1 CSE 390 Lecture 10 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller and Ruth Anderson.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 10 Sharing Resources. Basics of File Sharing The core component of any server is its ability to share files. In fact, the Server service in all.
Advertisements

MODULE 3: OS & APP LAYERS. Agenda Preparing and importing a gold image Creating and understanding Install Machines Creating basic Application layers Understanding.
Linux, it's not Windows A short introduction to the sub-department's computer systems Gareth Thomas.
OAAIS Enterprise Information Security Security Awareness, Training & Education (SATE) Program or UCSF Campus VPN.
Senior Design Lab Policies Presented by: Trey Murdoch CSC IT Staff.
Setting up your System Contents Required Software Flip and flop servers at OSU Using WinSCP Using Putty Using ssh, scp from Linux terminal.
Exploring the Internet Creating and setting up your website Instructor: Michael Krolak Instructor: Patrick Krolak See also
1 CSE 390 Lecture 10 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Josh Goodwin
Exploring the Internet Creating and setting up your website Instructor: Michael Krolak Instructor: Patrick Krolak See also
Virtual Machine and UNIX. What is a VM? VM stands for Virtual Machine. It is a software emulation of hardware. By using a VM, you can have the same hardware.
CDS-130: Computing for Scientists Remote Access to Matlab at Mason Fall August – 8 December Innovation Hall, Room 222 Instructor: Joseph Marr
Click to edit Master subtitle style Chapter 17: Troubleshooting Tools Instructor:
Linux Operations and Administration
Eucalyptus Virtual Machines Running Maven, Tomcat, and Mysql.
CSE 390a Editing and Moving Files
EMT 2390L Lecture 1 Dr. José M. Reyes Álamo. Outline About Linux Install Linux in a Virtual Machine.
| nectar.org.au NECTAR TRAINING Module 5 The Research Cloud Lifecycle.
FTP Server and FTP Commands By Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D. © Nanda Ganesan, All Rights Reserved.
Booting Ubuntu Linux Live CSCI 130 – Fall 2008 Action Lab Dr. W. Jones.
September 16, 2002Serguei A. Mokhov, 1 Setting Up Environment for Your UNIX Account in TAV COMP Operating Systems Tutorial.
AE6382 Secure Shell Usually referred to as ssh, the name refers to both a program and a protocol. The program ssh is one of the most useful networking.
Session 2 Wharton Summer Tech Camp Basic Unix. Agenda Cover basic UNIX commands and useful functions.
1 CSE 390 Lecture 9 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller and Ruth Anderson.
ENEE150 – 0202 ANDREW GOFFIN Introduction to ENEE150.
Introduction to Compgenomics Andy Conley January 9, 2012.
General rules 1. Rule: 2. Rule: 3. Rule: 10. Rule: Ask questions ……………………. 11. Rule: I do not know your skill. If I tell you things you know, please stop.
1 CSE 390a Lecture 1 introduction to Linux/Unix environment slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller & Ruth Anderson
1 CSE 390a Lecture 1 introduction to Linux/Unix environment slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller & Ruth Anderson
Page 1 Printing & Terminal Services Lecture 8 Hassan Shuja 11/16/2004.
| nectar.org.au NECTAR TRAINING Module 5 The Research Cloud Lifecycle.
1 Day 2 Logging in, Passwords, Man, talk, write. 2 Logging in Unix is a multi user system –Many people can be using it at the same time. –Connections.
Remote Access Usages. Remote Desktop Remote desktop technology makes it possible to view another computer's desktop on your computer. This means you can.
SQL SERVER 2008 Installation Guide A Step by Step Guide Prepared by Hassan Tariq.
Getting Connected CPSC 1010 August 21, Connecting to the SOC Servers Why would we need to connect Work with files Transfer files from your local.
A PC Wakes Up A STORY BY VICTOR NORMAN. Once upon a time…  a PC (we’ll call him “H”) is connected to a network and turned on. Aside: The network looks.
1 CSE 390 Lecture 10 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Josh Goodwin
How to configure, build and install Trilinos November 2, :30-9:30 a.m. Jim Willenbring.
© 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. This proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
1 CSE 390a Lecture 3 bash shell continued: processes; multi-user systems; remote login; editors slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller.
1 CSE 391 Lecture 10 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller and Ruth Anderson.
/Reimage-Repair-Tool/ /u/6/b/ /channel/UCo47kkB-idAA-IMJSp0p7tQ /alexwaston14/reimage-system-repair/
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
Backing Up Your System With rsnapshot
Data Virtualization Demoette… ODBC Clients
Click to edit Master subtitle style
CSC227: Operating Systems
Troubleshooting ip Chapter 5e.
INTEGRATING LINUX WITHIN A CORPORATE ENVIRONMENT Kai Ponte
The Linux Operating System
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
INSTALLING AND SETTING UP APACHE2 IN A LINUX ENVIRONMENT
slides borrowed and adapted from Alex Mariakis and CSE 390a
Lab: ssh, scp, gdb, valgrind
CSE 390a Lecture 1 introduction to Linux/Unix environment
CSE 390 Lecture 10 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller
CSE 303 Lecture 1 introduction to Linux/Unix environment
slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
introduction to Linux/Unix environment
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS
A Collaborative Environment
CSE 391 Lecture 3 bash shell continued: processes; multi-user systems; remote login; editors slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller.
CSE 390a Lecture 3 bash shell continued: processes; multi-user systems; remote login; editors slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller.
CSE 391 Lecture 3 bash shell continued: processes; multi-user systems; remote login; editors slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller.
introduction to Linux/Unix environment
Azure Container Service
Presentation transcript:

1 CSE 390 Lecture 10 Do anything from anywhere – tools to free your choice of OS slides created by Marty Stepp, modified by Jessica Miller and Ruth Anderson

2 Important Announcement There will not be a traditional final  Instead, the last Assignment will take the place of the Final Everyone needs to complete it It is a bit more involved / comprehensive than other assignments Have to choose a number of "achievements" and turn in evidence that you completed them If you need to make up an assignment from earlier in the quarter, you can do extra "achievements" Must earn a passing mark on last assignment to "pass" the course

3 Lecture summary Remote connections – get to your application or resource from anywhere Local options – get your application or resource to work on your setup Figure out how to do what you want to do in a new environment Course Evals

4 Remote Connections: to a linux machine You’ve seen remote connections to a Linux machine in action  Departmental attu.cs.washington.edu Linux server  Can use ssh (or PuTTy) from anywhere – independent of location and OS

5 Remote Connection: to a Windows machine What about remote connections to a Windows machine?  RDP – Remote Desktop Protocol  Enables remote connections to a Windows box from anywhere  Also independent of OS: From Linux – rdesktop command From Windows – Remote Desktop Connection  The CSE department offers 15 hosted virtual machine nodes, imaged similar to Windows machines in basement labs, remotely accessible via RDP. Overview: List of currently available nodes: Need to use the right domain: CSEPCLAB\

6 Non-remote options: linux on Windows? Cygwin: unix style environment within Windows  “package manager” is part of the install file  Provides the unix-like directory structure Home directory is /home/  Your actual windows directory structure is located at /cygdrive/ Enables: quick use of linux style tools in a terminal environment in Windows Doesn’t enable: magic Compare to: Windows cmd interface

7 Non-remote options: Windows on linux? One barrier to switching to Linux: lots of apps are built for Windows  that I use all the time isn’t ported to Linux!  Wine is an attempt at solving this  Provides an environment to run Windows applications in Linux  Open source  Not perfect, but many people have good success with major programs Many successfully run WoW, MS Office, TextPad… Lots of online tutorials / message boards / instructions to get your favorite app working in Linux

8 The More You Know™ Another barrier to using Linux as your main Desktop OS: “I don’t know how to do in Linux”  Imagine you had never seen or used Windows before. Would you somehow intuitively know how to: Change your desktop background/resolution? Install new graphics card drivers? Change system settings? (Control Panel? What’s that?) Etc etc…  So how do you figure it out? Ever read the Windows manual? (hint: there is no “the” manual)  “Windows 7 Product Guide” pages, considered very high level  “Windows 7 for Dummies” pages  “Windows 7 Bible” pages  What do you do when you don’t know how to do something?

9 Courtesy XKCD

10 The More You Know™ Step 1: Try and explore intuitively  Hey, you’re CSE majors. Where would *you* put that setting if you were designing the system? Step 1.5: Look in short, directly relating references  Man pages, quick start guides, the TOC in the manual (if exists…) Step 2: If that fails, search online!  Likely someone else has wanted to do what you want, and *also* couldn’t figure it out And, likely they’ve posted to a discussion board and had some guru give a detailed response Or, a FAQ has been written somewhere that tells you how

11 Mix and match Don’t think of Linux/Windows as a binary choice These tools provide a continuum of options  Windows  Windows + Cygwin  Windows + Cygwin + Linux VM  Linux + Windows VM + Wine  Linux + Wine  Linux Can choose the setup that best suites your situation and application requirements

12 The choice is yours To clarify: the purpose here was not to say “you should switch to Linux as your main OS”  But, you should know what tools and options exist, and be able to use Linux as your main OS if desired  You should be able to survive if someone locked you in a closet with a laptop that had Fedora or Ubuntu Wrap up discussion:  What are the pros/cons of using Linux as your main OS?  What tools seem the most useful that you learned this quarter? What tools seem like they address important areas, but need to be better?  From your experience, are there other tools you think you’d mention in this course, tools CSE majors should be aware of? Linux commands/tools, programming development tools…