alias pastebin="curl -F 'file=@-' 0x0.st | tee >(xsel -i 2>/dev/null) >(qrencode -t ANSIUTF8 2>/dev/null)"
sudo journalctl -b | pastebin
(-e is pointless, but maybe you want to limit the journal to the current boot
Also, rriendly reminder to better not engage in whichcraft at all
Seth your version works perfectly!
]]>eduroam uses WPA2-enterprise / WPA2/802.1X.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Networ … ss#eduroam
Yeah, the WiKi hint pointed me to that stuff, sorry not to mention. I just didn't take a closer look at it.
So there are cases where you can't just go by the flags but you have to know other things about what kind of network it is?
There is a tool that can generate generate wpa_supplicant configuration files for your specific university: https://eduroam.org/configuration-assistant-tool-cat/
Aha, thanks, will look at it.
]]>Both the library and the mpv extension are available at the AUR. Let me know if you run into issues.
More gestures and extensions are planned, including:
- spiral motion detection (knows if you're vaguely drawing circles)
- virtual buttons and numpads
- slide bottom edge on browser to switch tabs (like firefox mobile)
- mode-switching (switch between these weird gestures and the old mouse cursor)
]there should be command line switch option to exclude entries that have warnings. I manually removed the entries myself for now.
I've added it to the todo list.
]]>Hi, I think it's working as expected, you can actually see that the directory that you have would be a mountpoint actually and not a symlink, this change was made in asd with 6.0 version to make the user experience more transparent and help with the scenarios where asd crashes and restoration introduces a time gap that leads to the applications crashing.
Cheers!
]]>Getting B grade from Qualys or their reasoning behind the score aren’t the problem either. The tool is evaluating TLS deployment according to a set of best practices. Not following them isn’t a technical issue. In fact Qualys was able to properly verify the chain with no errors. Same will be true for most Firefox users.
The important part here is the hint given in the warning.
$ openssl s_client -connect instantworkstation.com:443
Connecting to 95.217.109.125
CONNECTED(00000003)
depth=0 CN=instantworkstation.com
verify error:num=20:unable to get local issuer certificate
verify return:1
depth=0 CN=instantworkstation.com
verify error:num=21:unable to verify the first certificate
verify return:1
depth=0 CN=instantworkstation.com
verify return:1
---
Certificate chain
0 s:CN=instantworkstation.com
i:C=GB, ST=Greater Manchester, L=Salford, O=Sectigo Limited, CN=Sectigo RSA Domain Validation Secure Server CA
a:PKEY: rsaEncryption, 2048 (bit); sigalg: RSA-SHA256
v:NotBefore: Dec 6 00:00:00 2023 GMT; NotAfter: Dec 6 23:59:59 2024 GMT
---
(…)
The problem is, that the issuer is itself not a trusted CA in Mozilla’s certificates pack. Unless Firefox obtained needed certificates from other sources, establishing a TLS connection is doomed to fail.
This is why it’s best deployment practice to offer the complete certificate chain. This way:
The client always gets all the needed certificates.
The client may store these (and Firefox does) for later use.
From what I can find on D-Bus on Arch Wiki, it's very brief and lacks any meaningful explanation on the bus address (how to interpret it as the logged user)
Because that problem is entirely not part of dbus.
You'd use eg. w, loginctl or seatd for a list of sessions and then will have to import the environment from one of their reelvant processes.
See eg. https://gist.github.com/AladW/de1c5676d93d05a5a0e1
~> cat arch_is_the_best.rs 2024-02-26T14:15:24
trait TheBest: std::fmt::Display {
fn is_the_best(&self) -> bool;
fn print_whether_it_is_the_best(&self) {
println!(
"{self} {} the best!",
if self.is_the_best() { "is" } else { "is not" }
);
}
}
struct Arch;
impl std::fmt::Display for Arch {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter) -> std::fmt::Result {
write!(f, "Arch")
}
}
impl TheBest for Arch {
fn is_the_best(&self) -> bool {
true
}
}
fn main() {
let arch = Arch;
arch.print_whether_it_is_the_best();
}
~> rustc arch_is_the_best.rs; ./arch_is_the_best 2024-02-26T14:15:27
Arch is the best!
~> 2024-02-26T14:16:11
]]>Screenshots and download:
https://www.box-look.org/p/2095462
The name is lightdm-simplelight and it's at :
https://github.com/takeshi981/lightdm-simplelight
]]>
I'm not having much time, but what i have i would like to contribute to help migration to python 3.12,
but i don't know how to help...
is there some list what needs to be done to upgrade python ?
]]>I have something I am running into with aurutils and my custom local repo, if someone can help me figure that out. As described in "man aur" under the section "Pacman configuration" and in " CacheDir (optional)" I setup my local repo and my pacman configuration.
This what my pacman options look like for the recommended options
CacheDir = /var/cache/pacman/pkg /var/cache/pacman/aurpkg
I figured out my mistake, I had these listed in the wrong order, I think I made a copy/past error when having updated my pacman.conf at some point but when creating my question I had just typed them out of the top of my head. Problem solved.
]]>PrimeNote empowers you to:
- Capture ideas effortlessly in various formats, from plain text and rich text to images and even full-fledged Vim or terminal environments.
- Organize your notes impeccably with a folder-based structure for instant retrieval.
- Safeguard confidential information with robust Fernet encryption.
- Navigate your notes with lightning speed using the built-in keyboard-driven search tool.
- Craft a personalized workspace by tailoring the appearance, menus, hotkeys, and mouse events to your preferences.
- Transmit content seamlessly in real-time by sharing your note repository on a virtual machine.
Landing page (with screenshots)
Gitlab repository
AUR page