> On 2016-05-11, emetib wrote:
>> I know this is a little off topic, yet I wrote this a while back
>> because of script kiddies messing with ssh on my server at the time.
Use ssh key logins and a packet filter to allow only certain IP(s)/user(s) to
access your server(s)?
On 2016-05-11, emetib wrote:
>I know this is a little off topic, yet I wrote this a while back
>because of script kiddies messing with ssh on my server at the time.
Thanks for that.
Oliver
On Wednesday 11 May 2016 23:30:52 emetib wrote:
> I know this is a little off topic, yet I wrote this a while back because of
> script kiddies messing with ssh on my server at the time.
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1voXlQpos4uI0qhndcIunBew1mmQbwTPl07xG5JF
>8bNM/edit?usp=drive_web It checks
I know this is a little off topic, yet I wrote this a while back because of
script kiddies messing with ssh on my server at the time.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1voXlQpos4uI0qhndcIunBew1mmQbwTPl07xG5JF8bNM/edit?usp=drive_web
It checks your auth.log for people trying to get in that don't
On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 23:00:53 +0100, Lisi wrote:
>Did you discover the Adriane version? Now available as an alternative boot on
>the mainstream disk. It is specifically for the blind and partially sighted,
>and has things like Daisy Player there, as well as screen readers and speech.
On 04/27/2016 02:10 PM, Joe wrote:
On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 15:43:08 -0400 Steve Matzura
wrote:
Do you still think I should go the mech drive route and not put it
on a USB key?
I've been happy with the drive, but as I said, I'm looking for a SSD
replacement soon. I've found
On Wednesday 27 April 2016 20:43:08 Steve Matzura wrote:
> Either I'm smarter than I think (LOL), or you're psychic. I looked at
> Knoppix earlier this morning. I didn't know about the throwaway aspect
> of it, though,
Did you discover the Adriane version? Now available as an alternative boot on
On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 15:43:08 -0400
Steve Matzura wrote:
> Joe:
>
> On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 19:05:26 +0100, you wrote:
>
> >The most versatile system that I know of is Debian-based Knoppix, but
> >the development effort goes into hardware detection and driving, with
> >the
Joe:
On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 19:05:26 +0100, you wrote:
>The most versatile system that I know of is Debian-based Knoppix, but
>the development effort goes into hardware detection and driving, with
>the result that it is not maintainable. It is installable to a hard
>drive, but you throw it away and
On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 10:44:31 -0400
Steve Matzura wrote:
> On Mon, 25 Apr 2016 20:22:48 +0100, Joe wrote:
>
> >I've found that a minimal installation, then dpkg --get-selections
> >and --set-selections and a bit of judicious /etc copying, to be a
> >fairly painless way to
On Mon, 25 Apr 2016 19:04:40 -0700, David Christensen
wrote:
>Alternatively, make your own Debian Live images (hybrid ISO -- can put
>on optical discs or USB drives):
>
> https://www.debian.org/devel/debian-live/
Good solution. It solves the drivers problem for
On Mon, 25 Apr 2016 20:22:48 +0100, Joe wrote:
>I've found that a minimal installation, then dpkg --get-selections and
>--set-selections and a bit of judicious /etc copying, to be a fairly
>painless way to get a clean near-copy of an existing installation. I
>migrated a server, I think lenny or
On 04/25/2016 03:21 AM, Steve Matzura wrote:
My system that I built late last year/early this year is running
great, except for the occasional overrun of inbound ssh from such
addresses as 59.*.*.*, 213.*.*.* and others, but that's only because
I have not put any blockers in place, either on my
On Mon, 25 Apr 2016 14:07:09 -0400
Steve Matzura wrote:
> Joe:
>
> On Mon, 25 Apr 2016 15:17:08 +0100, you wrote:
>
> >I run ssh on a non-standard port, and my router redirects to 22 of
> >my server, alternatively ssh itself will listen wherever you tell it
> >to.
>
>
Joe:
On Mon, 25 Apr 2016 15:17:08 +0100, you wrote:
>I run ssh on a non-standard port, and my router redirects to 22 of my
>server, alternatively ssh itself will listen wherever you tell it to.
That's probably what I should be doing. As you say, it keeps the logs
clean and the riff-raff at
On 25/04/2016 11:21, Steve Matzura wrote:
My system that I built late last year/early this year is running
great, except for the occasional overrun of inbound ssh from such
addresses as 59.*.*.*, 213.*.*.* and others, but that's only because I
have not put any blockers in place, either on my
My system that I built late last year/early this year is running
great, except for the occasional overrun of inbound ssh from such
addresses as 59.*.*.*, 213.*.*.* and others, but that's only because I
have not put any blockers in place, either on my home gateway device
or my Debian system, but
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 03:59:13PM -0500, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I've found that deleting 75-persistent-net-generator.rules takes care of
the network devices.
Yes, but you should expect this file to re-appear at the next package
upgrade, which is why I opted for an rm in /etc/rc.local.
I've found that deleting 75-persistent-net-generator.rules takes care of
the network devices.
Yes, but you should expect this file to re-appear at the next package
upgrade, which is why I opted for an rm in /etc/rc.local.
Stefan
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On 2010-02-17 21:59 +0100, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I've found that deleting 75-persistent-net-generator.rules takes care of
the network devices.
Yes, but you should expect this file to re-appear at the next package
upgrade, which is why I opted for an rm in /etc/rc.local.
Another option is to
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:47:44PM -0500, Chris Jones wrote:
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:36:23AM EST, Stefan Monnier wrote:
- Some udev rules try to give unique and *stable* names to devices by
simply remembering the names they used in the past. On a system that
you move around on many
A good place to test your system is the local consumer
electronics store.
Closed a couple of years ago, CompUSA that is.
I still have a Best Buy not too far from me, but I'm not sure they would
be agreeable beyond a quick boot, which would be okay if everything
works, but not ideal if you
On 2/15/2010 10:36 AM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
Some live distributions have USB environments (I call them) which allow
you to create a bootable image complete with a good-sized /home/ space for
data on a USB thumb drive. An example is Knoppix
(http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/), which has a
On Mon,15.Feb.10, 23:47:44, Chris Jones wrote:
What I did on my machine with a BIOS that will never recognize USB
devices, was boot off of the hard drive grub and then point grub2 to the
USB device from the shell that's accessible by hitting 'c' on the grub
boot menu.
With current
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just have my own configuration and run it every where
Some live distributions have USB environments (I call them) which allow
you to create
Not that I can confirm my USB stick 'portable debian' would work on a
wide range of systems. For a number of reasons I was not able to pursue
this much further than what is described in my notes, one of them being
that I did not have access to a target machine (or machines) and
discover
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:45:22AM EST, Stefan Monnier wrote:
Not that I can confirm my USB stick 'portable debian' would work on a
wide range of systems. For a number of reasons I was not able to pursue
this much further than what is described in my notes, one of them being
that I did
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:36:23AM EST, Stefan Monnier wrote:
[..]
- getting your BIOS find your kernel:
- some machines can't boot from USB at all.
- others can, but with some restrictions (typically Apple hardware,
so I end up having to setup my flash key with grub-efi-32,
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just have my own configuration and run it every where
El mié, 10-02-2010 a las 20:34 -0500, Rob Owens escribió:
I think you want Debian Live. http
On Sat, Feb 13, 2010 at 09:14:59AM -0430, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just have my own configuration and run it every where
Debian Live offers
framework?
THANKS
El sáb, 13-02-2010 a las 09:45 -0500, Rob Owens escribió:
On Sat, Feb 13, 2010 at 09:14:59AM -0430, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just
On Sat, Feb 13, 2010 at 08:44:59AM EST, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just have my own configuration and run it every where
Is this what you are talking
wrote:
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just have my own configuration and run it every where
Is this what you are talking about?
http://osdir.com/ml/debian-user-debian
directions.
Not that I can confirm my USB stick 'portable debian' would work on a
wide range of systems. For a number of reasons I was not able to pursue
this much further than what is described in my notes, one of them being
that I did not have access to a target machine (or machines) and
discover possible
On Sat, Feb 13, 2010 at 08:44:59AM EST, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Well, no, what i really want is a portable Debian, so i can, for
example, build a web app and show it everywhere without need a web
server and just have my own configuration and run it every where
Some live distributions
On Sat, Feb 13, 2010 at 10:01:58AM -0430, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Rob: Sorry not to trust you!!
I already read a little bit of Debian Live, so should i follow :
http://live.debian.net/manual/html/ch02s03.html
so i can install Debian Live in a HDD, or maybe i go for the USB ...
How many
Hi!!
I want to know if someone have done this before:
I have a external disk, and i install Debian in it from my PC, but when i
try to run it from my laptop i just can' t... but i just want to know if
somebody have done this and how, should i install it with some especific
parameters so it runs
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 04:20:46PM -0400, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Hi!!
I want to know if someone have done this before:
I have a external disk, and i install Debian in it from my PC, but when i
try to run it from my laptop i just can' t... but i just want to know if
what is the error ?
On Wed, 10 Feb 2010 16:20:46 -0400
Germana Oliveira germanaolivei...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi!!
I want to know if someone have done this before:
I have a external disk, and i install Debian in it from my PC, but when i
try to run it from my laptop i just can' t... but i just want to know if
Germana Oliveira wrote:
Hi!!
I want to know if someone have done this before:
I have a external disk, and i install Debian in it from my PC, but when
i try to run it from my laptop i just can' t... but i just want to know
if somebody have done this and how, should i install it with some
I think you want Debian Live. http://debian-live.alioth.debian.org/
I use it to boot multiple machines from a USB flash drive, but it should
work for a USB hard drive as well.
-Rob
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 04:20:46PM -0400, Germana Oliveira wrote:
Hi!!
I want to know if someone have done
Hi all,
I need to create a portable Debian (or derivate) system.
My needs are:
* install the system on a bootable USB HD
* install a system that autoconfigure on different hardware (I don't
know in advance which video card or lan card I'll find when I'll
use the system
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mirto Silvio Busico wrote:
Hi all,
I need to create a portable Debian (or derivate) system.
My needs are:
* install the system on a bootable USB HD
* install a system that autoconfigure on different hardware (I don't
know
Hi!
Well, for xmas i do something like that as gift for my customers.
I prepare a usb with many tiny linux distro bootable via usb and with grub
(to choice the preferred distro).
There are a lot of minimal linux distro, and many are debian based
(DamnSmallLinux, Knoppix, for example).
I think
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Mirco Piccin wrote:
Hi!
Well, for xmas i do something like that as gift for my customers.
I prepare a usb with many tiny linux distro bootable via usb and with
grub (to choice the preferred distro).
There are a lot of minimal linux distro, and
Busico [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi all,
I need to create a portable Debian (or derivate) system.
My needs are:
* install the system on a bootable USB HD
* install a system that autoconfigure on different hardware (I don't
know in advance which video card or lan card I'll find when I'll
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 10:30:34AM +0200, Joe Hart wrote:
Mirco Piccin wrote:
Hi!
Well, for xmas i do something like that as gift for my customers.
I prepare a usb with many tiny linux distro bootable via usb and with
grub (to choice the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Michael Pobega wrote:
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 10:30:34AM +0200, Joe Hart wrote:
Mirco Piccin wrote:
Hi!
Well, for xmas i do something like that as gift for my customers.
I prepare a usb with many tiny linux distro bootable via usb and with
grub
Mirto Silvio Busico wrote:
Hi all,
I need to create a portable Debian (or derivate) system.
My needs are:
* install the system on a bootable USB HD
* install a system that autoconfigure on different hardware (I don't
know in advance which video card or lan card I'll find when
On Thu, 05 Apr 2007 09:33:24 -0400, Michael Pobega wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 10:30:34AM +0200, Joe Hart wrote:
Mirco Piccin wrote:
Hi!
Well, for xmas i do something like that as gift for my customers.
I prepare a usb with many tiny
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 11:10:51PM +, - Tong - wrote:
On Thu, 05 Apr 2007 09:33:24 -0400, Michael Pobega wrote:
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 10:30:34AM +0200, Joe Hart wrote:
Well, for xmas i do something like that as gift for my customers.
I prepare a usb with many tiny linux distro
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