Problem

You want to use ldapsearch to search from a file (file contains domains and ldap contains emails), but you want to suppress empty output lines (option -LLL does not seem to suppress them).

Solution

Use grep -v ‘^$’ like

ldapsearch -LLL -H "ldaps://ldap_url:nnnn" -D "cn=Directory Manager" -w $LDP -b "ou=ou_name,dc=domain,dc=com" -s sub -f denyDomains.txt  "(mail=*@%s)" uid mail status | grep -v '^$' > denyDomainsResults.txt

Show options for a jaeger docker container

Problem

You would like to see all the available options for a jaeger docker container (ie query:1.54), with elasticsearch as the backend

Solution

The commands to run to be able to see all available options, using the image (replace the query:1.54), can be seen using:

docker run -e SPAN_STORAGE_TYPE=elasticsearch jaegertracing/jaeger-query:1.54 --help

All the available options can be converted to environment variables that can be passed as -e ENV_NAME by converting the option replacing all names with capitals and everything else with an underscore(example: –es.tls.enabled -> ES_TLS_ENABLED)

LDAP search using a file as input

Problem

You would like to do a search for a specific LDAP attribute (ie email) using a file (emails.txt) with the list of emails you want to search for.

Solution

After exporting the password (LDP) you can use the following to do the search and output the results into a file (search_results.txt)

ldapsearch -LLL _H "ldaps://ldap_url:port" -D "cn=User_name" -w $LDP -b "ou=ou_name,dc=dc_name,dc=domain_name" -s sub -f emails.txt "(mail_attribute=%s)" uid mail_attribute other_attribute > search_results.txt

OpenTelemetry docker demo error for otelcol container

Problem

You are trying to set up the OpenTelemetry docker demo application but the otel container fails with errors similar to the followng:

Error: failed to resolve config: cannot resolve the configuration: cannot retrieve the configuration: unable to read the file file:/etc/otelcol-config.yml: open /etc/otelcol-config.yml: permission denied

Error: failed to resolve config: cannot resolve the configuration: cannot retrieve the configuration: unable to read the file file:/etc/otelcol-config-extras.yml: open /etc/otelcol-config-extras.yml: permission denied

Solution

Change the permissions to the two configuration files in src/otelcollector to 644 and then stop and start the container.

Following the log file (docker logs -f otel-col) should have something like the following instead of the previous errors:

2024-01-10T14:44:29.062Z	info	service@v0.91.0/telemetry.go:86	Setting up own telemetry...
2024-01-10T14:44:29.063Z	info	service@v0.91.0/telemetry.go:203	Serving Prometheus metrics	{"address": ":8888", "level": "Basic"}
2024-01-10T14:44:29.064Z	info	exporter@v0.91.0/exporter.go:275	Development component. May change in the future.	{"kind": "exporter", "data_type": "logs", "name": "debug"}
2024-01-10T14:44:29.064Z	info	exporter@v0.91.0/exporter.go:275	Development component. May change in the future.	{"kind": "exporter", "data_type": "traces", "name": "debug"}

Create password for prometheus authentication

To create the password hash that can be used in basic authentication with prometheus you can can use the following:

htpasswd -nBC 10 ""  t -d ':\n'


10 is the bcrypt cost. Usually, the cost used should be between 10 and 12, with current computing power. Increasing this number will likely increase the security of the password at the expense of compute resources.

This can be then used in the configuration file like:

tls_server_config:
  cert_file: prometheus.crt
  key_file: prometheus.key
basic_auth_users:
  user: hhshdhdhdhhdhashedpassword

Note: Taken from the book ‘Prometheus Up & Running second edition’ by Julien Pivotto, Brian Brazil from Oreilly

Key is stored in legacy trusted.gpg keyring

As described in the post [here](https://itsfoss.com/key-is-stored-in-legacy-trusted-gpg/) you would need to export the key to its own file under the trusted.gpg.d directory.

So for example if the warning is for something like forticlient, first find the key using sudo apt-key gpg list and then taking the last eight characters and removing the space, export the key to its file (ie forticlient.gpg)

sudo apt-key export 5E54716D | sudo gpg --dearmour -o /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/forticlient.gpg