On 9/13/21 18:47, MRob wrote:
While you probably can't recover such information for past events,
going forward, iptables can help you figure this out. Putting an
IPtables
rule in the OUTPUT table prior to ACCEPTing the packets can help, e.g.:
iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp -m owner --uid-owner
I plug it in via usb, and I see mtp... but it sees it as a camera for
some reason.
Clue?
Meanwhile, they seem to have updated android to make things less
accessable, meaning I can't find the kindle books I bought, as I could a
few months ago.
mark
___
See "man iptables-extensions" and "man iptables". I don't know how this
works with firewall-cmd, but I imagine firewalld "just" manages
iptables?
Yes thats right
I am running CentOS Linux release 7.9.2009 (Core). Is there a way to
find
out which process consumed network bandwidth during a spe
On Mon, 6 Sept 2021 at 14:24, Anand Buddhdev
On 06/09/2021 19:35, Kaushal Shriyan wrote:
Hi Kaushal,
I am running CentOS Linux release 7.9.2009 (Core). Is there a way to find
out which process consumed network bandwidth during a specific time period?
For example, the Nginx process consumed
Hi,
how can I keep audio active --- or at least make it come back right away
--- after there was no audio for a few seconds? It takes some seconds
for the audio to come back, like when a movie was paused and playback is
being resumed. I either have to scroll back or miss out on the audio,
5 matches
Mail list logo