of course a park is generally more quiet than a bar, but its also
conceivably a lot more hot (except yesterday). We can also easily get
rained out if there's a summer storm, so I'm more inclined for an indoor
place.
here's a few places , admitted local to UMD
1) Behind the The Hotel there's a new place called the Hall, even has
pickleball courts ooutside (no, i'm not a fan). Kinda weird you need to
wear a band, like on cruises, in order to get alcohol.
2) Franklins or Bus Boys & Poets, both in hyattsville
3) that "new" beer place at Riverdale station, also has a new "2fifty
BBQ", Tapas place on the other corner if you want food
(they allow food to be taken in to the beer place)
4) Le Fantome Food Hall, also new, in Riverdale . Has a few food places
and a bar. I love their Poke Bowl.
I think 3) is my favorite these days, but they're all good.
Other places I don't know anything about, but just heard mention:
- union market (off NY Av)
- there's a Denizen's right by Fantome,in Riverdale. I was there
recently, but had noisy live music.
For those not having been around UMD for a few years, are in for the
shock treatment. They recently paved Rt.1 now that it's "finished" and
ready for the purple line. Parking is, as ever, a pain.
- peter
On 7/2/24 18:30, J. Milgram wrote:
BTW, it really is time for an UMGLUG. I propose we nail down 1-3 good
venues, then I'll try sending out a doodle poll for each of them.
To get things started: here's a crazy idea: how about out of doors at
a park? The glugging will have to be non-alcoholic but there's good NA
beer out there. In this spirit (or non-spirits) I propose: Carderock
Recreation Area. They have picnic tables under a pavilion so we're
good rain or shine. NB this is a purely selfish suggestion since it's
near work.
Or one of the many fine minibreweries anywhere in the greater metro
area ... I am unfamiliar, so propose away.
On 6/30/24 14:55, J. Milgram wrote:
And you know what distro I would say :)
On 6/30/24 13:09, Ben Stern wrote:
So you know what I'm going to say for the distro you should be
using, but
there aren't STIGs for it. I've been able to run it on my desktop
as long
as I keep it IAVA compliant, but that may not apply to your site.
Ubuntu's upgrade process has been pretty good every time I've tried
going
from LTS to LTS, and there are STIGs for Ubuntu. So that's a vote for
Ubuntu.
[I'm trying to push work to move to Ubuntu from RHEL and even with the
massive price tag we're facing, there's a belief that "Ubuntu isn't
made in
the USA and RHEL is, so we have to use RHEL." (I don't even know
where to
start with this.)]
Glad you found the problem!
Ben
On Sun, Jun 30, 2024 at 07:05:11AM -0400, J. Milgram wrote:
Thanks all around!
Rob: indeed, the system was compromised, sort of. The malware: some
kind of
"endpoint security" thing that the Company IT folks installed, on
top of
selinux, apparently because of a STIG. It's so seamless, it doesn't
even
tell you what's going on, just tells you operation not permitted. I
wonder
how it works ... must require some kind of kernel patch or module.
Killed
the daemon and problem solved. Of course now I have to wonder what in
particular it doesn't like about all the files it selects for this
special
treatment. But at least now I can backup all my files, even the
ones I'm not
allowed to view.
Which I need to do because they "must" upgrade me to a newer RHEL and
apparently it requires everything to be wiped, even /home. There
has got to
be a better Linux distro out there. If only I could remember its
name ...
Thanks again. I'm buying the first round at the next UMGLUG. That
day will
come!
regards
Judah
On 6/28/24 15:05, Rob Sherwood wrote:
I wouldn't ignore the possibility of a compromise... might be worth
booting off a known safe USB disk in rescue mode and seeing if the
problem
persists even in that environment.
Best of luck,
- Rob
.
On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 11:21???AM J. Milgram <milg...@cgpp.com>
wrote:
On Jun 28, 2024 at 14:19, J. Milgram <milg...@cgpp.com> wrote:
Peter, Moshe,
Thanks. These are good ideas. I might mention I'm running a
RAID1
array so I presume an asymmetrical hd problem would trigger
major
warnings. It never happened to me before so I don't actually
know what happens, or how to recover.
But I guess the raid array could be fine, and
reliably/redundantly supporting a broken filesystem...
Am running a search now to find all affected files, to see if
there's a pattern. Will check the logs too... Should have been
the first thing I thought of :) Like the dd idea too. Thanks
again.
More to follow.
Judah
On Jun 28, 2024 at 10:41, peter teuben <teu...@umd.edu> wrote:
inclined to think the disk has I/O issues, though you mentioned
repair claims there's nothing needed.
Any suspicious logs in /var/log
or try dd if=/dev/yourdisk of=/devnull
to see if that triggers I/O errors in the logs
On 6/28/24 10:38, J. Milgram wrote:
Greetings,
Hope everyone's summer is going well.
Weird problem here on an RHEL 7 box. Have a number of files
under /home that the os will not let me read. So tools like
cp,
md5sum, lsattr and such, and applications, all tell me
"operation not permitted" whether run as user or as root. That
said I can stat them. Have checked ownership, permissions,
file
acls, etc.
Haven't found a pattern to the affected files. One interesting
example is a directory of ~300 conference papers, all pdfs,
all
from same conference, all with identical perms and ownership,
and exactly one of them has this problem. The rest I can read
as normal.
Running selinux but disabling that didn't change anything.
It's an XFS filesystem. Ran xfs_repair but no change.
I'm stumped! Any ideas?
Thanks as always...
Judah
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