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00:00
I have a ridiculous amount of persistence, but my patience is running thin -- I'm probably going to see about an lx container or, worst, a KVM guest of Linux for Cavil at this point
too many platform dependencies in Qt that aren't patched to work with non-Linux
@allquixotic will do, as soon as I work out how that works XD
@JourneymanGeek ssh-keygen or use putty then mail me the pubkey
/me upboats @JourneymanCult for his Poe quotation
@allquixotic: sent
@JourneymanGeek ssh [email protected]
make sure to load your key into Pageant if you're on 'doze
00:10
what's the most popular linux server shell application out there?
Ok, I'm in ;p
(damn, I completely can't spell tiyukquellmalz)
Took me 4 attempts typing it in, then I chickened out and hid under the bed copy pasted it
0_0
@allquixotic: you preinstalled lighttpd et al?
@JourneymanGeek nginx, OpenSSH, nano, vim, emacs
oh and php5.5
pkgin instead of apt-get
00:14
excellent, then all I need is postgres and to work out how to configure ngnix
yeah, I worked out that much.
if you get stumped you can always install apache or lighttpd
naw, this says lighttpd is installed
OH
nvm
I realised it was TELLING me what the symbols in the package manager meant
00:34
0_0
its telling me to add stuff to a file than dosen't exist
@JourneymanGeek OH. ignore the NetBSD message
svcadm enable svc:/pkgsrc/postgresql:default should turn it on
if not, check svcs -a | grep postgre
00:45
Its running. running the postgres command says it can't find the config file
if it says maintenance, peek in `/var/svc/log/pkgsrc:postgre blah blah
hm
come on gateone so we can share a terminal :P
(googling now. For some reason, google thinks smartos and solaris are the same thing)
Sure ;p
where?
let me know once you're logged in and I'll share the terminal session
(I added my pubkey so I'm already logged in as root)
hmm. I use puppy for host, no?
don't even think about that
just wait until you get the pop-up about sharing, or until you see the magnifying glass
on the right hand side
you don't have to login since I already made a shell for us
00:51
0_0
gonna leave the session up in case any other things to work on. but you can use putty/kitty/whatever for your hacking as long as things are going smoothly
heh. you like GateOne yet? :P
yeah
... I realised what went wrong
everyone i've shown it loves it
I used the*postgres* command and mispelled pgsql
hehe
the postgres command tries to invoke the daemon :P
00:55
Going to do the hacky bits in putty (not cause I don't trust you ;p)
svcadm invokes the daemon for you
Its more responsive ;p
OK, but just FYI, your session is persistent with a timeout of 5 days on GateOne, so it's almost like screen without screen, in case you get disconnected, your session isn't gone
GateOne itself is running on my own "personal stuff" instance of SmartOS on the same box. but not on the physical / root node
00:56
(also, even I don't klnow these passwords. I generate them with hotbits)
I won't be poking your VM unless I explicitly need to fix something you're stuck on
or in the case of configuration updates necessitated by a host upgrade, or something like that
no worries on that, Its not running uber sensitive stuff anyway
(and if you need a ttrss instance just use that one ;p)
it's to the point now where OpenSSH (instead of Solaris's SSH daemon) will start automatically on boot, and the Solaris SSH daemon is disabled (it is frankly just worse than OpenSSH)
OpenSSH is also the only SSH implementation that works with GateOne, so if you wanted to spin up an instance of that separately on your side, you'd need OpenSSH, which you have :P
01:02
Where's the directory for the webserver?
0_0
/opt/local?
/opt/local is the prefix for GNUserland (NetBSD's builds of GNU packages)
/usr is the prefix for read-only Solaris core utilities
01:04
That kinda makes sense
anything you expect to find in /usr except for the system binary linker ld and a few other things like that are almost definitely under /opt/local instead.
confusingly, there are a few things which exist in both /usr/somewhere (e.g. /usr/bin, or even /bin) which also exist in /opt/local/bin -- in this case, almost without fail you want to use the /opt/local version, because it's going to be more "GNU-ey", and will work as you would expect on, say, Ubuntu or Fedora
basically, /usr, /bin and /sbin are core utilities very close to the kernel and very "Sun/Oracley" in their origin (and command syntax, and functionality). /opt/local is extremely close to Debian, and practically identical to NetBSD.
ANYTHING installed with pkgin goes in /opt/local.
don't assume that you understand the input or output of anything from /usr, /bin or /sbin -- usually requires a manpage read or a --help to get a feel for just how different it is from Linux's typical utilities
stuff in /opt/local you probably already understand
to an extent ;p
0_0
also, pkgin se is your friend -- follow it by a search term to search the package repo for stuff
pkgin se postgre
01:09
yeah, I noticed ;p
@HackToHell haha
0_0
@allquixotic: quicky very silly question - where's the web root?
@JourneymanGeek for nginx? it's wherever /opt/local/etc/nginx/nginx.conf says it is, which defaults to /opt/local/share/examples/nginx/html or something
you can change it obv.
01:23
can't see any harm in using /var/www
just make sure you mkdir it before running svcadm restart svc:/pkgsrc/nginx:default
and set perms :P
XD
Ahh ok
so the share/examples.... is relative to /opt/local
That confused me
01:35
Oh and I managed to download the sdk ;p
@allquixotic: >_> I think I may need your help again. I seem to have broken nginx
(commented out the original location it set, created and gave ownership of /var/www to the www user) and... I donno, I can't seem to connect)
Hmm.... All I want to do is go home and play Destiny. :(
02:01
....
I am an idiot
5
Stars inbound.
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic I still haven't gotten around to trying it :P
Its still broked but I was trying to enable the wrong service
Bob
Bob
I really need to sort out some form of backup (or at least redundancy) on my server :\
Two HDDs without backups = uh oh
I'm having this wierd feeling of deja vue
Bob
Bob
02:08
lol
(though I think I was annoying someone even more that time)
Bob
Bob
O_O
0
Q: Delete word to the left in WordStar

Vebjorn LjosaIn WordStar 4.0, is there a control command to delete the word to the left of the cursor? I know that I can press ^A to move one word to the left and then ^T to delete the word I just moved over, but sometimes I want to delete more than one recently-typed word, and it's cumbersome to do the two ...

blah, I'll take a tenner.
0_0
Bob
Bob
WordStar? Isn't that... uh...
That really old word proc?
Bob
Bob
02:11
@JourneymanGeek Any chance it'll run on your OS/2 VM? :P
If I can find a copy, I can try
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek Ask that guy? :P
mmm... shutdown.exe - You are my friend!
Die! Annoying computer.
Uuuugh it didn't work.
@Bob: meh, I have ways
Google search: wordstar.rar rapidshare
Bob
Bob
02:15
@MichaelFrank Uh... what millennium is that from?
lol
I prefer to search for abandonware
heck, I can get a copy of visicalc (legally) to go with it!
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek o.O
How does one get a legal copy of abandonware?
Bob
Bob
o.O
@Bob I'm not sure what period that app is from. But it's super useful.
Bob
Bob
02:20
@MichaelFrank You do know you can just shutdown -i?
@Bob not if you can't run a cmd window!
Bob
Bob
@MichaelFrank Create a shortcut to shutdown with -i
Holy shit.
@MichaelFrank I have a copy of that!
@Bob wow... this is handy!
Bob
Bob
Inherited from the migration from Server 2003, from the last admin, who for some reason used it to schedule a daily restart at 6 AM
-___-
(and the restart didn't even complete, because the chassis intrusion warning kept tripping)
Yea, the last modified time on our file is 22/12/1999.
Bob
Bob
02:26
@MichaelFrank I think the 2005 here is just when that guy downloaded it.
Anyway, shutdown -i is so much nicer:
I'll definitely be using that from now on.
Bob
Bob
But I'd rather use PowerShell, tbh :P
Yeah, turns out the machine was just stuck "Configuring software". I had to choke it out.
Bob
Bob
02:34
uhm
> Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon 64 processor (2GHz or faster)
Microsoft Windows 7 with Service Pack 1, Windows 8 , or Windows 8.1
2GB of RAM
That's for Photoshop CC 2014
good luck running it on a P4...
So apparently the Australian printer naming convention uses ─ (ASCII 196) instead of - (Hyphen).
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic Oh? They're jumping on the watch bandwagon?
@JourneymanGeek I'll take a look.
Bob
Bob
Give it a year. They'll probably sue one of the Android manufacturers for 'copying' their watches.
@Bob Obviously no one has worn things on their wrist before the iWatch
Bob
Bob
02:36
@MichaelFrank What printer naming convention? :S
@allquixotic Oh yea. Sue Rolex too.
@Bob the naming convention for the company I'm working at.
Bob
Bob
Ah.
347Kent─Printer01 instead of the sane 347Kent-Printer01, which I can actually type with a normal keyboard.
Bob
Bob
Alt+0151 and Alt+0150
wow. I haven't used those in ages, but I still remember them o.O
— –
Alt+196 does the same thing
Bob
Bob
02:39
@MichaelFrank turns out 196 is an entirely different dash... o.O
– <--- is the character.. apparently it's not 0151 or 196
Bob
Bob
looks like 0150
ahh, yes. I didn't try that one.
Bob
Bob
0151 is EM DASH
no idea what 196 is
"BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT HORIZONTAL" wow
Evening all.
02:42
@allquixotic thanks.
Bob
Bob
Two weeks. 338 GB written to the SSD.
I think I might need to disable Rapid Start; it's writing a bit too much...
~4-6 GB per 'hibernate' depending on my memory usage.
Anyone willing to assist me in some experiments? I'm working on a new protocol for beer to peer networking... Layer one is a b1tch ;)
@Everett So... do I just give you my address and you courier over some beer?
Yeah, that's what happens, I'll need your name, occupation, and hum, bank account number. I can fill your account with those golden delicious suds
Anyway, just thought I'd say hi and bring a little light hearted humor, hope all are well...
@Everett Hi, I'd like to report a Critical Vulnerability / Exploit (CVE) against your B2P protocol
It's called the Bladder Overflow Attack, and it occurs when the peer sends too many beers to the recipient
@Bob :S your SSD is way out-writing mine even though I constantly swap out textures and program data with 2 GB of RAM
and I've been running mem-hungry Chrome on my laptop at work
02:49
0_0
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic I have a 64 GB cache + 8 GB pagefile + upto 8 GB hibernation file on it
I don't think the pagefile is being used much though.
when I use GateOne, tabs I haven't accessed in a while get evicted into the page file :|
@allquixotic: the nice SSD or the crappy one? ;p
I have a 16 GB pagefile, 32 GB ReadyBoost and a virtual machine disk image on it
@JourneymanGeek the 850 Pro
Bob
Bob
Also, yours should be faster and last longer, too...
Mine's only an 840 EVO
02:51
I'm at ~10.89tb of writes after a year
Bob
Bob
There aren't any Pro mSATAs anyway.
are there 850 EVOs?
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek I'll probably be around there at this rate.
@allquixotic: no
I think they released the pro first
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic "coming soon" as of 20 hours ago
02:52
(and the 840 Evo is a generation after the plain 840s)
I wonder if they'll release an mSATA one with the same type of flash construction (V-NAND) as the 850 Pro?
Microsoft would be all over that for the SP4
@allquixotic: fairly certain
@allquixotic: I parsed that as service pack 4
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic More like M.2
oh, yeah
@Bob: probably both initially
mSATA is still super common
Bob
Bob
02:54
@JourneymanGeek I mean in the SP4
Might even be soldered to the board.
Bob
Bob
In fact, probably will be.
I wonder if Samsung will sell a Galaxy Note Edge Developer Edition? I would love to buy that and flash CM on it
Probably soldered to the board
they solder 'em but I think they still use mSATA as the protocol
until M.2 comes out
they could cut the BS protocol and just use PCIe though.
that would be some serious performance.
02:56
@allquixotic: one of those things I don't get
wouldn't it be simpler to just forget about sata on a device like that? ;p
Its not like you need to hang an arbitrary number of random hard drives/ssds
they are probably afraid of protocol bugs in whatever they invent to replace SATA.
SATA has been around a long time, and there are extremely well-debugged, rugged, production-grade SATA controllers out there
(there are also bad ones, but if you pick a good one, you save thousands of engineering hours by letting some other company do a lot of R&D for you)
Ahh
(oh, sata has been around a long time... Man, I feel old ;p)

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