G-Loaded Journal

The 1st Rule of Discussion

Published on February 9th, 2012 by George Notaras - Comments Off

I cannot overstate how disappointed I am after having a discussion with people who tend to partially mix the various declarations of Rights and the Law in order to make a point valid enough to justify their actions. I am not really the one to tell whether such behavior derives from competence or incompetence. What i do know is that I will never again join any discussion which, at least, is not based on common sense. Ever.

Speed up Apache by including htaccess files into httpd.conf

Published on November 28th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 0

It is widely known that, if virtual hosts in Apache (httpd) are configured to permit vhost administrators override specific configuration options at the directory level using htaccess files, the web server consumes valuable time in order to check whether an htaccess file exists in every directory included in the requested path and parse it. On the other hand, many popular web applications utilize htaccess files, especially those residing in the DocumentRoot, in order to implement pretty URLs or HTTP redirections, which is extremely convenient since the virtual host owner does not have to edit httpd’s configuration directly. So, I had the idea to include the htaccess file of the DocumentRoot directory on the filesystem into the virtual host’s configuration.
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The new amateuristic release strategy of Firefox

Published on September 28th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 8

I have been using Firefox since it was called Phoenix (version 0.5). I’ve witnessed all the effort that has been put into making this web browser a success. It is still the only web browser I can fully trust. Suddenly, earlier this year, the Mozilla Foundation decided to change the release strategy of the project for obvious marketing reasons and release several major versions within a short period of time. It was inevitable that such a change of release cycles would introduce numerous incompatibility issues with the available extensions. Such problems should have been solved before switching release strategies.
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WordPress is getting better

Published on September 28th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 0

The first time I used WordPress back in September 2005 I considered it to be the content publishing platform of choice as far as a personal or business website was concerned. It was easy to set up and publish content and, also, easy to customize, even with ugly hacks. read more… »

How to configure mod_gnutls to use the RC4 cipher to mitigate the SSL/TLS vulnerability

Published on September 27th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 1

It’s been a while since the details of an SSL/TLS vulnerability have been released to the public. Since then, security experts have worked on the issue and have released a whitepaper describing how to mitigate the attack, known as BEAST (Browser Exploit Against SSL/TLS).
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Mozilla Thunderbird speed up

Published on September 9th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 0

Mozilla Thunderbird is of those pieces of software I could say I am a fan of, but since I upgraded from TB3 to TB5 and recently to TB6, I’ve been experiencing various problems with the application’s overall speed and responsiveness. Using Thunderbird almost felt as if it was reading its data from the internet. Working with it had become an unpleasant experience, until I found some tips about how to make it more responsive. It seems that versions 5 and 6 try to use hardware acceleration to render the application’s user interface and, apparently, this does not work very well with my hardware. Anyway, here is what you have to do in order to restore Thunderbird 6 responsiveness to that of version 3.
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PHP syntax error caused 48-hour web site downtime

Published on June 14th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 0

Today I realized my web site had been serving an empty HTML document for the last 2 days on every HTTP request no matter what the path was. When I initially noticed the issue, I was a bit worried, but, after taking a closer look at the Apache error log, I found out about a PHP syntax error causing the issue. A couple of days ago I had edited a WordPress plugin on my live web site and, apparently, I made a typo which led to a syntax error and an empty document being served on every request. But, I recall I had checked the website after the modification of the plugin but I hadn’t noticed any issues! Actually, this happened because I had forgot to clear the cache, so when I checked the site after the modification of the plugin, it seemed OK. My modification didn’t change the visual representation of the web site, so, having forgot to turn off caching, there was no way for me to find out about the typo. Lesson learned: never modify the code of a live web site, but, if you have to do it, always turn-off caching before doing so.

Why free should not always mean cost-free

Published on May 14th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 13

More and more I realize that there is a misconception about free software. Many people tend to believe that free software actually means software that should not cost any money. They somehow find natural and fair the fact that some people may work voluntarily in order to produce software, which the rest can use to make money without having any legal obligation to contribute either money or effort back upstream.
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Running supervisor 3 on CentOS 5

Published on May 12th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 4

It’s been a long time since the last time I checked the available software for managing long running processes. Software in this particular area has evolved and, after some research and testing on a virtual machine, I tried to install supervisord in a CentOS 5.6 box. Unfortunately, no RPM package exists for the latest 3.X version, so I decided to go through the procedure to rebuild the supervisor RPM from the Fedora development tree, since v3.X has some really cool features I cannot do without.
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ntfs-3g and ntfsprogs projects merge

Published on April 15th, 2011 by George Notaras - Comments : 0

The fact that the developers of two projects with common goals decided to get along together is news in the Free Software world. What we usually hear are the announcements of new forks. I was very glad to read that the developers of two projects, ntfs-3g and ntfsprogs, which are open source tools that can be used to access and maintain the NTFS filesystem, decided to combine their efforts and made their first merged release. The merge has many benefits: no duplicate effort, easier code maintenance, more focused and coordinated effort and probably the most important one, common and more confident user base. I hope more projects follow their example.

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