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Today's Topics:
- Re: Samba config - (Bob Goodwin)
- Re: Output text color (was dnf list color bad) (Todd Zullinger)
- Re: Samba config - (Ed Greshko)
- Re: setting up PPPoE on fedora with recent network tools (Patrick Mansfield)
- Re: Output text color (was dnf list color bad) (Beartooth)
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2020 12:46:52 -0400 From: Bob Goodwin bobgoodwin@fastmail.us Subject: Re: Samba config - To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org Message-ID: 16d9a7a5-ba27-5769-a694-fffffed28d72@fastmail.us Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
On 2020-07-05 10:48, Ed Greshko wrote:
Check the settings on 192.168.50.149
Also, what do you get when you do....
smbclient -L 192.168.50.149 -U bobg
You will be prompted for your smb password on the remote system.
.
[bobg@WS1 ~]$ smbclient -L 192.168.50.149 -U bobg Enter SAMBA\bobg's password:
   Sharename      Type     Comment    ---------      ----     -------    print$         Disk     Printer Drivers    IPC$           IPC      IPC Service (Samba 4.12.3)    bobg           Disk     Home Directories SMB1 disabled -- no workgroup available
Not sure what it wants from SMB1 or why whatever it is is disabled? I probably need to enter something for that but do not have any Windows to deal with here ...
-- Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA http://www.qrz.com/db/W2BOD FEDORA-32/64bit LINUX XFCE Fastmail POP3
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2020 12:59:10 -0400 From: Todd Zullinger tmz@pobox.com Subject: Re: Output text color (was dnf list color bad) To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org Message-ID: 20200705165910.GN6611@pobox.com Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=pgp-sha256; protocol="application/pgp-signature"; boundary="Z58pRedRDwOEwTeD"
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Beartooth wrote:
On Fri, 03 Jul 2020 12:02:40 -0700, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 7/3/20 11:59 AM, Beartooth wrote:
That one is the color dnf upgrade uses to list what it proposes to change. (What it reports while making the changes is fine.) At present it shows bright chartreuse on pale blue -- which just fuzzes out.
=20 If the only problem is the one color from dnf, then either disable dnf colors or use the information from the last thread to adjust the color that's causing the problem.
=20 I found /etc/dnf/DIR_COLORS, /etc/dnf/DIR_COLORS.256color, and=20 /etc/dnf/DIR_COLORS.lightbgcolor.
I'm pretty sure those are in /etc, not /etc/dnf. If they're in the latter, can you confirm that and check what package provides them (rpm -qf /etc/dnf/DIR_COLORS*)? I don't see anything providing them.
In the first one, I found among much else=20 # If you use DOS-style suffixes, you may want to uncomment the following: #.cmd 01;32 # executables (bright green) I changed 32 to 31; removed=20 both hashmarks; no joy; rebooted; still no joy. =20 Am I editing the wrong file? That comment about suffixes doesn't=20 quite sit right, but I didn't see anything else that looked likelier.
Assuming you really meant /etc/DIR_COLORS*, then to be clear, 1) that will affect ls rather than dnf; and 2) you _are_ most likely editing the wrong file if you edit /etc/DIR_COLORS.
The logic for which of the 3 files is used is in /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh (for bourne-style shells like bash). Most modern terminal support 256 colors (at least), so they'll most likely use /etc/DIR_COLORS.256color.
After you edit it, you must source /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh to pick up the changes.
You can also copy the proper DIR_COLORS* file to your home dir to avoid having a clean install overwrite your changes in /etc. The paths which the colorls.sh script uses are:
$HOME/.dir_colors.$TERM $HOME/.dircolors.$TERM $HOME/.dir_colors $HOME/.dircolorsThe first one found is used.
--=20 Todd
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Date: Mon, 6 Jul 2020 01:02:17 +0800 From: Ed Greshko ed.greshko@greshko.com Subject: Re: Samba config - To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org Message-ID: 05252b8e-2848-4fac-67b2-72503fd79219@greshko.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
On 2020-07-06 00:46, Bob Goodwin wrote:
On 2020-07-05 10:48, Ed Greshko wrote:
Check the settings on 192.168.50.149
Also, what do you get when you do....
smbclient -L 192.168.50.149 -U bobg
You will be prompted for your smb password on the remote system.
.
[bobg@WS1 ~]$ smbclient -L 192.168.50.149 -U bobg Enter SAMBA\bobg's password:
   Sharename      Type     Comment    ---------      ----     -------    print$         Disk     Printer Drivers    IPC$           IPC      IPC Service (Samba 4.12.3)    bobg           Disk     Home Directories SMB1 disabled -- no workgroup available
Not sure what it wants from SMB1 or why whatever it is is disabled? I probably need to enter something for that but do not have any Windows to deal with here ...
That's not important.
What is is Sharename=bobg.
So, on WS1 the command would be....
mount -o uid=bobg,credentials=/home/bobg/cred //192.168.50.149/bobg /media/smb
And back to sleep I go.....
-- The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2020 10:29:02 -0700 From: Patrick Mansfield patmans@yahoo.com Subject: Re: setting up PPPoE on fedora with recent network tools To: Community support for Fedora users users@lists.fedoraproject.org Message-ID: 20200705172902.GA1121049@umbrella Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
On Sat, Jul 04, 2020 at 10:19:32AM +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 2020-07-04 04:19, Patrick Mansfield via users wrote:
Anyone know where to find details setting up and using a PPPoE client
on fedora with
current network tools?
I used nm-connection-editor to add one, but haven't figured out how to
actually bring
it up nor if it's actually working.
I installed rp-pppoe, I'm not sure if it's needed or if it's
integrated with NM.
Well, if you've set it up then you should be able see it in the list when you issue
nmcli connection
The details will be shown if you do...
nmcli connection show name-of-connection
And then....
nmcli connection up
will attempt to bring up the connection.� The results should be displayed and you can check the journal for any error messages.
Ah, thanks: I had tried to bring it up using nmcli, but missed this error:
Jul 04 10:53:23 umbrella NetworkManager[1183]: <warn> [1593885203.4348] device (wan0): PPPoE failed to start: the PPP plugin /usr/lib64/NetworkManager/1.20.12-1.fc31/libnm-ppp-plugin.so is not installed
I installed it:
dnf install NetworkManager-ppp
And was able to get PPPoE working.
I don't think rp-pppoe is needed, but have left it installed for now.
PITA as I'm trying to get rid of my combined modem router (actiontech C3000A) with new Centurylink internet service, and I can't modify the modem settings once I put it in bridge mode - it has to be physically reset if I want to change anything, like put it back to PPPoE mode, or to disable the VLAN.
-- Patrick
Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2020 17:52:56 -0000 (UTC) From: Beartooth Beartooth@comcast.net Subject: Re: Output text color (was dnf list color bad) To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org Message-ID: rdt41o$2i6$2@ciao.gmane.io Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
On Sun, 05 Jul 2020 12:59:10 -0400, Todd Zullinger wrote: [....]
I'm pretty sure those are in /etc, not /etc/dnf. If they're in the latter, can you confirm that and check what package provides them (rpm -qf /etc/dnf/DIR_COLORS*)? I don't see anything providing them.
You're right. My bad. They're in /etc. And I get # rpm -qf /etc/ dnf/DIR_COLORS* error: file /etc/dnf/DIR_COLORS*: No such file or directory
In the first one, I found among much else # If you use DOS-style suffixes, you may want to uncomment the following: #.cmd 01;32 # executables (bright green) I changed 32 to 31; removed both hashmarks; no joy; rebooted; still no joy.
Am I editing the wrong file? That comment about suffixes doesn't quite sit right, but I didn't see anything else that looked likelier.
Assuming you really meant /etc/DIR_COLORS*, then to be clear, 1) that will affect ls rather than dnf; and 2) you _are_ most likely editing the wrong file if you edit /etc/DIR_COLORS.
The logic for which of the 3 files is used is in /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh (for bourne-style shells like bash). Most modern terminal support 256 colors (at least), so they'll most likely use /etc/DIR_COLORS.256color.
Am I remembering wrong? Istr that I could tell a given machine *once* that I want to see dot files, and it would *always* display them.
After you edit it, you must source /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh to pick up the changes.
"source" is a verb?? Sorry -- you lost me. What does it mean?
You can also copy the proper DIR_COLORS* file to your home dir to avoid having a clean install overwrite your changes in /etc. The paths which the colorls.sh script uses are:
$HOME/.dir_colors.$TERM $HOME/.dircolors.$TERM $HOME/.dir_colors $HOME/.dircolorsThe first one found is used.
Sigh. The curse of the autodidact strikes again. I know that "HOME" in all upper case has a standard meaning, and I suppose "TERM" must, too. But I can never remember what it is, nor where to look it up.
-- Beartooth Staffwright, Not Quite Clueless Power User Remember I know little (precious little!) of where up is.
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