Take a look at shred (coreutils), wipe and secure-delete.
-t
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Charles Kroeger wrote:
My question was since this backup is on an ext3 formatted USB stick, if my hard
drive was reformatted with ext4, could the backup [image] on the USB stick be
'copied' back to the new ext4 partition, without problems, as it were.
If that software is filesystem agnostic,
Charles Kroeger wrote:
If you had an image of a partition that used the ext3 file system and tried
to install this image unto a freshly partitioned hard drive with an ext4 file
system, would the image be destroyed or corrupted?
I'm sorry I really don't understand, please define what you mean
Charles Kroeger wrote:
My question is if the hard drive is reformatted with the ext4 file system and I
re-install that 'image' [ext3 file system] will the data be corrupted?
This doesn't really help, I'll assume you just want to convert your ext3
filesystem (saved in an image file) to ext4.
Bob Proulx wrote:
Well... If you (and Camaleón) feel that strongly about it then
discussing it here should just be a launching point to taking the
discussion to upstream. Don't be shy about giving them feedback!
Otherwise how will they know? I am sure they will have considered
this already
Just plug it in and format it. If it's not supposed to be bootable and you
only plan to format one block device on it (a filesystem, a physical volume,
an encrypted volume, ...), you don't have to partition it (I usually don't)
although some software *might* get confused by disks without
Andre Majorel wrote:
Can anyone recommend a key logger for Debian ? I don't need replay
or any fancy functions, just stats about which keys get pressed
the most.
Support for X is essential, support for the console is not. Even
raw keycodes would do.
I saw that one[1][2] in the last Debian
lee wrote:
Well, I wonder what the manufacturers thinking behind lieing about the
sector size is. [...]
XP, AFAIK.
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Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
I suggest cdn.debian.net for the official archive and security.geo.debian.org
for the security archive. Both are GeoIP-based to find the closest mirror to
you, although cdn goes an extra step and also takes into account how up-to-
date and heavily-loaded the
Anand Sivaram wrote:
I dont think you could do that in filesystem level, since when 'w'
permission is given the user could create both files and directories, but
without 'w' permission the user cant do both. May be you could give
readonly permission to all directories except one where this user
Freeman wrote:
Anyone else notice an unusually large number of upgrades in squeezee over
the past 24 hours? I had 6 or 7 12 hours ago and 352 this morning, the most
I've seen at once.
R-C bugs regarding testing have also leaped to 716 from the low 500's
recently.
No mentions in Debian Project
Stephen Powell wrote:
Report? What report?
That was actually meant to be a quick off-list note about your post in
505609 which I thought deserved at least two nice words. ;-)
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James Stuckey wrote:
Is there an official way to request backports? Or, what is the easiest way
to make packages for lenny when using squeeze?
You'll probably get more valuable feedback there[1].
1: http://lists.backports.org/mailman/listinfo
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Proskurin Kirill wrote:
One question:
It is safe to use backported kernel in production?
Officially, it is not, but the backporters community is supportive enough.
You should probably check this[1] out first, however.
1:
Stephen Powell wrote:
Actually, that is largely a myth. Lilo's only release-critical bug turned
out not to be a bug at all. It was this bug that gave rise to the belief
that stock kernels were getting too big for lilo to load. But the problem
was that a new kernel was installed without lilo
Stan Hoeppner wrote:
LILO isn't broken and it works well enough for may folks such as myself. We
should have the option of keeping it, as an installable package, until _we_
feel we need to change to something else. It's as much a philosophical issue
as it is a practical one. There is no
not sure it's worth the trouble - one should just use what
he knows will work best for the task at hand, because the real difference
will most certainly be about comfort.
-thib
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Stan Hoeppner wrote:
My gut instinct is that due to the above reasons and possibly others, the next
dist upgrade is going to hose all my production servers whilst trying to
forcibly convert them to Grub2. Is my instinct correct?
Like any dist upgrade, squeeze will have release notes with
consul tores wrote:
No, the tendency to imitate Windows as a desktop.
Yes, there are many alternative desktops and windows managers, but i
have only one compaq presario laptop to use, which is working
perfectly using Lenny-Kde; and 3 days ago i received a new tool, a
lenovo thinkPad Edge, on
be extensively tested to be provided
as an alternative choice in d-i? I really don't know how much work would be
needed for this.
-thib
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Samuel Thibault wrote:
[snip]
Grub1 could because it was small enough to fit in a well-known usable
area in the ext2fs filesystem, but grub2 can not any more.
In the filesystem, you're sure? I'm curious, what part?
[snip]
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consul tores wrote:
Yes, Linux (kernel) is very tweakable, but normal users are not able
to compile their own kernel; i am more remembering when i could
install using 3 diskettes, and now i can not do it anymore.
If, we consider that the environment has changed; we have Red Hut,
Ubuntu and
consul tores wrote:
Could you say why?
I misunderstood you, or simply wasn't aware of the terminology, sorry. I
mistakenly thought you were suggesting the creation of an entirely new
Debian kernel.
We have lost the posibility to install from disquette, we have to add
an initrd, SElinux
know point here).
Note that this partition scheme doesn't need EFI hardware, it's entirely
backward compatible with PC/BIOS systems (you can even have hybrid GUID/DOS
partition tables if you're really stuck with crappy software).
-thib
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consul tores wrote:
Again, and again; Debian depends of Linus Torvals; maybe it is time to
seriously think about Debian kernels!
Madness.
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Rob Owens wrote:
I'm not sure. ext2 has no journal, so I'd assume it's faster, but I
really don't know.
ext4 can be configured not to use a journal nor barriers. There's really no
point in using ext2 these days, I think.
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bernard.schoenac...@free.fr wrote:
bonjour,
le premier qui moufte ...
bref, ne pas prendre le paquet kbd mais kbd-compat car autrement l'ensemble
des dépendances est déconstruit
kbd-compat est un layer pour wrap console-tools avec des scripts qui imitent
kbd, pas l'inverse. Ici, le
exp...@hope.cz wrote:
Is this possbile?
Look at IP address spoofing techniques, it's a broad subject. I would
consider identifying the client at the application level though (add support
for this to your protocol), if possible.
-thib
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B. Alexander wrote:
I started looking in this direction myself last night. I am, for the life
of me, unable to figure why or how drives are designated as early versus
non-early. With the exception of adding noearly to the options in
/etc/cryptab. However, I am unable to find a single partition
Adam Hardy wrote:
Sure. I mean on the box at home that I'm monitoring from the online
server. Aaaah, just realised I don't have a fixed IP ?$*!(*)*!!!
Alternatively, you can call a heartbeat script on the server from the box at
home. A simple cgi would do.
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page or wait for more help.
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eject(1) is. It will search mountpoints in /dev, /media and
/mnt by default btw, so it's just eject sd[a-z] for your example. You
might want to use /media and volume names instead.
-thib
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be
configured to do so.
-thib
[1] http://lwn.net/Articles/322823/
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additions which implement shared directories
over a specialized interface with a virtual filesystem (vboxfs) [2].
Hugo
QEMU and Xen might not be as straightforward for a desktop end-user, but
their users certainly won't find it difficult.
-thib
[1] http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/ch06.html
[2
Can't miss the Debian Reference by Osamu Aoki (青木 修):
http://www.debian.org/doc/user-manuals#quick-reference
It covers a lot of topics and provides up-to-date pointers to other resources.
-thib
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Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
[snip] I recommend moving to ext3 (NOT ext4) [snip]
Here we go again? :-)
-thib
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steve wrote:
Une idée ?
apt-get build-dep?
-t
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Ton patch devrait fonctionner même sur la version de Lenny, non?
$ apt-get source tangogps
[patch]
# apt-get build-dep tangogps
Tu devrais pouvoir compiler sans problème après.
-thib
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Ron Johnson wrote:
[snip]
http://www1.us.ioccc.org/main.html I guess they got bored looking at
normal production C code...
Sometimes, I find the code there even more impressive:
http://underhanded.xcott.com/
It's even more restricted, and not so pointless. Hiding in plain sight,
browser? What about other things requiring
many parallel connections (try a P2P application)?
-thib
PS Greetings from Liège.
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can't backup (it doesn't make
sense, it's too big, ..) and thus, yes, you also *need* mirroring (not just
to speed up things). But it will not help you in case of human error, as
Stan said.
-thib
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. Je pense que
debdelta[1] est le projet le plus à jour sur ce front.
-thib
[1] http://debdelta.debian.net/
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Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Salut,
Envisageant de mettre en place un proxy/cache APT pour les machines d'un
réseau local, j'apprécierais des avis, retours d'expérience et
recommandations sur les différentes options disponibles. En fouillant
dans la liste des paquetages, j'en ai trouvé 4 :
-
l'infrastructure de l'archive change très rarement.
Au pire, on peut toujours soumettre ces packages à l'archive volatile.
-thib
[1]
http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-reference/ch02.en.html#_proxy_server_for_apt
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:
Up to where is it worth the trouble? [2].
-thib
PS Do your backup and start incrementals every hour now :-)
[1] http://grub.enbug.org/LVMandRAID
[2] http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2010/02/msg01945.html
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Others suggested using filesystem-level tools, which is really fine.
Alternatively, you can shrink the filesystem and move the entire block at once.
Each method probably has its pros and cons.
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, there are many filesystem comparison tools if one wants to do it
manually, like dirdiff. For file contents, just hash and re-hash.
-thib
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to relocate it.
Not sure how it would work out though; you'd probably have to be inside the
new system, copying files from the old one, and not the other way around.
-thib
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-thib
PS I'll tell you something embarrassing about me if you find a SATA
controller that can inflate.
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, and I'd say that's even necessary if you don't have
snapshotting tools (LVM2 is good at it).
[snip]
-thib
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comes from #411123, which is fixed. I've never heard
of anything else.
Disclaimer -- just my understanding (I'm sometimes surprised.)
-thib
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, you should consider using
[the] automatic upgrade [...]
In other words, use automatic security upgrades if you can't maintain the
system actively and have enemies.
-thib
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RE.
$ apt-show-versions -R '^apt(itude)?$'
apt/lenny uptodate 0.7.20.2+lenny1
aptitude/lenny uptodate 0.4.11.11-1~lenny1
-thib
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Yet another solution:
http://packages.debian.org/lenny/unattended-upgrades
-thib
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it could clarify my words,
putting them in some context. Hopefully it's informative for someone.
Please correct me if you don't like my understanding of these things; but
really I see no problem.
-thib
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-school way, but it works.
-thib
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; should lead to some understanding. It's
quite old code from libtool. Maybe that[1] will be more helpful.
'Hope I got that right.
In the meantime, a very ugly hack that could probably work would be to
create a link to /usr/lib/mpg132/output_alsa.la from /lib/output_alsa.la.
-thib
[1] http
Stephen Powell wrote:
I believe a UUID is generated when the partition is formatted, either with
mkfs or mkswap.
I confirm - just tried shrinking and growing back an extfs. UUID is left
untouched (as expected); that Mint article is BS or just obsolete.
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' n'est pas supprimé: 'x y' s'est donc bien expanded, et est
bien escaped correctement.
Enfin, tant que ça marche.
-thib
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Julien Demange wrote:
Je me demande si ce n'est pas un peu plus que les espace qui lui pose
des soucis. Peut êtres l'association d'espace + - + autre chose...
Ca m'étonnerait..
Je vote pour un encodage hasardeux, si c'est sur un vieux ntfs.
-thib
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not change on boot, I'd use it. Maybe your beloved xfs, thib?
Actually, I've never even tried xfs, I was just beeing rational (but I guess
it has the potential to hook me up if I take the time to study it, some
other day). That beeing said, I can't help much there, but I would suspect
it also has
of the files. (Still, quite a long shot.)
-thib
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thib wrote:
I'd really look at the boot loader now.
Which I did. It's not it. Grub doesn't touch anything.
For the record, I fired up a VM and tried, on *squeeze*:
ext2 / grub2
ext2 / grub1
ext3 / grub1
Mount time never changed, checksums were always identical.
The filesystem
] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/grub-devel/2008-03/msg00091.html
-thib
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chainloading or is it recent?
-thib
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...
done
-thib
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.
-thib
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Archive
scripting qui se base plutôt
sur des librairies portables, les grands joueurs sont Perl, Python, Ruby, et
bien d'autres. Ils offrent encore plus de flexibilité au niveau du langage
(pas nécessairement au niveau fonctionnalité), et se placent à un niveau
d'abstraction un poil inférieur.
-thib
:
$ du -h --max-depth=1 2/dev/null
-thib
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Celejar wrote:
What do you mean manually?
Probably via an archive.
The lists servers are fine. You should check your mail filters.
-thib
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(or somewhere else)? I think d-user@ is stuck at
this point. I'm asking because I'm interested, too.
-thib
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Stephen Powell wrote:
Actually, that could be an important clue. Perhaps the last mount date
is what is being updated. And since both mounts were on the same day,
the date did not change. But if you reboot tomorrow ...
I don't know if that's it, of course. It's just a theory at this point.
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 2010-03-10 16:30, thib wrote:
Maybe I missed something relevant.
# dumpe2fs -h /dev/sda2 | grep time
dumpe2fs 1.41.10 (10-Feb-2009)
Last mount time: Sat Feb 13 08:39:01 2010
Last write time: Sat Feb 13 08:39:01 2010
I will not comment
Martin wrote:
I downloaded 5 DVD Lenny 5.0.4.
As I was browsing packages with aptitude I noticed that there
is angband-doc but angband is (UNAVAILABLE).
Martin
In non-free[1].
[1] http://packages.debian.org/lenny/angband
-thib
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, ce qui est sans doute le mieux à
faire, du moins de mon point de vue.
-thib
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En
(and other
things); not sure that's worth it.
-thib
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Ron Johnson wrote:
On 2010-03-09 02:58, thib wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
I'd hash each of the files in /boot (storing the results in a thumb
drive if you are paranoid) just before you reboot and then just after.
How would you do it after with an offline system? That would require
if at all, and
definitely enough for that.
-thib
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providing
a block list, as you described for lilo. Since the filesystem is made
read-only, this shouldn't be too ugly and certainly worth trying.
-thib
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trying to do that in the past, and in the end I realized it would only add
useless confusion.
So, it's not a bug, you should just not rely on these names.
-thib
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Clive McBarton wrote:
For the record, grub can also load a kernel and an initrd by just
providing a block list, as you described for lilo. Since the filesystem
is made read-only, this shouldn't be too ugly and certainly worth trying.
Really? Great. How exactly? I looked at the man and info
the offset(s) of
the diff(s), and see how it compares to the on-disk structure. Or ask this
on the extfs list.
-thib
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, for no apparent reason).
-thib
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http://www.pendrivelinux.com/
-thib
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). And if you can, well, you
should still use it, since it has to be developed for some reason
(supposedly optimization).
-thib
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and log in as root.
Traditionally, you would only put /boot out of the volume group, but now
that grub2 has fine support for LVM, I don't see any reason to exclude any
volume from the group.
-thib
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search the website for more recent benchmarks, there are
plenty.
-thib
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). Nothing to do
with IBM, BTW, I just found they were quality stuff.
[1] http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Main_Page
-thib
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worry, the read-only option should be enough, as long as
you don't do any maintenance operations on it (defragmentation, stuff like
that).
-thib
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it has been fixed, I never tried on
XP, but keep that in mind in case something breaks. Grub can help again in
this case (by virtually reordering the drives). If you decide to go with
the external drive, it shouldn't be a problem.
Welcome to the community.
-thib
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.
If nothing works for you, you'll have to study the filesystem in depth.
The question is, then, as usual; why is it important? (Sorry to ask again,
maybe you don't think it is relevant.)
-thib
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Aioanei Rares wrote:
xfs as a /boot partition? shivers
Why not?
[This is so going off topic.]
-thib
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and checksum the files inside, not the entire volume.
Or hack ext3.
-thib
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, really
doesn't need a high-performance fs. ext2 is more than adequate.
Maybe someone simply has reasons not to put /boot on a separate volume. Now
I sure agree that it isn't needed in virtually every other cases, but would
it really hurt?
-thib
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by default, but the second part? I don't know.
$ rm -f dir/.*
renames them? If that's the case, I would look for the unlikely.
What does happen if you issue a
$ rm -rf dir
then?
Would you, by any chance, using a fancy filesystem without unicode support?
(Wild guess.)
-thib
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Clive McBarton wrote:
thib wrote:
Maybe someone simply has reasons not to put /boot on a separate volume.
Now I sure agree that it isn't needed in virtually every other cases,
but would it really hurt?
We are already discussing this in your thread Single root filesystem
evilness decreasing
Clive McBarton wrote:
thib wrote:
maybe it would be acceptable to ask for a new little switch.
Or hack ext3.
Ask who? The maintainers of tune2fs? The maintainers of ext3? Both will
say what I already know, that manually mounting and unmounting an ext3
partition read-only does not modify
utilities packages only, of course - using qemu without the kvm kernel
subsystem will be different than using qemu alone.
-thib
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of these projects.
-thib
[1] http://packages.debian.org/squeeze/kvm
[2] http://packages.debian.org/sid/kvm
[3] http://www.linux-kvm.org/
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