Hi,
The answer can be found here:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2016/11/msg00552.html
Regards,
Yuri
Igor Cicimov wrote:
> Run tcpdump and check whats happening
That is strange - I will look into this direction - let me know if you have
any ideas
regards
tcpdump -vvv dst 10.0.0.7
tcpdump: listening on eth0, link-type EN10MB (Ethernet), capture size 65535
bytes
08:07:11.591763 ARP, Ethernet (l
On 13 Nov 2016 11:20 am, "deloptes" wrote:
>
> Joe wrote:
>
> > On Sat, 12 Nov 2016 22:15:45 +0100
> > deloptes wrote:
> >
> >> Hi,
> >> I need some help and I'll appreciate it.
> >>
> >> I have a firewall with iptables behind the modem.
> >> on this firewall I have
> >> eth0 with ip 10..
On 14 Nov 2016 12:50 am, "Pascal Hambourg" wrote:
>
> Le 13/11/2016 à 13:37, Joe a écrit :
>>>
>>>
>>> PPTP rather falls into the "complex protocols" described below.
>>
>>
>> Exactly so. You wouldn't believe how many routers of ten years ago or
>> so didn't handle it properly, at least with their
On 11/13/2016 11:34 AM, Robert Latest wrote:
> I want to automatically start a data backup script (to USB or network
> drive) at each shutdown of my computer.
Rather than having the system call my backup/ archive scripts, I have my
backup/ archive scripts call 'shutdown' when they're done.
David
On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 6:59 AM, Loren Dvid wrote:
> Hello,
> In debian 6.0 and 7.0 the latest stable version of PygreSQL package is 4.0
> http://www.pygresql.org/contents/changelog.html
> This version is from 2009. The newest stable version is 5.0.2
> Why the repository is not being updated?
>
Th
Tony Baldwin wrote:
> What do I do, put this somewhere in /boot/grub/grub.cfg, or
> /etc/default/grub
if you put it in /etc/default/grub you need to update /boot/grub/grub.cfg
try first /boot/grub/grub.cfg and then make it permanent for future grub
updates via /etc/default/grub
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Well then, all I can suggest is to run a packet capture and try to see
> what's going on.
I guess you mean on the firewall? I am not even sure I can install tcpdump
there, but I will try and ask again for help here for sure
thanks
Henning wrote:
> And usually there is no reason for two separate rfc1918 address ranges.
> Pick one matching your address space needs and design subnets.
> There is only one single reason for nat: you have more hosts than routable
> ip addresses. I guess 10.0.0.0 meets even the biggest organizatio
> On Nov 13, 2016, at 5:19 PM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
>> Le 13/11/2016 à 22:27, Henning a écrit :
>> I followed this thread and i wonder if there is a sane reason why you do nat
>> inside your network. Why don't you just route between different subnets i.e.
>> 10.0.1.0/24 and 10.0.2.0/24
>
hi debian
http://kryspol.pl/fellow.php?bob=cy2e0nqqw9d86c
Matt
Le 13/11/2016 à 21:43, deloptes a écrit :
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
replace 10.0.0.1/32 with 10.0.0.0/24 it does not work
You should double check that.
I checked replaced 10.0.0.1/32 with 10.0.0.0/24.
Just insert this rule and check whether it changes anything :
iptables -I FORWARD -j ACCEP
Le 13/11/2016 à 22:27, Henning a écrit :
I followed this thread and i wonder if there is a sane reason why you do nat
inside your network. Why don't you just route between different subnets i.e.
10.0.1.0/24 and 10.0.2.0/24
Probably because the modem and hosts in 10.0.0.0/24 don't know about
I followed this thread and i wonder if there is a sane reason why you do nat
inside your network. Why don't you just route between different subnets i.e.
10.0.1.0/24 and 10.0.2.0/24
you still can have a firewall between those subnets
-H
On Sunday 13 November 2016 13:01:27 David Wright wrote:
> On Sun 13 Nov 2016 at 11:16:51 (+), Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Sunday 13 November 2016 04:09:13 David Wright wrote:
> > > > I'd like to know how you found the above. Running aptitude 0.6.11 on
> > > > vtty3 here as root in 8.6 I'm unable t
On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Brian wrote:
On Mon 07 Nov 2016 at 18:17:05 -0600, David Wright wrote:
On Mon 07 Nov 2016 at 23:24:31 (+), Brian wrote:
Something for people to get their teeth into. From the first post:
> apt-get changelog libxslt1.1
> Err Changelog for libxslt1.1
(http://packages.de
once again, a reboot (requiring a couple fskings) has brought the sound
back.
On 11/13/2016 08:20 AM, Anthony Baldwin wrote:
This is the third time within the space of only two weeks, where one day
I'm happily listening to music on my machine one day. then I wake up the
next and there's no soun
On 11/13/2016 02:50 PM, deloptes wrote:
Anthony Baldwin wrote:
Definitely not a new chip...I built this machine in 2010, and It didn't
have such problems with lenny, squeeze, or wheezy, just now with jessie,
probably another thing systemd screwed up? Sorry for top posting but the
gmx web mai
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>> replace 10.0.0.1/32 with 10.0.0.0/24 it does not work
>
> You should double check that.
>
I checked replaced 10.0.0.1/32 with 10.0.0.0/24.
>>> This ruleset does not need improvements but a total rewrite.
>>
>> Yes I was thinking the same, I'll put it on the TODO. I ev
On 2016-11-13 20:34 +0100, Robert Latest wrote:
> I want to automatically start a data backup script (to USB or network
> drive) at each shutdown of my computer. I did some research into this
> and found that several people have the same problem as I do. But the
> threads I found petered out into
Le 13/11/2016 à 20:40, deloptes a écrit :
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Did you check the routing table on the firewall and the targets ? Do
they have a route to all the 10.0.0.0/24 range ?
the one I posted is on the firewall - firewall is the one I am trying to
modify.
The one you posted ? I didn
Anthony Baldwin wrote:
>
> Definitely not a new chip...I built this machine in 2010, and It didn't
> have such problems with lenny, squeeze, or wheezy, just now with jessie,
> probably another thing systemd screwed up? Sorry for top posting but the
> gmx web mail isn' t letting me write beneath t
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 13/11/2016 à 16:05, deloptes a écrit :
>>
>> These are the rules - a friend created this like 10y ago. I added few
>> rules to forward ports from outside to the intranet and to be able to
>> handle VPN.
>> You can ignore 192.168.60.1 on eth2 - not used.
>
> IMO, this
Hi all,
I want to automatically start a data backup script (to USB or network
drive) at each shutdown of my computer. I did some research into this
and found that several people have the same problem as I do. But the
threads I found petered out into discussions of several ways of doing
this, worki
Definitely not a new chip...I built this machine in 2010, and It didn't have
such problems with lenny, squeeze, or wheezy,
just now with jessie, probably another thing systemd screwed up?
Sorry for top posting but the gmx web mail isn' t letting me write beneath the
message without marking my r
Le 13/11/2016 à 16:05, deloptes a écrit :
These are the rules - a friend created this like 10y ago. I added few rules
to forward ports from outside to the intranet and to be able to handle VPN.
You can ignore 192.168.60.1 on eth2 - not used.
IMO, this ruleset is totally insane.
However, afte
Hi, I installed Stretch on a new computer last night using the alpha
installer. I'm getting all sorts of signing-key errors on this virgin
install (saying no pubkey could be found). Inline is the output:
>From Synaptic:
> An error occurred during the signature verification. The repository
> is not
On 11/13/2016 9:01 AM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
Richard:
You may as well use /media instead of /mnt.
I think it makes no decisive difference for your purpose.
I'll use /mnt as it is empty and I will thus be able to
distinguish between what Debian does and what I'm responsible for.
Now to r
Anthony Baldwin wrote:
> This is the third time within the space of only two weeks, where one day
> I'm happily listening to music on my machine one day. then I wake up the
> next and there's no sound!
> Neither pavucontrol or alsamixer show anything muted.
> Last it seems a reboot (after success
Michael Milliman wrote:
> Again, posting the exact ruleset would be helpful.
These are the rules - a friend created this like 10y ago. I added few rules
to forward ports from outside to the intranet and to be able to handle VPN.
You can ignore 192.168.60.1 on eth2 - not used.
Another important
Hi,
Richard:
You may as well use /media instead of /mnt.
I think it makes no decisive difference for your purpose.
The following discussion wanders away from the request for help
into the field of best practices with system administration:
I quoted:
> >
> > http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs
On Sat 12 Nov 2016 at 21:05:17 -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On my left hand I have a defective hard disk - AKA /dev/sdc .
> On my right hand I have a partitioned device waiting for data - AKA
> /dev/sdb6 .
[...Snip...]
> How do I prepare to invoke
>ddrescue /dev/sdc /mnt/repaired.img /mnt/
Le 13/11/2016 à 14:35, Thomas Schmitt a écrit :
Old school is:
http://www.tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Filesystem-Hierarchy/html/mnt.html
"This is a generic mount point under which you mount your filesystems
or devices. [...] This directory usually contains mount points or
sub-directories where
On Sun 13 Nov 2016 at 07:01:27 -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Sun 13 Nov 2016 at 11:16:51 (+), Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Sunday 13 November 2016 04:09:13 David Wright wrote:
> > > > I'd like to know how you found the above. Running aptitude 0.6.11 on
> > > > vtty3 here as root in 8.6 I'm unabl
Le 13/11/2016 à 13:37, Joe a écrit :
PPTP rather falls into the "complex protocols" described below.
Exactly so. You wouldn't believe how many routers of ten years ago or
so didn't handle it properly, at least with their initial firmware. But
Why wouldn't I ? Knowing how NAT is tricky, I am
On Sat 12 Nov 2016 at 23:44:56 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> David Wright composed on 2016-11-12 22:09 (UTC-0600):
>
> >Select the first item, Preferences and you get UI Options. Again, about
> >30 ↓ keystrokes gets to the line with, and when you're on it, the lower
> >pane displays as above and gi
This is the third time within the space of only two weeks, where one day
I'm happily listening to music on my machine one day. then I wake up the
next and there's no sound!
Neither pavucontrol or alsamixer show anything muted.
Last it seems a reboot (after successfully trying and succeeding to
Hi,
i wrote:
> > Check whether there is really no filesystem on /dev/sdb6 !
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> How ? I may suggest amongst others :
file -sk /dev/sdb6
Good proposal. Richard: Add this to mine.
An empty partition should report
/dev/sdb6: data
whereas a recognizable filesystem should
On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 11:11:24PM +0100, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> I configure sdb in /etc/hdparm.conf to apm=64, but when I start the system,
> apm
> does not change. Interesting enough a /etc/init.d/hdparm restart fixes the
> problem:
There are two config options available: "apm" and "apm_battery
On Sun 13 Nov 2016 at 11:16:51 (+), Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Sunday 13 November 2016 04:09:13 David Wright wrote:
> > > I'd like to know how you found the above. Running aptitude 0.6.11 on
> > > vtty3 here as root in 8.6 I'm unable to find anything like that from
> > > its Options menu, or anywhe
On Saturday, November 12, 2016 11:45:12 PM David Wright wrote:
> I agree with all that, but I avoid making symlinks. If I do a
> recursive search of my home directory, there's really no point
> in trawling through 300GB of photographs, so they're all under
> /home/photos. I put them under /home jus
Le tridi 23 brumaire, an CCXXV, Pascal Hambourg a écrit :
> >Check whether there is really no filesystem on /dev/sdb6 !
> How ?
Try to mount it? It could be dangerous in theory if the device came from
a malicious source, but not in this instance.
> My understanding of the FHS was that /mnt was in
Le 13/11/2016 à 13:29, Thomas Schmitt a écrit :
Check whether there is really no filesystem on /dev/sdb6 !
How ? I may suggest amongst others :
file -sk /dev/sdb6
wipefs /dev/sdb6
blkid /dev/sdb6
Only if not, create one by
mkfs -t ext3 /dev/sdb6
Why use an obsolete filesystem type as ex
On Sun, 13 Nov 2016 11:29:48 +0100
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 13/11/2016 à 11:09, Joe a écrit :
> > Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> >
> >> Le 12/11/2016 à 23:32, Joe a écrit :
> >>>
> >>> The SNAT should not be an issue, it can handle all protocols
> >>> transparently
> >>
> >> No it cannot. NAT
Hi,
Richard Owlett wrote:
> > > How do I prepare to invoke
i wrote:
> > ddrescue -p /dev/sdc1 /mnt/my_sdb6/my_sdc1 /mnt/my_sdb6/sdc1_log
tomas wrote:
> his "big" disk
> (where the backup is going to) has already a file system and is mounted.
Meanwhile i began to doubt this. (Why would Richard n
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Sun, Nov 13, 2016 at 12:53:20PM +0100, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Richard Owlett wrote:
> > I'm tangled up !! I plead for 5 or 6 lines to copy-n-paste.
>
> My proposal deviates from some aspects of your original plan.
Ah, Thomas, you're the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 09:05:17PM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 11/12/2016 2:57 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> >[*SNIP*]
> >Those steps are a rough sketch. Many details already flew back
> >and forth in this thread, so I didn't want to bloat the th
Hi,
Richard Owlett wrote:
> I'm tangled up !! I plead for 5 or 6 lines to copy-n-paste.
My proposal deviates from some aspects of your original plan.
I would try something like
ddrescue -p /dev/sdc1 /mnt/my_sdb6/my_sdc1 /mnt/my_sdb6/sdc1_log
Details:
/dev/sdc1 is a partition
On 11/12/2016 06:19 PM, deloptes wrote:
Joe wrote:
On Sat, 12 Nov 2016 22:15:45 +0100
deloptes wrote:
Hi,
I need some help and I'll appreciate it.
I have a firewall with iptables behind the modem.
on this firewall I have
eth0 with ip 10..1 to the modem ip: 10..12
eth1 wi
On Sunday 13 November 2016 04:09:13 David Wright wrote:
> > I'd like to know how you found the above. Running aptitude 0.6.11 on
> > vtty3 here as root in 8.6 I'm unable to find anything like that from
> > its Options menu, or anywhere else.
>
> I type "?" which gives a list of key bindings. About
On Sunday 13 November 2016 09:38:52 Joe wrote:
> On Sun, 13 Nov 2016 00:10:21 -0600
>
> Doug wrote:
> > I don't know what these Chromebooks sell for, and of course you know
> > that they are diskless
> > (which is maybe what you want) but there are frequently sales of
> > refurbished used Dell lap
On Sunday 13 November 2016 06:10:21 Doug wrote:
> > Acer Chromebook 11.6 Inch Celeron 2GB 16GB
> > http://www.argos.co.uk/product/5487972
> >
> > Asus Chromebook C201 11.6 Inch 2GB 16GB
> > http://www.argos.co.uk/product/5763830
> > ?
> >
> > Can anyone speak to these?
> > Thanks!
> >
> > Lisi
>
>
Le 13/11/2016 à 11:09, Joe a écrit :
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 12/11/2016 à 23:32, Joe a écrit :
The SNAT should not be an issue, it can handle all protocols
transparently
No it cannot. NAT is not possible with some IP protocols. Plain IPSec
(without NAT-T encapsulation) is the first one t
And as i can see the libvirt-daemon-system has libvirt-clients as a dep.
So, installation of libvirt-daemon-system is enough.
Thanks!
On Nov 13, 2016 03:14, "Christian Seiler" wrote:
> On 11/12/2016 11:15 PM, Van Nelle wrote:
> > I am trying to follow this https://wiki.debian.org/KVM tutorial
On Sun, 13 Nov 2016 10:35:29 +0100
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 12/11/2016 à 23:32, Joe a écrit :
> >
> > The SNAT should not be an issue, it can handle all protocols
> > transparently
>
> No it cannot. NAT is not possible with some IP protocols. Plain IPSec
> (without NAT-T encapsulation) is
Le 13/11/2016 à 01:19, deloptes a écrit :
Yes, it is not working
How is it not working ? What do you do and what happens ?
From one computer ip 10..6 I can ssh to 10..7 and vv.
That does not concern the firewall between the modem and the LAN.
I also see that iptables forwards to the outp
On Sun, 13 Nov 2016 00:10:21 -0600
Doug wrote:
> >
> I don't know what these Chromebooks sell for, and of course you know
> that they are diskless
> (which is maybe what you want) but there are frequently sales of
> refurbished used Dell laptops
> in the $120 to $160 price range, and they ar
Le 12/11/2016 à 23:32, Joe a écrit :
The SNAT should not be an issue, it can handle all protocols
transparently
No it cannot. NAT is not possible with some IP protocols. Plain IPSec
(without NAT-T encapsulation) is the first one that comes in mind.
Also many complex protocols such as FTP or
58 matches
Mail list logo