On Mon, Jan 02, 2017 at 01:43:14AM -0500, Steve Litt wrote:
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Hi Steve,
>
> In function configure_device(), you deduce whether it's wifi or wired
> by the device's name, and stuff like eno1 or wlo1 comes out saying
> "device can't be configured."
>
> One way to differentiate is the follow
Le 31/12/2016 à 01:06, KatolaZ a écrit :
That's a simple bash+dialog wrapper around ip/dhclient/wpa_cli, which
can help configuring wired (ethernet) and wi-fi networks (only open
and WPA+PSK, at the moment). Well, it's indeed not as simple as we
might go, since dealing with the dialog interface i
On Mon, Jan 02, 2017 at 12:28:04PM +0100, Didier Kryn wrote:
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>
> This is a very valuable work, fitting nicely within the concept of a
> minimal OS, and hopefully beyond. The difficulty of the work is, in my view,
> in understanding the proliferation of wifi protocols, which is why you
On Mon, Jan 02, 2017 at 07:20:36AM +0100, Jaromil wrote:
> dear Rick,
>
> On Sun, 01 Jan 2017, Rick Moen wrote:
>
> > In skimming through the dnscrypt source code, I see that it's a DNS
> > tool to proxy queries over DNSCrypt protocol (that invokes ldns in
> > the process of doing its work) -- bu
Rick Moen wrote:
> It should be noted that many programs presume to cache DNS, e.g., Web
> browsers do, as does the Java runtime.
Indeed.
Not only that, but many cache content as well - browser caching can be a real
PITA when it caches "the wrong thing", and especially with "clever" browsers
t
Hi,
on my Thinkpad T61 the power button fires two acpi events:
|button/power PBTN|
button/power LNXPWRBN:00
This is not a problem if you shutdown the computer, then the second
event is ignored. But if you try to suspend on power button, on resume
the second event causes it again to suspend immed