Tag Archives: linux

Beyond the Dashboard: How a 14B LLM Brought Real Intelligence to My Server Monitoring

If you manage Linux servers, you already know the morning ritual. You sip your coffee and stare at your monitoring dashboards. Grafana, Zabbix, Datadog – pick your poison. They are excellent at showing you lines on a graph, but let’s be honest; traditional monitoring is fundamentally “dumb.”

Standard monitoring relies on rigid thresholds. If CPU usage hits 95%, you get an alert. But what if that 95% CPU usage is just the scheduled weekly backup running alongside a routine malware scan? Your dashboard doesn’t care. It fires off an alert anyway, contributing to the slow, inevitable creep of alert fatigue.

I wanted something better. I didn’t just want monitoring; I wanted monitoring plus intelligence.

Continue reading Beyond the Dashboard: How a 14B LLM Brought Real Intelligence to My Server Monitoring

X forwarding over ssh and sudo

This has bugged me for years – with random success depending on sudo, su – etc.

The proper solution:-

steve@studio:~$ ssh -X 192.168.0.201
Last login: Fri Feb 10 21:54:11 2017 from 192.168.0.247
[steve@fleabox ~]$ xauth list
fleabox.track3.org.uk/unix:12  MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1  b4339e07fb0e4febdde6128fc56419e4
[steve@fleabox ~]$ sudo su -
[sudo] password for steve: 
[root@fleabox ~]# xauth add fleabox.track3.org.uk/unix:12  MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1  b4339e07fb0e4febdde6128fc56419e4
[root@fleabox ~]# virt-manager &
[1] 7168

Success!