I am currently using the following mirrors on Devuan Jessie:
deb http://packages.devuan.org/merged jessie main contrib non-free
deb http://packages.devuan.org/merged jessie-updates main contrib non-free
deb http://packages.devuan.org/merged jessie-proposed-updates main contrib
non-free
deb http://
On Sun, Dec 03, 2017 at 07:54:23PM -0600, lpb+dev...@kandl.houston.tx.us wrote:
> On jessie, I'm having trouble the eclipse package, because I am getting
> a 404 on a java package. Here's the error I get:
>
> Err tor+http://devuanfwojg73k6r.onion/merged/ jessie/main
> libcommons-pool-java all 1.6-
On 12/04/2017 05:29 AM, KatolaZ wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 03, 2017 at 07:54:23PM -0600, lpb+dev...@kandl.houston.tx.us
> wrote:
>> On jessie, I'm having trouble the eclipse package, because I am getting
>> a 404 on a java package. Here's the error I get:
>>
>> Err tor+http://devuanfwojg73k6r.onion/me
Hello,
I am unable to mount empty /usr on jessie. Is there any workaround or
should I keep some files there?
Or is there any build for libgssapi-krb5-2 to keep its files in /lib?
~# ldd /sbin/mount.nfs|grep usr
libgssapi_krb5.so.2 =>
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libgssapi_krb5.so.2 (0x7f
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
The package is at:
http://pkgmaster.devuan.org/merged/pool/DEBIAN/main/c/commons-pool/libcommons-pool-java_1.6-2_all.deb
Or:
http://auto.mirror.devuan.org/merged/pool/DEBIAN/main/c/commons-pool/libcommons-pool-java_1.6-2_all.deb
Or:
http://devuanfwoj
Hi,
Am 2017-12-04 16:12, schrieb Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
I am unable to mount empty /usr on jessie. Is there any workaround or
should I keep some files there? Or is there any build for
libgssapi-krb5-2 to keep its files in /lib?
~# ldd /sbin/mount.nfs|grep usr
libgssapi_krb5.so.2 => /usr/lib/x
Daniel, thanks. In the mean time, I have downloaded the package directly
from the URL you gave below, and applied with dpkg -i. I hope the
amprolla3 server becomes fixed as you describe below.
On 12/04/2017 09:52 AM, Daniel Abrecht wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> T
Am 2017-12-04 17:21, schrieb Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
Yes I need it for virtual machines so they won't store the same data.
NFS is not the right protocol for such things. NFS is a *network*
storage filesystem and behaves not like a local filesystem. Through NFS
user root gets mapped to nobody o
On 5 December 2017 at 00:43, J. Fahrner wrote:
> Yes I need it for virtual machines so they won't store the same data.
>
> NFS is not the right protocol for such things. NFS is a *network* storage
> filesystem and behaves not like a local filesystem. Through NFS user root
> gets mapped to nobody
Am 2017-12-04 17:54, schrieb Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
"no_root_squash Turn off root squashing. This option is mainly useful
for diskless clients."
NFS was never meant to be a filesystem for diskless workstations, so you
cannnot expect to behave like one. Diskless workstations have also
memory
On 5 December 2017 at 01:13, J. Fahrner wrote:
> Am 2017-12-04 17:54, schrieb Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
>
> "no_root_squash Turn off root squashing. This option is mainly useful for
>> diskless clients."
>>
>
> NFS was never meant to be a filesystem for diskless workstations, so you
> cannnot expect
On Mon, Dec 04, 2017 at 10:30:40AM -0600, lpb+dev...@kandl.houston.tx.us wrote:
> Daniel, thanks. In the mean time, I have downloaded the package directly
> from the URL you gave below, and applied with dpkg -i. I hope the
> amprolla3 server becomes fixed as you describe below.
>
>
Hi,
just to
I can confirm this now works by successfully doing the following:
% sudo dpkg --purge libcommons-pool-java
% sudo apt-get update
% sudo apt-get install libcommons-pool-java
Thanks,
L
On 12/04/2017 01:00 PM, KatolaZ wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 04, 2017 at 10:30:40AM -0600, lpb+dev...@kandl.houston.tx.us
On Mon, 4 Dec 2017 23:12:59 +0800
Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am unable to mount empty /usr on jessie. Is there any workaround or
> should I keep some files there?
> Or is there any build for libgssapi-krb5-2 to keep its files in /lib?
>
> ~# ldd /sbin/mount.nfs|grep usr
It appe
Steve Litt:
> On Mon, 4 Dec 2017 23:12:59 +0800
> Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky wrote:
...
> > ~# ldd /sbin/mount.nfs|grep usr
>
> It appears you're using NFS.
>
> Back in my youth, the wise men told me that NFS was a horrible security
> threat unless you also used YP, which was too sophisticated for me
Steve Litt wrote:
> Back in my youth, the wise men told me that NFS was a horrible security
> threat unless you also used YP, which was too sophisticated for me to
> ever figure out. So these days I use sshfs, which is nice, but slower
> than a turtle dragging a railroad engine.
>
> Is NFS still
Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
...
> I only worrying that I cannot make it work without having certain libs in
> /usr/lib. I believe that linking against them /sbin files is not good idea
> and wondering if there are any steps in Devuan to avoid /usr/lib
> dependencies for files that are stored in /sbin and
Steve Litt writes:
It appears you're using NFS.
Back in my youth, the wise men told me that NFS was a horrible security
threat unless you also used YP, which was too sophisticated for me to
ever figure out.
That's a long time ago and the world has changed.
Back then, the big problem was that
k...@aspodata.se writes:
If you know any specific packages which breaks the "separate /usr" idea,
please report.
Libraries in these
libdiscover2
libffi6
libgmp10
libgnutls-deb0-28
libgnutls-openssl27
libgssapi-krb5-2
libhogweed2
libk5crypto3
libkrb5-3
libkrb5support0
libnettle4
libp11-kit0
lib
On 5 December 2017 at 04:17, Arnt Gulbrandsen
wrote:
> k...@aspodata.se writes:
>
>> If you know any specific packages which breaks the "separate /usr" idea,
>> please report.
>>
>
> Libraries in these
>
> libgssapi-krb5-2
> libk5crypto3
> libkrb5-3
> libkrb5support0
>
I have rebuilt those above
On 5 December 2017 at 03:30, Steve Litt wrote:
>
> Are a lot of you using NFS? Do you feel safe doing so?
>
Yes it happens in trusted networks. I don't see any additional security
threat in this case.
I also use it in some multiple virtual machines setup to minimize hard
drive usage.
It's also c
Le 04/12/2017 à 17:11, J. Fahrner a écrit :
Hi,
Am 2017-12-04 16:12, schrieb Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
I am unable to mount empty /usr on jessie. Is there any workaround or
should I keep some files there? Or is there any build for
libgssapi-krb5-2 to keep its files in /lib?
~# ldd /sbin/mount.n
Le 04/12/2017 à 18:13, J. Fahrner a écrit :
Am 2017-12-04 17:54, schrieb Yevgeny Kosarzhevsky:
"no_root_squash Turn off root squashing. This option is mainly
useful for diskless clients."
NFS was never meant to be a filesystem for diskless workstations, so
you cannnot expect to behave like
Le 04/12/2017 à 20:30, Steve Litt a écrit :
Back in my youth, the wise men told me that NFS was a horrible security
threat unless you also used YP, which was too sophisticated for me to
ever figure out. So these days I use sshfs, which is nice, but slower
than a turtle dragging a railroad engine.
I am unsubscribing, from dng, mostly because I no longer use devuan, I
am now using hyperbola another operating system that uses debian
packages for stability and security. It's a stable arch. I am using it
right now.
It also avoids systemd if anyone is interested. But this will be my last
comment
Hello,
could someone enlighten me about differences in eudev and vdev packages?
I don't know which one to choose :)
--
Regards,
Yevgeny
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Quoting k...@aspodata.se (k...@aspodata.se):
> Sun's Yellow Pages is called NIS since a long time ago.
And NIS is lately spelled 'LDAP'. ;->
NFSv4 is better and less gratuitously firewall-hostile than versions in
days of yore.
I still would carefully avoid exposing any NFS (what we traditional
Quoting Didier Kryn (k...@in2p3.fr):
> I heard that YP aka NIS was a horrible security threat. NFS is
> certainly not very secure either. But nobody considers establishing
> the NFS connection across the world-wide Internet; it is always on a
> LAN and, given this, I don't see how it can be insecu
On 5 December 2017 at 14:21, Rick Moen wrote:
> Quoting Didier Kryn (k...@in2p3.fr):
>
> > the NFS connection across the world-wide Internet; it is always on a
> > LAN and, given this, I don't see how it can be insecure.
> ^^
> Ah, the 'nougat
Hi!
On 2017-11-29 08:37, Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote:
> Hi!
>
> Am Mittwoch, 29. November 2017 schrieb Didier Kryn:
> > Le 29/11/2017 à 08:38, Dr. Nikolaus Klepp a écrit :
> > > Hi!
> > >
> > > When bootin ascii and eth0 is present and configured as dhcp and eth0 is
> > > not connected to a network
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