Archive for October, 2007
One more for the road…
Wednesday, October 24th, 2007Gabi Walks!
Wednesday, October 24th, 2007
Dear ZaReason…
Wednesday, October 24th, 2007It has been about three months since I purchased my BigLap and started a new job that sees me working like a gypsy floating from place to place as long as it has wireless Internet. My laptop goes everywhere slung on my back and has worked perched on a knee at conferences, sticky tables at cafes, late nights in hotel rooms, and at my parent’s dining room table while my daughter tugs at my sleeve. It feels as necessary as my wallet and keys and I feel a little naked if it isn’t on me.
So how has it performed? Unbelievably. I’ve owned a number of laptops from Toshiba, Dell, and Sony and out of all of them this has been the best build quality and features for the price.
- Battery life is solid
- Light for being a 17″
- Screen hinges are stiff
- Keyboard responsive and quiet
- Rugged design
Tech support from ZaReason has been equally great with quick response times with a genuinely conversational and friendly tone. They have worked hard to make sure that as much of the hardware is operational with the shipping version of Ubuntu. The built in webcam is the only piece that has given me problems in that the image displayed is upside down and cannot seem to be flipped but that is more a problem with the device and the driver.
segue/
After actually putting five minutes of work into researching the solution it is now fixed…
Gratefully cribbed from 0graham0′s post over at Ubuntu forums…
sudo mkdir /etc/camdriver
Download the driver from Sourceforge extract it and run the following…
sudo make
sudo modprobe videodev
sudo modprobe v4l1-compat
sudo insmod stk11xx.ko vflip=1
Add the following to /etc/modules
videodev
v4l1-compat
and to /etc/rc.local
insmod /etc/camdriver/stk11xx.ko vflip=1
Viola!
/segue
The great thing about ZaReason though is that they never dropped the issue and had emailed me possible solutions and are very receptive if you happen to stumble on one of your own and that level of service is what makes the company so great.
Bottom line: I love this laptop and I really love this company.
Five
Monday, October 22nd, 2007It has been a week.
Thursday, October 18th, 2007Not just a measure of time but an indication of what an emotional and physical drain it has been. Quick itemized list, some important, some trivial, all easily digested…
- Gabi
- 22 lbs
- 29 1/4 inches
- Battling a cold post flu shot
- Management’s Mom
- One broken femur
- Pulled back
- Four days in hospital,
five to gotwo weeks in a rehabilitation center
- Work
- Me
- New EC2 instance sizes that boost the operational specs through the roof
- Working hard to rebuild and redeploy
- Still love my job
- Management
- Politics galore
- Working harder than ever
- Talking more and more about wanting to be a SAHM
- Me
- Music
- Heavy into my Autumn Jazz phase
- (Davis + Coltrane) * Live set in Copenhagen = Heaven
- Robert Mazurek’s playground is my new bliss
- Ahmad Jamal’s Poinciana, how the hell have I gotten by with out it?
- Baby Elephant is a tad disappointing, could be me though
- Japancakes continue to rule my world with there two new ones
- Heavy into my Autumn Jazz phase
- Reading
- Behind two months on Linux Journal
- Reading a paltry 10 pages a week of Blue Mars
- Unloaded nearly half my pile of old paperbacks on Book Mooch and Paperback Swap
- Blogging
- CSS rebooted a couple of weeks ago
- Completely missed on the Blog Action Day
- Going to try and get back into it with some write ups about the new EC2 products
- Ubuntu
- Gutsy Gibbon, mmmmm, nice!
- My ZaReason laptop still rules
That’s about it.
EC2: Pound + Apache, Mongrel Cluster, and MySQL Cluster
Thursday, October 11th, 2007Alternately, I should be titling this my 36 hour nightmare. Last week, high off the presentation, I built out and deployed the following configuration.
Everything was nice and tight and after loading QA data it ran like a champ but the problem was that QA data was pretty thin being only a fraction of the size of the production data. When we loaded production data into it, which by the way took nearly an hour to import,performance in the Cluster ground to a halt and we were faced with MySQL timing out the mongrels. Needless to say that after another 36 hours of work we abandoned this model and are looking at plain old replication for our data backed.
What could have given us all that grief? A couple of things spring to mind. The instances have 1.7GB of RAM and a single core process which for now works like a champ for a single MySQL server but for whatever reason it is not enough for a cluster under load. Also, running both SQL and Data Node services on the same box was likely less than inspired as the SQL service would spin up chewing into the remaining RAM and would often dominate the CPU. However, when we launch the cluster we were running some grossly inefficient queries with little or no indexing in the tables. A huge issue.
So we pulled back. At the moment we are still running the three legged system (one instance running Pound, Apache, Monit, and Mongrels, one Harvester, and one MySQL instance) but we made significant changes to the DB so that all the bloated joins that Ruby likes to make are hitting indexed tables as well as tweaking my.cnf to boost key buffer to 30% of RAM. Things seem better and we bought ourselves a little breathing room but we are still hitting the limit of the number of mongrels we can run on a single instance, 10 seems to be the upper threshold for stability, so we need to work out a method for building out a replicated set that will auto-recover after the countless data migrations that the dev team performs. That will be fun!








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