ServerFiles.com is a server software & hardware directory for Network administrators & IT professionals, listing networking & server software for Windows 2003, Windows 2000, NT and Linux; and now also listing networking hardware solutions focused on server based computing.
Webmin is a web-based interface for system administration for Unix. Using any browser that supports tables and forms (and Java for the File Manager module), you can setup user accounts, Apache, DNS, file sharing and so on. Webmin consists of a web server, and a number of CGI programs which directly update system files like /etc/inetd.conf and /etc/passwd. The web server and all CGI programs are written in Perl version 5, and use no non-standard Perl modules.
Linuxconf is an administration system for the Linux operating system. Linuxconf can tell you what has to be started, or restarted and this even if you change some configuration without Linuxconf. Mostly, it has features to warrant that what you have configured is effectively performing. Linuxconf modules have 3 different user interfaces generally for free (the code is written once).
Centrify DirectControl extends Microsoft Active Directory's identity management, access control and Group Policy services to Unix, Linux, Java and web platforms. DirectControl turns Unix/Linux systems into Active Directory clients, enabling you to move to a single point of administration, establish single sign-on, and apply global password and other security policies. DirectControl is the only solution that can integrate multiple Unix/Linux profiles and identities into Active Directory without intrusive changes to existing systems.
Monitor Linux, OpenBSD, BSDI, FreeBSD, SunOS or any UNIX System with dms. dms Daemon Monitoring System is a set of utilities written in Perl and Visual Basic that monitor the components that make up a UNIX server. These components might typically be the daemons sendmail, inetd, httpd and so forth. Basically if a daemon can be seen on a ps -aux command from root it can be monitored with dms. Restart failed server daemons! Keep your services online all the time. At an interval of 300 seconds a configuration file containing the server daemons that you wish to monitor is scanned. The results are written out to a 'message-pipe' . If one of the 'monitored' daemons is found to be missing, two things will happen, firstly an e-mail will be sent to your appropriate support team, and secondly the dms-server (dmss) will return a code indicating that a daemon is missing. If the web interface is purchased then it will display a 'red' icon denoting a problem. If configured to do so the dms daemon (dmsd) will attempt to restart a missing daemon.
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