--- Log opened Fri Jun 22 00:00:08 2018 00:00 < syb0rg> I'd hate to be the senior admin making $0 00:00 < Isky> lnnb: roughly $75k/yr in a place with a median income of $37k. 00:00 < syb0rg> but I would be cool with $infinity 00:01 < Isky> I dunno.. if it was $infinity, then I'd want a lot more vacation time to spend it. :P 00:01 < syb0rg> but you would only need to work for any finite amount of time to be infinitely rich, then you could just retire! 00:02 < Isky> I kind of assumed with $infinity, I had to stay working, or all the money would go away. Hmm 00:02 < syb0rg> that sounds more like a really luxurious version of slavery 00:03 < bls> you mean you don't just get paid to be awesome? 00:03 < Isky> syb0rg: I'd sign up for it, I think... with enough vacation time. 00:05 < Isky> so.. same cobol app on another server that does the same thing for an older system.. doesn't matter if I'm in an NFS mounted directory or local. It works. 00:05 < rascul> i get paid to be awesome 00:05 < lnnb> Isky: uninterruptible sleep state? 00:06 < Isky> lnnb: I can ctrl-c and kill it. 00:07 < Isky> It shows running in ps the whole time, but if I use strace, it hits a certain point (opens a file it's reading) and hangs. The file can be read. 00:09 < bls> is nfslockd an issue on that server? 00:10 < Isky> Not that I know of.. 00:10 < bls> or did someone do something weird to portmap's port ranges 00:10 < Isky> now THAT is entirely possible 00:10 < Isky> It's an OCI instance, and .. OCI makes me want to stab things. (oracle cloud infrastructure) 00:11 < bls> although portmap issues would show up on everything, file locking would be limited to just programs trying to use it 00:11 < Isky> ohh. nfslockd isn't running 00:11 < Isky> or it's not a separate service in OL7. I'm not sure. 00:14 < Isky> ah. It's just nfslock, and it's running without errors. 00:19 < Isky> and, as far as I can tell, I can run everything else from those directories.. another piece of note, the app itself is not in the directory. 00:40 < Thedarkb> You'd think given the number of people in this channel that it would be more active. 00:40 < bls> I'd say 3/4 of the clients connected here are abandoned bouncers/bots 00:40 < azarus> is there a channel for troff typesetting? 00:41 < azarus> (or nroff, whatever) 00:41 < bls> azarus: ask the channel list bot: /msg alis list yoursearchtermhere 00:41 < azarus> bls: nothing 00:41 < azarus> that's why I'm asking ;) 00:41 < bls> but I really doubt anyone cares about troff enough anymore to hang out in a channel and discuss it 00:42 < azarus> aww, oh well 00:45 < bls> and any time I need to create a document and don't have latex installed, I just use mom templates 00:46 < Isky> I use sharelatex.com if I don't have it installed. 00:46 < Isky> or often if I do. :P 00:58 < ALowther_> How do I remove a service from systemctl so that it does not show up anymore? 01:00 < bls> you could uninstall it 01:01 < Chris_A> ALowther_, systemctl disable 01:01 < bls> it'll still be listable if you disable it 01:01 < Aph3x-WL> it sounds like he wants it hidden instead of disabled 01:01 < Aph3x-WL> probably for spyware 01:02 < ALowther_> Yeah, I already tried to disable 01:03 < bls> what are you really trying to accomplish? 01:03 < ALowther_> More specifically, I enabled an openvpn service to run as a daemon to connect to a config, but I misspelled it. So now I have two, one with a slight misspelling, which interferes with my auto complete :) 01:04 < ALowther_> openvpn@my-vpn-connection.service && openvpn@my-vpn-connecyion.service 01:05 < bls> ah, then you should be able to find and delete a file in /etc/systemd/system 01:05 < bls> I believe it'll be a symlink to the openvpn servic 01:06 < ALowther_> Hmmmm 01:09 < ALowther_> Idk, I don't see anything obvious in there. 01:09 < bls> find /etc/systemd -name 'openvpn@my-vpn-connecyion.service' turns up nothing? 01:11 < ALowther_> bls: Yes, it did :). Thank you. 01:11 < ALowther_> I can just delete that directly? 01:11 < ALowther_> Do I need to worry about symlinks or anything? 01:12 < bls> it's been a while since I dealt with this, but is the file a symlink to openvpn.service? 01:13 < bls> there's probably a systemctl sub-command to properly do it, but I still can't remember them all 01:14 < ALowther_> bls: Hmmmm, idk :(. But I found where it's located. I'll google around. Thanks for the help finding it :) 01:17 < JacobsLadd3r> I have 'gather_stats & read -t 60' in a loop in bash and it works. As a SystemD service it fails, if I use 'sleep 60' instead of 'read -t 60' the SystemD service works. I'd prefer not to fork off another 'sleep' pid instead of 'read' being a builtin, anyway to get systemd to fake a TTY or whatever read is looking for? 01:20 < bls> why is using the correct tool instead of abusing the wrong one such a big deal? 01:22 < Loshki> More art in abusing the wrong one for some people. 01:25 < bls> if you're worried about your fork() call getting worn out, you can write your own sleep function 01:27 < JacobsLadd3r> yeah I was just hoping for an easy flag or something on read since it's already builtin. Thanks for that. 01:37 < bls> s() { local d="${1}";local s="${SECONDS}";while [[ $((SECONDS-s)) -lt "${d}" ]];do :;done } # gross...but no forks! 01:41 < JacobsLadd3r> cool thanks, there is no fork, or spoon 01:42 < ryouma> i try to unmount a partition and it says "umount: /media/samsung-root: target is busy". "fuser /media/samsung-root" says nothing. "lsof | grep samsung" says nothing. "ps -efH | cat" does not show anything likely. why is it busy? this occurs with all of my partitions. linux 3.16. 01:43 < bls> also highly inefficient use of CPU time since there's nothing calling yield 01:43 < bls> ryouma: are there any processes that have that directory hierarchy as their CWD? 01:45 < ryouma> bls: i never understood why having a shell cd'ed to a mountpoint makes it busy. why isn't it just a variable? but no, i don't have those. however: 01:45 < bls> for pid in /proc/[0-9]*;do sudo readlink -e $pid/cwd;done | sort | uniq 01:45 < ryouma> with mount i get "/dev/mapper/toshiba-root on /media/toshiba-root type ext4 (rw,relatime,data=ordered)" and "sysfs on /media/toshiba-root/sys type sysfs (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime)" and "fusectl on /media/toshiba-root/sys/fs/fuse/connections type fusectl (rw,relatime)" 01:45 < ryouma> (toshiba is the partition i am trying to unmount now) 01:46 < bls> ryouma: because most processes (i.e. not shells) don't like having their working directory ripped out from under them 01:46 < ryouma> clever. nothing htgere in the mountpoint. 01:47 < mgolisch> is that a lvm? 01:47 < ryouma> no, luks 01:47 < ryouma> i am unmounting the plaintext and then i will close the device mapper 01:47 < mgolisch> but yeah shouldnt matter 01:48 < ryouma> the sysfs is probably a remnant of doing a chroot to install grub 01:48 < ryouma> but i properly unmounted it (or tried to) 01:48 < ryouma> the fusectl is mysterious 01:48 < mgolisch> oh yeah thats why 01:48 < mgolisch> unmount those first 01:49 < ryouma> so it's probably all due to the chroot. i will find my code. but i think i do it correctly. 01:49 < mgolisch> you probably run a recursive bind mount on it 01:49 < mgolisch> just umount those two filesystems first it should work then 01:50 < ryouma> i do for dir in /dev /proc /sys; do; umount $mountedroot$dir; done 01:50 < ryouma> i do a bind mount, but dunno why you say recursive 01:50 < ryouma> why does my command above not unmount sysfs? 01:50 < bls> hmm, yeah, don't know what proc reports for cwd in the event of a chroot or bind mount 01:51 < mgolisch> because there this fuse thing mounted under it 01:52 < ryouma> the root problem seems to be "umount: /media/toshiba-root/sys: target is busy" 01:52 < ryouma> why is it busy? why is fuse anywhere? i didn't do anything that requires fuse? i ahve a comment that says this is the fault of systemd but idk why. 01:53 < mgolisch> because /media/toshiba-root/sys/fs/fuse/connections is mounted on it 01:55 < ryouma> ok. but i never mounted it. i only bind mounted /sys. 01:55 < mgolisch> sure you didnt run mount --rbind /sys /blah/sys? 01:55 < ryouma> yes, it is --bind 01:55 < ryouma> (this is a script) 01:56 < ryouma> dunno what rbind is 01:56 < mgolisch> maybe whatever you ran after that mounted that itself or so 01:56 < ryouma> maybe i should umount using umount --recursive? 01:56 < mgolisch> it mounts stuff recurivesly 01:56 < mgolisch> yeah umount -R 01:56 < mgolisch> or just umount the damn things already 01:56 < ryouma> mgolisch: well, all i ran was grub-update and grub-isntall and mkinitramfs or whatever 01:56 < mgolisch> told you like minutes ago 01:57 < ryouma> you told me to do that? 01:59 < ryouma> in any case umount --recursive $mountedroot$dir seems to be the solution. hope it doesn't screw up systemd or whatever command did the mounting 01:59 < ryouma> mgolisch: bls thanks 02:00 < mgolisch> np 02:00 < MrChinasky> test 02:00 < ryouma> /should/ i use mount --rbind when i create dev sys proc on the chroot? 02:03 < kerframil> ryouma: typically, yes. proc can be mounted directly (-t proc). 02:04 < MrChinasky> :q 02:04 < MrChinasky> lol 02:05 < ryouma> not sure i understand. is it wrong to, when creating a chroot, to do what i do? i do for dir in /dev /proc /sys do mount --bind $dir $mountedroot$dir done (with appropriate newlines) 02:06 < ryouma> oh you are saying i should use --rbind instead of --bind there 02:06 < spare> /dev normally has /dev/shm and /dev/pts as additional mounts using --rbind is quicker than needing to remount them as well 02:06 < ryouma> and saying btw i can use -t proc but don'thave to 02:07 < ryouma> spare: ok so i will change to --rbind in my chroot 02:07 < kerframil> ryouma: the optimal approach is mentioned in gentoo's documentation, which you may use as a reference (scroll down to Configuration): https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Chroot 02:07 < Mibix> I just used gparted to repartition a drive to ext4 from ntfs and now i lost a bunch of space like .3tb at least 02:08 < spare> --rbind for dev and -t proc -t sysfs normally lfs has a script to use mknod to create a minimal dev if you dont need access to anything 02:08 < kerframil> ryouma: warning, --make-rslave is very important if you're using systemd. otherwise, unmounting from inside the chroot could also unmount the mount point from which it was bound. 02:08 < ryouma> this is getting complex 02:10 < ryouma> kerframil: interesting. so instead of my loop i do all of those. will this work on debian? 02:10 < kerframil> it's not about using a loop or not using a loop, as long as the procedure is proper 02:11 < kerframil> yes, it will work anywhere 02:11 < kerframil> assuming a GNU userspace 02:13 < ryouma> i presume debian by default is a gnu userspace 02:13 < kerframil> yes 02:14 < kerframil> I should really say, as long as your mount command is provided by util-linux (which it will be) 02:14 < ryouma> this is not something that a person can just remember to do if the system is screwed up and grub needs installation. it needs a script 02:14 < ryouma> it is 02:15 < ryouma> should i still do umount --recursive? ah, yes i presume so since i am using rbind 02:15 < kerframil> if you want to clean up later, sure. not sure what the context is here. 02:15 < kerframil> umount -R /path/to/chroot should do it all in one fell swoop, as long as nothing is keeping it busy 02:16 < ryouma> what is env-update and "user $cp /etc/portage/make.conf /mnt/mychroot/etc/portage # When using an existing installation, skip this command; user $cp /etc/resolv.conf /mnt/mychroot/etc" do? i presume those are for gentoo. except resolv.conf which maybe is only if you are going to use the net in the chroot? 02:16 < kerframil> that's not relevant to you 02:16 < ryouma> ok 02:16 < ryouma> still curious what gentoo does 02:16 < kerframil> the mount commands are what are of interest 02:18 < kerframil> the installation of gentoo basically entails the extraction of a snapshot of a formative root filesystem. you then mount the pseudo-filesystems and chroot in before carrying out some procedures to finish the installation and get it to be the point where it can boot itself. 02:18 < kerframil> ti's a bit like using debootstrap in debian, I suppose - but not automated in any way 02:20 < kerframil> thus, chrooting is a well understood concept among its userbase. for new users, typically when they forget to build something into their kernel and have to boot a livecd to fix things up. 02:21 < ryouma> lots of mounts though. you'd have to write them down. 02:22 < kerframil> for me, it's second nature but yes - it can be quite a lot to digest and retain 02:23 < kerframil> as mentioned, --make-rslave is only strictly necessary where systemd is being used 02:23 < kerframil> actually, arch has a nice script that takes care of it 02:23 < kerframil> arch-chroot 02:27 < ryouma> but systemd is beign used in debian, so it is unnerving 02:27 < ryouma> yeah, debian should have that 02:27 < domhnall> ryouma: or write them in a script. (mount commands) 02:28 < ryouma> kerframil: does arch-chroot do what gentoo shows on the page? 02:29 < ryouma> domhnall: yeah that is what i am doing now using kerframil's instructions 02:29 < ryouma> domhnall: but if your system can't access your script it's annoying 02:29 < ryouma> or impossible 02:31 < kerframil> ryouma: approximately, though it goes further and takes care of things such as copying in the resolv.conf file and actually executing the chroot command 02:31 < kerframil> ryouma: https://git.archlinux.org/arch-install-scripts.git 02:32 < bls> scoff so much bloat and hand holding and training wheels 02:32 < domhnall> yeeeah, that arch-chroot blew my mind on my first install. I was like Whaaaa. 02:33 < SpeakerToMeat> Is there any way to tell screen to refresh? 02:33 < Mibix> is doing a mke2fs -m 0 a bad idea if its just a media drive? 02:33 < Mibix> i mean what do i need that root reserved section for anyway 02:33 < kerframil> Mibix: not really, no 02:34 < bls> SpeakerToMeat: -Ctrl+L 02:34 < SpeakerToMeat> bls thank you 02:34 < Mibix> k ty kerframil 02:34 < Mibix> im not sure what im losing? 02:34 < bls> Mibix: i only reserve space on / /usr and /var 02:35 < Mibix> k sweet 02:35 < bls> and the /usr isnt really a thing anymore 02:35 < Mibix> trying to convert all my ntfs drives to ext4 and was like wtf why am i losing so much space then i found that -m 02:35 < kerframil> Mibix: having a little reserved space does make some sense on / and perhaps /var. that way, an unprivileged user can't wreck everything by completely filling up the filesystem. the root user still has some room to maneuver. 02:36 < kerframil> Mibix: it's by no means required, however 02:36 < Mibix> OMG this is so much faster 02:36 < Mibix> haha 02:36 < ryouma> i have two identically-formatted drives. i rsync to them. but one has a lot more free space than the other. they have about identical contents. 02:37 < Mibix> 4x faster than ntfs 02:37 < bls> yeah if your fine booting recovery media in the event of disk full, it's not necessary 02:37 < ryouma> it's maybe because of dir slack or hardlink structure or smoething 02:37 < bls> or open file handles on one but not the other 02:37 < kerframil> Mibix: ntfs or ntfs-3g? 02:38 < SpeakerToMeat> Hmmm it was mc I had to ctrl-l 02:38 < ryouma> no open file handles. but the difference is enormous. like 60gb 02:39 < SpeakerToMeat> Man this is so slow that it feels like my 14.4 Kbps era 02:39 < SpeakerToMeat> I see a ctrl-l refresh line by line 02:40 < chey> heyy peeps 02:42 < domhnall> I hate those things 02:42 < Mibix> kerframil i think i was using ntfs-3g? 02:42 < kerframil> Mibix: yeah. it's slow. 02:55 < SpeakerToMeat> wtf my / at remote machien is suddenly %100 full (from 18Gb free) and if I delete a 2Gb file it is still %100 full 02:56 < SpeakerToMeat> I delete 10 600Mb files, still %100 full 02:56 < bls> probably have something pumping a file full as soon as you free up space 02:56 < SpeakerToMeat> Hmm yes but what... where 02:56 < SpeakerToMeat> No in my home 02:57 < bls> that or the kernel is struggling to shuffle the blocks around to return the free space back 02:57 < SpeakerToMeat> hmmm let me dmesg 02:57 < bls> check df -h, ncdu 02:57 < bls> lsof 02:57 < SpeakerToMeat> I'm doing ncdu home but I think I'll have to include /var (the usual culprit) 02:58 < bls> yeah, usually best to start at / 02:58 < SpeakerToMeat> Well I have a 11Gb syslog 02:58 < SpeakerToMeat> bls: if I ncdu at / i'll find out what it was in a qweek 03:03 < SpeakerToMeat> /var/log/syslog 03:04 < SpeakerToMeat> mc 03:10 < ryouma> kerframil: do i really want to bind mount /tmp into the chroot? i am rsyncing to target, then chrooting to it just to install grub. seems from my limited understanding that maybe i don't need to bind mount tmp or even do the rslave thing? 03:12 < kerframil> ryouma: /tmp isn't necessary. the significance of --make-rslave was already covered. 03:14 < ryouma> i didn't understand it then. ok maybe i do: 17:08 ryouma: warning, --make-rslave is very important if you're using systemd. otherwise, unmounting from inside the chroot could also unmount the mount point from which it was bound. -- ok so i guess you are saying it prevents you from screwing things up by unmounting /from inside the chroot/. i unmount outside it, so i don't need it. 03:15 < kerframil> ryouma: let me put in simpler terms 03:16 < ryouma> :) 03:16 < kerframil> ryouma: systemd overrides the kernel default of everything being private, in favour of shared 03:16 < kerframil> ryouma: if you do not use --make-rslave, any changes to the destination of bind mount can propagate back to its point of origin, so to speak 03:17 < kerframil> ryouma: it's really not something you want to risk. you can simplify things a little by not doing it as a distinct step e.g. mount --rbind --make-rslave /dev /mnt/chroot/dev 03:17 < toothe> anyone know where iptools's source code is? I can't seem to find it on github 03:18 < kerframil> ryouma: and by "changes" I mean changes to mount options, and even the process of unmounting 03:18 < kerframil> ryouma: you don't want these to affect the host environment 03:18 < toothe> oh wait, found it 03:18 < ryouma> kerframil: ok, so why does /proc not get the make-rslave treatment? 03:19 < kerframil> ryouma: because it's not being bind mounted 03:19 < kerframil> ryouma: it's just another instance of procfs 03:19 < kerframil> ryouma: if you did bind mount it, the same concerns would apply 03:20 < bls> toothe: do you mean net-tools or iproute2 03:21 < ryouma> kerframil: does it matter if i bind mount it or make ano9ther instance of it? 03:21 < kerframil> ryouma: tl;dr = using systemd? add --make-rslave when bind mounting anything (unless you absolutely know what you are doing) 03:21 < ryouma> i used to bind mount it 03:22 < kerframil> ryouma: I'm not specifically aware of any problems with bind mounting it 03:22 < kerframil> ryouma: it should also work 03:23 < ryouma> so i can go back to this, except add --make-rslave and make it --rbind instead of bind: for dir in /dev /proc /sys do mount --bind $dir $mountedroot$dir done (with appropriate newlines)? 03:24 < ryouma> (the reason i care is that this would be something i can possibly remember if needed, while a sequence of special cases i would not likely remember if needed) 03:24 < kerframil> ryouma: adding --make-rslave, quoting the variables and perhaps having a postfix `|| break` (or `|| exit` in a script) in case anything goes wrong. but yes. 03:25 < ryouma> great. yes, i should consider error handling. not sure what would work in the context of this specific script but yeah. 03:25 < kerframil> if it's a script, I think you just want || exit for each mount command. let it exit immediately, then you look at what was printed to STDERR and take action accordingly 03:25 < kerframil> doesn't need to be any more complicated than taht 03:25 < kerframil> for ...; do mount ... || exit; done 03:26 < ryouma> and also i need to use --rbind instead of --bind right? 03:26 < kerframil> I would, yes 03:26 < ryouma> kerframil: it's a long shells cript. an exit might be inappropriate. but yeah. 03:26 < kerframil> it is equivalent to -bind if there are no submounts to be recursed anyway 03:26 < kerframil> --bind* 03:38 < toothe> is there a name for the system of eth0:1 eth0:2, etc? 03:38 < toothe> versus having just different addresses on the same interface? 03:38 < Psi-Jack> Yeah, obsoleted form of IP Aliases. 03:39 < Dan39> toothe: thats the way it was done with ifconfig, now we use iproute2 (ip, route, etc.) 03:40 < Dan39> which just adds multiple IPs to same interface 04:04 < cmj> hi Psi-Jack 04:04 < cmj> woof need a walk 04:08 < kerframil> Dan39: that's exactly what happens anyway. the concept of alias interfaces died with the release of kernel 2.2. 04:09 < gambl0re> i configured opendns on my mobile wifi network but its still not filtering content. anyone have any ideas? 04:10 < cmj> 2.2? 04:10 < gambl0re> cmj, what do you mean 2.2 04:10 < Psi-Jack> Moin 04:11 < cmj> i misread kerframil 04:12 < Dan39> kerframil: heh, i see 04:12 < kerframil> yes, 2.2 04:12 < bls> gambl0re: you're a bit lacking on details. what you did to which piece of software, how you did it, and why would go a long way towards your question being less vague 04:12 < kerframil> there was a Linux 2.2 once upon a time 04:12 < Dan39> kerframil: but ifconfig doesn't see the additional IPs when added with ip 04:12 < Dan39> dont know the backend details :P 04:13 < kerframil> Dan39: that's what people keep saying but (a) it's not true (b) it doesn't contract my point. here's the deal: they rae not "aliases", they're additional addresses with optional labels. if a label is defined, then ifconfig will continue to show them in its well known quirky way. 04:13 < bls> heh, back when all the nit pickers and overclockers use 2.1 or 2.3 04:13 < kerframil> contradict* 04:13 < gambl0re> bls, i followed this guide to a T. https://support.opendns.com/hc/en-us/articles/228009007-Android-Configuration-instructions-for-OpenDNS 04:13 < Dan39> i see 04:13 < kerframil> for instance, if you ip addr add dev label "whatever", the ifconfig will show your so-called alias 04:13 < kerframil> the alias term just makes everything confusing 04:13 < Dan39> interesting 04:14 < gambl0re> opendns works on my laptop but it doesnt work on my android mobile device 04:14 < kerframil> Dan39: back in pre-2.2 kernels, they were sort of treated as distinct interfaces. for instance, they carried their own statistics. 04:14 < bls> gambl0re: so you're trying to make these settings in andriod? 04:14 < kerframil> Dan39: so looking it as an interface made some sense at the time 04:14 < kerframil> Dan39: not any more, of course 04:15 < gambl0re> yes 04:15 < bls> gambl0re: then you probably want #android, not #linux 04:15 < Dan39> i probably didnt even know what linux was when 2.2 was released 04:15 < Psi-Jack> I remember when they switched from a.out to ELF binaries. heh 04:15 < bls> or IPv3 to IPv4 04:16 < Dan39> 1999... older than i thought 04:17 < gambl0re> bls, whaat do you want me to do with ipv4 04:18 < bls> gambl0re: oh, sorry, that was directed at someone else. 04:19 < bls> gambl0re: for you, I feel like #android will be better at telling you how to override the network's DNS server settings 04:42 < RadarG> hello 04:43 < rx7a> Hello all!... I am installing Postfix, I don't understand the purpose of "postmaster" 04:43 < rx7a> ? 04:44 < Psi-Jack> postmaster the process, or the alias? 04:44 < bls> rx7a: what do you understand? or what's the problem? 04:44 < rx7a> When I install postfix, it is asking me Mail for the "postmaster" 04:46 < bls> rx7a: ah, that's a convention for ensuring there's someone to send an email to if someone needs to report a problem with your mail server. if you're not going to be receiving email on the internet via postfix, you don't need to worry about it being valid 04:46 < Psi-Jack> So, the alias. 04:47 < rx7a> Thanks for the answer bls, now I know :) 04:47 < Psi-Jack> Aztec|DeepState: "DeepState?" 04:48 < Aztec|DeepState> yessir 04:48 < Psi-Jack> Whazzat? 04:49 < Aztec|DeepState> I am in a 'deep state' of bliss listening to ollllld school electronic house tracks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwmtJ9vshY8&list=PLbliAWbuENjWhuo7fHPeNsxvOOApHvnjM&index=1 04:49 < Psi-Jack> Aztec|DeepState: "status" nickname changes are generally not permitted here. 04:49 < Aztec|DeepState> oki bye 04:49 < rx7a> Excuse bls, it is asking for "Root and postmaster mail recipient". 04:49 < rx7a> Then should I reply with "postmaster" or "postmaster@site001.com" 04:51 < bls> it's normally a valid user on the system 04:51 < bls> so if you don't have a postmaster user, that wouldn't work 04:51 < rx7a> Then I am going to set it to root@site001.com 04:52 < Psi-Jack> You receive email to root@yoursite? 04:53 < scampbell> rx7a: no one will be able to see where you send it to. Typically you send it to your own user so that, in the rare case you actually get such mail, you'll see it. 04:54 < rx7a> If I am user001, user001@site001.com should be fine then... 04:55 < bls> no need for the @.... 04:55 < scampbell> rx7a: you don't need to domain part, just user001 04:55 < phinxy> Might there be a poll for 5.0 naming? 04:56 < rx7a> Yeaa!... I can go forward now... 04:56 < rx7a> Thanks dudes :) 05:05 < jim> rx7a, say if joe owns a machine, installs linux on it, makes a user named joe... then most likely (and by joe's preference too), you'd tell it joe should receive root and postmaster mail, which would cause the mail system to deliver mail addressed to root@ or postmaster@, to joe 05:10 < rx7a> Thanks for the accuracy jim (y) 05:17 < z3t0> hi all 05:17 < z3t0> can someone recommend a simple lightweight image viewer 05:17 < z3t0> im looking at a list on the arch wiki but there seems to be a lot of choices 05:18 < triceratux> qiv, ristretto, viewnior 05:18 < bls> I've always just used 'display' from ImageMagick 05:18 < Dan39> i've gone through that many times and always try many beforing finding one i like, mainly one that allows switching between images very quickly 05:18 < domhnall> charmandor 05:19 < Dan39> but for a quick view of a couple images, i also often use display 05:19 < Dan39> since its very common 05:19 < Dan39> feh is popular of course 05:20 < Dan39> but either of those isn't great for viewing a ton of images quickly 05:22 < z3t0> feh seems to work thank you 05:47 < puff> Hi, trying to figure out how to use this USB "microscope". lsusb says it's a "Cubeternet" which appears to be a webcam, which makes sense, it's just a cheap webcam with a cheap lense and an LED for light. 05:47 < puff> I remember hearing that I should be able to just point VLC at it, trying to figure out how to tell VLC to use it. 05:47 < TRS-80> puff: yeah that's how they show up. Cheese is easier than VLC. 05:48 < TRS-80> You want to use VLC? It's in file menu somewhere you have to find the device 05:48 < puff> I'm not wedded to it, as long as I can see the image and capture frames. 05:49 < puff> VLC has Media/Open Capture Device, but then I need to give it a name. 05:50 < puff> Hm, Cheese says "no device found" 05:50 < ryouma> z3t0: feh is the most useful i have ever used. you can refile images with it for example. 05:50 < puff> Aha, unplugged it and plugged it back in. 05:52 < superkuh> feh++ 05:53 < puff> TRS-80: Is there a way to grab frames with Cheese? 05:54 < TRS-80> puff yes somewhere, been a while since I used it 05:54 < TRS-80> button middle front of interface? 05:57 < puff> TRS-80: Ah, found it. 05:57 < RedFlash> Hello, I was here yesterday getting support for a raspberry pi that wouldn't connect to the internet. We managed to get the issue fixed (or so I thought) by rebooting the router. Unfortunately, this only got things working for about an hour. I've triple checked all network settings on the pi and on the router and I'm honestly at a loss as to what to do now. As always, logs, screencaps and any other info is available if needed. Any ideas? 05:58 < TRS-80> RedFlash: you try swapping cables? 05:58 < RedFlash> One moment 05:58 < TRS-80> also, you have plenty good power (supply)? 06:00 < Psi-Jack> Minimum 1 million watts. ;) 06:00 < Triffid_Hunter> RedFlash: can you ping -n 4.2.2.1 ? I find crappy routers often kill their DNS forwarding first, leaving other stuff working 06:00 < TRS-80> was your pinky in your mouth as you said that? 06:09 < BlueFlash> Okay, just swapped out the cables and caused my home network to implode. Back up and running. Pings are working for 8.8.8.8 and google.com so far 06:11 < phinxy> Do programs load kernel modules sometimes? 06:11 < bls> no 06:11 < domhnall> Think you mean 'use' 06:13 < lnnb> i think i've seen iptables try that 06:13 < bls> kernel modules get loaded into the kernel because they need access to special calls that only the kernel can make 06:14 < bls> so if you tried to load them into a userland program, it wouldn't have access to those interfaces 06:14 < phinxy> Is there a Linux fork which is always running the user in ring-0? Or something equivilent? 06:15 < phinxy> Its probably a bad idea, nevermind. 06:15 < maxcell_> There is no volume icon on my Xfce (debian 9) and sound aren't working can somebody help me/ 06:16 < jim> BlueFlash, that ping would mean your physical (IP) connection is working, and very likely dns lookups are working too 06:17 < bls> maybe kthreads, but not process forks 06:18 < BlueFlash> jim, DNS does work when I can connect to the net, but then I just get timeout errors. iptables -L produces nothing and ifconfig shows that everything is fine 06:21 < Triffid_Hunter> phinxy: that's called DOS :P 06:22 < Triffid_Hunter> phinxy: modern programs *can't* run in ring 0 because they expect the OS to do memory mapping for them 06:25 < jim> BlueFlash, under what conditions do you get timeout errors? what exactly were you trying to do at the time? 06:25 < taaperotassu> Seems like my cronjob uses another time zone than what my date does. How do I check what time is cronjob having and how to change it? 06:25 < Psi-Jack> DOS had memory managers for XMMS and EMS memory. 06:25 < domhnall> BlueFlash: yeah, I've gotten timeout errors when searching via google and google only. Too tired to find out why. 06:26 < BlueFlash> jim, I'm setting up a fresh install of raspbian via SSH. I had one terminal open with "ping 8.8.8.8" running constantly. Another terminal for general use (apt, file system ops) 06:27 < [R]> taaperotassu: if you run 'env -i date' does it show the same thing as just date? 06:27 < jim> ok, so that's your general situation? 06:30 < jim> BlueFlash, I guess you're working on that right now? I request you pause that for a moment so that I can get a clear picture from you of what's going on... otherwise, I end up waiting for long periods of silence and (frankly) wondering what happened to you 06:30 < BlueFlash> jim, I'm also running a deluge daemon, but that's running traffic through a SOCKS5 proxy. That hasn't worked right either. That's the only other software I've installed on that. 06:31 < jim> BlueFlash, ok, what's the exact command you're running that times out? 06:32 < BenderRodriguez> has anyone complied the linux kernel from scratch? 06:32 < BlueFlash> jim, It appears to be working at the moment (after changing the cables reset the router). It times out on this: "ping 8.8.8.8". And any other attempt to access the internet on that device 06:32 < taaperotassu> [R]: Hey it shows the same than the date 06:32 < [R]> taaperotassu: then your system timezone is correct... and cron should be using the same one 06:33 < taaperotassu> [R]: Tho my locale is not right so I am wondering if its somehow affecitng it 06:33 < jim> ok, so you're not as well connected as I thought 06:34 < BlueFlash> jim, If you like, you can take a look over teamviewer. I'm willing to give you access to try and sort this out. The connection from my current computer is rock solid, only the pi is affected, so you should be fine 06:34 < jim> BlueFlash, do these timeouts that happen when you ping 8.8.8.8, always? sometimes? 06:34 < domhnall> BenderRodriguez: could you be more specific? 06:35 < jim> BlueFlash, I would have to learn how to set up teamviewer :) 06:36 < jim> it's probably nothing besides installing it... but for the moment, let's try it without :) 06:36 < BlueFlash> jim, Once it starts timing out, that's it until I punch the router. It's fairly easy to set up :P 06:36 < BlueFlash> Okay 06:36 < jim> so something makes the router fail, but then you reset it? 06:38 < BlueFlash> From what I can gather, yes. I thought it might have been Upnp, since deluged was putting a bunch of entries in there. I don't think it was supposed to do that because traffic from it is supposed to be going through a SOCKS proxy. I've since disabled Upnp, but the aforementioned situation still occurs 06:39 < jim> BlueFlash, is there something else you're observing or doing yourself that corresponds timewise to when the router fails? 06:39 < jim> this deluge thing, is it easy to turn it on and off? 06:40 < jim> right now there's nothing else I'm aware of that might be affecting your connection 06:40 < BlueFlash> jim, The last time it happened, I was just reading up on PiVPN on my main PC. Then I noticed the ping command had hung. Deluge (torrents) can be stopped/started via systemd 06:41 < jim> ok 06:42 < jim> BlueFlash, when the ping of 8.8.8.8 fails, does the internet from your main PC also fail? 06:43 < BlueFlash> jim, Just the pi. Everything else on the network is unaffected. On the router webui, the pi still appears to be connected, and no error messages appear in the router logs 06:44 < BlueFlash> Which is what led me to believe it was an internal issue yesterday. I thought it might have been a DNS issue, then DHCP, then maybe iptables, but all of those appear to be properly configured 06:44 < jim> as far as your main PC and your pi are concerned what is the IP of your router? is it one of thoese that start with 192.168? 06:45 < BlueFlash> jim, My network is 10.1.1.* based. Router is 10.1.1.1, pi is 10.1.1.2, my PC is 10.1.1.3 06:45 < jim> is the pi currently up or currently failing? 06:46 < BlueFlash> I'm currently talking to it via SSH. Haven't had any problems SSH or it accessing the local network even when it couldn't access the net. 06:47 < jim> ok, that suggests your internal net is working 06:47 < jim> and that your pi's connectivity to the internal net is fine 06:48 < jim> from your pi, can you ping 10.1.1.1? 06:48 < BlueFlash> Yeah, this is so weird. That's what led me to believe it's an internal issue. I've gone through more forum posts and stackexchange questions than I can count 06:48 < BlueFlash> Yes, 10.1.1.1 responds 06:48 < jim> ok, that again suggests the pi is connected to your internal net 06:49 < jim> which machine is deluge running on? 06:49 < BlueFlash> deluge is running on the pi as a daemon, accessing it via webui on my PC 06:49 < jim> BlueFlash, also, can you ping yahoo.com from your main pc? 06:50 < BlueFlash> jim, Yes 06:50 < jim> ok, I suspect the problem lies in the default route thru 10.1.1.1 on the pi 06:52 < BlueFlash> jim, Okay, it just happened again 06:52 < jim> ok, don't "fix anything yet 06:52 < BlueFlash> Not touching anything 06:53 < jim> does your ssh to the pi still respond normally? 06:53 < BlueFlash> Yes, I'm still connected 06:53 < jim> ok, good, on the pi, could you do: ip route 06:54 < jim> and capture and pastebin that output? 06:54 < jim> I take it your main PC is still getting net? (I notice you're still here :) 06:54 < BlueFlash> jim, Yup! https://pastebin.com/APrt17cv 06:55 < BlueFlash> What's interesting is that while internet connectivity has broken via command line, deluge is still downloading one torrent 06:56 < jim> and deluge is running on the pi? (btw, ip route shows that the default route is still intact) 06:56 < BlueFlash> Yes 06:58 < BlueFlash> Pinging google results in: ping: google.com: Temporary failure in name resolution 06:58 < iflema> BlueFlash: ping 8.8.8.8 06:58 < jim> if you stop deluge and start it again, does it usually pick up the download from where it left off? 06:59 < BlueFlash> iflema, https://pastebin.com/b6a4a9WX 06:59 < jim> iflema, I'm guessing something is wrong with his default route (but, it's still intact as shown by ip route) 07:00 < [R]> you're a default route 07:00 < iflema> all cable? 07:00 < BlueFlash> jim, Torrents appear to have ground to a halt. Tracker status is: Error: Invalid Argument 07:01 < jim> of all the jokes from ancient egypt from 1000000 bc, that was the most common joke... 07:01 < BlueFlash> iflema, Ethernet all the way baby 07:02 < jim> invalid argument? do you know how ioctl works? 07:02 < BlueFlash> (not really :/) 07:02 < jim> ok, 07:03 < jim> so ioctl is a registry of these integer "symbols" to functions to call 07:04 < jim> that is, you would register an integer to a function call... the effect of which is, that when you later make an ioctl call with that same integer, it will call the function to which it's registered 07:05 < jim> do you understand that part? 07:05 < BlueFlash> Yes, but I don't know how that applies to a torrent tracker on deluge 07:06 < jim> so ioctl has a pile of integers that are each tied to a function call 07:06 < iflema> if cables are all good try to remember what _you_ broke... 07:07 < jim> the thing is, if you try to make an ioctl call to an integer that is not in the "pile", it says: 07:07 < jim> invalid argument 07:07 < iflema> did these flashes come out of the pi... 07:07 < BlueFlash> iflema, Brand new installation of raspbian, deluge being the only other thing installed. Problem also occurred on a previous OS on the pi 07:08 < jim> the next piece, is: that when you load kernel modules that are drivers, it usually registers a handful of ioctls 07:09 < iflema> pi... i have a banana 07:09 < iflema> nasty fing 07:11 < jim> so -maybe- what's happening, is a driver module is getting unloaded unexpectedly, causing some ioctls to become unregistered, and something else is making an ioctl call to an ioctl it thinks is still installed, but it's not anymore 07:11 < jim> so you get: invalid argument 07:11 * iflema sings... two steps forward, 25 million steps back 07:12 < jim> thing is, this is a guess, of what could be happening 07:12 < BlueFlash> jim, So there might be an entry in the syslog? Teamviewer offer is still on the table btw 07:12 < jim> and I don't believe you have the kind of direct control over this thing so you can fix it 07:13 < jim> that's very possible, yes 07:13 < jim> so maybe if you watch a particular log, you might be able to see the driver loads and unloads 07:14 < BlueFlash> What in tarnation?! I just ran a search for mentions of deluge and the terminal imploded. I'll dump the output into pastebin 07:15 < jim> ok, sounds good 07:16 < jim> hope your terminal didn't have an actual crt when it imploded... 07:16 < BlueFlash> jim, heh https://pastebin.com/CgQX86G5 07:18 < BlueFlash> Would this help? https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=196767 07:18 < iflema> me snakes... 07:19 * iflema squirrel 07:20 < jim> BlueFlash, I dunno... I haven't made any sense out of the deluge pastebin yet 07:21 < iflema> pip 07:22 < BlueFlash> jim, Okay. The systemd messages are repeated A LOT. Main process exited -> Unit entered failed state -> Failed with result 'exit-code' -> Scheduling restart 07:22 * BlueFlash throws a big red brick at iflema 07:24 < jim> yeah, all I can see is the repeated message about it ignoring a conversion method 07:25 < let34> hi i am logged in as root 07:25 * [R] gives let34 a gold satr 07:25 < [R]> star* 07:25 < let34> i am trying to execute this command usermod -m -d '/home/app/flink-dist/target/flink-1.4.2-bin/flink-1.4.2' app 07:25 < let34> however it says usermod: user app is currently used by process 17252 07:25 * iflema nasty fing 07:25 < let34> if i do ps -p 17252 07:25 < [R]> so kill the process 07:25 < let34> it shows me that its sshd 07:25 < let34> now if i kill this process i might get exited out of the vm 07:26 < [R]> if thats your ssh session, there is no might 07:26 < let34> so what can i do without getting exited out 07:27 < jim> let34, be very careful when you're logged in as root... lots of power at your fingertips 07:27 < [R]> you could move it manually and then edit /etc/passwd 07:27 < [R]> and pray you don't screw something up... 07:27 < let34> sure jim 07:27 * [R] giggles 07:27 < let34> is it ok to edit the /etc/passwd 07:27 < jim> well 07:27 < [R]> if you don't screw it up... 07:27 < jim> first... it's your machine, so you can do whatever... 07:28 < let34> [R]: does that going to screw up things? 07:28 < jim> second, it might be better to let the programs that were designed for it (usermod in this case) do it for you 07:29 < let34> but running usermod command says that user app is currently used by process 17252 07:29 < let34> if check fo ps -p 17252 it says sshd 07:30 < let34> now if i kill sshd, ill be exited out of the session 07:30 < let34> [R]: after editing the /etc/passwd file , do you think we have to get that sourced or something? 07:30 < [R]> log out and log back in 07:30 < jim> so it's claiming the files of the user are busy... because it's running sshd as that user 07:37 < let34> jim: [R] i went ahead and edited the passwd file 07:38 < let34> however if i do echo $HOME 07:38 < let34> i dont see the change getting reflected 07:38 < [R]> [10:30:37] <[R]> log out and log back in 07:41 < storge> [R]: yessir 07:41 < [R]> yessir what 07:41 < storge> i just felt like agreeing 07:46 < syb0rg> hey you have a real point there, storge 07:49 < lopid> i conquer 07:50 < let34> [R]: its asking for password 07:50 < [R]> what? 07:50 < let34> probably i shd have copied the .ssh directory as well 07:50 < storge> gentlemen, we can all agree Paris is the capital of France. would you agree with me on that? 07:51 < pingfloyd> no 07:51 < Dagmar> No, 'P' is the capital of "Paris" 07:52 < Dagmar> It should be perfectly obvious and anyone who disagrees is clearly a communist 07:52 < storge> damn, and just when i thought we were all about to be in agreement 07:52 < lopid> what a mistake-a to make-a 07:52 < pingfloyd> communism is against my nazi religion 07:53 < pingfloyd> storge: agreements are overrated 07:53 < storge> pingfloyd: i agree 07:55 < storge> someone was talking about deluge, it got me thinking. are there still any good torrent search sites out there? i haven't looked in ages. i just remember some notables being shut down. 07:55 < pingfloyd> storge: TPB 07:56 < storge> TPB is back/up? 07:56 < storge> i thought it was long gone 07:56 < pingfloyd> did it go down again recently? 07:56 < storge> i thought those evil swedes danced with the devil to prosecute those guys 07:56 < storge> or perhaps i dreamt it 07:56 < storge> no a long time ago 07:57 < pingfloyd> whoa looks like it is down again 07:57 < Dagmar> Yep 07:57 < pingfloyd> like yesterday, literally 07:57 < storge> and now with GDPR 07:57 < storge> i suppose the torrent sites will serve euro visitors a 451 07:58 < thatpythonguy> for some reason, the 'locate' command is finding files that i've already removed.. any ideas? 07:58 < pingfloyd> storge: https://www.techworm.net/2018/06/the-pirate-bay-down-again.html 07:59 < pingfloyd> storge: no idea if those recommended alternative are worth a crap or not 07:59 < bls> thatpythonguy: locate runs on a cache/database thats usually only regenerated once a week 07:59 < thatpythonguy> do you know how I would manually override that? 07:59 < Dagmar> Well, updatedb runs 08:00 < pingfloyd> thatpythonguy: you can always run updatedb manually 08:00 < thatpythonguy> with sudo, it seems 08:00 < thatpythonguy> thanks ill try that 08:00 < bls> or you could just use find 08:00 < Dagmar> bah too much work 08:00 < pingfloyd> thatpythonguy: keeping the cron job around for it is a good idea though, as it will make the manual invocation complete faster since it maintains it. 08:01 < thatpythonguy> sudo updatedb gives me an error 08:01 < pingfloyd> I use locate when trying to locate files, and use find when I need to do something more than that 08:01 < pingfloyd> since find is a slow and index-less process 08:01 < thatpythonguy> it says /usr/bin/find: '/run/user/1000/gvfs': Permission denied 08:01 < pingfloyd> but find is perfect when you need to do more than just "find it" 08:02 < Dagmar> It'll give more errors than that when you let it look at dynamic "directories" like /proc and so on 08:02 < pingfloyd> there's also the wacky alternative mlocate 08:02 < Dagmar> There's also probably systemd-slocatectl 08:03 < thatpythonguy> ok somehow running sudo updatedb fixed my problem 08:03 < thatpythonguy> i dont know how lol 08:03 < Dagmar> It's literally updatedb's job to build/maintain the database that locate uses 08:04 < pingfloyd> thatpythonguy: really anytime you suspect outdated result with locate, you should be running updatedb 08:04 < storge> updatedb updated slocated DataBase 08:04 < storge> updates* 08:04 < za1b1tsu> I don't have an ethernet adapter, so regarding minimal linux installations like ubuntu minimal or arch linux, do I have to get an usb ethernet adapter or wifi generally works? I'm on a 2015 MBP. 08:04 < pingfloyd> s/result/results/ 08:04 < luke-jr> eh, updatedb takes like an hour and kills system performance 08:04 < Dagmar> wifi will work 08:04 < luke-jr> whenever I'm awake when it runs, I always kill it 08:04 < storge> nowadays i just run updatedb the moment before i run locate. 08:04 < pingfloyd> storge: same here 08:04 < Dagmar> luke-jr: That's why it's run by cron, late at night, under the control of ionice 08:05 < za1b1tsu> Dagmar: thank you 08:05 < Dagmar> If it's not being reniced, your system architect has failed 08:05 < luke-jr> Dagmar: talking about these guys suggesting running it before usign locate 08:05 < thatpythonguy> its strange because locate was finding files i just created about an hour ago, maybe its just a coincidence 08:05 < storge> i never have enough data for updatedb to take any real length of time. and it's notably faster on my ssd than hdd 08:05 < Dagmar> The only bad thing I have to say about updatedb is that it's scared the hell out of a few of my girlfriends 08:05 < pingfloyd> luke-jr: which dist are you using? 08:05 < luke-jr> pingfloyd: Gentoo 08:06 < luke-jr> I have several TB on my system though 08:06 < Dagmar> Having eight boxes, some with full-height high-speed SCSI drives in them, all run it at once at ~4:30am... 08:06 < Dagmar> They make a noise like some kind of uglt monster just broke into the room 08:06 < luke-jr> lol 08:06 < pingfloyd> Dagmar: they can't tell what you're doing anyway if it's beyond email, facebook, etc. 08:06 < Dagmar> s/uglt/ugly 08:06 < pingfloyd> gaming in some instances 08:06 < Dagmar> pingfloyd: They know what to do when some freaky monster growling starts happening from the far wall 08:06 < storge> what do you people with terabytes of data have anyway? is it video? i boggle at it, when i still run 40GB hdds that are mostly empty 08:07 < Dagmar> Freak right hte hell out and grab me. lol 08:07 < luke-jr> storge: sometimes I wonder 08:07 < pingfloyd> is there a monster in your walls? 08:07 < Dagmar> Video, audio, virtual machines, work files, buttloads of source tarballs 08:07 < pingfloyd> put a cat in the wall to hunt it down 08:07 < luke-jr> TBs is too much to keep track of :D 08:07 < Dagmar> LOTS of distribution ISOs for feeding to Vms 08:07 < mices> is chrooting as easy on plain linux as on a chromebook using croutons? 08:07 < Dagmar> pingfloyd: No but at the time one of my walls was basically made out of machines 08:08 < mices> am i wrong to love my chromebook cause i can create chroots 08:08 < luke-jr> chroots are nothing special.. 08:08 < Dagmar> Building chroots generally requires understanding how they work 08:08 < Dagmar> ...and little else 08:08 < pingfloyd> (cat in the wall is a joke for any moronic lurkers out there that may be thinking it's a good idea.) 08:09 < mices> i know the syntax to create with chromeos but otherwise not 08:09 < pingfloyd> Dagmar: what kind of machines 08:09 < luke-jr> chroot just operates on a normal filesystem 08:09 < storge> a guy in another channel just told a story of putting his cat in the microwave "as a funny joke" and then feigned worry that his microwave could accidently turn on. 08:10 < luke-jr> maybe it was a "smart" microwave 08:10 < Kharma> I am on a CB right now 08:10 < Kharma> love chromeos 08:10 < pingfloyd> Dagmar: the thing is, women seem to freak out if a guy has any decent collection of technology laying around in general 08:10 < luke-jr> someone could get his IP from IRC and hack in :p 08:10 < Kharma> I use Gallium, however I'm in a VM on Cloud Shell in ChromeOS right now 08:10 < luke-jr> my wife has been surprisingly tolerant of my new PC with its almost-always-noisy fans 08:11 < storge> or perhaps it's noisy fans conceal her frustrated muttering 08:11 < luke-jr> XD 08:14 < pingfloyd> storge: that guy sounds creepy 08:15 < syb0rg> background noise from fans is coming, win win 08:15 < syb0rg> *calming 08:15 < pingfloyd> yeah 08:15 < pingfloyd> it helps you sleep better 08:16 < pingfloyd> drowns out any startling noises going on 08:16 < lnnb> like all the cats trying to escape your walls 08:16 < pingfloyd> best sound for getting sleep is the ocean 08:16 < syb0rg> but the ocean has freaky shit in it, I dunno 08:17 < pingfloyd> syb0rg: so do lakes 08:17 < pingfloyd> and sometimes even ponds 08:17 < syb0rg> that loch ness monstah for instance 08:17 < pingfloyd> yeah, probably a prehistoric species 08:18 < syb0rg> wouldn't be a problem if it wasn't always after my tree fitty 08:19 < pingfloyd> you sure he isn't after your Lucky Charms? 08:19 < storge> i tend to use a mix of white and pink noise over binaural beats. i fall asleep fast and sleep deep and hard. 08:19 < zamlz> whats pink noise 08:19 < Elladan> Making my computer quiet has pretty much been my #1 priority for the last 10-15 years. 08:20 < Elladan> The worst issues seem to be GPUs 08:20 < pingfloyd> Nessie is Scot which is close enough 08:20 < introom> Elladan: buy a powerful one, put it in the garage, and screen shware with it. 08:20 < introom> that's my solution, and works well. 08:21 < goob> is there a loglevel or kernel option that will create something like an strace of everything? 08:21 < lnnb> get some fanless matrox gpu 08:22 < zamlz> water cool your gpu, easy 08:22 < Elladan> There are more modern fanless GPUs, but the nicer higher end ones will spin the fans down completely when lightly loaded. 08:22 < pingfloyd> use a peltier junction 08:22 < Elladan> So the noise only spins up when you run a game or something. 08:22 < storge> i guess that 3m or dupont product 'sapphire' never made it into the watercooling crowd 08:23 < storge> remember that demonstration where they drop a working laptop into it and since it's not water, but can cool it, happy laptop 08:24 < Elladan> Cray used that stuff decades ago, except they were using CFC's. Sorry ozone layer! 08:24 < bls> wasn't that insanely expensive and only slightly better than mineral oil? 08:26 < storge> yeah i'd just use mineral oil. or cod liver oil, for healthiness. 08:33 < Elladan> introom, how do you screen share, BTW? 08:41 < Lope> is there a way to (until next reboot) unbind all of gnome's global hotkeys with a command? 08:41 < syb0rg> Elladan, I would like to know a good answer to this also. VNC kinda works, but not nearly as well as sitting in front of the physical machine (though maybe with better configuration it would) 08:45 < luke-jr> syb0rg: what shortcomings do you find with VNC? 08:45 < Kharma> I use TigerVNC 08:46 < syb0rg> a bit of lag, and no audio (which I am sure could be fixed if I bothered). Which is fine for like troubleshooting and what not, but not for keeping your pc in another room and remoting in to play games on 08:46 < Elladan> TigerVNC worked OK for me, but not nearly as well as Steam's remote play thing. 08:46 < syb0rg> yeah, that I can see working well 08:47 < Elladan> (Because of lameness, steam actually seems to capture the whole screen, so you can get it to accidentally screen share sometimes) 08:48 < Elladan> Mainly, I think it works better because of hardware video encoding. It's also much lower latency though. 08:48 < syb0rg> yeah, that is one of the main things I would expect it to focus on. Less so for traditional screen sharing 08:49 < syb0rg> low latency, that is 08:50 < Dagmar> Well, yeah. That's why we've got a ludicrous number of cores in GPUs now 08:50 < Elladan> Any sort of general purpose screen sharing, you really want low latency. 08:51 < syb0rg> Yeah but when I think screen sharing I think IT support/monitoring - in either case a little lag is not really a big deal 08:51 < Elladan> It's just difficult to accomplish without using UDP on a LAN. 08:51 < Dagmar> Steam works pretty well for that 08:51 < syb0rg> gaming though? 08:51 < syb0rg> pretty big deal 08:51 < Elladan> Yeah fair enough, if you just want a software KVM then it really doesn't matter. You just want reliability 08:51 < Dagmar> I dunno. I play Wayward pretty often over the LAN on my laptop 08:51 < Kharma> Steam Remote Play? Let me guess..not fre? 08:51 < Kharma> free* 08:52 < Dagmar> Just a normal part of Steam 08:52 < Kharma> I couldn't understand Wayward! I got a refund on it 08:52 < Elladan> It's free as in money, but not libre. 08:52 < luke-jr> might want to try Xpra 08:52 < syb0rg> I want free money! 08:52 < jeffree> is there a convenient way of searching all commands? say I want to search for any command that has 'top' in it? 08:52 < Dagmar> Kharma: Until you get a bit focused on Not Being Eaten, yeah, you spend a lot of time starting over 08:52 < Kharma> So wait.. wow.. I wondr if Icould play Steam from ChromeOS 08:53 < Kharma> apt search -term- 08:53 < Elladan> I tried Xpra briefly. I didn't like how it pulled in like every library and package in the entire world in some sort of bizarre attempt to do everything 08:53 < luke-jr> it's pretty badly designed IMO 08:53 < Elladan> It did work OK, when it didn't flake out. 08:53 < luke-jr> but works decent 08:53 < jeffree> I mean to search commands already in my path 08:53 < luke-jr> I use Xpra for all my browsers 08:54 < luke-jr> (cuz I don't trust them to run on my real PC) 08:54 < syb0rg> jeffree, you can ls the directories in your path and pipe the output to grep 08:54 < Elladan> Kharma, there's a remote play android app now, so possibly. 08:54 < jeffree> syb0rg: yeah, I was hoping some tool might exist for this or something that makes it quick and easy 08:55 < Kharma> :O Sweet. I already love Termux too 08:55 < syb0rg> I don't personally know of a single command for that but there may be one, this is definitely a good place to ask =P 08:55 < Kharma> Going to Android root my Chromebook and try Linux Deploy too 08:55 < Dagmar> um... do a find for executables matching the pattern *top* ? 08:55 < Elladan> Steam remote play works a lot better with NVidia cards on the server side BTW. 08:55 < Kharma> I duel boot linux, but I'd love to go back to just ChromeOS 08:56 < syb0rg> Kharma, you heathen =P 08:57 < luke-jr> jeffree: perl -e 'for my $d (split /:/, $ENV{PATH}){ print "$_\n" for glob("$d/*put your search here*") }' 08:58 < luke-jr> top matches desktop and "* to p*" type tools though 08:59 < jeffree> luke-jr: thanks 09:00 < Kharma> I'm a Google fan-girl xD.. And ChromeOS is so asthetically pleasing 09:00 < luke-jr> can be shortened to: perl -le 'for(split /:/,$ENV{PATH}){print for glob "$_/*top*"}' 09:00 < Kharma> to me 09:00 < syb0rg> yeah it probably is, but I am the opposite of a google fangirl (opposite of both parts of that word) 09:00 < Elladan> I enjoy the lack of tech-support calls I get from my family when I give them ChromeOS laptops. 09:01 < syb0rg> google is just a data hoover, albeit a very useful one 09:01 < Kharma> Months ago though there wasn't even as many options to do "normal" things on Chromebooks.. now, there is really nothing they can't do 09:01 < Kharma> if you know how 09:01 < luke-jr> can they enable me to eat pizza again? :x 09:01 < syb0rg> yeah, I am sure it works well, google is usually good at making products. I just feel like I'm signing my soul over to them when I use their stuff :-O 09:01 < syb0rg> at least a fraction of it 09:02 * luke-jr makes an effort to avoid using Google stuff nowadays 09:02 < syb0rg> which does not prevent from owning an android phone, a gmail account and lots of stuff on google docs 09:02 * syb0rg shrugs 09:02 < Kharma> Better Google than any competition though, like Facebook or something.. I'd rather have Google have my data than anyone, realsly 09:02 < Kharma> rally* 09:02 < Kharma> really** 09:02 < jeffree> looks like libfile-searchpath-perl might be what I was looking for 09:02 < syb0rg> I'd rather me has my data 09:03 < Kharma> Well, yes 09:03 < rud0lf> google slowly learns you from network activity, and at critical point they replace you with a cyborg 09:03 < Stupendoussteve> I trust Apple over Google, when it comes to cloud services... except they are limited in what you can use to access them 09:03 < luke-jr> I host my own email, IM, and GPS tracking at least 09:03 < syb0rg> shit don't give my secret away rud0lf 09:03 < rud0lf> sorry 09:03 < rud0lf> :( 09:03 < Kharma> I try to self host where I can. I stoppd paying for webhosting.. Google provides free hosting for me now. 09:03 < rud0lf> all please do /clear now 09:03 < Bebef> Stupendoussteve: why? 09:03 < Kharma> If I could build a webserver, I would 09:03 < rud0lf> for syb0rg's sake 09:04 < syb0rg> a vps is pretty darn cheap these days 09:04 < Kharma> I love Google Cloud Services.. Apple? Umm.. that's.. are you joking? lol 09:04 < Stupendoussteve> Bebef: Their privacy stance tends to be better, since they are not a data mining company and make most of their money off hardware and software sales 09:04 < syb0rg> and I have enough local storage to store and back up my own data 09:04 < Kharma> Apple is so close-minded IMO 09:04 * luke-jr remembers the water he left on the stove to boil <.< 09:04 < syb0rg> I rather like apple's stance toward user data 09:04 < rud0lf> luke-jr: now you burned water 09:04 < Stupendoussteve> They are, unfortunately - they just happen to be nicer with data 09:05 < Kharma> Well, how do you really know what they are doing with it though? 09:05 < luke-jr> syb0rg: "we can spy on you, but not the government"? 09:05 < Kharma> CIA = Facebook, totally. 09:05 < luke-jr> frankly, I'd rather the government spy on me than Apple 09:05 < storge> it's all going to end up at the same place 09:05 < syb0rg> luke-jr, are they data mining to anything near the extent of other major tech companies though? 09:06 < luke-jr> (although I got rid of my Intel/AMD CPUs to avoid even that) 09:06 < Stupendoussteve> True enough, but that applies to every company. I usually trust a policy that says they respect privacy over one that says they don't, and many of their products do processing offline (image recognition for example) 09:06 < luke-jr> syb0rg: who knows 09:06 < Kharma> At least Googl is straight up with the data they have, use, what they use it for.. and are watched like a hawk.. I feel safer with them being as big as they are 09:06 < syb0rg> yeah, but at least they aren't normalizing it if they are hiding it. Sad, small victory though that may be 09:06 < syb0rg> and it leaves the possibility that they aren't open 09:07 < storge> ever heard of google ideas? helping overthrow foreign governments and such? you feel safer with that? 09:07 < Kharma> Way back when.. I was an iPhone freak.. dispised Android.. until I used one.. never looked back 09:07 < luke-jr> syb0rg: you have zero control over Apple stuff 09:07 < Elladan> I'm indifferent to Apple vs. Google, they're both better than average about treating your data with a modicum of respect, but nobody is really trustworthy except yourself. 09:07 < syb0rg> honestly, they are pretty well aligned with the "intelligence community" so far as I can tell, so they get the opposite of trust from me 09:07 < syb0rg> Google, that is 09:07 * luke-jr hopes we eventually move to a self-hosted world 09:07 < Der_Fuhrer> Alle Juden gehen zur Hölle 09:07 < syb0rg> I think that is the ideal outlook, Elladan 09:07 < storge> syb0rg: opposite of trust for me as well 09:07 < ConsoleFx> My current kernel version is 4.13.0-26-generic. One of the sys admin ran an library upgrades routine but since /boot space is totally full, the upgrade got terminated in between. Now I see there are some vmlinuz-packages with higher version numbers. If I delete those files from /boot, can it be considered safe? 09:07 < mavorsa> computing with google is like taking a shower in a prison where everyone can see your junk 09:08 < jeffree> luke-jr: if you don't mind saying, what cpus do you use? 09:08 < syb0rg> heh 09:08 < Der_Fuhrer> Ich bin der Führer. Willkommen im Dritten Reich 09:08 < luke-jr> ConsoleFx: I wouldn't 09:08 < luke-jr> jeffree: IBM POWER9 09:08 < Stupendoussteve> I'm not sure what "being as big as they are" means. Google/Alphabet is smaller than Apple 09:08 < Elladan> Facebook OTOH is pure evil. 09:08 < Der_Fuhrer> Ich spreche nicht gut ingles 09:08 < ConsoleFx> I could see there are vmlinux files i.e. 4.13.0-45 etc etc 09:08 < Der_Fuhrer> Elladan: Fick 09:08 < ConsoleFx> luke-jr, aah :( 09:08 < ConsoleFx> I think i am screwed then :( 09:08 < luke-jr> ConsoleFx: find your OS's cleanup tool 09:08 < Der_Fuhrer> ConsoleFx: fick 09:08 < syb0rg> Are they truly smaller, Stupendoussteve? Or just less rich? 09:08 < Stupendoussteve> Smaller in employees too 09:09 < Stupendoussteve> At least a few years ago 09:09 < syb0rg> interesting, I would not have guessed that 09:09 < ConsoleFx> fick is a package or something? 09:09 < ConsoleFx> Der_Fuhrer, ? 09:10 < Stupendoussteve> ConsoleFx: No, he's trolling 09:10 < ConsoleFx> oops okay 09:10 < sauvin> And badly. 09:10 < syb0rg> ConsoleFx, you could always just move the files rather than delete them, and put them back if something bad happens 09:11 < sauvin> Hey... Der_Fuhrer... ich habe gehoert, dass du ein zehr kleine Schwanz hast! Ist es wahr? 09:11 < Der_Fuhrer> sauvin: Sie sind ein Idiot 09:11 < syb0rg> Hey I know one of those words 09:11 < syb0rg> two actually 09:11 < lnnb> was it schwanz? 09:11 < bartmon> i think it was 09:11 < syb0rg> nah it was ein and idiot 09:11 < Kharma> Elladan: Facebook is ick.. I wish Google+ took off instad 09:11 < syb0rg> what are you, ein idiot? =P 09:11 < Der_Fuhrer> Nein, ficker 09:11 < ConsoleFx> syb0rg, hmm okay 09:11 < Kharma> instad* 09:12 < ConsoleFx> let me moving those files vmlinux files (not yet active kernel versions) 09:12 < Kharma> my e ky is poo 09:12 < ConsoleFx> lets see if that solves the issue 09:12 < Stupendoussteve> Kharma: Bad conductor 09:12 < syb0rg> hopefully it does consolefx 09:12 < Elladan> Kharma, I don't really see the point to any of these social things. Except the chinese social-control one, I guess. When directed purely towards evil, they seem notable. 09:13 < Kharma> I like Twitter, and blogging. 09:13 < taaperotassu> Anyone using megatools to backup their servers? I think its good to automate pushing but putting passwords in plaintext feels dangerous. 09:13 < Stupendoussteve> I don't get twitter, just seems like constant narcissism and bandwagons 09:13 < Der_Fuhrer> Nigger sind Schwule 09:13 < Kharma> I use to Facebook all the time.. now, I just use messenger.. even then, normally just us Bitlbee to use messenger on irssi 09:13 < syb0rg> I mean even IRC could be considered social media, I don't think social media is a bad thing, just its abuse 09:13 < wodencafe> no sir 09:14 < sauvin> Der_Fuhrer, you've had your Spass, time to move on now. 09:14 < Der_Fuhrer> sauvin: Alle Grüße deine Mutter! Ihre Muschi ist herrlich! 09:14 < Stupendoussteve> Ooo unicode 09:14 < syb0rg> who can argue with authentic European gibberish like that? 09:15 < Der_Fuhrer> syb0rg: Fuck your mother 09:15 < syb0rg> no thanks 09:15 < Der_Fuhrer> I am the spirit of adolf hitler 09:15 < syb0rg> the irony is that would get you thrown in jail in germany 09:15 < storge> and like hitler, you're gone 09:15 < Stupendoussteve> I read that as spirit animal 09:16 < syb0rg> lol 09:16 < syb0rg> are there any blonde, blue eyed animals? 09:16 < rud0lf> Stupendoussteve: aWolf ? 09:16 < taaperotassu> [Login] 09:16 < taaperotassu> Username = Your_Mega_Username 09:16 < lnnb> wtf is this an INI file? 09:17 < taaperotassu> sorry I just accidentally pasted here 09:17 < taaperotassu> lol 09:17 < Stupendoussteve> It's ok, your password showed up as ****** 09:17 < taaperotassu> that was just an example file 09:17 < syb0rg> I actually did that with a password earlier but it was a low value one fortunately 09:17 < Stupendoussteve> I thought the username looked a bit unoriginal 09:17 < Kharma> Google basically gives you a free VM as part of their always free tier.. unlike Amazon.. btw, if anyone uses a Chromebook or needs a small server to experimnt with.. plus like 300 credit for a year. Although Amazon is more "production ready".. I hav't tried other cloud providers besides those 2 09:18 < syb0rg> right, I heard about that 09:18 < lnnb> google has free vm's? 09:18 < Kharma> Yep 09:18 < syb0rg> I am actually paying a whole euro a month for a vps right now 09:18 < Stupendoussteve> Part of the compute engine 09:18 < syb0rg> what are the specs of it like? 09:18 < lnnb> and they don't make you put in some credit card mumbo jumbo? 09:18 < Stupendoussteve> Amazon used to have a free tier, but I haven't touched AWS since it was first released 09:19 < syb0rg> amazon still offers a free trial deal I think 09:19 < Kharma> small, micro.. but the 300 credit makes up for it for a yar at least 09:19 < Kharma> year 09:19 < Kharma> stupid e 09:19 < syb0rg> yarrr 09:19 < Kharma> Ya, but I went over budget with them twice, I havent paid google a cent for moneth 09:20 < jeffree> luke-jr: why that chip? 09:20 < Kharma> months* 09:20 < lnnb> gah 09:21 < Kharma> and after a year with amazon, you're screwed.. Google includes a month of running micro instance, each month, even after the trial 09:22 < Kharma> Amazon offers an always free for Storagee I think 09:22 < Kharma> same with google too though 09:22 < syb0rg> I think amazon's free offer is intended only to help students and devs learn their ecosystem 09:23 < Kharma> MAkes sense 09:24 < shrdlu68> jeffree: find `awk '{gsub(":"," "); print $0}' <<< $PATH` -type f -name "*top*" 09:24 < Kharma> lnnb: no credit needed. They pay you 09:24 < syb0rg> haha, I think someone beat you to that a loooong time ago shrdlu68 09:25 < Kharma> and.. each google account qualifies.. 09:25 < Kharma> ehem.. 09:25 < Kharma> shhh 09:25 < jeffree> shrdlu68: thanks 09:25 < lnnb> If you are eligible, your free trial will start when you sign up for Google Cloud Platform. To sign up, sign in or create a Google Account. You will also need a credit card or bank account details so we can verify your identity. You will not be charged or billed during your free trial. 09:25 < syb0rg> that is a good point actually, you could potentially get a decent amount of resources with a handful of accounts 09:25 < lnnb> Kharma: ^^^ 09:25 < syb0rg> ah but lnnb with the buzzkill 09:26 < Kharma> also, their ToS is "Do what you want, don't harm others" so adult content is allowed, and has been confirmed.. just fyi 09:26 < syb0rg> cool I can archive all the best stuff on xnxx now 09:26 < Kharma> I didn't need to on my account that's not connected to any payment methods with Google Play or anything though :/ 09:27 < Kharma> but maybe because that account was long standing already I duno 09:27 < Kharma> My main account is conected via CC to Google play 09:27 < Kharma> but it's not even a valiud cc anymore 09:28 < syb0rg> but if it was when you registered it they have validation of your identity 09:28 < lnnb> lol "always free", unless you exceed usage limits 09:28 < lnnb> Any usage above Always Free usage limits will be automatically billed at standard rates. To help control costs, consider setting up budgets and alerts through the Google Cloud Platform Console. 09:28 < syb0rg> or until they say nevermind 09:29 < Stupendoussteve> They're usually pretty good with grandfathering users when they end a deal like that 09:29 < Kharma> Well, I have never yet, I can't even spend my credit.. Amazon was scary though, even with budget alerts, I owed 20 dollars twice o_o 09:29 < Stupendoussteve> I've still got an Apps for Business account from when there was a free tier 09:29 < syb0rg> true, I used to have a free google apps account with them 09:29 < syb0rg> oh hey beat me to it 09:29 < Kharma> Gsuite went into a free lgacy mode 09:29 < Kharma> for old account 09:30 < Kharma> legacy* 09:31 < Kharma> syb0rg: I believe with the always free, there is a 6 month depreciation warning built into the SLA 09:31 < syb0rg> that is good 09:32 < Kharma> I may be mistaken on that but.. They won't just pull the plug within a month .. most services in stable offering, even some betas have a good SLA contract 09:33 < Kharma> Alpha stuff you're on your own.. oh, and also their cloud shell, via the console, gives a 5gb persistant local dockerfile type VM.. makes a good docker sandbox 09:34 < shrdlu68> Actually find `awk '{gsub(":"," "); print $0}' <<< $PATH` -type f -regextype awk -regex ".*top[^/]*" is much better 09:34 < domhnall> So, found out why google was timing out. Turns out, I had [~5] browser sessions open on remote host. Go figure. All it well now. 09:34 < syb0rg> why's that shrdlu68? 09:35 < shrdlu68> syb0rg: With -name *top* it will match "top" anywhere in the path. 09:35 < Kharma> there is a "secret group" for cloud shell which allows for whitelisting of your account so you can customize your dockerfile environment so it persists sytem wide settings between sessions;. otherwise just home dir persists 09:35 < syb0rg> ah, fair point then shrdlu68 09:36 < syb0rg> huh, that is a nice little feature Kharma 09:37 < Kharma> one of my VM console logs read "starting session 109 with Kharma.." as I ssh'd to it the other day.. I wonder if I have like 100 open ssh sessions going on o_o 09:38 < Kharma> That's possible to happen too I think I had read, wish ssh in general .. hmm 09:38 < syb0rg> Kharma: pgrep ssh | wc -w 09:38 < Techknight_> Hi guys. I don't know if this is the right channel to ask this question but here it comes. 09:38 < Kharma> I usually always "exit" but.. guess we can't always say always 09:38 < syb0rg> that will tell you active ssh sessions 09:39 < Kharma> ty 09:39 < Techknight_> I've a makefile which I use to compile a pandoc document https://pastebin.com/nXA8YgWv but it is one long line which is hard to read and edit...... Is there anyway to break the line? 09:39 < syb0rg> well, plus any other processes containing "ssh" in their name 09:39 < syb0rg> but hey 09:40 < syb0rg> an approximate count 09:40 < Kharma> lol 09:40 < syb0rg> ok add --exact to pgrep and it will behave 09:41 < syb0rg> but you might need sshd, not ssh 09:41 < syb0rg> forget it, I give up! no more linux for me 09:41 < wr> can i filter on debian syslog a specific day, if syslog has 7 files part? 09:42 < Kharma> I can't get mosh to work no matter which ports I open and try.. argg.. I want to try it, seems cool 09:43 < Kharma> kind of like my aventures with mpd >_> 10:06 < mavorsa> is anyone here any good with troubleshooting things like icon themes? there is a theme (actually two of them now) that ive downloaded who's folder icons are not working and i can't seem to figure out why. the folder.png is in its directory and its theme file points to the /places location where it is. i have also updated the icon cache. 10:13 < repys> I am getting from smartmontools this : Read SMART Error Log failed: scsi error aborted command 10:13 < repys> what does that mean? 10:13 < repys> I can't find any help on googl 10:22 < ExtremeFMan> No command 'tupime' found! 10:23 < luke-jr> jeffree: not backdoored, open source firmware, etc 10:24 < ExtremeFMan> sounds like a broken hardware perhaps 10:26 < iodev> luke-jr: Open source firmware ... and moons made of cheese 10:27 < iodev> a fantasy ... just be glad we have proprietary firmware or else atheros/broadcom wifi would NOT work 10:31 < rud0lf> is there a way i can run script every time pulseaudio sink is changed? for example after pluggin headset 10:32 < rud0lf> i use device.description="" but it's reset every time i re-plug :/ 10:35 < repys> any idea? 10:37 < dreadkopp> hey guys. i've got a labelprinter here. page size is set up correctly in cups. when i print a file via 'lp ' it is printed correctly. when i print from firefox though the page settings seem to be overridden though. ffs about:config print.use_global_printsettings is set to true though... any way to force the printer to always print in defa 10:37 < dreadkopp> ult layout ? 10:37 < luke-jr> iodev: … 10:40 < ExtremeFMan> hard to say what just "scsi error" really means, but it could be a broken drive or an I/O problem etc. 10:48 < bartmon> rud0lf, i'm not sure but AFAIK pulseaudio is integrated with dbus, maybe something useful there? https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/PulseAudio/Documentation/Developer/Clients/DBus/Core/ 10:57 < anon9002> My SBC's root HDD has a tendency to disconnect randomly. How can I make the system automatically reboot when this happens? 11:04 < MrElendig> udev rule, systemd unit, polling script 11:04 < dgurney> an even better idea would be to fix the issue properly 11:05 < revel> I don't know, that sounds like a lot of work. 11:05 < MrElendig> indeed 11:09 < BCMM> i bet it's a power issue 11:09 < MrElendig> not unlikely 11:09 < MrElendig> depending on the sbc 11:10 < BCMM> e.g. 2.5" USB HDD and SBC running off a large phone charger, as the voltage drops the hard drive malfunctions before the sbc 11:10 < anon9002> It's hard to fix the issue properly since the SBC is 10000 miles away from me. 11:10 < Dagmar> Seriously. Fix the actual problem 11:11 < Dagmar> *That* kind of failure will actually screw up the drive 11:12 < MrElendig> 10k miles sounds unlikely 11:13 < BCMM> 10k miles is possible if you measure over the surface of the earth instead of in a straight line 11:17 < ExtremeFMan> what, you don't have a gravity lift going through the planet yet? 11:17 < day> earthlings 11:18 < tomty89> can someone test this command out for me: 11:18 < tomty89> su -c 'id -g; id -g -r' 11:18 < tomty89> if you have zsh it would be great if you can run it with -s /bin/zsh as well 11:18 < BCMM> ExtremeFMan: "gravity lift"? you seem to be implying that we'd use a hole through the middle of the planet for transport, as opposed to for fixing network latency 11:19 < ExtremeFMan> well, doesn't that sound more reasonable? 11:19 < BCMM> i suggest that nobody ever runs commands that start with "su -c" on the request of some guy on IRC, *even if* the command seems perfectly straightforwards 11:20 < ExtremeFMan> lol 11:20 < MrElendig> http://arch.har-ikkje.net/gfx/legit.jpg 11:40 < cmj> like sudo whoami? 11:40 < cmj> weird 11:41 < Armand> How is that "weird" ? 11:52 < rud0lf> i have bash variable $test in form of: abc.def = "Always the same text Variable text" .. how can i parse "Variable text"? 11:54 < KekSi> what?! 11:54 < KekSi> yourvariable='abc.def = "some text"' < that is your variable declaration? 11:55 < KekSi> and you're trying to extract the stuff between the (double-) quotes? 11:56 < BCMM> rud0lf: you could use sed to get rid of the constant text 11:56 < Night_Elf> echo ${abc.def}|awk -F 'Always the same text' '{print $2}' 11:56 < BCMM> in fact i think in bash there's some sort of rarely-used built-in feature to do taht 11:56 < rud0lf> $test="abc.def = \"Always the same text Variable text\"" 11:57 < rud0lf> i'm trying ${test##abc.def \= ....} but it doesn't work 11:57 < Night_Elf> echo ${test}|awk -F 'Always the same text' '{print $2}' 11:58 < rud0lf> thanks 11:58 < Night_Elf> And then you might want to get rid of the last " 11:58 < rud0lf> no need to 11:58 < BCMM> rud0lf: hang on, just to check i've understood your intended syntax correctly: there is an actual = sign *as part of your variable contents*, right? 11:58 < Night_Elf> So it worked for you the above ? 11:58 < BCMM> and also " marks? 11:58 < rud0lf> BCMM: yes 11:58 < Night_Elf> BCMM: it seems like that, yes 11:59 < rud0lf> Night_Elf: worked like a charm, thank you again 12:00 < Night_Elf> Oh ok. Cheers then :) 12:00 < rud0lf> Night_Elf: right, i need last quotation mark removed :P 12:00 < Night_Elf> lol 12:01 < BCMM> rud0lf: this can also be done in pure bash ${test/abc.def = \"Always the same text/} is a near-solution (leave a final " in though) 12:14 < yakiza> Anyone has experience with Juniper STRM 12:15 < dAnjou> hi, I'm trying to use a tool that reads some config exclusively from a file path passed via argument. Problem is that I want to generate this config from a template dynamically. Is there a way to create a "fake" file with a real path that only exists for as long as the tool is executing? 12:16 < dgs> why not create a real file that only exists as long as the tool is executing? 12:17 < jim> yakiza, you should just ask your question... the more informative details you throw in, the more people can figure out whether they can help; 12:19 < Tazmain> Hi all, what are the chances I can recover my data from a ntfs drive that I accidently executed dd on for about 10 seconds ? 12:19 < dAnjou> dgs: or that. Is there a solution that I don't have to script myself? 12:20 < dgs> not that i know of... but that doesn't mean much 12:21 < dgs> i'd just create a file in tmp with a random name - config files are tiny normally so i'd prob not even bother deleting them afterwards and just rm via cron or something 12:21 < jim> Tazmain, sorry that heppened... and I don't know of a way 12:22 < Tazmain> jim, well seems I can get some raw files 12:24 < ananke> Tazmain: photorec/testdisk 12:24 < jim> Tazmain, doesn't do much good now... but for the future, you might prefer file copying rather than imaging 12:24 < Tazmain> ananke, that doesn't keep folder structure. but will try 12:24 < MrElendig> Tazmain: EasyRecovery or similar 12:24 < Tazmain> jim, I was creating a bootable usb 12:24 < Tazmain> o/ MrElendig 12:24 < jim> 'oh ok 12:24 < Tazmain> dd did a good job of making sure some of the data is really lost 12:25 < kubast2> Yo I had to check mainline kernel I uninstalled it and now I can't boot to gdm 12:25 < MrElendig> it's not lost, just the ntfs headers that are gone 12:25 < Tazmain> MrElendig, usually when that is the case I still see all the data, or of the $MFT is corrupt, but in this case, I am only seeing like 10% 12:26 < x45> sup 12:26 < ananke> Tazmain: indeed, it doesn't. the reason being is because you wiped the MFT. 12:27 < Tazmain> MrElendig, unless I am missing something about how that file system works 12:27 < MrElendig> 10 sec is not time enough to wipe the entire disk 12:27 < MrElendig> so just the header data is gone 12:27 < ananke> Tazmain: you can try using testdisk's 'repair mft' option 12:27 < Tazmain> for 500GB on a 5600rpm drive it shouldn't be 12:28 < kubast2> How can I force a dkms recompile or something from recovery shell? 12:28 < Tazmain> MrElendig, if the header data is gone, that means I can reconstruct it and get all the data back right ? 12:29 < ananke> said 'header' data is MFT. and that's what holds your directory structure. 12:30 < Tazmain> if that is completely gone ? 12:30 < ananke> it's as if you were ignoring my earlier comments 12:30 < MrElendig> there are tools that will go trough looking for the data themself 12:31 < Tazmain> ananke, I was reading test disks mft repair in the wiki, and it said it will use the MFT backup 12:32 < Tazmain> MrElendig, but it will lose the file names right? that is what I have mostly seen happens 12:34 < Tazmain> ananke, I will try out testdisk and see if it can fix it. 12:34 < Pentode> Tazmain, what it's going to do is attempt and guess and produce a table that will at the most have the correct boundaries for some of the files on the disk 12:35 < Pentode> what did you over-write, and with what? 12:36 < BluesKaj> 'Morning folks 12:36 < mavorsa> morning fred, morning bob 12:36 < MrElendig> the commercial tools are much better than testdisk 12:36 < shrdlu68> Wouldn't fsck help if one first tried to reconstruct the partition table? 12:36 < Tazmain> Pentode, so on the disk I had a fedora .iso that I wanted to use to create a bootable flash, so the HDD was /dev/sdi, and I accidently went and executed dd if=./fedora.iso of=/dev/sdi && sync 12:37 < Pentode> ugh 12:37 < Pentode> how long did it go on for? 12:37 < Tazmain> MrElendig, the commericial ones I know of , are meh , like O&O and , stellar pheonix, and 12:37 < shrdlu68> I did that once too. 12:37 < Tazmain> Pentode, roughly 10 seconds 12:37 < MrElendig> Tazmain: easyrecovery 12:37 < Night_Elf> something I wonder... I have the ip address of 'lo' interface be 127.0.0.1 which is standard. When I ping 127.0.1.1 it responds. And so do 127.0.1.5 or 127.0.13.54 or anything. Why is that? Is that normal ? 12:38 < shrdlu68> I was used to my laptop's HDD being assigned sda, then it got assigned sdb. A rite of passage. 12:38 < MrElendig> Night_Elf: yes 12:38 < MrElendig> Night_Elf: 127.anything will route to yourself 12:38 < Tazmain> MrElendig, ontrack ? 12:38 < MrElendig> Tazmain: yes 12:39 < Tazmain> okay let me see 12:39 < MrElendig> costs a small fortune ofcourse 12:39 < Night_Elf> MrElendig: I see. 12:39 < Tazmain> no kidding 12:39 < Tazmain> like $170 12:39 < MrElendig> could test it on a small subset of your data though 12:39 < MrElendig> for free 12:39 < Tazmain> yeah see if it works first 12:40 < MrElendig> wouldn't be suprised if a pip install pip have been involved 12:41 < ananke> Night_Elf: it's an entire /8 network. look at the subnet mask 12:41 < Pentode> Tazmain, well testdisk is always worth a try. i've been successful recovering simple things like partition tables but when it comes to over-writing the whole beginning of the disk you may just get a big mess that you'll have to wade through to get anything useful out of. 12:42 < MrElendig> bha wrong channel 12:42 < Pentode> there is software thats good at this but good luck getting ahold of it :| 12:42 < Tazmain> MrElendig, lol well done 12:43 < Tazmain> Pentode, if formatted a disk before and recovered everything, even after 3 formats, but this dd, i've seem to have met my match 12:43 < Pentode> yeah the problem is the format didn't over-write anything 12:44 < Tazmain> it cleared the partition table 12:44 < ananke> 'format' and 'partition table' are not the same thing 12:45 < Tazmain> ananke, wait, a 'full format' recreates the parition table right,and a quick format, just marks everything as free space ? 12:48 < ananke> Tazmain: not sure what 'full format' you're talking about. formatting is the act of laying out structures of a given filesystem. partitioning is adjusting the content of partition table. they are NOT the same nor interchangable. however, some operating systems/tools may perform both operations for you at the same time, such as diskutil on osx 12:49 < ananke> as to your original problem, your only hope to recover directory structure is via repairing MFT. if that fails, you're SOL and the only thing you'll get is data without metadata 12:56 < Tazmain> ananke, using diskpart in windows, or gnome-disks with the over write with 0's option -> AFAIK that is a full format? 12:57 < Pentode> basically 12:57 < Tazmain> ananke, the only was sectors on the disk can be created is at manufacturing right? 12:58 < Tazmain> like if you subject the disk to a magnet 12:58 < Pentode> yes, true low-level formats aren't done by the end user anymore. 12:58 < Tazmain> no way to still do it ? 12:59 < Pentode> i dont think the newer controllers will even let you 12:59 < Tazmain> can't you do it with parted magic live boot ? 12:59 < Night_Elf> I remember this program of long ago. Spinrite 12:59 < Pentode> but i don't know enough about them to say that for sure 12:59 < Tazmain> Night_Elf, I have it :p 12:59 < Pentode> Night_Elf, yeah i remember spinrite. 12:59 < Tazmain> I still use it 12:59 < Night_Elf> It was a jewel Tazmain, Pentode 12:59 < Night_Elf> It works on modern disks too ? 13:00 < Tazmain> yeah. 13:00 < Tazmain> just not SSD 13:00 < Pentode> yeah but modern spinrite is _not_ the same as the old tool 13:00 < Night_Elf> Oh... I need to check my floppy disks. I know I have it still, just too long covered with dust. 13:01 < Pentode> it recovers missing / damaged sector data 13:01 < Tazmain> modern one? They still updating it ? 13:01 < Pentode> it's not actually formatting the disk in any way 13:01 < Night_Elf> I see 13:01 < Pentode> Tazmain, spinrite used to be able to do full low level formats 13:03 < Pentode> Tazmain, i think the last release was like 20 years ago or so 13:03 < Pentode> maybe a little less not sure 13:03 < Night_Elf> That's the time I remember it. Around '98 - 2000 13:04 < Tazmain> Pentode, formats? I don't remember that. It can do a surface refresh ?? 13:04 < Night_Elf> It did all under the sun that was possible to do without you using a screwdriver on a disk. 13:05 < Night_Elf> I remember settings to change sector sizes and all. 13:06 < Pentode> it "reads" weak bits and re-writes them. 13:06 < Tazmain> Night_Elf, are you sure you are not thinking of parted magic ? 13:06 < Pentode> Tazmain, spinrite has a richer and weirder and more fragmented history than most people know. 13:06 < Tazmain> because that live boot can do that, and do a secure erase, for SSD as well 13:07 < Pentode> it was originally just for interleaving 13:07 < Tazmain> well parted magic can still do that 13:07 < Pentode> now it's just for "resurfacing" i guess you would call it? 13:08 < Night_Elf> I was introduced to spinwrite around 1994 or 1995. No, there was no parted magic back then. And that small program that could fit on a few kilobytes in a floppy disk, is hard to forget or mistake with something else. 13:08 < Tazmain> ah okay 13:08 < Tazmain> I don't know the version from that year 13:09 < Tazmain> I think mine is like 2007 ? 13:09 < Tazmain> version 6, 2004 13:09 < Pentode> wikipedia says 2004 was the last release i guess 13:09 < Night_Elf> That thing was seriously jaw dropping. 13:09 < Pentode> it was a godsend with old MFM encoded ESDI disks 13:09 * Pentode twitches 13:09 < Tazmain> people in #hardware told me it was BS eitherway 13:10 < Night_Elf> Well software is software and hardware is hardware. Software will always do what the hardware allows, so there's that. 13:11 < Pentode> yeah well something that was useful decades ago was re-invented for more modern hardware and became less popular / useful. 13:11 < Pentode> so you'd probably be hard pressed to find someone younger than 30 that thinks spinrite is worth anything. ;) 13:12 < Tazmain> Pentode, I am younger than 30, and I think spinrite is gold. Used it a bunch of times, to repair a drive 13:12 < Tazmain> it just can't do usb drives :( 13:13 < Pentode> yeah well it relies on residual magnetic stuffs still being there to fix it 13:13 < Pentode> non of that with solid state drives. :( 13:23 < Tazmain> yeah 13:23 < Tazmain> or usb externals 13:27 < rocketmagnet> hi everyone, i have a strange isssue, i just shutdown -h now and now my grub isn't shown up anymore or grib at all, all i get is error: unkown filesystem\nEntering rescue mode...\grub rescue: 13:27 < rocketmagnet> what am i supposted to do ? 13:27 < SuperSeriousCat> What did you do before you shut down? 13:27 < rocketmagnet> nothign special 13:28 < peetaur2> rocketmagnet: find out what you did... or just repair it like https://pastebin.com/raw/GfeysRFu 13:28 < rocketmagnet> what can cuase this kind of error ? and how to correct it ? maybe just run cairo linux and make a complete hdN test to check for errors 13:29 < MRd1> ... 13:29 < rocketmagnet> peetaur2: i'm no able to get into a console 13:29 < peetaur2> example of what you could do to cause it... you could install with lvm and mdadm on ubuntu 12.04 and put it on a GPT partition table without a bios_grub...the installer would happily create this completely wrong setup, and it would seem to wokr...then some day later when you apt-get upgrade, it updates grub which runs grub-install, which errors out, and if you reboot, it is dead. 13:29 < peetaur2> I don't know if newer releases do the same, but wouldn't doubt it. :) 13:31 < peetaur2> rocketmagnet: you use rescue media to get a console 13:31 < rocketmagnet> how 13:32 < rocketmagnet> i understand, does the debian install usb disk would be enouth ? 13:32 < peetaur2> the ideal media is the installer you used for that distro release 13:33 < peetaur2> assuming it is sane ... like you can enter a special rescue mode, or you can hit ctrl+alt+f# to get a shell during the install (the debian one is bad at this...you have to get to the disk partitioning step of the install before the shell will have any useful CLI utilities...but luckily they are one with a special rescue mode) 13:33 < RebelCoder> Hello people. If anyone is using minicom, please advise. I am using minicom to do some manual steps to upgrade a firmware on my board. I want to find the way to automate it, maybe to run minicom -file path - settings -mods... etc... any help would be much appreciated. 13:34 < rocketmagnet> now i'm in rescue mode, what am i supposted to do know ? 13:35 < rocketmagnet> peetaur2: ^ 13:35 < peetaur2> get to shell 13:35 < rocketmagnet> ok 13:35 < rocketmagnet> done 13:35 < peetaur2> and then follow my link or some less expert alternative 13:35 < peetaur2> at least try it before you give up and try some easy thing like the grub repair live dvd thing 13:35 < peetaur2> those things just have magic buttons that fail withotu saying any details so you remain lost 13:35 < peetaur2> learning the raw stuff is valuable forever 13:38 < rocketmagnet> how to check all filesystem that are not mounted for errors ? 13:39 < peetaur2> use fsck on each one 13:39 < peetaur2> probably add -f otherwise it just skips because of timestamps and mount count not being high enough 13:40 < peetaur2> and you could do the everyone else recommended way of manually answering y to each question even though you have no idea what it is, to somehow have a better chance of not corrupting things ... 13:40 < peetaur2> or do it my way and have a backup and just use -y so you don't answer a billion yesses for no reason, and then check out /lost+found/ after to see a bunch of missing things, and also could look other ways like find some 0 byte files or compare to backup 13:41 < rocketmagnet> i work on another pc, i'can't copy paste the code you gave me 13:41 < peetaur2> ext3 is great sometimes...if you use -y, you end up with an empty fs...I think ext4 only does that if you disabled the journal 13:41 < peetaur2> *you can end up with an empty fs .... not always or even often 13:44 < rocketmagnet> but how can such an error appear suddenly just after a reboot ?? 13:44 < ice9> is it possible to set port in resolv.conf? 13:44 < rocketmagnet> and what's ther error about it 13:45 < peetaur2> depends on lots of things... most likely is something like there was data in flight, in volatile storage like RAM, and it was partially written...then you hard rebooted or crashed, and it wasn't ever completed. Journaling is supposed to fix that, but there are cases when it doesn't. 13:45 < peetaur2> and your bootloader should not have been affectd...see what I wrote about ubuntu and GPT for an example where an invalid configuration looks like it works until an update and then fails 13:46 < peetaur2> the bootloader would only be affected if you were using grub-install during a hard reboot 13:48 < rocketmagnet> when i try fsck.ext3 /dev/sda1 i get "superblock invalid" 13:49 < rocketmagnet> is there a tool that checks all my partitions for errors and corrects them if posile ? 13:50 < TimDix> Hello, I've got a server which I can SSH into, but is not responding to HTTP requests. However, if I SSH onto the server, I can curl the site and it runs properly, so the webserver seems to be fine. I started looking at the firewall, and that appears to be running correctly as well... suggestions on how I can troubleshoot this further to identify why I cannot connect? 14:01 < Night_Elf> TimDix: It could be helpful: tcptraceroute website.domain.com 80 14:01 < Night_Elf> Or any other port of not port 80 14:02 < Night_Elf> if* 14:05 < TimDix> Night_Elf: Thanks for the suggestion, that appears to be running correctly as well. 14:06 < TimDix> I've pasted a few things here... does anything jump out as potentially problematic? https://paste.linux.community/view/68cd7139 14:09 < TimDix> Fixed! (kinda) I turned off the firewall and now it's working. 14:09 < TimDix> So, I'll work on troubleshooting that further. 14:10 < enelar> Guys, i have simple question about systemd that i've failed to google for myself. Is there exist or how would i setup target that occur once user logged in graphical 14:10 < Night_Elf> That !Z suggests that's something to do with active blocking so probably it is a firewall issue. 14:11 < enelar> I want to reconnect bluetooth each time i've logged in, cause bluetooth.service fail to do so by himself 14:13 < yakiza> Hello fellas! i have JUNIPER STRM that for some reason it doesnt store or it drops the NAT logs not sure what exactly but when i try to search i just get nothing 14:13 < ananke> yakiza: contact juniper's technical support 14:13 < yakiza> ananke: is it you? my ananke ? 14:14 < ananke> last time I checked, I wasn't owned by anybody 14:14 < yakiza> hahahahha slackware ananke ? 14:16 < TyrfingMjolnir> What are the options to github? 14:17 < yakiza> what? TyrfingMjolnir ?> 14:17 < Night_Elf> Many say gitlab 14:17 < TyrfingMjolnir> Then again what will it give me other than sshd? The HTML layer? 14:17 < AE-35> TyrfingMjolnir: bitbucket 14:17 < TyrfingMjolnir> hg? 14:18 < TyrfingMjolnir> Or does bitbucket support git now? 14:18 < AE-35> hg 14:25 < Pentode> enelar, im not 100% sure but i think you just have to symlink the service in /etc/systemd/system/graphical.target.wants/ 14:26 < Pentode> at the very least thats the right direction, though. there may be one more step to actually make it work im not sure 14:26 < Pentode> i still need to familiarize myself with systemd a bit better but i don't like change. :/ 14:30 < triceratux> http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-backroom/3665176/posts 14:31 < gnulligan> hey guys, I need some help :) 14:31 < gnulligan> I'm setting up a triple boot machine 14:31 < gnulligan> zorin + windows 10 + clonezilla 14:33 < gnulligan> I set up windows to use half the disk space during install, made a 300mb partition for clonezilla in disk management (windows) and then rebooted with zorin and made just a root partition from the end of the disk. The remaining space is now the backup partition 14:33 < gnulligan> zorin = xenial (16.04 LTS + custom DE) 14:34 < SuperSeriousCat> Do you boot into clonezilla? 14:34 < SuperSeriousCat> Is it an OS? 14:34 < gnulligan> are you asking me what clonezilla is? lol 14:34 < SuperSeriousCat> Yes 14:35 < gnulligan> so I installed zorin/xenial with the bootloader written to the linux root partition 14:35 < gnulligan> instead of to the device 14:35 < gnulligan> because I'm trying to have all the boot options in NVRAM 14:35 < gnulligan> (since I'm using UEFI) 14:36 < gnulligan> meaning, I want the clonezilla grub, the zorin grub and windows BCD as UEFI entries 14:36 < gnulligan> clonezilla grub will be default, and will have entries for the other two as well as quick backup options 14:37 < gnulligan> the thing is, I installed clonezilla and zorin/"ubuntu" differently 14:37 < gnulligan> I downloaded clonezilla as a ZIP file, and extracted it to the clonezilla partition 14:37 < gnulligan> BUT I installed ubuntu using the live image 14:38 < gnulligan> now, there's only two entries in my NVRAM, clonezilla and windows 14:38 < Night_Elf> gnulligan: After you install all, did you run update-grub ? I am not sure but I think that searches and finds for partitions with an os installed and places those in the selection menu. 14:38 < gnulligan> yeah I 14:38 < gnulligan> I've heard of that, but I'm using a custom grub.cfg 14:39 < gnulligan> I'm not sure if update-grub will overwrite that or not 14:39 < Night_Elf> Well you can save that custom file, update-grub, and then see to incorporate the custom pieces into the generated file. 14:39 < gnulligan> hmmmmmm 14:39 < gnulligan> I see 14:40 < gnulligan> ok, since clonezilla grub works (and that's the grub I want to be default) I'll just boot into clonezilla, open a shell, and run update-grub 14:41 < rocketmagnet> when my mainboard tells me i've an sata_12, sata_34. and sata_45, where does i have to plug in the cd writer ? and does it matter in what order i pass my harddisks ? 14:41 < gnulligan> after making a backup from the windows partition (clonezilla is on fat32) 14:41 < gnulligan> ok I'll try that, afk 14:41 < TimDix> So, I know it's an issue with iptables, but I still cannot access this server, I've added the following: https://paste.linux.community/view/9a5ec759 - suggestions on how to troubleshoot further? 14:42 < TimDix> (service iptables stop, will let me access the server. service iptables start and then I cannot) 14:44 < ananke> TimDix: we'd need to see where this fits with the rest of the rules 14:50 < dnanib> TimDix: is this about port 80 access? 14:50 < gnulligan> wait a second... 14:50 < gnulligan> I just realized something 14:50 < gnulligan> update-grub won't fix this 14:50 < TimDix> ananke: What's a command that'll provide the information that would be helpful? 14:51 < TimDix> dnanib: yes 14:51 < gnulligan> because, I need all OS entries to be in the UEFI NVRAM 14:51 < gnulligan> ok I think I know what happened 14:51 < gnulligan> UEFI found clonezilla because I installed clonezilla to a fat32 FS 14:52 < gnulligan> so when I boot up, if I check the UEFI, it gives options for windows and clonezilla 14:52 < gnulligan> BUT I installed ubuntu to ext 14:52 < gnulligan> ext4 14:52 < TimDix> IS this "normal"? https://paste.linux.community/view/fa073b3f 14:52 < ExtremeFMan> should I get a server from a provider, whose support says "we can't open Internet links"..? 14:53 < gnulligan> I bet the UEFI can only read FAT filesystems 14:53 < BCMM> ExtremeFMan: it sounds like they use IE, so no 14:54 < BCMM> gnulligan: if we're talking about an EFI support partition on an internal hard disk, basically yes 14:54 < ExtremeFMan> it's just that they are a major service provider in the server sector 14:55 < ananke> TimDix: show us the full content of /etc/sysconfig/iptables 14:55 < BCMM> ExtremeFMan: worth noting that a lot of web hosting "services" are just resellers, and may have no technical expertise because they need none 14:55 < BCMM> was there some context to TimDix's question before i connected? 14:56 < BCMM> TimDix: presumably you're trying to achieve NAT, and something isn't working? 14:56 < dnanib> TimDix: then referring to this: https://paste.linux.community/view/9a5ec759 14:56 < TimDix> BCMM: Web server, I get connection refused when iptables is running, webserver works fine when I disable it. 14:57 < TimDix> anake: as requested: https://paste.linux.community/view/86fac55d 14:57 < Night_Elf> His webserver is accessible from localhost, but not from the public internet. 14:57 < dnanib> iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --sport 80 -m conntrack --ctstate ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT <- this rule prevents the SYN_ACK part of the 3-way handshake from going out (I think) 14:57 < dnanib> assuming the default for the table is DROP/REJECT 14:57 < BCMM> TimDix: what is your goal here? did you add those rules to iptables or did you find it like that? 14:58 < BCMM> oh right wow i didn't see the pastebin... the NAT stuff is probably not the issue here to say the least 14:58 < TimDix> The server crashed when diskspace reached 0 bytes. I'm just trying to get it up again. I inherited this server, so I'm trying to figure it out. 14:58 < TimDix> I'm also, (as I'm sure you've figured out) not very good at this. 14:58 < BCMM> TimDix: what's the layout of the network here? is there any reason the server would be performing NAT itself? 14:58 < g1itch> i recently blew away my gnome keyring due to a password change, and ever since then chrome seems to not keep me signed into sites. Could this be related? 15:00 < TimDix> BCMM: I don't know. These servers sit in the back room. It connects to internal servers and is one of the only servers exposed to the public. I'm not sure if that's why they did what they did. 15:00 < TimDix> The person who set it up... quit. 15:00 < BCMM> g1itch: chrome can use gnome-keyring for password storage, but i don't think it uses it to lock up cookies 15:00 < TimDix> I'm sorry, I'm not being very helpful. 15:00 < BCMM> g1itch: do you really mean you can't stay logged in to stuff, or is it just that chrome isn't filling in your passwords when you do eventually get logged out? 15:02 < plexigras> i have a bunch of folders in the current directory and i want to find all folders that don't have files that contain a word 15:02 < plexigras> how do i best do this? 15:02 < g1itch> BCMM twitter for example, i was able to open my browser every morning and already be logged in 15:02 < g1itch> and now it actually has me type in my creds every day even if i select 'remember me' 15:02 < g1itch> twitter is just an example, happening with a bunch of sites 15:02 < TimDix> dnanib: thanks for your suggestion. I got that command from here: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/iptables-essentials-common-firewall-rules-and-commands - "Allow all incoming http traffic" 15:03 < TimDix> dnanib: How would you suggest modifying it to allow the SYN_ACK? 15:03 < BCMM> plexigras: ooh, that's an interesting one... getting all *files* without a string is straightforwards, but that's not the same... 15:06 < plexigras> is there something like dirname that only returns the first/root dir? 15:06 < plexigras> so dirname a/b/c returns a 15:07 < gnulligan> BCMM: I thought so. How do I fix this lol? 15:07 < mcdnl> TimDix: does your box have firewall-cmd (firewalld) or it's just a pure iptables? 15:07 < BCMM> gnulligan: i'm afraid i wasn't around for the original question, what's going on? 15:07 < mcdnl> or ufw 15:07 < BCMM> gnulligan: i was just answering about filesystems uefi firmware (typically) supports 15:08 < gnulligan> ohhh ok 15:08 < BCMM> plexigras: if there's no other good solution, you could repeatedly invoke dirname until it no longer modifies the output 15:08 < gnulligan> well it's a long story lol... I'm trying to set up a windows + ubuntu + clonezilla triple boot 15:08 < BCMM> or rather, until it returns . 15:09 < BCMM> gnulligan: why would you *install* clonezilla? 15:09 < gnulligan> on uefi, and I want to have ALL the OSes visible in the UEFI NVRAM for redundancy 15:09 < TimDix> mcdnl, I'm not sure, I tried a few things, and I don't see firewalld 15:09 < mcdnl> TimDix: run firewall-cmd as root, does the binary exist? 15:09 < TimDix> Nope, I tried that and command not found 15:09 < mcdnl> ok 15:09 < TimDix> tried which on both commands as well 15:09 < TimDix> and checked services 15:09 < gnulligan> BCMM: I'm using a custom clonezilla grub that lets me press a key and instantly backup the whole disk to a separate partition 15:09 < TimDix> Anywhere else to check? 15:09 < BCMM> gnulligan: huh that's actually fair enough 15:10 < mcdnl> curl localhost from the machine with iptables up does work? 15:10 < gnulligan> :) 15:10 < TimDix> Ok, another thing... perhaps... I see iptables and ip6tables... any chance they're conflicting with each other? 15:10 < TimDix> mcdnl: Yes 15:10 < gnulligan> so I'm trying to have all entries in NVRAM for redundancy 15:10 < TimDix> wget locally works. 15:10 < gnulligan> if grub fails, windows is still there, and if windows BCD fails, grub is there 15:10 < mcdnl> they should'nt interfere unless you're using ipv6 to connect from one server to another 15:10 < ellyacht> man 15:10 < BCMM> gnulligan: well i dunno how nvram works, honestly. but i've got a working windows/debian dual boot 15:11 < mcdnl> if i got it right, what you have looks like a load balancer or reverse proxy 15:11 < BCMM> gnulligan: oh i see, you don't want to chainload them all from grub, you want to be able to select them individually from your firmware's boot menu? 15:11 < ellyacht> please sumone tell me how to turn off the bluettoth and wifi modules on my laptop running linuxmint 19 15:11 < gnulligan> BCMM: yes and no 15:11 < mcdnl> and you have problems getting the whateveritis to the backend servers 15:11 < mcdnl> ? 15:12 < gnulligan> I want to have grub be the default entry in the boot menu, and to give me the option to boot from wherever I want (windows, clonezilla, ubuntu) 15:12 < BCMM> ellyacht: rfkill 15:12 < TimDix> mcdnl: was that directed at me? (backend servers/load balancer/reverse proxy question) 15:12 < gnulligan> but I ALSO want the clonezilla and windows entries in the firmware menu as well 15:12 < gnulligan> so if ubuntu updates and changes grub, windows is still there 15:13 < BCMM> gnulligan: i'm afraid i wouldn't know about that, afaik my mobo doesn't have a proper menu for that so i just use grub 15:13 < gnulligan> if grub and ubuntu get nuked, I still have clonezilla and windows separate 15:13 < ellyacht> BCMM: this is what it gave me 15:13 < gnulligan> BCMM: I see... 15:13 < ellyacht> BCMM: ID TYPE DEVICE SOFT HARD 15:13 < ellyacht> 0 bluetooth hci0 blocked unblocked 15:13 < ellyacht> 1 wlan phy0 blocked unblocked 15:13 < mcdnl> yes TimDix 15:13 < TimDix> I don't believe we're using any of those on this. 15:14 < BCMM> gnulligan: what was the filesystem issue though? do you actually have a gpt-partitioned disk with a fat esp on the first partition? 15:14 < mcdnl> yeah it was just a guess, i havent read everything you said so i'm not sure what is your problem 15:14 < TimDix> we have haproxy and varnish on our production servers... but that isn't on here. 15:14 < BCMM> ellyacht: try `rfkill block all` 15:16 < gnulligan> BCMM: yes, but in the ubuntu installer (since I didn't want to overwrite the windows ESP) I chose manual setup, made a single 100GB EXT4 partition, mounted as root, and when it asked where to install the bootloader I entered that same ext4 partition 15:16 < ellyacht> BCMM: kk then restart? the physical lights on the front of my laptop are constantly on for the bt and wifi unless i go into bios 15:17 < TimDix> We hired a sysadmin. He came in, set up this server, didn't document anything, spent half of his week 'working on it', because it crashes several times a week, and then he quits... and now it's my problem. I really just want to start over on this thing. 15:17 < BCMM> gnulligan: i have no idea how to make ubuntu in particular play nice with uefi. but in general you can just use the ESP windows creates for everything, since it usually has a load of free space on it 15:18 < BCMM> gnulligan: it's worth double-checking whether ubuntu understands its trying to install in uefi mode. do you know if you installed grub-pc or grub-efi? 15:18 < mcdnl> ok i think i got it now 15:18 < mcdnl> can you show me your actual /etc/sysconfig/iptables 15:18 < TimDix> Did I not? one sec 15:18 < Truk_> hello i have /bin/bash: source: No such file or directory when i do source $HOME/.profile 15:18 < mcdnl> i've seen one from before 15:19 < TimDix> https://paste.linux.community/view/86fac55d 15:19 < mcdnl> but i read something about adding two lines 15:19 < Truk_> whereas the file exists 15:19 < BCMM> ellyacht: as i understand it, restarting will clear rfkill status 15:19 < gnulligan> BCMM: I don't know 15:19 < gnulligan> that might be the issue 15:19 < gnulligan> how do I check? 15:19 < BCMM> ellyacht: what does `rfkill list` show now? 15:19 < BCMM> gnulligan: so does ubuntu boot at all, currently? 15:19 < mcdnl> TimDix: there's no accept on port 80, and you have a reject so everything that isnt ssh or 3260 or 25567 will be rejected with host unreachable 15:20 < gnulligan> BCMM: no, there's no entry in firmware 15:20 < gnulligan> I might be able to get into the clonezilla grub and run grub-update 15:20 < BCMM> gnulligan: oh and just to check my understanding, this is a single disk, and the windows installer created the original gpt partition table and ESP? 15:20 < mcdnl> did you execute the iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m multiport... from before? 15:20 < gnulligan> BCMM: exactly 15:20 < mcdnl> https://paste.linux.community/view/9a5ec759 15:20 < mcdnl> this 15:21 < TimDix> Yes, multiple times... one second... 15:21 < gnulligan> if I did grub-update though, that won't fix the firmware not finding it 15:22 < BCMM> gnulligan: if you're doing grub-update, you've already managed to chroot the unbootable install, right? 15:22 < mcdnl> TimDix: -A adds the rule to the end of the chain, so if you have a reject before it, it will be of no sue 15:22 < dnanib> TimDix: ref this: https://paste.linux.community/view/86fac55d 15:22 < BCMM> gnulligan: check if you've got grub-pc or grub-efi installed 15:22 < dnanib> There is no state = NEW ACCEPT in INPUT 15:22 < gnulligan> BCMM: no I didn't chroot, I'm talking about the clonezilla grub 15:22 < dnanib> for port 80 15:22 < BCMM> gnulligan: oh right 15:22 < dnanib> iptables -I INPUT -m state --state NEW --dport 80 -j ACCEPT 15:23 < mcdnl> that should do it 15:23 < BCMM> gnulligan: it seems like ubuntu installs a bootloader based on the mode the install cd (or usb) was booted with 15:23 < gnulligan> BCMM: I thought so. Let me try to reboot into the usb again and find out what it boots as 15:23 < gnulligan> brb 15:23 < BCMM> gnulligan: these days, install media can usually be booted in legacy (bios) or EFI mode, meaning it creates two entries in your firmware's "choose boot device" thingy 15:23 < mcdnl> to accept the syn_ack, then the rest of the flow goes through the first rule, -A INPUT -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT 15:23 < BCMM> so, do you know how you booted the ubuntu installer? 15:24 < TimDix> Ok, I'm now thoroughly confused why those previous commands didn't work, because as you pointed out, they werne't in the iptables... they're there now, one moment. 15:24 < gnulligan> BCMM: I WAS WONDERING WHY THE USB WOULD SHOW UP WITH THREE ENTRIES IN MY BIOS LOL 15:24 < gnulligan> THANK YOU HAHA 15:24 < BCMM> gnulligan: wait, *three*? 15:24 < BCMM> gnulligan: yeah some firmware is hopelessly uninformative about that 15:25 < mcdnl> TimDix: paste your *actual* /etc/sysconfig/iptables 15:25 < TimDix> mcdnl, dnanib: That's working now, Thank you both so much for your help! 15:25 < mcdnl> aight 15:25 < mcdnl> save the changes 15:25 < gnulligan> it says "BIOS:USB" "UEFI:USB" and "UEFI:USBpartition1" 15:25 < gnulligan> I might have done bios before 15:25 < BCMM> gnulligan: oh, lemme guess: "name of usb manufacturer", "uefi: name of usb manufacturer" and "uefi: ubuntu version.whatever"? 15:25 < BCMM> oh 15:26 < mcdnl> TimDix: does /etc/iptables/rules.v4 exist? 15:26 < gnulligan> I'll try UEFI:USB 15:26 < BCMM> gnulligan: well i don't get why there's a usbpartition1 and usb... but that probably doesn't matter 15:26 < gnulligan> brb 15:26 < TimDix> mcdnl: current /etc/sysconfig/iptables 15:26 < TimDix> https://paste.linux.community/view/c8fa6033 15:26 < BCMM> gnulligan: how it will usually work is that there is an mbr on the usb for bios systems, and also the main fs is fat and has a /EFI/ directory for uefi machines 15:27 < TimDix> mcdnl: /etc/iptables does not exist 15:27 < dnanib> That is not good, TimDix 15:27 < dnanib> Just run iptables-save 15:27 < dnanib> Are you on an RHEL/derivative machine? 15:27 < TimDix> dnanib: Is that different than /etc/init.d/iptables save? 15:27 < gnulligan> AHAH ok everything looks different when I boot in uefi mode 15:28 < gnulligan> higher resolution etc 15:28 < dnanib> TimDix: probably the same thing. But your paste.linux is showing something totally different from what we have been discussing 15:28 < TimDix> dnanib: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.10 (Santiago) 15:28 < gnulligan> interesting 15:28 < TimDix> dnanib: yeah, I'm really confused by that as well... trying to sort it out, I'm sorry if I provided misleading information to troubleshoot. 15:28 < BCMM> gnulligan: (there's a common misconception that efi boot is only possible with gpt partitions, but that's only definitively true for windows. almost all firmware will read /EFI/ directories from the first partition on MBR-partitioned removable media, and a lot will do it for internal disks too.) 15:29 < dnanib> TimDix: you said you now have a working configuration. Just run iptables-save and keep a copy of that. :-) Rest we will sort out later. 15:29 < gnulligan> BCMM: huh didn't know that 15:29 < winsoff> Got a 2006 beater laptop that someone wants me to spruce up for them. Any recommendations on good looking, fast operating systems that are basically only going to be used for running firefox? 15:29 < TimDix> dnanib: Yes, it's saved now. 15:29 < TimDix> The rest... I'm going to kill with fire. 15:29 < BCMM> gnulligan: and, of course, any firmware should read /EFI/ directories from iso9660 filesystems with no partition table at all 15:30 < BCMM> gnulligan: yeah hardware initialisation is a bit different in uefi. you're probably seeing the bootloader at native resolution or something 15:31 < mcdnl> TimDix: iptables-save doesnt save by itself 15:31 < gnulligan> there's an "install alongside other oses" option 15:31 < gnulligan> omg 15:31 < gnulligan> so much easier 15:31 < BCMM> well if it's a fresh ubuntu install, no customisation, it's probably still easiest to just reinstall ubuntu unless your usb is, like, really slow 15:31 < dnanib> iptables-save > iptables.saved.on.22.06.2018 :-) 15:31 < BCMM> rather than fix the existing isntall 15:31 < mcdnl> it outputs what you need to write to the iptables save file 15:31 < gnulligan> BCMM: I think I'll do that 15:31 < BCMM> good luck! 15:31 < gnulligan> BCMM: TYVM! 15:31 < mcdnl> on debian based systems its stored in /etc/iptables/rules.v4 15:31 < gnulligan> :D 15:31 < BCMM> gnulligan: np! 15:31 < ALowther> I ssh'd into a remote host, added myself to a group and it didn't register so that I could see it with the 'groups' command until I exited the session and ssh'd back in. I am just curious as to why/how it happened this way? 15:32 < mcdnl> for rhel i dont know, probably it's in /etc/sysconfig/iptables but better check it out 15:35 < BCMM> ALowther: as i understand it, group membership is a property of a process, that is applied to your login shell when you log-in. but i'm not too certain how it actually works. 15:36 < backandforth> Hi, is using the http_proxy envionr ment variable to set a proxy a security concern (e.g., other programs running as that user could it's that environment variable)? 15:36 < BCMM> ALowther: i do know that you can workaround the need to make a new ssh connection by doing `su yourusername` 15:36 < BCMM> (su isn't just for becoming root! su yourself lets you log in again, as yourself) 15:36 < ALowther> BCMM: Interesting, thanks. So that is like a standard things that happens 15:37 < BCMM> ALowther: yeah it's *definitely* expected behaviour 15:37 < ALowther> BCMM: Sure, I thought it stood for 'switch user' anyhow. 15:37 < ALowther> BCMM: Good to know :) 15:37 < BCMM> ALowther: i think it's one of those ancient unix things where the meaning has been lost. but a lot of people assume "super user" 15:38 < mcdnl> yeah, it's unclear which of those is 15:39 < BCMM> ALowther: stackexchange points out that you might need to do su -l, and also that you could use exec to replace your existing shell instead of pointlessly nesting 15:39 < ChrisVim> hey folks! which book can you recommend for get a deeper understanding of linux? i'm on an arch system now with i3 for 2 years but i never really asked myself how linux works. cheers 15:40 < BCMM> ChrisVim: that question might be a bit broad, tbh, unless you really want to know *everything* 15:40 < djph> depends on what you're actually trying to learn -- the OS is a pretty broad topic 15:40 < ALowther> BCMM: so running su USER is a child process? 15:41 < BCMM> ChrisVim: like, are you curious about kernel internals, how the different userspace bits of unix systems fit together, or basics like the distinction between the kernel and userspace? 15:42 < BCMM> ALowther: yes. the result of su is to start a new shell (unless you use -c to run a different command). when you `exit`, that shell terminates, you find yourself at your original shell 15:42 < ALowther> BCMM: YEAH! 15:42 < BCMM> with your original credentials, environment variables and so on 15:42 < ALowther> BCMM: I just ran exit to test that 15:42 < ALowther> BCMM: I never knew that, interesting. Thanks 15:42 < ChrisVim> BCMM: djph: yes thats for sure. but maybe there is a standard recommendation where i can learn the basics like bash scripting , what all the different system folders are for, terminal commands, ... 15:43 < BCMM> ALowther: one thing people often don't realise initially is that there's nothing special about a shell. it's just a command-line program, and you can run a shell from you shell just like running any other program 15:43 < BCMM> ChrisVim: "terminal commands" is definitely too broad to recommend any resources, because you can do *anything* in the terminal 15:43 < ChrisVim> until today i learned linux just with learning by doing. i thought it would be a good idea to now learn it from scratch 15:44 < BCMM> ChrisVim: but a good intro to bash scripting will also cover some of the basic, universal commands 15:44 < ALowther> ChrisVim: You can build your own Linux system with Linux From Scratch(LFS), but that seems a bit deeper than what you're asking...but it's there if you're interested. 15:44 < BCMM> (including some which aren't part of bash, like sed and awk) 15:45 < ALowther> ChrisVim: https://guide.bash.academy 15:45 < ChrisVim> ALowther: BCMM: Thanks for your answers! 15:45 < ALowther> ChrisVim: That link will start teaching from a blank slate. 15:46 < ChrisVim> thats what i was looking for, thanks 15:46 < BCMM> ChrisVim: as ALowther says, there's no better way to find out how it really works than taking it apart and putting it together again. but perhaps your later messages suggest that you're more interested in learning more superuser skills than learning how it all works internally? 15:46 < BCMM> ChrisVim: for directories https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_Hierarchy_Standard is a good starting point 15:47 < BCMM> ChrisVim: the FHS itself is not perhaps as canonical or universally-followed as its creators might have hoped, but it's a very good start 15:47 < ChrisVim> BCMM: thanks again! 15:47 < BCMM> np 15:48 < giovdav> Hello all! 15:48 < BCMM> giovdav: hi! 15:49 < giovdav> I need to edit a big file 4GB ... but vim crash ... what i can do? 15:49 < giovdav> where is a way to load only a portion of this file to edit it? 15:49 < giovdav> i don't need that the editor will load the whole file .. 15:49 < giovdav> i have read something with sed 15:49 < Thuryn> giovdav, the editor has to read the entire file to *write* it back out. 15:49 < giovdav> but i prefere an editor because i need to do other things 15:50 < ChrisVim> maybe you can also check out #vim 15:50 < Thuryn> giovdav, only options are: split the file into chunks, edit the chunks, then re-merge them OR 15:50 < demonxian3> i like vim 15:50 < jhodrien> split, edit, cat merge? 15:50 < Thuryn> use a different editor 15:50 < BCMM> Thuryn: right, but it doesn't have to put the whole thing in memory to do that 15:50 < jhodrien> Use a different editor? 15:50 < giovdav> uuuuf i don't want to load the whole file 15:50 < giovdav> i try to ask in vim 15:50 < BCMM> Thuryn: i mean, cat has to read the chunks to write them, but it's smart enough not to put them all in memory at once 15:50 < mcdnl> giovdav: https://stackoverflow.com/a/908673 15:51 < demonxian3> in VIM , type :Ve 15:51 < mcdnl> giovdav: even better, next answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/19795855 15:52 < BCMM> ctrl-c seems like a kind of dodgy solution, does vim really not have a launch parameter to make it skip all the clever stuff like syntax highlighting? 15:53 < jhodrien> BCMM: Wouldn't you just load vim disabling plugins, or start it up, :sy off, then open your file? 15:53 < Thuryn> ...or use a different editor... 15:54 < BCMM> jhodrien: that's what i was asking, i guess. how do you start without plugins? 15:54 < BCMM> oh right, vim --noplugin 15:58 < ice9> how to find the command filename of pid? 15:59 < BCMM> ice9: /proc/PID_HERE/cmdline 15:59 < BCMM> ice9: works like a file, you can cat it or read it programmatically or whatever 16:00 < ice9> BCMM, i'm getting this and i don't see the command itself https://paste.linux.community/view/20cb8b50 16:01 < BCMM> ice9: uh, snaps are weird. no idea how they work inside 16:02 < BCMM> ice9: but it may very well be the case that that process was created by some method *other* than just executing some command through the system shell 16:05 < ice9> i'm using lxd via snap, how can i disable dnsmasq? 16:07 < BCMM> ice9: i don't use any of that myself, but have you seen this? https://discuss.linuxcontainers.org/t/lxd-via-snapd-disable-dnsmasq/450 16:13 < zarzar> what latency should i expect when using uart on linux? 16:15 < Azelphur> Anyone got a laptop with USB-C? Interested in buying one of these: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Autoor-Multi-purpose-interface-Multi-Device-Connection/dp/B07C78P6Y7/ but wondering what my chances are of having it work at all 16:16 < Pentode> interesting little device 16:17 < AE-35> Azelphur: try hardware 16:17 < Azelphur> AE-35: the channel? most people have Windows in there :) 16:17 < Pentode> it's cheap enough to give a go i suppose. at the very least it should work as a hub. 16:17 < AE-35> yes 16:18 < Pentode> chances of the network interface working are probably pretty good. not so sure about the HDMI feature, though. 16:18 < Pentode> you have to find out what chipsets it uses to ultimately get _any_ useful information about whether it may or may not work though 16:21 < Pentode> ya dig? 16:24 < BCMM> Azelphur: so basically that's a hub with some ports, and also a bunch of different devices internally connected to it. very little way of seeing what those internal devices are 16:24 < BCMM> the card reader should work, because it's probably just a USB mass storage device 16:25 < BCMM> as you say, a hub is just a hub, no driver support needed there 16:25 < Pentode> BCMM, yeah. he's really got to figure out what chips those devices are using and i don't see anything about it doing basic searches.. 16:26 < Azelphur> BCMM: amusingly I'm mainly interested in HDMI, and just figured I'd buy something like that anyway. 16:27 < BCMM> Azelphur: there are definitely some usb gpus that work with linux, and definitely some that don't,,, 16:27 < BCMM> this very much seems like a device where the specsheet doesn't exist 16:28 < BCMM> the only places it's mentioned online are places that retail it and the manufacturer doesn't seem to have a web presence, etc. 16:28 < Pentode> yeah i can't find anything at all either 16:28 < Pentode> take a shot in the dark and see. ;) 16:29 < BCMM> i can't even find any mention of software support - they're not even talking about macos 16:29 < snaphelp> Ayyy 16:29 < BCMM> oh wait hang on apparently i can't read! 16:29 < BCMM> Chip: PD / FL7102 * HDMI / PS176 * LAN / RTL8153 * TF / SD / GL823K 16:29 < snaphelp> I joined the dark side my dudes 16:29 < BCMM> Pentode; Azelphur^ 16:29 < snaphelp> I am using snap's 16:29 < Pentode> oh a nougat of data 16:30 < Pentode> where'\d you find that, i guess i can't read either. 16:30 < snaphelp> Anyone here know how to get windows fonts off windows and install them on linux? 16:31 < Pentode> truetype fonts can just be put in ~/.fonts or /usr/share/fonts/truetype/ i believe 16:32 < BCMM> snaphelp: are you talking about fonts you've installed, or the standard ones that come with windows? 16:32 < BCMM> snaphelp: because for the basic really common ones there's things like this https://packages.debian.org/sid/ttf-mscorefonts-installer 16:33 < BCMM> and if you want the newer-generation ones like calibri you can legally extract them from the free powerpoint viewer https://wiki.debian.org/ppviewerFonts 16:33 < royal_screwup21> is there anydownside to locking your computer when you don't want to use, as opposed to shutting it down? 16:33 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: additional power usage 16:34 < BCMM> (and wear and tear and so forth) 16:34 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: do you mean locking or sleep/suspend-to-ram? 16:34 < royal_screwup21> BCMM: hm I see. Just wondering if all that outweighs the start up time 16:34 < Pentode> i just copied a few random *.ttf fonts from a windows font dir and stuck them in ~/.fonts and they appear to render fine. i'm not aware if i have any fancy font rendering packages installed, though, but i don't believe i do. 16:34 < royal_screwup21> BCMM: no, just locking. ctrl + alt + l 16:35 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: why not consider suspend to ram? unless you need the machine to perform background tasks, it's *much* lower-power than leaving it on 16:35 < icy`> royal_screwup21, does a high uptime score count for anything? 16:35 < BCMM> it's practically like turning it off, except it's back almost instantly 16:35 < BCMM> (like, barely slower than the time it takes your monitor to come out of powersave) 16:36 < BCMM> Pentode: ttf is ttf, more or less 16:36 < Pentode> BCMM, yeah apparently so. i dont know much about fonts. 16:37 < Pentode> comparing them side by side they do appear to look quite different when rendered in linux, however. 16:37 < royal_screwup21> BCMM: cool, I'll look into it. I'm guessing systemctl suspend does the trick 16:37 < Pentode> some don't even look like the same font 16:37 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: what de are you using? there's probably easy non-root ways of doing it 16:37 < royal_screwup21> I'm on ubuntu 16.04 and I'm the root user 16:38 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: on kde, i've got it as an option on the "leave" menu, and i've also configured my machine's power button to suspend 16:38 < gu-----> Anyone know how to wake a printer up from sleep mode? walking over and pushing the power button is not ideal. I'm running a print server with CUPS. 16:38 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: you don't mean you're always logged in as root, do you? 16:38 < royal_screwup21> BCMM: ....is that bad? 16:39 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: well, what's this machine for? 16:39 < royal_screwup21> oh, it's just my personal computer 16:39 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: are we talking like a general-purpose desktop where you're logged in to a graphical session? 16:39 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: and are you *actually* root? or do you just mean you're a user who has the ability to do everything with sudo? 16:39 < BCMM> royal_screwup21: you can type `whoami` in a terminal to find out 16:40 < royal_screwup21> ah, yeah sorry I didn't know about that distinction. Yeah I'm a user who can do everything with sudo 16:41 < gu-----> maybe I can create a cron script to detect if a printer is sleeping? 16:41 < gu-----> but that would be silly 16:41 < gu-----> i could just force it to be up at all times i rather have CUPS wake it up 16:42 < BCMM> Pentode: ttf is basically ancient, no new features to keep up with or anything. otf is where you might be missing some features if you're using a new font and an old renderer 16:42 < ananke> gu-----: how are you connecting to said printer? network or usb? 16:43 < Azelphur> BCMM: nice find 16:43 < BCMM> Azelphur: i don't understand though, i looked up PS176 and it's apparently a dp-hdmi converter 16:43 < Azelphur> BCMM: that makes sense to me, because afaik USB-C outputs DP. 16:44 < Azelphur> it's just DP over USB-C 16:44 < BCMM> Azelphur: i know there is a dp over usb-c standard, but isn't that just connector reuse? 16:44 < BCMM> Azelphur: it doesn't actually use the usb protocol or work with hubs, does it? 16:44 < Azelphur> BCMM: that I don't know, good question. 16:44 < BCMM> oh it supports usb data along with dp apparently https://www.displayport.org/displayport-over-usb-c/ 16:44 < Azelphur> cool 16:45 < Azelphur> I also notice the description for that item says "Applies to: for Mac OS/WINDOWS/Linux/Android" 16:45 < Azelphur> so...maybe that means it works? 16:45 < gu-----> anake: usb 16:45 < gu-----> ananke: usb 16:46 < BCMM> Azelphur: i really don't know how dp over usb-c works, though. surely not just any old type-c port, right? the system's gpu has got to somehow be aware of/connected to it? 16:46 < Azelphur> BCMM: well, I imagine in this case it is, it's an XPS 13 and designed to do it hardware wise. 16:46 < Azelphur> I've seen videos of other Linux users having success with USB-C to HDMI cables, too. 16:47 < Azelphur> but I just figure why pay £16 for USB-C to hdmi when I can pay £24 for USB-C to ethernet/usb/sd/hdmi 16:47 < BCMM> Azelphur: well, then it ought to work i guess. it's *not* a usb gpu like i thought, and should just show up as a displayport in xrandr i guess 16:47 < Azelphur> ah I see, that would be nice 16:47 < Azelphur> well, time to take a punt I suppose :) 16:47 < BCMM> Azelphur: i mean, i should say that in my experience, usb all-in-one gadgets are weird and janky 16:48 < BCMM> i've seen a few front-panel USB hub + multi card reader (fits in the floppy disk slot on an atx case), and they've all been rubbish 16:48 < BCMM> random disconnects, slow speeds on the usb ports because the hub is incredibly cheap etc 16:48 < ananke> gu-----: cups should wake it up automagically 16:49 < Azelphur> BCMM: honestly, with Linux (on my desktop PC) USB is just so unreliable in general. It continually just stops working, entire hub/port will stop working and I have to reboot to fix it 16:49 < Azelphur> and it's definitely not a hardware fault, because I've had the same issue over 2 different motherboard/chipsets and three usb hubs 16:49 < Azelphur> Only thing left to be a hardware fault is the case xD 16:52 < zumba_ad_> Good morning. Doing ls -n on my home directory tells me my uid and gid. Is there a command that will show uid and gid without running ls -n? 16:52 < ananke> zumba_ad_: stat 16:52 < zumba_ad_> ok, i'll try thanks! 16:53 < zumba_ad_> looks like it's not the one i was looking for 16:54 < zumba_ad_> i just want to know what my corresponding uid is of my account 16:54 < fryguy> zumba_ad_: `id` 16:54 < zumba_ad_> ah 16:54 < zumba_ad_> yes! that's it :) 16:54 < zumba_ad_> thank you 16:54 < zumba_ad_> brb 16:55 < ananke> zumba_ad_: that's a very different question than your original one 17:11 < someguy9099> hi, can i emulate a joystick with linux (so i can connect my laptop to another pc, and act as a joystick) 17:12 < someguy9099> i saw something about that on raspberry pi, but nothing about joysticks 17:13 < Pentode> you want to connect said machine via ethernet or usb or something and have one of it's HID's act as a joystick for another machine? 17:14 < someguy9099> yes, trough usb , one machine acts as the device and the other one as the host(?) 17:14 < Pentode> im not aware of softwares that will do this, though im sure there could be something i'm not aware of. 17:15 < Siecje> how can I print the last 5 lines of a file but truncate each line if it is too long. 17:17 < Pentode> Siecje, you can use tail to output any number of last lines in a file. 17:18 < Pentode> Siecje, you could then use cut to truncate it.. 17:19 < Siecje> Pentode: how do you cut each line? 17:19 < Pentode> Siecje, i've tried this: tail -n 5 file.txt | cut -c -80 17:19 < Pentode> appears to work 17:19 < Pentode> -80 being 80 characters 17:21 < Siecje> Pentode: That does work thanks. 17:22 < Pentode> np 17:26 < MibixFox> can someone please help me? i have been converting my drives from ntfs to ext4 and using the gui to copy files over. I stopped the gui copy midway and im trying to use rsync in the cli but its not resuming where i left off. im using rsync -a --append -u --progress /mnt/Q /mnt/P/ and it seems to just be rewriting everything 17:29 < ayecee> add this to the command: --modify-window=1 17:29 < ayecee> ntfs file timestamp is lower resolution, and this can cause rsync to think the times are different. 17:30 < copart> I use --modify-window=2 17:30 < ayecee> also good 17:31 < BCMM> Azelphur: the only time i've ever really seen big difference between OSs on usb support was in linux's favour 17:31 < Celmor> can I use grep to match strings like bash globbing works, e.g. * for any number of chars, ? for a single char, etc. 17:32 < BCMM> Azelphur: had a mouse that was failing, would drop its usb connection every few minutes. on windows, i then had to unplug the mouse and plug it in again, but on linux it would just come back after a second or two 17:32 < copart> Celmor: grep uses regular expressions 17:32 < copart> Celmor: * in bash is .* in regular expression 17:32 < Celmor> I know, I can use .* and similar but I wanted a simpler version 17:32 < ayecee> Celmor: i don't think grep can do globbing 17:32 < Celmor> I thought I used to be able to use a single * 17:33 < copart> pipe your pattern from sed 17:33 < copart> replace * with .* and ? with .? 17:34 < ayecee> look at this guy 17:34 < ayecee> thinks he's a comedian 17:35 < Pentode> lol 17:36 < Celmor> alright 17:38 < copart> echo catsarenotfood | egrep "$(echo 'cat*foo?' | sed 's/\*/.*/g; s/\?/.?/g')" 17:40 < rocketmagnet> when i had 2 hard disk, can i install windows on the first and linux on the second and still have grub to let me choose at startup ? 17:41 < Celmor> yes 17:41 < rocketmagnet> no problem at all ? 17:41 < rocketmagnet> can i have the linux hd use lvm to encrypt it ? 17:41 < WhiteDevil> ijust ordered a wireless adpater 17:41 < Celmor> you need 2 ESPs though, one for the grub boot loader and 1 for the windows boot loader 17:42 < WhiteDevil> it runs on linux but it says mint, ubuntu and debian 17:42 < WhiteDevil> I have a debian 17:42 < WhiteDevil> but i also have RHEL 17:42 < Celmor> either that are put grub and windows boot loader in the same ESP but then you need to be more careful 17:42 < WhiteDevil> do you think there might be hickups with rhel ? 17:43 < Celmor> rocketmagnet, I have an ESP on a disk I passthrough to a windows VM, at boot time that disk is still available to the host system and the linux kernel is loaded from it, the disk for linux is completely formatted with LVM 17:43 < Celmor> I specified in my UEFI to load the linux kernel in EFI mode 17:43 < Celmor> but if the default boot loader in that ESP is started, windows is booted 17:44 < ayecee> i use "apt-get autoremove" to remove packages that are no longer used, especially kernel packages. does yum have an equivalent command? 17:45 < ayecee> ah, looks like it does that already. 17:46 < MibixFox> adding --modify-window=1 doesnt seem to change anything either :/ 17:46 < Celmor> MibixFox, try #rsync 17:47 < Celmor> or -I 17:47 < Celmor> (--ingonre-times) 17:47 < copart> ayecee: removes packages that were installed as a dependency when you remove the parent 17:47 < copart> ayecee: when you do dnf remove 17:47 < ayecee> dnf? 17:48 < copart> ayecee: yum too (dnf is newer tool in FEdora) 17:48 < ayecee> i see 17:48 < ayecee> thanks 17:48 < |aaron> hey all. ive got a systemd unit and a script id like to run that populates env vars for that unit's use. i know about the Environment and EnvironmentFile unit options but those only support simple declarations like VAR=VALUE, whereas my script needs to loop over the result returned from another program. is the only solution here for my script to write the variables to a file for the unit to read? i was hoping to avoid storing them on disk at all (as they are 17:48 < |aaron> secrets). 17:50 < ayecee> oh pfft, there's a yum autoremove. that's just too easy. 17:58 < bls> |aaron: you're better off giving up on using the features systemd provides if they don't work and doing it all yourself 17:58 < Dagmar> |aaron: You might want to *fully* explain the problem then, rather than develop an insecure x-y solution 17:59 < |aaron> bls: so not use a systemd unit to run this service and just script the whole thing myself, you mean? the service is apache httpd 17:59 < Dagmar> In general, anything that could be called a "secret" shouldn't be getting stuck into environment values except with very specific caveats 17:59 < |aaron> Dagmar: Hmm ok, well I pretty much did, the secrets are from AWS SSM parameter store, and the service is httpd 17:59 < bls> no, just have a unit that calls your script, and do everything in your script 17:59 < bls> pretty much exactly the way things were before systemd 18:00 < |aaron> Dagmar: Hmm. Where would you put them then? 18:00 < Dagmar> There's pretty much no way something like that should have involved init 18:01 < gnulligan> tomreyn: I KNEW YOUR NAME WAS FAMILIAR 18:01 < gnulligan> lol you're a megaglest dev 18:01 < gnulligan> your name was bugging me for a while because it sounded familiar 18:02 < |aaron> bls: So I actually tried that but I must have done something wrong. I override ExecStart= with my script, which exports all the vars then calls "exec $DAEMON -- $DAEMON_SERVER_OPTS" at the end 18:02 < |aaron> but httpd doesnt even start that way 18:03 < |aaron> the journal says it finished starting up, but no process 18:03 < |aaron> should i not be using exec? obviously id like systemd to still manage the pid, proc status, etc 18:04 < ayecee> why use exec? 18:04 < |aaron> Dagmar: the unit seemed like a natural place to put it to me.. where would you put it? 18:04 < |aaron> thats just how examples i saw online were doing it 18:04 < |aaron> i thought that was the "correct" way but i guess not 18:05 < Dagmar> What part of "you should fully explain" is confusing 18:05 < |aaron> I did fully explain 18:05 < |aaron> What part of my explanation was confusing? 18:05 < Dagmar> The part where you might have been installing AWS instance keys into the brain of a giant mutated spider 18:06 < |aaron> Why would you assume that? Access control is handled by an instance profile 18:06 < |aaron> There are no keys on the machine at all. These secrets are the only sensitive data 18:07 < rocketmagnet> hi again, where on earth can i set kernel boot parameters if i'm not using a boot manager ? (rasperri pi with kali here) 18:07 < Dagmar> O 18:07 < Dagmar> I'll make this simple, |aaron 18:07 < rocketmagnet> i'm not able to disable ipv6 permanently on debian, the only way i found is by setting the right boot paramter to grub 18:07 < Dagmar> If you think that you "fully explained" anything, but don't see a problem with that the details you've given amount to less than 250 characters, perhaps this is part of your problem 18:08 < Dagmar> *You* don't even appear to know what you're trying to do 18:08 < |aaron> ??? 18:08 < |aaron> Lmfao 18:08 < |aaron> ok dude you are just talking nonsense 18:08 < |aaron> I know *exactly* what im trying to do, and ive explained it completely. If you want to ask a follow up question go ahead 18:09 < |aaron> Comments like this "The part where you might have been installing AWS instance keys into the brain of a giant mutated spider" make it sound much more like you are the one who doesnt understand what im doing 18:09 < Dagmar> Nah, I'll just ignore you 18:09 < Dagmar> There's plenty of lunatics on the internet 18:09 < |aaron> darn, such a loss 18:09 < |aaron> ill say 18:09 < Dagmar> Notice the complete lack of anyone else wanting to get involved with such a vaguely defined process 18:09 < rocketmagnet> when there is nothing like grub, how to set kernel boot parameters ?? 18:09 < |aaron> i thought you were gonna ignore me? 18:09 < Dagmar> rocketmagnet: How are you booting at all? 18:09 < |aaron> still running your mouth because *you* dont understsand, lmao 18:10 < |aaron> such a simple question too 18:10 < rocketmagnet> from an sd card, it's an prebuild kali for arm (rasperry pi) 18:10 < Dagmar> rocketmagnet: It probably *does* use grub 18:10 < rocketmagnet> how does linux does it when there is no need for grub ? 18:11 < Dagmar> It *doesn't* 18:11 < MrElendig> read the kali docs 18:11 < Dagmar> Kernels don't magically boot 18:11 < rocketmagnet> that's clear 18:11 < MrElendig> it tells you how to change the boot parameters 18:11 < rocketmagnet> i've found nothing on the web so far 18:13 < Dagmar> Maybe you should be using Raspbian then 18:14 < Dagmar> There's a number of things about Kali that were not designed with desktop use in mind 18:15 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: what is your use case? 18:15 < rocketmagnet> i want to disable ipv6 for all network devices 18:15 < rocketmagnet> vpn dns leak... 18:16 < Dagmar> So set your DNS correctly 18:16 < rocketmagnet> when using grub i just had to pass ipv6=0 and that worked 18:16 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: what is your use case for kali 18:16 < MrElendig> it is NOT a secure distro 18:16 < gnulligan> ^ 18:16 < rocketmagnet> Dagmar: i set my dns correctly, but there is still a way to get your provider with ipv6 18:16 < Dagmar> When the VPN is active, your system should be using something that is on the other side of the VPN as it's DNS source. No exceptions. 18:17 < MrElendig> it was made to break security, not be secure 18:17 < Dagmar> This is true 18:17 < Dagmar> It's *not* meant to be used as a "hardened environment' 18:17 < rocketmagnet> MrElendig: what's distro would you prefer for a firewall/router/fileserver ? 18:17 < rocketmagnet> i'm from debian background 18:18 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: pfsense etc 18:18 < rocketmagnet> and i don't want to change that, i've already tons to learn and are behind it, no time for another distro 18:18 < MrElendig> not that a rpi is suitable as a router 18:18 < felda> who dare pfsense in my presence?! 18:18 < ntd> is the quadro nvs 285 not supported for x11 vdpau (nouveau)? 18:18 < rocketmagnet> rpi is a good router... why not ?? 18:18 < MrElendig> ntd: nouveau basically doesn't support anything 18:18 < Dagmar> rocketmagnet: It lacks the ability to convincingly "do" gigE 18:18 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: it is not a good router, it has horrible IO performance and no hw acceleration for anything relevant 18:19 < felda> good luck hitting gigabit with anything like an RPI 18:19 < MrElendig> felda: good luck even doing 100mbit 18:19 < Dagmar> Nah, they have good hardware accell for video decoding 18:19 < MrElendig> felda: add a couple of vlans and good luck doing 30mbit 18:19 < Dagmar> ...and they work okay for Fast Ethernet-only environments 18:19 < rocketmagnet> the new one also has 64bit 18:19 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: if you want to diy a router you are better off buying one of the cheap aliexpress servers 18:20 < rocketmagnet> i found out that my old router send signals to their company... 18:20 < felda> maybe try this? https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157808 18:20 < MrElendig> if you just want to play around, then look at vde 18:21 < rocketmagnet> so i decided to use something where i'm sure what hardware/sofware is running, i also had custom software on the router but still got these stupid signals send out to california, like they are monitoring their users in some way 18:21 < ntd> MrElendig, exact same system image is working fine on an almost identical box. only diff is that it has a quadro nvs 290 18:21 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: I would suggest just buying a mikrotik/ubiq router though 18:21 < rocketmagnet> can i have linux installed there ? 18:22 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: you would use their OS 18:22 < Dagmar> Oooo they had me until it got to only two slots of ddr4 18:22 * Dagmar closes the browser tab 18:22 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: if you want diy, grab something like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgBaRzmOqjQ 18:22 < ntd> oh, well. i do believe i've got a 290 in a drawer somewhere, but just seemed unlikely 18:22 < MrElendig> or some old machine with a couple of PCIex4 slots 18:22 < gnulligan> hey guys when I try to install xubuntu it just shows a black screen and nothing else 18:23 < rocketmagnet> too much watt 18:23 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: no 18:23 < gnulligan> it gets to a grub prompt, I select "Install Xubuntu" 18:23 < gnulligan> and black 18:23 < gnulligan> but, when I select "check disk for errors" the error check works fine 18:23 < rocketmagnet> i need something with small energy 18:23 < gnulligan> and the error check display is perfect, even detecting my second monitor 18:23 < MrElendig> rocketmagnet: how is 20w too much? 18:23 < gnulligan> I tried editing the options for the "Install Xubuntu" entry in grub and removing "quiet", but it still just shows a black screen, no text 18:23 < gnulligan> what's going on? :( 18:25 < MrElendig> gnulligan: nomodeset 18:25 < Dagmar> ntd: Keep in mind the Quadro's are designed for visualization/CUDA stuff, not gaming. The Nouveau people basically aren't coding for /those/ kinds of cards 18:25 < MrElendig> gnulligan: or video=.... 18:26 < MrElendig> gnulligan: what hardware is this btw? 18:26 < ntd> this is playing video with mplayer using -vo vdpau 18:26 < ntd> for some reason the 285 won't do this, 290 will :) 18:26 < gnulligan> MrElendig: ryzen 5 2400g w/ integrated vega xD 18:26 < Dagmar> Not "some reason". This reason -> https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/CodeNames/ 18:27 < MrElendig> gnulligan: old kernel? 18:27 < gnulligan> no it's xubuntu 18.04 18:27 < Dagmar> The 290 is a Tesla card 18:27 < MrElendig> gnulligan: that is a yes then 18:27 < MrElendig> you want 4.16 + latest mesa 18:27 < Dagmar> The 285 is Curie and basically, almost entirely worthless for nouveau 18:27 < gnulligan> oh really? lol 18:27 < MrElendig> but anyway, try booting with nomodeset 18:27 < gnulligan> I was afraid I'd need a super new kernel for this 18:27 < gnulligan> ok 18:28 < MrElendig> gnulligan: 2xxxg sadly is buggy as hell still 18:28 < ntd> "quite diff from prev cards" 18:28 < ntd> i see 18:28 < MrElendig> though with the latest mesa (or -dev) it have improved somewhat 18:28 < ntd> was looking at http://us.download.nvidia.com/solaris/346.47/README/supportedchips.html 18:28 < airking> is Fillipe a bot? 18:28 < gnulligan> so just edit the grub entry for "install Xubuntu" and add "nomodeset", right? 18:28 < MrElendig> yea, append it to the kernel line 18:28 < ntd> so then it's pretty much confirmed. thanks 18:28 < gnulligan> MrElendig: ok ty brb 18:29 < MrElendig> if it still doesn't work, try noapic acpi=off 18:29 < MrElendig> gnulligan: also, make sure the firmware is fully up to date 18:29 < MrElendig> gnulligan: also, how is the monitor connected? 18:30 < ntd> time to do dumpster-diving for that 290, thanks Dagmar 18:30 < MrElendig> gnulligan: idealy you would want >= 4.17 18:31 < gnulligan> MrElendig: well this is a windows dual-boot so windows should have taken care of whatever firmware needed updating. it's connected with hdmi, dual monitors (the second one didn't work on windows until a driver was installed so we'll see how it goes on linux), and the nomodeset option worked 18:31 < MrElendig> windows does not magically upgrade the uefi firmware 18:32 < gnulligan> oh that 18:32 < MrElendig> https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=ryzen-2400g-may&num=1 18:32 < gnulligan> yeah I upgraded it lol 18:32 < gnulligan> if you mean flashing the bios, then yes 18:32 < MrElendig> you are not alone with 2xxxg problems 18:32 < rosco_> I can reboot a machine remotely through remote management but I have no better interface than that. How can I test a new kernel? Is there a command to reboot a host with a "onetime" test kernel and reboot on a safesr kernel in case of another reboot? 18:33 < gnulligan> btw does "download updates while installing" ever cause system instability later? 18:33 < MrElendig> rosco_: don't mess with it unless you have out of bound access 18:33 < gnulligan> I've heard one guy say not to use that option because it can be less stable than updating afterwards 18:33 < MrElendig> rosco_: one thing you could do is to set up a hardware watchdog and have the default kernel be the known good one, and then tell the boot loader to only boot the new kernel once 18:34 < MrElendig> rosco_: and hope that the hardware watchdog will reboot the machine if the new kernel fails 18:34 < MrElendig> this assumes that your machine has a functional hardware watchdog 18:34 < MrElendig> (a lot of hardware doesn't) 18:35 < MrElendig> if you have out of band access, just tell the boot loader to only boot the new kernel once 18:35 < BCMM> gnulligan: uefi firmware usually needs to updated manually. also, you generally can't rely on windows to update other kinds of firmware either 18:36 < MrElendig> both grub and systemd-boot supports one time boot 18:36 < BCMM> gnulligan: i mean, windows update will download stuff like cpu microcode, but like most firmware, it's volatile and needs to be "installed" on every boot 18:37 < BCMM> (graphics firmware is definitely one that's loaded each boot) 18:37 < oerheks> grinn gnulligan 18:37 < MrElendig> for amd, the runtime microcode is shipped in linux-firmware 18:37 < oerheks> crossposting is so smart 18:39 < gnulligan> BCMM: the problem is "firmware" is a generic term. When he asked if I updated "the firmware", I didn't know which one he meant, but I assumed microcode for zen bugfixes etc... though yes I updated the uefi firmware manually as well 18:40 < BCMM> gnulligan: right, but windows will *not* take care of microcode updates for linux 18:40 < gnulligan> oh really? I thought microcode was OS-independent 18:40 < Dagmar> It is 18:40 < BCMM> gnulligan: it is, but the cpu doesn't actually store microcode updates 18:40 < dgurney> manufacturers don't always have the latest microcode in the firmware 18:41 < MrElendig> microcode and firmware are different things though 18:41 < Dagmar> Are you perhaps surmising that Windows is going to load the microcode and then chain-load Linux? 18:41 < BCMM> gnulligan: they get "installed" each time the OS is booted 18:41 < gnulligan> BCMM: omg really? I never knew that 18:41 < BCMM> gnulligan: well that's the case for intel anyway. i believe amd is the same though. 18:41 < dgurney> yes, really. either the firmware loads microcode on boot, or the OS does 18:41 < BCMM> gnulligan: at power-on you get the microcode that was burned in to the cpu when it was manufactured 18:44 < rosco_> MrElendig: I was thinking that ‘GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT’ could be used in some way. I never really used it 18:45 < MrElendig> gnulligan: watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fNBkUCjhcE&list=PLEeZWGE3PwbZ44SUf1-vA-UuX9_J_pifB when you have the time 18:45 < BCMM> gnulligan: on my debian system, i've installed intel-microcode from non-free, and as far as i can see it hooks the initramfs generation thingy. if you *don't* have something like that on your distro, you're not running current microcode 18:46 < ssarah> i want something that monitors a user area/dir and sends me an email when there are changes 18:46 < ssarah> you guys know of anything? 18:46 < MrElendig> rosco_: uefi? 18:46 < MrElendig> rosco_: also which distro? 18:46 < gnulligan> MrElendig: wow that 18:46 < MrElendig> rosco_: https://wiki.debian.org/GrubReboot 18:46 < gnulligan> thats cool 18:46 < gnulligan> I always wanted to put an opensparc on a FPGA 18:47 < dotcomboom> curious, is the microcode that necessary? 18:47 < BCMM> ssarah: if you wanted to roll your own, you could start with inotifywait or inotifywatch https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29672293/how-to-send-an-email-alert-if-a-folder-is-modified 18:47 < MrElendig> (risc-v is much nicer) 18:47 < MrElendig> dotcomboom: yes 18:47 < rosco_> MrElengis: centos 7, WOW, just found it! "grub-reboot — Set the default boot menu entry for the next boot only." 18:47 < MrElendig> dotcomboom: it fixes various bugs in the cpu 18:47 < dotcomboom> ah 18:47 < gnulligan> MrElendig: there aren't any risc-v implementations (yet) that can match ultrasparc T2 performance 18:48 < MrElendig> gnulligan: but they don't need a 1000€ fpga either... 18:48 < MrElendig> :p 18:48 < BCMM> dotcomboom: modern x86 processors are ludicrously complicated. they have what is basically an internal risc architecture, and a built-in software layer that implements x86 on top of it 18:48 < gnulligan> lol ya 18:48 < BCMM> dotcomboom: it's all much too complicated and riddled with bugs 18:48 < MrElendig> dotcomboom: pretty much every cpu since the 80's have used microcode 18:49 < BCMM> dotcomboom: but a few of those bugs get discovered and fixed, and that's what microcode updates are for 18:49 < gnulligan> anyway I just rebooted and although xubuntu installed, now the installed version has a black screen xD 18:49 < MrElendig> just varied if it was runtime changeable or not 18:49 < gnulligan> I guess nomodeset again, though I assume I can remove that from grub once the kernel is updated right? 18:49 < BCMM> MrElendig: pretty much every *desktop* cpu 18:50 < widmo> I've always thought the microcode is hardcoded in the asic, and just recently discovered it's not 18:50 < widmo> Isn't there a performance penalty because it's not hardcoded? 18:50 < ssarah> BCMM, i will try that 18:50 < gnulligan> widmo: why? 18:50 < gnulligan> is eeprom slower to read than eprom? 18:50 < zarzar> is CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW affected by the kernel tick rate at all? 18:51 < MrElendig> gnulligan: usually the oposite 18:51 < widmo> Well, i'd imagine there would be a redundant step in decoding of every instruction 18:51 < BCMM> widmo: x86 is hideously inefficient in many ways, but people have spent decades and billions of dollars optimizing around those problems 18:51 < widmo> I can imagine 18:51 < BCMM> i hope we'll see the day when a proper architecture gets the same treatment... 18:52 < gnulligan> (that was a rhetorical answer to widmo- there shouldn't be any speed difference between using eeprom or eprom/prom) 18:52 < MrElendig> gnulligan: most eeproms are made with much newer tech than eproms so.. 18:52 < gnulligan> lol ya 18:52 < gnulligan> I doubt anyone even makes eproms anymore 18:53 < BCMM> gnulligan: i don't think he was concerned with microcode loading times, but more the penalties of providing a flexible, general-purpose execution environment for it 18:53 < gnulligan> ohhh 18:53 < BCMM> if that makes sense 18:53 < widmo> BCMM: thanks for explaining, that was what I've meant 18:53 < BCMM> because usually programmable things are slower than burned-in-to-silicon things 18:53 < gnulligan> yeah it does, I can see why that could cause a performance overhead 18:54 < BCMM> we're all used to things like software h.264 or aes vs. dedicated hardware implementations 18:54 < BCMM> or cpu/gpu bitcoin vs asic 18:55 < BCMM> and x86/amd64 instructions are essentially implemented as something in between a hardware solution and a software solution 18:57 < MrElendig> using microcode is actually faster on modern cpus than what implementing the instructions directly in silicon would be 18:57 < MrElendig> since it massively reduces the transistor count and size, so you can push the speeds higher 18:58 < MrElendig> core size* 18:58 < MrElendig> and hey, you can implement a instruction in microcode and have it execute in just one clock tick, or implement it in silicon and have it execute in just one clock tick :p 18:59 < MrElendig> (for the simpler ones) 18:59 < gnulligan> ok I just booted into xubuntu with nomodeset, then ran software updater and restarted 18:59 < gnulligan> it still won't let me boot without nomodeset 18:59 < gnulligan> I guess it didn't update the kernel? 19:00 < gnulligan> :( 19:00 < gnulligan> I'll check brb 19:00 < MrElendig> try noapic acpi=off 19:01 < gnulligan> well I mean, nomodeset works 19:01 < MrElendig> ah tought you ment it didn't work 19:01 < gnulligan> I get a desktop with nomodeset, but I'd rather it had full h/w support 19:01 < MrElendig> set up ssh, boot without modeset and see what happens 19:01 < MrElendig> ssh in and see if it responds 19:01 < MrElendig> and if it does, check dmesg -H 19:02 < MrElendig> when exactly does it go black btw, at loading modules, or when it starts X? 19:03 < gnulligan> right after grub 19:03 < gnulligan> I hit enter, and black 19:03 < paul424> Hello, Hello, I am on Opensuse 42.3 and I am trying to connect to an android 4 device, which is stuck ( onyx eink reader - max carta ) , which keeps booting and booting and cannot start. Is there any way I can access it's memory and reset it ? 19:03 < paul424> ,the lsusb gives 19:03 < MrElendig> if it is using plymouth, make sure to disable it 19:03 < paul424> Bus 002 Device 002: ID 18d1:2d01 Google Inc. Android-powered device in accessory mode with ADB support 19:04 < MrElendig> paul424: usually involves opening it up 19:04 < Isky> paul424: last time I did that, I searched for "unbrick android in linux" on google and got steps 19:04 < Isky> I don't remember what they were, though. 19:04 < MrElendig> most ebook readers have the software on a sd card 19:05 < triceratux> gnulligan: they recently changed xorg to have a much greater affinity for the modesetting driver https://tjaalton.wordpress.com/2016/07/23/intel-graphics-gen4-and-newer-now-defaults-to-modesetting-driver-on-x/ i found i had to make certain adjustments 19:05 < MrElendig> paul424: tried back + power button? 19:05 < Isky> I'm trying to use fcntl to lock files on nfs, and it's hanging. (I don't have a choice to use another method. They're cobol scripts used in our ERP) 19:05 < gnulligan> MrElendig: I think it won't need nomodeset if I update to the latest kernel... would sudo apt-get dist-upgrade do it? Or is the newest kernel not in the official xubuntu repos? 19:05 < paul424> MrElendig, what do you mean by back + power button 19:05 < gnulligan> triceratux: ty I'll check that ouit 19:06 < MrElendig> paul424: turn it off, press back and power at the same time 19:06 < MrElendig> long press 19:06 < paul424> I tried pressing the power for 7 seconds and it freezes the device 19:06 < MrElendig> paul424: power + back button will put it in recovery mode 19:06 < paul424> then I press the power button again and it retrurns to booting up 19:07 < paul424> what is that mystical back button 19:07 < MrElendig> the button wiht a sideways u 19:07 < paul424> you seem to own such device 19:07 < paul424> hmm ... 19:07 < MrElendig> I don't 19:08 < MrElendig> have had a few older onyx devices though 19:08 < MrElendig> just replaced my kobo h2o with the aura one after the screen broke :( 19:08 < paul424> yeap , I also owned m90 model, which I already sold 19:09 < paul424> and that model had the back button , which you activated with the pin 19:09 < MrElendig> had a couple of boox variants 19:09 < paul424> but not the Max version ? 19:09 < MrElendig> nope, way too expensive 19:09 < MrElendig> would be nice for pdf though, kobo is friggin useless when it comes to pdf 19:10 < pekmek> hi guys 19:10 < MrElendig> also, I like it being waterproof :p 19:10 < pekmek> someone using orchestrator for mysql replication? 19:10 < gnulligan> hey so I'm having hardware support issues with xubuntu on a ryzen 2400g 19:10 < gnulligan> I'd like to update to the most recent kernel 19:10 < gnulligan> is sudo apt-get dist-upgrade the best option here? 19:11 < gnulligan> lol nope 19:11 < BCMM> gnulligan: what version of xubuntu are you using? 19:11 < gnulligan> I just checked- that only updates 7 packages, and they're libgoa and libvt related 19:11 < MrElendig> there is the mainline ppa or backports 19:11 < WhiteDevil> hey what was that linux gaming room called ? 19:12 < gnulligan> BCMM: latest, 18.04 19:12 < gnulligan> I guess add a repo then 19:12 < gnulligan> though that usually breaks everything haha 19:13 < gnulligan> what's the official linux kernel repo? 19:13 < WhiteDevil> hey anyone know the room i was talking about ? 19:13 < TRS-80> triceratux: "recently" kek, I love GNU/Linux <3 19:14 < BCMM> WhiteDevil: "room" means an irc channel in this case? 19:14 < WhiteDevil> yes sorry 19:14 < koala_man> #gamingonlinux ? 19:14 < WhiteDevil> yup that one 19:14 < MrElendig> check backports first, if not there use the kernel-ppa 19:15 < BCMM> gnulligan: do you know which kernel you need? 19:16 < triceratux> TRS-80: unless you look closely you wont know when they did it, when a given distro adopted it, & why you or anyone else is only seeing it now. at least with ubuntu it comes out in manageable, properly scheduled snapshots 19:16 < MrElendig> 4.17 would be prefered for raven ridge 19:17 < triceratux> tumbleweed ships 4.17 already. give up on the ubuntu 19:17 < gnulligan> BCMM: 4.16, so I guess I'll add the mainline ppa 19:18 < Ignacy> hey guys. helping some non-linux-usr to read his problematic ssd from linux mint. what's the name of default file manager on mint, and how do I call it from terminal (which command)? 19:19 < MrElendig> Ignacy: coreutils 19:19 < MrElendig> aka ls, cd, etc..... 19:19 < MrElendig> if you are running X anyway, just click the icon 19:20 < BCMM> Ignacy: looks like they're using a fork of nautilus called "nemo" 19:20 < Ignacy> i'm telling him what to type to install ntfs driver, create a directory and mount his problematic drive there. but it will mount it as root, so i wanted to open the file with file manager 19:20 < Ignacy> nemo! thanks 19:21 < MrElendig> nemo is not going to help in anyway way 19:21 < Ignacy> it's opening in read only, should be ok with root access 19:21 < MrElendig> not with permissions 19:21 < Ignacy> run as root? 19:21 < MrElendig> and NEVER run nemo as root 19:21 < MrElendig> just mount with the correct uid/gid mount options 19:21 < Ignacy> can I do that? 19:22 < MrElendig> you can 19:22 < MrElendig> (if you read the manual) 19:22 < Ignacy> ok, that sounds proper. thanks! 19:22 < Ignacy> that's what i'm gonna do 19:22 < BCMM> Ignacy: ntfs doesn't support unix permissions. as a result, all files on an ntfs partition will appear to have the same ownership and permissions. you can decide what those are when you mount it. 19:23 < MrElendig> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NTFS-3G#Linux_compatible_permissions 19:23 < BCMM> Ignacy: man ntfs-3g 19:23 < MrElendig> https://www.tuxera.com/community/ntfs-3g-advanced/ownership-and-permissions/ 19:23 < BCMM> oh or that 19:23 < MrElendig> depending on how fancy you want to be 19:25 < Ignacy> hmm, how can I get linux mint live cd username from console, to change the owner of the catalogue that the drive will be mounted to? 19:25 < Ignacy> that would solve the permissions problem. it's the catalogue that is created as root, because it's in /media 19:27 < MrElendig> Ignacy: id 19:29 < Ignacy> i'll use $(whoami) to get username 19:30 < MrElendig> use id 19:30 < jim> don't you have to parse id? 19:32 < MrElendig> his next question would be "how do I get the group" or "why doesn't uid=username work :p 19:32 < jim> oh ok, you can use id -un 19:33 < Ignacy> ahhh id was a command name, not a variable. 19:33 < gnulligan> are odd-numbered kernels, like 4.17, unstable? 19:33 < gnulligan> or is that over with? 19:33 < paul424> MrElendig, what to choose from recovery menu ? 19:33 < Ignacy> but it's a live system so id and guid is most likely 1000 and 1000 19:33 < MrElendig> paul424: factory reset would be a start 19:33 < gnulligan> I'm trying to decide between kernel 4.16 and 4.17 for my system 19:33 < dgurney> gnulligan, that is long over with 19:33 < dgurney> like, really long 19:34 < paul424> wipe data\factory reset --does not helo 19:34 < gnulligan> ok cool lol 19:34 < MrElendig> gnulligan: use the newest available 19:34 < gnulligan> ty MrElendig 19:34 < MrElendig> 4.17 have a bunch of improvements for raven ridge 19:34 < MrElendig> has* 19:34 < paul424> help*, but the device gives no confirmation about that, only "rebooting ... " 19:35 < jim> gnulligan, I'd request you spell out things like ty into thank you while you're here... helps others understand 19:35 < MrElendig> "Swich off the device firstly, and then long press back + power buttons, enter into recovery mode, to choose “wipe data\factory reset – yes delet all user data - reboot” to restore factory default." -- onyx customer support 19:35 < paul424> I see that web page as well 19:35 < MrElendig> I would contact them if there is no option to rest 19:35 < MrElendig> reset* 19:36 < gnulligan> laugh out loud oh kay Jim thank you 19:36 < paul424> but asi I wrote I don;t get no confirmation ........hmm 19:36 < MrElendig> had it on my older devices too 19:36 < paul424> MrElendig, hopefully there is some service in Europe 19:36 < paul424> European Union* 19:36 < MrElendig> they have an office in ze germany 19:36 < jim> gnulligan, just consider the folks here who are (say) first-time english speakers 19:36 < MrElendig> or had anyway, sent one of my old ones there 19:37 < paul424> ZE > 19:37 < paul424> ? 19:37 < MrElendig> in münchen iirc 19:38 < paul424> oki, many thanks for help anyway :) 19:38 < MrElendig> did you buy it straight from onyx-international? 19:39 < paul424> err from the aliexpress ... 19:39 < MrElendig> good luck then :p 19:39 < takeme> chmod -x run <— i can’t change attribute, what’s wrong? 19:39 < paul424> what;s wrong with aliexpress, MrElendig ? 19:39 < MrElendig> sidenote: when I bought mine, it was the same price to buy from their european dealer as from ali :pp 19:40 < MrElendig> paul424: no support 19:40 < MrElendig> unless you call 30 days "warranty" support :p 19:40 < Ignacy> @takeme that's chmod +x run 19:40 < Ignacy> as you want to "add" the execute bit 19:41 < paul424> how do I chooise wipe data, MrElendig ? with a pencil ? 19:41 < MrElendig> probably 19:41 < takeme> :( Ignacy thanks :) 19:41 < takeme> :) 19:41 < paul424> the thing is the device acts out as the options weren't choosen at all 19:41 < paul424> chosen* 19:41 < MrElendig> hmm, seems like onyx international is in .ru now 19:42 < MrElendig> mash the buttons? 19:42 < MrElendig> onyx is a bit of a mess btw, there are 3 different companies or something like that 19:42 < paul424> from what I deduce from the mentioned support page it shouild at least print the info " delete all user data - reboot ? " 19:42 < MrElendig> with different devices depending on the area 19:43 < paul424> mash ,,, err smash ? sorry I am not English native :P 19:43 < Ignacy> sudo mount -t ntfs-3g -o gid=$(id -g),uid=$(id -u),dmask=022,ro /dev/sdb1 /media/windows to make it run in read only mode? seems legit? 19:44 < MrElendig> try it and see :) 19:44 < Ignacy> thanks everyone very much. I'm glad I've asked it. The whole point is that I'm replying to him on some board, and leaving the house. So I wont be there and I don't have immidiate feedback. 19:45 < Ignacy> it's some other guy on the internet that has that problem. 19:45 < MrElendig> could just use the stadard dmask and just ro 19:45 < pankaj> My interest from programming is going away first time. I do not know how to keep it. 19:46 < Ignacy> eat shrooms, ask spirits for guidance. 19:48 < paul424> MrElendig, naah It ought to be choosen by power button 19:48 < gnulligan> jim: ok thanks for explaining, I'll use less abbreviations 19:48 < paul424> not the pencil :( 19:48 < jim> gnulligan, thanks, I appreciate that 19:49 < MrElendig> pankaj: go on a aliexpress spree and then go play with some hardware 19:49 < Ignacy> btw, MrElendig, are you by any chance norwegian/dutch? 19:49 < MrElendig> Ignacy: sort of 19:50 < MrElendig> Ignacy: until we go "screw you guys" and run off with all the oil and fish 19:51 < Ignacy> I'm in Trondheim, good luck running away. #polishinvasion 19:53 < Isky> LOL 19:54 < kingrodian> yeah, my building is already full of polish workers 19:55 < paul424> Wait for me , for me I also want to go Norway 19:55 < paul424> I can repair broken Onyx ereaders now 19:55 < Dagmar> Well, at least everything is shiny now. 19:56 < dannylee> ji 19:56 < paul424> MrElendig, naah I have the ereder working now, many thanks again 19:57 < hassoon> 'evening 19:59 < thxffo> i am running a go program to test for an asymmetric hashing bug, when the program runs i try to do a >> output.txt but the the stuff on screen is not going to file, any ideas? 19:59 < MrElendig> work work drynk fyght! 19:59 < MrElendig> thxffo: &>> 19:59 < Isky> NFS file locking is going to drive me to drink.. and maybe fight. 20:00 < thxffo> ok let me try that 20:00 < MrElendig> thxffo: if it prints to stderr too (requires a sane shell) 20:00 < MrElendig> 2>&1 if some ancient horrible shell 20:00 < ice9> when i launch a container i get "Error: Failed container creation: No root device could be found" 20:01 < Dagmar> Isky: You're at least using NTFS4, right? 20:01 < Dagmar> er NFS4 20:01 < thxffo> it is just stdout 20:05 < Todden> On linux lite i set the password for my account to blank and now it wont let me change it,it wont accept a blank one 20:05 < Todden> What do? 20:06 < Isky> Don't set a blank password? 20:06 < Isky> You could set it and go remove it from passwd and shadow, I suppose. 20:06 < Todden> I know now to do that Isky 20:06 < BCMM> Todden: why do you want a blank password? 20:07 < Todden> Boot is encrypted 20:07 < Todden> If the laptop is on,i dont mind anyone who goes near it 20:07 < Isky> Dagmar: I was trying to force 3, because it works on an RHEL6 nfs server with an RHEL5 client.. but it didn't help, so I took the version specification out. The client and server are OL7 for the system not working. It's particularly with fcntl that it doesn't work. 20:07 < Todden> But how do i remove it from passswd and shadow 20:07 < Dagmar> As root you can set it regardless 20:07 < BCMM> seems like a case for automatic login, not a blank password 20:07 < ananke> Isky: how did you 'set to blank'? 20:08 < Todden> idk i just tried setting the password to nothing,it worked 20:08 < BCMM> Todden: are you trying to set the password to something other than blank, but the tool you're using to change it won't accept your current password? 20:08 < Dagmar> Isky: Well, NFSv3 doesn't support flock() is part of the problem 20:08 < BCMM> Todden: trying to understand your initial message here 20:08 < Todden> Np 20:08 < Dagmar> This is pretty much the reason a lot of stuff still uses BSD-style .lock files 20:08 < Todden> I am trying now to do anything 20:08 < ananke> Isky: oops, wrong person, sorry 20:08 < Isky> delete the x in the second field in /etc/passwd for no password.. so it's like user::stuff:stuff 20:08 < Todden> As it wont take a password at all for any task 20:08 < Isky> ananke: ahh 20:08 < ananke> Todden: login as root 20:09 < Isky> Dagmar: it's not using flock. It's using fcntl, and I can't promise v3 does support it, because that's what we're using on the system that works 20:09 < Todden> It was the root PW i changed 20:09 < Todden> I cant get into root 20:09 < Isky> Todden: reboot to single user mode 20:09 < macwinner> hi, my server was built with a single partion without any swap. Is it possible to add swap space without needed to rebuild the box? 20:09 < Todden> Im unsure how to do that,linux lite 20:10 < Todden> Sorry 20:10 < macwinner> centos 7 20:10 < Todden> Im quite new to Linux 20:10 < ananke> Todden: google for 'reset root password ' 20:10 < Dagmar> macwinner: You can make a swap file and tell them system to use that 20:10 < Todden> I can get into another account 20:10 < macwinner> dogmar, cool, thank you! 20:10 < Todden> ananke, that sounds handy 20:10 < Isky> macwinner: totally possible.. create the new partition (or add a new disk), use fdisk to set the type to swap, edit your fstab to use it... then probably reboot to actually use the swap. 20:10 < Dagmar> macwinner: Basically, create an empty file of the appropriate size with dd, run mkswap on it as if it were a partition, and put it in your /etc/fstab like usual 20:11 < Isky> macwinner: oh.. sorry, you also need to makeswap 20:11 < macwinner> much appreciated. i'll look up the specific steps. 20:11 < Isky> Dagmar: ooh.. I think I'd add a new disk for swap instead of using a file, but that's a nifty suggestion. 20:11 < Dagmar> Meh. I just make swap partitions 20:12 < Isky> Dagmar: I do, too, but in the scenario he's talking about... 20:12 < Todden> https://www.linuxliteos.com/manual/install.html#respassword to anyone else who is having this issue btw 20:12 < Todden> for future ref 20:12 < Dagmar> Unlikely 20:12 < backandforth_> Why is there sometimes package managers will search for dependencies even when dependencies have been resolved? 20:13 < Dagmar> Because they need to check the dependencies for _each_ package they install 20:13 < Dagmar> Despite being almost entirely unoptimized, our update mechanisms are still *wildly* faster than anything Microsoft has ever produced 20:14 < Todden> ananke, thanks mate 20:14 < backandforth_> Dagmar: AM I OK to go ahead within an installation even if I'm having that problem? 20:15 < Dagmar> What problem? 20:15 < Dagmar> I suppose you could install Slackware. 20:16 < backandforth_> Dagmar: http://dpaste.com/2SYT0B9 20:16 < Dagmar> ...then it's _explicitly_ your responsibility to be sure all dependencies are present. ;) 20:16 < Isky> or LFS 20:16 < ayecee> like driving without a seatbelt to avoid getting chafed 20:16 < Isky> I've never had it take long to look for deps, so .. I guess I don't really care. 20:16 < Isky> ayecee: They have stuffed animals made just to fix that issue. ;) 20:17 < ayecee> large bears that sit between you and the windshield, i guess 20:17 < Isky> ayecee: small ones with seatbelt wraps on them that.. oh.. they might only work for women. 20:17 < Dagmar> If you can't drive on an empty, featureless plain without hitting something, you don't need to be driving 20:18 < ayecee> well, you say that, but that's life in the midwest 20:18 < Dagmar> If you have "life" like that inside your server, you have bigger problems that dependency resolution code isn't going to solve 20:18 < ayecee> people hitting things on empty featureless plains 20:18 < Isky> Apparently, they will stay in place even without breasts, so everyone can use them. 20:18 < Dagmar> Isky: In that pastebin'd case it looks like the repo was just down or unreachable at the time 20:18 < Isky> I just know exactly where that bear snuggles in on me. :P 20:19 < Isky> Dagmar: hmmm.. I didn't think it actually checked the repo for deps that were already installed. 20:19 < backandforth_> Dagmar: Can I ignore and continueÉ 20:19 < ayecee> try it and see 20:20 < Dagmar> backandforth_: Yeah but whatever mysqld was needing from that isn't going to work, since the repo is apparently buggered 20:20 < Dagmar> It probably isn't fatal, but it may impact LOB stuff 20:20 < Dagmar> Open http://repo.mysql.com/yum/mysql-connectors-community/el/7/x86_64/repodata/repomd in your browser 20:21 < Dagmar> Someone's repo update script is knackered 20:21 < Dagmar> I don't know what specifically is supposed to go into that file, but i'm damn sure that 'File not found."' isn't part of the format 20:21 < backandforth_> you`re missing the xml part at the end I think 20:21 < backandforth_> I looked into it and it`s an xml file with a bunch of numbers 20:22 < Dagmar> No, I am not 20:22 < Dagmar> Either the line from the pastebin was truncated or that repo is broke 20:23 < backandforth_> truncated 20:23 < backandforth_> here`s the link http://repo.mysql.com/yum/mysql-connectors-community/el/7/x86_64/repodata/repomd.xml 20:23 < Dagmar> There's also the repeated appearance of "Trying other mirror." being a pretty clear message that yum didn't like what it saw (if it was seeing anything) 20:23 < backandforth_> I don`t know what`s missing 20:24 < Dagmar> "QA" 20:25 < hexnewbie> backandforth_: Your paste is incomplete. Did it complete, fail, bail out to prompt without an error message? What was the command that produced this output? 20:25 < Dagmar> Don't worry. After awhile when you see broken third-party repos you'll be like, "Oh is it Tuesday already?" 20:25 < hexnewbie> backandforth_: Is there an error message anywhere at all? 20:25 < backandforth_> This pastebin looks better: http://dpaste.com/12G4ERP 20:25 < Dagmar> If I had an unlimited budget, I'd be like running an ongoing mission like Jay & Silent Bob, except I'd be flogging people who put up terrible Debian repos 20:26 * Dagmar boggles 20:26 < Isky> Dagmar: I can offer a bit of money to fund that quest! 20:27 < Dagmar> hexnewbie: Other than possible MITM skullduggery or a complete failure to notice there's a proxy required for the company LAN, I've no idea WTF a 401 is showing up there 20:27 < Dagmar> The site totally doesn't require authentication 20:27 < backandforth_> sorry hexnewbie, here`s the whole thing http://dpaste.com/0GG491E 20:27 < Dagmar> backandforth_: Is this on some kind of private corporate network 20:28 < backandforth_> yes 20:28 < Dagmar> You need to configure things to use your proxy credentials then 20:28 < Dagmar> https://www.centos.org/docs/5/html/yum/sn-yum-proxy-server.html 20:29 < Dagmar> ...although since this looks like a capture portal issue, you may be just SOL unless they're using some kind of whitelist and you can login with lynx or something 20:29 < Dagmar> It's generally *not* a good idea to MITM traffic like what is apparently going on there 20:30 < Dagmar> i.e., your yum is *not* actually contacting the mysql.org site, but hitting some bloody capture portal on your corporate network 20:30 < Dagmar> Might need to contact your netsec people and ask them to whitelist the thing 20:31 < backandforth_> There must be a way I can do it without using a proxy 20:31 < Dagmar> For sure they have created a nice problem for you 20:31 < Dagmar> backandforth_: Hit up http://repo.mysql.com with lynx and see if the guilty parties show a support number to call 20:32 < Dagmar> That server does *not* normally require authentication of any kind, so the 401 is likely coming from some other server that got the request 20:33 < Dagmar> If yum can reach the CentOS mirrors without a fight, you probably do need to talk to your netsec people about getting the mysql.com site into the same whitelist 20:33 < Dagmar> Make those bishes work for their fancy titles. ;) 20:33 < mikister> Hi guys, I got newb question, what is the "user@linuxpc:~$" thing in the terminal called 20:33 < ayecee> the prompt 20:34 < Isky> mikister: a prompt 20:34 < Dagmar> "The prompt" 20:34 < Kharma> PS1 20:34 < Kharma> :p 20:34 < BCMM> mikister: also sometimes the "PS1", after the environment variable that decides what's in it 20:34 < mikister> Thanks guys 20:35 < Dagmar> ...which is probably "gerschlockenschliebrossen" in German 20:38 < Isky> Dagmar: my brain keeps trying to translate that. :P 20:38 < Dagmar> Isky: If you speak German you know exactly what kind of joke i'm making there. ;) 20:38 < Isky> Dagmar: I know anglo saxon.. sometimes that's enough for German, and sometimes it's not. 20:38 < Dagmar> "Why adopt words from other languages when we can just pack a whole sentence without the whitespace?" 20:39 < jamithy> Dagmar - is that even a word? 20:39 < Isky> Dagmar: but I know enough german to have gotten that joke, yes. :P 20:39 < Dagmar> jamithy: Oh heck no 20:39 < Isky> I'm just like.. "lure"? "close"? wtf does that say?! 20:39 < Dagmar> ...although it *might* be because German 20:39 < Isky> It does contain at least two valid words. :P 20:39 < jamithy> i thought so, i just asked my german gf :) 20:39 < seven-eleven> hi, is it safe to use a website to generate a password? I need to create a few passwords and im too lazy to create them manually 20:39 < Dagmar> lol 20:40 < Dagmar> seven-eleven: Do you trust some random stranger to make up your passwords? 20:40 < Pentode> too lazy to just type a line of random characters? ;p 20:40 < jamithy> just hit some random keys on the keyboard 20:40 < Dagmar> If you want to be *super* lazy, just go copy sections of ciphertext from /etc/shadow 20:41 < Dagmar> As an added bonus it'll confuse the hell out of anyone who actually cracks that 20:41 < Pentode> lol 20:41 < Dagmar> "Wait... why did I get a salted ciphertext back?" 20:41 < seven-eleven> Dagmar, the passwords are used only locally and my WAN IP is dynamic, so it should be relatively hard to for the website where the password is used, but else I agree I don't trust a stranger 20:41 < Isky> cat a specific amount of characters from /dev/urandom? 20:41 < Isky> seven-eleven: you can get scripts to run at command line to generate passwords for you 20:41 < seven-eleven> Dagmar, i like to use memorable passwords, like bitcoins seed 20:41 < Dagmar> or phone apps 20:42 < Dagmar> I just modify builds of Keepass 20:42 < seven-eleven> yeah that would be better, some script or app creating memorable passwords 20:42 < hexnewbie> seven-eleven: Use ‘apg -a 0 -m30’ for pronounceable passwords, or ‘apg -a 1 -m30’ for random ones. You don't have to use the whole string 20:42 < seven-eleven> memorable passwords are just english dictionary words randomly put together 20:42 < Dagmar> One too many times of seeing it generate 0O0i1Ij;OOo0 as a password 20:42 < Isky> I write down the first 5 words that come to mind. It tends to work.. but I know bits and pieces of 14 languages, so I may have an advantage there. 20:44 < ayecee> especially when swearing 20:44 < hexnewbie> seven-eleven: Or pick 5 random words from the dictionary and remember them: echo $(cat /usr/share/dict/american-english | shuf | head -n5) 20:44 < ayecee> it would be better if they weren't from a dictionary 20:44 < jamithy> you're safe until they do a brute-force dictionary attack :P 20:45 < jamithy> agreed :) 20:45 < ayecee> well, a dictionary permutation attack 20:45 < BCMM> i have changed all my passwords to "correct horse battery staple", which has been mathematically demonstrated to be the most secure password 20:45 < seven-eleven> hexnewbie, thanks!! the random dictionary words are exactly what I need. I prefer dictionary words over pronounceable passwords 20:45 < Todden> Error found when loading root/.profile 20:45 < Todden> mesg: ttyname failed : inappropriate ioctl for device 20:45 < hexnewbie> ayecee: xkcd tends to disagree, and provides statistics to support it. I do use random character passwords, though. 20:45 < Todden> What is this? 20:45 < MrElendig> Todden: less .profile 20:45 < seven-eleven> ayecee, nah, dictionary is too big, that's what they make bitcoin seeds of, so it has to be safe :) 20:45 < Todden> Delete the file? 20:46 < Todden> I dont like that idea 20:46 < MrElendig> Todden: that is not what I said at all 20:46 < MrElendig> man less 20:46 < ayecee> hexnewbie: huh. how many words in your dictionary? 20:46 < BCMM> ayecee: seriously though, there's obviously less entropy per character in dictionary words, but our ability to remember them outweighs that 20:46 < hexnewbie> ayecee: wc -l /usr/share/dict/american-english says 99171 20:46 < BCMM> ayecee: i.e. you can remember a *much* longer password with dictionary words 20:47 < seven-eleven> hexnewbie, mine says 102305 20:47 < Isky> BCMM: yeah, and since we can remember them, we can have much longer passphrases, which makes them harder to crack. 20:47 < mous> my username is password and my password is username 20:47 < mous> hack proof 20:47 < BCMM> ayecee: basically one should be looking at the difficulty to remember:difficulty to bruteforce ratio 20:48 < ayecee> eh. 99171^5 looks like it has pretty good value. 20:48 < BCMM> ayecee: https://xkcd.com/936/ illustrates it well 20:48 < superkuh> I make sure to outline exactly how I pick my passwords on public spaces to help any attacker narrow it down. 20:49 < ayecee> takes longer than going through the permutations of a 12 character password 20:49 < Todden> So is this an issue i need to fix 20:49 < Todden> You said less .profile 20:49 < seven-eleven> just don't use "correct horse battery staple" as your password :P 20:49 < Todden> err 20:49 < ayecee> four words is a bit weaker though 20:49 < jamithy> at least pluralise it first if you do :P 20:50 < BCMM> superkuh: eh, password generation schemes are like encryption algorithms. if they're good, knowing which one you're using doesn't substantially impact security 20:50 < Todden> im confused 20:50 < Todden> I did base my PW off that on anotehr PC 20:50 < Todden> But not on this one 20:50 < Todden> And trust me,its far off 20:50 < hexnewbie> The problem with ‘correct horse battery staple’ is how many web sites and programs out there would truncate it to 10 characters or refuse it as too long 20:50 < BCMM> if anything that xkcd lowballs the entropy in passphrases by using very common words 20:50 < seven-eleven> ayecee, i think bitcoin seeds use 7 words 20:50 < Todden> My password is err..6 chars 20:50 < BCMM> by accepting some slightly odd words you can increase it significantly 20:51 < ayecee> 123456 20:51 < Todden> So that aint the issue 20:51 < Todden> Nah its a name converted to numbers 20:51 < superkuh> That's the password on my luggage! 20:51 < Todden> Eg A=01 20:51 < ayecee> Todden: that's a very weak password then 20:51 < Todden> ayecee, Idgaf,the laptop itself is encrypted with no battery 20:51 < meyou_> so it's a 3 letter name converted to a 6 digit number 20:51 < meyou_> oof 20:51 < Todden> Pull the power and its out 20:52 < meyou_> that's if they let you pull the powah 20:52 < ayecee> and protected by a 6 char password 20:52 < Todden> Good point 20:52 < Todden> but theres nothing on this laptop tbh 20:52 < Todden> its a basic "by the bed" laptop 20:52 < Todden> for late night googling,skype calls with my LDR etc 20:52 < hexnewbie> meyou_: 011401 is a strong password, indeed! 20:53 < ayecee> being uninteresting is a great step towards security 20:53 < Todden> Well not skype...as skype is now apparently toxic 20:53 < ayecee> as is the LDR 20:54 < Todden> How so 20:54 < ayecee> idk just something to say 20:54 < Todden> Most security breaches come from relationships? 20:54 < ayecee> if i had a clock, i'd be watching it 20:55 < Todden> Also i know what i did to give that error 20:55 < Todden> I clicked like...3 boxes 20:55 < Todden> Start XCFE,Start GNOME and another desktop environment 20:56 < Todden> So its trying to load 3 at once 20:56 < Todden> lol 20:58 < Todden> noice,smort 20:58 < ellyacht> can someone explain to me why its bad to run a driver I got from nvidia instead of the driver manager version 20:59 < Sitri> "driver manager"? What? 20:59 < Todden> Ubuntu's driver manager 20:59 < Todden> Assume 20:59 < ayecee> because you may have to do the same installation each time other packages update, and often without warning 20:59 < ayecee> would be called package manager, not driver manager 20:59 < Todden> Also guys for a laptop that runs linux lite OK,what would you guys recommend...as a more feature full package 20:59 < Todden> Its a bad laptop(Inspiron 1520) 21:00 < Bashing-om> ellyacht: Nvidia says " Note that many Linux distributions provide their own packages of the NVIDIA Linux Graphics Driver in the distribution's native package management format. This may interact better with the rest of your distribution's framework, and you may want to use this rather than NVIDIA's official package. 21:00 < ayecee> lubuntu 21:00 < Bashing-om> " 21:00 < Todden> Lubuntu you think? 21:00 < triceratux> canonical may know more about how they put their distro together than you do 21:00 < Todden> Itll run it ok on an Inspiron 1520 21:00 < ellyacht> Bashing-om: may want to use this rather... 21:00 < ellyacht> so I mean would it hurt to try the other one? 21:00 < Todden> Eh why not 21:01 < ellyacht> I mean its a brand new laptop like literally days old I would Like to see what VR is capable of and what 21:01 < Todden> VR is allegedly cool AF 21:02 < Todden> I had some friends who used it on LSD,apparently its the coolest thing you will ever experience 21:02 < ayecee> that's illegal 21:02 < Todden> Posession is,usage is not 21:02 < Todden> technically 21:02 < ayecee> better use it before they catch me 21:02 < ellyacht> Todden: I like the way you think 21:02 < ellyacht> !\ 21:02 < birdbolt1> how to kill nginx completely please? 21:03 < Todden> Cyberpolice are on their way ayecee 21:03 < Todden> birdbolt1, shotgun 21:03 < birdbolt1> shotgun nginx? 21:03 < ayecee> too late, already tripping balls 21:03 < birdbolt1> waitt... you're fucking with me.. 21:03 < Todden> Lol no man i was joking 21:03 < Todden> A literal shotgun 21:03 < ellyacht> ok so how do I run the driver I just downloaded from nvidia 21:03 < Todden> Haha 21:03 < Todden> Hang on,ill try find out 21:03 < birdbolt1> haha sorry i im too wound up rn 21:03 < Todden> np 21:03 < Todden> I know the feel 21:03 < birdbolt1> got django and react screwing me mercilessly 21:03 < Todden> After you fix this,i advise a break 21:03 < Todden> this happened to me the other day 21:04 < Todden> try /etc/init.d/nginx stop 21:04 < birdbolt1> indeed, i'll need it 21:04 < Todden> or ps aux | grep nginx 21:04 < ayecee> or service nginx stop 21:04 < Todden> Then use the response from that to format this : kill -9 2124 # tried with kill -QUIT 2124, kill -KILL 2124 21:04 < Todden> Finally ps aux | grep nginx to check 21:04 < Todden> I mean....it should work 21:05 < birdbolt1> wonderful 21:05 < Todden> Oh come on,this is the 2nd USB stick to die on me 21:05 < Todden> in like a week 21:05 < Todden> It work? 21:06 < birdbolt1> yep, thanks! 21:06 < Todden> Whose idea? 21:06 < Todden> Im betting on ayecee 21:06 < birdbolt1> the init.d method 21:06 < Todden> NOICE 21:06 < Todden> Im getting better at this crap 21:07 < Todden> Granted most of it is copy and pasted notes 21:07 < birdbolt1> I just restarted out of some frustration with node, and and nginx was hogging the default port my docker container was publishing to 21:07 < Kharma> Why didn't you just change the port docker published to? :p 21:07 < ayecee> sounds like quite the flustercluck you've got going on there 21:07 < birdbolt1> cuz i'd have to build a again, im using docker compose 21:07 < Todden> Last week ive had no internet due to starting service with talktalk,4 engineer visits(one was the same guy twice),one guy at the call centre who failed to escalate the issue,first engneer didnt bother checking the fibre box at all 21:08 < rasputozen> what do you think of this idea: an operating system file handler that allows files within files, implemented by having file-delimiter strings within the file to slice up the contents 21:08 < Todden> Final one was told it was a phone line issue,he was not ADSL trained he just guessed at everything and got it working...so i know frustration 21:08 < ayecee> rasputozen: it's not clear what problem this idea solves 21:08 < Todden> Then i phone up for my PPPoA password as i gotta phone from the landline but i have no landline,first call centre guy tells me he cantget it for me says its impossible...the second one gets it for me right away 21:08 < rasputozen> the syntax would be just treating the file as a directory 21:09 < Todden> So birdbolt1 ,take a break 21:09 < rasputozen> ayecee: really fast prototyping since you could edit multiple files within a single buffer unobtrusively 21:10 < ayecee> who has this problem of being limited to single files? 21:10 < rasputozen> no one is, it would just be a convenience 21:10 < ayecee> for who? 21:10 < rasputozen> someone that wants to prototype quickly 21:11 < ayecee> and only has one buffer to work with, i guess 21:11 < rasputozen> one buffer can be nice 21:11 < BCMM> rasputozen: not sure about the implementation, amongst numerous problems it seems like it would restrict fs implementation in performance0amaging ways 21:12 < rasputozen> to have the syntax to access files within files be to just add a '/' after the file, it probably could be built on top of the normal file handler calls without changing the old code 21:12 < BCMM> but there is, on the face of it, no solid reason that directories can't have their own file data as well as containing other inodes 21:12 < rasputozen> so no performance hit 21:12 < ayecee> eh. write a patch, see how it comes out. 21:12 < BCMM> it's just the convention that we've ended up with 21:13 < BCMM> a lot of other tree structures in use allow something to be perform a function in its own right as well as having subordinate nodes 21:13 < BCMM> ^to perform 21:13 < ayecee> might try modifying an editor instead of kernel to rapidly prototype this. 21:14 < rasputozen> on the face of it seems interesting, no? 21:14 < ayecee> no, the opposite of that. 21:14 < ayecee> it seems like a heavy-handed solution to a contrived problem. 21:14 < rasputozen> well its just giving you more without taking anything away 21:14 < Todden> Oh btw birdbolt1 after kill -9 the process is doomed 21:15 < Todden> Like it will die,no matter what 21:15 < Todden> Only problem is if it has a child or parent thats also hanging 21:15 < Pentode> zombies are a pain 21:15 < birdbolt1> lol Todden 21:15 < Todden> braaaainnnzzzzzz 21:16 < Pentode> you have to hit em in the head real hard 21:16 < Todden> What is dead may never die 21:16 < MrElendig> cgroups are handy for killing off whole families 21:16 < Todden> Lol 21:16 < Todden> We need a ~quotes botr 21:16 < Todden> bot 21:16 < Todden> Tripsit has one,everyone has hilarious quotes 21:17 < BCMM> surprised i don't see this channel on bash.org more 21:18 < MrElendig> Todden: you should play DF: http://www.bay12forums.com/smf/index.php?topic=38863.0 21:18 < Pentode> neat. never knew about bash.org 21:18 < BCMM> oh man DF is bad for your search history 21:18 < Todden> Lets check it out 21:19 < rasputozen> so you could do something like 'cat ~/foo.txt/c ~/foo.txt/b ~/foo.txt/a' to print files in reverse order or 'cat foo.txt' to print them all sequentially along with their delimiter strings, and then also edit '~/foo.txt' to edit them all at once in a single buffer 21:19 < Todden> Ahh dwarf fortress 21:19 < Todden> Honestly I checked it out and it doesnt seem quite like me,some bits do 21:19 < BCMM> df is why i recently tried to google the difference between corpses and refuse 21:19 < Todden> I like the construction aspect but the top down stuff reallly doesnt appeal to me 21:20 < BCMM> Todden: top down as in the graphical presentation? or the micromanagement thing? 21:20 < rasputozen> if you use vim you can then do regex search and replace for multiple closely related files very simply and easily 21:20 < Todden> The graphical presentation 21:20 < rasputozen> i mean any editor can do that im sure 21:20 < Todden> Also we need a quote bot because of pages like this: http://prntscr.com/jy6m3z 21:20 < BCMM> Todden: i can't see how else you'd present it, really 21:21 < Todden> Its just not "me",i dont like games like that with few exceptions like FTL 21:21 < BCMM> Todden: people always complain about the graphics, but i think that's the first time i've heard somebody complain specifically about the *perspective* 21:21 < BCMM> but safe the say the visuals are not really the "thing" about df 21:21 < Todden> BCMM, I like to be specific 21:22 < no_gravity> Hello! What is a good way to install a small linux distro with a gui? 21:22 < BCMM> the awesome thing is how emergent and unscripted things are 21:22 < MrElendig> df can look pretty nice though 21:22 < ayecee> no_gravity: have someone else do it 21:22 < Todden> Visuals arent an instant NO for me but visuals like that make it very difficult for me to enjoy a game 21:22 < jamithy> just download the iso image 21:22 < Todden> I do like good visuals 21:22 < no_gravity> jamithy: Which one? 21:22 < Todden> Like...Half life 1 is ok with me 21:22 < jamithy> and then you can try it as a live CD, and see that it works with your hardware 21:22 < ayecee> no_gravity: fetch the nearest child of five to set it up for you :D 21:22 < bls> no_gravity: any of them 21:23 < triceratux> no_gravity: swagarch iso https://swagarch.gitlab.io/#download 21:23 < Todden> As for other styles,depends on the game like FTL 21:23 < jamithy> no_gravity: have you used linux before? 21:23 < Todden> BCMM, 21:23 < BCMM> Todden: like, everything in the game happens for a reason that is simulated in an excessively reductionist way, so the whole thing becomes an excercise in taking stupid stuff to it's logical conclusions 21:23 < BCMM> but in a good way 21:24 < jamithy> no_gravity: if not try something like linuxmint.com 21:24 < Todden> Give me an example,that sounds interesting 21:24 < Todden> Im a curious guy 21:24 < BCMM> like, the answer to "can i do X" is almost never "no, because the developers didn't specifically think of that" 21:24 < no_gravity> jamithy: Linux is my daily driver since the 90s. I think Debian 1 or Debian 2 was my first distro. 21:24 < bls> no_gravity: then why not continue to use debian? 21:25 < Todden> Thats interesting BCMM ,i do like games that are very open ended 21:25 < BCMM> Todden: have you seen the famous bug with the cat vomit? 21:25 < Todden> I have not 21:25 < Todden> Link it..i love this,ive got hexchat on 1 monitor the other monitoring like 4 systems,a laptop on my left and a TV infront of me 21:25 < Todden> Plus im on a comfy sofa chair 21:25 < BCMM> Todden: well obviously this isn't really an example of things working as intended but it shows how hilarious in-depth some aspects are: 21:26 < Todden> feel like l33t hax0rman 21:26 < no_gravity> bls: That's an option. I usually use it with the Mate desktop. But now I just want to build a very small VM. So just a window manager would be better. 21:26 < bls> Todden: the best intro to the game I've ever seen is Boat Murdered if you can still find a copy 21:26 < ayecee> Todden: i can do that just by not showering for a few days 21:26 < MrElendig> Todden: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaifrB5IrvGNPJmPeVOcqBA 21:27 < Todden> ayecee, the ability to hack actually is directly correlated with the number of days you havent showered 21:27 < ayecee> heh 21:27 < Todden> You dont shower for a month you get pentagon acccess 21:27 < bls> Todden: it's a group of people handing the game off to one another and narrating and illustrating the odd things that the game engine made happen 21:27 < BCMM> Todden: basically there was an issue were cats were walking through spilled beer, and then later cleaning themselves and thus ingesting the beer, getting drunk and throwing up (due to a bug in how the dose of alcohol was calculated for the cats, i think) 21:27 < Todden> Ill stick that on screen 3 21:27 < Todden> tHATS JUST A CHANNEL 21:28 < Todden> *Caps 21:28 < gnulligan> I'm trying to change the text color in grub.cfg 21:28 < gnulligan> it says set color_normal=black/black 21:28 < gnulligan> but my background is black, so I want the text to be grey if not selected 21:28 < gnulligan> would that be color_normal=grey/black or gray/black ? 21:28 < BCMM> Todden: actually the bugs are the best bit of df https://twitter.com/DwarfFortBugs 21:28 < BCMM> "Caravan won't leave after it was spooked by an otter" 21:28 < Todden> I am ot sure this is my sort of thing,i play fortnite StW/Red Alert type C&C games,FPS games,used to play minecraft heavily modded so i could build like...particle accelerators 21:29 < Todden> Ive logged 3k+ hours on GMOD,used to love TTT 21:29 < Todden> Oh and EVE Online 21:29 < Todden> But no time for that nowadayss 21:29 < Todden> Thanks anyway 21:30 < BCMM> Todden: building ridiculous stuff a la minecraft is what df is for 21:30 < jamithy> does minecraft work on linux? 21:30 < MrElendig> yes 21:30 < jamithy> oh cool :) 21:30 < MrElendig> both the original and several clones 21:30 < no_gravity> I think I will try the Marco window manager. 21:30 < Todden> I used to love those base building servers,where you'd raid each other 21:30 < no_gravity> Will 'apt install marco' be enough to run desktop aps? How do I start it then? Just 'startx'? 21:31 < BCMM> Todden: oh i thought of one! somebody built a bunch of minecarts out of lead specifically so they could crush goblins when they derail 21:31 < MrElendig> no_gravity: will have to update your .xinitrc too 21:31 < Todden> Also im getting unsafe swap space on lubuntu install from liveCD but im saying to erase the whole disk 21:31 < Todden> so wat 21:31 < Todden> Shall i just...go into gparted and erase the disk myself 21:31 < MrElendig> BCMM: can have them crash into a fortification and have the content fly onwards too 21:31 < no_gravity> MrElendig: how so? 21:31 < gnulligan> I'm trying to change the text color in grub.cfg 21:31 < gnulligan> it says set color_normal=black/black 21:31 < MrElendig> BCMM: fun if you eg fill them with magma 21:31 < gnulligan> but my background is black, so I want the text to be grey if not selected 21:31 < gnulligan> would that be color_normal=grey/black or gray/black ? 21:32 < MrElendig> BCMM: or cats 21:32 < MrElendig> or burning cats! 21:32 < BCMM> MrElendig: i've gotta actually play with minecarts some time 21:32 < BCMM> i always end up deciding it's too complicated and just making a shaft to the bottom of the world 21:33 < bls> where the demons live?!? 21:33 < BCMM> bls: just above 21:33 < Isky> In my head? Get out of there! 21:33 < BCMM> on the grounds that i mostly move heavy things like ore down to the magma smelters, which can now just be thrown down the shaft 21:33 < BCMM> and the things that need to come back up are mostly lighter so it's ok to just haul them up by hand 21:33 < BCMM> (like finished weapons) 21:34 < UristMcRM|Tux> best use of minecarts is to fill them with serrated disks and launch them at gobs 21:34 < MrElendig> UristMcRM|Tux: burning cats! 21:34 < MrElendig> UristMcRM|Tux: or burning logs and launch them at the elfs 21:35 < UristMcRM|Tux> lol 21:35 < MrElendig> remember kids, wooden artifacts can burn forever 21:37 < BCMM> MrElendig: i hadn't though of that, but that makes a df sort of sense 21:37 < BCMM> because it's flammable and also mostly indestructible right? 21:38 < MrElendig> yea 21:38 < MrElendig> someone tried to drain a sea once 21:38 < MrElendig> by dropping one into it 21:38 < MrElendig> sadly it just lead to fps death 21:39 < BCMM> MrElendig: i can think of more obvious ways to drain a sea, but won't they just provide infinite water from off-map? 21:39 < BCMM> i've never done a coastal embark so i'm just assuming it works like a wet cavern 21:39 < MrElendig> yep 21:41 < Todden> Ok why is my lubuntu installl saying unsafe swap space 21:41 < Todden> the entire drive is unallocated 21:41 < ayecee> if only there were some way to share what you were seeing 21:41 < ayecee> but i guess we'll have to depend on vague verbal descriptions 21:42 < Todden> I am trying,hang on lol 21:42 < Todden> Im trying my own solution first 21:42 < ayecee> cool 21:42 < Todden> Only way to learn 21:42 < Todden> or cause a kernal panic 21:43 < ayecee> that's why we send kids into the world instead of school 21:43 < ayecee> and let natural selection take its course 21:43 < Todden> Indeed! 21:43 < triceratux> if only there were a way to look up similar bugreports even from the vague descriptions https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2334294 21:44 < Todden> https://askubuntu.com/questions/393418/unsafe-swap-space-detected this exact error ayecee 21:44 < Todden> Yeah i am,ofc 21:44 < Todden> I can multitask 21:44 < Todden> But i kinda need swap space right? 21:44 < Todden> Esp with a small ram lappy 21:45 < Todden> Eh ill do it without swap space see what happens 21:46 < Pentode> well depends on what you are doing. web browsing, software development and a few other things and i almost never touch my swap partition with just under 4gb of physical ram 21:46 < bls> it's possible to run without it, although it's recommended to have some 21:46 < Todden> Itll be a light "by the bed" laptop 21:47 < Todden> Reddit,skype,IRC,wickr etc 21:47 < no_gravity> How can I copy a file into virtualbox? 21:47 < Pentode> even on my thinkpad with 2gb of ram, web browsing with a million tabs is the only real risk of needing swap space 21:47 < olivetree_> shared folders 21:47 < BCMM> Todden: skype's not light 21:47 < BCMM> on ram, i mean 21:47 < Todden> https://www.cnet.com/products/dell-inspiron-1520/specs/ 2GB RAM 21:48 < Todden> Skype is an example sorry,i dont actually use skype 21:48 < Todden> It has somehow gone out of vogue 21:48 < Todden> Google hangouts 21:48 < Pentode> Todden, just use xfce or lxde or something. or even better, some light standalone window manager and you'll be fine IMO 21:48 < BCMM> it's an electron app (or some other web-engine based junk) 21:48 < Sitri> Hangouts has been replaced 21:48 < Pentode> my thinkpad boots into xfce in under 200mb of ram 21:48 < Todden> With what Sitri ? 21:48 < Sitri> Chat or something 21:48 < Todden> I use it on my phone as i canphone US phone numbers for free 21:48 < Todden> From the UK 21:49 < Todden> Same for PC 21:49 < Todden> They arent getting rid of hangouts are they?,i NEED it 21:49 < ayecee> probably a simple rename 21:50 < Sitri> "On March 9, 2017, Google announced that it would be evolving Hangouts into two products: Hangouts Meet and Hangouts Chat. Hangouts Meet would focus on video conferences and Hangouts Chat would be focused on instant messaging with additional features such as bot assistant and threaded messaging." 21:50 < BCMM> Todden: is wickr another of those IM platforms with a huge web-based desktop client? 21:50 < Todden> Yeah 21:50 < Todden> Its way bloated 21:50 < BCMM> Todden: you might be interested in Rambox, 21:50 < Pentode> Todden, ddr2 sdram is super cheap. 21:50 < BCMM> which lets you use a bunch of different services like that with just one electron instance 21:50 < paulcarroty> inspiron 1520? remember this crap 21:51 < BCMM> (does hangouts too) 21:51 < bls> heh, yet another "hipsters reinvent IRC/AIM, poorly" 21:51 < Todden> 30MB RAM so its not THAT bloated 21:51 < Pentode> paulcarroty, they weren't too bad. 21:51 < Todden> Wickr that is 21:51 < Todden> And yeah I need the feature UK>US free calling 21:51 < Todden> Like i need it 21:51 < BCMM> bls: i miss when there was such a thing as an instant messaging protocol 21:52 < paulcarroty> Pentode, too bad 21:52 < Pentode> lol 21:52 < BCMM> bls: now there's all these services where basically their web interface and their phone app are literally the only ways to interact with them 21:52 < Todden> Pentode, Yeah ill be buying more ram over next few months along with other upgrades 21:52 < bls> BCMM: ...with *gasp* non-monetized federation 21:52 < Todden> new job,much bigger money 21:52 < Todden> So many things which are breaking or broken 21:52 < Todden> And Rambox? 21:52 < Todden> I like downloadmoreram.com 21:52 < BCMM> bls: eh, aim and msn weren't federated to my knowledge, but at least third-party clients were possible (if not actually *supported) 21:53 < Pentode> when i worked at an electronics repair shop 1500 series weren't one of the models we had stacks of dead in the back room.. lol 21:53 < paulcarroty> Todden, just buy something better. 21:53 < BCMM> rambox is a stupid solution but only because it's solving a stupid problem 21:53 < Pentode> now those HP multimedia machines from the same era are another story, lol 21:53 < bls> BCMM: yeah, was more thinking IRC and XMPP, but at least there was client independence with oscar 21:53 < gnulligan> hey BCMM ty for the help with updating the kernel, it works great now 21:54 < BCMM> gnulligan: np! 21:54 < bls> the web/non-techies have pretty much killed the independent protocol and protcol/server/client separation 21:54 < gnulligan> last thing... now I'm trying to save a copy of the disk to a partition on it using clonezilla 21:54 < gnulligan> which is also on the disk 21:54 < BCMM> bls: facebook got me using messenger by doing xmpp, then pulled support for it once messenger had taken over the market. so damn predictable... 21:54 < gnulligan> and it fails with "No existing disk(s) or no unmounted disk(s) are found!) 21:55 < bls> yep, classic embrace, extend, extinguish. cisco did the same thing with their messaging/confercing app in the corporate world 21:55 < paulcarroty> Pentode, HP Pro series is good, but extreme bad for repair. 21:55 < gnulligan> I'm guessing the partition I'm trying to save to isn't mounted 21:55 < BCMM> bls: yeah, i reckon the last chance of doing something civilized would have been for phone vendors to agree on a federated "thing that doesn't suck as much as sms" *before* whatsapp-style apps filled that niche 21:56 < bls> will be interested to see what happens with mastodon now that FB is seeing users leave 21:58 < paulcarroty> bls, the same what happened with diaspora. 21:58 < Todden> Now ive got An error occured while configuring encrypted volumes, the configuration has been aborted 21:58 < Pentode> paulcarroty, yeah a nightmare. 21:58 < Todden> Im gonna try rufus'ing a lubuntu ISO to a USB 21:59 < ayecee> no, don't do that 21:59 < ayecee> dd or imageusb should be all you need 21:59 < Pentode> it was like the engineers started by working out how difficult they could make them to work on. 21:59 < Todden> Ive already got rufus,and i know how to use it 21:59 < Todden> in DD mode 22:00 < Todden> What are those tools? 22:00 < bls> haha, yeah, interested, not hopeful 22:00 < ayecee> dd mode, eh. sounds fine. 22:00 < Todden> Yeah its got DD mode in it 22:00 < Todden> Theres DD and ISO mode 22:00 < Todden> You can guess 22:00 < bls> at least there's still gmane getting served over NNTP! 22:01 < Pentode> paulcarroty, tho i give them the benefit of the doubt a lot of the issues were caused by the industries inexperience with new lead free solder and BGA components... 22:01 < gnulligan> OK I got it, it's because Clonezilla is on the same disk that it's trying to backup 22:02 < gnulligan> since it's on partition 5, therefore partition 5 can't be backed up 22:02 < gnulligan> because partition 5 is mounted 22:02 < gnulligan> what if I ran Clonezilla as a ramdisk? 22:02 < gnulligan> would that let it unmount its own partition? 22:03 < bls> if you're booted off the disk, you've got more to worry about than just clonezilla 22:03 < jim> Todden, well I don't have windows, so I never used rufus,,, is there an obvious choice as to its operating mode? 22:03 < Pentode> can't you just boot off a live disk and run clonezilla from there? 22:03 < no_gravity> I installed debian+xorg+marco window manager. Now starx gives me a black screen with a mouse. How can I start applications now? 22:03 < gnulligan> bls: wow so helpful thank you so much 22:04 < bls> no_gravity: put something like xterm before the window manager in your .xinitrc 22:04 < jim> no_gravity, can the wm start stuff? 22:04 < Todden> jim, yes 22:04 < bls> no_gravity: or start a tool bar or menu application 22:04 < Pentode> no_gravity, theres no configurable menu with that window manager? 22:04 < no_gravity> bls: How? All I have now is a black screen with a mouse pointer. 22:04 < bls> assuming the window manager doesn't already provide one 22:05 < no_gravity> jim: All I have now is a black screen with a mouse pointer. 22:05 < jim> Todden, ok, so there are choices... what are they? 22:05 < bls> no_gravity: either learn the keybinds for the window manager or exit and add stuff to .xinitrc from the console 22:05 < Todden> Oh nvm i know how to use it 22:05 < Todden> DD and ISO mode 22:05 < no_gravity> bls: How do I exit? 22:06 < jim> Todden, cool... so you are going to install a linux? 22:06 < bls> ++ if your distro hasn't disabled it, otherwise, you're back to needing to learn your keybindings 22:06 < Pentode> no_gravity, you _could_ ctrl+alt+f to another terminal and run xterm there then switch back to X... lol 22:06 < Todden> Yeah i know what im doing,ive done this before with this exact OS and USB stick funnily enough 22:06 < Todden> I just had issues with my disk it was really old i think 22:06 < no_gravity> Pentode: ctrl+alt+f does nothing. 22:07 < Todden> I had linux lite didnt like it so much and bugged it out so decided to switch to something with more features even though its only an inspiron 1520 thus very weak 22:07 < Pentode> ctrl+alt+f1 for example. does nothing? 22:07 < jim> Todden, which os is it? 22:07 < Todden> Lubuntu 18.04 22:07 < no_gravity> Pentode: Yeah, it switches to a terminal on the host :) 22:07 < jim> Todden, ok... does it boot? 22:07 < Todden> Dude i havent downloaded it yet lol 22:07 < Todden> i know what im doing with it 22:07 < Todden> dw 22:07 < jim> oh ok :) 22:07 < Pentode> no_gravity, do: export DISPLAY=0.0 then run xterm. problem solved. ;) 22:08 < jim> wait, how big is it? 22:08 < no_gravity> Pentode: On the host??? 22:08 < Pentode> =:0.0 sorry. 22:08 < Todden> Wasnt asking for help was updating the person earlier who asked me what i was doing with this linux lite laptop 22:08 < Todden> 1GB 22:08 < Todden> Slow net 22:08 < no_gravity> Pentode: I think this is a misunderstanding. 22:08 < triceratux> Todden: lubuntu 18.10 is better. its lxqt & the dailies are already quite solid 22:08 < no_gravity> Pentode: Doing that on the host will not have an impact on Debian running inside the VM. 22:08 < Pentode> no_gravity, apparently. 22:08 < Pentode> oh you are using a virtual machine 22:08 < no_gravity> Yup 22:08 < Todden> 17.10 is the one ive got,im downloading 18.04 22:09 < jim> a gb? does it have a smaller one? (that sounds like it could be live?) 22:09 < Todden> There is no 18.04 22:09 < Todden> *18.10 22:09 < Pentode> well just add xterm to ~/.xinitrc like mentioned above. ;) 22:09 < Todden> This is the 64 bit desktop ver 22:09 < bls> so forget all this switching consoles, go find the documentation for your window manager and learn to use it 22:09 < Todden> https://lubuntu.net/downloads/ 22:09 < no_gravity> Pentode: If I could edit it. All I have is a black scren with a mouse pointer. 22:10 < no_gravity> I will just kill the VM and restart it... 22:10 < Pentode> no_gravity, theres no way to switch to another virtual terminal? what are keybindings disabled with virtual machines or something? 22:10 < Pentode> i dont have experience with those.. 22:10 < jim> debian netinstall images (you'd do the same thing with them) are 1/3rd that size 22:10 < no_gravity> Pentode: I have no clue. It's VirtualBox. 22:10 < Todden> jim, http://prntscr.com/jy77le this is the 1st screen,then start will ask you to download the latest syslinux file,then itll ask for ISO or DD mode 22:10 < Pentode> hrmph 22:10 < triceratux> Todden: its a dev build so it takes some patience but its out there http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current/ 22:11 < no_gravity> 'apt install vim' - here goes another 30 MB :/ 22:11 < jim> is your disk already partitioned for it? 22:11 < bls> you can add all the stuff you want to .xinitrc, but you're still not going to know how to use your window manager 22:11 < Todden> triceratux, really that worth it? 22:12 < Todden> im 60% through this version,though im in no rush 22:12 < no_gravity> There is no ~/.xinitrc. Should I create it? 22:12 < Pentode> no_gravity, i'm not familiar with mate's window manager. i just cant imagine a window manager with no friggin' menu. 22:12 < Todden> http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current/cosmic-desktop-amd64.iso triceratux this one? 22:12 < Todden> And yeah jim ofc 22:12 < Todden> Ignore the name 22:12 < no_gravity> Pentode: It's easy to imagine. Just imagine a completely black screen with a mouse pointer. 22:12 < Pentode> no_gravity, yes. and hope that the distro executes it along side the display manager. some don't. 22:13 < bls> I use a window manager with no menus...it does everything via keybindings 22:13 < Pentode> lol 22:13 < no_gravity> startx brought me to the same black screen with a mouse. 22:13 < OtakuSenpai> is there anyone who uses voidlinux here?> 22:13 < jim> a netinstall generally doesn't have a DE 22:13 < bls> I also made sure I knew how to use said window manager before settling on it for a desktop 22:13 < no_gravity> Fuck this, I will install mate-desktop-environment. 22:13 < Todden> jim, next screen: http://prntscr.com/jy795h 22:14 < Pentode> no_gravity, just install a different window manager. 22:14 < Todden> http://prntscr.com/jy79by then iso/DD 22:14 < mophed> no_gravity: what WM or DE are you using? 22:14 < jim> no_gravity, please watch your language while you're here 22:14 < no_gravity> mophed: I marco 22:14 < jim> polo? 22:15 < mophed> i marco? 22:15 < mophed> never heard of it 22:15 < no_gravity> mophed: I use marco 22:15 < no_gravity> mophed: The window manager of Mate. 22:15 < Nawab> is there anyone who uses voidlinux here?> 22:15 < Todden> triceratux, cheers mate im downloading that image now 22:15 < bls> mophed: it's the window manager from mate, it's been stripped of all the normal window manager bells and whistles under the assumption that other programs will provide the functionality 22:15 < mophed> are there any errors in the xorg log? watch journalctl while you launch it 22:15 < Todden> 1.63gb so a lil bigger,but its only 600mb and you said its better 22:15 < no_gravity> 'apt install mate-desktop-environment-core' ... there goes another 400 MB \o/ 22:16 < Todden> What benefits over the live ver? 22:16 < Pentode> no_gravity, i dont know why you don't just install a different window manager if you don't want the bloat of the whole desktop environment. 22:16 < triceratux> Todden: im running it with no problem. theryre doing away with lxde for the next release & the lxqt makes it a bunch better imho 22:16 < Pentode> install windowmaker or something. 22:17 < mophed> i3 is my favorite 22:17 < no_gravity> Pentode: Well, now it's too late. Installing mate core atm. 22:17 < Todden> That doesnt make much sense to me tbh...ill be honest i am still pretty new to linux 22:17 < Pentode> lol, oh well 22:17 < Todden> Im figuring it out pretty well 22:17 < Todden> I think 22:17 < Todden> Its fun 22:18 < jim> Todden, there's generally two modes you can run a linux in, either text-only or graphical (which has terminals, so you can do the text thing there) 22:19 < Todden> Oh yeah i know that,I use both 22:19 < Todden> I'd say 80% GUI,20% terminal 22:19 < jim> the text move (or graphic with terminal) is the most expressive 22:19 < Nawab> is there anyone who uses voidlinux here? 22:19 < jim> I haven't 22:20 < no_gravity> Nawab: What is voidlinux? 22:20 < thxffo> anyone have ideas what would be causing an authentication error with kafka: ssl certs authentication failed due to invalid credentials 22:20 < Pazooza> Never heard of it. 22:20 < Todden> Ive never heard of it 22:20 < Todden> And ive heard of most things 22:20 < Nawab> https://voidlinux.org/ 22:20 < Nawab> no_gravity, ^ 22:20 < no_gravity> Nawab: I see. 22:21 < Nawab> i like their package manbagfement system 22:21 < Todden> What are the benefits to it 22:21 < Pazooza> But nice wrightup in Wikipedia. 22:21 < Nawab> much easier n hasslefree 22:21 < Todden> "XBPS source packages collection." sounds good 22:21 < no_gravity> "Not a fork!". I guess VOID then stands for "VOid Is not Debian" 22:22 < Todden> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Void_Linux 22:22 < Pazooza> Used runit instead of systemd. 22:22 < Todden> Hahah 22:22 < gnulligan> could someone help me with getting clonezilla working? I'm running clonezilla from a hard disk and need it to backup that entire hard disk (including itself) to another partition on that same disk, but whenever I try to run it I get the error "no existing disk found". I noticed that the clonezilla partition didn't show up, but it shows up if clonezilla is run with the "toram" option 22:22 < jim> that's good, I need a spoon anyway 22:22 < Todden> no_gravity, p good 22:22 < gnulligan> however it still gives the same error even when run from ram 22:23 < jim> I'll try to help you out in a bit 22:23 < gnulligan> ok thanks jim 22:24 < Todden> jim, how many times have people told you a PC is dead 22:24 < Todden> you hear about my freecom external CD drive? 22:24 < Todden> Its dead jim 22:24 < Dagmar> You shouldn't have left it in that hot car with the windows rolled up 22:25 < no_gravity> Todden: ? 22:25 < Nawab> anyone hav any knbowledge about network manager? 22:25 < Dagmar> Also, I'm pretty sure backing up an entire disk to a single partition on that same disk will violate space-time causality 22:25 < fryguy> just ask the question you really want to ask 22:25 < sstory> I would like to use tar on one machine to tar a directory and contents, a file from another directory and a file from yet another and then untar it on another machine and everything restore to the same locations. Is that possible? 22:25 < Nawab> ok 22:26 < Todden> noodle, the linux distro 22:26 < Todden> Looks pretty good 22:26 < Todden> Void 22:26 < sstory> When I did the tar originally it said / removed 22:26 < Todden> Dagmar, I honestly dont know how it died 22:26 < Dagmar> sstory: THat's pretty much the default operational mode for tar. It preserves the paths to anything you stick in an archive by default 22:26 < Dagmar> Todden: Next time crack a window. ;) 22:26 < Nawab> so when i start nm ... after a while it stops and creates anew connection with the same name and then it continues connecting and disconnecting 22:27 < Todden> It goes well with my Atapi iHAS124 drive 22:27 < Todden> Which is also dead,my internal drive 22:27 < Todden> So i got two dead CD drives 22:27 < Dagmar> Opticals occasionally die 22:27 < no_gravity> Strange, when I run startx as root, it works. But then I do it as a normal user, I end up in a black screen with a little white terminal. 22:27 < Nawab> https://askubuntu.com/questions/623940/network-manager-how-to-stop-nm-updating-etc-resolv-conf how do i use this post's info to fix network manager in my voidlinux system 22:27 < Todden> Ive ordered a eplacement one though 22:27 < sstory> Dagmar: I thought so, but untarring isn't working 22:27 < Dagmar> Frankly I'm surprised the one I have now still works 22:27 < Pazooza> Windows should automatically roll down when the temp reaches 90. 22:27 < Sitri> sstory: cd to the lowest common directory (might be /), then tar c dir1 dir2 dir3 dir4 | ssh username@host tar -C /common/directory x 22:27 < Todden> idk why my CD drives keep dying 22:27 < Dagmar> sstory: You have to tell tar the full path to the files when you tar them up 22:27 < Todden> I mean i only occasionally use them as cup holders 22:28 < macwinner> I'm trying to replace an existing server with a brand new physical server that should be almost identically. If I want the sshd server configs and keys to be copied over, do I just need to make sure /etc/ssh is copied? 22:28 < Todden> And i did once get like...a substantial amount of human blood in there 22:28 < Todden> Well no like 10ml 22:28 < sstory> Dagmar: I did something like this: tar cvfz prog.tar /usr/local/share/applications/prog.desktop /usr/share/icons/prog /usr/local/bin/prog 22:28 < Todden> So perhaps thats why 22:28 < Dagmar> sstory: If you do like, `tar -cf foo.tar /home/dagmar/blerp.txt` *that* is giving it the whole path. You can take it to another machine and untar it from / (or specify -C / IIRC) and it'll untar blerp.txt to /home/dagmar, creating directories as needed 22:28 < Nawab> anyone can help me? 22:29 < Todden> Nawab, What do you need? 22:29 < Todden> Ghostbusters? 22:29 < Nawab> so when i start nm ... after a while it stops and creates anew connection with the same name and then it continues connecting and disconnecting 22:29 < Nawab> https://askubuntu.com/questions/623940/network-manager-how-to-stop-nm-updating-etc-resolv-conf how do i use this post's info to fix network manager in my voidlinux system 22:29 < Dagmar> sstory: You should be able to see it showing you the paths when you do `tar -tvf prog.tar` 22:29 < sstory> Dagmar: I do, but / is missing from front of all. Is that normal? 22:30 < Dagmar> Nawab: Probably by installing Ubuntu to the machine 22:30 < Dagmar> Nawab: They have another facility that is separate from NetworkManager that handles the sort of overlapping resolv.conf scopes 22:30 < Nawab> what do you mean? 22:31 < Dagmar> sstory: Yes. Because when I am allowed to put / at the start of a tarball's path, it allows me to do things like send people a tarball containing miscellaneous files and /etc/shadow 22:31 < sstory> Dagmar. Ok. the -C / worked. Thanks! 22:31 < Dagmar> sstory: The / will _always_ be stripped from tar archive paths. Any tar archive that happens to have paths that start with / can safely be assumed to be malicious action 22:31 < sstory> Dagmar: Thanks! 22:32 < Dagmar> ...*to-doo-do-doooo* and now you know. 22:32 < Dagmar> Can ya tell I'm already getting prepared for my new admin gig 22:32 < Dagmar> geg 22:33 < Dagmar> Switching over to using verbiage that takes all question out of people's minds about whether or not some exploit is theoretical 22:33 < Dagmar> It keeps me from having to say, "No, we will not ignore that possibility because I have personally used it to take over someone's machine" 22:33 < n-iCe> hi 22:33 < jim> hi 22:35 < ellyacht> can someone tell me how to install an already downloaded driver? But without their suggestions and without their opinions please. 22:36 < jim> Nawab, do you want a specific name server in /etc/resolv.conf? 22:36 < Nawab> jim, i want nm to not recreate a new netwok connection and change the dns nameservers 22:36 < Nawab> i earlier set 8.8.8.8 as the dns servers 22:37 < Nawab> but nm changed it to my isp's 22:37 < jim> Nawab, and that's the name server you want? 22:37 < Nawab> yes, 8.8.8.8 22:37 < jim> (you could also run your own btw) 22:37 < Nawab> i dont hav the hardware 22:37 < jim> ok, first do this: sudo apt install resolvconf 22:38 < Nawab> jim im not in debian 22:38 < Nawab> its void linux 22:38 < jim> which doesn't have apt? 22:38 < Pazooza> Void is closer to BSD. 22:38 < Nawab> yeah 22:38 < Nawab> its xbps 22:39 < Nawab> i guess the packages should remain same 22:39 < Sitri> xbps-install -S resolvconf 22:40 < Nawab> Sitri, Unable to locate 'resolvconf' in repository pool. 22:41 < jim> Nawab, could you run this: test -e /etc/network/interfaces && echo yes || echo no 22:41 < Nawab> no 22:42 < Todden> jim, i got it 22:42 < jim> ok, hmm, ok. sorry, I don't know much about why it replaces, but I do know that dhcp can be told to write the /etc/resolv.conf file 22:42 < Todden> Setting it up to burn now 22:44 < Todden> MBR or GPT@ 22:44 < Todden> I normally use MBR but i may as well ask 22:44 < gnulligan> what does the "bootfrom" linux kernel parameter do exactly? 22:45 < gnulligan> does it tell the kernel where the root filesystem is supposed to be? 22:45 < jim> there;'s a boot prompt howto 22:45 < Todden> jim, this look ok to you http://prntscr.com/jy7mpi 22:45 < Todden> its what id normally use 22:45 < jim> it talks avoutr the boot parameters 22:45 < gnulligan> jim: are you free now? 22:45 < Todden> DD mode 22:45 < jim> no not yet 22:45 < gnulligan> I found this: https://clonezilla.org/livehd.php which gives the parameters on how to use clonezilla-live from a hard disk 22:46 < Todden> Oh gnulligan you are trying to use clonezilla? 22:46 < Todden> What for? 22:46 < gnulligan> but I don't understand why they're saying to use "bootfrom=/dev/sda4 " 22:46 < Todden> yay im useful 22:46 < gnulligan> Hey Todden I hope you can help haha 22:46 < Todden> Have you burnt the disk 22:46 < Todden> Or USB(better) 22:46 < gnulligan> I've been working on this for a few hours 22:46 < gnulligan> I have clonezilla installed to partition 5 on my hard drive 22:46 < Todden> i know the feel 22:47 < Todden> ive had 3 sleepless nights in past 7 22:47 < Todden> Why.. 22:47 < Todden> Do you have it installled 22:47 < Todden> Why not run it live 22:47 < gnulligan> and I need it to backup the entire hard drive (including itself) to partition 6 22:47 < Sitri> gnulligan: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.html 22:47 < gnulligan> Sitri: thanks I'll check that 22:47 < Todden> Clonezilla doesnt work on the drive its on afaik 22:47 < Todden> Oor it didnt used to 22:47 < gnulligan> Todden: https://clonezilla.org/livehd.php 22:47 < gnulligan> it needs to run from ram 22:48 < Todden> Yeah so why is it installed 22:48 < Todden> Youre rght tho 22:48 < maryo> I wanted to check whether a port is open on the remote machine. Is it possible to curl command to do this task as I don't have netstat or ss or telnet in the machine ? 22:48 < Todden> I can check it 22:48 < Todden> or anyone here 22:49 < Sitri> gnulligan: Actually, I don't see a bootfrom, so I'm guessing it's something that's parsed by the initrd 22:49 < Todden> Just PM the IP and we can ping on the port 22:49 < Todden> gnulligan, So what is your problem anyway 22:49 < Todden> You should be running this live not installed from a parttion imo,ESPECIALLY not the one you are cloning form 22:50 < gnulligan> according to https://clonezilla.org/livehd.php (which is the only resource I've found for this) it needs to be run with these parameters from grub: live-media-path=/live-hd bootfrom=/dev/sda4 toram=filesystem.squashfs 22:50 < gnulligan> everything makes sense except bootfrom 22:50 < gnulligan> why is bootfrom sda4? 22:50 < jim> maybe you don't have a /dev/sda4? 22:50 < moog> maryo: nmap ? 22:51 < jim> maybe it assumes you do, or is assuming specific hardware 22:51 < gnulligan> sda4 is a partition right 22:51 < gnulligan> like hard disk partition 4 22:51 < gnulligan> so is that the clonezilla partition? 22:51 < gnulligan> the partition that I'm trying to backup? 22:51 < Todden> Why not use this https://clonezilla.org/downloads/download.php?branch=stable 22:51 < gnulligan> the destination partition? 22:51 < Todden> Its just plug n play 22:51 < Todden> Clone from the disk 22:52 < Todden> No foolin around with installiing stuff 22:52 < Todden> I do not get why you INSTALLED clonella 22:52 < maryo> moog, nmap is also not available 22:52 < gnulligan> I'm tired of explaining "why", I last explained it about an hour ago so you can check the logs if you want 22:53 < moog> No idea so 22:53 < Todden> Fair enough 22:53 < Todden> Ive had that before on IRC,respect 22:53 < gnulligan> Todden: thanks for understanding haha 22:53 < jim> gnulligan, so it asked you to download a zip file? 22:54 < gnulligan> jim: what asked me? 22:54 < gnulligan> I did use a zip file to install clonezilla 22:54 < jim> the web page 22:54 < gnulligan> I downloaded clonezilla as a zip and extracted it to the partition 22:54 < jim> ok, do you remember what you installed it onto? 22:55 < gnulligan> yes 22:55 < jim> which partition? 22:55 < Todden> It is very difficult to clone from the drive its on btw 22:55 < gnulligan> 5 22:55 < Todden> Just FYI 22:55 < ryouma> i tried to check the logs. if the goal is to clone your exact computing environment to a new spindle, or similar, is clonezilla the correct tool? 22:55 < Todden> Yes 22:55 < Todden> If you have identical hardware itll be the same PC 22:56 < ryouma> i have a script that does it that will not be of use to you because it is too specific to me, but i can say that it seems like a trivial problem but is extremely not trivial. it's one tiny little obvious thing after another, plus one big non-obvious thing after another. however, it is possible. it's great if clonezilla does it for you. 22:56 < Todden> Good for businesses where you have the same type of PC all over,spend 3-4 hours setting up one PC and clone it 22:57 < jim> gnulligan, ok, which drive? sda? so, sda5? 22:57 < bls> it's also dead simple if you just boot live media to do it instead of risking corruption by cloning the disk you're booted off of 22:57 < gnulligan> jim: IDK if it's sda or not according to clonezilla, but the clonezilla gui shows all my partitions as being of the form "nvme0px" 22:58 < gnulligan> so I guess it would be nvme0p5 22:58 < jim> so, maybe the full name is /dev/nvme0p5 22:58 < Todden> Also downloading clonezilla,never know when its gonna come in handy 22:58 < jim> ? 22:59 < gnulligan> jim: yeah that's the full name for the clonezilla partition 22:59 < jim> maybe clonezilla could be used to back up your system 22:59 < Todden> jim, Booting from that Lubuntu USB3 stick now,the new fancy dev ve 22:59 < Todden> Thanks for that 23:00 < gnulligan> hmm 23:00 < jim> gnulligan, you could try that as the "bootfrom" value? 23:00 < gnulligan> ok I'll try that 23:00 < gnulligan> wait a minute brb 23:01 < jim> gnulligan, so, the web page was giving a typical example 23:04 < Todden> Now lubuntu is installing and will hopefully not error out(not really begun yet,copying files)...clonezilla is nearly done incase i ever need it 23:04 < Todden> Time to go play fortnite stw(the one not full of kids) 23:05 < Todden> jim, This new installer looks so cool 23:05 < Todden> And the desktop environment 23:05 < Todden> And its blazing fast even on this old laptop,so worth it 23:06 < jim> Todden, you got it going :) 23:06 < Todden> yarp,dont get too excited 23:06 < Todden> its on live mode 23:06 < Todden> i ran into the errors during install 23:06 < Todden> ill let you know when im past em 23:07 < jim> well how big was the usb stick you used? 23:07 < Todden> 32gb 23:07 < Todden> I cant find the encrypt paritions and LVM options..hmm 23:07 < Todden> I think it might be under manual 23:07 < jim> should be plenty./. 23:07 < jim> yeah, 23:08 < jim> first you need "physical volumes for luks" (if you're encrypting) and "for lvm" if not 23:08 < Todden> yep you gotta go to manual partitoning 23:09 < Todden> Hmm..this is gonna be tricky 23:09 < Todden> I need to do LVM by myself 23:10 < Todden> I forgot what things need their own partitions..and how much space 23:10 < Todden> Many flags 23:10 < Todden> Im actually confused by this...oh dear 23:10 < jim> Todden, ok, how much disk space total do you want to have for your entire system? 23:11 < Todden> 73.8GB is how much space is on the drive,but i need a seperate boot and swap space i know that 23:11 < Todden> If i download say..teamviewer 23:11 < Todden> Could you quickly set up volumes 23:12 < Todden> its ok if not 23:12 < jim> Todden, I don't have a teamviewer set up 23:12 < gnulligan> hey jim back 23:12 < Todden> Any remote support setup you do? 23:13 < jim> I haven't done a remote in years 23:13 < Todden> Could always live stream from the webcam rofl 23:13 < Todden> haha 23:13 < jim> gnulligan, so, the web page was giving a typical example 23:13 < gnulligan> it says "(initramfs) Unable to find a medium containing a live file system" 23:14 < jim> weird. 23:14 < Todden> Ok ive got 73.8GB to play with and a BUNCH of flags i could use,im going for ext4 obviously 23:14 < jim> gimme a few mins 23:14 < Todden> And as for mount points..im thinking a partition for boot under /boot and SWAP with no mount the rest can go in 1 big ext4 partition 23:15 < bls> don't need a partition for swap 23:15 < Todden> Why not? 23:15 < bls> you can either use a volume or a swap file 23:15 < jim> Todden, ok, what kind of partition table you got on the drive? (default is mbr/legacy, 4 primary partitions... you might be able to put a gpt on the drive, 128 primary parttions) 23:15 < Todden> But theres nothing..wrong with a partition 23:15 < bls> either would be way more flexible than a partition 23:15 < Todden> Formatted as linuxswap? 23:15 < gnulligan> that's after I tried adding "live-media-path=/live-hd bootfrom=/dev/nvme0n1p5 toram=filesystem.squashfs" 23:15 < Todden> MBR 23:16 < Todden> I can change it to GPT 23:16 < jim> ok... now many partitions are already on the drive? 23:16 < Todden> 73.8GB of unallocated space,731MB ext4(i assume the install stuff) 23:17 < Todden> MBR or GPT 23:17 < superboot> Hi all. I'm running systemd. Is /etc/network/interfaces depricated in favor of /etc/systemd/network/ifacename.net? 23:17 < jim> either is probably fine... but: do you want to use the whole drive exclusively for that installation of linux/ 23:17 < jim> ? 23:17 < Todden> Sorry ive never done LVM manually before and every prior lubuntu installer did it automatically with encryption 23:17 < Todden> Yes 23:17 < Todden> I do 23:18 < jim> ok 23:18 < Todden> But i want something like LVM,like a sensible boot,swap space etc 23:18 < Todden> mounts are / boot home opt srv usr var 23:18 < jim> do you want to encrypt? 23:18 < Todden> Yes 23:18 < Todden> And theres loads of flags 23:18 < Todden> I could type em all out 23:18 < bls> superboot: depends on your distro 23:19 < jim> I never did an encrypted system 23:19 < Todden> Ill type out flags 23:19 < jim> so I'm likely to screw it up 23:19 < Todden> wont take me 2m 23:19 < jim> ok 23:19 < jim> but I use lvm all the time 23:20 < Todden> apple-tv-recovery,bios-grub,boot,diag,esp,hidden,hpservice,irst,lba,legacy-boot,lvm,msft-data,msft-reserved,palo,prep,raid,root,swap 23:20 < mooniac> I have a micro SD card that is totally corrupted. I also have a USB 2.0 adapter for that. Is there any way to delete, purge, wipe, "reset", whatever the micro SD chip card? 23:20 < Todden> Primary or extended,partition types: ext2,3,4 linuxswap fat16 fat32 ntfs unforatted or btrfs(?!) 23:21 < jim> I'm not sure what that partition (700mb or so) is doing on the partition, sounds like approx the size of a cd 23:21 < superboot> bls: Linux Mint 18.3 23:21 < Todden> It is 23:21 < Todden> Its the install files 23:21 < Todden> I believe 23:21 < Todden> gotta go somewhere 23:21 < Todden> Sorry no 23:22 < Todden> . /dev/sda is the 73.8GiB of free space 23:22 < jim> ok, so you're out for now? 23:22 < Todden> And /dev/sda1 is the 731mb 23:22 < jim> or? 23:22 < Todden> No 23:22 < jim> ok 23:22 < Todden> I mean install files 23:22 < Todden> they gotta go someewhere right? 23:23 < kerframil> mooniac: as in an equivalent to ATA secure erase? no. you could try passing over it with shred -v -n1 and hope for the best. or destroy it. 23:23 < jim> you're booted into the installer now, right? 23:23 < Todden> But yeah the 731mb part is /dev/sda1 and the 73gb unallocated is /dev/sda 23:23 < Todden> Im booted into the live interface,i tried the instaler 23:23 < Todden> But ended up in the live interface,ive launched the installer 23:23 < mooniac> doesn't have to be safe. Can totally wipe. 23:23 < Todden> I dont mind fucking up,this PC is a..tabula rasa 23:23 < jim> ok please watch language 23:24 < Todden> apologies,ill confine the swearing to latin too 23:24 < z3t0> hi all 23:24 < jim> hi 23:24 < Todden> yo 23:24 < z3t0> I am using a window manager that has a font setting like this 23:24 < z3t0> "-xos4-terminus-medium-r-normal--14-140-72-72-c-80-iso8859-15" 23:24 < Todden> jim, Obviously if someone else needs help while youre helping me we can both try help em 23:24 < Todden> I dojnt expect your full attention 23:24 < z3t0> What format would that be? I am trying to set the font myself based off of that example 23:24 < Todden> First though you think MBR or GPT 23:25 < Todden> Gonna go MBR unless anyone wants to argue for GPT 23:25 < spare> mbr is legacy gpt supports 2tb+ partition sizes and uefi 23:25 < kerframil> z3t0: that's a (legacy) X Logical Font Description for the Terminus font, in its pure bitmapped form 23:25 < bls> z3t0: it's an old X bitmap font spec, install/use xfontsel to generate your own 23:25 < jim> can you put that 700mb onto another drive temporarily/ 23:25 < jim> ? 23:25 < Todden> err 23:26 < Todden> I dont know how 23:26 < Todden> I dont think it is possible its the install files 23:26 < Todden> The liveCD files 23:26 < Todden> I can reboot straight into the installer 23:26 < Todden> hopefully that wont create anything on disk 23:26 < kerframil> z3t0: chances are, your distro packages this font. if you want to specify a different font description, use xfontsel as bls mentioned. 23:27 < jim> you're in a partitioner now? 23:28 < Todden> Yeah 23:28 < Todden> I did just err 23:28 < Todden> delete this 700mb partiton 23:28 < Todden> Nothing awful happened 23:28 < jim> ok 23:28 < Todden> Changes havent been applied though yet 23:28 < Todden> I dont think 23:28 < jim> you still have the usb stick you booted the live from? 23:29 < Todden> Yeah its plugged in 23:29 < Todden> I assume you have to leave it in 23:29 < Todden> Now i have 74.5GiB of free space 23:30 < jim> ok, I'd say it's safe to blow that partition away... at this point, you now have 4 partitions 23:30 < Todden> Ive got zero 23:30 < Todden> Theres nothing 23:30 < jim> ok, try booting the installer 23:30 < Todden> Im in the installer 23:30 < Todden> halfway through it 23:30 < Todden> At the partitioning section 23:30 < jim> oh ok, and you're in the partitioner... 23:30 < Todden> Yep 23:30 < Todden> 74.5GiB of free space,set to GPT 23:31 < Todden> Primary or extended,partition types: ext2,3,4 linuxswap fat16 fat32 ntfs unforatted or btrfs(?!) 23:31 < Todden> apple-tv-recovery,bios-grub,boot,diag,esp,hidden,hpservice,irst,lba,legacy-boot,lvm,msft-data,msft-reserved,palo,prep,raid,root,swap 23:31 < Todden> mounts are / boot home opt srv usr var 23:31 < jim> make a 3g ext4 and have it mount on /boot 23:31 < Todden> boot flag? 23:32 < jim> umm, yeah 23:32 < Todden> got it 23:32 < Todden> Normally now i'd do like 5gb formatted as linuxswap 23:33 < Todden> But apparently not 23:33 < jim> ok, now you can put all the rest of the space on the luks... but, is it just your home dir you want to encrypt? 23:33 < kerframil> note: if you're intending to use dm-crypt, then leaving swap unencrypted is a major opsec fail 23:33 < Todden> Mhmm 23:33 < Todden> I want to encrypt the entire drive 23:34 < Todden> Total 23:34 < Todden> Like all my other PC's 23:34 < Todden> And kerframil yeah i know 23:34 < Todden> I actually cant find the option to encrypt anywhere i might have to do it post-install 23:34 < Todden> Ill look after setting up everything else 23:34 < Todden> And when you say LUKS 23:34 < Todden> What do you mean 23:34 < jim> ok, we can split it into two partitions 23:34 < Todden> K 23:35 < jim> encrypted lvm 23:35 < Todden> 73314 MiB 23:35 < Todden> So 2 partitions of ext4 23:35 < Todden> With LVM flag 23:35 < jim> no 23:35 < Todden> What size,mount point and other flags 23:35 < jim> we're not at that point yet 23:36 < Todden> k 23:36 < kerframil> jim: I can't counsel him as to graphical distro installers, but having one extra partition (beyond the boot partition) that is used by dm-crypt, the resulting volume of which is designated as an LVM PV is what I would suggest 23:36 < kerframil> jim: I'm telling you as I need to step out 23:36 < jim> you want to encrypt the drive... what we might do however, is have the partition that contains the kernels to boot, be unencrypted 23:37 < jim> that will be much less hassle when you boot 23:37 < jim> want to do that? 23:37 < Todden> Yeah thats fine 23:37 < Todden> I normally do that 23:37 < Todden> Leave the boot unencrypted 23:37 < Todden> I mean what can they do with the bootloader 23:38 < Todden> This way it asks for a password like..on boot right? 23:38 < Dagmar> Rather a number of things, actually, but there's no good solution to any of them without hardware support for full-disk encryption 23:38 < Todden> Normally says something lke "enter password to mount /sda/dev5:" 23:38 < Todden> Black screen 23:39 < jim> ok, now, you can either have the whole rest of the drive be "used as" a "physical volume for luks", or two partitions, both luks PVs 23:39 < Dagmar> Meanwhile, the malicious modification is quietly connecting to the nearest AP to email whatever password you entered to the DHS 23:39 < Todden> Why two partitions out of curiosity 23:39 < jim> maybe easier to deal with if they're smaller 23:39 < jim> but, that's up to you 23:40 < kerframil> oh, one other thing: if you're UEFI booting, don't forget that you need an ESP (that can be the /boot partition if formatted as *fat32* not ext4). if BIOS booting, grub also needs a dedicated partition where using GPT - it's called a BIOS boot partition. 23:40 < Dagmar> Wait they don't have an option to skip filling the disk with entropy? 23:40 < Todden> Im on GPT 23:40 < jim> that's right, forgot about that 23:40 < Todden> I havent seen that option yet Dagmar 23:40 < Todden> If i see it ill enable it 23:40 < jim> you booting efi? 23:40 < Todden> If not then i dont care 23:40 < Todden> Errr 23:40 < Todden> It is a Dell Inspirion 1520 23:41 < Todden> Incidentally my total available space/2 is 38gb 23:41 < Dagmar> Well, that's the step that's typically abominably slow. 23:41 < jim> is that an efi booting machine? 23:41 < Dagmar> It probably is 23:41 < jim> ok, so let's give it an esp 23:41 < Dagmar> Dangit mine's upstairs but most of the recent Dells do UEFI as an option 23:41 < Todden> https://www.dell.com/community/Storage-Drives-Media/Dell-Inspiron-1520-OS-Installation/td-p/3772257 This implies it does 23:41 < Todden> As it says BIOS/UEFI 23:41 < dasfamiliar> hello everyone 23:41 < jim> make it what, halfgig? 23:41 < jim> hi 23:41 < Dagmar> 100mb is generally plenty for the EFI 23:42 < Todden> So atm i got a 3gb ext4 /boot with the boot flag partition 23:42 < Todden> And tis all 23:42 < Dagmar> I think MS talks about that being "the minimum" but it's not in the spec 23:42 < jim> ok, add a fat32 partition, 200mb 23:42 < Dagmar> 100Mb is puh-lenty unless you've got oodles of images to boot and probably a UEFI shell environment installed 23:43 < Todden> flags and mount? 23:43 < Todden> Ill make a pretty boot environment 23:43 < Todden> With nice boot images 23:43 < jim> in case he wants to put an extra one later 23:43 < Todden> ^ 23:43 < Dagmar> I don't mean pictures. I mean multibooting 20-30 different distributions 23:43 < Todden> Dat too 23:43 < Todden> I might put kali on it lateer 23:43 < Dagmar> I was also being somewhat sarcastic. 23:43 < Dagmar> THis is bootstrap territory. It doesn't take up lots of space 23:44 < jim> yeah 23:44 < Todden> So i got 200MB fat32,no mount point and no flags 23:44 < Dagmar> Ideally the bigger deal is making sure it ends on a cylinder boundary 23:44 < Todden> Ah 23:44 < Dagmar> ...because the first other partition is definitely going to start on a cylinder boundary 23:44 < jim> sec 23:44 < Todden> Ill have to do some moving round 23:44 < Todden> Ill put it at the start of the drive 23:45 < Todden> Done 23:45 < Todden> FAT32 300MB at drive start no flags no mount,Ext4 /boot boot flag 3GB,71.3GB unall 23:46 < Dagmar> z3t0: If you haven't already been told, that's an X11R6 "font spec". It's an _ancient_ way of specifying a font 23:46 < Dagmar> Having scrolled up a bit, did lubuntu make serious changes to the installer? 23:46 < Todden> Yes 23:46 < Todden> Totally 23:46 < Todden> Ill show you in a sec igot images 23:47 < Dagmar> Mint & Ubuntu both give hte option to just do whole-disk encryption out of the box, and they default to doing it with LVM 23:47 < Dagmar> A shame if Lubuntu didn't keep that part 23:47 < Todden> They didnt 23:47 < Dagmar> Ouch 23:47 < Todden> Its replace partition with lubuntu 23:47 < Todden> Erase disk 23:47 < bls> apparently that option was dropped from some of ubuntu's recent installers according to complaints here 23:47 < Todden> Or manual 23:47 < Dagmar> bls: Geez. They were ahead of Debian with that bit 23:48 < Dagmar> Like, Debian will do it, but the way it mounts them later is weird and unpretty 23:48 < jim> Todden, the mount point for the fat32 partition should be /boot/efi 23:48 < bls> that or its been made part of some alternative workflow that no one here has bother to figure out yet 23:48 < Todden> Ahhh ok i was wondering,its not an option in "the list" but i can make it one 23:48 < jim> and we need toi set its type 23:48 < Todden> LVM flag? 23:48 < Dagmar> Todden: Note that that mount point could be anywhere, but if you don't have it _there_ the distributions tools won't know about the new place and updating the kernels will fail 23:49 < Todden> You lost me 23:49 < jim> what's the type for gpt... 0xEFEF? 0xEF00? 23:49 < Pentode> bah. my network connection in 17.04 just mysteriously refuses to work for some unknown reasons until the machine is either rebooted or reconnected some random number of times. other times, it just works. :| 23:49 < Dagmar> The mount point for the ESP being /boot/efi 23:49 < Todden> Yeah,it has to be 23:49 < Todden> goot it 23:49 < Todden> 300mb fat32 partition in /boot/efi no flags 23:50 < Todden> http://imgur.com/a/Q3gPoor 23:51 < Todden> This is a few pics 23:51 < Todden> might be a cheeky nude 23:51 < Todden> might be the installler 23:51 < Todden> who knows 23:51 < superboot> Todden: Manual isn't that bad on the LVM side. Boot into live cd. sudo pvcreate /dev/sdX; sudo vgcreate linuxVG /dev/sdX; lvcreate -L 30G -n root linuxVG; lvcreate -L 80G -n home linuxVG; lvcreate -L 16G swap linuxVG; 23:51 < jim> Dagmar, what's the partition type field for the esp? EFEF? EF00? 23:52 < seven-eleven> is it a bad idea to use automatically generated memorizable phrases, words are grabbed randomly from /usr/share/dict/american-english , as password in configuration files? i worry that the result may contain passwords with offensive words. so maybe i should use random characters as passwords for automatically generated passwords in config files :| 23:52 < Todden> superboot, you have beyond lost me,im in the partioner of the installer atm getting helped by jim 23:52 < Todden> For passwords i would use random dictionary words,like 6 in a row 23:52 < Pentode> seven-eleven, using words in general is not a good idea. 23:52 < Todden> Not correct horse battery staple 23:52 < bls> seven-eleven: probably shouldn't saving passwords in files to begin with 23:53 < Pentode> if you really need a password to be easy to remember use made up words or something. 23:53 < bls> and a string completely random characters would be better than the same length string of real words 23:53 < Todden> Incase this fails 23:53 < jim> Todden, we're still setting up the ESP 23:53 < Todden> Im downloading gparted Live to do this all manually 23:53 < Todden> Yes 23:54 < jim> I just need the type code 23:54 < Todden> err 23:54 < Todden> how do 23:54 < spare> ef00 23:54 < jim> well for mbr partition table, the type code is a byte and has to be ef 23:55 < Todden> Im on GPT 23:55 < spare> ef00 is uefi and ef02 is bios partition 23:55 < seven-eleven> bls, i agree, but the software im using didn't implement a way to store passwords in an obscure way 23:55 < Todden> I did say i may as well go to GPT 23:56 < jim> Todden. on gpt, the type code for partitions is two bytes, and for the ESP we'll set it to EF00 23:56 < Todden> I dont know how to do that 23:56 < jim> that finishes the setup for the ESP 23:56 < jim> sec 23:57 < Todden> np im gonna set some fires 23:57 < Todden> Incense,a nice oil burning thing,a few candles,heroin on foil,some lava lamps etc 23:58 < Todden> yknow the standard stuff 23:58 * norkle sips whiskey, 23:58 < McDonaldsWiFi> you guys know what this error means? "udev : Breaks: systemd (< 233-4)" 23:58 < McDonaldsWiFi> I tried searching without luck :( 23:58 < Todden> one of them is untrue 23:58 < Todden> Whoever guesses right wins something when i set this partition up 23:59 < Todden> guess at end 23:59 < seven-eleven> bls, Pentode I think security is not the deciding issue regarding "words vs characters passwords", because a 5 random words passwords sourcing from 100,000 words dictionary provides a probability of 1/10^25. i think offensive words in configuration files is the disadvantage, and considering that I dont need to retype the password, because its stored just once in the config file i should hands down go for character passwords --- Log closed Sat Jun 23 00:00:09 2018