SPO600 Servers
In SPO600, remote access to two servers is provided for learning and project work. It is recommended that you also set up a personal Fedora system.
Contents
Preparatory Steps
In order to gain access to these computers, you must send an SSH key to your professor.
- Follow the steps outlined under Using Public Keys with SSH to create your key.
- Copy the public key (
id_rsa.pub
orid_dsa.pub
) to a file namedyourUserId.pub
-- for example, if your Seneca user ID is "jldoe", save the key in the filejldoe.pub
using a command such as:cp ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub jldoe.pub
- Attach that file to an e-mail message and send it to chris.tyler@senecacollege.ca including the course code "SPO600" somewhere in the subject line.
An account will be created within a few work days of sending the key.
Available Servers
AArch64
The first server is an ARMv8 AArch64 system known as aarchie or archie. This is a system that is currently located inside the EHL. To connect to this system, you have to go through the EHL gateway on port 2200. The EHL
If you're using a command-line ssh system, and you are on the Seneca network, you can issue a command such as this:
ssh -p 2200 username@ehl.internal.cdot.systems
To connect from outside Seneca:
ssh -p 2200 username@ehl.cdot.systems
x86_64
The other server is an x86_64 system known as xerxes
. To connect to it from within Seneca, issue this command:
ssh username@xerxes.internal.cdot.systems
You can't yet connect to xerxes from outside Seneca, so connect to a system inside Seneca first and then use the command above. Check back to this page to find out when external access is available.
Sudo Access
To perform operations which require privilege, such as installing software, use the sudo
command to execute the desired instruction as the root
user.
For example, to install the software packaged ncurses-devel
, execute: sudo dnf install ncurses-devel
or sudo yum install ncurses-devel
In order to use sudo
, you will need to know your password. An initial password is provided in the file ~/password
(different on each server) -- feel free to change this with the passwd
command.
Multiuser Access
Remember that these machines are multi-user systems. Use the w
or who
commands to see who else is using them; you can also try using the write
command to communicate with another user if required.