[b]Espaço Duplo em Disco agora Padrão em todos os Pacotes[/b]
Os planos padrão agora incluem:
Linode 64 c/ 2048 MB (2 GB)
Linode 128w/ 4096 MB (4 GB)
Linode 192 c/ 6144 MB (6 GB)
Linode 256 c/ 8192 MB (8 GB)
Verifique a página [url=https://www.linode.com/products/linodes.cfm]produtos[/url] para mais informações.
[b]Retroativo para todos os Clientes Existentes AGORA[/b]
Os clientes existentes devem notar o espaço em disco já alocado à sua conta.
Use a seguinte lista para determinar quanto espaço foi adicionado à sua conta:
Linode 64 - Um adicional de 1024 MB (1 GB)
Linode 128 - Um adicional de 2048 MB (2 GB)
Linode 192 - Um adicional de 3072 MB (3 GB)
Para aproveitar o espaço extra, você tem a opção de:
[list][*] [b]Redimensionar o sistema de arquivos existente para ocupar o novo espaço[/b][list][*] Desligar o Linode
[*] Members -> Disk Images -> Clique em seu sistema de arquivos raiz -> Digite o novo tamanho e salve as alterações
[Reinicie seu Linode
[/list]
[*] [b]Criando novas imagens de disco vazias[/b]
[list][*]Members -> Disk Images, role para baixo até "Create an Empty Disk Image"
[Digite um rótulo (por exemplo: "disk2")
[Digite o tamanho (use a caixa "Storage Summary" (Resumo do armazenamento) no canto superior direito)
[*] Escolha "ext3" para o tipo de sistema de arquivos e crie o disco
[*] Membros -> Configurações -> Clique em sua configuração
[*] Adicione seu novo "disk2" a um slot /dev/ubd? aberto. Salvar
[Reinicie seu Linode
[Faça login em seu Linode e como root: "mount /dev/ubd[insira a letra do dispositivo aqui] /path/to/mountpoint" onde path/to/mountpoint é um diretório existente
[/list]
[*] [b]Implantando mais instalações do Linux[/b][list][*]Use o Distro Wizard! Experimente uma nova distro ou algo do gênero 🙂 Por falar nisso, uma distro do Gentoo estará disponível em breve.[/list]
[/list]
Obrigado por seus negócios! Aproveite!
-Chris
Comentários (8)
That’ll come in very handy! Thanks 🙂
Very nice surprise.
Thanks,
–Tony Coffman
😯 I believe linode is the best ….. cool support .. very understanding
[quote:18823ed1a7=”awanglara”]:shock: I believe linode is the best ….. cool support .. very understanding[/quote]
I agree. I have been a customer for about a month now and bugged them about many things by now. Always professional, friendly and timely support. And an excellent product, too 🙂
Yes.. Linode > *
Yup :~]
I run a free shells provider from my linode, and several people
have asked me how much it’s costing me! They are quite surprised
when I tell them…. A few of them have told me they’re considering
getting accounts here too, given linode.com’s prices 🙂
-Ash
[quote:ffcddf8758=”Ashen”]
I run a free shells provider from my linode
[/quote]
In other words you are begging to be abused, hacked and DoS’ed. I dearly hope this is in some violation of the TOS.
Sunny Dubey
A long time ago, I ran macos on my home machine.
I diddn’t have access to any of the wonderful world of *nix by
virtue of my pretty restricted access to computers in general.
In those times I was reliant on the goodwill of a few kind people
who gave me free shell accounts in order to learn how to use linux,
to learn various programming languages, and most usefully,
to experiment.
Now that I’m in a position of having my own server (albeit a virtual
one) I think it just that I should pay back the net community for
what it gave me for free, by giving something back.
This doesn’t mean anyone can get an account on my system.
I vet accounts, and I’m known to call people, internationally if necessary,
to verify their identities before granting them accounts.
(yes I shamelessly ripped that idea from caker’s policy)
[url]http://www.moonlightglade.net/shells[/url]
I could explain in a long flood of text why I’m not as vulnurable
as you think I am, but that’d take ages and I’m busy. 🙂
Suffice it to say I screen applications carefully, I monitor my users,
I configure the system pretty tightly, I run quite a bit of security
software (like portsentryd), I have multiple addresses (4) and can
change the DNS for any of them to map to localhost in case I get
DOSed, etc, etc….
I have a plan to beef up security in future by repartitioning, running
debian/gentoo, and reconfiguring my system again from scratch,
and generally building myself a fortress before I let users near it 🙂
You work on your linode, I’ll work on mine 🙂