Oftentimes you’ll be in a situation where you want to run a command on a remote machine that will take a long time to complete, but you want to be able to issue the command and then log off and have that command run in the background. There are many ways you could achieve this, perhaps by using cron or at to schedule the command to run right away. However, there is a better way.
Full story »Categories
FSDaily's Web servers and hosting by DomainGurus
Popular this week - High End
- 27The newbie's guide to hacking the Linux kernel
- 25Set up Xen 3.4.3 Dom0 via xenified 2.6.31.12 kernel on top Ubuntu 9.10 Server
- 25Using Nmap to "Fix" a Problem
- 24sshsplit - A utility to multiplex ssh dynamic tunnels
- 21Kernel Log: Stable kernels analysed, Linux without firmware, new graphics drivers






