Boot in recovery mode Debian/Ubuntu
mount -o remount,rw /
Boot in recovery mode Debian/Ubuntu
mount -o remount,rw /
1. Creating a USB version of a live CD — the boring option
With the current 'hybrid' Debian iso's it couldn't be easier.
THIS WILL WIPE YOUR USB STICK
— START HERE —
a. Download the iso
Using jigdo is a good option. Downloading a business-card/netinstall iso is another, if you'll have a working internet connection available.
b. Plug in and mount your USB device and find out the device name of your USB drive.
If it's mounted you can use
#df -h
rootfs 93G 36G 54G 40% /
udev 3.9G 0 3.9G 0% /dev
tmpfs 801M 980K 800M 1% /run
/dev/disk/by-uuid/..-10a350f85687 93G 36G 54G 40% /
tmpfs 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
tmpfs 1.6G 52K 1.6G 1% /tmp
tmpfs 1.6G 816K 1.6G 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda6 745G 183G 525G 26% /home
/dev/sdc1 2.0G 434M 1.5G 23% /media/XP-KOMKU
or
mount
../dev/sdc1 on /media/XP-KOMKU type vfat (rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,fmask=0022,dmask=0077,codepage=cp437,iocharset=utf8,shortname=mixed,showexec,utf8,flush,errors=remount-ro,uhelper=udisks)
to list mounted devices. In my case it's an old 2 G usb stick I used to create a Windows XP installation USB device on.
If you prefer a gui tool, start palimpsest (called Disk Utility in gnome)
It will be something akin to sdb1 or sdc1 etc. That means the device name is /dev/sdb or /dev/sdc, respectively. In our case, it's sdc.
c. Unmount but don't detach the device
You don't want anything else writing to it.
# umount /dev/sdc1
# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
rootfs 93G 36G 54G 40% /
udev 3.9G 0 3.9G 0% /dev
tmpfs 801M 976K 800M 1% /run
/dev/disk/by-uuid/..-10a350f85687 93G 36G 54G 40% /
tmpfs 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
tmpfs 1.6G 60K 1.6G 1% /tmp
tmpfs 1.6G 820K 1.6G 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda6 745G 183G 525G 26% /home
sudo su
And write (assuming that the device name is sdc and you are using the businesscard iso)
cat debian-6.0.3-amd64-businesscard.iso > /dev/sdc
Done.
e. boot from your USB drive and go through the same steps as for a CD.
Plug it in, then start your computer. Hit F12 (or F10 or del or F2) during the bios start-up to select boot medium. Choose to boot from usb. Older BIOSes can't boot from USB.
Fonte: http://verahill.blogspot.pt/2012/02/installing-debian-on-usb-stick-live-usb.html
General opinion used to be, that it's wise to reserve as much as 20 to 25 percent of the storage capacity of an SSD for such unallocated space.
7. With "noatime" in /etc/fstab, you disable the write action "access time stamp", that the operating system puts on a file whenever it's being read by the operating system. For an SSD "noatime" is much better.
You can do that as follows:
a. First make sure that you have installed the applications gksu and leafpad:
Click on the grey Ubuntu logo (Dash home). Query: terminal.
Click on Terminal.
Type (or copy/paste):
sudo apt-get install gksu leafpad
Press Enter and submit your password. Please note that the password will remain invisible, not even asterisks will show, which is normal.
b. Then type in the terminal (use copy/paste):
gksudo leafpad /etc/fstab
Press Enter.
c. Now add "noatime" to the line for your root partition and your other Linux partitions. Not to the line for the swap partition!
An adapted line may look like this:
UUID=f0ae2c59-83d2-42e7-81c4-2e870b6b255d / ext4 noatime,errors=remount-ro 0 1
Note: this is one line, not two! It might appear to be two lines (dependent on your screen size), because of the length of the line.
Incompleto
Fonte: https://sites.google.com/site/easylinuxtipsproject/ssd
Open your xorg.conf for editing in any text editor (gedit is used in this example):
gksu gedit /etc/X11/xorg.conf
Now change/add the Driver line in the Device section.
Section "Device" ... #Other directives here Driver "radeon" Option "DRI" "on" #this is the default in recent radeonhd versions Option "AccelMethod" "EXA" #this is the default in recent radeonhd versions EndSection
By default, HDMI audio is disabled. In the Device section of your xorg.conf, you'll need to add the following lines:
Option "Audio" "true" Option "HDMI" "all"
The GPU should automatically drop to low-power mode when the video signal is disabled (i.e. when the monitor turns itself off using DPMS after a specified amount of idle time). You can check/change your DPMS settings on-the-fly with the xset command and you can statically set the appropriate options in xorg.conf. Please read the appropriate man pages (xset and xorg.conf) for more information on that topic. At this time, full dynamic control of clocks and voltages (i.e. ATI PowerPlay) is not implemented in the open-source drivers. However, one can force the GPU to low-power mode at all times by adding the following line in the Device section of xorg.conf:
Option "ForceLowPowerMode" "true"
Exemplo:
###—— https://wiki.debian.org/AtiHowTo ——-
Option "AccelDFS" "1"
Fonte: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonHD
Identifying Your Graphics Chip
First, check your graphic card name and chipset:
sudo update-pciids #optional command, requires internet lspci -nn | grep VGA
It should report something like this for your graphics card:
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI] RV710 [Radeon HD 4550]
Testing The Driver
To look for boot messages/errors, check
dmesg | egrep 'drm|radeon'
To see your OpenGL information, you can run the commands below. Make sure your OpenGL renderer string does not say "software rasterizer" or "llvmpipe" because that would mean you have no 3D hardware acceleration:
sudo apt-get install mesa-utils LIBGL_DEBUG=verbose glxinfo
Typically, the following manual commands will properly uninstall -fglrx:
sudo apt-get remove –purge xorg-driver-fglrx fglrx*
Fonte: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Troubleshooting/VideoDriverDetection#Problem:_Need_to_purge_-fglrx
Recommended configuration for X.org
sudo apt-get install --reinstall libgl1-mesa-glx libgl1-mesa-dri xserver-xorg-core sudo dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg
Boot into recovery mode and select Root Shell. Then run:
X -configure
Then:
cp /root/xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf
Reboot and you can edit the new Xorg.conf.
Fonte: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonDriver
sudo apt-get install nagios3 nagios-nrpe-plugin
sudo htpasswd /etc/nagios3/htpasswd.users steve
Fonte https://help.ubuntu.com/10.04/serverguide/nagios.html
A comprehensive list of commands needed when using Debian/Ubuntu:
Command privileges.
sudo command – run command as root
sudo su – root shell open
sudo su user – open shell as a user
sudo -k – forget your password sudo
gksudo command – sudo visual dialog (GNOME)
kdesudo command – sudo visual dialog (KDE)
sudo visudo – edit / etc / sudoers
gksudo nautilus – root file manager (GNOME)
kdesudo konqueror – root file manager (KDE)
passwd – change your password
Command Network
ifconfig – displays information network
iwconfig – displays information from wireless
sudo iwlist scan – scan wireless networks
sudo /etc/init.d/networking restart – reset the network
(file) /etc/network/interfaces – manual configuration
ifup interface – bring online interface
ifdown interface – disable interface
Commands Display
sudo /etc/init.d/gdm restart – reset X (Gnome)
sudo /etc/init.d/kdm restart – reset X (KDE)
(file) /etc/X11/xorg.conf – show Configuration
sudo dpkg-reconfigure – reconfigure xserver-xorg-phigh – reset configuration X
Ctrl+Alt+Bksp – X display reset if frozen
Ctrl+Alt+FN – switch to tty N
Ctrl+Alt+F7 – switch back to X display
Commands Service System.
start service – service to start work (Upstart)
stop service – service to stop working (Upstart)
status service – check if service is running (Upstart)
/etc/init.d/service start – start service (SysV)
/etc/init.d/service stop – stop service (SysV)
/etc/init.d/service status – check service (SysV)
/etc/init.d/service restart – reset service (SysV)
runlevel – get current runlevel
Commands for Firewall.
ufw enable – turn on the firewall
ufw disable – turn off the firewall
ufw default allow – allow all connections by default
ufw default deny – drop all connections by default
ufw status – current rules and
ufw allow port – to allow traffic on port
ufw deny port – port block
ufw deny from ip – ip block
Command System.
lsb_release -a – get the version of Ubuntu
uname -r – get kernel version
uname -a – get all the information kernel
Commands for Package Manager.
apt-get update – refresh updates available
apt-get upgrade – update all packages
apt-get dist-upgrade – version update
apt-get install pkg – installing pkg
apt-get remove pkg – uninstall pkg
apt-get autoremove – removing packages obsotletos
apt-get -f install – try to fix packages
dpkg –configure -a – try to fix a broken package
dpkg -i pkg.deb – install file pkg.deb
(file) /etc/apt/sources.list – list of repositories APT
Special Packages For commands.
ubuntu-desktop – Setting the standard Ubuntu
kubuntu-desktop – KDE Desktop
xubuntu-desktop – desktop XFCE
ubuntu-minimal – core earnings Ubuntu
ubuntu-standard – the standard utilities Ubuntu
ubuntu-restricted-extras – not free, but useful
kubuntu-restricted-extras – ditto KDE
xubuntu-restricted-extras – ditto XFCE
build-essential – packages used to compile
linux-image-generic – latest generic kernel image
linux-headers-generic – latest headlines
Applications commands.
nautilus – File Manager (GNOME)
dolphin – File Manager (KDE)
konqueror – Web browser (KDE)
kate – text editor (KDE)
gedit – text editor (GNOME)
Credits
sudo apt-get install gvfs-fuse
And add yourself to the fuse group:
sudo gpasswd -a your-user-name fuse
Then logout and login again to enable group membership.
Following the article on NSA and the Prism program , alternatives can be considered using other cyber-corporations.
1) Replace Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, AOL, Facebook, Paltalk, Apple services that are:
Your email correspondence
your friends, your interests and your opinions centers (social networks, RSS feeds)
your research on the internet (search engine)
your documents (cloud)
your internet navigation
your home (Street View, etc.)
your bank details (Google Play, etc.)
your telephone number (Recovery Account)
your travels and your location (Latitude, Map)
your calendar
videos and music (Youtube, Google Music)
your blog (Blogger, …)
data from your mobile phone (Android Apps …)
and soon your life IRL (Google Glasses, …)
etc …
We can use:
Mail: Zoho or mail.opera
Calendar: Zoho
Contacts: Zoho or mail.opera.com
Docs: Zoho
RSS: Feedly
Drive: DropBox
Search: DuckDuckGo , Startpage , Orange
Map: OpenStreetMap
iGoogle: portal.opera.com
Google Music or other: Grooveshark
Youtube: Vimeo , Dailymotion
Internet Browser: Firefox and managing bookmarks Xmarks and Delicious
Google Alert: Talk Walker Alert
Do not use Google+, Facebook, Instagram, … Prefer Twitter
Instant Messaging (Skype, AOL, …): Brosix
Blog: Transfer your blog (Blogger, …) on an independent business as OverBlog or create your own blog ( WordPress , Joomla , …)
OS: Linux , Unix , …
Changes will be made with the new platform to limit OverBlog see not use these companies.
If everyone does not use these companies, they will have more interest to exist. Other companies will resume over by redeeming but it is up to us afterwards to change our habits.
Revivall
Source: http://www.revivall.org/article-des-…118349976.html and here
More info: http://techsplurge.com/16192/protect-online-privacy-prism-nifty-tools/