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Maczfs vs zevo
Maczfs vs zevo










maczfs vs zevo
  1. #Maczfs vs zevo update
  2. #Maczfs vs zevo password
  3. #Maczfs vs zevo free

Once you’re done adding the Auphonic public key and have saved the authorized_keys file you can hit save on the Auphonic website to add your external service. You can also authenticate your users that way where you also should add a comment at the end so you know which key belongs to which user in case you need to revoke access at some time in the future. This will happen if you use this server for multiple Auphonic accounts, each of which will give you a separate public key to use. Paste the Auphonoc public key into the file and at the end of the line add a space and then yourAuphonicUsername That way you will know which public key belongs to whom should you have several public keys in there. In case the directory ~/.ssh doesn’t exist yet, you need to mkdir it. Copy the whole text in that box, we need to add that to the authorized_keys on the server before we can save this service.īack in the SmartOS zone, edit ~auphonic/.ssh/authorized_keys. You’ll be presented with the public key that Auphonic will use to connect to your SFTP server. When done it should resemble this screenshot.īefor you hit save, klick on the “Use public key authentication” text.

#Maczfs vs zevo password

The username is of course auphonic and we’ll leave the password empty. The directory will simply be / since we’re chrooting anyway and / simply refers to the auphonic user’s home directory in this case. The port number is prepopulated with the standard ssh/sftp port 22 which we’ll change to 44938. The server hostname is the DNS name or IP number where Auphonic can contact your server. The display name is just what you’ll see as a source in your production so name it anything you like. You’ll be presented with this form to complete. Login to your Auphonic account to create a new SFTP service then select “services” then “SFTP”. Great, your OpenSSH server now allows sftp but no ssh logins authenticated by key or interactive password. $ ssh -p 44938 service allows sftp connections only.

#Maczfs vs zevo update

zlogin to the fresh zone and update the package manager as usual. 10GB of storage looks ok to me and 128MB RAM seems plenty. To begin, we’ll start with a fresh SmartOS zone. (I consider MacZFS deprecated, OpenZFS not yet production ready and ZEVO is abandoned as well as incompatible with Mavericks.) Preparing a zone Chrooting SSH on OS X is quite a pain and SmartOS also uses ZFS which is not a filesystem available on OS X Mavericks at the time of this writing. You might wonder why I’m not doing this on OS X Server as you’d rightfully would expect from me. SmartOS is a hypervisor based on the Illumos project forked from OpenSolaris. I wanted to use SmartOS as the server plaform. I like to use SFTP which is using SSH as transport including authentication and encrypted data transfers. To import your source files and to export processed audio, Auphonic supports many external services it can interact with.

#Maczfs vs zevo free

Auphonic is free to use and they’ll shut up and take your money if you want to support them. The service likes to get some support by donations via flattr, bitcoin, money transfer, credit card or even the evil PayPal.

maczfs vs zevo

It audiomagically improves recordings of spoken word and is very popular with podcasters for a reason.

maczfs vs zevo

Estimated reading time: 10', implementation takes longer IntroductionĪuphonic is an absolutely great web service to post process just about any audio file you want to throw at it.












Maczfs vs zevo