spurgeon's Ethernet: The Definitive Guide
Advanced troubleshooting (including some protocol troubleshooting): Neal Allen's Network Maintenance and Troubleshooting Guide: Field Tested Solutions for Everyday Problems
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I am looking for a turnkey solution for server monitoring, especially disk space usage that notifies of certain events such as a particular drive getting low on space via email, text or both.
The client has 11 machines that need monitoring and money is not an issue with them as they run a time critical operation.
Any insights from personal experiences would be appreciated.
Try either Zabbix, Nagios or Pandora FMS. They're all basic monitoring solutions that can help in a greater or lesser measure heavily depending on the infrastructure and the time as you mentioned. In your position, for that small amount of devices I'd try one out that has an Open Source edition like Pandora FMS or OpenNMS.
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I need have a networking monitoring system that have these feature.
opensourced (must)
written by c/c++. (must)
async io mode (like io, must)
support ping, http, snmp, mysql, redis... protocal
The System must run with epoll mode so that run many test as there can, no blocking at all.
Is there any avaliable one?
I don't know if you looked on sourceforge for open source software, they have many rated network monitoring systems written in C and C++. Pandora is good but look around maybe you might find what you looking for there.>>> Link<<<
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I have to survey this topic but I can't find useful articles which are academic. Also, I have to answer this question - what are the standards and format of rss feeds?
thanks
I see the relationship between collaboration frameworks and RSS feeds as follow: collaboration frameworks provide support to rss feeds as a way to communicate (export) updates of something or to import communication from other systems. Here is a list of three academic papers somehow related to collaboration frameworks or the use of rss feeds to create systems.
Florian Rosenberg, Francisco Curbera, Matthew J. Duftler, Rania Khalaf, "Composing RESTful Services and Collaborative Workflows: A Lightweight Approach," IEEE Internet Computing, pp. 24-31, September/October, 2008
Evaluating Web 2.0 Services Based on 7C Framework
A Framework for Flexible User Profile Mashups
The answer for you last question you can find in this link: RSS specification.
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I currently use fiddler2 ,paros proxy, Live Http Header and HttpFox.
I would like to know if there are some Free good quality http debugging tools available other than these.
Thanks Again Guys!
I would say, Firebug is a pretty good (and free) complement to all these tools you are mentioning. I would also recommend Wireshark. It's a lower level PACKET SNIFFER than the ones you've mentioned, but is has a pretty good HTTP decoder.
Paros hasnt been updated for many years -
have a look at the OWASP Zed Attack Proxy instead.
Its a free, open source fork of Paros and has been significantly enhanced.
Simon (ZAP Project Lead)
Check out Glimpse. It hooks into your ASP.NET MVC/Forms app and provides you with debug info on calls/cache hits and misses/remote calls/etc.
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I was wondering if there are any automated tools for displaying a database schema diagrammatically?
My artistic side fails me and it would be nice to open my discussion with a diagram which doesn't scream ugly.
Many thanks,
Gav
Sure, there are plenty of tools, especially commercial ones such as DeZign. Are you looking for free SW, or could you afford a few hundred dollars for a license?
Edit: since you've clarified you have no funding for such tools, let me point out that there are free ("as in, free beer";-) possibilities, too -- for example, there is supposed to be a "Free Edition" of the commercial package DBVisualizer (the site of the firm producing that package talks repeatedly about this free edition but appears to only offer links to the evaluation version, for which you'd have to purchase a license after a while; however, with a web search I see several links to free-edition downloads, maybe a few versions back). I have no experience with this package (in either edition) but it may be worth your while to try!