How to Increase PhpMyAdmin Session Timeout from 1440 seconds


phpMyAdmin is one of my favorite tools and I use it all the time. But man, the 24-minute session timeout is a huge problem . A short cookie lifetime is all well and good on your production server, but what about when you’re just testing new things  away on the computer in your test envirnment?
Did a little grepping and found that you can override this setting, even though it’s not documented anywhere but in the codes (so far as I can tell). To override it, just open up config.inc.php in the root phpMyAdmin directory and add this setting (anywhere, but  mostly at end of file):
phpmyadmin config file for ubuntu Server : /etc/phpmyadmin/config.inc.php

$cfg['LoginCookieValidity'] = <your_new_timeout>;

Where <your_new_timeout> is some number larger than 1800. Personally, I chose 28800, which is 8 hours.

Define how long a login cookie is valid. Please note that php configuration option session.gc_maxlifetime might limit session validity and if the session is lost, the login cookie is also invalidated. So it is a good idea to set session.gc_maxlifetime at least to the same value of $cfg['LoginCookieValidity'].
php.ini file for ubuntu Server : /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini

Disclaimer! It should go without saying that increasing the timeout is a (comparatively minor) security risk (but a risk nonetheless). Obviously, do not do this on your production server. And as always, proceed with caution.

Setting up a SVN Server on a EC2 Instance (Ubuntu 14.04 LTS)

Setting up an SVN server on my EC2 instance (on AWS), is a major problem whenever we connect svn using key-file(key.pem for AWS).
Here’s my situation:
  • I have a micro EC2 instance hosted with Amazon.
  • I used a non-standard port for ssh access
  • I have a pem file provided by Amazon for access through ssh
  • I run Ubuntu 14.04 Server on my EC2 instance
  • On the client side, I’m running Ububtu 14.04 Desktop
With that out of the way, the first thing I had to do was insure svn was installed on my server and Desktop :
sudo apt-get install -y subversion

Then, on my EC2 instance, I want to create both the directory where I’ll store repositories, and the subsequently, create the repository itself. Permissions and ownership are of the utmost importance. This worked for me:
sudo mkdir -p /srv/svn/
sudo chown ubuntu:ubuntu /srv/svn/
svnadmin create /srv/svn/{repo_name}
Mind the {rep_name} placeholder above 

vim /svnrepos/conf/svnserve.conf
In that file add these three lines:
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = passwd
Create a password file:
vi /svnrepos/conf/passwd
In that file add a line for your user:
# add users in the format : user = password
tony = mypassword

Ubuntu : Netbeans Installation

This Guide is useful for Netbeans Installation on Ubuntu. Generally we face problems during installation of Netbeans like JDK path, package not available, permissions denied etc. This guide gives  you step by step instructions to easy installation of Netbeans. Hope so it helps you a lot !

1. Update your Ubuntu 14.04 :
Ubuntu is open-source operating system which provides updates frequently for users to overcome security breaches and enhance user experience. Just type this command on your terminal : (open terminal using Ctrl+Alt+t or type terminal in ubuntu search bar )       
sudo add-apt-update

For LAMP stack use following commands :
sudo apt-get install apache2
sudo apt-get install php5
sudo apt-get install mysql-server mysql-client
sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin
 
2. Download Netbeans from official website :  
Select your os type(32/64 bit) and download from following link :
                               https://netbeans.org/downloads/