thanevim

joined 1 year ago
[–] thanevim@kbin.social 11 points 7 months ago

Running xfce4 Fedora brilliantly on an old Dell Chromebook thanks to this, fully recommended!!

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 8 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Is Damn Small Linux still around?

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 13 points 9 months ago (2 children)

PXE, or network boot. It is basically never used (and rarely enabled, if ever, by default) by the individual, but can be helpful in, for example, a large scale OS deployment. Say IT has to get their corporate image version of Windows 10/11 installed on 30 new laptops. They could write a ton of flash drives, but it'd be easier to just host a PXE boot server and every laptop just listen to them.

V6 specifically in that instance would just be for the reason of "we need to move away from v4 anyways"

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 7 points 10 months ago

inside their stores

You should see Walmart WiFi policies

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Did you not ever have to have a controller plugged in the host and Link per player? That's a quirk I've faced using my laptop as the Steam Link device, streaming from my desktop.

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 4 points 10 months ago

Sadly, no. One was in production and was pretty stable, but suffered performance issues (at least for me? But an S21 Ultra really shouldn't have performance issues) and now the Dev has gone inactive...

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 4 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I mean, you can't neglect the prior 2 PlayStation generations. Gran Turismo started on ps1 with the first two, and the next two on PS2. Besides that, great entries like the first three Spyro games, Jak and Dexter, Ratchet and Clank... And let's not forget just home much freaking staying power the PS2 had! Was still getting new games alongside Wii, Xbox 360, even the PS3

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 17 points 11 months ago

Heheheh... My DM tried to run this on the party, forgetting the Druid's tremor sense meant she was never "not looking"

He was so livid. Even better was this is his wife playing said druid!

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 9 points 11 months ago

As a link to a different website, at least. This one links to imgflip

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 13 points 11 months ago (1 children)

And yet they couldn't extend the same courtesy for me when they raised my grandfathered family plan

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 3 points 11 months ago (2 children)

How reliable is the mobile service, and how much are you paying for it? I've found Tmo shoddy at best for anything more than my phone...

[–] thanevim@kbin.social 0 points 11 months ago

I'd guess the concern was something to the tune of "if it's only getting mb power, will it somehow dangerously undervolt or be otherwise damaged?"

 

EDIT: This has been solved!! This link has the full post, but basically you need to ensure SELinux flags are set for every file, and this won't happen to new files added. I have appended the SELinux option as a context entry to my fstab and now every file shows!

So right off the bat, I understand that NFS is dependent on UID matching. What I can't find is a guide to setting this up that isn't either:

  1. Make all nfs media accessible by all, or
  2. Use advanced permissions that seem(?) reliant on professional server authentication that I can't wrap my head around ~~(I guess I need to take some Linux classes?)~~ I would happily work with anyone willing to help me understand how to make this work though.

As for Samba: Well it seemed like I had everything set up well enough. I can login with each of the three users just fine. All files and folders have 02777 permissions with correct ownership. This was set after initially using just 777, and a troubleshooting answer on a Stack Exchange-like site advised 02777. However, files that I added shortly after setting up Samba and getting it running are simply not showing in client systems. And crucially, this is even the case on machines that logged in the first time after the file changes, ruling out the potential for bad client-side caching. Is there a server-side caching I'm not aware of?

I can run chmod -R 02777 * all day til the cows come home for the entire drive that's being shared (under /mnt/4tb, yes this is related to my previous thread on reddit r/linuxadmin). But no matter how I run it alongside restarting samba (sudo systemctl restart smb), it still won't show those newer files. Testparm succeeds, no errors in the config. FWIW, I printed the config below

[global]
	workgroup = SAMBA
	security = user
    unix extensions = no
    server string = Ravens Hoard
	passdb backend = tdbsam
    inherit permissions = yes
	printing = cups
	printcap name = cups
	load printers = yes
	cups options = raw

	# Install samba-usershares package for support
	include = /etc/samba/usershares.conf

[gen-media]
    comment = General Media Repository
    path = /mnt/4tb/general
    writeable = yes
    browseable = yes
    public = no
    create mask = 0644
    directory mask = 0755
    valid users = user4, user2, user1
    force user = user4

[intake]
    comment = Intake Directory
    path = /mnt/4tb/intake
    read only = no
    writeable = yes
    browseable = yes
    public = no
    create mask = 0644
    directory mask = 0755
    valid users = user1

[user1]
    comment = Share for user1
    path = /mnt/4tb/user1
    read only = no
    writeable = yes
    browseable = yes
    public = no
    create mask = 0664
    force create mode = 0664
    directory mask = 02755
    force directory mode = 02755
    valid users = user1

[user2]
    comment = Share for user2
    path = /mnt/4tb/user2
    read only = no
    writeable = yes
    browseable = yes
    public = no
    create mask = 0644
    directory mask = 0755
    valid users = user2

[user3]
    Comment = Share for user3
    path = /mnt/4tb/user3
    read only = no
    writeable = yes
    browseable = yes
    public = no
    create mask = 0644
    directory mask = 0755
    valid users = user1, user3
    force user = user3

Lastly in my explorations on file sharing, is SFTP/SSH-based file sharing. But with this, I don't know of a way for Windows clients to mount the share transparently. Is this possible? Or would the Windows client be stuck with using 3rd party software like WinSCP?

FWIW, The idea of this is that the shares can be read and written to by Android through Solid Explorer, Android TV using Kodi, and Windows 10. It would have 3 users and 4 shares, as can be seen in the samba config. Any help towards getting one of these methods working for this purpose would be very much appreciated.

 

Looking for creative ideas, and feeling xkcd.com/910 strongly here

 

Wife is missing her r/JNMIL stories, and wants to know if there's a such lemmy or kbin magazine for them off of Reddit. Anyone know of any?

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