Remote control module in SCCM

I knew the remote control module in SCCM was very handy but I didn’t really bother with it until this morning. Mainly because I do very little with desktops now as I’m focused on the server and service side of things.

I decided to have a quick look this morning though and my findings are a little frustrating.

Firstly, There’s a full screen option in the view menu that doesn’t really do anything. I think it’s simply there in case you want to use remote desktop as the window is likely the same. This means that when using the native SCCM remote control module it doesn’t pass the windows key through to the remote system. This is always a pet peeve of mine. I hate it when I’m connected to a remote system and keys are passed through to my local machine. Using full screen view usually gets around this as options can be set that will specify that all keys should be passed through within this view.

The second thing is that i don’t know why it’s not a standard RDP connection. This really gets on my nerves as if it was RDP then Jaws or most other screen readers that support remote desktop would then be able to read what was on the local box. It would also give more configurable options. Such as sending remote audio to the local machine etc.

It’s probably about as useful as VNC. This will be great for most people but for me it’s very very frustrating.

I don’t care how you dress it up.

I don’t want to upset anyone. This is a personal post and if you have recently lost someone it may not be something you should read.

———————–

No matter how much you read about it, how much you listen to reports about it, how many times you see it in films or on TV, no matter how many times you are bombarded with it every day, Death is not normal. In the world we live in, it’s generally not even natural. It’s forced down our throats every time we move.

You’d think this high exposure to death and tragedy would numb us to it.
Believe me, it doesn’t.
Even when it’s someone you hardly know.
Speaking to a mother who has just lost her son does not put things into perspective. It does not make you thankful for the people that you love and who love you. It does not make you think why or how.
What can it possibly make you think!
I usually have answers.
Now, I have none.
And I hardly knew the person.

I suppose I’m succeeding in being the strong one. – Granted, with a lot of effert, I’m trying to be the one everyone else can lean on. It’s the only thing I know how to do in this kind of situation. I think in my head though I’m dumbfounded. I have so much sympathy and pity for the family.

More than all that, I admire them. I admire their unity, their resiliency. Their strength. I have no idea how they are getting through this or how they’ll continue to get through it in the next few weeks.
I don’t think I could.

I wasn’t sure if I should post this.
I decided to go ahead though. I don’t know what the reason behind the post is but I needed to say it.

Just no, what ever the problem. There’s always a solution. Talk. Please!

Homepage


http://www.suicideprevention.ie/

If you cant talk to friends or family try this website.
http://www.samaritans.org/

More probable than winning the lottory

There doesn’t seem to be anything wrong.
The tire seems fine!
Maybe it’s all in your head?
Five minutes down the road there’s a sudden bang and the car lerches to the left.
Hmmmm. Maybe it wasn’t just in your head after all?

She always complains no one listens. Now they might?

Be careful. Get your car serviced regularly.

Logwatch in Debian Linux.

Installing Logwatch is very straight forward and it’s definitly worth taking a few minutes to do it. The format that it can send your system logs to you in is so nice and easy to read you’ll wonder how you ever kept track of your server without it.

I like logs to be mailed to me every morning. These are the steps you need to take to get a similar report:

  1. Firstly run the following command to install Logwatch. I’m assuming you already have postfix and sendmail installed.

    apt-get install logwatch

  2. The config file you need to edit is located at:

    /usr/share/logwatch/default.conf/logwatch.conf

  3. I’d suggest replacing the following entries as follows:

    Line 35
    Output = mail
    Line 37
    Format = html
    Line 44
    MailTo = name@mydomain.com
    Line 45
    MailFrom = logwatch@mydomain.com
    Line 67
    Archives = No
    Line 70
    Range = yesterday
    Line 77
    Detail = Med

  4. Test your logwatch configuration by running logwatch on the command line.
  5. Create a new cron job to run this at 5:45AM every day. This is the time I generally get reports sent out. Backup jobs, Windows and Linux security and Logwatch reports are sent out during 5:30AM and 6AM so that things are spaced out.

    crontab -e
    45 5 * * * /usr/sbin/logwatch

That’s all there is too it.

Update on 27th January 2012

Logwatch in some versions of Debian is slightly broken if you choose to format messages using HTML. To get around this you will need to download the package from source and install it. The instructions to do this are outlined below.

  1. Create a temporary directory to save the files to:

    mkdir /tmp/logwatch
    cd /tmp/logwatch

  2. Download the package from sourceforge by using the following command.

    wget http://ignum.dl.sourceforge.net/project/logwatch/logwatch-7.4.0/logwatch-7.4.0.tar.gz

  3. Unpack the archive that you downloaded in step 2.

    tar xzvf logwatch*

  4. cd to this directory.

    cd logwatch

    means that if you press the tab key on your keyboard the name of the directory / file will be automatically completed for you. When using the console this saves a lot of time.
  5. Make the install file executable.

    chmod 777 install

  6. Run the install script.

    ./install

  7. Answer all questions with the defaults by pressing the enter key.
  8. The config is now to be created in /etc/logwatch/logwatch.conf
  9. Use the lines above to specify what you want to configure.

alternatively, run the following command replacing it with your own Email address of course. This runs logwatch and does not read from a configuration file.

logwatch –output mail –format html –mailto joe.bloggs@MadeUpCompany.com –archives no –range Yesterday –debug Med

VOIP over any network over a VPN.

I just wanted to summarise what I’ve been doing over the past few days.

Firstly: A quick overview of the systems I have running here:
Almost everything is virtualized and runs under ESX4.
I have a few Windows 2008 boxes. One of these acts as a domain controler, the other as an exchange 2007 server, another is for forefront, another is a SQL server, another is for backups and then another is for administration and the VPN. I have a number of Linux servers as well. One is for web hosting, another is for the firewall and routing and the last one is for Linux hosted Email and mailing lists.

Over the past while I’ve upgraded the antivirus for Exchange and client desktops to Forefront 2010.

I also installed Microsoft system center data protection manager 2010. That’s working particularly well. I’m delighted with it. It’s backing up Exchange and a few major file shares as well.

Most recently I’ve been tightening up on security. I’ve added a VPN and blah blah blah. That’s not very interesting.

What is kind of cool however is with the VPN, I am able to connect to my Trixbox server. Oh, I forgot to mention that one at the start of this post. This provides all my home phone connectivity. So, no matter where I am in the world, I can still receive calls received by my home phone number.

That’s kind of cool isn’t it?

New dog?

Firstly, I know I’m jumping the gun by writing this post.
It is highly unlikely that this will actually happen. No, I’m being realistic.
I got a call this morning from Irish guide dogs to say they have two dogs in mind for the class starting on the 10th of January. If all goes ok in the next month the trainer will call me to organise a matching visit to determine what one of the two is best suited to me.
Even if it goes ok there’s a a major challange ahead. It’s never easy training with a new dog but I’m looking forward to it more than most of you will possibly understand.
Bring on December!

Take responsibility.

Like every political post I write, these are my views and are strictly not those of my employer. I write this as an individual with specific personal political views and opinions. This post should thus be read as such.
I genuinely don’t know where to start with this.
I remember sitting in school learning about the plantations. The History teacher said very bluntly that the Irish were always a divided people so when the English enforced this during the plantations it became ingrained. It was his opinion that this lack of solidarity was why it was so easy for England to cement their rule. After all, in his opinion, the Irish were so busy fighting themselves they didn’t have anything left to fight anything else!
There are a lot of things in Irish society that are hidden left over’s from the 16th and 17th century. I think it is obvious that this division is one of them.
Ok. Getting to a specific example. Look at the way the entire country fights against the government. No matter what they do we have a problem with it. WE complain that the health service has too many managerial staff. They announce cuts of four thousand to the current number of seventeen thousand managerial staff, all be it in a slightly badly organized way, but cuts none the Less. In response, we give out that their not the right kind of cuts. There’s nothing they can do that we’ll agree with.
We have fallen into the same old trap. But you know what is even worse? I don’t think we realise it. If you stopped reading, watching and listening the news do you except that your outlook on the entire situation would be more optimistic? If the opposition parties in the government were more constructive do you agree you would feel a little better about the situation we’re in?
I blogged over a year ago about how the financial situation was going to get much worse mainly because of negativity and public perception. A small number of visitors thought my view was unrealistic but I continue to stick by it. It’s hard not to be negative when even the people who know more about the economy are negative and provide no positive options. The more people become uncertain about where their next euro will come from the more spending will fall. The more spending will fall the less income businesses will have. The less income businesses have the less taxes are paid. It’s a vicious circle. It doesn’t start with people but it certainly isn’t helped by them. I think it is our negativity and our over acceptance of doom and gloom that has prolonged this entire situation. There are thousands of positive thinkers in this country but there’s no public platform for them. As I said in previous posts, the system doesn’t allow for it. It relies on the jeering from the background from those whose sole purpose is to get into power to balance things out. Think about it. How can that ever work? I’ve explained why I don’t think the Irish parliament doesn’t work so you can read that again if you like.
Hundreds of years after social division was our downfall we still haven’t learned. Instead of tackling this problem head on as one nation, we scuttle around it as organized as an army of mice on ecstasy.
Let’s face it, not one opposition party nor Fianna Fáil has a hope of fixing this problem. I firmly believe that not one member of any political party be it Sinn Féin, Labour, the Greens, Fine Gael or Fianna Fáil have one member in government who has the potential to get us out of this. The only people we can rely on are ourselves.
You know what, that alone scares the crap out of me. How is a country so disjointed ever going to help themselves? Everyone is looking to the government. The same government who have failed so many in the past. I’m no expert. I don’t consider myself as being particularly great when it comes to politics but to me that seems a little stupid.
I think a change is needed but I think we don’t have time to wait for it. Politics is not the answer. Waiting for the government is not the answer. Fighting among ourselves is not the answer.
Exactly when are we all going to grow up and take responsibility for our own country?
It’s not their fault. It’s ours!
Deal with it!
Stop complaining. Get up and actually do what you can.
Positivity is just as contagious as negativity.
If you want proof look at the economy at the start of this year when the leading news report on every station was “Ireland is officially out of recession”. That posative story directly resulted in an increase in spending did it not?
At the very least, it can’t hurt.

Configuring the firewall on desktops and servers side to allow DPM 2010 to push out the client.

Very simply, there are pages out there that will tell you what ports are required for distributing the Data Protection Manager agent but the problem is they don’t tell you what i required on the client side.

This command will open the fireall to allow the agent name. This is messy and not really what would ordinarily like to do as it doesn’t really allow for alterations to most hardware firewalls but for a normal active directory network set up it will work fine.

netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name=”Allow DPM Remote Agent Push” dir=in action=allow service=any enable=yes profile=any remoteip=123.123.123.123

Just replace the IP address with the one you have assigned to your DPM 2010 server.

You should probably remove this rule from your firewall after this is done.

So. what’s new?

So, what’s new about this wonderful new version of digitaldarragh.com?

I’ve moved away from Drupal for this site.  Who knows, when version 7 finally comes out I might consider returning in a year or so however I’ve been waiting for it to arrive for ages now and even if it is released in the next month or two it wouldn’t be a great idea to upgrade right away as there are bound to be problems with the core without even considering the problems that will be likely to emerge with contributed modules considering the major changes in this new version.

I also just really like the way wordpress works. It started out as a blogging platform so Blogging is simply what it does best. With version 3, wordpress really took on other CMS platforms such as joomla and Drupal in my view. I certainly cant say that it’s better than Drupal in particular however I think Drupal 7 has learned from WordPress 3.  That says a lot for WordPresses development.

So, enough of my opinions. What’s different!

  • There’s a bright new theme. Now the background of each page is a picture from one of the most fantastic places in the world. It’s of the mountains and the lake in Torbole in the lake Garda region of Italy. The design has been described as relaxing and easy to look at by a number of people. Although it’s bright, I was concious that a number of visitors spend a lot of time reading computer screens during the day so glare can be a problem.
  • Sticking with the design side of things, I’ve also included more logical and consistent navigation. ON every page of the site you will be able to jump to blog entries by month or by category. This is perfect for visitors who are only interested in certain topics that I right about.
  • Twitter and facebook integration.  I love it when you share content that you’ve read on this website with social networks.  I’m now making it very easy.  At the bottom of every blog post there are share with facebook and twitter links. These will open a new browser window that bring you to the respective social networks.  If you are logged in to these websites already the link to the blog post will already be in the tweet / share field.
  • Audio play back has been available on this website for over a year now.  In the latest version, audio playback has been enhanced yet again.  Simply click one of the audio links in the blog or the music room and the audio will play right away. The file is also available to download and you will be able to very easily see the length of the track.
  • The new site is fully accessible to users of mobile phone technology. When a visitor arrives using a mobile phone they will be presented with a customized site layout and color scheme.  Of course, following usability standards is very important to me so when you visit the site from an iPhone for example, the interface follows conventions you would expect on that platform.

These changes should significantly improve the browsing experience of visitors to DigitalDarragh.com.

I look forward to the next year!

It’s all shiny and new!

Welcome oh wonderful reader. How are you!

This is just a quick post to say it’s great to see you.

The site has gone through quite a major change recently.

If your accessing it from a mobile phone you’ll notice that it’s actually very different to the way it is shown on a normal computer screen. This is because I’ve customized the look and feel to make it easier to navigate on small phone screens.

There are dozens of small and huge changes. I’ll tell you all about them very shortly. But first, I need some sleep.

Talk to you all tomorrow. There’s some really great things to talk about then.