On 2022-04-20 21:42 UTC, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> On 2022-04-20, Florian Obser wrote:
>> You will need a carefully curated /etc/sysclean.ignore file.
>>
>> You decided to put maildirs somewhere on the system, sysclean is not
>> omniscient, you need to tell it to leave them alone. Same with .git
I was having some issues starting up autossh to multiple destinations using
a rc.d script. The following configuration works connecting an OpenBSD
machine to two remote endpoints for remote forwarding back to sshd on the
local machine.
There's likely a better way to do this, but this has been test
On 2022-04-20, Florian Obser wrote:
> You will need a carefully curated /etc/sysclean.ignore file.
>
> You decided to put maildirs somewhere on the system, sysclean is not
> omniscient, you need to tell it to leave them alone. Same with .git
> directories.
> I don't recall needing to tell it abo
You will need a carefully curated /etc/sysclean.ignore file.
You decided to put maildirs somewhere on the system, sysclean is not
omniscient, you need to tell it to leave them alone. Same with .git directories.
I don't recall needing to tell it about package config files though, that's a
bit wei
On Wed, Apr 20, 2022 at 08:39:09PM +0200, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> the upgrade guide claims
>
> A detailed cleanup can be done with the aid of the sysclean package.
>
> sysclean lists 4180 files and directories on my home server, including mail
> directories, config files of va
Hi folks,
the upgrade guide claims
A detailed cleanup can be done with the aid of the sysclean package.
sysclean lists 4180 files and directories on my home server, including mail
directories, config files of various external packages, generated files, .git
directories, etc. A lot of st
6 matches
Mail list logo