I'm trying to deny access to all except specific IP address in a
directory, just testing it.
In modules.d/00_default_settings.conf
Options MultiViews
AllowOverride All
Require all granted
in admin/.htaccess
Require all denied
Require ip 10.0.0.100
My IP is 1
I've done a basically vanilla install (*) of gentoo hardened with disks
prepared at luks/btrfs. I've used `genkernel --btrfs --luks all`. I am
getting the following error when trying to boot the system and arrive at the
point of unlocking a disk (note the spaces, "on ... failed"):
device-m
Thelma
On 11/28/2020 07:19 AM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 27/11/2020 02:56, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
>> I just installed nvidia-drivers-455.28-r1 and can not start "nvidia x
>> server setting" it doesn't open.
>>
>> running: $ nvidia-smi
>> NVIDIA-SMI has failed because it couldn't comm
n952162 wrote:
> Assuming no "emerge --sync" has been done, e.g.
>
> I've been using -u to mean, "don't update if there's nothing new" (which
> I would actually think would be the default). Maybe that's wrong? -n
> is better?
>
>
>
You may want to check the man page for emerge. I don't think -n
On Sat, 28 Nov 2020 at 21:04, n952162 wrote:
>
> Assuming no "emerge --sync" has been done, e.g.
>
> I've been using -u to mean, "don't update if there's nothing new" (which
> I would actually think would be the default). Maybe that's wrong? -n
> is better?
In my book, there's only one reason t
Assuming no "emerge --sync" has been done, e.g.
I've been using -u to mean, "don't update if there's nothing new" (which
I would actually think would be the default). Maybe that's wrong? -n
is better?
On 27/11/2020 02:56, the...@sys-concept.com wrote:
I just installed nvidia-drivers-455.28-r1 and can not start "nvidia x
server setting" it doesn't open.
running: $ nvidia-smi
NVIDIA-SMI has failed because it couldn't communicate with the NVIDIA
driver. Make sure that the latest NVIDIA driver is
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