Re: [PLUG] Restoring MS Backup QIC and BKF files via Samba?

2023-11-08 Thread Paul Heinlein

On Wed, 8 Nov 2023, Ben Koenig wrote:

What you may want to try is setting up your old windows OS with 
multiple virtual disks. C:\ for the os, then a D:\ that can hold the 
backup files. Some of the virtual disk formats used by qemu can be 
mounted directly. So you copy the data over via the host, boot the 
VM, and all necessary files are accessible in your virtual D:\.


Unburdened by any recent experience with these ancient Windows 
releases, I'd suggest the same thing.


--
Paul Heinlein
heinl...@madboa.com
45°22'48" N, 122°35'36" W


Re: [PLUG] Restoring MS Backup QIC and BKF files via Samba?

2023-11-08 Thread Ben Koenig
On Wednesday, November 8th, 2023 at 12:02 PM, Russell Senior 
 wrote:


> I think I have mentioned, either here or certainly at PLUG social
> gatherings, that I'm currently working on organizing ancient backups. I
> restored a bunch of 4mm DDS1 and DDS3 tapes and am currently working on
> DC600A tapes (QIC24 format, ~60MB per cartridge). The latter date from
> 1992-1993 and straddle my adoption of Linux. So, the earlier tapes are
> written with a DOS program called SYTOS, and the later ones are tar
> archives. I am currently dealing with the very common problem with
> quarter-inch cartridge (QIC) tapes that the "tension bands" have stretched
> or broken in the 30 years since they were commonly in use. There are a slew
> of other potential problems as well, that I am not plagued with so far.
> 
> Among the files that I recovered from the 4mm tapes are Microsoft backups
> (*.qic from Windows 95 and *.bkf from Windows 2000). The backup scheme I
> was employing a the time in the early 2000s was to back up the Microsoft
> machines in the office to a Samba share and then backup those files from
> Linux on to tape. I am now interested in archiving the files contained
> within the qic and bkf files. Apparently, the only way to do that is it
> spin up an era-specific version (windows 95 or 98 for the qic files, and
> windows 2000 or xp for the bkf files) to use the Microsoft programs to
> restore the constituent files.
> 
> I can install the Microsoft OS and necessary tools in a virtual machine
> easily enough (still painful, but ... with enough anesthesia still
> possible), but the problem I'm confronted with is how to most easily get
> the backups and restorations in and out of the VM. The *.qic files alone
> amount to a few dozen gigabytes, which is at least doubled in the
> restoration. Support for guest tools for sharing space seem to be missing
> for these early windows systems, so that qemu can't easily share a folder
> with the guest. I think I am going to have to either give the guest OS a
> gigantic file system, inject the backps into that filesystem by mounting it
> from the host, and then fish out the extrications in a similar manner, OR I
> need to spin up some Samba server and mount a SMB share from the guest. I
> don't have an existing SMB server on the premises as our household is, in
> the vernacular, a Linux shop.
> 
> Has anyone done this and have advice on what's the most direct path here?
> 
> TIA,
> 
> --
> Russell Senior
> russ...@personaltelco.net

If you go the samba route, you would need to monkey with the config to set the 
older SMB/CIFS version. I doubt a windows version that old will talk to the 
default samba setup.

What you may want to try is setting up your old windows OS with multiple 
virtual disks. C:\ for the os, then a D:\ that can hold the backup files. Some 
of the virtual disk formats used by qemu can be mounted directly. So you copy 
the data over via the host, boot the VM, and all necessary files are accessible 
in your virtual D:\.

You'll just want to make sure that the modern filesystem tools in linux know 
not to try to automagically correct the filesystem created by windows 95. 
-Ben


[PLUG] Restoring MS Backup QIC and BKF files via Samba?

2023-11-08 Thread Russell Senior
I think I have mentioned, either here or certainly at PLUG social
gatherings, that I'm currently working on organizing ancient backups. I
restored a bunch of 4mm DDS1 and DDS3 tapes and am currently working on
DC600A tapes (QIC24 format, ~60MB per cartridge). The latter date from
1992-1993 and straddle my adoption of Linux. So, the earlier tapes are
written with a DOS program called SYTOS, and the later ones are tar
archives. I am currently dealing with the very common problem with
quarter-inch cartridge (QIC) tapes that the "tension bands" have stretched
or broken in the 30 years since they were commonly in use. There are a slew
of other potential problems as well, that I am not plagued with so far.

Among the files that I recovered from the 4mm tapes are Microsoft backups
(*.qic from Windows 95 and *.bkf from Windows 2000). The backup scheme I
was employing a the time in the early 2000s was to back up the Microsoft
machines in the office to a Samba share and then backup those files from
Linux on to tape. I am now interested in archiving the files contained
within the qic and bkf files. Apparently, the only way to do that is it
spin up an era-specific version (windows 95 or 98 for the qic files, and
windows 2000 or xp for the bkf files) to use the Microsoft programs to
restore the constituent files.

I can install the Microsoft OS and necessary tools in a virtual machine
easily enough (still painful, but ... with enough anesthesia still
possible), but the problem I'm confronted with is how to most easily get
the backups and restorations in and out of the VM. The *.qic files alone
amount to a few dozen gigabytes, which is at least doubled in the
restoration. Support for guest tools for sharing space seem to be missing
for these early windows systems, so that qemu can't easily share a folder
with the guest. I *think* I am going to have to either give the guest OS a
gigantic file system, inject the backps into that filesystem by mounting it
from the host, and then fish out the extrications in a similar manner, OR I
need to spin up some Samba server and mount a SMB share from the guest. I
don't have an existing SMB server on the premises as our household is, in
the vernacular, a Linux shop.

Has anyone done this and have advice on what's the most direct path here?

TIA,

-- 
Russell Senior
russ...@personaltelco.net


Re: [PLUG] question about freecarrierlookup.com and txt messages

2023-11-08 Thread wes
I tried it yesterday when the post was first made and got the same result -
invalid number. I tried again just now and it is working. so it appears to
have been an outage on their end.

-wes

On Wed, Nov 8, 2023 at 6:28 AM MC_Sequoia  wrote:

> Firstly, I didn't know about this website and service. It worked for me. I
> got the carrier, sms & mms gateways. It even gave me a carrier for my
> Google Voice number, which I thought it would return invalid number.
>


Re: [PLUG] TigerVnc server - using systemd?

2023-11-08 Thread Johnathan Mantey
Ah. the blank screen.
My experience is this has to do with sessions, and who's logged into them.

If I use a networked Keyboard/Vid/Mouse and log in to my X11 or Wayland
session, and then attempt to use VNC to get a display there as well, then
the VNC session is black.
It turns out the VNC session is *working*, you just can't see anything. By
working I mean launching a program or moving the mouse does both functions.
They just show up on the other active sessions screen (IIRC).
I dealt with this by only having one session active, which in my case, had
the VNC session preferred.
Eventually I dealt with it by booting in server mode, where my VGA
connector I use with the KVM is always just an ASCII console.
Prior to figuring out how to have my OS automatically start the VNC server
I would ssh to the unit, start the VNC server, and then use VNC client.
This allowed the VNC client session to get my GDM login screen, and to get
a KDE desktop.

On Wed, Nov 8, 2023 at 1:11 AM Tomas Kuchta 
wrote:

> On Tue, Nov 7, 2023, 23:33 Robert Detjens  wrote:
>
> >
> > >
> > > In both cases, I installed: zypper/dnf install tigervnc and I got the
> > > latest version.
> >
> > Fedora has the server and client in separate packages -- `tigervnc` and
> > `tigervnc-server`. The server package has the server service (tounge
> > twister,
> > heh) at `/usr/lib/systemd/system/vncserver@.service`.
> >
>
> Thank you - I overlooked the tigervnc-server package + had invisible typo
> in username.
>
> I can start the service and connect to it. Now I need to figure out why the
> session is blank - likely something to do with Wayland.
>
> Thanks again, Tomas
>
> >
>


Re: [PLUG] question about freecarrierlookup.com and txt messages

2023-11-08 Thread MC_Sequoia
Firstly, I didn't know about this website and service. It worked for me. I got 
the carrier, sms & mms gateways. It even gave me a carrier for my Google Voice 
number, which I thought it would return invalid number.


Re: [PLUG] TigerVnc server - using systemd?

2023-11-08 Thread Tomas Kuchta
On Tue, Nov 7, 2023, 23:33 Robert Detjens  wrote:

>
> >
> > In both cases, I installed: zypper/dnf install tigervnc and I got the
> > latest version.
>
> Fedora has the server and client in separate packages -- `tigervnc` and
> `tigervnc-server`. The server package has the server service (tounge
> twister,
> heh) at `/usr/lib/systemd/system/vncserver@.service`.
>

Thank you - I overlooked the tigervnc-server package + had invisible typo
in username.

I can start the service and connect to it. Now I need to figure out why the
session is blank - likely something to do with Wayland.

Thanks again, Tomas

>