a 41 on.
I somehow goofed my EUFI boot. Yes it was definitely
my doing.
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash drive's boot folder
I am concerned that I my goof my main comput
On 1/20/25 2:11 PM, George N. White III wrote:
On Sat, Jan 18, 2025 at 4:16 AM Tim via users
wrote:
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash drive's boot folder
With my
On Sat, Jan 18, 2025 at 4:16 AM Tim via users
wrote:
>
> > How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
> > main fc41 computer?
> >
> > The flash drive is completely readable from my main
> > computer including the flash drive's boot folder
>
> Wi
27;ve installed Fedora so it can run from the drive
(liveboot) if it can find it? Or do you mean you've copied the
installer to the drive?
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash dr
eboot) if it can find it? Or do you mean you've copied the
installer to the drive?
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash drive's boot folder
With my last Fedora install (40
it? Or do you mean you've copied the
installer to the drive?
> How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
> main fc41 computer?
>
> The flash drive is completely readable from my main
> computer including the flash drive's boot folder
With my last Fedora instal
On 1/17/25 11:35 PM, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/17/25 11:15 PM, Felix Miata wrote:
ToddAndMargo via users composed on 2025-01-17 22:55 (UTC-0800):
Device Start End Sectors Size Type
/dev/sdc1 2048 4095 2048 1M BIOS boot
/dev/sdc2 4096 2101247 209
On 1/17/25 11:15 PM, Felix Miata wrote:
ToddAndMargo via users composed on 2025-01-17 22:55 (UTC-0800):
Device Start End Sectors Size Type
/dev/sdc1 2048 4095 20481M BIOS boot
/dev/sdc2 4096 2101247 20971521G Linux extended boot
/dev/sdc3 2101248 12
ToddAndMargo via users composed on 2025-01-17 22:55 (UTC-0800):
> Device Start End Sectors Size Type
> /dev/sdc1 2048 4095 20481M BIOS boot
> /dev/sdc2 4096 2101247 20971521G Linux extended boot
> /dev/sdc3 2101248 121143295 119042048 56.8G Linux root
On 1/17/25 10:29 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/17/25 4:39 PM, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
I have a USB flash drive I have installed Fedroa 41 on.
I somehow goofed my EUFI boot. Yes it was definitely
my doing.
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash
On 1/17/25 4:39 PM, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
I have a USB flash drive I have installed Fedroa 41 on.
I somehow goofed my EUFI boot. Yes it was definitely
my doing.
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
a 41 on.
I somehow goofed my EUFI boot. Yes it was definitely
my doing.
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash drive's boot folder
I am concerned that I my goof my main comput
On 1/17/25 6:57 PM, Felix Miata wrote:
Samuel Sieb composed on 2025-01-17 17:18 (UTC-0800):
If you also have Fedora installed on the hard drive, this will
likely conflict, although you could manually add it with a different name.
A different name is configured for Grub2 users in /etc/default/
Samuel Sieb composed on 2025-01-17 17:18 (UTC-0800):
> If you also have Fedora installed on the hard drive, this will
> likely conflict, although you could manually add it with a different name.
A different name is configured for Grub2 users in /etc/default/grub as a value
for
GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=
I somehow goofed my EUFI boot. Yes it was definitely
my doing.
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash drive's boot folder
I am concerned that I my goof my main computer EUFI boot
Yes it was definitely
my doing.
How do I fix my EUFI boot on the USB drive from my
main fc41 computer?
The flash drive is completely readable from my main
computer including the flash drive's boot folder
I am concerned that I my goof my main computer EUFI boot
in the process.
Yours in confusion,
-
On 11/3/24 00:03, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
you should look at your ~/.xsession-errors file for errors.
I did. What do you think I was doing all those hours?
I must have gone through 20 articles on how to fix this.
That was indeed mentioned
--
__
Hi.
On Sat, 02 Nov 2024 16:58:25 -0700 ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> During the troubleshooting I had a fc39 mate live usb fired
> up in a virtual machine. I used the following to hunt down
> all the xsessions, .ICE*, etc.. I could find no difference.
> # find / -iname \*xsess\*
As I said, i
On 11/1/24 17:39, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Hi All,
Fedora 41
dnf5-5.2.6.2-1.fc41.x86_64
How do I tell dnf5 I want to replace an fc39 package of
the same revision?
Many thanks,
-T
Followup.
With all the suggestion over on
https://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?333513-DNF-how-do
On 11/2/24 06:50, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sat, 2024-11-02 at 05:12 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 11/2/24 04:45, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sat, 2024-11-02 at 11:24 +, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Fri, 2024-11-01 at 17:23 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 11/1/24
On Sat, 2024-11-02 at 05:12 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> On 11/2/24 04:45, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > On Sat, 2024-11-02 at 11:24 +, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > > On Fri, 2024-11-01 at 17:23 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> > > > On 11/1/24 06:02, francis.montag...@inria.
On 11/2/24 04:45, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sat, 2024-11-02 at 11:24 +, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Fri, 2024-11-01 at 17:23 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 11/1/24 06:02, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
Look in your ~/.xsession-errors or test with a brand new test user.
On Sat, 2024-11-02 at 11:24 +, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> On Fri, 2024-11-01 at 17:23 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> > On 11/1/24 06:02, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
> > > Look in your ~/.xsession-errors or test with a brand new test user.
> >
> > Neither of my own profile or th
On Fri, 2024-11-01 at 17:23 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> On 11/1/24 06:02, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
> > Look in your ~/.xsession-errors or test with a brand new test user.
>
> Neither of my own profile or the two new profiles
> had an xsession-errors file
Just in case: it's .xe
On 11/1/24 06:02, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
At this point you should try to run a "dnf distro-sync" in a protected
way.
Example with systemd-run:
sudo systemd-run -u distro-sync --no-block --service-type=oneshot \
dnf -y distro-sync
Wait for this transient distro-sync unit to
On 11/1/24 06:02, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
Look in your ~/.xsession-errors or test with a brand new test user.
Neither of my own profile or the two new profiles
had an xsession-errors file
--
___
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraprojec
Hi All,
Fedora 41
dnf5-5.2.6.2-1.fc41.x86_64
How do I tell dnf5 I want to replace an fc39 package of
the same revision?
Many thanks,
-T
# dnf provides unbound-libs --releasever=41
Updating and loading repositories:
Repositories loaded.
unbound-libs-1.21.1-3.fc39.x86_64 : Libraries used by
On 11/1/24 12:39, Robert McBroom via users wrote:
lightdm works on rawhide f42
From my research, it work in the vast majority
of cases. But if you are one of the "unlucky" ones,
yo will learn a few new swear words. (Not an
admission that I cuss.)
--
_
On 11/1/24 9:02 AM, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
lightdm nor slick-greeter (since January, for F39 and F40).
I suspect a change in your account profiles (shell for example).
Look in your ~/.xsession-errors or test with a brand new test user.
Funny. I liked the version of Thunderbird on
On Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:57:23 -0700 ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> On 11/1/24 02:16, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
>> Is it the machine where you did a system-upgrade to F40 ? (with
>> duplicates systemd RPMs ... at least).
> This is that same system. I cloned it back to
> fc39. After a dnf
On 11/1/24 02:16, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
Is it the machine where you did a system-upgrade to F40 ? (with
duplicates systemd RPMs ... at least).
Tihs is that same system. I cloned it back to
fc39. After a dnf update, lightdm stopped working.
Funny. I liked the version of Thunderbi
On Fri, 01 Nov 2024 01:26:09 -0700 ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> On 11/1/24 01:15, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
>> Elaborate please: we are using lightdm on hundreds of machines
>> without issues, except on a few of them using nvidia-340xx ...
> I am not using an nvidia graphics card.
> I
On 11/1/24 01:14, Stephen Morris wrote:
No problems, glad it's working now.
regards,
Steve
I must have spent 16 hours trying to fix this.
About killed me.
I am tickled with lxdm.
--
___
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscr
On 1/11/24 19:04, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 11/1/24 00:58, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 1/11/24 14:20, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
# systemctl status display-manager.service
Unit display-manager.service could not be found.
What display-manager are you actually using, is it sddm, gdm or
so
Hi.
On Fri, 01 Nov 2024 01:04:01 -0700 ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> Turns out I have no issues with x running. The problem
> is lightdm;
> I am stuck in the "endless loop" problem that is plaguing
> lightdm users.
Elaborate please: we are using lightdm on undreds of machines without
issues,
On 11/1/24 01:15, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
Hi.
On Fri, 01 Nov 2024 01:04:01 -0700 ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Turns out I have no issues with x running. The problem
is lightdm;
I am stuck in the "endless loop" problem that is plaguing
lightdm users.
Elaborate please: we are usi
On 11/1/24 00:58, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 1/11/24 14:20, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
# systemctl status display-manager.service
Unit display-manager.service could not be found.
What display-manager are you actually using, is it sddm, gdm or
something different.
Lets say you are using gdm wit
On 1/11/24 14:20, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
# systemctl status display-manager.service
Unit display-manager.service could not be found.
What display-manager are you actually using, is it sddm, gdm or
something different.
Lets say you are using gdm with Gnome, what does systemctl display when
Fedora 39
How do I check to see if my xorg display manager is running?
# systemctl status display-manager.service
Unit display-manager.service could not be found.
# dnf provides display-manager
...
Error: No matches found.
Many thanks,
-T
On 10/23/24 17:26, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 10/23/24 06:23, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Wed, Oct 23, 2024 at 7:20 AM ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
I have both MATE and Xfce installed.
Whilst I work on my xinit/lightdm problems,
I am firing up my GUI with startx.
startx fires up xfce by
On 10/23/24 17:42, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 10/23/24 17:26, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 10/23/24 06:23, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Wed, Oct 23, 2024 at 7:20 AM ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
I have both MATE and Xfce installed.
Whilst I work on my xinit/lightdm problems,
I am firin
On 10/23/24 06:23, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Wed, Oct 23, 2024 at 7:20 AM ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
I have both MATE and Xfce installed.
Whilst I work on my xinit/lightdm problems,
I am firing up my GUI with startx.
startx fires up xfce by default.
How to I tell startx I want to fire up M
On 10/23/24 06:23, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Wed, Oct 23, 2024 at 7:20 AM ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
I have both MATE and Xfce installed.
Whilst I work on my xinit/lightdm problems,
I am firing up my GUI with startx.
startx fires up xfce by default.
How to I tell startx I want to fire up M
On Wed, Oct 23, 2024 at 7:20 AM ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
>
> I have both MATE and Xfce installed.
> Whilst I work on my xinit/lightdm problems,
> I am firing up my GUI with startx.
>
> startx fires up xfce by default.
>
> How to I tell startx I want to fire up MATE?
Let me Google that for yo
Hi All,
I have both MATE and Xfce installed.
Whilst I work on my xinit/lightdm problems,
I am firing up my GUI with startx.
startx fires up xfce by default.
How to I tell startx I want to fire up MATE?
Many thanks,
-T (T/Mr.T/Todd/Dude/His Resplendence)
--
~~~
On 6/27/24 03:25, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/26/24 01:09, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Hi All,
Fedora 39
qemu-kvm-8.1.3-5.fc39.x86_64
virt-manager-4.1.0-3.fc39.noarch
Windows 11
How do I Share Host Files (Fedora 39) with
Windows 11 (client) with KVM?
I have been reading this virt
On 6/28/24 11:49, Frank Bures wrote:
On 2024-06-28 05:14, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/27/24 14:04, Frank Bures wrote:
On 2024-06-27 16:46, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/27/24 11:50, Frank Bures wrote:
I followed the instructions at
https://virtio-win.github.io/Knowledge-Base/Vir
On 2024-06-28 05:14, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/27/24 14:04, Frank Bures wrote:
On 2024-06-27 16:46, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/27/24 11:50, Frank Bures wrote:
I followed the instructions at
https://virtio-win.github.io/Knowledge-Base/Virtiofs:-Shared-file-system
to mount tw
On 6/27/24 14:04, Frank Bures wrote:
On 2024-06-27 16:46, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/27/24 11:50, Frank Bures wrote:
I followed the instructions at
https://virtio-win.github.io/Knowledge-Base/Virtiofs:-Shared-file-system
to mount two different F40 host file systems from Win11 KVM gue
On 2024-06-27 16:46, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/27/24 11:50, Frank Bures wrote:
I followed the instructions at
https://virtio-win.github.io/Knowledge-Base/Virtiofs:-Shared-file-system
to mount two different F40 host file systems from Win11 KVM guest.
However, the mount does not survi
On 6/27/24 11:50, Frank Bures wrote:
On 2024-06-27 07:09, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
How to change the mount point from Z to something else:
REGEDIT4
; Change VirtIO-FS's mount point (letter):
; Change the M: below to you desiged letter. Remember the :
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\VirtI
On 2024-06-27 07:09, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
How to change the mount point from Z to something else:
REGEDIT4
; Change VirtIO-FS's mount point (letter):
; Change the M: below to you desiged letter. Remember the :
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\VirtIO-FS]
"MountPoint"="M:"
I followed t
> On 26 Jun 2024, at 09:10, ToddAndMargo via users
> wrote:
>
> How do I Share Host Files (Fedora 39) with
> Windows 11 (client) with KVM?
Agreed that guide you found is not great.
Web search found this one (untested) that looks a believable
https://hatchjs.com/virt-manage
On 6/27/24 03:25, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 6/26/24 01:09, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Hi All,
Fedora 39
qemu-kvm-8.1.3-5.fc39.x86_64
virt-manager-4.1.0-3.fc39.noarch
Windows 11
How do I Share Host Files (Fedora 39) with
Windows 11 (client) with KVM?
I have been reading this virt
On 6/26/24 01:09, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Hi All,
Fedora 39
qemu-kvm-8.1.3-5.fc39.x86_64
virt-manager-4.1.0-3.fc39.noarch
Windows 11
How do I Share Host Files (Fedora 39) with
Windows 11 (client) with KVM?
I have been reading this virt-manager how to:
https://chrisirwin.ca/posts
Hi All,
Fedora 39
qemu-kvm-8.1.3-5.fc39.x86_64
virt-manager-4.1.0-3.fc39.noarch
Windows 11
How do I Share Host Files (Fedora 39) with
Windows 11 (client) with KVM?
I have been reading this virt-manager how to:
https://chrisirwin.ca/posts/sharing-host-files-with-kvm/
He is leaving out how
On 6/11/24 18:39, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 11/6/24 23:08, David King wrote:
On 6/10/24 18:18, Stephen Morris wrote:
When I invoke Jellyfin on the TV and supply the require IP address
of my pc and required port, the Jellyfin client tells me the server
(I think) needs to be upgraded and gives me
On 11/6/24 23:08, David King wrote:
On 6/10/24 18:18, Stephen Morris wrote:
When I invoke Jellyfin on the TV and supply the require IP address of
my pc and required port, the Jellyfin client tells me the server (I
think) needs to be upgraded and gives me the Github URL to get the
upgrade.
On Mon, Jun 10, 2024 at 6:19 PM Stephen Morris wrote:
>
> I have installed Jellyfin from rpmfusion by following the
> instructions on the Jellyfin web site for Fedora.
> After activating Developer Mode on my TV I used Docker to install
> the Jellyfin client on the TV.
> I ran the Je
On 6/10/24 18:18, Stephen Morris wrote:
When I invoke Jellyfin on the TV and supply the require IP address of
my pc and required port, the Jellyfin client tells me the server (I
think) needs to be upgraded and gives me the Github URL to get the
upgrade.
Hence I need to approach the Rpmfusio
On 6/10/24 5:18 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
Hi,
I have installed Jellyfin from rpmfusion by following the
instructions on the Jellyfin web site for Fedora.
After activating Developer Mode on my TV I used Docker to install
the Jellyfin client on the TV.
I ran the Jellyfin script to
Hi,
I have installed Jellyfin from rpmfusion by following the
instructions on the Jellyfin web site for Fedora.
After activating Developer Mode on my TV I used Docker to install
the Jellyfin client on the TV.
I ran the Jellyfin script to open up Jellyfin in Firewalld (After
starting
On Mon, 2024-01-22 at 15:50 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> Well, I am a BOFH, you know. Letting him find out the hard way was the
> easiest way to get rid of the git, especially when you consider that the
> tech he connects to when he calls back to clean up his mess won't be
> anywhere near as experi
On 01/22/2024 01:47 PM, Tim via users wrote:
I remember trying that out on Win98SE, just within a LAN. Gawd, it was
a pain. And I'm sure it was full of buffer overflows, like all
Microsoft products.
Well, I am a BOFH, you know. Letting him find out the hard way was the
easiest way to get ri
On Mon, 2024-01-22 at 09:57 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> Back around the turn of the Millenium, I had a caller who wanted to know
> if he could use MS Home Web Server (I think it was) to set up a
> website. (If you have to ask, you probably shouldn't be doing it.) I
> tried to explain the risks, b
On Mon, 2024-01-22 at 09:49 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
>
> On 1/22/24 00:30, Tim via users wrote:
> > Then, when it went haywire one day I had to tell telephone support
> > the
> > password to sort things out. Embarrassing, and quite satisfying at
> > the
> > same time.
>
> When I was doing tech sup
On 1/22/24 04:49, Tim via users wrote:
I'm sure it would have been cheaper to have designed their security
better, in the first place. They probably spend more on their
advertising budget than IT, so it's not like they can't afford it.
Back around the turn of the Millenium, I had a caller wh
On 1/22/24 00:30, Tim via users wrote:
Then, when it went haywire one day I had to tell telephone support the
password to sort things out. Embarrassing, and quite satisfying at the
same time.
When I was doing tech support, the ID10Ts in IT decided to make our
passwords expire after 60 days o
On Mon, 2024-01-22 at 00:02 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> Add to injury, if they get hacked and they pencil
> whipped, they become responsible for all costs
> involved. Telling them that their grandchildren
> will need lawyers does not phase them.
You would think that "you hate your legal
On 1/21/24 23:30, Tim via users wrote:
On Sun, 2024-01-21 at 16:39 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
I needed a password eight characters long
I picked "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs".
Okay, that was a "Dad Joke" but it probably is a really
strong password and easy to remember. I recommen
On Sun, 2024-01-21 at 16:39 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> I needed a password eight characters long
> I picked "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs".
>
> Okay, that was a "Dad Joke" but it probably is a really
> strong password and easy to remember. I recommend run on
> phrases to my custome
On 1/21/24 17:39, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Okay, that was a "Dad Joke" but it probably is a really
strong password and easy to remember. I recommend run on
phrases to my customers. When I make them up for them,
I often use a phrase that flatters their business.
Those they never forget.
On 1/21/24 06:22, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 6:31 AM Tim via users
wrote:
On Sun, 2024-01-21 at 02:56 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
This all goes back to using easy passwords. And the
same passwords on different sites:
https://www.nist.gov/itl/smallbusinesscyber/gu
On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 6:31 AM Tim via users
wrote:
>
> On Sun, 2024-01-21 at 02:56 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> > This all goes back to using easy passwords. And the
> > same passwords on different sites:
> >
> > https://www.nist.gov/itl/smallbusinesscyber/guidance-topic/multi-factor-
ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
>> Multi-Factor Authentication is a technique to try to get around
>> the users response to the obnoxious nature of passwords.
>> Whether or not it improves things or just manages to
>> further annoy the poop out of the users is up for debate.
& this:
> Certain people
On Sun, 2024-01-21 at 02:56 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> This all goes back to using easy passwords. And the
> same passwords on different sites:
>
> https://www.nist.gov/itl/smallbusinesscyber/guidance-topic/multi-factor-authentication
>
> "In fact, databases of known breached a
On 1/21/24 02:56, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Multi-Factor Authentication is a technique to try to get around
the users response to the obnoxious nature of passwords.
Whether or not it improves things or just manages to
further annoy the poop out of the users is up for debate.
Certain people
On 1/20/24 22:52, Tim via users wrote:
On Sat, 2024-01-20 at 17:54 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
c) Something you are, such as a biometric. This method
involves verification of characteristics inherent to the
individual, such as via retina scans, iris scans, fingerprint
scans, finger vein
On Sat, 2024-01-20 at 17:54 -0800, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> c) Something you are, such as a biometric. This method
> involves verification of characteristics inherent to the
> individual, such as via retina scans, iris scans, fingerprint
> scans, finger vein scans, facial recognition, voice
On Sat, 2024-01-20 at 22:08 +0100, Walter H. via users wrote:
> not really, because, the knowledge of user and password is somewhere else;
There are a lot of people who'll have an unsecured phone, because it's
a pain to them.
> so neither the person who stole your phone (the 2FA device) nor you a
On 1/20/24 13:08, Walter H. via users wrote:
On 20.01.2024 20:39, Tim via users wrote:
On Sat, 2024-01-20 at 20:00 +0100, Walter H. via users wrote:
buy an iPhone ...
exact this what you want is the other way of it sense;
2FA = 2 Factor Authentication
example you login on a site, there you h
On 20.01.2024 20:52, Chris Adams wrote:
Once upon a time, Tim said:
That's one of my gripes about two-factor authentication - it
(typically) uses your phone. Steal someone's phone, and it's
everything they need to pretend to be you.
That's going to be true of any second-factor device. In the
On 20.01.2024 20:39, Tim via users wrote:
On Sat, 2024-01-20 at 20:00 +0100, Walter H. via users wrote:
buy an iPhone ...
exact this what you want is the other way of it sense;
2FA = 2 Factor Authentication
example you login on a site, there you have the knowledge of
user and password
and t
Once upon a time, Tim said:
> That's one of my gripes about two-factor authentication - it
> (typically) uses your phone. Steal someone's phone, and it's
> everything they need to pretend to be you.
That's going to be true of any second-factor device. In theory, MFA is
"something you know plus
On Sat, 2024-01-20 at 20:00 +0100, Walter H. via users wrote:
> buy an iPhone ...
>
> exact this what you want is the other way of it sense;
>
> 2FA = 2 Factor Authentication
>
> example you login on a site, there you have the knowledge of
>
> user and password
>
> and then the 2nd factor, whi
On 17.01.2024 01:54, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:44, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:42, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:58, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:29, Barry wrote:
On 16 Jan 2024, at 20:43, ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
"keysmith" looks like it is
I got a bit funny with sed
$ zbarimg /home/temp/Screenshot_2024-01-04_16-08-43.png | sed -e
's/.*?secret=//' -e 's/&.*//'
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parameters, it should be the usual 6-digits
with 30 second change interval.
> On a stinking smart phone, it brings back a six digit code.
> How do I duplicate this in Fedora?
You need a program that can handle OTP codes. There are at least two
in the Fedora repo: "ke
parameters, it should be the usual 6-digits
with 30 second change interval.
> On a stinking smart phone, it brings back a six digit code.
> How do I duplicate this in Fedora?
You need a program that can handle OTP codes. There are at least two
in the Fedora repo: "ke
6-digits
with 30 second change interval.
> On a stinking smart phone, it brings back a six digit code.
> How do I duplicate this in Fedora?
You need a program that can handle OTP codes. There are at least two
in the Fedora repo: "keysmith" and "numberstation". I thin
>
QR-Code:otpauth://abcd/efgh:123445566?secret=ABCDEFGHIJKLMNONP&issuer=abcd.com
The "abcd" part should be "totp", meaning it's a time-based code.
If there aren't any other parameters, it should be the usual 6-digits
with 30 second change interval.
> On
cret=ABCDEFGHIJKLMNONP&issuer=abcd.com
The "abcd" part should be "totp", meaning it's a time-based code.
If there aren't any other parameters, it should be the usual 6-digits
with 30 second change interval.
> On a stinking smart phone, it brings back a six d
On 1/16/24 20:36, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 16:54, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:44, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:42, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:58, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:29, Barry wrote:
On 16 Jan 2024, at 20:43, ToddAndMargo via users
w
On 1/16/24 20:36, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
Found this:
ykocli is a front-end command line utility (actually, a bash script)
that places ykman obtained TOTP tokens into the CopyQ clipboard.
That is a program for working with the Yubikey hardware tokens.
--
_
/efgh:123445566?secret=ABCDEFGHIJKLMNONP&issuer=abcd.com
scanned 1 barcode symbols from 1 images in 0.02 seconds
On a stinking smart phone, it brings back a six digit code.
How do I duplicate this in Fedora?
Many thanks,
-T
Is there a way to run Android apps on Fedora?
--
Found this:
ykocli i
On 1/16/24 16:54, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:44, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:42, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:58, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:29, Barry wrote:
On 16 Jan 2024, at 20:43, ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
"keysmith" looks like it is "c
/efgh:123445566?secret=ABCDEFGHIJKLMNONP&issuer=abcd.com
scanned 1 barcode symbols from 1 images in 0.02 seconds
On a stinking smart phone, it brings back a six digit code.
How do I duplicate this in Fedora?
Many thanks,
-T
Is there a way to run Android apps on Fedora?
I do not suppose ther
On 1/16/24 17:55, Todd Zullinger wrote:
ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:44, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:42, Samuel Sieb wrote:
You are misunderstanding how this works. That QR code contains a
secret value that lets the OTP application generate the 6 digit
codes as needed. Th
ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> On 1/16/24 15:44, Samuel Sieb wrote:
>> On 1/16/24 15:42, Samuel Sieb wrote:
>>> You are misunderstanding how this works. That QR code contains a
>>> secret value that lets the OTP application generate the 6 digit
>>> codes as needed. There is no actual code in the
On 1/16/24 15:44, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 15:42, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:58, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 1/16/24 14:29, Barry wrote:
On 16 Jan 2024, at 20:43, ToddAndMargo via users
wrote:
"keysmith" looks like it is "creating" the things, not
reading them. Am I miss
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