On 1/30/25 16:58, gevisz wrote:
Thank you for your reply.
You're welcome.
I will look into the link but, as far as I understand,
Feel free to ask questions, either here or directly to me if you feel
it's not germane to Gentoo.
it does not answer the question why one of my ZFS disks does
On 1/30/25 16:49, gevisz wrote:
Because, as I wrote it, it was easier than to try to change a profile
with the procedure described in the corresponding news.
I take that as you chose to do the fresh install, not that something
forced you to do the fresh install. It's perfectly fine if that's
On 1/30/25 11:49 AM, gevisz wrote:
I have not updated my Gentoo system since May 31, 2024, so in the
middle of October 2024 I had to install it anew.
Why did you have to install it anew?
I've pulled Gentoo systems more than three years forward. I've talked
about how to do it on this mailing
On 1/30/25 10:55 AM, gevisz wrote:
I should have used /dev/disk/by-id/ata-WDC_WD5000* notations instead!
Unfortunately, I have not found the way to change these notations
other than deleting the whole zpool and re-creating it anew with
the notations /dev/disk/by-id/ata-WDC_WD5000*, which took qu
On 11/6/24 11:39, whiteman808 wrote:
What in case when two lock files are being created at the same time? How
can I prevent in this case emerge fail?
Have you actually experienced this type of failure?
Or are you just thinking about worst case?
I've been sharing distfiles between multiple sys
On 11/5/24 10:27 AM, Grant Taylor wrote:
What?!?!?! Network Manager can't be made to keep it's hands off of
/etc/resolv.conf so the workaround is to leverage file system features
to break Network Manager's hands when it tries to touch the file?
Clarifying, after some replies
On 11/5/24 9:38 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
The Network Manager man page says to 'chattr +i /etc/resolv.conf',
so I did, and that one move enabled the wireless network to work as
it should.
What?!?!?! Network Manager can't be made to keep it's hands off of
/etc/resolv.conf so the workaround is
On 6/4/24 21:02, Grant Taylor wrote:
It turns out that I needed to change the initiator configuration on the
EMC for the test system to use fail-over mode 4, which I think is also
known as ALUA.
I was really close, but not quite there.
Now I've made it all the way.
% multipa
Pre-Script: It's working.
On 6/4/24 19:48, Grant Taylor wrote:
The thing that makes me think that this might be EMC CLARiiON specific
is the following output.
It turns out that I needed to change the initiator configuration on the
EMC for the test system to use fail-over mode 4, wh
On 6/4/24 11:03, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
Yes, I have dev-mapper multipath support in the kernel:
# zcat /proc/config.gz | grep -i multipath
# CONFIG_NVME_MULTIPATH is not set
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH=y
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH_QL=m
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH_ST=m
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH_HST=m
# CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH_IOA
On 6/4/24 11:03 AM, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
I have 2 HBAs.
Each HBA is connected to expander A and expander B (seperate expander
chips on the same backplane)
Each SAS drive has 2 connections. Connection 1 is connected to expander
A. 2 is connected to B.
(might be the other way round, but this e
Hi Joost,
On 6/4/24 12:29 AM, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
I don't use FibreChannel myself (can't justify the cost).
I hear that. I manage an old EMC for a friend who's still using it as
clustered storage for an old VMware install. It started giving us
occasional hiccups (corrected memory errors
On 6/1/24 11:14, Alarig Le Lay wrote:
No, “name or service not known” means that your resolver doesn’t work
Not necessarily.
It can also mean that the name being looked up is not valid.
I'd think that a network sniffer would provide that answer in short
order for traditional DNS.
--
Gran
Hi,
I'm trying to set up SAN multipathing via dm-multipath for the first
time in about a decade.
I am seeing the test LUNs (1 x 10 GB and 1 x 100 GB) twice on my
relatively recent (< 60 days out of date) Gentoo system. But I'm not
able to get multipath to see anything.
Before I go too dee
On 3/27/24 13:58, J. Roeleveld wrote:
Hi all,
Hi,
I am looking for a way to synchronise a filesystem between 2 servers. Changes
can occur on both sides which means I need to have it synchronise in both
directions.
What sort of turn around time are you looking for? seconds, minus,
hours, l
On 3/2/23 9:53 PM, efeizbudak wrote:
Doesn't this sort of defeat the purpose of using pass? I mean if it's
always decryptable then is it really useful to have it encrypted in the
first place (assuming you have full disk encryption set up)? I may be
missing something crucial here so please let me
On 3/2/23 6:48 AM, Matt Connell wrote:
You just described gpg-agent, the core of what Efe (OP) is meddling
with :)
No, I didn't.
I was referring to having the OP's utility read the password and
interact with GPG /once/ at startup and then the utility run for a much
longer time retaining the
On 3/1/23 7:10 AM, efeizbudak wrote:
Hi all,
Hi,
I let mutt-wizard set a cron job which takes my password out
of pass, logs into the email server and fetches my mail every
5 minutes.
Can you re-architect this as a (pseudo) daemon so that you unlock it
once (or at least a LOT less often) a
On 1/20/23 9:09 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
I'm still getting bounce messages the same as all year.
Different meaning of "all the time".
- Not all sending domains use advanced security.
- Not all receiving domains use advanced security.
- Not all mailing lists account for advanced security.
On 1/20/23 2:07 AM, Dale wrote:
It could be the OP is running into the same problem I have in the
past, whatever that problems is.
My experience is that this is a combination of advanced email protection
on the sender /and/ the receiver.
E.g. the sending domain's email configuration specifie
On 1/18/23 4:19 PM, Dale wrote:
I might add, in the past I followed the instructions to get bounced
messages, I've never once had it work. I don't get a error or anything
either, like I do if I do something wrong doing something else.
I tried it a few times.
I'd see mail log entries where th
On 1/18/23 8:07 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
You can also request redelivery of messages based on the internal
numbers if you follow the help advice in all list message headers.
The problem is that if the message is rejected because of filtering the
first time around, there's a very good chance th
On 10/26/22 7:27 PM, Ramon Fischer wrote:
Sure, you cannot cover everything, but mitigating at least a little bit
would be OK or not? :)
I don't know. :-/
It's the proverbial problem of spam / virus filtering and a spam / virus
gets through the filters and someone saying "But it's your fault
On 10/26/22 3:48 PM, Ramon Fischer wrote:
I have created an issue at their Git repository. Maybe there will be
solution for this:
https://github.com/sudo-project/sudo/issues/190
I ... don't know where to begin.
There are so many ways that you can hurt yourself with syntactically
valid s
On 10/26/22 3:27 PM, Ramon Fischer wrote:
Why was I thinking of a chroot?
Maybe because of reading "grup/grub" a few e-mails before and thinking
of "grub-mkconfig"...
Or maybe because entering a chroot is such a prominent thing to do when
booting off of Gentoo media to do an installation tha
On 10/26/22 3:13 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
They and you are different people. You are looking at it from the
perspective of a user accidentally locking themself out of the system,
so su is the best way to be able to fix it. I agree with you there. I
was looking at it from the perspective of a th
On 10/26/22 2:08 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
So they have root access, nothing has changed. How they get root
access is irrelevant, just that they have it.
No, how they get root access is not irrelevant.
If your only access to root is via sudo and you break sudo you no longer
have root access.
On 10/26/22 12:35 PM, Jack wrote:
Could you not interrupt grup and append "single" or "init=/bin/bash" to
the kernel command line?
Maybe.
It will depend on how complex your configuration is.
I don't remember if Gentoo requires root's password when entering single
user mode or not. (I've no
On 10/26/22 12:22 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
You need to be root to write to /etc/sudoers.d. If someone has that
access, you are already doomed!
And what happens if someone uses the existing root-via-sudo access to
break sudo?
You loose root-via-sudo access.
Someone could become root, via sud
On 10/26/22 12:04 PM, Ramon Fischer wrote:
Also a very interesting question!
}:-)
I just tested this with "visudo" and it does not intercept this.
Nor should it.
It's perfect legitimate sudoers syntax.
The location; /etc/sudoers.d/zz vs the end of /etc/sudoers
(proper), doesn't m
On 10/26/22 1:42 AM, Ramon Fischer wrote:
and your user is able to synchronise your clock again.
I'm not sure that will work as hoped. See my other reply about PTY and
testing the commands at the command line for more explanation of what I
suspect is happening.
I do not know, what the deve
On 10/26/22 12:31 AM, Walter Dnes wrote:
My regular user has script "settime" in ${HOME}/bin
#!/bin/bash
date
/usr/bin/sudo /usr/bin/rdate -nsv ca.pool.ntp.org
/usr/bin/sudo /sbin/hwclock --systohc
date
/etc/sudoers.d/001 has, amongst other things, two lines...
waltdnes x8940 = (root) NOPASSW
On 10/25/22 9:44 PM, Matt Connell wrote:
Calm down.
I am calm.
The suggestion to not edit the (/etc/sudoeres) configuration file is one
of those types of things that if nobody objects to then eventually not
doing so will become defacto policy. So I objected, calmly, but with
emphasis.
N
On 10/25/22 9:04 PM, Ramon Fischer wrote:
I do not think, that this is a bug, since it is the default file, which
should not be edited by the user.
I *STRONGLY* /OBJECT/ to the notion that users should not edit
configuration files.
By design, that's the very purpose of the configuration file
On 10/7/22 11:10 AM, Matt Connell wrote:
Was more just laughing at myself for having used equery so frequently
for ~10 years and not knowing about the option.
Fair enough.
And if I was hiding it, I wouldn't have publicly replied that I
learned it :)
TIL
You accidentally struck a button for
On 10/7/22 10:23 AM, Philip Webb wrote:
There's the Wayback Machine, which tries to archive all I/net pages ever.
Sadly, there are a lot of pages that the Wayback Machine a.k.a. The
Internet Archive doesn't have archived. TIA / WM is a best effort
system and is a lot better than not having a
On 10/7/22 10:31 AM, Matt Connell wrote:
Ashamed to admit I learned of equery meta today. I'd previously been
relying on eix to find, say, the website associated with a package.
NEVER be ashamed to admit that you learned something.
Learning is a good thing.
It doesn't matter when you learn i
On 10/7/22 8:25 AM, n952162 wrote:
Can anybody tell me how I can look at the official change history of
linux commands?
Some man pages have history of commands in them.
Admittedly, it seems as if man pages on Solaris and *BSD (I have access
to FreeBSD) tend to be better than Linux man page at
On 9/18/22 1:26 AM, n952162 wrote:
I want to ssh over my openvpn connection, and I can't do it, the
connection times out.
IMHO the first, second, and third thing to try when OpenSSH clients fail
for some reason is `-v`, `-v -v`, and `-v -v -v` in your ssh command(s).
That will almost always
On 8/20/22 10:22 PM, William Kenworthy wrote:
What are you measuring the speed with - hdparm or rsync or ?
hdparm is best for profiling just the harddisk (tallks to the interface
and can bypass the cache depending on settings, rsync/cp/?? usually have
the whole OS storage chain including encry
On 8/20/22 4:45 PM, Dale wrote:
I figured it was something like that. ;-)
:-)
This drive is not supposed to be SMR. It's a 10TB and according to a
site I looked on, none of them are SMR, yet. I found another site that
said it was CMR. So, pretty sure it isn't SMR. Nothing is 100% tho.
Sorry for the duplicate post. I had an email client error that
accidentally caused me to hit send on the window I was composing in.
On 8/20/22 1:15 PM, Dale wrote:
Howdy,
Hi,
Related question. Does encryption slow the read/write speeds of a
drive down a fair amount?
My experience has be
On 8/20/22 12:30 AM, Walter Dnes wrote:
Long-story-short; I run ArcaOS (backwards compatable OS/2 successor)
as a guest on QEMU on my desktop.
Aside: Is ArcaOS really a different version of OS/2? Or is it still
4.x with patches and updated drivers? I saw extremely little
difference, other
On 8/20/22 1:15 PM, Dale wrote:
Howdy,
Hi,
Related question. Does encryption slow the read/write speeds of a
drive down a fair amount?
m
This new 10TB drive is maxing out at about 49.51MB/s or so. I actually
copied that from the progress of rsync and a nice sized file.
It's been runnin
On 7/18/22 3:28 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
Either on the client where the agent is running, but also on the
system I connected to.
I have always considered that there is enough sensitive data on the
client and that there are already enough things running there that I end
up considering the clien
On 7/18/22 12:23 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
I've been using ansible for some of my automation scripts and am
happy with the way that works. The existing implementations for
"adding users" and such is tested plenty by others and does actually
check if the user exists before trying to add one.
ACK
On 7/17/22 11:48 PM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
It could, but that would open up an unsecured key to interception if
an intermediate host is compromised.
What are you thinking? -- I've got a few ideas, but rather than
speculating, I'll just ask.
See previous answer, the agent, as far as I know, w
On 7/17/22 11:24 PM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
If I have 1 desktop and 1 laptop, that means 2 client machines.
Add 5 servers/vms.
/Clients/ need (non-host) key pairs. Servers shouldn't need non-host
key pairs. Servers should only need the clients' public keys on them.
That means 10 ssh-keys per
On 7/15/22 11:46 PM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
Hmm... interesting. I will look into this.
:-)
But, it needs the agent to be running, which will make it tricky for
automation.
Why can't automation start an agent? Why can't there be an agent
running that automation has access to?
(I have some s
On 7/15/22 11:42 PM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
True, properly done automation is necessary to make our lives easier.
#truth
I tried this approach in the past and some levels of automation still
use this, but for being able to login myself, I found having different
keys become cumbersome and I ende
On 7/15/22 4:11 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
I've never used it before, mainly because I wasn't aware of its
existence until I re-read the ssh-keygen man page, but it seems to
be simple timestamps passed to valid-before/valid-after.
I'm not sure that's applicable to /keys/ verses /certificates/.
On 7/15/22 1:12 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
I'll check that out, but it is also possible to set time limits on SSH
keys, and limit them to specific commands.
Please elaborate on the time limit capability of SSH /keys/. I wasn't
aware of that.
Is it hours of the day / days of the week they can
On 7/14/22 3:22 PM, Steve Wilson wrote:
Have you looked at dev-tcltk/expect?
Expect has it's place.
Just be EXTREMELY careful when using it for anything security related.
Always check for what is expected before sending data. Don't assume
that something comes next and blindly send it (possi
On 7/15/22 6:44 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
I don't share keys, each desktop/laptop has its own keys.
Not if they use their own keys. It should be simple to script
generating a new key, then SSHing to a list of machines and replacing
the old key with the new one in authorized_keys.
+1
Indee
On 7/15/22 1:53 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
I agree, but that is a tedious process.
Yes, it can be. That's where some automation comes into play.
I have multiple machines I use as desktop depending on where I am. And
either I need to securely share the private keys between them or set
up differ
On 7/15/22 1:15 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
Yes.
Okay.
That simply means that SSH keys won't be used to authenticate to the
remote system.
How would it not prompt for a password.
There is a PAM module; pam_ssh_agent_auth, which can be used to enable
users to authenticate to sudo using SSH k
On 7/15/22 1:07 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
What I am looking for is:
1) Lookup credentials from password vault (I can do this in
script-form, already doing this in limited form for ansible-scripts,
but this doesn't give me an interactive shell)
ACK You indicated you already had a solution for t
On 7/14/22 1:08 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
I was accepting your point, one I hadn't considered.
Ah. Okay. :-/ Here I was hoping to learn something new from you. ;-)
Still a good discussion none the less. :-)
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die
On 7/14/22 9:56 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
That is true, but it is also true about the current setup as that
also gives root access. I get the impression that Joost is looking
for a more convenient approach that does not reduce security, which
is true here...
I'm all for being /more/ secure, es
On 7/14/22 8:48 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
Is this user only used as a gateway to root access, or can you set
up such a user? If so you could use key-based authentication for
that user, with a passphrase, and add command="/bin/su --login"
to the authorized_keys line. That way you still need three
On 7/14/22 3:54 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
For security reasons, I do not want direct login to root under any
circumstances. This is disabled on all systems and will stay this way.
+10 for security
Currently, to login as root, you need to know:
- admin user account name
- admin user account pass
On 7/14/22 12:35 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
Hi All,
Hi,
I am looking for a way to login to a host and automatically change
to root using a password provided by an external program.
Please clarify if you want to /require/ a password?
I can think of some options that would authenticate, thus av
On 5/29/22 9:48 AM, w...@op.pl wrote:
User xyz can exacute command D on host A as user B in group C
...
is just a matter of consistency ;)
The group that a command is run as starts to become much more germane
when you are using sudo to run commands as a different non-root user.
E.g. if yo
On 5/12/22 8:42 AM, John Covici wrote:
So, I went on to the sasl mailing list and someone found a patch --
seems to be available for the freebsd port, and the patch was specific
to sendmail and dev-libs/cyrus-sasl 2.1.28. I modified it for gentoo
and it fixed everything up! I wonder if I shou
On 5/6/22 4:09 AM, John Covici wrote:
So, I restored all the files, I could like sendmail.mc and the
Sendmail.conf, but no joy, still no authentication mechanisms.
I restored them to about first of April.
Well darn. :-/
This still leads me to saslauthd.
I didn't mean to imply that it /was
On 5/5/22 1:24 PM, John Covici wrote:
I do have a submit.mc file, but I have not changed this at all.
What is strange to me is that if I do saslauthd -v should not I get
everything that my Sendmail.conf has?
I would not assume so.
I say that based on my understanding of how SASL and Sendmail
On 5/5/22 10:39 AM, John Covici wrote:
saslauthd is running, but it seems to ignore the Sendmail.conf .
I think it's the other way around.
Sendmail is told to support authentication via one or more methods, one
of which can be SASL and co.
The actual SASL auth daemon just listens on a unix
On 5/4/22 7:31 AM, John Covici wrote:
Hi. I have been using various clients to connect to my sendmail
server using port 587 and using starttls to encrypt the connections
and then using the plain mechanism to send the user name and password
to authenticate.
Last day or so this has stopped workin
On 4/13/22 6:31 AM, n952162 wrote:
Unfortunately, I get a 550 from my network provider for all of these:
1. me
2. localdomain
3. net
4. web.de
So, how does thunderbird do it?
I don't know what name Thunderbird uses in it's HELO / EHLO command(s).
Though it shouldn't matter much which nam
On 3/31/22 10:17 AM, Grant Taylor wrote:
I do know that the DHCP protocol supports adding additional options /
definitions / parameters (?term?) to specify ... static routes.
In case others are interested in this, a few pointers about using it.
ISC's DHCP server has two option
On 3/31/22 7:21 AM, William Kenworthy wrote:
Hi,
Hi,
I am trying to use a raspberry pi ... to create a routed link
between two access points ... so I can access the monitoring port ...
from homeassistant.
I'm distilling this down to a Gentoo system participating in two two
LANs, both of
Some clarifications.
On 3/22/22 1:28 PM, Grant Taylor wrote:
Xvnc
I have looked at NoMachine (a.k.a. NX) in the past. But I've not tried
it myself because my work client machine has a VNC client built in and
doesn't have an NX client.
As in run an Xvnc server as an X11 server
On 3/22/22 10:41 AM, Grant Edwards wrote:
How does one run "modern" X11 apps remotely?
Xvnc
As in run an Xvnc server as an X11 server / display. Point your
programs at that display / server. Then have a VNC client connect to
said VNC server.
Using ssh -X or ssh -Y works fine for older ap
On 3/18/22 1:03 PM, n952162 wrote:
I rent a low-cost virtual server in the cloud. The platform offers
me some choices in linux distributions, but I'm wondering if I can
compile gentoo to run on it. Anybody have experience doing this?
I've got a Gentoo image running in Linode without any prob
On 3/9/22 11:50 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
This is normal, at least when using systemd.
How is this a /systemd/ thing?
Is it because systemd is enabling a /kernel/ thing that probably is
otherwise un(der)used?
I ask as someone who disliked systemd as many others do. But I fail to
see ho
On 2/28/22 5:04 AM, Adam Carter wrote:
If you put that url in a browser does it show your passwd file? I assume
because the logs say 200 it will. If so shut down the httpd and reset
all the passwords
Note the question mark after the leading slash. As such, the path
traversal component is f
On 2/20/22 10:24 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
Hello list,
Hi,
I have a couple of vertically mounted easy-swap disk caddies in the
back of my workstation, and I'm having trouble finding screws to
mount the disk in the caddy. Clearance is nil, so the screws must be
countersunk so they aren't pro
On 1/18/22 1:26 PM, Raphael Mejias Dias wrote:
Hello,
Hi,
I've modified a little my config file:
Okay.
ProxyPass "zmz" "http://raphaxx.intranet:8280/zm/
ProxyPassReverse "zmz" "http://raphaxx.intranet:8280/zm/";
I would expect the first parameter to be anchored / fully qual
On 1/18/22 1:30 PM, Anatoly Laskaris wrote:
Age migth mean a lot when we are talking about software. Modern software
usually is easier to configure, has sane defaults, more secure and has
integration with other modern software.
I'll concede that those points are /possibilities/. But they are
On 1/18/22 1:50 PM, Rich Freeman wrote:
No, I'm talking about the opposite situation. I'm talking about you
have foo.local resolvable via mDNS, but not DNS - then there is a
chance you won't be able to access the host.
It's the same problem just opposite directions.
The solution is to use so
On 1/18/22 11:24 AM, Anatoly Laskaris wrote:
I'm sorry for not answering to the question directly, but why use apache2?
- Because Apache is already installed and listening on the port in
question.
- Because that's what the OP asked about.
- Because it might be IBM / Oracle HTTP Server whic
On 1/18/22 9:57 AM, Raphael Mejias Dias wrote:
Hello,
Hi,
I'm trying to setup a reverse proxy on my apache2 server to serve an
another apache2 server running on a vm, basically my root apache2
is at 192.168.0.15 and my second apache2 is at 192.168.0.15:8280.
My idea is to have 192.168.0.15/
On 1/15/22 7:47 AM, tastytea wrote:
Did you know you can search with / and then jump to the results with
the number keys?
I've been using the search for decades*. But I didn't know about the
number keys to jump until reading this message and trying it. #TIL
*Yes, I've been using Linux for
On 1/15/22 3:33 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
Hello list,
Hi.
Rich F said recently, "I'd avoid using the .local TLD due to RFC 6762."
Ya
I've read RFC 6762 in the past and I just skimmed part of it again. I
didn't find anything that prohibited the use of the local top level
domain for t
On 1/14/22 8:45 AM, Raphael Mejias Dias wrote:
Hello,
Hi,
I'm trying to configure BIND for a local DNS server, but I'm not sure
that it's ok.
Based on your other comments, it seems as if there is more of a question
about overall DNS configuration and operation than about the BIND DNS
serv
On 1/2/22 12:14 AM, John Covici wrote:
OK, I fixed it, the group name was wrong when I tried the last time, I
had libvirtd and its only libvirt and that seems to have fixed things.
Thank you for the clarifying follow up. Here's hoping you same someone
else time in the future. :-)
On 1/2/22
On 1/1/22 11:05 PM, John Covici wrote:
Well, I foujnd out something. If I go to the file menu, I can add the
connection manually and it works,
That sounds familiar.
but I wonder why I have to do that?
Because the KVM Virtual Manager is designed such that it can administer
KVM / libvirt /
On 1/1/22 10:07 PM, John Covici wrote:
Maybe I have to log out of everything with my user name even though
most of the logins are to virtual consoles?
You typically need to log out of X11 sessions and log back in for them
to see the new groups.
But you say "virtual consoles", which tells me
On 1/1/22 1:19 PM, Mark Knecht wrote:
In my experience it often takes either a logout/in or a reboot
Ya
Depending on what you actually /need/ to use the new group for you can
probably ssh to localhost or possibly use the `newgrp` command go switch
your primary group to the group that you
On 1/1/22 6:04 PM, John Covici wrote:
It more seems to have to do something with the uri -- libvertd is
certainly running, and I added myself to the kvm group, but still get
qem/kvm not connected.
Run `id` as your current user and make sure that it's showing the kvm &
libvirt groups.
--
G
On 1/1/22 12:08 PM, John Covici wrote:
OK, I made some progress -- I emerged qemu/kvm packages including
libvirtd and virt-manager came along. Now, when I start virt-manager,
it complains the qqemu/kvm not connected. I am running virt-manager
as my regular user.
Make sure that libvirtd is
On 12/31/21 4:50 PM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
Thanks for the hint. Yes, it works. I think it is the best solution for
now.
You're welcome.
A simple .forward works in most cases. Though it may run into typical
forwarding problems (SPF, DKIM, etc.). But you're probably fine with
what y
On 12/31/21 3:58 PM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
How do you configure "~/.forward"?
echo "u...@example.net" > ~/.forward
That will cause most MTAs to forward message for your local user to the
u...@example.net email address.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die
I don't have an answer for you, but I do have a drive by comment.
On 12/31/21 3:09 PM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
I'm trying to find a solution to read and delete local mail in:
/var/mail/[user] as Thunderbird discontinued support for reading local
mail directory (movemail).
This type of
On 12/31/21 8:12 AM, Rich Freeman wrote:
++
+++ to KVM / libvirt / VirtManager (GUI)
This is just a front-end to libvirt and kvm, so you're building
entirely on solid technologies, and anything you set up with the
GUI can be edited or run or otherwise managed from the command line,
and vice
On 12/26/21 9:42 AM, Philip Webb wrote:
I want to login to a remote site using 'ssh'.
The response I get is "Unable to negotiate with port :
no matching host key type found. Their offer: ssh-rsa,ssh-dss".
Yesterday, I updated 'openssh' :
Michael's pointing in the proper direction.
Check out
On 12/20/21 3:37 PM, Wol wrote:
You mean the body sans envelope?
Kinda, sorta, yes, no, maybe.
I'd have to compare the two formats to be able to say more definitively,
or with any certainty. But, ya, that's the /type/ of difference that
I'm thinking of.
Aside: What /actually/ is the body
On 12/20/21 3:09 PM, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
Delivery works on both systems
:-)
(with a little caveat, see second-last paragraph).
;-)
At first I believed that both systems used mail from GNU mailutils.
But I erred:
Ya. Determining /which/ implementation of a command is being used ca
On 12/20/21 12:08 PM, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
There is one last niggle: after I read a message with the mail tool,
it saves those messages in /root/mbox. It does not do this on Arch,
but keeps them in /var/spool/mail/root instead.
This sounds like the doing of your mail user agent.
The MTA+
On 12/18/21 4:00 PM, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
Just for the record and completeness’ sake: ... I found out that the
program was actually called dma -- the DragonFly BSD mail transport
agent, not mda.
Thank you for sharing your find Frank.
The DragonFly BSD MTA looks interesting. I'll have to
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