Adding redis database to redisinsight from a remote system - redis

I am running redisinsight container on my local system and the redis database is created on a Jetson device. Is it possible to add the this redis database to my redisinsight?
Since my Jetson device has no display available I expect to display the redisdb from my linux machine

Related

How to mount windows volume without letter in "Linux for Windows"

I have the following task:
I installed Linux for Windows in Windows 10 Pro computer;
I installed Ubuntu 18.04 LTS;
I have a separate volume in Windows computer, which doesn't have a drive letter assigned to it;
I need to find a way to mount this Windows volume without letter in WSL Ubuntu.
I know the volume id in case it is required.
Any ideas how to achieve this?
Thx, Vlad.
First of all, my question wasn't completely right, I wrote Linux for Windows but in fact I was talking about "Windows Subsystem for Linux".
The idea is to have 1 disk drive as hardware configured RAID 0 storage which is built with 2x Samsung SSD 1Tb. But for protection of data on RAID 0, I want to use HDD which will sync data with rsync or any cloud service. I selected ownCloud.
Finally, I want to hide the HDD from the system and configure WSL to use it.
Hereby how it works for me:
1) I created a folder here: c:\Users\Public\wsl
2) I mounted the HDD in the folder created above.
3) After the HDD is mounted, I created a subfolder for my favorite Linux distribution: c:\Users\Public\wsl\ubuntu
4) I installed Ubuntu 18.04 in this folder as it described here: Installing WSL on Windows 10 without MS Store
5) The point above allows to install ownCloud server on hidden HDD. Now, in order to get it running at system boot, one can create scripts as described here: how to autoload apache2 and mysql in WSL at Windows boot
6) And finally, to get ownCloud Server running at system boot, even before any user login, one needs to do as follows:
*) Open Windows task scheduler;
*) add a task which runs autostart.sh (see how to make this script on a link above) on system boot;
*) use wscript.exe (from windows system32) as the command to run and the vbs script as parameter. Check this link if you need more details;
7) Finally, we need to setup ownCloud client on the computer and connect it with the server by using http://localhost as the server url.
So, as result of this setup, one gets faster disk system based on 2x SSH configured in RAID 0 and to protect data, one uses a local cloud server in virtual machine to get personal content synchronized with standard HDD.
If the system uses actively SSD, the cloud won't get time for syncing data. But as soon as resources are available, system will sync data in background mode into the HDD, which requires more time to write the same data.
This setup allows to use SSD system at full speed as it is required by applications and it does not limit dramatically the performance of SSD subsystem while keep syncing data in slow HDD as computer resources are available and SSD resources are available.

Remote access to a Jetson Nano

I am trying to remotely access a Jetson Nano from my mac. So far I have done the following:
I installed microsoft Remote Desktop on my mac
I connected the nano with my mac through the Micro-usb Port
In network I could see the connection "linux for Tegra" where my nano would be 192.168.55.1
With this I still cannot remote access the nano
So I open a terminal and typed
>ssh username#192.168.55.1
and I could access the nano terminal.
So I think now, I have to do
>sudo apt install xrdp
in order to be able to remotely access the GUI.
However, the nano does not have internet connection.
Is there a way that it can use the internet connection of my mac to do this?
(I am reading a tutorial on Rasppi with windows and apparently this is possible)
One of the approaches is to install X server for mac and then use ssh -Y username#192.168.55.1. You will get the command line shell first but you can type in commands like gedit - they windows will show up on the host.
192.168.55.1 is the same network as any other. All tools supposed to work over TCP/IP should work with it as well.
USB is a Serial connection by default.
On windows use a putty based tool.
For example start with MobaXterm > New session > Serial #11500
Login
Password
It won't forward internet by default.
Best simple way is to plug in your phone as USB network sharing and plug in to the laptop via micro-USB.
For Linux, Ubuntu, use a serial ("COM" related stuff) tool.
If you want to do ssh through USB it will require custom editing of networking file.
By default Nano is using a bridge called L4TBRO on 192.168.55.1, laptop is client in .100.
DNS server is on Nano's side.
You would have to create a new interface but using your laptop as DCHP and DNS servers.
Note that usb can power the Jetson Nano for continuous execution on a recent laptop. Some recommends not to and it may crash if you run a compilation on all cores. (if it crashes, just disable 2 cores via nvpmodel -m 1)

How to convert/migrate pyisical attached virtual machine to virtual disk or upload to esxi

THis request made me dysphoric, we have one VM with physical disk attached, this vm can write to this physical drive directy, now we must upload this vm to our esxi server to save places(this is pc), but I could not neither upload nor convert to virtual disk, so cannot migrate anymore.
client vm: centos
host: windows server 2012
vmware workstation version: 12.0
enter image description here
There's a couple ways this can be performed.
Since you're on a version of Workstation higher than 8.0, you might be able to connect directly to the ESXi host (or vCenter Server) and upload the VM. Here's the process to accomplish it: http://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-10/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.ws.using.doc%2FGUID-8C854257-8595-4877-B985-1DC801E98E88.html
If that doesn't work, you should try the vCenter Converter. It's a free "trial" through the following: https://www.vmware.com/products/converter.html
Here's a good walkthrough on how to use the converter: http://thesolving.com/virtualization/how-to-convert-a-vmware-workstation-vm-into-an-esxi-one-with-vcenter-converter/

How to automatically replicate a running VM on ESXi to a computer running locally VMWare Player or VMWare Fusion?

The specific use case I'm dealing in our company is the following:
On a ESXi server, a dedicated VM is running to host a demo environment of a software solution. This demo environment is maintained updated by the development and maintenance team.
At specific points in time, people form sales need to take with them a copy of the latest demo environment (the VM) on their laptop to make customer's demos/presentations.
I wonder if there is a tool to automate this kind of operation silently.
Yes there is.
VMware themself make a product called vCenter Converter which is available here http://www.vmware.com/uk/products/converter/
When using the standalone client choose to convert..
Source : VMware Infrastructure virtual machine
Destination : VMware Workstation or Other VMWare Virtual Machine
You should then be able to open in in Player or Fusion.
*This will require the VMs to be off, if you don't want to turn them off you could clone them first (only available if you aren't using the free ESXi Hypervisor - thus the paid one)
Hope this helps :)

Debian wheezy Linux guest environment not available

Since yesterday I can't connect through ssh to all of my Debian wheezy instances on my google cloud. I can connect only through the web console. When the web console tries to negotiate the session, there's a message telling me to update the Linux guest environment. But for wheezy, there is no Linux guest environment package.
Do you have any idea to resolve this issue ?
Debian 7 images were deprecated a while a go and as there are no update packages for the Guest Environment, the best approach would be to migrate to Debian 8 or 9.
To access your VMs you might try one of the following options:
1) According to this public issue the old guest environment still work with deprecated keys. If you have an SSH client configured with an old private key, you might still have access to your VMs through it.
2) Accessing the VM via the serial console
3) Mounting, as secondary, the original disk or a copy of it in a VM you do have access to. The steps are very similar to the section “Inspect an instance without shutting it down” on this document". That would allow you to recover your data.