This is a quick guide to mounting a qcow2 disk images on your host server. This is useful to reset passwords, edit files, or recover something without the virtual machine running.
Step 1 - Enable NBD on the Host
modprobe nbd max_part=8
| httpClient.DefaultRequestHeaders.Authorization = | |
| new AuthenticationHeaderValue( | |
| "Basic", | |
| Convert.ToBase64String( | |
| System.Text.ASCIIEncoding.ASCII.GetBytes( | |
| string.Format("{0}:{1}", username, password)))); |
Typing vagrant from the command line will display a list of all available commands.
Be sure that you are in the same directory as the Vagrantfile when running these commands!
vagrant init -- Initialize Vagrant with a Vagrantfile and ./.vagrant directory, using no specified base image. Before you can do vagrant up, you'll need to specify a base image in the Vagrantfile.vagrant init <boxpath> -- Initialize Vagrant with a specific box. To find a box, go to the public Vagrant box catalog. When you find one you like, just replace it's name with boxpath. For example, vagrant init ubuntu/trusty64.vagrant up -- starts vagrant environment (also provisions only on the FIRST vagrant up)| # === Optimized my.cnf configuration for MySQL/MariaDB (on Ubuntu, CentOS, Almalinux etc. servers) === | |
| # | |
| # by Fotis Evangelou, developer of Engintron (engintron.com) | |
| # | |
| # ~ Updated September 2024 ~ | |
| # | |
| # | |
| # The settings provided below are a starting point for a 8-16 GB RAM server with 4-8 CPU cores. | |
| # If you have different resources available you should adjust accordingly to save CPU, RAM & disk I/O usage. | |
| # |
| #!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
| """ | |
| License: MIT License | |
| Copyright (c) 2023 Miel Donkers | |
| Very simple HTTP server in python for logging requests | |
| Usage:: | |
| ./server.py [<port>] | |
| """ | |
| from http.server import BaseHTTPRequestHandler, HTTPServer |