Ubuntu: Difference between revisions
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= Live CD = | |||
https://livecdlist.com/ | https://livecdlist.com/ | ||
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* Mint https://linuxmint.com/download.php | * Mint https://linuxmint.com/download.php | ||
== | == Run on RAM disk == | ||
See [[Grub#Run_Live_Linux_on_Ram_Disk|Grub -> Run live Linux on ram disk]]. | |||
[ | |||
= Download/Install = | |||
Download links for all versions from [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ wiki.ubuntu.com] > [http://releases.ubuntu.com/ releases.ubuntu.com]. | |||
Ubuntu [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuFlavors flavors] and [http://www.ubuntu.com/about/about-ubuntu/derivatives derivatives] | |||
== Download mirror == | |||
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+cdmirrors. The mirrors are sorted by speed. [https://mirror.umd.edu/ubuntu-iso/ UMD]. | |||
[ | === Full list of all flavors of Ubuntu === | ||
http://cdimages.ubuntu.com/. See [https://itsfoss.com/download-ubuntu-20-04/ Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Released. Download Now!] | |||
=== Install via PXE Network Boot Server === | |||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/install-debian-9-stretch-via-pxe-network-boot-server/ Install Debian 9 (Stretch) via PXE Network Boot Server] | |||
=== Original GA (General Availability) stack & [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/LTSEnablementStack HWE (Hardware Enablement)] stack === | |||
The HWE stack provides a newer kernel and X support for existing Ubuntu LTS releases. | |||
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SecurityTeam/KnowledgeBase/SpectreAndMeltdown#Kernel_Mitigations | |||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/02/how-to-install-ubuntu-18042-lts.html How To Install The Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS Hardware Enablement Stack ] | |||
== UEFI and Legacy mode == | |||
* [https://rufus.ie/en/ Rufus] has an option to select the target system is UEFI or Legacy. Balena Etcher does not have this option. | |||
* [https://www.linuxbabe.com/command-line/how-to-use-linux-efibootmgr-examples Use Linux efibootmgr Command to Manage UEFI Boot Menu] | |||
* [https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Efibootmgr Efibootmgr] | |||
==== | == Secure boot == | ||
I need to disable secure boot in order to boot Ubuntu. | |||
== LVM partition == | |||
See [[LVM|LVM]] | |||
== After installation == | |||
=== System program problem detected === | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/how-to-fix-system-program-problem-detected-ubuntu/ How To Fix System Program Problem Detected In Ubuntu] | |||
* [https://www.binarytides.com/ubuntu-fix-system-program-problem-error/ How to fix “System program problem detected” error on Ubuntu] | |||
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/365358/im-getting-a-lot-of-system-program-problem-detected-error-dialogs-is-there-a | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo rm /var/crash/* | |||
</pre> | |||
* http://www.techdrivein.com/2012/08/how-to-disable-system-program-problem.html. sudo nano /etc/default/apport. | |||
Change value of "enabled" from 1 to 0. Then reboot. | |||
=== Things to do after installing Ubuntu === | |||
<ul> | |||
<li><syntaxhighlight lang='sh' inline>apt update; apt upgrade -y</syntaxhighlight> | |||
<li>edit '''~/.bashrc''' to add alias, colored man pages, colored prompt, time stamp to bash prompt, time stamp to history command. To take those changes into effect, you do '''source ~/.bashrc''' . | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_mb=$'\e[1;32m' # Blinking text: bold green | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_md=$'\e[1;34m' # Bold text: bold blue | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_me=$'\e[0m' # End mode | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_so=$'\e[01;47;34m' # Standout: bold white on blue | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_se=$'\e[0m' # End standout mode | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_us=$'\e[1;4;31m' # Underlined text: bold underlined red | |||
export LESS_TERMCAP_ue=$'\e[0m' # End underline | |||
=== | export HISTSIZE= | ||
export HISTFILESIZE= | |||
export HISTTIMEFORMAT="%Y-%m-%d %T " # add time stamp to history | |||
PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] " | |||
alias nano="nano -c --softwrap" | |||
alias checkport='sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN' | |||
alias sshnocheck="ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no" | |||
alias scpnocheck='scp -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no' | |||
= | alias open='xdg-open' | ||
</pre> | |||
<li>edit '''~/.ssh/config''' | |||
<li>install Chinese input | |||
<li>install graphics driver ([https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2016/04/10-things-to-do-after-installing-ubuntu-16-04-lts 16 Things To Do After Installing Ubuntu 16.04 LTS]) | |||
<li>install media codecs | |||
<li>change power setting, night light ([https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/04/things-to-do-after-installing-ubuntu-1904 10 Things To Do After Installing Ubuntu 19.04]) | |||
<li>install favorite software | |||
</ul> | |||
== | == Rescue mode == | ||
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-boot-into-rescue-mode-or-emergency-mode-in-ubuntu-18-04/ How To Boot Into Rescue Mode Or Emergency Mode In Ubuntu 18.04] | |||
== End of life date of Ubuntu release == | |||
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases | |||
== Server version == | |||
[[File:UbuntuServerInstall.png|150px]] | |||
== | == Mint Linux == | ||
[https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=3462 How to upgrade to Linux Mint 18.3] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ cat /etc/os-release | |||
NAME="Linux Mint" | |||
VERSION="18.3 (Sylvia)" | |||
ID=linuxmint | |||
ID_LIKE=ubuntu | |||
PRETTY_NAME="Linux Mint 18.3" | |||
VERSION_ID="18.3" | |||
HOME_URL="http://www.linuxmint.com/" | |||
SUPPORT_URL="http://forums.linuxmint.com/" | |||
BUG_REPORT_URL="http://bugs.launchpad.net/linuxmint/" | |||
VERSION_CODENAME=sylvia | |||
UBUNTU_CODENAME=xenial | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
==== | vs Ubuntu 16.04 | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ cat /etc/os-release | |||
NAME="Ubuntu" | |||
VERSION="16.04.4 LTS (Xenial Xerus)" | |||
ID=ubuntu | |||
= | ID_LIKE=debian | ||
PRETTY_NAME="Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS" | |||
VERSION_ID="16.04" | |||
HOME_URL="http://www.ubuntu.com/" | |||
SUPPORT_URL="http://help.ubuntu.com/" | |||
BUG_REPORT_URL="http://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/" | |||
VERSION_CODENAME=xenial | |||
UBUNTU_CODENAME=xenial | |||
</pre> | |||
As we can see use $UBUNTU_CODENAME is common between Ubuntu & Mint. This variable can be used in setting a repository for installing a new software. See the [https://brave-browser.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installing-brave.html#linux Brave] example. | |||
In [https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/docker-ce/ubuntu/ Docker's installation guide], it uses the value (eg 'bionic') from '''lsb_release -cs ''' which will give the same value of ''VERSION_CODENAME''' on Mint Linux. | |||
The taskbar in Windows is called a '''Panel''' in Linux Mint. If you open applications, you will see the application names showed in the application icons in the taskbar. That takes too much space. Cf macOS or Ubuntu Unity. See a screenshot [http://linuxsoftware.moncerbae.com/2015/12/understanding-part-of-cinnamon-desktop.html?m=1 here] where the "Panel" is moved to the top and "Cairo Dock" is installed. | |||
We can also add a program to '''Favorites'''. The favorites programs are located at the Mint Start Menu. | |||
== | == Pop_OS == | ||
https:// | [https://support.system76.com/articles/pop-recovery/ Use The Recovery Partition] | ||
== Create customized ubuntu iso == | |||
See [[Dual_boot|Dual boot]] | |||
== | == Create your own Debian iso == | ||
* http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/tutorials/spin-your-own-debian | |||
== MultiSystem – Create a MultiBoot USB from Linux == | |||
See [[Daul_boot|Dual boot]]. | |||
== | == Minimal Ubuntu == | ||
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/MinimalCD | |||
The minimal ubuntu iso (mini.iso) is about 64MB. It will download files when we install the Ubuntu. | |||
In the halfway of installing the minimal Ubuntu, there is a dialog called 'Software selection'. It says ''At the moment, only the core of the system is installed. To tune the system to your needs, you can choose to install one or more of the following predefined collections of software. Choose software to install:''. | |||
==== | == The Perfect Server == | ||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/perfect-server-ubuntu-16.04-with-apache-php-myqsl-pureftpd-bind-postfix-doveot-and-ispconfig/ Ubuntu 16.04] from howtoforge. | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/perfect-server-debian-8-4-jessie-apache-bind-dovecot-ispconfig-3-1/ Debian 8.4] from howtoforge. | |||
https:// | == Live USB with persistent storage: mkusb == | ||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/03/create-persistent-storage-live-usb-with.html Create A Persistent Storage Live USB With Ubuntu, Linux Mint Or Debian (UEFI, >4GB Persistence Support)] | |||
* [http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/14912/create-a-persistent-bootable-ubuntu-usb-flash-drive/ Linux Live USB Creator] | |||
* (Bonus) [https://nomadbsd.org/index.html NomadBSD] | |||
[ | = Selection of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desktop_environment desktop environment] = | ||
See [[Desktop_environment|Desktop environment]]. | |||
= | = Themes = | ||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/ubuntu-themes/ 5 Ubuntu Themes That Will Steal Your Breath Away] | |||
* [https://www. | |||
== | == Windows 10 theme == | ||
[https://www. | [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/make-linux-look-like-windows/ Make Linux Look Like Windows 10 With These Tips and Tweaks] | ||
== | == GTK3 == | ||
https:// | [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/10/how-to-use-different-gtk-3-theme-for.html How To Use A Different GTK 3 Theme For Specific Applications] | ||
== Orchis == | |||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/02/orchis-is-cool-gtk-gnome-theme-with.html Orchis Is A Cool GTK / GNOME Theme With Rounded Elements] | |||
= [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Repositories/Ubuntu Ubuntu Software Repository] = | |||
See [[Ubuntu_software_repository|Ubuntu software repository]]. | |||
= Troubleshooting = | |||
== What should I do when Ubuntu freezes? == | |||
* [http://askubuntu.com/questions/4408/what-should-i-do-when-ubuntu-freezes What should I do when Ubuntu freezes?] | |||
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/39855 How to fix non-responsive Ubuntu system?] | |||
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_SysRq_key | |||
(11/11/2020). Note that my mouse can move but it cannot click. The keyboard did not respond to some solutions like Ctrl+Alt+F1 or Alt+F2. SSh from another computer still works:) '''Press Alt+SysReq (or Alt+Print), do not release and then type 'REISUB'''' (lower case). This puts the keyboard in raw mode, ends tasks in various states, syncs the disks, etc, and finally reboots the machine. | |||
(11/23/2020). Pop_OS freezes again. I should check /var/log/syslog via ssh. | |||
Don't try this on a virtual machine. It will not work. It just restart the HOST machine. | |||
(10/29/2021). The /var/log/syslog shows unusual lines containing lots of '''\00\00\00\00''' and '''Inserted module 'lp' '''. Try a suggestion from [https://askubuntu.com/a/1190229 Using syslog to diagnose a crash]. Another report related to the specific CPU (NUC8i5BEH) [https://www.reddit.com/r/intelnuc/comments/npua35/nuc8i5beh_running_linux_randomly_freezes_when/ NUC8i5BEH running Linux randomly freezes when idle]. | |||
== [http://askubuntu.com/questions/406229/there-was-no-etc-default-grub-file Grub2 cannot boot after timeout] == | |||
There is not /etc/default/grub with GRUB2. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get --reinstall install grub-pc | |||
</pre> | |||
== [http://askubuntu.com/questions/454037/disk-drive-boot-problem-the-disk-drive-for-tmp-is-not-ready-yet-or-is-not-pres The disk drive for /tmp is not ready yet] == | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo mv /tmp /tmp_old | |||
sudo mkdir /tmp | |||
sudo chmod 1777 /tmp | |||
</pre> | |||
== [http://askubuntu.com/questions/73997/how-do-i-fix-a-failed-to-download-package-files-error Software updater - “Failed to download package files” error?] == | |||
Change the download location to 'Main Server' or another server close to the country you live in and try to sudo apt-get update again. | |||
== unable to open mtp device ubuntu 14.04 == | |||
[http://askubuntu.com/questions/463015/ubuntu-14-04-and-android-cant-see-phone-on-my-computer Use this tip]. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get install mtpfs | |||
</pre> | |||
== Cannot log in in ubuntu 20.04 == | |||
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/62113975 It's caused by ticking 'enable automatic logging in' at installation] | |||
== No sound after suspend == | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/06/fix-no-sound-dummy-output-issue-in.html?m=1 Fix No Sound (Dummy Output) Issue In Ubuntu With SND HDA Intel] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/fix-sound-ubuntu-1304-quick-tip/ How To Fix No Sound in Ubuntu And Linux Mint]. Unfortunately none of them works on Intel NUC + Ubuntu 18.04.2. | |||
== tracker-miner-fs == | |||
See http://askubuntu.com/questions/346211/tracker-store-and-tracker-miner-fs-eating-up-my-cpu-on-every-startup how to disable it. | |||
on | |||
= Monitor = | |||
== Monitor resolution == | |||
* '''xrandr'''. It shows as 20" 1360x768 (16:9) on my 2005 19" Sharp TV LC-19SB15U [https://www.cnet.com/products/sharp-lc-19sb15u/ 1366 x 768] through Input 4 (VGA) (44W). | |||
* On Mint Linux, it shows 1920x1080i. But it'll be better with 1280x720 (16:9). | |||
* [https://youtu.be/pkzrQqT_lFI How to set a Custom Screen Resolution in Linux ] | |||
* [https://www.maketecheasier.com/how-to-setup-dual-monitors-with-xrandr/ How to Setup Dual Monitors With XRandR] | |||
== Night light == | |||
[https://www.fossmint.com/best-eye-care-software-to-protect-your-eyes-in-linux/ Best Eye Care Software to Protect Your Eyes in Linux] | |||
= Display Manager = | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/12/how-to-change-default-display-manager.html How To Change The Default Display Manager (Switch To GDM, LightDM, SDDM, Or LXDM) In Debian, Ubuntu Or Linux Mint] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/display-manager/ Linux Jargon Buster: What is Display Manager in Linux?] | |||
== Display server: Wayland Xorg == | |||
[https://itsfoss.com/switch-xorg-wayland/ How to Switch Between Xorg and Wayland in Ubuntu] & [https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-enable-disable-wayland-on-ubuntu-20-04-desktop How to enable/disable wayland on Ubuntu 20.04 Desktop] | |||
<pre> | |||
echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
[https://askubuntu.com/a/1393619 How can I tell if an application is using XWayland?] 1. Running '''xlsclients''' in a terminal will list all the apps currently running which are using XWayland (cf native wayland). 2. Run '''xeyes''' | |||
==== | = Power management = | ||
[ | == Battery == | ||
[https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-low-full-charge-discharge-battery-notification/ How to get Battery status notification when a battery is full or low] | |||
==== | == Suspend, hibernate == | ||
[https:// | <ul> | ||
<li>Automatic suspend will disable ssh connection, cron jobs, et al. PS. a server never goes to suspend. | |||
<li>[https://fostips.com/automatic-suspend-idle-time-less-15-min-ubuntu-fedora-debian/ Set Automatic Suspend Idle Time (Less Than 15 Min) in Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian] | |||
< | <li>If you like to suspend immediately, use | ||
* '''sudo systemctl suspend''' from the command line. This requires to enter the password. Note the ''sudo systemctl hibernate'' does not work (the system will just shutdown). | |||
* Press 'Alt' and then the Power Off button should change to a Suspend button from the Gnome Shell user menu. This seems to be better. | |||
</ul> | |||
* | |||
= Swapfile = | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>How to remove a swapfile. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo swapoff /swapfile # swapfile is located under the root | |||
sudo rm /swapfile | |||
free -h # double check | |||
# Remove the swap entry from /etc/fstab | |||
sudo nano /etc/fstab | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
<li>Re-enable swap. [https://bitlaunch.io/blog/how-to-create-and-adjust-swap-space-in-ubuntu-20-04/ How to Create and Increase Swap Space in Ubuntu 20.04] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo fallocate -l 2G /path/to/new_swapfile | |||
sudo chmod 600 /path/to/new_swapfile | |||
sudo mkswap /path/to/new_swapfile | |||
sudo swapon /path/to/new_swapfile | |||
sudo cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.bak | |||
echo '/swapfile none swap sw 0 0' | sudo tee -a /etc/fstab | |||
</pre> | |||
<li>[https://ploi.io/documentation/server/change-swap-size-in-ubuntu Change swap size in Ubuntu]. It seems we need to delete the swapfile before we follow that. | |||
</ul> | |||
= Hard drive = | |||
== Install a new hard drive == | |||
See also https://help.ubuntu.com/community/InstallingANewHardDrive, [https://vegastack.com/tutorials/fdisk-command-in-linux/ Fdisk Command in Linux] and [[#Mount_drive|Mount drive]] | |||
<ol> | |||
<li>Use '''ls /dev/sd*''' show connected disk drives | |||
<li>Use '''sudo fdisk /dev/sdb''' command to create partition table. Then 'g', 'p', 'n', 'p', '1', ENTER, ENTER, 'w'. </li> | |||
<li>Use '''sudo mkfs -t ext4 /dev/sdb1''' to create a new partition </li> | |||
<li>Use '''sudo mkdir /mnt/ssd''' to create a new mount point </li> | |||
<li>(One time mount) '''sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/ssd''' </li> | |||
<li>Use '''sudo nano -Bw /etc/fstab''' to do auto mount on boot | |||
<pre> | |||
/dev/sdb1 /media/mynewdrive ext3 defaults 0 2 | |||
/dev/sdc1 /media/mynewdrive ext3 defaults 0 0 | |||
</pre> | |||
</li> | |||
<li>'''sudo chown -R USERNAME:USERNAME /mnt/ssd''' to give the ownership to the USERNAME. </li> | |||
</ol> | |||
[http://withr.me/add-new-hard-disk-3tb/ Add second hard disk (3TB) to Ubuntu 16.04] | |||
== exFat/Format USB for Windows == | |||
[https://itsfoss.com/format-exfat-linux/ How to Format a USB Disk as exFAT on Linux [Graphically and Command Line]] | |||
== Ubuntu Disks utility == | |||
We can use it to write an image to the SD card. Right click the image file in the File Manager. Select 'Open with '-> 'Disk Image Writer'. Select 'Destination' and click 'Restore'. | |||
'''BALENA ETCHER''' can have a problem with writing the [https://github.com/christianhaitian/arkos/wiki ArkOS image]. | |||
== Disk Usage Analyzer == | |||
It is actually called [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Baobab Baobab]. | |||
== | == Check partition type == | ||
'''lsblk -f''' | |||
==== | == Use '''parted''' command to format a new hard disk == | ||
* [https:// | * The '''fdisk''' won’t create partitions larger than 2 TB. Use '''parted''' with GPT partition table. | ||
* '''lsblk''' (no sudo is needed) is useful to summarize/list all devices. After that we can use '''sudo parted /dev/sdX''' to print more detail on a device. | |||
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-manage-disk-partitions-using-parted-command/ How To Manage Disk Partitions Using Parted Command] | |||
* | * http://askubuntu.com/questions/517354/terminal-method-of-formatting-storage-drive. The bottomline is not to use '''fdisk''' since it does not support GPT. Use '''parted''' (the CLI brother of GParted). | ||
* http://www.tecmint.com/parted-command-to-create-resize-rescue-linux-disk-partitions/ | |||
* https://www. | * https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/fdisk-unable-to-create-partition-greater-2tb.html | ||
* | * https://trisquel.info/en/wiki/how-format-external-storage-device-using-parted | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install parted | |||
sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdb # find out the disk size | |||
sudo parted | |||
print | |||
select /dev/sdb | |||
mklabel myLabel | |||
mkpart primary ext4 0GB 128GB | |||
print | |||
quit | |||
lsblk | |||
sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb1 | |||
mkdir /mnt/newdisk | |||
sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/newdisk | |||
df -h | |||
</pre> | |||
== Gparted == | |||
It is best to use the latest release of GParted https://github.com/GNOME/gparted/. | |||
The gparted version on Mint 17.2 is 0.18.0 (Feb 19, 2014) while the current one is 0.28.1 (Feb 17, 2017). | |||
After I create a bootable USB drive, the partition format is fat32 (I use an old version of GParted to format the drive as fat32, and then I use unetbootin to create the bootable USB drive). | |||
If we want to use unetbootin, the USB drive has better to be pre-formatted as fat32 first for unetbootin to detect it. Once unetbootin detect the drive, we can use gparted to reformat it as NTFS before going to burn the Windows bootable USB drive. Read [https://askubuntu.com/questions/162174/how-do-i-use-unetbootin-to-make-a-bootable-windows-usb-installer How do I use Unetbootin to make a bootable Windows USB installer?]. | |||
=== | === Resize Active/Primary root Partition In Linux Using GParted Utility === | ||
[ | [https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-resize-active-primary-root-partition-in-linux-using-gparted-utility/ How To Resize Active/Primary root Partition In Linux Using GParted Utility]. Three utilities are introduced too. | ||
* '''e2fsck''': e2fsck is a file system check utility that automatically repair the file system for bad sectors, I/O errors related to HDD. | |||
* '''resize2fs''': The resize2fs program will resize ext2, ext3, or ext4 file systems. It can be used to enlarge or shrink an unmounted file system located on device. | |||
* '''e2image''': The e2image program will save critical ext2, ext3, or ext4 filesystem metadata located on device to a file specified by image-file. | |||
=== | === Change a partition's label === | ||
* A partition's '''label''' will determine the mounted directory when an external drive is connected to a machine | |||
* '''Gparted'''. Right click a partition -> Unmount. Right click the partition again -> Label File System. Apply. | |||
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/289480 What is the difference between a name and a label in gparted?] | |||
* [https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-name-label-a-partition-or-volume-on-linux How to label a partition or volume on Linux with e2label] | |||
=== | === parted utility === | ||
[https://www.2daygeek.com/how-to-manage-disk-partitions-using-parted-command/ How To Manage Disk Partitions Using Parted Command] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo parted /dev/sda print free | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
=== '''gparted''' on a 4TB disk === | |||
Get an error when I tried to create partitions on a 4T disk. Search 4TB gparted sectors exceeds the msdos-partition-table-imposed maximum of 4294967295 | |||
It seems it is necessary to use '''GPT''' instead of '''MBR/msdos''' as a partition table to overcome 2TB limitions. | |||
It is also a good idea to use a live gparted os since the one in Ubuntu may not be up-to-date and gparted takes forever to scan devices. When boot from live USB, we need to turn off the Ext hard disk first. | |||
Step1. Device -> Create a partition table -> GPT | |||
Step2. Create a new ext4 partition as you want. | |||
* http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2164361 | |||
* http://gparted-forum.surf4.info/viewtopic.php?id=14940 | |||
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/339041/cannot-resize-drive | |||
* http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/67835/change-partition-table-with-gparted | |||
Note: | |||
* The 4TB hard disk can be recognized and used normally in an internal hd in Ubuntu 12.04. | |||
* The 4TB hard disk can also be used in Windows 7 as an external hd if I formatted it (e.g. from gparted in Linux) as an NTFS partition. The Disk Management (command prompt -> diskmgnt.msc) shows it has 3726.02 GB (3726.02 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 = 4.000784e12 Bytes) capacity and the windows manager shows it is 3.63TB (3726.02/1024=3.638) total space. | |||
* It cannot be used as 4TB in the case when I use a docking station in Dell Precision T3500. Unsolved problem: | |||
** Running the command chown from root to user takes forever on 4T partition. | |||
** The ext dock station (StarTech) will halt the shutdown until I power off the station? | |||
Conclusion: | |||
* 4TB using NTFS works on Ubuntu. | |||
* rsync will not stop spinning for some reason even the command is finished (through StarTech dock station). | |||
Below is a screenshot I got from Gparted on a pre-formatted (NTFS) 4T portable drive from Seagate. It seems not harmful because I can still umount, change labels, etc on the disk. | |||
[[File:Gparted gpt.png|200px]] | |||
== Health check of the hdd: badblocks, dmesg, fsck == | |||
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-check-the-physical-health-of-a-usb-stick-flash-drive/ Linux check the physical health of a USB stick]. '''badblocks''' and '''f3''' tool. | |||
I got an input/output error when I use ''sudo rm'', ''sudo reboot'' or ''Ctrl + Del'' commands. | |||
When I use the power button to force shutdown, I could not boot again. The BIOS does find the hdd and the Ubuntu Live USB does find the internal hdd too. | |||
To force to reboot/shutdown, follow the suggestion [http://linoxide.com/how-tos/inputoutput-error-bad-blocks-how-to-restart-linux/ here] | |||
'''dmesg''' command shows there are a few bad sectors on that hdd. | |||
http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/37659/the-beginners-guide-to-linux-disk-utilities/ shows a few ways to run a health check on the hdd. The gnome disk utility cannot run S.M.A.R.T. on the external hdd. | |||
< | <pre> | ||
sudo badblocks -v /dev/sdb1 | |||
sudo badblocks /dev/sdb > /home/zainul/bad-blocks | |||
sudo fsck -l bad-blocks /dev/sdb | |||
</pre> | |||
sudo | |||
</ | |||
This article http://linoxide.com/linux-how-to/how-to-fix-repair-bad-blocks-in-linux/ talks about how to fix/repair bad blocks in Linux | |||
. | |||
This article http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/25902/what-does-this-hard-disk-error-message-mean-current-pending-sector-count talks about how to do with bad sectors. | |||
It is an indicator that hdd is going to die http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-hardware-18/34-bad-blocks-what-should-i-do-927224-print/. | |||
==== | == Force Check Root Filesystem using fsck During Reboot == | ||
* https://superuser.com/a/401312 | |||
* https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2016/03/forcefsck-on-reboot/ | |||
= Burn/Write an iso or img file to a USB flash drive = | |||
[http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows Official instruction] on www.ubuntu.com and from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tools_to_create_Live_USB_systems wikipedia]. | |||
* If your current OS is windows => [http://www.pendrivelinux.com/universal-usb-installer-easy-as-1-2-3/#button Universal USB Installer/Live Linux USB Creator]. | |||
* If your current OS is Ubuntu => [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStick#Creating_a_bootable_Ubuntu_USB_flash_drive_from_Ubuntu Several choices] like '''Startup Disk Creator/usb-creator''' ([[has an option on the GUI to erase the usb drive]]). If your ubuntu derivative does not have it, install it by sudo apt-get install usb-creator-gtk. UNETBOOTIN (no option to erase the USB so it can fail) or mkusb. | |||
* If your current OS is Mint => Right click the iso file and select Make bootable USB stick. No software to install. | |||
== Use dd == | |||
* [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-linux-dd-create-make-disk-image-commands/ How to make disk image with dd on Linux or Unix] | |||
First, get to know the USB drive device name like /dev/sdb. When using 'dd', the USB drive has to be unmounted (using 'umount' command, not click 'reject' button in File Manager). Note that this will irrevocably destroy all data on /dev/sdX. | |||
[ | The instruction can be found in a lot of places like [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/USB_Flash_Installation_Media Archlinux wiki] page. | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo fdisk -l | |||
sudo dd bs=4M if=xxx.img of=/dev/sdb && sync | |||
</pre> | |||
where /dev/sdb is a device name, not a partition name. We can also adjust bs to a smaller value like 1M, 4m. | |||
* [https://opensource.com/article/18/7/how-use-dd-linux Monitor dd operations]. Note for some reason it will stuck in the middle of process; the process bar stopped. And when it happened, 'Ctrl+c' will not stop immediately. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ sudo umount /dev/mmcblk0p1 | |||
$ sudo apt install pv | |||
$ sudo dd if=Downloads/ubuntu-18.04-desktop-amd64.iso | pv | sudo dd of=/dev/mmcblk0 | |||
</pre> | |||
[ | * [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-dd-command-show-progress-while-coping/ Monitor the progress], | ||
** adding a parameter '''status=progress''' in '''dd''' (not working on Ubuntu 14.04) | |||
** Linux '''dialog''' command | |||
** following [[Raspberry#Install_an_image_to_a_SD_card|Raspberry Pi]] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
</ | sudo pkill -USR1 -n -x dd | ||
</pre> | |||
For some reason when I use dd to create ubuntu 14.04 on usb drive, sudo gparted also gives me a Libparted warning ''/dev/sdc contains GPT signature, indicating that it has a GPT table. However, it does not have a valid fake msdos partition table, as it should... Is it a GPT partition table?'' messsage. If I click 'Yes', Gparted shows no partition on the usb drive??? Nevertheless, the usb drive can be used to boot into ubuntu 14.04. | |||
In another case, the gparted compalins the usb drive "Invalid partition table - recursive partition on /dev/sdb". Someone suggests to issue a dd command to erase a hard disk. | |||
==== | == use dd to erase a hard disk == | ||
The following command works on Live Ubuntu. We can use this method to erase a hard disk. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda bs=4M status=progress | |||
</pre> | |||
== Clone your linux hard drive == | |||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/2-methods-to-clone-your-linux-hard-drive/ How to Clone Your Linux Hard Drive: 4 Methods] | |||
== [https://etcher.io/ Etcher] - cross platform == | |||
For Ubuntu, there is no need to install the program. Just run the binary file (.AppImage). | |||
See https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/pi-sd-etcher/ | |||
[ | == [https://rufus.akeo.ie/ Rufus] == | ||
Rufus is a popular free and open source graphical tool to create bootable USB drives from Windows. It can be used to create not only bootable Windows drives from ISO files or disk images, but also create bootable Linux USB drives from Windows. | |||
* Windows OS is required to use Rufus | |||
* Create GPT (for UEFI) or MBR partition table. See [http://www.howtogeek.com/193669/whats-the-difference-between-gpt-and-mbr-when-partitioning-a-drive/ What’s the Difference Between GPT and MBR When Partitioning a Drive?] | |||
* https://github.com/hirotakaster/baytail-bootia32.efi | |||
* [https://medium.com/@tomac/installing-ubuntu-mint-linux-on-onda-820w-tablet-727747a376b#.o4osscrty installing Ubuntu / Mint Linux on Onda 820w tablet] | |||
* It successfully burns ESXi and Ubuntu iso images to USB drives while the USB drives created by the 'dd' command does not work?? | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/08/rufus-creating-persistent-storage-live.html?m=1 Rufus: Creating A Persistent Storage Live USB With Ubuntu Or Debian From Windows] | |||
== [https://unetbootin.github.io/ UNETBOOTIN] - cross platform == | |||
[https:// | For creating a Windows bootable USB drive, we cannot use Etcher program. On UDoo-X86 [https://www.udoo.org/get-started-x86/ Get started] site, it suggests to use Unetbootin if the host machine is Ubuntu. NOTE. the USB drive has to be formatted as FAT32 (this can be done by '''GParted''' program); otherwise Unetbootin cannot recognize the drive. Unfortunately the USB drive can not be booted from UDoo-X86. See also the trick by [https://askubuntu.com/questions/162174/how-do-i-use-unetbootin-to-make-a-bootable-windows-usb-installer this post]. | ||
* The command ''sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt'' should be '''sudo mkdir /media/$USER/usb; sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /media/$USER/usb''' where /dev/sdc1 should be changed appropriately | |||
* This approach works | |||
/ | * Rufus is good but not always (eg the USB drive is not bootable??) | ||
The GUI is written by Qt so the program is cross-platform. See its [http://sourceforge.net/p/unetbootin/wiki/compile/ wiki]. | |||
[ | |||
The following is a screenshot of the contents of xubuntu 12.04. '''The usb drive needs to be formatted to fat32''' on Windows OS to repair partition table error. The partition table error was discovered when I use sudo gparted program to view the USB drive. | |||
Note that Unetbootin (Windows & Linux) and Universal USB installer (Windows only) are quite similar although Universal USB installer provides more options in its interface while Unetbootin does not have any other options. | |||
[[File:XUbuntu12044 USBdrive.png|200px]] | |||
[[File:XUbuntu gparted.png|200px]] | |||
=== | == Universal USB Installer/UUI == | ||
http://www.pendrivelinux.com/universal-usb-installer-easy-as-1-2-3/ | |||
I first used ''dd'' command to successfully created a xubuntu 14.04 usb drive but there seems to be a problem with the partition since the gparted program will give a warning message about that and also the whole 16GB was used when I insert the drive onto a Windows machine. | |||
Note that the '''fdisk''' utility cannot handle this new partition format so we have to use the '''gparted''' program. | |||
Open the '''gparted''' program. Use it MULTIPLE TIMES to create a partition table (Device -> Create Partition Table...). Then we create a FAT32 partition with all of the space. After that, we can use the UUI program to create an Ubuntu USB drive. | |||
The following screenshots are from a 16GB USB drive. | |||
[[File:UUIa.png|200px]] [[File:UUIb.png|200px]] | |||
== | == Mint mintStick == | ||
[https://pkgs.org/download/mintstick mintstick]. Linux Mint mintStick DEB package can be used in Ubuntu 18.04. | |||
== USB Drive Writing Speed == | |||
Using the dd command | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/media/brb/USB\ STICK/test.img bs=100M count=1 oflag=dsync | |||
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/media/brb/USB\ STICK/test.img bs=100M count=10 oflag=dsync | |||
</pre> | |||
Some data from plugging into USB 2.0 slot. Partition format may be FAT32 or Ext3/4. | |||
* Staples 128GB: 6.7M/s when writing 200M (fat32 formatted by [[Linux#Format_a_USB_drive|USB Stick Formatter]]). 161M/s when writing 200M, 174M/s when writing 400M, 9M/s when writing 800M (NTFS). | |||
* Toshiba 16GB USB 3.0: 9M/s when writing 200M, 5.6M/s when writing 400M, 3.9M/s when writing 800M. | |||
* Samsung 128GB USB 3.0 flash drive fit: 7.6M/s when writing 200M, 12M/s when writing 400M, 6.7M/s when writing 800M, 10M/s when writing 1600M. | |||
* Seagate Backup Plus 4T: 25-27 M/s when writing on ext4 and 500-750 M/s on exFAT. | |||
- | * WD MyPassort 1T: 154M/s when writing 200M, 156M/s when writing 400M, 168M/s when writing 800M (NTFS/exFAT). 22~24M/s when writing on ext3. | ||
* WD Mybook 4T: 21.4 MB/s when writing 1G. | |||
Conclusions: | |||
/ | # USB flash drive is slow compared to USB portable hard drive. | ||
# Large writing will become slower on USB flash drive but not on hard drive. | |||
# <strike>NTFS/exFAT is several times faster than ext3/ext4</strike>. The testing result here is false b/s caching. | |||
# The test result can fluctuate a lot when using the dd command with count=1. | |||
Cautions: | |||
* When I use the '''cp''' command to copy a 4.3GB iso file to USB flash drive, it took less than 1 minute. But after I eject the drive (disappear from NEMO Windows Manager/taskbar notification), its LED keeps flashing. A message "Writing data to USB DISK 2.0 Don't unplug until finished" appears on top right corner of my desktop. If I unplug it now, the OS will pop up an error message "Error ejecting /dev/sdc ...". This makes me suspect the testing results here. In fact, when I try to plug in the flash drive, the OS cannot mount the drive. I need to go back to use the USB Stick Formatter to reformat the drive. | |||
= Multiple boot USB = | |||
== ventoy == | |||
* https://github.com/ventoy/Ventoy | |||
* [https://ostechnix.com/how-to-create-multiboot-usb-drives-with-ventoy-in-linux/ How To Create Multiboot USB Drives With Ventoy In Linux] | |||
== [http://www.pendrivelinux.com/yumi-multiboot-usb-creator/ YUMI] == | |||
YUMI works much like Universal USB Installer, except it can be used to install more than one distribution to run Live from your USB. | |||
It can be used to create a Multiboot USB Flash Drive containing multiple operating systems, antivirus utilities, disc cloning, diagnostic tools, and more. | |||
== [http://multibootusb.org/ MultiBootUSB] == | |||
The program is included by LXLE. | |||
It supports [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LiveUsbPendrivePersistent persistence] up to 4GB for ubuntu and its derivatives. | |||
It also supports multi-thread (check by top or htop). The %cpu > 100. | |||
It will take space as needed. So we can still use the USB drive to write data. | |||
* http://multibootusb.org/news/ | |||
* https://github.com/mbusb/multibootusb | |||
* https://github.com/mbusb/multibootusb/wiki/User-Guide | |||
For some reason, the USB drive could not be boot after I use the program. The ubuntu does not show/recognize it though gparted still finds it. Maybe it is because the partition format (ext4 by gparted) is right. For YUMI program, it says to use fat16/fat32/NTFS; otherise syslinux will fail. But it seems not to help:( Maybe it is the partition table (I choose gpt instead of the default msdos). | |||
[ | == Automatically Mount USB Drives On Ubuntu Or Debian Server == | ||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/04/automatically-mount-usb-drives-on.html Automatically Mount USB Drives On Ubuntu Or Debian Server With USBmount] | |||
= | = Determine/install/switch Window Manager = | ||
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Window_manager | |||
* | * http://askubuntu.com/questions/72549/how-to-determine-which-window-manager-is-running | ||
* | * http://askubuntu.com/questions/227607/different-display-and-window-managers-for-ubuntu-and-how-to-install-them | ||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install wmctrl | |||
wmctrl -m | |||
sudo apt-get install <pkg-name> | |||
<pkg-name> --replace | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
On an old/new Ubuntu the default window manager is '''Compiz'''/[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNOME_Shell GNOME Shell], for xubuntu it is '''Xfwm4''' and for BBB it is '''Openbox'''. We can use the '''neofetch''' command. | |||
== | = Jenkins = | ||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-jenkins-with-apache-on-ubuntu-16-04/ How to Install Jenkins Automation Server with Apache on Ubuntu 16.04] | |||
== | = Automatic update, unattended upgrade = | ||
* https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/automatic-updates.html | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/auto-updates-ubuntu/ How to Handle Automatic Updates in Ubuntu] | |||
* http://www.howtogeek.com/228690/how-to-enable-automatic-system-updates-in-ubuntu/ | |||
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/automatic-security-update-unattended-upgrades-ubuntu-debian/ How To Set up Automatic Security Update (Unattended Upgrades) on Debian/Ubuntu] | |||
* Update log '''more /var/log/dpkg.log''' | |||
* To check the history including the commands used to run apt update, see '''less /var/log/apt/history.log''' | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ tail /var/log/apt/history.log | |||
Start-Date: 2018-12-05 06:38:19 | |||
Commandline: /usr/bin/unattended-upgrade | |||
Install: ... | |||
Upgrade: ... | |||
... | |||
Start-Date: 2018-12-21 06:18:59 | |||
Commandline: /usr/bin/unattended-upgrade | |||
Upgrade: linux-libc-dev:amd64 (4.4.0-140.166, 4.4.0-141.167) | |||
End-Date: 2018-12-21 06:19:00 | |||
</pre> | |||
* Software & Updates GUI | |||
** By default, it will check automatically check updates every day. I changed it to every week. | |||
** When there are security updates, it will download and install automatically by default. Looks good. | |||
** When there are other updates, it will display weekly. | |||
* [https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2016/02/how-to-disable-automatic-update-ubuntu How to Disable Automatic Updates On Ubuntu] | |||
==== | == How to find out if/why my Ubuntu/Debian Linux server needs a reboot/restart == | ||
[https://www. | * [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-find-out-if-my-ubuntudebian-linux-server-needs-a-reboot/ How to find out if my Ubuntu/Debian Linux server needs a reboot] '''cat /var/run/reboot-required''' (in fact, we just need to check if the file exists or not) | ||
* To view the list of packages that require a restart with: '''more /var/run/reboot-required.pkgs''' | |||
* My cases are new initrd.img-5.4.X-XX-generic and vmlinuz-5.4.X-XX-generic (Linux kernel) files in /boot directory. [https://askubuntu.com/a/935899 Is there unused `initrd.img` to remove?], [https://serverascode.com/2019/05/17/install-and-boot-older-kernel-ubuntu.html Install and Boot an Older Kernel in Ubuntu], [https://linoxide.com/linux-how-to/fixing-broken-initrd-image-linux/ How to Fix a Broken Initrd Image in Linux], [https://askubuntu.com/a/574016 Safely remove old files in /boot], [https://www.jamescoyle.net/how-to/1974-how-to-fix-a-full-boot-partition-on-linux How To Fix A Full /boot Partition on Linux], [https://linoxide.com/booting/remove-old-kernel-versions-boot-menu/ How to Remove Old kernel Versions from Boot on Ubuntu 18.04]. | |||
* Check the output of 'uname -a' before and after the reboot. | |||
<ul> | |||
<li> | |||
See also the [[Grub|Grub]] page. When a new initrid image is downloaded, '''/boot/grub/grub.cfg''' will be updated to use the newest image. | |||
<pre> | |||
grep initrd.img /boot/grub/grub.cfg -n | |||
</pre> | |||
</li> | |||
</ul> | |||
* I found the reboot reason is most likely the update of kernels (ls -lt /boot). See https://www.ubuntuupdates.org/. | |||
* '''less /var/log/apt/history.log''' to see the update history (including unattended-upgrade, linux-headers-VERSION-generic). | |||
* Though I have enabled '''livepatch''', when I ssh into my machine the console still shows "System restart required". Why? | |||
** https://ubuntu.com/security/livepatch | |||
** [https://askubuntu.com/a/844693 Instance with Canonical Livepatch Service requires restart] | |||
** [https://www.maketecheasier.com/how-to-avoid-server-reboots-with-ubuntu-livepatch/ How to Avoid Server Reboots with Ubuntu Livepatch] | |||
** [https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/livepatch-faq/24760 Livepatch FAQ - Livepatch - Ubuntu Community Hub] | |||
** [https://nobuto-m.github.io/post/2017/knowing-what-services-need-restart-with-needrestart/ Knowing what services need restart with “needrestart”] | |||
Raspberry Pi | |||
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-find-out-if-raspberry-pi-linux-os-needs-a-reboot/ How to find out if Raspberry PI Linux OS needs a reboot] | |||
[ | == Shell example to get notification when you need to reboot == | ||
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-find-out-if-raspberry-pi-linux-os-needs-a-reboot/ How to find out if Raspberry PI Linux OS needs a reboot] | |||
= | = After running update/upgrade in Ubuntu = | ||
== | == Virtualbox == | ||
Virtualbox does not work. After initial fix, the guest machine cannot connect to internet:( | |||
==== [http://askubuntu.com/questions/ | == Crashes network manager (no internet connection, no applet) == | ||
The solution on [http://askubuntu.com/questions/727127/last-upgrade-crashes-network-manager-no-internet-connection-no-applet here] works on my Ubuntu 14.04.4. Download 3 deb files and install them (downgrade packages). | |||
== | = Printer setup = | ||
* [https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/l-lpic1-108-4/index.html Manage printers and printing] | |||
Printers -> Add -> Network Printer -> Find Network Printer (wait a little bit). | |||
It shows two matches. Brother HL-5250DN (AppSocket/JetDirect network printer via DNS-SD) & Brother HL-5250DN series (LPD network printer via DNS-SD). The first one does not work and the 2nd one works. | |||
Another way is to type the IP approach (Enter URI). Enter 192.168.1.88:9100 -> Select printer from database -> Brother. There are two possibilities: HL-5250DN & HL-5250DN for CUPS. The first one does not work and the 2nd one works. | |||
It is strange that when I try to print from Firefox, it shows 3 options (Print to file, BRN_xxxxx, HL-5250DN). The BRN_XXXXX shows the status is online but it cannot be printed. | |||
== | == Web interface (port 631) == | ||
* [https:// | * [https://askubuntu.com/questions/23936/how-do-you-administer-cups-remotely-using-the-web-interface How do you administer CUPS remotely using the web interface?] | ||
* | * [[Raspberry#Connect_your_dumb_printer_to_your_home_network|Connect your dumb printer to your home network by Raspberry Pi]] | ||
== | == Troubleshooting == | ||
* [https://support.system76.com/articles/add-a-printer-pop/ Pop_OS].If the printer stops working, open the Printers Application again and click the gear icon, and select Remove Printer to remove the printer and its settings. Repeat the steps above to add the printer and try printing the test page again. This process usually resolves many printing issues. | |||
* '''io.elementary.appcenter''' took 2GB memory on Pop_OS 20.04; see [https://www.reddit.com/r/pop_os/comments/h0tgzn/pop_shop_not_closing_properly_sometimes/ '''Pop Shop''' not closing properly (sometimes)] | |||
* [[#LPR_.26_Cupswrapper|Download driver from manufacturer website]] | |||
* To look at the CUPS (Common Unix Printing System) configuration and status window, please open this webpage: http://localhost:631. The "Help" menu provides help for lots of printer commands. | |||
* [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DebuggingPrintingProblems Debugging Printing Problems] Ubuntu | |||
** '''avahi-browse -a -v -t -r ''' can show the printer IP | |||
== Deep sleeping == | |||
* [https://medium.com/@watsonpitter26/how-do-i-get-my-brother-printer-out-of-deep-sleep-mode-2fc14e2ab9d6 How do I get my brother printer out of deep sleep mode] | |||
* [https://help.brother-usa.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/151825/~/unable-to-print-after-the-machine-has-entered-deep-sleep---windows Unable to print after the machine has entered "Deep Sleep" - Windows] | |||
* [https://help.brother-usa.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/153110/~/unable-to-print-after-the-machine-has-entered-deep-sleep---macintosh Unable to print after the machine has entered "Deep Sleep" - Macintosh] | |||
== Command line == | |||
* | * '''lpstat''' | ||
* | ** '''lpstat -t''': see the status for all of the printers on the system, as well as the scheduler and all jobs | ||
* | ** '''lpstat -p''': Display all installed printers | ||
* | ** '''lpstat -a''': Display only those printers that are currently accepting print requests. | ||
* | ** '''lpstat -o''': Display all active print jobs | ||
* | * '''lp''' | ||
** '''lp example.pdf''': print a single example.pdf file on your default printer | |||
** '''lp -d MFCL2700DW example.pdf''': specify a printer via the -d switch: | |||
** Two-sided printing: '''lp -o sides=two-sided-long-edge example.pdf''' | |||
** '''lp -P 1,3,5-7,16 example.pdf''' : Print certain pages | |||
** man lp: Help | |||
* '''lpadmin''' | |||
** '''lpadmin -x''': Delete a printer. PS I cannot delete a printer either using the GUI or the command line:( | |||
== LPR & Cupswrapper* == | |||
* [https://opensource.com/article/21/9/print-files-linux Print files from your Linux terminal] | |||
# | * [https://askubuntu.com/questions/383515/whats-the-difference-between-lpr-and-cupswrapper-drivers-how-to-install-printe What's the difference between LPR and cupswrapper drivers? How to install printer drivers?] | ||
# | * [http://support.brother.com/g/b/producttop.aspx?c=eu_ot&lang=en&prod=mfcl2710dw_us_eu_as Brother MFC-L2710DW] driver download & manual. It looks this is 2015 product. | ||
** '''lpstat -t''' to check the status for CUPS printer OR | |||
** '''Alt+F2''' and enter '''system-config-printer''' | |||
** Deb version | |||
** The deb version only has i386 version? | |||
** [https://youtu.be/ys5VqAEqVII How to install brother Network printer on ubuntu] 2017 | |||
** [https://faithtechlife.com/2015/06/03/setting-up-brother-mfc-l2700dw-on-ubuntu/ Setting Up Brother MFC-L2700DW on Ubuntu 14.04] | |||
* From Brother's website (shell script). See also [https://notebook.thriftechs.com/2017/11/installing-brother-mfc-l2700dw-as-network-printer-on-ubuntu/ INSTALLING BROTHER MFC-L2700DW AS NETWORK PRINTER ON UBUNTU 16.04], or [https://kbpdfstudio.qoppa.com/install-printer-driver-on-linux/ this post] from PDF Studio for step-by-step instruction with screenshots. | |||
*# Download the '''Driver Install Tool''' (linux-brprinter-installer-*.*.*-*.gz) under Utilities instead of Linux Printer Driver (deb package). | |||
*# Open a terminal window. | |||
*# cd Downloads | |||
*# gunzip linux-brprinter-installer-*.*.*-*.gz | |||
*# su bash linux-brprinter-installer-*.*.*-* "Brother machine name"; e.g. sudo bash linux-brprinter-installer-2.2.0-1 MFC-L2700DW | |||
*# The driver installation will start. Follow the installation screen directions. When you see the message '''Will you specify the DeviceURI ?''', For USB Users: Choose N(No) '''For Network Users: Choose Y(Yes)''' and DeviceURI number (ipp://BRWFC017C4B27C8.local:631/ipp/print ) or the "Specify IP address" choice (192.168.1.89). | |||
*# The install process may take some time. Please wait until it is complete. | |||
*# http://192.168.1.89:631. The [https://support.brother.com/g/b/faqend.aspx?c=us&lang=en&prod=mfcl2710dw_us_eu_as&faqid=faq00002496_002 default password] is '''initpass''' | |||
* It seems Ubuntu 18.04 can automatically detect the MFC-L2700DW network printer. | |||
* I use this method to install the driver on Ubuntu 18.04 and 20.04. | |||
* I update to the latest version using ios app (2020-04-20). I tried more than 1 time. | |||
* Some commands | |||
<pre> | |||
$ lpstat -R # check queue | |||
</pre> | |||
[[:File:PrinterInstall.png]] | |||
== Paper Jam == | |||
* | [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1oYP0GCM_Mw Brother MFCL2710DW - Clearing paper jam errors] | ||
== Drum == | |||
* [http://support.brother.com/g/b/faqend.aspx?prod=hl5250dn_all&c=eu_ot&lang=en&faqid=faq00000154_022 Replace the drum unit] | |||
* https://youtu.be/KpK3gDJTF3k | |||
= | = Graphics driver = | ||
* | * https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BinaryDriverHowto/Nvidia By default Ubuntu will use the open source video driver '''Nouveau''' for your NVIDIA graphics card. This driver lacks support for 3D acceleration and may not work with the very latest video cards or technologies from NVIDIA. | ||
* [https:// | * [https://itsfoss.com/fix-ubuntu-freezing/ Fixing Ubuntu Freezing at Boot Time]. Ubuntu 18.04. Don't use open source version of NVIDIA drivers. Use proprietary NVIDIA drivers. | ||
* http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-updated-and-optimized-open-graphics-drivers-radeon-intel-and-nvidia-on-ubuntu-15-0414-04.html | |||
* http://www. | * http://www.howtogeek.com/242045/how-to-get-the-latest-nvidia-amd-or-intel-graphics-drivers-on-ubuntu/ | ||
* | * http://www.binarytides.com/linux-get-gpu-information/ | ||
* | |||
< | GPU info | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ lspci -vnn | grep VGA -A 12 | |||
# OR | |||
$ lshw -numeric -C display | |||
</pre> | |||
sudo | To check hardware acceleration | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
# If glxinfo is not find, run sudo apt-get install mesa-utils | |||
$ glxinfo | grep OpenGL | |||
</pre> | |||
Under Ubuntu-Unity, we can search Additional Drivers to install propriety party drivers instead of using X.org. | |||
On Dell T3600, it shows (pay attention to the line '''driver=nouveau'''). See also [https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/InstallNouveau/ Installing Nouveau on your Linux computer]. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ sudo lshw -C video | |||
</ | [sudo] password for brb: | ||
*-display | |||
description: VGA compatible controller | |||
product: GF108GL [Quadro 600] | |||
vendor: NVIDIA Corporation | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
If I change to use the nvidia driver on T3600 which has NVIDIA Quadro 600, the GLX error will happen (OpenGL related. Some programs like Qt Creator, Blender will not be able to run). See [https://taichimd.us/mediawiki/index.php/Qt#Could_not_initialize_GLX._Aborted the detail]. | |||
== AMD vs NVIDIA == | |||
[http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/use-amd-nvidia-gpus-linux/ Should You Use AMD or NVIDIA GPUs on Linux?] | |||
= Autostart a program after logging into your desktop = | |||
<ol> | |||
<li>'''~/.config/autostart/''' (hidden directory) | |||
Add .desktop files to here to have programs start automatically at startup. These .desktop files are application shortcuts — you can often create them by dragging-and-dropping an application onto your desktop or even just into the ~/.config/autostart/ window. I am using this way to auto start conky; see [[Conky|here]]. [https://askubuntu.com/a/81385 How can I add new autostart programs in Lubuntu?] | |||
If you’re not using a desktop environment check out '''~/.bash_profile''' file. | |||
</li> | |||
<li>'''/etc/xdg/autostart''' | |||
</li> | |||
<li>search 'Startup Applications Preferences' in Dash/Menu/Preferences. I have 1) Calibre 2) Dropbox 3) SSH Key Agent (/usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon --start --components=ssh) . For Lubuntu, this option is available on version 19.04+. | |||
</li> | |||
</ol> | |||
Resources: | |||
* http://www.howtogeek.com/228467/how-to-make-a-program-run-at-startup-on-any-computer/ | |||
* https://developer.toradex.com/knowledge-base/how-to-autorun-application-at-the-start-up-in-linux | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/48321/how-do-i-start-applications-automatically-on-login How do I start applications automatically on login?] | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/11/how-to-launch-startup-applications-with.html How To Launch Startup Applications With A Delay On Linux] | |||
= Auto start services on boot = | |||
* https://geekflare.com/how-to-auto-start-services-on-boot-in-linux/ | |||
* https://askubuntu.com/questions/9382/how-can-i-configure-a-service-to-run-at-startup | |||
* [[#Make_script_run_at_boot_time_with_init.d_directory|Make script run at boot time with init.d directory]] | |||
On Ubuntu (Let’s say script name is nginx), | |||
# Copy the script in '''/etc/init.d/''' folder | |||
# Execute the below command | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
update-rc.d nginx defaults | |||
</pre> | |||
# Reboot the server to ensure services are started. | |||
= Take screenshots (and edit them) = | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/taking_a_screenshot | |||
* [https://www.debugpoint.com/screenshot-apps-linux/ 10 Best Modern Screenshot Apps for Linux] 2023/12/28 | |||
== gnome-screenshot (preinstalled in Ubuntu) == | |||
* [https://linuxhint.com/screenshots_ubuntu/ The Best Methods to Take Screenshots in Ubuntu 22.04] | |||
* | * [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/taking-screenshots-in-linux-using-gnome-screenshot/ A comprehensive guide to taking screenshots in Linux using gnome-screenshot] | ||
* | {{Pre}} | ||
# Current window | |||
gnome-screenshot -w | |||
# an area | |||
gnome-screenshot -a | |||
# delay | |||
gnome-screenshot --delay=[SECONDS] | |||
# interactive mode | |||
gnome-screenshot -i | |||
[ | # directly save your screenshot | ||
gnome-screenshot --file=[FILENAME] | |||
# copy to the clipboard | |||
gnome-screenshot -c | |||
</pre> | |||
== | == [http://shutter-project.org/ Shutter] (removed) == | ||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/10/shutter-removed-from-ubuntu-1810-and.html Shutter screenshot tool was removed from Debian Unstable and Ubuntu 18.10 ]. Consider '''flameshot'''. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# https://launchpad.net/~shutter/+archive/ubuntu/ppa | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:shutter/ppa | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install shutter | |||
</pre> | |||
* After we launch Shutter, the tool sits at the (upper-right) Ubuntu system tray | |||
* The built-in editor (click '''Edit''' button on the rhs) is convenient but limited ('''GIMP''' is more powerful but complicated). Tools includes | |||
** Select item to move or resize it | |||
** Draw a freehand line | |||
** Highlighter | |||
** Draw a straight line | |||
** Draw an arrow | |||
** Draw a rectangle | |||
** Draw an ellipse | |||
** Add a text | |||
** Censor portions of the screenshot | |||
** Pixelize selected areas | |||
** Crop | |||
* [http://shutter-project.org/preview/screenshots/ screenshots] | |||
* Each taken screenshots are placed in different tabs in Shutter | |||
* If we close Shutter, the unsaved screenshots are still there because by default it automatically save files in the ~/Pictures folder. We can modify the settings from Edit -> Preferences. | |||
* It also supports 'cropping'. Click 'Edit' button, Tool -> Crop, Select a region, Click 'Crop' button on the RHS. | |||
== ksnip == | |||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/02/ksnip-160-screenshot-software-released.html Ksnip 1.6.0 Screenshot Software Released With System Tray Icon, Global Hotkeys, Watermarks And More ] | |||
Note the snap version of the program does not allow me to save the file? | |||
The deb [https://github.com/ksnip/ksnip/releases binary file] works perfectly. | |||
. | |||
To crop an image, click the "Crop" icon. It will select the border of the image ready for cropping. All you have to do is drag and resize the rectangle. See a screenshot below. | |||
[[:File:Ksnip.png]] | |||
== [https://github.com/lupoDharkael/flameshot flameshot] (good replacement of shutter) == | |||
* https://flameshot.js.org/#/ | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/take-screenshot-linux/ Best Tools For Taking and Editing Screenshots in Linux] | |||
* It also has a command line function like scrot. | |||
* The text tool cannot change the font size? | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-take-screenshots-flameshot-linux/ How to Capture and Edit Screenshots on Linux With Flameshot] | |||
== | == Annotator == | ||
[ | * [https://itsfoss.com/annotator/ Annotator: Open-Source App for Linux to Easily Add Essential Annotations to Your Images] | ||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/install-use-annotator-linux/ How to Install and Use Annotator: An Image Annotation Tool for Linux] | |||
== GIMP == | |||
File -> Create -> Screenshot | |||
== | == '''import''' == | ||
command from ImageMagick | |||
== '''scrot''' == | |||
from scrot package. Note that by default the title bar will not be included (see the '-b' option below). | |||
It seems '''scrot''' is better for my need. | |||
Note: there seems no way to copy the screenshot to the clipboard. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
scrot -c -d 5 screenshot.png # -c is count down, -d is delay | |||
scrot -b -c -d 5 -u screenshot.png # -b is title bar, -u is the current foc'u'sed window | |||
scrot -u # current window | |||
scrot -s screenshot.png # select an area | |||
scrot --thumb 50 # 50% of the original screenshot | |||
scrot abc.png -e 'gthumb $n' # open gThumb to open the file after taking the screenshot | |||
# sudo apt-get install mirage # 105 kB | |||
mirage screenshot.png # view the image | |||
scrot -b -d 5 '%Y:%m:%d:%H:%M:%S.png' -e 'mv $f ~/Desktop/' | |||
</pre> | |||
See [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-take-screenshots-in-linux-with-scrot/ How to take screenshots in Linux with scrot]. | |||
== [https://screencloud.net/ ScreenCloud] == | |||
* Binary for Ubuntu 16.04 is available | |||
* https://github.com/olav-st/screencloud (Compiling instruction is given there) | |||
* http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2016/06/force-install-screencloud-ubuntu-16-04 | |||
== Hotshots == | |||
Only supports Ubuntu up to 14.04. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntuhandbook1/apps | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install hotshots | |||
</pre> | |||
== | == mtPaint, MyPaint, Pinta == | ||
[[#Paint.NET_like_program|Paint.NET_like_program]] | |||
Either MyPaint (no tool) or Pinta (can't control font size) is not good at adding text to an image. GIMP is still the king. | |||
= Screencaster/Record desktop = | |||
* https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScreenCasts (seems outdated) | |||
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/4428/how-to-create-a-screencast | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/ways-can-record-desktop-linux-raspberry-pi/ 7 Ways to Record Your Desktop Screen on Linux and Raspberry Pi]: Kazam, Simple Screen Recorder, ScreenStudio, RecordMyDesktop, VLC, Asciinema, OBS Studio. | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/897844 How to Record Screen and internal Audio?] (simplescreenrecorder works for recording the entire screen & a fixed rectangle but not a window!) | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-linux-screen-recording-apps/ The 8 Best Linux Screen Recording Apps to Capture Your Screen] | |||
The | == OBS Studio (cross platform) == | ||
* https://obsproject.com/, https://youtu.be/55sP4ytE1uc?t=189 | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/screen-record-obs-wayland/ Screen Recording in Linux With OBS and Wayland] | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-obs-studio-live-streaming-alternatives/ The 5 Best OBS Studio Alternatives for Live Streaming] | |||
== Blue Recorder == | |||
* https://github.com/xlmnxp/blue-recorder. Snap and Flathub. Blue Recorder captures both audio and video at 60fps stright out of the box. You can define a delay. You can hide the app's interface. | |||
== | == Peek == | ||
https://github.com/phw/peek 9.9k star, latest release 2020. It is possible to use Peek in a GNOME Shell Wayland session using XWayland by launching Peek with the X11 backend. | |||
It | == VokaScreenNG == | ||
* https://github.com/vkohaupt/vokoscreenNG 895 star, latest release Oct 01, 2023 | |||
* [https://www.debugpoint.com/screen-recorders-linux-wayland/ Best Screen Recorders for Wayland in Linux (Compared & Tested)] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/vokoscreenng/ VokoscreenNG: Open Source Screencasting Tool] | |||
* It is used in [https://youtu.be/T29fMv5OoFA youtube videos] of QML tutorials. | |||
== [https://launchpad.net/kazam kazam] == | |||
It seems Kazam does not support Wayland yet. So use OBS Studio instead. | |||
Although Kazam can do screenshots, [[#Shutter|Shutter]] (can sit on the system tray) is more convenient for taking care of screenshots. | |||
The default frame rate is only 15. If we want to increase it, go to File -> Preferences -> Screencast tab. | |||
When recording, it will have 5 seconds (adjustable) to wait. After launching Kazam, it will show an icon (video recorder) on the top-right corner. Keyboard shortcuts are available. For example (Windows key=Super key), | |||
* Record=Ctrl + Windows + r, | |||
* Finish=Ctrl + Windows + f, | |||
* Pause=Ctrl + Windows + p. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install kazam | |||
</pre> | |||
You can choose fullscreen, window or a specific area. However, if you want to change the window or area once you have chosen one, you have to restart the program. One nice thing with Kazam is the output video is in .mp4 format (not ogv or ogg format). For a 14-seconds video with 15 frames per second (default), the video file size is 1.4MB. | |||
A good introduction [https://www.maketecheasier.com/create-screencast-videos-using-kazam/ Create Screencast Videos With Ease Using Kazam] | |||
== [http://www.maartenbaert.be/simplescreenrecorder/ SimpleScreenRecorder] (Qt based) == | |||
[https://github.com/MaartenBaert/ssr source code] and [https://beeznest.wordpress.com/2014/10/16/the-comprehensive-guide-to-screencasting-in-ubuntu-14-04/ this article] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:maarten-baert/simplescreenrecorder | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install simplescreenrecorder | |||
</pre> | |||
== [https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Istanbul Istanbul] == | |||
Saved files are in the '''ogg''' format. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install istanbul | |||
</pre> | |||
== [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScreenCasts/RecordMyDesktop RecordMyDesktop] == | |||
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0Tn3Z8OklQ. | |||
** The recorded video is in the '''ogv''' format. | |||
** It can be run from the command line. | |||
** We need to run '''ffmpeg''' to convert video to flv (Quality seems to be reduced) OR we can use online service (http://video.online-convert.com/convert-to-mp4) to convert ogv file to mp4 file (Same quality as I can tell). | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install recordmydesktop gtk-recordmydesktop | |||
</pre> | |||
== Create animated Gif of a screencast == | |||
* [http://askubuntu.com/questions/107726/how-to-create-animated-gif-images-of-a-screencast Create animated Gif of a screencast] and the command line tool [https://github.com/jclem/gifify/ Gifify]. | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/record-screen-to-animated-gif-on-linux/ How to record a region of your desktop as animated GIF on Linux] | |||
* [https://vishalvyas.com/how-to-create-animated-gifs-with-peek-on-ubuntu/ How to create Animated GIFs with Peek on Ubuntu] | |||
=== | = Second screen = | ||
* | == Deskreen: share an app or the desktop == | ||
* | * cf [[Remote_desktop#RustDesk|RustDesk]] (teamviewer like) | ||
* cf [https://anydesk.org/en/solutions/personal-user AnyDesk] (teamviewer like) | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/01/deskreen-makes-any-device-with-web.html Deskreen Makes Any Device With A Web Browser A Second Screen For Your Computer], [https://smile.amazon.com/Headless-Display-Emulator-Headless-1920x1080-Generation/dp/B06XT1Z9TF amazon] | |||
* [https://www.reviewgeek.com/68635/the-free-deskreen-app-turns-your-old-tablet-into-a-wireless-monitor/ The Free Deskreen App Turns Your Old Tablet Into a Wireless Monitor] | |||
* Android: | |||
** Firefox works better than Brave/Duckduckgo on Onyx Note Air. I can exit the full screen mode by swiping up to get open apps and then clicking on FF. Dasung Non-Reader is much slow compared to Note Air. | |||
* IOS: | |||
** Safari works well. The latency is low and there is an "X" on top-left corner to exit the full screen mode. Chrome does not work for some reason. | |||
== VirtScreen == | |||
https://github.com/kbumsik/VirtScreen | |||
== Mirroring display/screen == | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/05/turn-your-tablet-or-phone-into-graphic.html Turn Your Tablet Or Phone Into A Graphic Tablet / Touch Screen For Your Desktop With Weylus] | |||
= Wallpaper = | |||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/305974/how-to-use-bings-background-of-the-day-as-your-ubuntu-wallpaper/ How to Use Bing’s Background of the Day as Your Ubuntu Wallpaper] | |||
* Download the wallpapers from other distributions like | |||
** Linux Mint. [https://winaero.com/install-previous-wallpapers-linux-mint-19/ Install Previous Wallpapers in Linux Mint 19]. '''/usr/share/backgrounds/''' | |||
** Elementary | |||
** Budgie | |||
* [https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Wallpapers Fedora wallpapers] | |||
= Customize the desktop = | |||
== | == Dock == | ||
[https:// | * [https://itsfoss.com/customize-ubuntu-dock/ The Definitive Guide to Using and Customizing the Dock in Ubuntu] | ||
* [https://itsfoss.com/make-ubuntu-look-like-macos/ How to Make Ubuntu Look Like macOS in 5 Easy Steps] | |||
* Install Cairo-Dock. | |||
== | == Show date in top bar of desktop == | ||
* https:// | * [https://askubuntu.com/questions/1040306/how-to-show-date-in-top-bar-of-deskop-in-ubuntu-18-04-lts Ubuntu 18.04] <syntaxhighlight lang='bash' inline> | ||
dconf write /org/gnome/desktop/interface/clock-show-date 'true' | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
=== | == Remove overlay scroll bar == | ||
==== | http://www.itworld.com/article/2698420/disable-overlay-scroll-bars-in-ubuntu-14-04.html | ||
== Change scroll bar color == | |||
See [http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1172617 this post]. Run sudo apt-get install gnome-color-chooser. | |||
Go to Engines tab in gnome-color-chooser and choose clearlooks engine for scrollbars. | |||
== | == How to turn off/disable Compiz's “drag to maximize” behaviour? == | ||
http://askubuntu.com/questions/72452/how-to-turn-off-compizs-drag-to-maximize-behaviour | |||
On Mint, go to Preferences -> Window Tiling -> Enable Window Tiling and snapping -> Off. | |||
== Move a Window Without Clicking the Titlebar == | |||
Hold down the '''Alt''' key and then click in the window anywhere, and move your mouse.. See [[Raspberry#Move_a_Window_Without_Clicking_the_Titlebar|here]]. For recent Ubuntu, we can hold the '''super''' key and drag the window anywhere. See [https://help.ubuntu.com/stable/ubuntu-help/shell-windows-states.html.en Move and resize windows]. | |||
On new Ubuntu, the Settings -> Keyboard Shortcuts shows Alt + F7 can be used to move a Window. The method is to use the arrow keys to move the window up/down after we hit Alt + F7. | |||
== Snapping windows to left or right == | |||
* Drag the window to left or right. I found when I drag the window to right, it just maximizes the window | |||
* Window key + Left/right key. It Works on Ubuntu 18.40. | |||
== How to Keep a Window Always on Top == | |||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/keep-a-window-always-on-top-linux/ How to Keep a Window Always on Top in Linux] | |||
== | == Change mouse cursor size == | ||
Settings -> Universal Access | |||
==== | = [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/NetworkManager Network Manager] = | ||
== Find Available Network Interfaces On Linux == | |||
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-find-available-network-interfaces-on-linux/ Find Available Network Interfaces On Linux] | |||
# ifconfig -a | |||
# ip link show # OR ip addr | |||
# ls /sys/class/net | |||
# cat /proc/net/dev | |||
# netstat -i | |||
# nmcli device status # OR nmcli connection show | |||
== Restart the network == | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo service network-manager restart | |||
# OR | |||
sudo nmcli networking off | |||
sudo nmcli networking on | |||
</pre> | |||
== | == avahi-daemon == | ||
Run '''sudo apt install avahi-daemon''' so we can use hostname.local to access the remote machine. | |||
== | == Set static IP == | ||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/configure-static-ip-address-settings-ubuntu-22-04/ How to Configure Static IP Address on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS] or [https://ostechnix.com/configure-static-ip-address-ubuntu/ How To Configure Static IP Address In Ubuntu (Easy Guide)]. Method 1: '''nmcli''' Command, Method 2: '''Netplan''', Method 3: '''nmtui''', 4: GUI. | |||
[https://www.reddit.com/r/Ubuntu/comments/bdeki8/my_ubuntu_server_has_two_ip_addresses_but_only/ My Ubuntu Server has two IP addresses, but only one is assigned in netplan, any ideas?] Solution: assign static ones in the router to your computer's MAC address. | |||
Starting with 17.10 release, '''Netplan''' is the default network management tool on Ubuntu. PS. another file we may want to check is '''/etc/dhcpcd.conf'''. | |||
PS: replace '''eth0''' as needed. On my Ubuntu box, it should be ens18 according to '''ip a'''. We can find out the device name by the default 00-netcfg.yaml file. [https://www.linuxtechi.com/static-ip-address-on-ubuntu-server/ Setting up Static IP address on Ubuntu Server 22.04]. | |||
<pre> | |||
$ sudo cat /etc/netplan/01-netcfg.yaml | |||
network: | |||
version: 2 | |||
renderer: networkd | |||
ethernets: | |||
eth0: | |||
dhcp4: no | |||
addresses: | |||
- 192.168.1.199/24 | |||
nameservers: | |||
addresses: [8.8.8.8, 1.1.1.1] | |||
routes: | |||
- to: default | |||
via: 192.168.1.1 | |||
$ sudo netplan apply # or sudo netplan --debug apply | |||
$ ip a # no reboot is necessary | |||
</pre> | |||
</ | Now that I got a message when I tried above on the latest Ubuntu 20.04. '''`gateway4` has been deprecated, use default routes instead'''. To fix it, follow the instruction [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/681221 here] by replacing ''gateway4'' with ''routes'' with to and via. | ||
== Multiple IP addresses == | |||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/devops/how-to-add-an-additional-ip-address-to-your-linux-server/ How to Add an Additional IP Address to Your Linux Server] | |||
* one Ethernet port can have multiple IP addresses in Ubuntu. This is often referred to as IP aliasing. see [https://askubuntu.com/questions/547289/how-can-i-from-cli-assign-multiple-ip-addresses-to-one-interface How can I (from CLI) assign multiple IP addresses to one interface?]. | |||
==== | == Change IP address from the command line == | ||
<pre> | |||
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.17 netmask 255.255.255.0 up | |||
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 | |||
</pre> | |||
[http://www.howtogeek.com/103190/change-your-ip-address-from-the-command-prompt/ Windows] OS. | |||
== Local DNS == | |||
* Search: local caching stub resolver DNS ubuntu 20.04 | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-setup-local-dns-server-using-dnsmasq-on-ubuntu-20-04/ How to Setup Local DNS Resolver using Dnsmasq on Ubuntu 20.04] | |||
* [https://youtu.be/uV-OauHhKgA Configuring DNS With Dnsmasq and Ubuntu Server 20.04] (video) | |||
* [https://www.linuxbabe.com/ubuntu/set-up-local-dns-resolver-ubuntu-20-04-bind9 Set Up Local DNS Resolver on Ubuntu 20.04 with BIND9] | |||
** '''systemd-resolve --status''' can show the real DNS while the '''dig''' only shows 127.0.0.53 | |||
** '''dig''' command can include a DNS IP, for example, dig A www.pcworld.com @8.8.8.8 | |||
** '''nslookup''' command can also show the DNS IP. I got 127.0.0.53 too. | |||
== Set up OpenDNS == | |||
[https://support.opendns.com/hc/en-us/articles/228007167-Linux-Mint-Cinnamon Set up OpenDNS on Linux Mint] or [https://pchelp.ricmedia.com/set-custom-dns-servers-linux-network-manager-resolv-conf/ Set custom DNS servers on Linux with Network Manager or resolv.conf] | |||
Select the Method: '''Automatic (DHCP) addresses only''' and enter '''208.67.220.220, 208.67.222.222''' into the DNS field, then click Save. | |||
But after the change (and reboot), I don't have internet anymore. | |||
== DNS problem and 127.0.1.1 == | |||
(Ubuntu 16.04 on Odroid) For some reason, pinging my domain always goes to the wrong IP. If I go to System -> Administration -> Network to change DNS from 127.0.1.1 to 8.8.8.8, it fixes the problem. But if I reboot, the DNS entry goes back to 127.0.1.1 again. | |||
When I follow this post [http://askubuntu.com/questions/627899/nameserver-127-0-1-1-in-resolv-conf-wont-go-away nameserver 127.0.1.1 in resolv.conf won't go away], the DNS will be changed to local IP of my router and the problem is fixed (even I reboot the computer). | |||
See also the next: How to flush the DNS cache | |||
== | == How to flush the DNS cache == | ||
* http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/rhel-debian-ubuntu-flush-clear-dns-cache/ | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/07/how-to-flush-dns-cache-on-linux-for.html?m=1 How To Flush DNS Cache On Linux for systemd-resolved (eg Ubuntu 18.04), BIND, Dnsmasq Or nscd] | |||
* http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/flush-dns-cache-ubuntu/ | |||
[https://www. | {{pre}} | ||
sudo /etc/init.d/dns-clean | |||
</pre> | |||
== NM-applet == | |||
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NetworkManager | |||
== Wifi problem troubleshooting == | |||
[https://www.maketecheasier.com/fix-wi-fi-not-working-ubuntu/ Wi-Fi Not Working in Linux? Here’s How to Fix it] 2024. 1. Hardware or software, 2. Driver, 3. DNS. | |||
== How to Connect to WiFi using netplan == | |||
[https://itsfoss.com/connect-wifi-terminal-ubuntu/ How to Connect to WiFi from the Terminal in Ubuntu Linux] | |||
== Manage wifi network using nmcli and wavemon == | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>[https://ostechnix.com/check-wifi-signal-strength-from-commandline-in-linux/ How To Check WiFi Signal Strength From Commandline In Linux] | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>nmcli - nmcli dev wifi | |||
<li>iw - sudo iw dev; sudo iw dev wlo1 link | |||
<li>iwconfig - sudo apt install wireless-tools; sudo iwconfig | |||
<li>iwlist - sudo apt install wireless-tools; sudo iwlist wlan0 scanning | grep -i --color signal | |||
<li>wavemon - sudo apt install wavemon; wavemon | |||
</ul> | |||
<li>[https://core.docs.ubuntu.com/en/stacks/network/network-manager/docs/configure-wifi-connections Configure WiFi Connections] | |||
<pre> | |||
nmcli d wifi connect my_wifi password <password> | |||
</pre> | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
[https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/configuring_and_managing_networking/managing-wi-fi-connections_configuring-and-managing-networking Chapter 12. Managing wi-fi connections] from redhat.com | |||
</li> | |||
<li>[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/11/how-to-show-available-wifi-networks.html?m=1 How To Show Available WiFi Networks, Their Channels, Signal Strength And More From The Command Line] | |||
<pre> | |||
nmcli dev status # nmcli d | |||
# | nmcli dev wifi # it works if wifi is on | ||
nmcli r wifi on # turn on wifi (by default wifi is on even on Ubuntu server) | |||
< | </pre> | ||
</li> | |||
<li>[https://connectwww.com/nmcli-view-your-network-wifi-details-and-control-your-networkmanager/61731/ nmcli – View your Network & Wifi details and Control your NetworkManager] | |||
<pre> | |||
nmcli – View your Network & Wifi details and Control your NetworkManager WIFI-device | |||
iwconfig | |||
< | nmcli device wifi connect "$SSID" password "$PASSWORD" | ||
nmcli dev status | |||
sudo | nmcli con show | ||
sudo | </pre> | ||
</li> | |||
</ | <li>To list all wifi SSID and their signal with wavemon | ||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt install wavemon | |||
sudo wavemon | |||
# The bottom will show a list of keyboard shortcuts | |||
# Press F3 to see a list of available wifi | |||
# The list will be sorted by dBm level | |||
</pre> | |||
</li> | |||
</ul> | |||
=== Turn on/off wifi adapter using nmcli === | |||
[http://askubuntu.com/questions/597116/how-to-disable-wireless-from-command-line The command-line equivalent of unchecking the nm-applet's 'Enable Wi-fi' should be] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
nmcli nm wifi off | |||
# OR | |||
nmcli radio wifi off | |||
# OR | |||
sudo ifconfig wlan0 down | |||
</pre> | |||
==== [https:// | == Nmtui == | ||
[https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/13866/how-to-manage-linux-wi-fi-networks-with-nmtui/ How to Manage Linux Wi-Fi Network with Nmtui] | |||
==== | == Proxy == | ||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxy_server Proxy server] | |||
* [http://askubuntu.com/questions/3807/how-to-check-if-network-proxy-is-really-applied How to check if Network Proxy is really applied?] | |||
* [[Raspberry#Proxy_server|Raspberry -> Proxy server]] | |||
==== ' | == Internet Shut Down == | ||
* [http://gizmodo.com/this-is-probably-why-half-the-internet-shut-down-today-1788062835 This Is Why Half the Internet Shut Down Today], [http://pcworld.com/article/3134056/hacking/an-iot-botnet-is-partly-behind-fridays-massive-ddos-attack.html An IoT botnet is partly behind Friday's massive DDOS attack] and [http://www.appledaily.com.tw/appledaily/article/international/20161023/37425973/ 駭客襲美 推特等主要網站大掛點] (Oct 21 2016) | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denial-of-service_attack Distributed denial-of-service/DDoS attack] from wikipedia. | |||
==== ''' | == IP scanner == | ||
* [https://angryip.org/ Angry IP Scanner] (Windows, Mac, Linux). GUI. | |||
* nmap utility; e.g. '''sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.1/24''' | |||
* fing (terminal) | |||
== How to get connection to both wifi as well as LAN == | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/639425 How to get connection to both wifi as well as LAN in ubuntu 14.04 LTS?] | |||
** Ubuntu allows multiple connections by default. | |||
** Use LAN for the Intranet and WiFi for the Internet | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/239639 How to "prioritise" multiple network connections] (using GUI) | |||
* [https://superuser.com/questions/331720/how-do-i-set-the-priority-of-network-connections-in-ubuntu How do I set the priority of network connections in Ubuntu?] (using ifmetric package). [https://installati.one/ubuntu/21.04/ifmetric/ How To Install ifmetric on Ubuntu 21.04] | |||
== wireless connection randomly drop off: iwconfig, iwconfig == | |||
My wireless adapter is TP-LINK, TL-WN722N. | |||
http://askubuntu.com/questions/73607/wireless-connection-keeps-dropping-with-an-intel-3945abg-card | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo iwconfig # List available wireless interfaces | |||
sudo iwconfig wlan0 power off | |||
</pre> | |||
[http://linuxplained.com/how-to-fix-wireless-problems-in-ubuntu-1204-precise-pangolin/ 5 Best Linux/Ubuntu compatible USB Wifi cards]: | |||
* AirLink101 AWLL6075 Wireless N Mini USB Adapter | |||
* Medialink – Wireless N USB Adapter – 802.11n | |||
* ASUS (USB-N13) Wireless-N USB Adapter | |||
* Panda Mini Wifi (b/g/n) 150Mbps Card | |||
* TP-Link TL-WN722N 150Mbps High Gain Wireless USB Adapter | |||
To show (USB) wireless adapter information | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo lshw -C network | |||
sudo lsusb -v | |||
iwconfig # get signal level, Bit rate | |||
</pre> | |||
To check wifi connection information (SSID, channel, address, frequency, qualiyt, signal level, ...). [https://askubuntu.com/a/832592 How do I scan for Wireless Access Points?] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo iwlist wlan0 scan | |||
sudo iw dev wlan0 scan | egrep "signal:|SSID:" | sed -e "s/\tsignal: //" -e "s/\tSSID: //" | awk '{ORS = (NR % 2 == 0)? "\n" : " "; print}' | sort # change wlan0 to the right interface | |||
</ | </pre> | ||
My experience is quality should be at least 50/70 and signal level should be larger than -60dBm. | |||
On my nuc desktop, it got -63 dBm (on Sunday it is -54 dBm). On Raspberry Pi zero, it shows -54 dBm (impressive). On Mint with Qualcomm Atheros AR93xx, it shows -56 dBm. On macbook pro, I got -70. On Raspberry Pi 3B (around the router), it shows -39 dBm. | |||
[https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/348609 How to interpret wireless quality indicators?]. | |||
==== | == VPN == | ||
See [[VPN|VPN]] | |||
= DHCP Server = | |||
* [http://www.tecmint.com/install-dhcp-server-in-ubuntu-debian/ How to Install a DHCP Server in Ubuntu and Debian] | |||
sudo apt-get install | * [https://www.linuxtechi.com/how-to-configure-dhcp-server-on-ubuntu/ How to Configure DHCP Server on Ubuntu 22.04 Step-by-Step] | ||
</ | |||
= File Server = | |||
== [https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/network-file-system.html Network File System (NFS)] == | |||
NFS allows a system to share directories and files with others over a network. By using NFS, users and programs can access files on remote systems almost as if they were local files. | |||
Some of the most notable benefits that NFS can provide are: | |||
* Local workstations use less disk space. | |||
* There is no need for users to have separate home directories on every network machine. Home directories could be set up on the NFS server and made available throughout the network. | |||
'''Server part''': | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel-server | |||
</pre> | |||
Configure the directories to be exported by adding them to the '''/etc/exports''' file. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
/home/USERNAME/SHAREFOLDER 192.168.1.0/24(rw,sync,no_subtree_check) | |||
/ubuntu *(ro,sync,no_root_squash) | |||
/home *(rw,sync,no_root_squash) | |||
# replace * with one of the hostname formats. | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
where 'ro' means read only. See [http://www.brennan.id.au/19-Network_File_System.html Linux Home Server Howto]. The '''no_root_squash''' option will not prevent root on a client machine from writing files to the server as root; by default, NFS will map any requests from root on the client to the 'nobody' user on the server. See [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-an-nfs-mount-on-ubuntu-14-04 digitalocean]. | |||
To start the NFS server: | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo service nfs-kernel-server start | |||
</pre> | |||
'''Client part''': | |||
PS. | |||
* ''There is no need to enter any password related to the NFS server.'' | |||
* See [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-an-nfs-mount-on-ubuntu-14-04 digitalocean] for other ways to specify the arguments in </etc/fstab>. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install nfs-common | |||
sudo apt-get install | |||
sudo mount -t nfs example.hostname.com:/ubuntu /mnt/ubuntu | |||
# The mount point directory /mnt/ubuntu must exist. | |||
# or modify the /etc/fstab file | |||
# example.hostname.com:/ubuntu /mnt/ubuntu nfs rsize=8192,wsize=8192,timeo=14,intr | |||
# localip:/sharedfolder /mnt/ubuntu nfs defaults 0 0 | |||
brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ ps -ef | grep nfs | |||
root 675 2 0 11:16 ? 00:00:00 [nfsiod] | |||
root 14783 2 0 16:51 ? 00:00:00 [nfsv4.0-svc] | |||
brb 14960 13491 0 16:56 pts/0 00:00:00 grep --color=auto nfs | |||
</pre> | |||
To make the mounting permanently, run '''sudo nano /etc/fstab''' and include a line like | |||
</ | <pre> | ||
1.2.3.4:/home /mnt/nfs/home nfs auto,noatime,nolock,bg,nfsvers=4,intr,tcp,actimeo=1800 0 0 | |||
</pre> | |||
Some help: | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-configure-a-nfs-server-and-mount-nfs-shares-on-ubuntu-18.04/ How to configure an NFS server and mount NFS shares on Ubuntu 18.04] | |||
* [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/how-to-configure-nfs-server-and-client-configuration-on-ubuntu-16-10-yakkety-yak.html How to configure NFS Server and Client Configuration on Ubuntu 16.10] | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/11/easy-nfs-share-setup-in-ubuntu-linux.html Easy NFS Share Setup In Ubuntu, Linux Mint Or Debian With Simple NFS GUI (Server And Client)] | |||
==== | == Boot from an NFS server == | ||
* http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/tutorials/boot-linux-from-an-nfs-server | |||
With NFS booting, the core kernel and file systems are kept on a central server and then pushed out onto client systems to be booted on there. That means your files and desktop will always be available wherever you want to log in. | |||
At the end, the client computer does not need any internal storage. Cool! | |||
== | == [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server_Message_Block CIFS (Common Internet File System)] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NT_LAN_Manager NTLMv2 (NT LAN Manager)] == | ||
* https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/transfer.html#mapped | |||
* https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MountWindowsSharesPermanently | |||
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MountWindowsSharesPermanently | |||
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Samba/SambaClientGuide | |||
''Note that this method is most suitable for transferring small files. Users transferring large amounts of data to and from Helix/Biowulf should continue to use scp or sftp.'' ([https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/transfer.html#mapped nih.gov]) | |||
[ | |||
== Samba == | |||
[[Samba|Samba]] | |||
= Change automatic login = | |||
Open '''sudo nano /etc/gdm3/custom.conf''' and change the logic value true/false | |||
= Change the default session when using auto login = | |||
See [http://askubuntu.com/questions/62833/how-do-i-change-the-default-session-for-when-using-auto-logins this post]. We need to edit the file /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf. Note that on my Ubuntu 12.04, I have the following desktop options. | |||
<pre> | |||
$ ls -lt /usr/share/xsessions/ | |||
total 16 | |||
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 205 Apr 19 2012 gnome.desktop | |||
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 188 Apr 19 2012 gnome-shell.desktop | |||
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 208 Apr 19 2012 ubuntu-2d.desktop | |||
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 185 Apr 19 2012 ubuntu.desktop | |||
</pre> | |||
= sudo = | |||
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-grant-and-remove-sudo-privileges-to-users-on-ubuntu/ How To Grant And Remove Sudo Privileges To Users On Ubuntu] | |||
= Terminal = | |||
== Directory color on ssh == | |||
When I ssh to biowulf from Gnome/Terminal, the folder color became dark blue which is hard to read when the background color is black. A solution is https://serverfault.com/questions/137649/changing-terminal-colors-in-ubuntu-server. | |||
Note that | Note that when we use the terminal app '''Tabby''', the directory color is easy to see. | ||
1. append this to your ~/.bashrc | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
[ | if [ "$TERM" != "dumb" ]; then | ||
[ -e "$HOME/.dir_colors" ] && | |||
DIR_COLORS="$HOME/.dir_colors" [ -e "$DIR_COLORS" ] || | |||
DIR_COLORS="" | |||
eval "`dircolors -b $DIR_COLORS`" | |||
alias ls='ls --color=auto' | |||
fi | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
2. create/edit your ~/.dir_colors, for example with | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
$ dircolors --print-database > .dir_colors | |||
</pre> | |||
3. Then force a read of your .bashrc file with: | |||
<pre> | |||
$ source ~/.bashrc | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Everything should be pretty. | |||
== | == powerline == | ||
* | * [https://fedoramagazine.org/add-power-terminal-powerline/ Add power to your terminal with powerline] | ||
* https:// | * [https://www.2daygeek.com/powerline-adds-powerful-statusline-to-vim-bash-tumx-in-ubuntu-fedora-debian-arch-linux-mint/ Powerline – A Powerful Statusline Plugin For Vim & Bash Terminal] | ||
* [https://github.com/powerline/powerline Github], [https://powerline.readthedocs.io/en/master/installation/linux.html Installation on Linux] | |||
== Remember terminal tabs == | |||
The trick on [http://askubuntu.com/questions/310705/some-fast-way-to-save-and-restore-tabs-of-terminal this post] works for me on my GNOME Terminal 3.6.2 (gnome-terminal --version). | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# To save configuration into /home/$USER/terminal.cfg: | |||
gnome-terminal --save-config=/home/$USER/terminal.cfg | |||
# To load it back: | |||
gnome-terminal --load-config=/home/$USER/terminal.cfg | |||
</pre> | |||
To recall the titles, follow [http://vadim-kirilchuk-linux.blogspot.com/2013/05/gnome-terminal-how-to-save-tabs-and.html this simple hack]. That is, add an entry Title=xxxx to each tab section. | |||
== | == Terminal tab color == | ||
If we open several tabs in the (GNOME) Terminal, the default color of the active tab is not quite different from the other tabs. We need a solution to change the tab colors. | |||
http://askubuntu.com/questions/355297/gnome-terminal-tabs-no-contrast-between-active-and-inactive-tabs | |||
Solution: edit ~/.config/gtk-3.0/gtk.css (you might have to create it) and add: | |||
<pre> | |||
TerminalWindow, | |||
TerminalWindow.background { | |||
background-color: #6e6e6e; | |||
color: #000000; | |||
} | |||
TerminalWindow .notebook tab { | |||
padding: 2; | |||
background-color: #6e6e6e; | |||
} | |||
TerminalWindow .notebook tab:active { | |||
background-color: #d1d1d1; | |||
} | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Then close '''ALL''' terminal windows start and test. | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/ | == How to practically use your Linux terminal for everything == | ||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-practically-use-your-linux-terminal/ set alarms, take screenshots, check weather, schedule shutdown] | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-practically-use-your-linux-terminal-part-2/ Send emails, browse internet, listen muscic, play games] | |||
== | == Record terminal: script command == | ||
https:// | * [https://www.ostechnix.com/record-everything-terminal/ How To Record Everything You Do In Terminal] | ||
* [https://www.tecmint.com/record-and-replay-linux-terminal-session-commands-using-script/ Record and Replay Linux Terminal Sessions using ‘script’ and ‘scriptreplay’ Commands] | |||
= Font = | |||
== Large text, monitor scaling, HiDPI displays == | |||
* This is useful on large screen displays or TVs. | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/change-hidpi-scaling-settings-linux/ How to Change HiDPI Scaling Settings on Linux] using GNOME, KDE, elementary OS, Xfce | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/HiDPI | |||
== | == Install Microsoft Font in linux suite == | ||
http://www. | [http://www.pcworld.com/article/2863497/how-to-install-microsoft-fonts-in-linux-office-suites.html PCWorld.com] | ||
= Install language packs = | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install language-pack-[cod] language-pack-gnome-[cod] language-pack-[cod]-base language-pack-gnome-[cod]-base | |||
</pre> | |||
For example, [cod]=en or [cod]=zh. | |||
= Change locale language and character set = | |||
* http://www.shellhacks.com/en/HowTo-Change-Locale-Language-and-Character-Set-in-Linux | |||
= | = Display Chinese character (from vanilla Debian/Ubuntu system) = | ||
[ | * [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Multilingual_support_%28East_Asian%29#Debian-based_GNU.2FLinux Wikipedia] | ||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install fonts-arphic-ukai fonts-arphic-uming | |||
</pre> | |||
* [http://crunchbang.org/forums/viewtopic.php?id=778 crunchbang.org], [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/548473 How to make Chinese characters display properly on Chromium] | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install language-support-fonts-zh | |||
# Or | |||
sudo apt-get install ttf-arphic-uming ttf-wqy-zenhei | |||
# OR | |||
sudo apt-get install fonts-arphic-uming fonts-wqy-zenhei | |||
</pre> | |||
* [http://wiki.debian.org.hk/w/Make_Debian_support_Chinese_%28eng%29 wiki.debian.org.hk] | |||
* [https://wiki.debian.org/Fonts wiki.debian.org] | |||
= Chinese Input = | |||
* ibus/fcitx is a service. Use ''ps -ef'' to check if it is running. | |||
* On Ubuntu 18.04, it is '''Ctrl + Space''' to switch input methods (the keyboard icon will be changed to "酷"). The "Windows + Space" only changes the drop-down list (en <-> 中) but it has no effect. | |||
* "Windows + Space" may need to be clicked twice to switch the input method (at least on Mint 18.2) | |||
* Log out and Log in seems to be necessary | |||
* Helpful | |||
** https://www.pinyinjoe.com/linux/ubuntu-10-chinese-input-pinyin-chewing.htm | |||
** https://wiki.mageia.org/en/Input_methods | |||
** http://ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2016/07/2-best-chinese-pinyin-im-ubuntu-16-04/ | |||
[[File:Zhuyin-keyboard.gif|600px]] | |||
[[File:Ibus.png|400px]] | |||
# type 'language' in Dash search (Or click Power button on the top-right corner -> System Settings...) and click 'Language Support' (this may not be installed from (x)Ubuntu automatically. In such case, IBUS will be missing eg Chewing method). The 'Language Support' is under Settings menu in xUbuntu. | |||
# Click 'Install' if a message popped up with the message 'The language support is not installed completely'. After the installation is done, the 'Language support' dialog comes back. | |||
# Choose between ibus (ubuntu < 16.04) /fcitx (ubuntu 16.04). | |||
#* Choose 'IBUS' for keyboard input method system (bottom of the dialog). IBUS is under 'System' menu in xUbuntu. | |||
# | #* Choose 'fcitx' | ||
# Click 'Install/Remove Languages'. Choose Chinese. Click 'Apply'. An 'Applying changes' dialog will appear. | |||
# Click 'Close' button. | |||
# Select Chinese | |||
#* System Settings -> Text Entry -> '+' -> Chinese. Or Settings > Keyboard Input Method > Input method > Select an input method > Show only input methods for your region > Chinese 酷 Chewing. If we cannot find this dialog, we can launch it by '''ibus-setup''' command. If Chewing is not shown as one of Chinese input methods, we can log out and log in the desktop. If ibus does not have the chewing selection, we should try to install it '''sudo apt-get install ibus-chewing''' and/or run '''ibus restart'''. | |||
#* Dash -> Fcitx Configuration. '+' -> Chewing. PS. On Ubuntu 16.04 it only shows a Chinese option without further options even I installed ''ibus-chewing''. | |||
# Make sure 'Show current input source in the menu bar' is checked. | |||
# Click 'Close' button. | |||
On Ubuntu 14.04, the super key is '''Windows'''. | |||
On Ubuntu 16.04, ibus does not work. Use fcitx instead. Chewing(Fcitx) should be added to the "Text Entry" GUI. "fcitx" should be selected in the "Language Support" GUI (it's OK the language for menus and windows does not include 漢語 (臺灣). A linux or keyboard icon should appear in the taskbar. | |||
On Ubuntu 18.04, I don't need to use fcitx (not available by default) | |||
# I follow [https://www.pinyinjoe.com/linux/ubuntu-18-gnome-chinese-setup.htm pingyinjoe] to install Chinese from Language Support. Reboot (Log out seems to take forever). | |||
# I follow [https://askubuntu.com/questions/1032465/how-can-i-use-chewingzhuyin-input-method this post] to use '''sudo locale-gen zh_TW.UTF-8''' to add chewing to the list (see next step). | |||
# Type 'region' to search and click "Region and Language". Follow the GUI to add Chinese (Chewing). | |||
# Test it by using Windows + Space to switch input methods. | |||
Note that do not use 'Text Entry' application (shown as one options when we search 'language'). This application will conflict with ibus. | |||
== | == Easy way == | ||
Tested on Ubuntu 18.04 and 19.10. Do not to go to "Input Method". | |||
# Language support. Make sure Chinese (traditional) is selected. Log out and log in. This step is not needed when I try Pop!_os. No need to worry about keyboard input method system; the default 'none' is OK. Log out and log in. | |||
# Choose Settings -> Region & Language -> Input Source -> Chinese (Taiwan). | |||
On Debian 11, I first need to run '''sudo apt-get install ibus-chewing''' & '''ibus restart'''. Then log out and log in again. Go to settings-Region and Language. Input Sources - Other - Chinese. Select Chinese (Chewing). Done. Use Win+Space to switch input languages. | |||
== ibus == | |||
[https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-setup-multilingual-input-method-on-ubuntu/ How To Setup Multilingual Input Method On Ubuntu 18.04]. | |||
''' | ibus works fine on Pop_OS 20.04 (it does not have fcitx PLUS ibus is already running) . Step 1 is to make sure Chinese is included in '''Language Support''' (it's already in Pop_OS 20.04) Step 2. Use Settings and search for 'input sources'. Use "+" to add Chinese Chewing. | ||
== [https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gcin gcin] == | |||
新注音 New Zhuyin | |||
/ | * Google: ubuntu 英文版 中文輸入 | ||
/ubuntu | * http://aarontechdiary.blogspot.com/2016/07/ubuntu-1604.html | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install gcin | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
* blog.xuite.net/yh96301/blog/287374341-Ubuntu+14.04安裝鍵盤輸入法系統gcin | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Gcin | |||
* Show Applications -> gcin Tools | |||
* https://magiclen.org/gcin/ | |||
== fcitx == | |||
https://daviwa.blogspot.com/2017_10_08_archive.html | |||
''' | * On Linux Mint, it cannot show a list of candidate words. The trick of using '''killall fcitx-qimpanel''' works. | ||
* On Ubuntu Mate, the fcitx works fine. ps -ef | grep fcitx-qimpanel shows nothing. | |||
* On Lubuntu 18.04 LTS, fcitx works fine. | |||
*# add Chinese in 'Language Support' | |||
*# log out and log in (For live CD, the user name is '''lubuntu''' and the password is empty) | |||
*# click on fcitx icon > ConfigureFcitx. Uncheck the option '''Only Show Current Language''' in order to get a list of available input methods. Add Chinese Chewing. Close the Window. | |||
*# use Ctrl+Space keybinding to switch the language | |||
= /usr/lib/ibus/ibus-ui-gtk3 high memory usage = | |||
For some reason, the ubuntu 14.04 is not responsive. Htop shows ibus-ui-gtk3 is the culprit. The [http://askubuntu.com/questions/490317/how-can-i-find-out-what-ibus-daemon-and-ibus-ui-gtk3-are-doing suggestion] is to run | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
killall ibus-daemon | |||
</pre> | |||
After I run this command and wait a few seconds, the memory leak problem is solved. | |||
= Change time zone = | |||
http://wiki.debian.org/TimeZoneChanges | |||
<pre> | |||
$sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata | |||
</pre> | |||
The command launches an ncurses based interface which allows arrow keys to be used to select the region specific time zone. | |||
= Make script run at boot time with init.d directory = | |||
http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/28 | |||
For example, see [http://learn.adafruit.com/drive-a-16x2-lcd-directly-with-a-raspberry-pi/init-script here] from running a python script for raspberry pi. | |||
# Create a script '''/etc/init.d/lcd''' | |||
# Make the script executable | |||
# Make the script known to the system by using the '''update-rc.d' command | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo update-rc.d lcd defaults | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== /etc/rc.local file == | |||
* [ | * [http://linuxtechlab.com/executing-commands-scripts-at-reboot/ Executing Commands and Scripts at Reboot & Startup in Linux] | ||
* [https://www. | * [https://www.lukmanlab.com/how-to-activing-rc-local-on-ubuntu-server-18-04/ How to Activing rc.local on Ubuntu Server 18.04] | ||
*# sudo nano /etc/rc.local | |||
*# sudo chmod +x /etc/rc.local | |||
*# sudo systemctl enable rc-local | |||
* [https://www.linuxbabe.com/linux-server/how-to-enable-etcrc-local-with-systemd How to Enable /etc/rc.local with Systemd] | |||
For CentOS, we use file ‘/etc/rc.d/rc.local’ instead of ‘/etc/rc.local’. We also need to make this file executable before adding any script or command to the file. | |||
Note: | |||
* When executing a script at startup, make sure that the script ends with ‘exit 0’. | |||
* Using /etc/rc.local for custom scripts is a legacy method, and some modern Debian systems might not have this file or might not execute it. Consider using systemd units or other modern methods for more reliable and maintainable solutions. | |||
== crontab == | |||
[http://linuxtechlab.com/executing-commands-scripts-at-reboot/ Executing Commands and Scripts at Reboot & Startup in Linux] | |||
== | = Back up DVDs = | ||
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-dvd-ripper-software.html Top 5 Linux DVD RIP Software] from cyberciti.biz. | |||
== dvdbackup command == | |||
It works and fast. It will create a new directory (no need to specify beforehand). | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt install dvdbackup | |||
dvdbackup # get usage | |||
dvdbackup -i /dev/dvd -o ~/Videos/ -M | |||
# -M means to back up the whole DVD | |||
</pre> | |||
We can further create an ISO file from a directory using | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
genisoimage -o output_image.iso directory_name | |||
# Or | |||
mkisofs -lJR -o output_image.iso directory_name | |||
# -l : Allow full 31 character filenames. | |||
# -J : Generate Joliet directory records in addition to regular iso9660 file names. | |||
# -R : Generate System Use Sharing Protocol (SUSP) and Rock Ridge (RR) records using the Rock Ridge protocol | |||
</pre> | |||
# | |||
== Create an iso file from a CD/DVD or HD == | |||
See also | |||
* | * [http://tuxarena.blogspot.com/2009/03/4-ways-to-create-cddvd-iso-images-in.html 4 Ways to Create CD/DVD ISO Images in Ubuntu]. | ||
: | * [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Optical_disc_drive#Creating_an_ISO_image_from_a_CD.2C_DVD.2C_or_BD Creating an ISO image from a CD, DVD, or BD] | ||
Method 1 (Better than Method 2). No need to umount the cdrom. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
mkisofs -o /tmp/DVD.iso /tmp/directory/ | |||
</pre> | |||
to make an ISO from files on your hard drive. | |||
Method 2. | |||
# | Make sure the cdrom is NOT mounted. Type '''mount''' to confirm it. If cd was mouted automatically unmout it with umount command: | ||
like '''umount /dev/cdrom''' or '''umount /mnt/cdrom'''. Note that no extra forward slash after /dev/cdrom for the command below. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
dd if=/dev/cdrom of=~/DVD.iso status=progress # worked in antiX | |||
dd bs=4M if=/dev/sr0 of=~/DVD.iso status=progress | |||
# Works for me to back up some borrowed DVDs | |||
# | |||
# Don't add the 'bs' parameter or you'll get an error reading '/dev/sr0': Input/output error | |||
# or use VLC to watch a little bit of the DVD first to fix the problem (why it helps?) | |||
# note that status=progress does not show the percentage. It shows how much is copied. | |||
# OR | |||
cat /dev/sr0 > ~/DVD.iso | |||
</pre> | |||
For some reason I get an Input/output error. But after I use VLC to play the video, the Input/output error is gone when I try it again. | |||
We can mount the iso file to a directory to check the iso file content is correct. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
mount -t iso9660 -o loop,ro DVD.iso /mnt | |||
</pre> | |||
Method 3. | |||
Monitor the progress of percentage assume we know the disk size | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install pv | |||
dd if=/dev/urandom | pv -s 2G | dd of=/dev/null | |||
</pre> | |||
[https://askubuntu.com/a/215521 Method 4]. | |||
To see the progress of dd once it's running, open another terminal and enter: | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo kill -USR1 $(pgrep ^dd) | |||
: | </pre> | ||
This will display ''dd'' progress in the ''dd'' terminal window without halting the process. If you're on BSD or OS X, use '''INFO''' instead of '''USR1'''. The USR1 signal will terminate dd. | |||
sudo | |||
</ | |||
If you would like to get regular updates of the dd progress, then enter: | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
watch -n5 'sudo kill -USR1 $(pgrep ^dd)' | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
watch will probe the dd process every -n seconds (-n5 = 5 seconds) and report without halting it. | |||
Note the proper single quotes in the commands above. | |||
==== | == HandBrake == | ||
It works but it loses the menu page on DVD. | |||
= Have fun with /etc/hosts file = | |||
su -c "nano /etc/hosts" | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
127.0.0.1 localhost | |||
::1 localhost | |||
74.125.67.100 DNS_NAME1 DNS_NAME2 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
* If you want to add aliases for your machine that will lookup to the loopback address you can keep adding them as '''space separated''' values on that line. | |||
* "::1" is the ipv6 equivalent of 127.0.0.1 (which is for ipv4). | |||
== | == Block malware, adware == | ||
[https://www. | [https://www.howtogeek.com/319700/how-to-use-your-computers-hosts-file-to-block-tons-of-malware-porn-and-other-types-of-websites/ How to Use Your Computer’s Hosts File to Block Tons of Malware, Porn, and Other Types of Websites] | ||
= | = Mount a remote file system over ssh = | ||
[[Ssh#SSHFS%3A_mount_a_remote_file_system_over_ssh|SSHFS: mount a remote file system over ssh]] | |||
= | = Linux Console File Managers = | ||
[https://www.tecmint.com/linux-terminal-file-managers/ 11 Best Linux Console File Managers] | |||
= Nautilus [https://wiki.gnome.org/action/show/Apps/Files Files] or Nemo (File Manager) = | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-nautilus-tweaks-linux/ The 11 Best Nautilus Tweaks to Get More Out of the File Manager on Linux] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/file-managers-linux/ Best File Managers and File Explorers for Linux]. | |||
** [https://apps.kde.org/en-gb/dolphin/ Dolphin] is good. It's lightweight & supports tab view and split view. sudo apt install dolphin. I tested on Debian 12 & Xfce. Open Menu (button) -> Configure -> Configure Dolphin -> Startup -> Begin in split view mode. It remembers the split view after re-open. | |||
** [https://krusader.org/ Krusader]. Split view is the default. When it was launched the first time, it asked about whether to enable some 3rd party apps (diff utility, email client, batch renamer, checksum utility, ...). Tools -> New Net Connection. Many goodies. The Krusader app is heavily dependent on KDE. | |||
== Bookmark the current directory to the sidebar == | |||
Ctrl + d. See also Files > Keyboard Shortcuts. | |||
== | == Ctrl + L == | ||
Change to a directory | |||
== Undo Ctrl+L == | |||
Press ESC. | |||
== Mount another Linux system in Nautilus == | |||
Very easy. Check out | |||
[http://www.howtogeek.com/203432/how-to-access-ftp-and-webdav-sites-in-any-operating-systems-file-manager/ howtogeek.com] | |||
== | == Eject USB drive == | ||
''One or more applications are keeping the volume busy''. One reason is I cd to one directory in the USB drive on the Terminal. If I move away, I can eject the drive. | |||
== Preview a file == | |||
Use the space bar to preview a file and click the space bar again or ESC to close the preview. Click "f" or F11 to preview the file in full-screen. | |||
== Create a desktop shortcut == | |||
* Navigate to your application in Nautilus. Right-click, select "Make Link". Then drag shortcut to your desktop. Works in Ubuntu 12.04. | |||
* [https://linux.palemoon.org/help/installation/# Pale moon browser] instruction, especially the '''icon''' part. | |||
== .desktop file format == | |||
* [https://specifications.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/ Desktop Entry Specification] | |||
* "%k" - [http://askubuntu.com/questions/47775/how-can-i-set-the-path-variable-in-a-desktop-file-to-be-relative-to-the-locat How can I set the 'Path' variable in a .desktop file to be relative to the location where the desktop file is located?] and [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/144422/getting-the-current-path-in-desktop-exec-command Getting the current path in .desktop EXEC command] | |||
* [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8980464/how-do-i-access-an-environment-variable-in-a-desktop-files-exec-line How do I access an environment variable in a .desktop file's exec line?] | |||
== Open a terminal == | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install nautilus-open-terminal | |||
nautilus -q | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
In Ubuntu 15.10, the functionality is already included in nautilus! | |||
== The Linux Directory Structure, Explained == | |||
https://www.howtogeek.com/117435/htg-explains-the-linux-directory-structure-explained/ | |||
==== | === Templates folder in the home directory === | ||
* | [https://askubuntu.com/a/94739 What is the “Templates” folder in the home directory for?] | ||
* [https:// | |||
=== What purpose does the Public folder serve === | |||
* https://askubuntu.com/a/174870 | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/share-folders-local-network-ubuntu-windows/ Share Folders On Local Network Between Ubuntu And Windows] | |||
== | == gnome-sushi - Quick look == | ||
[https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/gnome-sushi-mac-quick-for-ubuntu Get macOS ‘Quick Look’ on Ubuntu with GNOME Sushi] | |||
== | == Plugin == | ||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2020/11/embedded-nautilus-terminal-plugin-adds.html Embedded Nautilus Terminal Plugin 3.4.0 Adds Configurable Toggle Shortcut And Colors] | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/05/nautilus-terminal-updated-with-nautilus.html Nautilus Terminal Updated With Nautilus 40 Support, Context Menus] | |||
== Nemo == | |||
* Nemo is a fork of Nautilus/GNOME Files [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemo_%28file_manager%29#History Wikipedia] | |||
* [https://www.ubuntubuzz.com/2019/05/comparing-search-between-nautilus-and-nemo.html Comparing Search Between Nautilus And Nemo File Managers] | |||
* I find I cannot add a remote location (sftp) but once I add it through Nautilus (I install it separately), the remote location appears in Nemo too. (Update) I can use File -> Connect to Server ... in Nemo. | |||
= | = Mount and Unmount Storage Devices from the Linux Terminal = | ||
[ | [https://www.howtogeek.com/414634/how-to-mount-and-unmount-storage-devices-from-the-linux-terminal/ How to Mount and Unmount Storage Devices from the Linux Terminal] | ||
== | == Mount iso file == | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo | $ sudo mkdir /mnt/iso | ||
$ sudo mount -o loop /tmp/file.iso /mnt/iso | |||
$ sudo umount /mnt/iso | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
= | = Check ubuntu version from command line = | ||
http://www.howtogeek.com/206240/how-to-tell-what-distro-and-version-of-linux-you-are-running/ | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
lsb_release -a # command not found if we run it from a docker image | |||
# | |||
# OR | |||
cat /etc/issue # works on docker image | |||
# OR | |||
cat /etc/*release # works on docker image | |||
# check kernel version | |||
uname -r # docker will get this information from the host | |||
# | # check 32/64 bit kernel | ||
uname -a # docker will get this information from the host | |||
</pre> | |||
= keyboard shortcuts = | |||
Go to keyboard app to change the settings. Note: '''Super''' key is also Windows key. Use 'Backspace' key to disable a shortcut. | |||
* List from [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/KeyboardShortcuts ubuntu.com] | |||
* Super: Open the Dash. Press and hold it to see a cheat sheet with a bunch of other nifty shortcuts. | |||
* Super + Number: Open the application that is at that position in the dock | |||
* '''Alt/Super/Shift + Mouse''': Move an application. Useful if an application's title bar is too high. | |||
* Alt + F2: Run an application by typing its name in the box which appears (same function as the Super key). | |||
* '''Alt + Space''': Activate the window menu. Not useful so I assign this to "Show all applications" (Super + a). This will be consistent with macOS. | |||
* Ctrl + Super + D: To minimize all windows | |||
* '''sudo apt install gnome-tweaks''' . From there, go to workspaces on the LHS choose static spaces. Choose the number of workspaces you like. Click on the super key to see all workspaces on the RHS. Drag and drop an app to move it to the desired workspace. | |||
* Super + left/right: snap the window to left/right | |||
* Super + upper/down: maximize/resize the window | |||
* Super + h: hide/minimize a window. I changed it to '''Super + m''' (overwrite its original meaning). On macOS, it is '''Command + m'''. | |||
On | On Xubuntu, | ||
* Alt + F1 (Ctrl + ESC): Application menu. | |||
* Alt + F2 (Super + R): Application Finder. | |||
== Add a new keyboard shortcut == | |||
Let's say I want to assign Ctrl+Alt+s to bring the shutdown dialog. | |||
# System Settings -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Windows -> Toggle shaded state -> Backspace to disable it. For some reason, I cannot assign a new keybinding using the method of '''Custom Shortcuts' method. | |||
# Open ''Ubuntu Software Center ''and install '''Compiz Config Setting Manager''' program. Open the program by search ''Compiz'' and then create a new command '''gnome-session-quit --power-off --force''' with a name like 'Shutdown' and the keyboard binding we want. CCSM -> General -> Commands. | |||
With this approach, it will give a dialog with 4 options (lock suspend restart shutdown) but no one is pre-selected. If we want the shutdown icon being preselected, use [http://askubuntu.com/questions/554576/how-do-i-call-gnome-session-quit-with-countdown-from-unity this script] where the '''zenity''' command was used to create a dialog. The '''zenity''' program was pre-installed in Ubuntu. See [http://www.howtogeek.com/107537/how-to-make-simple-graphical-shell-scripts-with-zenity-on-linux/ How to Make Simple Graphical Shell Scripts with Zenity on Linux]. | |||
==== | == Firefox == | ||
* Space: page down | |||
* Shift + space: page up | |||
= Hardware/Device manager = | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>[https://www.howtogeek.com/426199/how-to-list-your-computers-devices-from-the-linux-terminal/ How to List Your Computer’s Devices From the Linux Terminal] mount , lsblk, df , fdisk , The /proc Files , lspci , lsusb , lsdev , lshw , lsscsi , dmidecode, hwinfo. </li> | |||
<li>By default, ubuntu does not provide any graphical tool like device manager on Windows. A very close one is '''[http://ezix.org/project/wiki/HardwareLiSter lshw]''' (hardware lister). A GUI tool based on it is called '''lshw-gtk''' (seems not as informative as the command line one) and can be installed by ''sudo apt-get install lshw-gtk'' in Ubuntu/Debian or ''yum install lshw'' in Red Hat/Fedora/CentOS.</li> | |||
<li>As you can see the line containing 'display' shows the motherboard (P45T-A), CPU (Intel Core 2 Duo E8400), graphical card (GeForce 9400 GT in this case), et al. | |||
< | |||
< | |||
http://wiki. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
$sudo | $ sudo lshw -short | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
</li> | |||
<li>For storage part, ubuntu provides a graphical tool. See "disk utility" on gnome based ubuntu or search for "[https://live.gnome.org/Design/Apps/Disks disks]" in launcher. </li> | |||
<li>[https://www.cloudsavvyit.com/14492/how-to-use-lsusb-in-linux-with-a-practical-example/ How to Use lsusb in Linux (With a Practical Example)] </li> | |||
<li>[https://itsfoss.com/inxi-system-info-linux/ Get All Kind of System Information in Linux Terminal With '''inxi'''] </li> | |||
</ul> | |||
== | == Hardinfo, Hardinfo2 == | ||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/12/how-to-install-system-information-tool.html How To Install System Information Tool HardInfo 0.6 Alpha ('''System Profiler And Benchmark''') On Ubuntu, Pop!_OS Or Linux Mint From PPA] | |||
* [https://www.tecmint.com/hardinfo-check-hardware-information-in-linux/ Hardinfo2 – Check Hardware Information in Linux] | |||
== Find out motherboard information == | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# No root | |||
cat /sys/devices/virtual/dmi/id/board_{vendor,name,version} | |||
# Root | |||
sudo dmidecode | grep -A4 '^Base Board Information' | |||
</pre> | |||
== RAM == | |||
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/check-ram-speed-linux/ Linux Check Ram Speed and Type Commands] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo | sudo apt install dmidecode | ||
sudo dmidecode --type 17 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
==== | == Hard drive specification == | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
# hdparm command | |||
sudo hdparm -I /dev/sda | |||
# OR using lshw command | |||
sudo apt-get install lshw | |||
lshw -class disk -class storage | |||
# Find Out Disks Name Only | |||
lshw -short -C disk | |||
# smartmontools package | |||
sudo smartctl -i /dev/sda | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
[ | = [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UFW ufw (uncomplicated firewall)] = | ||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/122065/htg-explains-i-have-a-router-do-i-need-a-firewall/ Do I Need a Firewall if I Have a Router?] | |||
* [https://linuxize.com/post/how-to-setup-a-firewall-with-ufw-on-ubuntu-18-04/ How To Set Up a Firewall with UFW on Ubuntu 18.04] | |||
* [http://gufw.org/ Gufw], https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Gufw | |||
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ufw-allow-incoming-ssh-connections-from-a-specific-ip-address-subnet-on-ubuntu-debian/ How to open ssh 22/TCP port using ufw on Ubuntu/Debian Linux] | |||
The default firewall configuration tool for Ubuntu is '''ufw'''. Developed to ease '''iptables''' firewall configuration, ufw provides a user friendly way to create an IPv4 or IPv6 host-based firewall. By default UFW is disabled. | |||
Suppose I have a virtual machine running a web server at port 8888 (The vm may be initialized by the Vagrant command). I can access the webpage from my host machine using http://localhost:8888. | |||
Now I want the web page to be accessible from other local machines. We can use the '''ufw''' command to enable the firewall wall and open ports for certain services. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo ufw allow 8888/tcp | |||
sudo ufw show added | |||
sudo ufw enable | |||
sudo ufw status | |||
sudo ufw app list | |||
sudo ufw delete allow 8069 | |||
nmap localhost | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Now I can go to another machine, open a browser at http://hostip:8888/. I should be able to get the same result as I got from the host machine. | |||
sudo | In one instance sshing to a server failed (connection time) for some reason. The solution is to run the following command on the server | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo ufw allow 22/tcp | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
A graphical interface program is called [http://gufw.org/ Gufw Firewall]. | |||
Other things '''ufw''' can do: | |||
< | * Allow/Deny by ports and (optional) protocols | ||
* Allow/Deny by service name | |||
</ | * Disable ping requests. | ||
* Allow by specific IP | |||
* Allow by subnet | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>Allow by specific port and IP address/range. For example, to allow a VNC access from a specific IP. | |||
<pre> | |||
# https://serverfault.com/a/74024 | |||
sudo ufw allow from 192.168.1.0/24 to any port 5900 | |||
</pre> | |||
</li> | |||
</ul> | |||
* Deny by certain IP address | |||
* Deny by certain IP address and certain port | |||
= webmin = | |||
See http://www.webmin.com/deb.html | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/webadmin/webmin_1.600_all.deb | |||
dpkg --install webmin_1.600_all.deb | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
The install will be done automatically to ''/usr/share/webmin'', the administration username set to ''root'' and the password to your current root password. You should now be able to login to Webmin at the URL http://localhost:10000/. Or if accessing it remotely, replace localhost with your system's IP address. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
apt-get install perl libnet-ssleay-perl openssl libauthen-pam-perl libpam-runtime libio-pty-perl apt-show-versions python | |||
wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/webadmin/webmin_1.600_all.deb | |||
dpkg --install webmin_1.600_all.deb | |||
</pre> | |||
[[File:Webmin.png|100px]] | |||
= | = Virtualize Linux = | ||
http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/features/how-to-virtualise-linux-part-1 | |||
== CPU information == | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ grep name /proc/cpuinfo | sort -u | |||
model name : AMD Phenom(tm) II X6 1055T Processor # home | |||
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU X7560 @ 2.27GHz # helix | |||
# | |||
# | model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1650 0 @ 3.20GHz # office | ||
</pre> | |||
# | == CPU usage == | ||
* See [[Raspberry#E-ink|Raspberry Pi eink]] example where python's psutil package was used. | |||
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/54458254/how-to-get-cpu-usage-in-python-2-7-without-using-psutil How to get CPU usage in python 2.7 without using PSUtil] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
import psutil | |||
print psutil.cpu_percent() | |||
</pre> | |||
Note not like the '''htop''' command, the result from psutil fluctuates a lot. | |||
== Find out if the OS is running in a virtual environment == | |||
Linux adds the '''hypervisor''' flag to '''/proc/cpuinfo''' if the kernel detects running on some sort of a hypervisor. See [http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/3685/find-out-if-the-os-is-running-in-a-virtual-environment here]. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
</ | cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep hypervisor | ||
</pre> | |||
== | == Virtualbox == | ||
See [[Virtualbox|here]]. | |||
==== | == gksu == | ||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/04/gksu-removed-from-ubuntu-heres.html gksu Removed From Ubuntu, Here's The Recommended Replacement] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/gksu-replacement-ubuntu/ gksu Removed From Ubuntu, Here’s What You Can Use Instead] | |||
== | == VBoxClient: the VirtualBox kernel service is not running == | ||
Got the above message on the upper right corner of the screen for every booting. Note I don't install VirtualBox. A [https://www.linuxliteos.com/forums/other/vboxclient-the-virtualbox-kernel-service-is-not-running/15/ solution] is run | |||
[ | {{Pre}} | ||
gksudo gedit /etc/X11/Xsession.d/98vboxadd-xclient | |||
</pre> | |||
find the line | |||
<pre> | |||
notify-send "VBoxClient: the VirtualBox kernel service is not running. Exiting." | |||
</pre> | |||
Now change '''notify-send''' to '''echo'''. | |||
= | = Thin client = | ||
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/ThinClients | |||
== | == [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuLTSP UbuntuLTSP] == | ||
* [http://www.havetheknowhow.com/Configure-the-server/Install-LTSP.html How to install LTSP (Linux Terminal Server Project) on Ubuntu Server] | |||
* | * Full Tutorial - Install and configure LTSP server and clients (ubuntu, ltsp, howto) [https://youtu.be/s1cguYmZ3-c Part 1] and [https://youtu.be/2aFcDlp9-xw Part 2] | ||
==== | == [http://www.ltsp.org/ LTSP] == | ||
=== | == Raspberry Pi == | ||
[http://www.uzerp.com/blog/running-raspberry-pis-as-thin-clients-with-ubuntu-14-04-lts/ Running Raspberry Pi’s as Thin Clients with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS] | |||
[https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuLTSP/RaspberryPi UbuntuLTSP/RaspberryPi | |||
] | |||
= Remote desktop = | |||
[[Remote_desktop|Remote desktop]] | |||
= Install sshd = | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
apt-get update | |||
apt-get install openssh-server | |||
</pre> | |||
= sftp, vsftpd and virtual users = | |||
* [https://www.linuxtechi.com/configure-chroot-sftp-in-linux/ How to configure chroot SFTP in Linux] | |||
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/vsftpd | |||
* http://www.ubuntugeek.com/setup-ftp-server-using-vsftp-and-configure-secure-ftp-connections-using-tlsssl-on-ubuntu-16-04-server.html | |||
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/ubuntu-vsftpd/ | |||
= ProFTPd = | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/install-proftpd-on-ubuntu/ How to Install and Set Up ProFTPD With TLS on Ubuntu] | |||
= Install LAMP = | |||
See the page [http://library.linode.com/lamp-guides/debian-6-squeeze] | |||
<pre> | |||
apt-get install apache2 | |||
a2enmod rewrite | |||
apt-get install mysql-server [I choose branch name as MYSQL root password] | |||
apt-get install php5 php-pear php5-suhosin | |||
apt-get install php5-mysql | |||
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Another instruction including how to set up user directories for Apache web server http://wiki.debian.org/LaMp | |||
<pre> | |||
apt-get install mysql-server mysql-client | |||
mysql_secure_installation | |||
apt-get install apache2 apache2-doc | |||
apt-get install php5 php5-mysql libapache2-mod-php5 | |||
apt-get install python libapache2-mod-python | |||
</pre> | |||
The apache configuration file is in '''/etc/apache2/apache2.conf'''. | |||
For PHP, it is also useful to install php for command line. | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo aptitude install php5-cli | |||
</pre> | |||
Restarting apache before testing on web browser | |||
<pre> | |||
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart | |||
</pre> | |||
== Debian 8 == | |||
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-linux-apache-mysql-php-lamp-stack-on-debian-8 | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo aptitude install apache2 apache2-doc | |||
sudo aptitude install mysql-server php5-mysql | |||
# optional | |||
sudo mysql_secure_installation | |||
sudo aptitude install php5-common libapache2-mod-php5 php5-cli | |||
sudo service apache2 restart | |||
</pre> | |||
== | = [http://www.ampps.com/downloads AMPPS] for a local server = | ||
http://www.howtogeek.com/219983/how-to-use-ampps-to-install-joomla-locally/ | |||
XAMPP is a free, open source cross platform web server solution stack package for Windows, Mac, and Linux. AMPPS is a software stack from Softaculous enabling Apache, MySQL, MongoDB, PHP, Perl, Python, and Softaculous auto-installer on a desktop. | |||
== XAMPP == | |||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-install-xampp-on-ubuntu-20-04/ How to Install XAMPP on Ubuntu 20.04] | |||
[[ | = Sandstorm: self-hostable web productivity suite = | ||
* [https://sandstorm.io/ Sandstorm] Open source platform for self-hosting web apps | |||
* https://apps.sandstorm.io/ | |||
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/1/productivity-tool-sandstorm Getting started with Sandstorm, an open source web app platform] | |||
= | = [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_management_system Content management systems] = | ||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_content_management_systems List of content management systems] | |||
==== | == PageKit == | ||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-pagekit-cms-on-ubuntu-1804/ How to Install PageKit CMS on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS] | |||
== [https://processwire.com/ ProcessWire] == | |||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-processwire-cms-on-centos-7/ How to Install ProcessWire CMS on CentOS 7] | |||
== | == [https://www.bookstackapp.com/docs/admin/installation/#manual BookStack] == | ||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-bookstack-on-ubuntu-1604/ How to Install BookStack on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS] | |||
A docker image is also available. | |||
==== | == Mediawiki == | ||
* My [[Mediawiki|Mediawiki]] | |||
== | = UPnP server = | ||
See [[UPnP|UPnP]]. | |||
= | = Storage server GlusterFS = | ||
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/high-availability-storage-with-glusterfs-on-debian-8-with-two-nodes/ | |||
= | = Security = | ||
* [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/improve-online-security-defend-privacy/ The Complete Guide to Improving Your Online Security and Defending Your Privacy]. It covers web browsers, browser extensions, email providers, search engines, VPN, password managers, OS, mobile, messaging, cloud storage & encryption tools. | |||
== Automatic security update == | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-setup-automatic-security-updates-on-ubuntu-1604/ How to Setup Automatic Security Updates on Ubuntu 16.04] | |||
* [https://www.2daygeek.com/manually-install-security-updates-ubuntu-debian/ How to Manually Install Security Updates on Debian/Ubuntu?] | |||
/ | |||
/ | |||
/ | |||
/ | |||
/ | |||
/ | |||
== TPM == | |||
[https://ubuntu.com/blog/tpm-backed-full-disk-encryption-is-coming-to-ubuntu TPM-backed Full Disk Encryption is coming to Ubuntu] | |||
=== | == https connection == | ||
* [http://security.stackexchange.com/questions/2914/can-my-company-see-what-https-sites-i-went-to Can my company see what HTTPS sites I went to?] | |||
* [http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB118539543272477927 Ten Things Your IT Department Won't Tell You] | |||
== HTTPOXY == | |||
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/httpoxy-protect-your-server/ | |||
/ | |||
== Fail2Ban, Tinyhoneypot and IPv4 security == | |||
* https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/security.md | |||
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/increase-ipv4-security-with-fail2ban-and-tinyhoneypot-on-debian-jessie/ | |||
=== | == MYSQL security == | ||
Just execute '''mysql_secure_installation''' from the command line. | |||
* You can set a password for root accounts. | |||
* You can remove root accounts that are accessible from outside the local host. | |||
* You can remove anonymous-user accounts. | |||
* You can remove the test database, which by default can be accessed by anonymous users. | |||
See http://www.mysql-optimization.com/mysql-secure-installation-program.html | |||
== Meltdown and Spectre == | |||
* https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SecurityTeam/KnowledgeBase/SpectreAndMeltdown | |||
* https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/software/meltdown-and-spectre-patches-causing-boot-issues-for-ubuntu-16-04-computers/ | |||
* https://www.ghacks.net/2018/01/11/check-linux-for-spectre-or-meltdown-vulnerability/ | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade | |||
uname -a | |||
# 4.4.0-109 | |||
</pre> | |||
= HTTPS connection issue = | |||
An https connection problem with certificate. Error message comes from Google-chrome and Safari browsers. | |||
Your connection is not private: | |||
[[File:HttpsNotPrivateChrome.png|250px]], | |||
[[File:HttpsNotPrivateSafari.png|250px]] | |||
If we use wget or curl on a terminal, we will get an error message | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ wget https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz | |||
ERROR: cannot verify ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov's certificate, issued by ‘CN=DigiCert SHA2 High Assurance Server CA,OU=www.digicert.com,O=DigiCert Inc,C=US’: | |||
Unable to locally verify the issuer's authority. | |||
To connect to ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov insecurely, use `--no-check-certificate'. | |||
# curl -L https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz -o sratoolkit.tar.gz | |||
</pre> | |||
It is interesting after a few tries, '''curl''' works again and '''wget''' works after adding the option ''--no-check-certificate'' | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ wget --no-check-certificate https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz | |||
$ curl -L -O https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz | |||
</pre> | |||
== | == HTTPS at NCBI: Guidance for Users == | ||
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/home/develop/https-guidance/ | |||
= | = Compiling R = | ||
Use the following command to download required components before building any R packages. See also [http://cran.r-project.org/bin/linux/ubuntu/ ubuntu package for R] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get build-dep r-base | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
= Create .deb file = | |||
'''[https://help.ubuntu.com/community/CheckInstall checkinstall]''' command | |||
* http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/162 | |||
* http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/using-checkinstall-build-packages-source | |||
* https://www.linux.com/learn/tutorials/307110-easy-package-creation-with-checkinstall | |||
* http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/tutorials/build-your-own-deb-and-rpm-packages | |||
'''[https://debian-handbook.info/browse/stable/debian-packaging.html dpkg-buildpackage]''' command | |||
* http://conoroneill.net/controlling-an-i-racer-rc-car-using-a-wii-balance-board-and-raspberry_pi/ | |||
== | = Package maintenance = | ||
See [[Ubuntu_package|Ubuntu package]]. | |||
== | = Software automation = | ||
== | == Ansible == | ||
Ansible is a free and open source software that can be used to automate software provisioning, configuration management, and application deployment. | |||
See [[Ansible]] | |||
= Terminal Assistant = | |||
* [https://github.com/pickhardt/betty Betty]: [http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/use-natural-language-with-betty-your-digital-assistant-in-the-linux-terminal/ makeuseof] and [http://www.infoworld.com/article/2696910/open-source-tools/install-the-command-line-virtual-assistant-betty-in-linux-mint-17.html infoworld] | |||
* [https://github.com/semicode-ltd/sarah Sarah] | |||
= Torrent = | |||
[http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/top-6-torrent-alternatives-to-pirate-bay-downloads/ Top 6 Torrent Alternatives to The Pirate Bay] (7/5/2017) | |||
(old) Popular search sites | |||
* torrentz | |||
* thepiratebay | |||
* isohunt | |||
* kickass torrents | |||
== How to set up torrent scheduling on Linux == | |||
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-set-up-torrent-scheduling-on-linux/. It covers 'Deluge', 'Transmission' and 'Rtorrent'. | |||
This can be useful for people who want to take advantage of their computer while they are not using it, like during the nighttime for example. This way, large portions of huge files can be downloaded without delaying your work activities, or interrupting/undermining your media consumption. | |||
== | == Torrent client command line: [http://aria2.sourceforge.net/ aria2c] == | ||
aria2 is a lightweight multi-protocol & multi-source command-line download utility. It supports '''HTTP/HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent''' and '''Metalink'''. aria2 can be manipulated via built-in '''JSON-RPC''' and '''XML-RPC''' interfaces. | |||
http://linuxconfig.org/aria2-all-in-one-command-line-download-tool | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get install aria2 | |||
aria2c magnet:?xt=urn:btih:1e99d95f1764644a86a8e99bfd80c ... | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
=== | == Torrent client: transmission-cli == | ||
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Transmission | |||
== Torrent client command line: rtorrent == | |||
We first need to create an .rtorrent.rc file under $HOME directory. Then run | |||
</ | <pre> | ||
rtorrent XXX.torrent | |||
</pre> | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/RTorrent | |||
* http://harbhag.wordpress.com/2010/06/30/tutorial-using-rtorrent-on-linux-like-a-pro/ [download a template] | |||
* http://mylinuxbook.com/rtorrent-bit-torrent-client/ | |||
=== | In the simplest case, .rtorrent.rc looks like | ||
<pre> | |||
# On the terminal, mkdir ~/Downloads/rsession | |||
download_rate = 0 | |||
upload_rate =50 | |||
directory = ~/Downloads | |||
session = ~/Downloads/rsession | |||
port_range = 55556-55560 | |||
scgi_port = 127.0.0.1:5000 | |||
use_udp_trackers = yes | |||
encryption = allow_incoming,try_outgoing,enable_retry | |||
</pre> | |||
As you can see here, I have created a sub-directory ''rsession'' under ~/Downloads/. | |||
== | [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/RTorrent#Key_bindings Keybinding]: | ||
* ctrl + q = quit application | |||
* ctrl + d = stop an active download | |||
* ctrl + s = start downloading | |||
= glibc = | |||
== Patch glibc 2.9 == | |||
* http://www.infoworld.com/article/3033862/security/patch-now-unix-bug-puts-linux-android-and-ios-systems-at-risk.html | |||
* http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-patch-cve-2015-7547-glibc-getaddrinfo-stack-based-buffer-overflow/ | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get upgrade | |||
sudo reboot | |||
</pre> | |||
= SSL = | |||
See [[SSL|SSL]]. | |||
= | = File does not exist: /var/www/favicon.ico from /var/log/apache2/error.log = | ||
The reason? You have not created a favicon, also known as a website icon, for your website. It’s the icon that displays in the address bar of your web browser when you connect to a website. A web browser will request this icon file from every website. | |||
If you choose to create one. Use a program such as Gimp and create a 16×16 pixel image and save it as a .ico filetype. Then upload that file to the DocumentRoot of your website. You will need one for each VirtualHost. If you don’t have Gimp, there are online resources such as [http://www.favicon.cc/ favicon.cc] where you can create a .ico file and download it for your own use. | |||
As you know by now, not having a favicon.ico file, won’t stop web browsers from requesting it each time. But you can tell Apache not to log the event as an error message. You will still see the request in the access.log, but at least you will have a cleaner error.log file. | |||
Add the following block of code to each VirtualHost, or at least the ones which don’t have a favicon file. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Redirect 404 /favicon.ico | |||
<Location /favicon.ico> | |||
ErrorDocument 404 "No favicon" | |||
</Location> | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Don’t forget to restart apache after making the change. If you want make a “global” change, which would apply to any and all VirtualHosts, you can create a file in Apache’s conf.d folder with a name such as nofavicon.conf and then add that block of code to the file. That would disable favicon across the board and save you from having to edit each VirtualHost. | |||
Or, you create an empty file with the name “favicon.ico” in the directory root of Apache (for exemple /var/www/). | |||
== | = Show weather on the taskbar = | ||
http://www.noobslab.com/2012/10/important-thingstweaks-to-do-after.html | |||
= | = WebCam = | ||
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Webcam | |||
[https:// | Install '''cheese''' or '''guvcview'''. [https://thinkrpi.wordpress.com/2013/04/05/step-3-install-softwares-for-webcam-and-computer-vision/ An example of using computer vision] on Raspberry Pi. | ||
] | |||
=== | = Watch TV = | ||
[http://code.google.com/p/freetuxtv/wiki/HomePage?wl=en Freetuxtv] | |||
= | = Running concrete5 On Nginx (LEMP) = | ||
http://www.howtoforge.com/running-concrete5-on-nginx-lemp-on-debian-squeeze-ubuntu-12.10 | |||
= | = Open mms stream in google chrom in linux = | ||
http://www.thermetics.net/2011/12/07/how-to-open-mms-links-from-chrome-under-ubuntu/ | |||
= Download mms stream (suitable if mms is an extension; for example, studioclassroom) = | |||
* Use mimms (will NOT output to speaker at the same time; so is best in terms of performance) | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get install | sudo apt-get install mimms | ||
mimms -t 60 mms://example.com/video | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
where -t option specifies number of minutes. See http://linuxers.org/howto/how-download-mms-streaming-videos-ubuntu | |||
The output will have the same extension as the input. But it is not always clear. For example | |||
<pre> | |||
$ mimms -t 3 mms://bcr.media.hinet.net/RA000073 | |||
mms://bcr.media.hinet.net/RA000073 => RA000073.wmv | |||
1.48 MB / ∞ B (8.79 kB/s, ∞ s remaining) | |||
Download stopped after user-specified timeout. | |||
</pre> | |||
* Use mplayer (will output to speaker at the same time, so suffer from performance, anyway do not get output) | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
mplayer mms:/link/something.xxx -dumpstream -dumpfile file.xxx | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
mms:/link/something.xxx - link to the stream you wish to download | |||
file.xxx - file to which you wish to download the stream, be careful to write the same extension xxx | |||
Wait for the file to download and that's it. See http://ubuntuhowtos.com/howtos/download_mms_stream | |||
= Streaming = | |||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/02/stream-videos-music-and-pictures-from.html Stream Videos, Music And Pictures From Gnome To Chromecast With Cast To TV Extension (v6 And v7 Released)] | |||
./ | |||
= Keep a linux process running after log out = | |||
See also [[Terminal_multiplexer|Terminal multiplexer]] page. | |||
* http://linux.101hacks.com/unix/nohup-command/ | |||
* http://serverfault.com/questions/311593/keeping-a-linux-process-running-after-i-logout | |||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/804823/nohup-command-linux/ How to Use the nohup Command in Linux] | |||
<pre> | |||
# nohup command-with-options & | |||
</pre> | |||
If we use '''ssh -X''' to connect to a remote computer, the command can launch a GUI application on my local computer (without strange messages shown on the terminal). | |||
= Open Firefox in cron job = | |||
The trick is to use '''export DISPLAY=:0''' | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
export DISPLAY=:0 | |||
firefox http://www.google.com & | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
= Close firefox gracefully = | |||
Use '''wmctrl''' command. | |||
* http://www.linuxjournal.com/magazine/hack-and-automate-your-desktop-wmctrl | |||
* http://tomas.styblo.name/wmctrl/ | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get install wmctrl | |||
wmctrl -c firefox | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
The | = Audio = | ||
== Get normalized sound volume == | |||
The sound from some youtube video can be too low. The following solution seems to work on Ubuntu 18.04 (nuc). | |||
[https://askubuntu.com/a/771628 Automatically adjust the volume based on content?]. It works. A reboot is needed. Tested on [https://youtu.be/RMe8MJhjJW4 this video]. See the automatic change in setting after reboot. [[:File:Soundnormalize.png]]. | |||
== | == Change default audio player == | ||
Right-click an MP3 file, and from the menu select “Properties”. In the window that appears, go to the “Open With” tab and select VLC or whatever. Click the “Set As Default” button to set VLC as the default player. | |||
You might also want to set the default player in the sound menu. | |||
== Trim == | |||
[https://osxdaily.com/2010/09/16/trim-mp3-on-your-mac/ Trim an MP3 on your Mac]. Open the file using QuickTime. "Cmd + t" to open the Trim function, or, you can also find the Trim function under the “Edit” menu. The rest is easy. | |||
== Compress audio files == | |||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/tools-compress-audio-files/ How to Compress Large Audio Files: 5 Easy and Effective Ways] | |||
The | == Audio editing == | ||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/best-free-audio-editing-software/ The Best Free Audio Editing Software] | |||
== Audio recorder == | |||
[https://www.apowersoft.com/ubuntu-audio-recorder.html Top 5 Audio Recorders for Ubuntu Recommendation] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:audio-recorder/ppa | |||
sudo apt update; sudo apt install audio-recorder | |||
</pre> | |||
== Record audio out from your browser using the command line == | |||
http://www.pantz.org/software/alsa/recording_sound_from_your_web_browser_using_linux.html | |||
Step 1: Install required programs | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install gnome-media pavucontrol lame | |||
</pre> | |||
Step 2: Create a script file <recordfm.sh> | |||
# | <pre> | ||
#!/bin/bash | |||
# Get pulseaudio monitor sink monitor device then pipe it to | |||
# sox to record wav, lame to encode to mp3, or flac to encode flac | |||
FILENAME="$1" | |||
STOPTIME="$2" | |||
# Encoding options for lame and flac. | |||
LAMEOPTIONS="--preset cbr 192 -s 44.1" | |||
if [ -z "$FILENAME" ]; then | |||
echo -e " | |||
Usage: $0 /path/to/output.mp3 | |||
Usage: $0 /path/to/output.mp3 stopinseconds" >&2 | |||
exit 1 | |||
fi | |||
# Get sink monitor: | |||
MONITOR=$(pactl list | egrep -A2 '^(\*\*\* )?Source #' | \ | |||
grep 'Name: .*\.monitor$' | awk '{print $NF}' | tail -n1) | |||
echo "set-source-mute ${MONITOR} false" | pacmd >/dev/null | |||
# Record it raw, and pipe to lame for an mp3 | |||
echo "Recording to $FILENAME ..." | |||
if [[ $FILENAME =~ .mp3$ ]]; then | |||
if [ -z $STOPTIME ]; then | |||
parec -d $MONITOR | lame $LAMEOPTIONS -r - $FILENAME | |||
else | |||
echo -e "\nStopping in $STOPTIME seconds" | |||
parec -d $MONITOR | lame $LAMEOPTIONS -r - $FILENAME 2>&1 & | |||
SPID=$! | |||
sleep $STOPTIME | |||
kill -9 $SPID | |||
fi | |||
fi | |||
</pre> | |||
Step 3: play the music or launch a browser with a desired url. | |||
Step 4: run the bash script | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
chmod +x recordfm.sh | |||
./recordfm.sh test.mp3 10 | |||
</pre> | |||
where <test.mp3> is the output filename and 10 is recording length (seconds). It works. | |||
Note the script teaches us how to find out the ID for a process we just launched (cleaner than using ps -ef | grep commands). The command is | |||
<pre> | |||
SPID=$! | |||
echo $SPID | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
==== | == Advanced audio control == | ||
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/advanced-audio-control-on-linux/ | |||
* Alsamixer | |||
* Pulse Audio Volume Control | |||
* Pulse Audio Equalizer | |||
== Music player == | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-linux-music-player-apps/ The 15 Best Linux Music Player Apps] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/sunamu-music-widget/ Sunamu]: Display Lyrics for Currently Playing Music on the Desktop in Linux | |||
[[ | == Podcast == | ||
[ | * [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/manage-podcasts-linux-10-apps/ The 5 Best Apps for Managing Podcasts on Linux] | ||
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/1/productivity-tool-gpodder Get started with gPodder, an open source podcast client] | |||
* [https://lifehacker.com/how-to-make-your-podcast-sound-like-npr-1840048544 How to Make Your Podcast Sound Like NPR] | |||
== | == White noise == | ||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-white-noise-apps-for-linux/ The 6 Best White Noise Apps for Linux to Help You Relax] | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/04/blanket-ambient-noise-app-for-linux.html Blanket: Ambient Noise App For Linux That Helps You Stay Focused And Improves Your Productivity] (Linux only) | |||
= | = SMPlayer: video player = | ||
* [ | * [http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-smplayer-on-ubuntu-15-10.html Install SMPlayer on Ubuntu 15.10] | ||
* [https://itsfoss.com/video-players-linux/ Top Open Source Video Players for Linux] | |||
* https:// | == MPV - terminal media player including youtube videos == | ||
See [[Youtube#mpv|Youtube]] | |||
== | == Listen to the radio at the Linux terminal == | ||
[https:// | [https://opensource.com/article/18/12/linux-toy-mplayer Listen to the radio at the Linux terminal] | ||
== | == SMTube: search and watch youtube == | ||
* https://www.smplayer.info/ | |||
* http://www.smtube.org/. SMTube is an application that allows to browse, search and play YouTube videos. Videos are played back with a media player (by default SMPlayer) instead of a flash player, this allows better performance, particularly with HD content. No youtube ads. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rvm/smplayer | |||
apt- | sudo apt-get update | ||
apt-get | sudo apt-get install smplayer smtube | ||
apt-get install | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== GNOME mpv player == | |||
Simple GTK+ frontend for mpv. | |||
https://celluloid-player.github.io/ The interface of SMPlayer looks old. The GNOME mpv player (now called '''celluloid''' looks better. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xuzhen666/gnome-mpv | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
apt- | sudo apt install celluloid | ||
apt-get | |||
apt | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== Haruna == | |||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/01/haruna-video-player-is-cool-mpv-gui.html Haruna Video Player Is A Cool mpv GUI Frontend]. It does not have deb package yet. | |||
= Youtube command line tools = | |||
== Play audio only == | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/olivia-cloud-based-music-player-with.html Olivia]: Cloud-Based Music Player With YouTube Support And Over 25,000 Online Radio Stations | |||
/ | * http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/229787/audio-only-youtube-player/229790#229790 | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
# play in background (prompt will return, a new vlc process will be launched) | |||
cvlc --vout none https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1O0W7jSd940 | |||
# or play in foreground (prompt will not return) | |||
/usr/bin/vlc -I dummy --vout none https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1O0W7jSd940 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Using this approach to play audio only will save CPU power. Tested on Odroid. | |||
However, it seems this approach does not work on a playlist, for example, https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6h94tLpXv3LabUa7B0tCz7K0pI5ZzZEi. See '''mpsyt''' for a solution! | |||
https://www. | |||
== | == Youtube-dl == | ||
[[Youtube#Youtube-dl|Youtube->Youtube-dl]] | |||
= Video editing in Linux = | |||
See [[Video|Video]]. | |||
== | == Video rip/convert/transcoder == | ||
See [[Video#Video_rip.2Fconvert.2Ftranscoder|Video]]. | |||
== | = Open Websites In A Floating, Borderless Window/Picture in picture = | ||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/open-websites-in-floating-borderless.html Open Websites In A Floating, Borderless Window With Pennywise] | |||
= | = How to install a Ceph Storage Cluster on Ubuntu = | ||
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-a-ceph-cluster-on-ubuntu-16-04/ | |||
== | = Building a simple Beowulf Like Cluster with Ubuntu = | ||
See also the [[Raspberry#Clustering|Raspberry Pi]] page where a simple cluster was built. | |||
==== | == MPICH2 == | ||
Resource: | |||
# http://byobu.info/article/Building_a_simple_Beowulf_cluster_with_Ubuntu/ | |||
# https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MpichCluster | |||
# https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SettingUpNFSHowTo (NFS configure) | |||
Here is my record for creating a cluster environment based on ubuntu 13.04. The master node is running on ubuntu 13.04 desktop with virtualBox 4.2. The virtualBox has added a host-only adapter (vboxnet0) with ip 192.168.56.1. This adapter will be added to the master node so I can use this ip to identify the master node in the host-only network. Creating cluster using VirtualBox is just for the education purpose, not for real practice. | |||
* (virtualBox) Create two virtual machines running on ubuntu 13.04 server. The ssh server was checked during installation. The host name for each of them is ubuntuNode1 and ubuntuNode2 respectively. The network adapter is left by default (NAT) during installation. But after the installation is done, I shutdown the system and add a host-only adapter (vboxnet0) to each of them. Then after the system is up again, I change the IP so it is static. Do '''sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces''' and append the following before running '''sudo /etc/init.d/networking restart''' to take the change in effect. | |||
* | <pre> | ||
auto eth1 | |||
iface eth1 inet static | |||
address 192.168.56.101 # use 192.168.56.102 for ubuntuNode2 | |||
netmask 255.255.255.0 | |||
network 192.168.56.0 | |||
broadcast 192.168.56.255 | |||
</pre> | |||
Note that it is better not to add host-only network before installation, or during installation it will ask what is the primary network (confusing). So at the end each new nodes should have both '''eth0''' and '''eth1''' adapters and they should not reside in same subset. '''ifconfig''' may not show all adapters so we should use '''ifconfig -a''' instead. Although host-only network is used for communication between guest and guest OR guest and host, since each guest node has NAT adapter by default so the guest machine can still access the internet. | |||
sudo nano /etc/ | * (master node) Edit /etc/hosts so it like like | ||
sudo /etc/init.d/ | <pre> | ||
127.0.0.1 localhost | |||
192.168.56.1 ubuntu1304 | |||
192.168.56.101 ubuntuNode1 | |||
192.168.56.102 ubuntuNode2 | |||
< | </pre> | ||
Note that the master node will be used to start jobs on the cluster although it is OK to let the master node as one of nodes to execute the jobs. | |||
* (all nodes) Run | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo adduser mpiuser --uid 999 | |||
</pre> | |||
It is recommeneded to use the same password for the user. This will create a new directory ''/home/mpiuser''. This is the home directory for user ''mpiuser'' and we will use it to execute jobs on the cluster. | |||
* (master node) Run | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel-server | |||
</pre> | |||
</ | * (other nodes) Run | ||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install nfs-client | |||
</pre> | |||
* (master node) Add the following to the file '''/etc/exports''' | |||
<pre> | |||
/home/mpiuser *(rw,sync,no_subtree_check) | |||
</pre> | |||
* | or something like | ||
<pre> | |||
/home/mpiuser 192.168.56.0/24(rw,sync,no_subtree_check) | |||
</pre> | |||
Some people create a shared folder under /srv directory. | |||
Now run | |||
<pre> | |||
< | sudo service nfs-kernel-server restart | ||
sudo | </pre> | ||
* (master node) | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo ufw allow from 192.168.56.0/24 | |||
</pre> | |||
sudo | * (other nodes) | ||
<pre> | |||
sudo mount ubuntu1304:/home/mpiuser /home/mpiuser | |||
</pre> | |||
And if we want to mount the NFS shared directory when the compute nodes are booted, edit '''/etc/fstab''' by adding | |||
<pre> | |||
ubuntu1304:/home/mpiuser /home/mpiuser nfs | |||
</pre> | |||
* (master node) | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install ssh | |||
su mpiuser | |||
ssh-keygen | |||
ssh-copy-id localhost | |||
* | </pre> | ||
We can test if the ssh works without passwords | |||
<pre> | |||
ssh ubuntuNode1 | |||
echo $HOSTNAME | |||
</pre> | |||
* (all nodes) | |||
< | |||
* | |||
* | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get | sudo apt-get install mpich2 | ||
which mpirun | |||
which mpiexec | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
* (master node, mpiuser) | |||
Go to the home directory of mpiuser and create a new file '''hosts'''. Include host names for computing nodes (it is OK to include master node, ubuntu1304, as one of computing nodes) | |||
<pre> | |||
ubuntuNode1 | |||
ubuntuNode2 | |||
</pre> | |||
* (all nodes) | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-get install build-essential | |||
</pre> | |||
* (master node, mpiuser). Creating a test file <mpi_hello.c> | |||
<pre> | |||
#include <stdio.h> | |||
#include <mpi.h> | |||
int main(int argc, char** argv) { | |||
int myrank, nprocs; | |||
MPI_Init(&argc, &argv); | |||
MPI_Comm_size(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &nprocs); | |||
MPI_Comm_rank(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &myrank); | |||
printf("Hello from processor %d of %d\n", myrank, nprocs); | |||
MPI_Finalize(); | |||
return 0; | |||
} | |||
</pre> | |||
And compile and run it by | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
mpicc mpi_hello.c -o mpi_hello | |||
mpiexec -n 3 -f hosts ./mpi_hello | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
We should see something like | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Hello from processor 0 of 2 | |||
Hello from processor 1 of 2 | |||
</pre> | |||
Successful! That's it. | |||
== OpenMPI == | |||
* http://auriza.site40.net/notes/mpi/openmpi-on-ubuntu-904/ | |||
* http://particlephysicsandcode.wordpress.com/2012/11/04/installing-open-mpi-1-6-3-ubuntu-12-04-fedora/ | |||
* http://randomusefulnotes.blogspot.com/2010/12/setting-up-mpi-cluster-on-ubuntu.html | |||
With R | |||
* http://www.open-mpi.org/papers/tr-uni-muenchen-8991/parallelR_techRep.pdf | |||
* http://www.cybaea.net/Blogs/R-tips-Installing-Rmpi-on-Fedora-Linux.html (Fedora) | |||
* http://kiradi.blogspot.com/2011/10/high-performance-computing-with-openmpi.html (Ubuntu) | |||
* http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/doMPI/vignettes/doMPI.pdf | |||
* http://biowulf.nih.gov/user_guide.html#parallel | |||
= File sharing in a local network - woof = | |||
* https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/linux-how-to-share-files-on-a-local-network/ | |||
==== | = Sharing internet = | ||
https://www. | == Simple Gui approach from GNOME desktop == | ||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2018/09/how-to-create-wi-fi-hotspot-in-ubuntu.html How To Create A Wi-Fi Hotspot In Ubuntu 18.04 / Gnome (And Edit Its Settings)] | |||
* [http://ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2014/09/3-ways-create-wifi-hotspot-ubuntu/ 3 Ways to Create Wifi Hotspot in Ubuntu 14.04] | |||
* https://www.quora.com/How-do-I-create-hotspots-in-Ubuntu-14-04. Notice the last step. | |||
When I tested the method with my rtl8187 wifi adapter by Rosewill (output by '''lsusb''') on Odroid Xu4 running Ubuntu 14.04, I got an error on Step 3 (Create New Wi-Fi Network) ??? | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
Failed to activate connection | |||
(32) Access Point (AP) mode is not supported by this device | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
When I tried the wifi adapter RT2870/RT3070 802.11n by MediaLink (MWN-USB150N), there is no problem to create it. My android device can connect to it. However, there is no internet access:( ...... After some tweaks on command line (iptables; see ''Sharing internet via wifi: iptables'' below), it works!!! | |||
And the output of '''nm-tool''' command also confirms the wifi device is connected. | |||
<pre> | |||
odroid@odroid:~/Downloads$ netstat -rn | |||
Kernel IP routing table | |||
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface | |||
0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth2 | |||
10.42.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 wlan3 | |||
192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth2 | |||
</pre> | |||
The ap hotspot from the wifi adapter has an IP 10.42.0.1 (ifconfig). | |||
See [[Raspberry#IP_scan_tools|IP scan tools]] (eg '''arp-scan''') to find out connected devices. | |||
== Sharing internet via wifi: ap-hotspot == | |||
I cannot make it to work to share the internet via wifi on my Xubuntu 13.04. However the solution in http://askubuntu.com/questions/287251/creating-an-infrastructure-hotspot-using-ubuntu-12-10 works for me. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ # Under rare situation, we need to run the following line to get 'add-apt-repository' | |||
$ sudo apt-get install apt-get install software-properties-common | |||
$ sudo su - | |||
# add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8 | |||
# aptitude update | |||
# aptitude install ap-hotspot | |||
# ap-hotspot configure | |||
# ap-hotspot start | |||
</pre> | |||
In the step of 'ap-hotspot configure' it will ask for Access Point name and WPA passphrase. | |||
When I run the final line 'ap-hotspot start', it will ask me to disconnect my current wifi first. | |||
At the end, I found my original configuration in ubuntu does not work even its setting is there. '''apt-hotspot''' create an infrastracture AP instead of adhoc. | |||
== | == Sharing internet via wifi: iptables == | ||
1. Assume the primary wired network connection, eth0 is connected to Internet. | |||
2. Using your distro's network managment tool, create a new ad hoc wireless connection with the following settings: | |||
< | <pre> | ||
IP address: 10.99.66.55 | |||
Subnet mask: 255.255.0.0 (16) | |||
</pre> | |||
3. Use the following shell script to share the internet connection | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
#!/bin/bash | |||
#filename: netsharing.sh | |||
#Replace 10.99.0.0/16 by your network/netmask | |||
#Usage: ./netsharing.sh input_interface output_interface | |||
#Example: ./netsharing.sh eth0 wlan0 | |||
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward | |||
iptables -A FORWARD -i $1 -o $2 -s 10.99.0.0/16 -m conntrack --ctstate NEW -j ACCEPT | |||
iptables -A FORWARD -m conntrack --ctstate ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT | |||
iptables -A POSTROUTING -t nat -j MASQUERADE | |||
</pre> | |||
$ | |||
</ | |||
4. Run the script as follows: | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo ./netsharing.sh eth0 wlan0 | |||
</pre> | |||
5. Connect your devices to the wireless network you just created with the following settings (Question: how about the SSID here?) | |||
<pre> | |||
IP address: 10.99.66.56 (and so on) | |||
Subnet mask: 255.255.0.0 | |||
</pre> | |||
To make this more convenient, you might want to install a DHCP and DNS server on your machine, so it's not necessary to configure IPs on devices manually. A handy tool for this is '''dnsmasq''' which you can use for performing both DHCP and DNS operations. | |||
Credit: [https://www.packtpub.com/application-development/linux-shell-scripting-cookbook-second-edition Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook] | |||
[http://forum.odroid.com/viewtopic.php?f=112&t=9321 A similar approach] discussed on the Odroid forum. | |||
[ | == iptables == | ||
* [[Beaglebone#Internet_over_USB|Beaglebone]] | |||
= ~/.xsession-errors file is filling the hard disk = | |||
It is related to vino-server. See | |||
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/130768/my-home-partition-slowly-fills-up-until-the-system-is-unable-to-complete-even-si | |||
* http://filthypants.blogspot.com/2013/02/xsession-errors-log-filling-hard-drive.html | |||
Short solution is to use "kill -9 xxx" to kill the process and rm to remove ~/.xsession-errors file. The long time solution is to uninstall vino. | |||
= JRE and JDK = | |||
[[Java#Installation|Java]] | |||
[ | = Notifications = | ||
* To see old notifications, use Superkey + M or click the clock. | |||
* [https://www.maketecheasier.com/desktop-notifications-for-linux-command/ How to Get Desktop Notifications from the Linux Command Line] with the '''notify-send''' command | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2021/02/get-notifications-on-your-desktop-or.html Get Notifications On Your Desktop Or Phone When A Long-Running Command Has Finished With Noti] | |||
= Send email = | |||
It is useful to several occations: | |||
# | * [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-setup-automatic-security-updates-on-ubuntu-1604/#email-notification Email notification for updates] | ||
== | == Send emails through gmail: mail == | ||
https:// | [https://developernote.com/2017/10/configuring-sendmail-with-gmail-relay-on-ubuntu-16-04/ Configuring sendmail with GMail relay on Ubuntu 16.04] | ||
== | == Send emails through gmail: sSMTP == | ||
https://askubuntu.com/ | * [https://askubuntu.com/a/12933 How to send mail from the command line?] | ||
* https://wiki.debian.org/sSMTP | |||
= CPU/system load = | |||
== Cockpit == | |||
* https://cockpit-project.org/ | |||
* [[KVM#Virtual_Machine_Manager.2Fvirt-manager.2C_Cockpit.2C_virt-viewer.2C_remote-viewer|KVM]] page | |||
* [https://youtu.be/L9fMWCRcqIE Cockpit | An Easy to Use Web GUI for Your Linux Servers] (video) | |||
== Conky: system resource monitor == | |||
See [[Conky|Conky]]. | |||
== | == [https://oguzhaninan.github.io/Stacer-Web/ Stacer] - Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring == | ||
https:// | [https://www.fossmint.com/stacer-ubuntu-system-optimizer/ Stacer – The Linux System Optimizer You’ve Been Waiting For]. Qt library. But it seems the memory usage will increase after a while. | ||
[[File:Stacer.png|200px]] | |||
== Mission Center: Windows Task Manager like == | |||
* [https://news.itsfoss.com/mission-center/ Mission Center: A Sleek System Monitoring App for Linux] | |||
* https://flathub.org/apps/io.missioncenter.MissionCenter | |||
== Grafana == | |||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/devops/how-to-set-up-a-simple-grafana-cloud-monitoring-dashboard-for-your-linux-server/ How to Set Up a Simple Grafana Cloud Monitoring Dashboard for Your Linux Server] 2022/10 | |||
* [https://www.instructables.com/id/Bird-Feeder-Monitor-V20/ Bird Feeder Monitor V2.0] | |||
== Graphite == | |||
* https://graphiteapp.org/quick-start-guides/graphing-metrics.html | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-install-and-configure-graphite-on-ubuntu-22-04/ How to Install and Configure Graphite Monitoring System on Ubuntu 22.04] | |||
* [https://www.linode.com/docs/guides/install-graphite-and-grafana/ Monitor Your System with Graphite and a Grafana Dashboard] | |||
== | == I-Nex == | ||
[https://www.ghacks.net/2017/07/23/a-look-at-i-nex-a-cpu-z-like-application-for-gnulinux/ A look at I-Nex – a CPU-Z like Application for GNU/Linux] | |||
== CPU-G == | |||
See [http://blog.hostonnet.com/how-to-view-cpu-info-in-ubuntu-cpu-z-alternative-for-linux this instruction] to install CPU-G program for viewing hardware information (process, mb, graphic, memory, system). | |||
== | == CPU-X == | ||
[https:// | [https://www.fosslicious.com/2020/06/cpu-x-alternative-to-cpu-z-for-ubuntu.html CPU-X, An Alternative to CPU-Z for Ubuntu and Other Linux Distributions!]. This is pre-installed in Calculate Linux. On ubuntu, run "sudo apt install cpu-x" to install it. | ||
== [https://github.com/cyring/CoreFreq CoreFreq] == | |||
http://www.tecmint.com/corefreq-linux-cpu-monitoring-tool/ | |||
== System load indicator on desktop/GNOME resource monitor on taskbar == | |||
* [http://www.howtogeek.com/118908/10-awesome-indicator-applets-for-ubuntus-unity-desktop/ System Load Indicator], [https://www.addictivetips.com/ubuntu-linux-tips/view-network-memory-and-cpu-usage-from-system-tray-in-ubuntu-linux/ View Network, Memory And CPU Usage From System Tray In Ubuntu Linux] | |||
* It is used to view system information (cpu, memory, network) in real-time. | |||
* It works on Ubuntu 20.04.1. It can show CPU and memory usage. A drawback is the high CPU usage; see [https://askubuntu.com/a/973810 gnome-shell 3.26.1 constantly uses 20-30% CPU]. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo | sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload | ||
sudo | # sudo apt-get install indicator-cpufreq | ||
# indicator-cpufreq | |||
</pre> | |||
== Alert When Memory Gets Low == | |||
[https://www.tecmint.com/shell-script-to-send-email-alert-when-memory-low/ A Shell Script to Send Email Alert When Memory Gets Low] | |||
== | == Monitor CPU Utilization And Send Email == | ||
[https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-shell-script-to-monitor-cpu-utilization-usage-and-send-email/ Linux Shell Script To Monitor CPU Utilization And Send Email] | |||
https:// | |||
== | == Top processes sorted by RAM or CPU == | ||
< | [https://www.tecmint.com/find-linux-processes-memory-ram-cpu-usage/ Find Top Running Processes by Highest Memory and CPU Usage in Linux] <br> '''ps -eo pid,ppid,cmd,%mem,%cpu --sort=-%mem | head''' | ||
== | == Monitor Resource Usage of a Single Process == | ||
[https://www.baeldung.com/linux/monitor-process-resource-usage Monitor Resource Usage of a Single Process] | |||
==== | = Hard drive: hdparm and smartctl = | ||
== Hard disk speed == | |||
[[Benchmark#Disk_speed_test|Benchmark -> Disk speed test]] | |||
==== | == Hard disk directory size == | ||
See [[Linux#Display_directory_size_with_sorting_and_human_readable|Display directory size with sorting and human readable]] by using the '''ncdu''' utility. | |||
==== | == MART overall-health self-assessment test == | ||
On my Samsung SSD 860 EVO 500GB, SMART DATA was greyed out when I try the '''Disks''' utility. But GSmartControl and smartctl can get the data out | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo smartctl --all /dev/sda | grep overall | |||
$ SMART overall-health self-assessment test result: PASSED | |||
</pre> | |||
== Monitor/run a short test on a hard disk health by command line/GUI == | |||
Using [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/monitor-harddisk-with-smartmon-on-ubuntu/ smartctl] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt install smartmontools | |||
sudo smartctl -a /dev/sda | |||
# Run a short test | |||
$ sudo smartctl -t short /dev/sda # It will start the test in the background | |||
$ sudo smartctl -l selftest /dev/sda | |||
</pre> | |||
or the GUI version | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install gsmartcontrol | |||
sudo gsmartcontrol | |||
</pre> | |||
[https://www.ghacks.net/2017/07/19/how-to-check-hard-drive-disk-health-in-gnulinux/ How to check Hard Drive Disk Health in GNU/Linux] | |||
= | Interpretation: | ||
* http://www.linuxjournal.com/magazine/monitoring-hard-disks-smart?page=0,1 | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/S.M.A.R.T. | |||
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T. | |||
* https://askubuntu.com/questions/20393/how-do-i-interpret-hdd-s-m-a-r-t-results | |||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/134735/how-to-see-if-your-hard-drive-is-dying/ How to See If Your Hard Drive Is Dying with S.M.A.R.T.] (Windows) | |||
== | == Email warnings for hd problems by '''smartd''' == | ||
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-find-out-if-harddisk-failing.html Configure smartd on server to get email based warnings if problems are detected] | |||
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/monitoring-hard-disk-health-with-smartd-under-linux-or-unix-operating-systems.html Monitoring hard disk health with smartd under Linux or UNIX operating systems] | |||
Debian Linux | |||
# Enable smart by editing /etc/default/smartmontools file. | |||
# Smart Configuration file: /etc/smartd.conf | |||
# Start/Stop smart: /etc/init.d/smartmontools start | stop | |||
== | == Hard disk temperature == | ||
http://www.cyberciti.biz/howto | http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/howto-monitor-hard-drive-temperature.html | ||
It seems the hddtemp command does not work on SSDs. | |||
<pre> | |||
< | sudo apt-get install hddtemp | ||
sudo apt-get | sudo hddtemp /dev/sdb | ||
/dev/sdb: ST2000DM001-9YN164: 40°C | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
For SSD, | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get - | sudo apt-get install smartmontools | ||
sudo smartctl -a /dev/sda | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== Hard disk power on time/hours == | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo | sudo smartctl --all /dev/sda | grep Power_On_Hours | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Sample output: | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo | $ sudo smartctl -A /dev/sda | grep -i power | ||
9 Power_On_Hours 0x0032 034 034 000 Old_age Always - 58541 | |||
12 Power_Cycle_Count 0x0032 100 100 020 Old_age Always - 164 | |||
$ sudo smartctl -A /dev/sdb | grep -i power | |||
9 Power_On_Hours 0x0032 100 100 000 Old_age Always - 585 | |||
12 Power_Cycle_Count 0x0032 100 100 000 Old_age Always - 43 | |||
192 Power-Off_Retract_Count 0x0032 200 200 000 Old_age Always - 32 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== | == Free up disk space/clean up system space/remove or delete junk files == | ||
[https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-remove-delete-unwanted-junk-files-free-up-space-ubuntu-mint-debian/ 5 Easy Ways To Free Up Space (Remove Unwanted or Junk Files) on Ubuntu] | |||
== | = system's hardware temperatures and voltages = | ||
<ul> | |||
< | <li>[https://www.makeuseof.com/control-cpu-fan-speed-on-linux/ How to Control the CPU Fan Speed on Linux] | ||
sudo apt-get | <li>[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/ubuntu-performance-monitoring/ How to monitor your system performance on (Ubuntu) Linux]. | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ sudo apt-get install lm-sensors | |||
$ sensors | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
</ul> | |||
== | = Passwords and keys = | ||
[https://help.gnome.org/users/seahorse/stable/ GNOME Passwords and Keys] | |||
[https://itsfoss.com/ubuntu-keyring/ The Keyring Concept in Ubuntu: What is It and How to Use it?] Mar, 2020 | |||
== Unlock keyring == | |||
I got the prompt of unlocking keyring every time I open google chrome browser. | |||
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/867/how-can-i-stop-being-prompted-to-unlock-the-default-keyring-on-boot (this works) | |||
< | * http://askubuntu.com/questions/184266/what-is-unlock-keyring-and-how-do-i-get-rid-of-it (this does not help) | ||
* http://superuser.com/questions/311216/why-does-chrome-ask-for-my-gnome-keyring-seahorse-password (works. I create a shortcut to launch chrome) | |||
</ | <pre> | ||
google-chrome --password-store=basic | |||
</pre> | |||
It is also helpful to remove ubuntu one from Ubuntu 12.04. See http://hex.ro/wp/blog/removing-ubuntuone-from-ubuntu-12-04/ | |||
= | = Password manager = | ||
* [https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-organize-your-passwords-using-pass-password-manager How to organize your passwords using pass password manager] | |||
* [https://www.passwordstore.org/ pass] the standard unix password manager | |||
* [https://www.fossmint.com/pass-commandline-password-manager-for-linux/ Pass – Manage Your Passwords from Linux Command Line] | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/install-and-configure-passbolt-password-manager-on-ubuntu-2004/ Install and Configure Passbolt Team Password Manager on Ubuntu 20.04] | |||
= netcat (nc) - arbitrary TCP and UDP connections and listens = | |||
Netcat or nc is a networking utility for debugging and investigating the network. | |||
The nc (or netcat) utility is used for just about anything under the sun involving TCP, UDP, or UNIX-domain sockets. It can open TCP connections, send UDP packets, listen on arbitrary TCP and UDP ports, do port scanning, and deal with both IPv4 and IPv6. | |||
* http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2012/04/nc-command-examples/ | |||
* https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-use-netcat-to-establish-and-test-tcp-and-udp-connections-on-a-vps | |||
* https://learn.adafruit.com/raspipe-a-raspberry-pi-pipeline-viewer-part-2?view=all | |||
For example, we can create simple network sockets and use them for text communication. We need two sockets: one listens for connections and the other connects to this one. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# create a listening socket on the local machine | |||
nc -l 1234 | |||
# connect to the socket from a 2nd computer | |||
nc IP_LocalMachine 1234 | |||
# send messages. | |||
# Type something and press Enter on the terminal from the 2nd computer. | |||
# The message will appear on the terminal of the local machine. | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
To transfer files over the network ('''no any password is needed!!''') | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# receiver machine | |||
nc -l 1234 > destination_file | |||
# sender machine | |||
nc IP_Receiver 1234 < source_filename | |||
</pre> | |||
[https://linuxize.com/post/netcat-nc-command-with-examples/ Netcat (nc) Command with Examples] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
# receiving host | |||
nc -l 5555 | tar xzvf - | |||
# sending host | |||
tar czvf - /path/to/dir | nc receiving.host.com 5555 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
= List of all services/daemons = | |||
Run service '''--status-all''' to get a list off all the Upstart services and their status. See | |||
* man service | |||
* man initctl | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
service --status-all # output format is clean | |||
sudo initctl list # show the process number too | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
where in the output "+" means started, "-" stopped, and "?" unknown. | |||
== SysV init == | |||
Init is an initialization system | |||
SysV init is named for System V Unix. | |||
Init runs as PID 1. Parent process of all other processes on the system. | |||
Runlevels represent discrete operational states. | |||
* [https://learn.adafruit.com/running-programs-automatically-on-your-tiny-computer/sysv-init-runlevels SysV init: Runlevels] - Running Programs Automatically on Your Tiny Computer (from adafruit.com) | |||
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runlevel | |||
* [https://www.tecmint.com/change-runlevels-targets-in-systemd/ How to Change Runlevels (targets) in SystemD] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
$ runlevel | |||
$ less /etc/init.d/ssh | |||
$ ls -ld /etc/rc* | |||
$ ls -l /etc/rc2.d | |||
$ cat /etc/rc.local | |||
$ sudo service networking restart | |||
$ ls /etc/init.d/ | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== | == systemd == | ||
[https://itsfoss.com/start-stop-restart-services-linux/ How to Start, Stop & Restart Services in Ubuntu and Other Linux Distributions] | |||
== systemd vs upstart == | |||
* Ubuntu 16.04 (and newer), RHEL/CentOS 7 (and newer), Arch Linux use [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemd systemd] but relative old OS uses [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upstart_(software) Upstart] service manager. | |||
* [https://fossbytes.com/systemd-vs-sys-v-vs-upstart/ Systemd vs SysV vs Upstart — Linux Service Management Throwdown] | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/867953 SysV, Upstart and systemd init script coexistence]. Newer init systems try to maintain compatibility with older ones. In particular, systemd tries to maintain compatibility with both Upstart and SysV init scripts. | |||
* [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SystemdForUpstartUsers SystemdForUpstartUsers] | |||
* [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/5877/what-are-the-pros-cons-of-upstart-and-systemd What are the pros/cons of Upstart and systemd?] | |||
== | = Cloud/online storage = | ||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/10-cloud-solutions-using-linux/ 10 Cloud Solutions You Should Be Using on Linux] | |||
==== | == Mounting == | ||
https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/ | * [https://cryptomator.org/ Cryptomator] Free client-side encryption for your cloud files. Open source software: No backdoors, no registration | ||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/07/rclonetray-easily-mount-rclone-remotes.html?m=1 RcloneTray: Easily Mount Rclone Remotes On Demand Using A GUI] | |||
== Mega == | |||
* [https://mega.nz/sync MegaSync] | |||
== ownCloud == | |||
Use '''apt''' to install or go to the [https://owncloud.org/download/ download] page | |||
== One Drive == | |||
* [https://packages.ubuntu.com/bionic/onedrive onedrive] package. [http://skilion.github.io/onedrive/ Homepage]. | |||
* https://github.com/skilion/onedrive | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/onedriver/ Mount Microsoft OneDrive in Linux With OneDriver GUI Tool] 2021 | |||
== Dropbox == | |||
See [[Software#Ubuntu|Software > Dropbox]]. | |||
== Google Drive == | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-access-your-google-drive-account-using-overgrive/ How to access your Google Drive account using '''overGrive'''] ($4.99) Support '''Auto sync''' and '''convert Google file format to Office format'''. | |||
* [https://www.insynchq.com/ insync] ($30) | |||
* Use [http://rclone.org rclone] program. See http://wiki.linuxquestions.org/wiki/Rsync_with_Google_Drive | |||
** [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/08/rclone-149-adds-google-photos-backend.html?m=1 Rclone 1.49 Adds Google Photos Backend, New Web UI] | |||
** [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/07/rclonetray-easily-mount-rclone-remotes.html?m=1 RcloneTray: Easily Mount Rclone Remotes On Demand Using A GUI] | |||
** [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/10/rclone-browser-160-adds-new-options.html Cloud Storage GUI Rclone Browser 1.6.0 Adds New Options] | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-access-google-drive-from-linux-gdrive/ How to access your Google Drive account from Linux command line using Gdrive] (Old) | |||
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-mount-google-drive-locally-as-virtual-file-system-in-linux/ How To Mount Google Drive Locally As Virtual File System In Linux] (10/5/2018) | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/access-google-drive-ubuntu/ How to Access Your Google Drive Account on Ubuntu] using '''Gnome Online Accounts''' (3/5/2018). In addition to the Google account, the program can be used to log into Nextcloud, Facebook, Microsoft, Flickr, Pocket, Foursquare, Microsoft Exchange and IMAP/SMTP accounts. | |||
*# Install software <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
sudo apt install gnome-online-accounts # Probably already there | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
*# Add google account. Either using the command line '''gnome-control-center online-accounts''' or using Settings > Online Accounts > Add an online account. Make sure the Files slider button is on. Close the Online Accounts dialog box. | |||
*# Your Google Drive files are mounted in Nautilus now. You can add as many Google Drive accounts as you want. To add another, open Gnome Online Accounts again. Each account is listed separately in the sidebar in Nautilus. | |||
Caveats: | |||
* Unlike Windows or macOS, your Google Drive files are not downloaded and stored locally in Ubuntu. You must have an active internet connection to access your account. | |||
* The online account files are located under "/run/user/1000/gvfs/" directory. | |||
* PDF files can be opened by Document Viewer. When the file is loaded, it shows a random file name. | |||
* The doc files cannot be opened by LibreOffice. When I drag and drop the files to Terminal, they show random file names like ''/run/user/1000/gvfs/google-drive:host=gmail.com,user=XXXXXXX/1LOLKBssIIR0x7TWR7MHIEeSU0uPj9TwK_YuAGTzt' | |||
== Back up google photos == | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/06/how-to-backup-google-photos-to-your.html How To Backup Google Photos To Your Computer With gphotos-sync] 2019-07-03 | |||
* [https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/08/rclone-149-adds-google-photos-backend.html?m=1 Rclone 1.49 Adds Google Photos Backend, New Web UI] 2019-08-28 | |||
==== | = Office = | ||
== Libre Office == | |||
* [https://www.slant.co/versus/2300/2305/~libreoffice_vs_wps-office libreoffice_vs_wps-office] | |||
* [https://www.howtogeek.com/187663/openoffice-vs.-libreoffice-whats-the-difference-and-which-should-you-use/ LibreOffice vs OpenOffice] | |||
Install | |||
* [https://libre-software.net/how-to-install-libreoffice-on-ubuntu-linux-mint/ How to install LibreOffice 6.1 on Linux Mint, Ubuntu, Xubuntu, Debian…] | |||
* https://www.libreoffice.org/download/snap/. ''sudo snap install libreoffice'' | |||
== WPS Office 2016 == | |||
https://www.wps.com/en-US/ | |||
== ONLYOFFICE Desktop Editors == | |||
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-onlyoffice-desktop-editors-51-on-ubuntu/ | |||
== Microsoft Office == | |||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/install-use-microsoft-office-linux/ How to Install and Use Microsoft Office on Linux] | |||
= | = Application Launcher = | ||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/linux-app-launchers/ The 9 Best Linux App Launchers to Help You Get Stuff Done Faster] | |||
== | == [https://github.com/KELiON/cerebro Cerebro] == | ||
[http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2017/02/cerebro-is-a-spotlight-linux-equivalent Cerebro is an Open Source OS X Spotlight Equivalent for Linux] | |||
== [https://github.com/Ulauncher/Ulauncher Ulauncher] == | |||
[http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2017/02/ulauncher-lightweight-app-launcher-linux Ulauncher is a Lightweight App Launcher for Linux Desktops] | |||
==== | == [https://launchpad.net/synapse-project Synapse] == | ||
[http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2016/10/your-favourite-alfred-app-launcher-linux Synapse or Albert — What’s Your Favourite App Launcher for Linux?] | |||
== | == [http://do.cooperteam.net/ Gnome Do] == | ||
Release June 2009 | |||
== | = What is the last log in time for users = | ||
<pre> | |||
lastlog # all users | |||
last # current user | |||
</pre> | |||
== | = System Logs: rsyslog = | ||
* Handled by '''rsyslog''' in '''/etc/rsyslog.conf''' | |||
* Rsyslog can send and accept logs over the network. Search configure remote logging. | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/set-up-linux-remote-logging-using-rsyslog/ How to Set Up Remote Logging on Linux Using rsyslog] | |||
== logger command == | |||
We can write messages to ourself with the '''logger''' command. | |||
<pre> | |||
$ logger "hello from the command line" | |||
$ tail /var/log/syslog | |||
</pre> | |||
== Read/view the system logs == | |||
[https://vitux.com/view-system-log-files-ubuntu/ How to View System Log Files on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS] | |||
'Show Application' -> 'Logs'. | |||
<pre> | |||
$ less /var/log/syslog | |||
< | $ less /var/log/dpkg.log | ||
$ | $ ls /var/log | ||
$ | $ less /var/log/auth.log | ||
$ | # use f/b or arrow keys or / to search | ||
# we can search again by using / and enter | |||
# we can restrict to lines containing the term by using & and the term | |||
$ sudo journalctl | grep shutdown | |||
</pre> | |||
==== | Log rotate after a set period of time. Use zcat or aless to view archived files. | ||
<pre> | |||
$ zcat syslog.4.gz | |||
</pre> | |||
== What is the reboot time == | |||
The following method does not show the reboot history. | |||
<pre> | |||
last reboot | |||
</pre> | |||
It seems the command only show 1 record on Ubuntu 18.04. But it shows lots of records on Ubuntu 20.04/Pop_OS 20.04. On mac, it shows a few records. | |||
The above command only show the 'last' reboot time. If we want to see the boot history, see [https://vitux.com/view-system-log-files-ubuntu/ How to View System Log Files on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS]. The '''GNOME Logs''' utility is best. At the top of the GUI, I can select the logs of the (boot) date. But it has a limit number of dates to choose from. The 2nd choice '''Log File Viewer''' utility is not useful since it does not provide a choice of the date. The command line approach is possible if we need to use '''grep''' to search of 'boot' in syslog or syslog.1 or syslog.X.gz files under '''/var/log/''' directory. We may search for a very old boot log using this approach. For example, zcat /var/log/syslog6.log | grep boot. | |||
== What date/when was the system installed == | |||
<pre> | |||
ls -l /var/log/installer | |||
</pre> | |||
For other OSs, follow [https://www.ostechnix.com/find-exact-installation-date-time-linux-os/ How To Find Exact Installation Date And Time Of Your Linux OS]. Replace 'dev/sda1' with the filesystem of the "/" partition. <strike>Replace /dev/sda1 with /dev/mmcblk0p2 on Raspbian</strike>, | |||
<pre> | |||
$ sudo su | |||
# dumpe2fs /dev/sda1 | grep 'Filesystem created:' | |||
# OR | |||
# tune2fs -l /dev/sda1 | grep 'Filesystem created:' | |||
</pre> | |||
Maybe checking '''/etc/ssh''' would help if openssh-server was installed (such as '''sudo apt-get install openssh-server'''). | |||
Both methods do not apply to the Ubuntu 18.04 from [https://wiki.odroid.com/odroid-xu4/os_images/linux/ubuntu_4.14/ubuntu_4.14 Odroid xu4] but looking at files under /var/log can still give a hint. | |||
== | == systemd-journald == | ||
[http://www. | * [https://linuxhandbook.com/journalctl-command/ Beginner's Guide to Analyzing Logs in Linux With journalctl Command], [https://www.howtogeek.com/499623/how-to-use-journalctl-to-read-linux-system-logs/ How to Use journalctl to Read Linux System Logs] | ||
* [https://askubuntu.com/q/1253076 How to stop systemd-journal utilizing 100% cpu resource Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Focal Fossa)]. Check '''/var/log/journal''' folder or '''journalctl --disk-usage''' | |||
* [http://ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2020/12/clear-systemd-journal-logs-ubuntu/ Free up Disk Space – Clear Systemd Journal Logs in Ubuntu 20.04] | |||
** [https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/194058 How to clear journalctl] | |||
* [https://linuxconfig.org/introduction-to-the-systemd-journal Introduction to the Systemd journal] | |||
* [https://www.loggly.com/ultimate-guide/linux-logging-with-systemd/ Linux Logging with Systemd] | |||
* [https://www.reddit.com/r/RemarkableTablet/comments/m9dcxy/cant_upload_files_using_the_web_interface_since/ remarkable ebook device]. '''journalctl -f''' is to show journal logs in real time. | |||
* [https://www.atlantic.net/vps-hosting/how-to-use-journalctl-to-analyze-logs-in-linux/ How to Use journalctl to Analyze Logs in Linux] | |||
* '''journalctl -b'''. See [https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/read-only-filesystem.106812/ Read-only filesystem]. | |||
= Image/Photo = | |||
== Image viewer on command line == | |||
* [https://www.ghacks.net/2019/09/16/feh-is-a-light-weight-command-line-image-viewer-for-linux/ Feh is a light-weight command-line image viewer for Linux] | |||
* | * [https://www.linuxlinks.com/imageviewers/ 30 Best Free and Open Source Graphical Image Viewers]. '''feh''' is ranked #1. | ||
* | |||
== | == Edit images using command line == | ||
https:// | [https://opensource.com/article/21/11/edit-photos-linux-command-line 4 ways to edit photos on the Linux command line] | ||
== Crop an image == | |||
* gthumb: Open an image. Click color palette icon on top-right corner (or use keyboard shortcut 'e'). Click 'crop'. There will be a rectangle on image where you can resize the rectangle. | |||
* Pinta & mtPaint can also take a screenshot of the desktop and crop the image. | |||
* gimp. https://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-tutorial-quickie-crop.html | |||
== Rename files in batch == | |||
[https://www.linuxuprising.com/2019/05/gui-to-batch-rename-files-on-linux-with.html?m=1 GUI To Batch Rename Files On Linux With Exif And Music Tags Support: Inviska Rename] | |||
== | == View exif information == | ||
gThumb works fine. | |||
== | == Remove Metadata From Files: exiftool == | ||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/remove-metadata-from-files-in-linux/ How to Quickly Remove Metadata From Files on Linux] | |||
= Mind-mapping = | |||
* [http://www.xmind.net/ xmind] | |||
* [http://freemind.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page FreeMind] | |||
[https:// | = Sticky notes = | ||
[https://linuxhint.com/top-sticky-notes-app-for-ubuntu/ Top Sticky Notes App for Ubuntu]. '''Indicator-stickynotes''' is better than Xpad (I cannot move the app) and KNote (I cannot install it in gnome). | |||
[https://www.bettertechtips.com/ubuntu/install-sticky-notes-ubuntu/ How Install Sticky Notes in Ubuntu] shows we can install a deb file if we don't want to add another PPA. | |||
== | = Password manager = | ||
=== | == KeePass == | ||
[https://magazine.odroid.com/article/keepass-password-manager/ KeePass: Password Manager] from Odroid magazine. | |||
Choice 1: [https://keepassxc.org/ KeePassXC], KeePass Cross-Platform Community Edition. I can open kdbx file in KeePassXC. It also has a browser integration (auto-fill) functionality. See [https://sts10.github.io/2017/06/27/keepassxc-setup-guide.html Getting Started With KeePassXC] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:phoerious/keepassxc | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt install keepassxc | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Choice 2: [http://www.keepassx.org KeePassX]. Note that the kdbx file used in KeePass2 cannot be opened in KeePassX. | |||
Choice 3: [http://keepass.info KeePass2] (this is what I am using now). There is no need to use ppa.launchpad.net to install from. You can install keepass2 by using '''sudo apt-get install keepass2''' or install the latest version using [https://launchpad.net/~jtaylor/+archive/ubuntu/keepass Julian Taylor’s PPA]. | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:jtaylor/keepass | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install keepass2 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
On Android: KeePassDroid | |||
Chrome browser (not OS) integration: See the [https://github.com/pfn/passifox/ source code]. | |||
Chromebook: [https://www.bestchromebookapps.com/keepass2-for-chromebook/ KeePass2 for Chromebook] | |||
Security: | |||
* [http://lifehacker.com/keepass-vulnerability-could-let-attackers-steal-your-pa-1781486764 KeePass uses unencrypted HTTP requests when retrieving updates] | |||
=== | === KeePass with KeeAgent === | ||
http://code.mendhak.com/keepass-and-keeagent-setup/ | |||
=== | === [https://github.com/keeweb/keeweb KeeWeb]: Free cross-platform password manager compatible with KeePass === | ||
* | * [https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-install-keeweb-password-manager-ubuntu-20-04/ How to Install KeeWeb Password Manager on Ubuntu 20.04], [https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-install-keeweb-password-manager-on-ubuntu-22-04/ Ubuntu 22.04] | ||
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/keeweb-an-open-source-cross-platform-password-manager/ KeeWeb – An Open Source, Cross Platform Password Manager] | |||
* It can open from WebDAV, Dropbox (sync and offline access), Google Drive, OneDrive, ... | |||
* A Docker exists for the self hosting method. | |||
== 1Password == | |||
[https://www.reviewgeek.com/58360/1password-beta-arrives-for-linux/ 1Password Beta Arrives for Linux] | |||
=== | == Bitwarden == | ||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/install-set-up-bitwarden-linux/ How to Install and Use Bitwarden on Linux] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/bitwarden/ Bitwarden: A Free & Open Source Password Manager] | |||
* [https://help.bitwarden.com/article/install-on-premise/ Install and deploy Bitwarden to your own server] | |||
* [https://www.pcworld.com/article/3607714/best-free-password-managers.html Best free password managers: Better online security doesn’t have to cost a thing] Feb 2021 | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/how-host-self-host-bitwarden/ How You Can Self-Host Bitwarden at (Nearly) No Cost Using Google Cloud] | |||
= Bluetooth = | |||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-send-sound-through-bluetooth-on-linux/ How to send sound through Bluetooth on Linux] from HowToForge. | |||
* https://wiki.debian.org/BluetoothUser | |||
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BluetoothSetup | |||
* [http://askubuntu.com/questions/474839/bluetooth-is-disable-on-ubuntu-14-04 To turn Bluetooth ON when your systeem starts up] | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Bluetooth_headset | |||
* [http://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/934/how-do-i-install-bluetooth-for-my-mouse-and-keyboard How to install bluetooth for my mouse and keyboard] for my Raspberry Pi. | |||
* https://zach-adams.com/2014/07/bluetooth-audio-sink-stream-setup-failed/ Linux Mint | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install bluetooth | |||
sudo apt-get install bluetooth bluez-utils blueman | |||
</pre> | |||
Then run '''lsusb | grep Bluetooth''' command which will shows the name of your bluetooth device. | |||
* https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Bluetooth | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo apt-get install bluez | |||
</pre> | |||
On my bluetooth adapter, the '''lsusb''' shows, | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
$ lsusb | |||
Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth Dongle (HCI mode) | |||
... | |||
$ sudo hcitool dev | |||
Devices: | |||
hci0 00:1A:7D:DA:71:09 | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
I can use Ubuntu's bluetooth setting dialog to connect my bluetooth keyboard without any problem (It will ask me to enter some code on pairing). | |||
Note that the MAC address of my bluetooth keyboard shown above is the from the controller/adapter. It is NOT the same as my bluetooth keyboard one (90:7F:61:8F:D0:38) as shown from the bluetooth setting (GUI) dialog. | |||
== | == Bluetooth mouse == | ||
My M590 mouse suddenly has a lag in response (Pop_OS 20.04). Don't know how to fix it. | |||
The jerky movement/lag problem may be caused by other reason: nano receiver placement/positioning (e.g. moved the USB wireless receiver from the back to a port on the front of the PC), usb hub, other gadgets (e.g. phone) around the receiver. | |||
Or increase the Mouse Speed in Settings. | |||
Other solutions: [https://askubuntu.com/a/836143 How can I get rid of mouse lag under Ubuntu?] | |||
[ | |||
== | == [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Trackpad_2 Apple Magic Touchpad] == | ||
[https://tech.pookey.co.uk/apple-magic-trackpad-2-on-ubuntu-linux/ Apple Magic Trackpad 2 on Ubuntu Linux] 20.04 | |||
== | == Bluetooth Audio Receiver == | ||
http://www. | * Bluetooth 4.0 Receiver A2DP Wireless Adapter from [http://www.amazon.com/Mpow-Streambot-Bluetooth-Receiver-Streaming/dp/B00MJMV0GU/ref=sr_1_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1463170351&sr=1-4&keywords=bluetooth+receiver Mpow Streambot] or [http://www.amazon.com/Bluetooth-Receiver-DBPOWER-Wireless-Devices/dp/B012FRBINI?ie=UTF8&psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s01 DBPOWER] | ||
Remember to change the ''Mode'' from ''Telephony Duplex (HSP/HFP)'' to '''High Fidelity Playback (A2DP)''' from ''Sound Settings'' dialog (launched from Taskbar). See also [[Windows#Output_audio_to_bluetooth|Windows OS]]. | |||
[[File:BluetoothAudioLinux.png|200px]] | |||
= Open the default graphical applications using the command line (mime-types) = | |||
See '''/etc/gnome/defaults.list'''. | |||
* | * [https://askubuntu.com/questions/15354/how-to-open-file-with-default-application-from-command-line How to open file with default application from command line?] | ||
* [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-easily-open-a-pdf-file-from-command-line-in-ubuntu/ How to easily open a PDF (or any) file from command line in Ubuntu] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# alias open='xdg-open'. Put this inside your ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_aliases | |||
xdg-open [name-of-PDF-file] | |||
# If you want to use gnome-open, you need to install a package | |||
sudo apt-get install libgnome2-bin | |||
gnome-open [name-of-PDF-file] | |||
gnome-open [dir-name-or-path] # To open a directory in Nautilus file manager | |||
[ | |||
gnome-open https://www.howtoforge.com/ # To open a website in your system's default web browser | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== | == xdg-open, xdg-mime == | ||
<ul> | |||
< | <li>For some reason, even Chrome is my default browser (Ubuntu -> Settings -> Default applications) but when I use the '''xdg-open''' command to open a '''local''' HTML file, Brave is called. NB. the xdg-settings also 'thinks' chrome is the default browser. If I uninstall Brave, then VS code will be replaced to open local HTML files by xdg-open. | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
$ xdg-settings get default-web-browser | |||
google-chrome.desktop | |||
$ xdg-mime query default x-scheme-handler/http | |||
google-chrome.desktop | |||
$ xdg-mime query default x-scheme-handler/https | |||
google-chrome.desktop | |||
$ xdg-mime query filetype myfile.html | |||
application/xhtml+xml | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
The solution that works for me is to run '''sudo nano /usr/share/applications/defaults.list''' and remove lines contains 'brave' (the .list file is really a mess). After that, xdg-open myfile.html will use chrome to open it. See [https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/77136/xdg-open-default-applications-behavior xdg-open default applications behavior], [https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Xdg-utils#xdg-open xdg-open] & [https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/XDG_MIME_Applications XDG MIME Applications] & [https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Xdg-utils xdg-utils] from archlinux.org. | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
$ env XDG_UTILS_DEBUG_LEVEL=10 xdg-mime query default text/xhtml | |||
# A long list | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
</li> | |||
<li>On Peppermint 11, the '''open''' command located in ''/usr/bin'' is a symbolic link to '''/usr/bin/xdg-open'''. | |||
<li>[https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/970888 How can I change the default application for a content type?] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
xdg-mime default okularApplication_pdf.desktop application/pdf | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
</li> | |||
<li>[[Text_editor#Change_to_use_as_the_default_text_editor|Change the default text editor]] '''xdg-mime default code.desktop text/plain ''' | |||
</li> | |||
</ul> | |||
== Change the default browser == | |||
[https://linuxhint.com/open-default-browser-command-line-linux/ How to open default browser from command line Linux] | |||
== | == Change the default PDF app == | ||
Right click a pdf file, choose "Properties". Click on "Open With". Select an app and click "Set as default". | |||
= | = Unity display timeout = | ||
[ | Go to [http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Image:Ubuntu_11_unity_battery_power_management_settings.jpg Dash -> power setting -> Brightness Settings] | ||
= Screensaver showing current time = | |||
== xscreensaver + gltext == | |||
http://askubuntu.com/questions/64086/how-can-i-change-or-install-screensavers | |||
== | |||
http:// | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get install gnome- | sudo apt-get install xscreensaver | ||
# sudo apt-get remove gnome-screensaver | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Click Dash > xscreensaver or run the command line '''xscreensaver-demo'''. Mode = Only One Screen Saver & pick GLText. Click Setting & choose 'Display date and time' ,'Don't rotate'. | |||
== gluqlo == | |||
[Note that gluqlo uses too much cpu] | |||
I like [https://github.com/alexanderk23/gluqlo gluqlo (flip clock) screensaver]. However, it is not easy to make it to replace the gnome-screensaver. | |||
<pre> | |||
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:alexanderk23/ppa | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install gluqlo | |||
</pre> | |||
* Follow the instruction to install it on Ubuntu machine. | |||
* Follow the instruction there to remove gnome-screensaver and install xscreensaver. | |||
* Configure xscreensaver to use only 1 screensaver. Edit ~/.xscreensaver file and add a line like | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
gluqlo -root \n\ | |||
</pre> | |||
* Still follow the instruction to allow xscreensaver to start when the machine starts up. Don't try to edit ~/.xinitrc file as other sites suggested; start Dash and type 'startup' and follow the screen dialog to add xscreensaver -nosplash. | |||
* Still follow the instruction to add lock screen keyboard shortcut. | |||
Note that the above steps work for Ubuntu 12.04 & 13.10 but not 14.04 (Ubuntu 14.04 changed to use LockScreen instead LightDM program to lock the screen). A solution on Ubuntu 14.04 is to [http://askubuntu.com/questions/465194/how-to-disable-screen-lock-in-ubuntu-14-04-unity disable screen lock]. | |||
# | # Still follow the above instruction to remove gnome-screensaver and install xscreensaver. Set gluqlo as the only one screensaver. | ||
# Go to Brightness & Lock panel from the Unity Launcher. And set Turn screen off when inactive: to ''Never''. | |||
# Install "Unity Tweak Tool" with sudo apt-get install unity-tweak-tool. Run it from the Launcher and select System > Security > Enhance system security by disabling Desktop lock. | |||
# To enable locking desktop (required a password to unlock the desktop), check 'Lock Screen After' option. I pick 1 minute. | |||
For some reason, gluqlo suddenly uses all my cpu (6 cores) resource (Ubuntu 14.04). The computer thus makes some noise. I have to use 'kill' command to kill them. | |||
= Flash for browser = | |||
* https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats/Flash | |||
* http://www.howtogeek.com/193876/using-firefox-on-linux-your-flash-player-is-old-and-outdated/ | |||
On Ubuntu 12.04, there is no way to directly install the pepperflashplugin-nonfree plugin. So we have to use ppa from other people. See [http://linuxg.net/how-to-install-chromium-and-enable-pepper-flash-plugin-on-all-the-supported-ubuntu-systems-and-their-derivatives/ this post] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install chromium-browser | |||
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:skunk/pepper-flash | |||
sudo apt-get update | |||
sudo apt-get install pepflashplugin-installer | |||
sudo update-pepperflashplugin-nonfree --install | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
The last step gives me an error: sudo: update-pepperflashplugin-nonfree: command not found | |||
= xed from Cinnamon Desktop = | |||
By default, recent open files are not shown (xed 1.6.3). See https://github.com/linuxmint/xed/issues/55. | |||
Open Cinnamon Settings -> Privacy and enable 'remember recent files'. | |||
= Text file line ending in DOS and Unix = | |||
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newline A DOS/Windows text file can be converted to Unix format by simply removing all ASCII CR characters with] | |||
<pre> | |||
$ tr -d '\r' < inputfile > outputfile # inputfile and outputfile cannot be the same | |||
</pre> | |||
or, if the text has only CR newlines, by converting all CR newlines to LF with | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
$ tr '\r' '\n' < inputfile > outputfile | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
==== | = SQL = | ||
== MySQL Workbench == | |||
http://www.mysql.com/products/workbench/ | |||
== sqliteman == | |||
https://sourceforge.net/projects/sqliteman/ | |||
= | = User Interface Designer = | ||
[https:// | [https://glade.gnome.org/ Glade] - RAD tool to enable quick & easy development of user interfaces for the GTK+ toolkit and the GNOME desktop environment | ||
[https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Devhelp Devhelp] - API documentation browser for GTK+ and GNOME | |||
== | = HTML editor = | ||
* http:// | * Atom | ||
* http://www. | * Bluefish | ||
* [http://brackets.io/ Brackets] features | |||
** Inline Editors | |||
** Live Preview | |||
** Preprocessor Support | |||
* [http://www.monodevelop.com/ MonoDevelop] | |||
* [http://kompozer.net/ Kompozer] and the installation instruction for [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/InstallKompozer Ubuntu]. | |||
* [http://bluegriffon.org/ BlueGriffon]: a new WYSIWYG content editor. The interesting thing is the software [http://www.bluegriffon-epubedition.com/BGEE.html BlueGriffon EPUB Edition]: a cross-platform Wysiwyg editor able to natively create and edit EPUB2 and EPUB3 ebooks! | |||
[ | |||
= | = npm and Javascript = | ||
See [[Javascript#npm_-_package_manager|npm package manager]] in Javascript. | |||
== | = Chroot = | ||
[[Chroot|Chroot]] | |||
== | = Check/Diagnostic SD card, read-only file system = | ||
http:// | * [https://askubuntu.com/q/47538 How to make read-only file system writable?]. I got the same error message when I try to 'cp' or 'rm' or 'touch' a file on my USB drive. The solution here works. | ||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo mount -o remount,rw '/media/brb/KINGSTON8G' | |||
</pre> | |||
When I check the difference of the output of 'mount' on the USB drive, I see it changes from (ro) to (rw). | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
# Before | |||
$ mount | |||
/dev/sdb1 on /media/brb/KINGSTON8G type vfat (ro, ...) | |||
# After | |||
$ mount | |||
/dev/sdb1 on /media/brb/KINGSTON8G type vfat (rw, ...) | |||
</pre> | |||
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/69932/is-there-an-sd-card-diagnostic-utility. Look for Disk Utility on you dash (Alt+F2 and type 'disk') | |||
* [https://superuser.com/questions/656362/canot-format-microsd-file-system-is-read-only Canot format MicroSD. File system is read-only] | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/197459/how-to-fix-sudo-unable-to-open-read-only-file-system How to fix “sudo: unable to open … Read-only file system”?] | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo fsck -Af -M # If not work, use the next solution | |||
sudo fsck.ext4 -f /dev/sdb2 # From a live CD/USB drive, assume /dev/sdb2 is ext4 partition | |||
</pre> | |||
The above commands do not help in my case. | |||
# | |||
/ | |||
</ | |||
= AppImage file - new way of installing an application = | |||
See [[Snappy#AppImage|Snappy]] | |||
= | = Snappy = | ||
See [[Snappy|Snappy]]. | |||
[https://askubuntu.com/a/1089263 Exclude snap partitions in the '''df''' command output] | |||
<pre> | |||
alias df='df -x"squashfs"' | |||
</pre> | |||
# | = Flatpak = | ||
See [[Snappy#Flatpak|Snappy]] | |||
= Message Of The Day, login banner /etc/motd = | |||
* https://wiki.debian.org/motd | |||
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-disable-ssh-motd-welcome-message-on-ubuntu-linux/ How to disable ssh motd welcome message on Ubuntu Linux] | |||
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/how-to-disable-ads-in-terminal-welcome-message-in-ubuntu-server/ How To Disable Ads In Terminal Welcome Message In Ubuntu Server] | |||
= .Trash-1000 folder = | |||
See [http://superuser.com/questions/169980/what-is-trash-and-trash-1000 this post]. Ubuntu will create such folders when a file is deleted from a USB drive. Presumably this would allow a file to be restored if you accidentally deleted it. | |||
Try to empty the paperbin or delete the folder with the terminal-command as root: sudo rm -rf /path/to/folder/.Trash-1000 | |||
sudo | |||
== | = Games = | ||
[https://opensource.com/article/19/1/flightgear Take to the virtual skies with FlightGear], [http://home.flightgear.org/ FlightGear] | |||
== controller/joystick == | |||
* [https://github.com/Grumbel/jstest-gtk/ jstest-gtk] | |||
sudo apt-get install | * [https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-configure-your-gamepad-on-ubuntu/ Xbox wireless Gamepad] | ||
* [https://askubuntu.com/questions/32031/how-do-i-configure-a-joystick-or-gamepad How do I configure a joystick or gamepad?] | |||
* [https://blog.bullgare.com/2020/04/ubuntu-play-games-with-joystick/ Ubuntu — play games with joystick] | |||
* [https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=341764 games that work with gamepads/joysticks] | |||
** [https://www.supertux.org/ supertux] | |||
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/351089 What racing games run on Ubuntu? ] | |||
** [https://supertuxkart.net/Main_Page Super Tux Kart]. sudo apt-get install supertuxkart | |||
* Ubuntu - 'Software' app. Search for 'game'. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Games | |||
** 0ad: real-time strategy game of ancient warfare | |||
** DOSBox-X | |||
** retroarch | |||
** ScummVM | |||
* [https://www.binarytides.com/top-games-on-ubuntu-linux/ 15 Best free games on Ubuntu Linux] 2013 | |||
* [https://www.tutoraspire.com/ubuntu-games/ 33 Ubuntu Games] | |||
* [https://www.ubuntupit.com/best-free-linux-games-everyone-play/ 26 Best Free Linux Games That Everyone Should Play] | |||
* [https://www.ubuntupit.com/play-games-on-linux-easy-tutorial-newbie-users/ How to Play Games on Linux | Easy Tutorial for Newbie] | |||
* [https://itsfoss.com/free-linux-games/ Top 31 Best Linux Games You Can Play for FREE] | |||
* [https://unixcop.com/top-10-ubuntu-games/ Top 10 Ubuntu games] | |||
= Twitter client = | |||
== [https://github.com/baedert/corebird Corebird] == | |||
* https://gist.github.com/arraytools/4d1af59a7ebd58ab3941 (tested on Ubuntu 14.04) | |||
== [https://github.com/birdieapp/birdie Birdie] == | |||
[https://plus.google.com/+CassidyJames/posts/EzxrE4UyYVF Birdie vs Corebird] | |||
[ | = Elasticsearch & Kibana = | ||
[https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/elasticsearch-and-kibana-installation-and-basic-usage-on-ubuntu-1604/ Elasticsearch and Kibana : installation and basic usage on Ubuntu 16.04] | |||
= TexLive = | |||
* | * [https://askubuntu.com/questions/485514/how-to-properly-install-and-use-texlive-with-package-manager-in-14-04 How to properly install and use texlive with package manager in 14.04] | ||
* | * http://brettklamer.com/diversions/statistical/compile-r-for-data-science-to-a-pdf/ | ||
= Recover files from Windows drives = | |||
{{Pre}} | |||
sudo fdisk –l | |||
sudo apt-get install ntfs-3g | |||
sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sdaX /PARTITION/POINT | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
* http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/fix-corrupted-windows-ntfs-filesystem-ubuntu/ | |||
* [http://www.pcworld.com/article/2147063/linux-to-the-rescue-how-ubuntu-can-help-a-computer-in-distress.html Reset your Windows password] | |||
= Best apps = | |||
* [https://linuxhint.com/100_best_ubuntu_apps/ 100 Best Applications for Ubuntu 2018] | |||
* [https://youtu.be/0AitRu1XD84 Peppermint OS 10: Installing Apps for Business & Study (Step by step) ] | |||
[ | == Adobe alternatives == | ||
[https://www.makeuseof.com/best-linux-alternatives-to-adobe-products/ The 8 Best Alternatives to Adobe Products That Run on Linux] | |||
= Kernel = | |||
== How to Roll Back the Kernel == | |||
[https://www.howtogeek.com/740797/how-to-roll-back-the-kernel-in-linux/ How to Roll Back the Kernel in Linux] | |||
== System Call == | |||
* [https://arvindsraj.wordpress.com/2012/10/05/adding-hello-world-system-call-to-linux/ Adding hello world system call to Linux] (Ubuntu) | |||
* [https://brennan.io/2016/11/14/kernel-dev-ep3/ Tutorial - Write a System Call] | |||
== | |||
* [https:// | |||
[https:// | == Remove old kernels == | ||
[https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ubuntu-18-04-remove-all-unused-old-kernels/ Ubuntu 18.04 remove all unused old kernels] | |||
== /boot directory == | |||
Compare some files from two Ubuntu 20.04 machines. | |||
* '''vmlinuz-5.8.0-48-generic''' or '''config-5.8.0-48-generic''' or '''System.map-5.8.0-48-generic''': same size | |||
* '''initrd.img-5.8.0-48-generic''': not the same size | |||
= BIOS = | |||
< | <ul> | ||
<li>[https://fwupd.org/ fwupdmgr]. I got the following message when I ran a ssh connection. | |||
[https:// | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
1 device has a firmware upgrade available. | |||
Run `fwupdmgr get-upgrades` for more information. | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
<li>[https://askubuntu.com/a/1497749 How can I upgrade my device firmware from the command line?] | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
# (The first time only) install & run fwupdmgr | |||
sudo apt update \ | |||
&& sudo apt install fwupd \ | |||
&& fwupdmgr refresh --force \ | |||
&& fwupdmgr get-updates \ | |||
( | && fwupdmgr update | ||
sudo apt | |||
# (Every subsequent time thereafter) just run fwupdmgr once it's installed | |||
fwupdmgr refresh --force \ | |||
&& fwupdmgr get-updates \ | |||
&& fwupdmgr update</pre> | |||
</ul> | |||
</ | |||
</ | |||
==== | = Other Flavors = | ||
* | == Other tiny, lightweight Linux == | ||
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/6/linux-distros-to-try 5 tiny Linux distros to try before you die] | |||
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/5-lightweight-linux-distros-ideal-intel-atom-processor-pc/ 8 Lightweight Linux Distros Ideal for Intel Atom Processor PCs] 2022 | |||
== | == Arch linux, Manjaro Linux == | ||
[[Arch_Linux|Arch Linux]] | |||
Latest revision as of 17:19, 28 September 2024
Live CD
- Debian https://www.debian.org/CD/live/
- CentOS https://wiki.centos.org/Download. Yes I can mount /dev/sda1 (Ubuntu) and write files into it.
- Ubuntu https://www.ubuntu.com/download
- Mint https://linuxmint.com/download.php
Run on RAM disk
See Grub -> Run live Linux on ram disk.
Download/Install
Download links for all versions from wiki.ubuntu.com > releases.ubuntu.com.
Ubuntu flavors and derivatives
Download mirror
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+cdmirrors. The mirrors are sorted by speed. UMD.
Full list of all flavors of Ubuntu
http://cdimages.ubuntu.com/. See Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Released. Download Now!
Install via PXE Network Boot Server
Install Debian 9 (Stretch) via PXE Network Boot Server
Original GA (General Availability) stack & HWE (Hardware Enablement) stack
The HWE stack provides a newer kernel and X support for existing Ubuntu LTS releases.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SecurityTeam/KnowledgeBase/SpectreAndMeltdown#Kernel_Mitigations
How To Install The Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS Hardware Enablement Stack
UEFI and Legacy mode
- Rufus has an option to select the target system is UEFI or Legacy. Balena Etcher does not have this option.
- Use Linux efibootmgr Command to Manage UEFI Boot Menu
- Efibootmgr
Secure boot
I need to disable secure boot in order to boot Ubuntu.
LVM partition
See LVM
After installation
System program problem detected
- How To Fix System Program Problem Detected In Ubuntu
- How to fix “System program problem detected” error on Ubuntu
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/365358/im-getting-a-lot-of-system-program-problem-detected-error-dialogs-is-there-a
sudo rm /var/crash/*
- http://www.techdrivein.com/2012/08/how-to-disable-system-program-problem.html. sudo nano /etc/default/apport.
Change value of "enabled" from 1 to 0. Then reboot.
Things to do after installing Ubuntu
apt update; apt upgrade -y
- edit ~/.bashrc to add alias, colored man pages, colored prompt, time stamp to bash prompt, time stamp to history command. To take those changes into effect, you do source ~/.bashrc .
export LESS_TERMCAP_mb=$'\e[1;32m' # Blinking text: bold green export LESS_TERMCAP_md=$'\e[1;34m' # Bold text: bold blue export LESS_TERMCAP_me=$'\e[0m' # End mode export LESS_TERMCAP_so=$'\e[01;47;34m' # Standout: bold white on blue export LESS_TERMCAP_se=$'\e[0m' # End standout mode export LESS_TERMCAP_us=$'\e[1;4;31m' # Underlined text: bold underlined red export LESS_TERMCAP_ue=$'\e[0m' # End underline export HISTSIZE= export HISTFILESIZE= export HISTTIMEFORMAT="%Y-%m-%d %T " # add time stamp to history PS1="\[\033[1;34m\]\$(date +%H:%M%p) \w$\[\033[0m\] " alias nano="nano -c --softwrap" alias checkport='sudo lsof -i -P -n | grep LISTEN' alias sshnocheck="ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no" alias scpnocheck='scp -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no' alias open='xdg-open'
- edit ~/.ssh/config
- install Chinese input
- install graphics driver (16 Things To Do After Installing Ubuntu 16.04 LTS)
- install media codecs
- change power setting, night light (10 Things To Do After Installing Ubuntu 19.04)
- install favorite software
Rescue mode
How To Boot Into Rescue Mode Or Emergency Mode In Ubuntu 18.04
End of life date of Ubuntu release
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases
Server version
Mint Linux
How to upgrade to Linux Mint 18.3
$ cat /etc/os-release NAME="Linux Mint" VERSION="18.3 (Sylvia)" ID=linuxmint ID_LIKE=ubuntu PRETTY_NAME="Linux Mint 18.3" VERSION_ID="18.3" HOME_URL="http://www.linuxmint.com/" SUPPORT_URL="http://forums.linuxmint.com/" BUG_REPORT_URL="http://bugs.launchpad.net/linuxmint/" VERSION_CODENAME=sylvia UBUNTU_CODENAME=xenial
vs Ubuntu 16.04
$ cat /etc/os-release NAME="Ubuntu" VERSION="16.04.4 LTS (Xenial Xerus)" ID=ubuntu ID_LIKE=debian PRETTY_NAME="Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS" VERSION_ID="16.04" HOME_URL="http://www.ubuntu.com/" SUPPORT_URL="http://help.ubuntu.com/" BUG_REPORT_URL="http://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/" VERSION_CODENAME=xenial UBUNTU_CODENAME=xenial
As we can see use $UBUNTU_CODENAME is common between Ubuntu & Mint. This variable can be used in setting a repository for installing a new software. See the Brave example.
In Docker's installation guide, it uses the value (eg 'bionic') from lsb_release -cs which will give the same value of VERSION_CODENAME' on Mint Linux.
The taskbar in Windows is called a Panel in Linux Mint. If you open applications, you will see the application names showed in the application icons in the taskbar. That takes too much space. Cf macOS or Ubuntu Unity. See a screenshot here where the "Panel" is moved to the top and "Cairo Dock" is installed.
We can also add a program to Favorites. The favorites programs are located at the Mint Start Menu.
Pop_OS
Create customized ubuntu iso
See Dual boot
Create your own Debian iso
MultiSystem – Create a MultiBoot USB from Linux
See Dual boot.
Minimal Ubuntu
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/MinimalCD
The minimal ubuntu iso (mini.iso) is about 64MB. It will download files when we install the Ubuntu.
In the halfway of installing the minimal Ubuntu, there is a dialog called 'Software selection'. It says At the moment, only the core of the system is installed. To tune the system to your needs, you can choose to install one or more of the following predefined collections of software. Choose software to install:.
The Perfect Server
- Ubuntu 16.04 from howtoforge.
- Debian 8.4 from howtoforge.
Live USB with persistent storage: mkusb
- Create A Persistent Storage Live USB With Ubuntu, Linux Mint Or Debian (UEFI, >4GB Persistence Support)
- Linux Live USB Creator
- (Bonus) NomadBSD
Selection of desktop environment
See Desktop environment.
Themes
Windows 10 theme
Make Linux Look Like Windows 10 With These Tips and Tweaks
GTK3
How To Use A Different GTK 3 Theme For Specific Applications
Orchis
Orchis Is A Cool GTK / GNOME Theme With Rounded Elements
Ubuntu Software Repository
See Ubuntu software repository.
Troubleshooting
What should I do when Ubuntu freezes?
- What should I do when Ubuntu freezes?
- How to fix non-responsive Ubuntu system?
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_SysRq_key
(11/11/2020). Note that my mouse can move but it cannot click. The keyboard did not respond to some solutions like Ctrl+Alt+F1 or Alt+F2. SSh from another computer still works:) Press Alt+SysReq (or Alt+Print), do not release and then type 'REISUB' (lower case). This puts the keyboard in raw mode, ends tasks in various states, syncs the disks, etc, and finally reboots the machine.
(11/23/2020). Pop_OS freezes again. I should check /var/log/syslog via ssh.
Don't try this on a virtual machine. It will not work. It just restart the HOST machine.
(10/29/2021). The /var/log/syslog shows unusual lines containing lots of \00\00\00\00 and Inserted module 'lp' . Try a suggestion from Using syslog to diagnose a crash. Another report related to the specific CPU (NUC8i5BEH) NUC8i5BEH running Linux randomly freezes when idle.
Grub2 cannot boot after timeout
There is not /etc/default/grub with GRUB2.
sudo apt-get --reinstall install grub-pc
The disk drive for /tmp is not ready yet
sudo mv /tmp /tmp_old sudo mkdir /tmp sudo chmod 1777 /tmp
Software updater - “Failed to download package files” error?
Change the download location to 'Main Server' or another server close to the country you live in and try to sudo apt-get update again.
unable to open mtp device ubuntu 14.04
sudo apt-get install mtpfs
Cannot log in in ubuntu 20.04
It's caused by ticking 'enable automatic logging in' at installation
No sound after suspend
- Fix No Sound (Dummy Output) Issue In Ubuntu With SND HDA Intel
- How To Fix No Sound in Ubuntu And Linux Mint. Unfortunately none of them works on Intel NUC + Ubuntu 18.04.2.
tracker-miner-fs
See http://askubuntu.com/questions/346211/tracker-store-and-tracker-miner-fs-eating-up-my-cpu-on-every-startup how to disable it.
Monitor
Monitor resolution
- xrandr. It shows as 20" 1360x768 (16:9) on my 2005 19" Sharp TV LC-19SB15U 1366 x 768 through Input 4 (VGA) (44W).
- On Mint Linux, it shows 1920x1080i. But it'll be better with 1280x720 (16:9).
- How to set a Custom Screen Resolution in Linux
- How to Setup Dual Monitors With XRandR
Night light
Best Eye Care Software to Protect Your Eyes in Linux
Display Manager
- How To Change The Default Display Manager (Switch To GDM, LightDM, SDDM, Or LXDM) In Debian, Ubuntu Or Linux Mint
- Linux Jargon Buster: What is Display Manager in Linux?
Display server: Wayland Xorg
How to Switch Between Xorg and Wayland in Ubuntu & How to enable/disable wayland on Ubuntu 20.04 Desktop
echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE
How can I tell if an application is using XWayland? 1. Running xlsclients in a terminal will list all the apps currently running which are using XWayland (cf native wayland). 2. Run xeyes
Power management
Battery
How to get Battery status notification when a battery is full or low
Suspend, hibernate
- Automatic suspend will disable ssh connection, cron jobs, et al. PS. a server never goes to suspend.
- Set Automatic Suspend Idle Time (Less Than 15 Min) in Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian
- If you like to suspend immediately, use
- sudo systemctl suspend from the command line. This requires to enter the password. Note the sudo systemctl hibernate does not work (the system will just shutdown).
- Press 'Alt' and then the Power Off button should change to a Suspend button from the Gnome Shell user menu. This seems to be better.
Swapfile
- How to remove a swapfile.
sudo swapoff /swapfile # swapfile is located under the root sudo rm /swapfile free -h # double check # Remove the swap entry from /etc/fstab sudo nano /etc/fstab
- Re-enable swap. How to Create and Increase Swap Space in Ubuntu 20.04
sudo fallocate -l 2G /path/to/new_swapfile sudo chmod 600 /path/to/new_swapfile sudo mkswap /path/to/new_swapfile sudo swapon /path/to/new_swapfile sudo cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.bak echo '/swapfile none swap sw 0 0' | sudo tee -a /etc/fstab
- Change swap size in Ubuntu. It seems we need to delete the swapfile before we follow that.
Hard drive
Install a new hard drive
See also https://help.ubuntu.com/community/InstallingANewHardDrive, Fdisk Command in Linux and Mount drive
- Use ls /dev/sd* show connected disk drives
- Use sudo fdisk /dev/sdb command to create partition table. Then 'g', 'p', 'n', 'p', '1', ENTER, ENTER, 'w'.
- Use sudo mkfs -t ext4 /dev/sdb1 to create a new partition
- Use sudo mkdir /mnt/ssd to create a new mount point
- (One time mount) sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/ssd
- Use sudo nano -Bw /etc/fstab to do auto mount on boot
/dev/sdb1 /media/mynewdrive ext3 defaults 0 2 /dev/sdc1 /media/mynewdrive ext3 defaults 0 0
- sudo chown -R USERNAME:USERNAME /mnt/ssd to give the ownership to the USERNAME.
Add second hard disk (3TB) to Ubuntu 16.04
exFat/Format USB for Windows
How to Format a USB Disk as exFAT on Linux [Graphically and Command Line]
Ubuntu Disks utility
We can use it to write an image to the SD card. Right click the image file in the File Manager. Select 'Open with '-> 'Disk Image Writer'. Select 'Destination' and click 'Restore'.
BALENA ETCHER can have a problem with writing the ArkOS image.
Disk Usage Analyzer
It is actually called Baobab.
Check partition type
lsblk -f
Use parted command to format a new hard disk
- The fdisk won’t create partitions larger than 2 TB. Use parted with GPT partition table.
- lsblk (no sudo is needed) is useful to summarize/list all devices. After that we can use sudo parted /dev/sdX to print more detail on a device.
- How To Manage Disk Partitions Using Parted Command
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/517354/terminal-method-of-formatting-storage-drive. The bottomline is not to use fdisk since it does not support GPT. Use parted (the CLI brother of GParted).
- http://www.tecmint.com/parted-command-to-create-resize-rescue-linux-disk-partitions/
- https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/fdisk-unable-to-create-partition-greater-2tb.html
- https://trisquel.info/en/wiki/how-format-external-storage-device-using-parted
sudo apt-get install parted sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdb # find out the disk size sudo parted print select /dev/sdb mklabel myLabel mkpart primary ext4 0GB 128GB print quit lsblk sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb1 mkdir /mnt/newdisk sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/newdisk df -h
Gparted
It is best to use the latest release of GParted https://github.com/GNOME/gparted/.
The gparted version on Mint 17.2 is 0.18.0 (Feb 19, 2014) while the current one is 0.28.1 (Feb 17, 2017).
After I create a bootable USB drive, the partition format is fat32 (I use an old version of GParted to format the drive as fat32, and then I use unetbootin to create the bootable USB drive).
If we want to use unetbootin, the USB drive has better to be pre-formatted as fat32 first for unetbootin to detect it. Once unetbootin detect the drive, we can use gparted to reformat it as NTFS before going to burn the Windows bootable USB drive. Read How do I use Unetbootin to make a bootable Windows USB installer?.
Resize Active/Primary root Partition In Linux Using GParted Utility
How To Resize Active/Primary root Partition In Linux Using GParted Utility. Three utilities are introduced too.
- e2fsck: e2fsck is a file system check utility that automatically repair the file system for bad sectors, I/O errors related to HDD.
- resize2fs: The resize2fs program will resize ext2, ext3, or ext4 file systems. It can be used to enlarge or shrink an unmounted file system located on device.
- e2image: The e2image program will save critical ext2, ext3, or ext4 filesystem metadata located on device to a file specified by image-file.
Change a partition's label
- A partition's label will determine the mounted directory when an external drive is connected to a machine
- Gparted. Right click a partition -> Unmount. Right click the partition again -> Label File System. Apply.
- What is the difference between a name and a label in gparted?
- How to label a partition or volume on Linux with e2label
parted utility
How To Manage Disk Partitions Using Parted Command
sudo parted /dev/sda print free
gparted on a 4TB disk
Get an error when I tried to create partitions on a 4T disk. Search 4TB gparted sectors exceeds the msdos-partition-table-imposed maximum of 4294967295
It seems it is necessary to use GPT instead of MBR/msdos as a partition table to overcome 2TB limitions.
It is also a good idea to use a live gparted os since the one in Ubuntu may not be up-to-date and gparted takes forever to scan devices. When boot from live USB, we need to turn off the Ext hard disk first.
Step1. Device -> Create a partition table -> GPT
Step2. Create a new ext4 partition as you want.
- http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2164361
- http://gparted-forum.surf4.info/viewtopic.php?id=14940
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/339041/cannot-resize-drive
- http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/67835/change-partition-table-with-gparted
Note:
- The 4TB hard disk can be recognized and used normally in an internal hd in Ubuntu 12.04.
- The 4TB hard disk can also be used in Windows 7 as an external hd if I formatted it (e.g. from gparted in Linux) as an NTFS partition. The Disk Management (command prompt -> diskmgnt.msc) shows it has 3726.02 GB (3726.02 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 = 4.000784e12 Bytes) capacity and the windows manager shows it is 3.63TB (3726.02/1024=3.638) total space.
- It cannot be used as 4TB in the case when I use a docking station in Dell Precision T3500. Unsolved problem:
- Running the command chown from root to user takes forever on 4T partition.
- The ext dock station (StarTech) will halt the shutdown until I power off the station?
Conclusion:
- 4TB using NTFS works on Ubuntu.
- rsync will not stop spinning for some reason even the command is finished (through StarTech dock station).
Below is a screenshot I got from Gparted on a pre-formatted (NTFS) 4T portable drive from Seagate. It seems not harmful because I can still umount, change labels, etc on the disk.
Health check of the hdd: badblocks, dmesg, fsck
Linux check the physical health of a USB stick. badblocks and f3 tool.
I got an input/output error when I use sudo rm, sudo reboot or Ctrl + Del commands.
When I use the power button to force shutdown, I could not boot again. The BIOS does find the hdd and the Ubuntu Live USB does find the internal hdd too.
To force to reboot/shutdown, follow the suggestion here
dmesg command shows there are a few bad sectors on that hdd.
http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/37659/the-beginners-guide-to-linux-disk-utilities/ shows a few ways to run a health check on the hdd. The gnome disk utility cannot run S.M.A.R.T. on the external hdd.
sudo badblocks -v /dev/sdb1 sudo badblocks /dev/sdb > /home/zainul/bad-blocks sudo fsck -l bad-blocks /dev/sdb
This article http://linoxide.com/linux-how-to/how-to-fix-repair-bad-blocks-in-linux/ talks about how to fix/repair bad blocks in Linux .
This article http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/25902/what-does-this-hard-disk-error-message-mean-current-pending-sector-count talks about how to do with bad sectors.
It is an indicator that hdd is going to die http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-hardware-18/34-bad-blocks-what-should-i-do-927224-print/.
Force Check Root Filesystem using fsck During Reboot
Burn/Write an iso or img file to a USB flash drive
Official instruction on www.ubuntu.com and from wikipedia.
- If your current OS is windows => Universal USB Installer/Live Linux USB Creator.
- If your current OS is Ubuntu => Several choices like Startup Disk Creator/usb-creator (has an option on the GUI to erase the usb drive). If your ubuntu derivative does not have it, install it by sudo apt-get install usb-creator-gtk. UNETBOOTIN (no option to erase the USB so it can fail) or mkusb.
- If your current OS is Mint => Right click the iso file and select Make bootable USB stick. No software to install.
Use dd
First, get to know the USB drive device name like /dev/sdb. When using 'dd', the USB drive has to be unmounted (using 'umount' command, not click 'reject' button in File Manager). Note that this will irrevocably destroy all data on /dev/sdX.
The instruction can be found in a lot of places like Archlinux wiki page.
sudo fdisk -l sudo dd bs=4M if=xxx.img of=/dev/sdb && sync
where /dev/sdb is a device name, not a partition name. We can also adjust bs to a smaller value like 1M, 4m.
- Monitor dd operations. Note for some reason it will stuck in the middle of process; the process bar stopped. And when it happened, 'Ctrl+c' will not stop immediately.
$ sudo umount /dev/mmcblk0p1 $ sudo apt install pv $ sudo dd if=Downloads/ubuntu-18.04-desktop-amd64.iso | pv | sudo dd of=/dev/mmcblk0
- Monitor the progress,
- adding a parameter status=progress in dd (not working on Ubuntu 14.04)
- Linux dialog command
- following Raspberry Pi
sudo pkill -USR1 -n -x dd
For some reason when I use dd to create ubuntu 14.04 on usb drive, sudo gparted also gives me a Libparted warning /dev/sdc contains GPT signature, indicating that it has a GPT table. However, it does not have a valid fake msdos partition table, as it should... Is it a GPT partition table? messsage. If I click 'Yes', Gparted shows no partition on the usb drive??? Nevertheless, the usb drive can be used to boot into ubuntu 14.04.
In another case, the gparted compalins the usb drive "Invalid partition table - recursive partition on /dev/sdb". Someone suggests to issue a dd command to erase a hard disk.
use dd to erase a hard disk
The following command works on Live Ubuntu. We can use this method to erase a hard disk.
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda bs=4M status=progress
Clone your linux hard drive
How to Clone Your Linux Hard Drive: 4 Methods
Etcher - cross platform
For Ubuntu, there is no need to install the program. Just run the binary file (.AppImage).
See https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/pi-sd-etcher/
Rufus
Rufus is a popular free and open source graphical tool to create bootable USB drives from Windows. It can be used to create not only bootable Windows drives from ISO files or disk images, but also create bootable Linux USB drives from Windows.
- Windows OS is required to use Rufus
- Create GPT (for UEFI) or MBR partition table. See What’s the Difference Between GPT and MBR When Partitioning a Drive?
- https://github.com/hirotakaster/baytail-bootia32.efi
- installing Ubuntu / Mint Linux on Onda 820w tablet
- It successfully burns ESXi and Ubuntu iso images to USB drives while the USB drives created by the 'dd' command does not work??
- Rufus: Creating A Persistent Storage Live USB With Ubuntu Or Debian From Windows
UNETBOOTIN - cross platform
For creating a Windows bootable USB drive, we cannot use Etcher program. On UDoo-X86 Get started site, it suggests to use Unetbootin if the host machine is Ubuntu. NOTE. the USB drive has to be formatted as FAT32 (this can be done by GParted program); otherwise Unetbootin cannot recognize the drive. Unfortunately the USB drive can not be booted from UDoo-X86. See also the trick by this post.
- The command sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt should be sudo mkdir /media/$USER/usb; sudo mount /dev/sdc1 /media/$USER/usb where /dev/sdc1 should be changed appropriately
- This approach works
- Rufus is good but not always (eg the USB drive is not bootable??)
The GUI is written by Qt so the program is cross-platform. See its wiki.
The following is a screenshot of the contents of xubuntu 12.04. The usb drive needs to be formatted to fat32 on Windows OS to repair partition table error. The partition table error was discovered when I use sudo gparted program to view the USB drive.
Note that Unetbootin (Windows & Linux) and Universal USB installer (Windows only) are quite similar although Universal USB installer provides more options in its interface while Unetbootin does not have any other options.
Universal USB Installer/UUI
http://www.pendrivelinux.com/universal-usb-installer-easy-as-1-2-3/
I first used dd command to successfully created a xubuntu 14.04 usb drive but there seems to be a problem with the partition since the gparted program will give a warning message about that and also the whole 16GB was used when I insert the drive onto a Windows machine.
Note that the fdisk utility cannot handle this new partition format so we have to use the gparted program.
Open the gparted program. Use it MULTIPLE TIMES to create a partition table (Device -> Create Partition Table...). Then we create a FAT32 partition with all of the space. After that, we can use the UUI program to create an Ubuntu USB drive.
The following screenshots are from a 16GB USB drive.
Mint mintStick
mintstick. Linux Mint mintStick DEB package can be used in Ubuntu 18.04.
USB Drive Writing Speed
Using the dd command
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/media/brb/USB\ STICK/test.img bs=100M count=1 oflag=dsync sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/media/brb/USB\ STICK/test.img bs=100M count=10 oflag=dsync
Some data from plugging into USB 2.0 slot. Partition format may be FAT32 or Ext3/4.
- Staples 128GB: 6.7M/s when writing 200M (fat32 formatted by USB Stick Formatter). 161M/s when writing 200M, 174M/s when writing 400M, 9M/s when writing 800M (NTFS).
- Toshiba 16GB USB 3.0: 9M/s when writing 200M, 5.6M/s when writing 400M, 3.9M/s when writing 800M.
- Samsung 128GB USB 3.0 flash drive fit: 7.6M/s when writing 200M, 12M/s when writing 400M, 6.7M/s when writing 800M, 10M/s when writing 1600M.
- Seagate Backup Plus 4T: 25-27 M/s when writing on ext4 and 500-750 M/s on exFAT.
- WD MyPassort 1T: 154M/s when writing 200M, 156M/s when writing 400M, 168M/s when writing 800M (NTFS/exFAT). 22~24M/s when writing on ext3.
- WD Mybook 4T: 21.4 MB/s when writing 1G.
Conclusions:
- USB flash drive is slow compared to USB portable hard drive.
- Large writing will become slower on USB flash drive but not on hard drive.
NTFS/exFAT is several times faster than ext3/ext4. The testing result here is false b/s caching.- The test result can fluctuate a lot when using the dd command with count=1.
Cautions:
- When I use the cp command to copy a 4.3GB iso file to USB flash drive, it took less than 1 minute. But after I eject the drive (disappear from NEMO Windows Manager/taskbar notification), its LED keeps flashing. A message "Writing data to USB DISK 2.0 Don't unplug until finished" appears on top right corner of my desktop. If I unplug it now, the OS will pop up an error message "Error ejecting /dev/sdc ...". This makes me suspect the testing results here. In fact, when I try to plug in the flash drive, the OS cannot mount the drive. I need to go back to use the USB Stick Formatter to reformat the drive.
Multiple boot USB
ventoy
YUMI
YUMI works much like Universal USB Installer, except it can be used to install more than one distribution to run Live from your USB.
It can be used to create a Multiboot USB Flash Drive containing multiple operating systems, antivirus utilities, disc cloning, diagnostic tools, and more.
MultiBootUSB
The program is included by LXLE.
It supports persistence up to 4GB for ubuntu and its derivatives.
It also supports multi-thread (check by top or htop). The %cpu > 100.
It will take space as needed. So we can still use the USB drive to write data.
- http://multibootusb.org/news/
- https://github.com/mbusb/multibootusb
- https://github.com/mbusb/multibootusb/wiki/User-Guide
For some reason, the USB drive could not be boot after I use the program. The ubuntu does not show/recognize it though gparted still finds it. Maybe it is because the partition format (ext4 by gparted) is right. For YUMI program, it says to use fat16/fat32/NTFS; otherise syslinux will fail. But it seems not to help:( Maybe it is the partition table (I choose gpt instead of the default msdos).
Automatically Mount USB Drives On Ubuntu Or Debian Server
Automatically Mount USB Drives On Ubuntu Or Debian Server With USBmount
Determine/install/switch Window Manager
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Window_manager
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/72549/how-to-determine-which-window-manager-is-running
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/227607/different-display-and-window-managers-for-ubuntu-and-how-to-install-them
sudo apt-get install wmctrl wmctrl -m sudo apt-get install <pkg-name> <pkg-name> --replace
On an old/new Ubuntu the default window manager is Compiz/GNOME Shell, for xubuntu it is Xfwm4 and for BBB it is Openbox. We can use the neofetch command.
Jenkins
How to Install Jenkins Automation Server with Apache on Ubuntu 16.04
Automatic update, unattended upgrade
- https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/automatic-updates.html
- How to Handle Automatic Updates in Ubuntu
- http://www.howtogeek.com/228690/how-to-enable-automatic-system-updates-in-ubuntu/
- How To Set up Automatic Security Update (Unattended Upgrades) on Debian/Ubuntu
- Update log more /var/log/dpkg.log
- To check the history including the commands used to run apt update, see less /var/log/apt/history.log
$ tail /var/log/apt/history.log Start-Date: 2018-12-05 06:38:19 Commandline: /usr/bin/unattended-upgrade Install: ... Upgrade: ... ... Start-Date: 2018-12-21 06:18:59 Commandline: /usr/bin/unattended-upgrade Upgrade: linux-libc-dev:amd64 (4.4.0-140.166, 4.4.0-141.167) End-Date: 2018-12-21 06:19:00
- Software & Updates GUI
- By default, it will check automatically check updates every day. I changed it to every week.
- When there are security updates, it will download and install automatically by default. Looks good.
- When there are other updates, it will display weekly.
- How to Disable Automatic Updates On Ubuntu
How to find out if/why my Ubuntu/Debian Linux server needs a reboot/restart
- How to find out if my Ubuntu/Debian Linux server needs a reboot cat /var/run/reboot-required (in fact, we just need to check if the file exists or not)
- To view the list of packages that require a restart with: more /var/run/reboot-required.pkgs
- My cases are new initrd.img-5.4.X-XX-generic and vmlinuz-5.4.X-XX-generic (Linux kernel) files in /boot directory. Is there unused `initrd.img` to remove?, Install and Boot an Older Kernel in Ubuntu, How to Fix a Broken Initrd Image in Linux, Safely remove old files in /boot, How To Fix A Full /boot Partition on Linux, How to Remove Old kernel Versions from Boot on Ubuntu 18.04.
- Check the output of 'uname -a' before and after the reboot.
-
See also the Grub page. When a new initrid image is downloaded, /boot/grub/grub.cfg will be updated to use the newest image.
grep initrd.img /boot/grub/grub.cfg -n
- I found the reboot reason is most likely the update of kernels (ls -lt /boot). See https://www.ubuntuupdates.org/.
- less /var/log/apt/history.log to see the update history (including unattended-upgrade, linux-headers-VERSION-generic).
- Though I have enabled livepatch, when I ssh into my machine the console still shows "System restart required". Why?
Raspberry Pi
Shell example to get notification when you need to reboot
How to find out if Raspberry PI Linux OS needs a reboot
After running update/upgrade in Ubuntu
Virtualbox
Virtualbox does not work. After initial fix, the guest machine cannot connect to internet:(
Crashes network manager (no internet connection, no applet)
The solution on here works on my Ubuntu 14.04.4. Download 3 deb files and install them (downgrade packages).
Printer setup
Printers -> Add -> Network Printer -> Find Network Printer (wait a little bit).
It shows two matches. Brother HL-5250DN (AppSocket/JetDirect network printer via DNS-SD) & Brother HL-5250DN series (LPD network printer via DNS-SD). The first one does not work and the 2nd one works.
Another way is to type the IP approach (Enter URI). Enter 192.168.1.88:9100 -> Select printer from database -> Brother. There are two possibilities: HL-5250DN & HL-5250DN for CUPS. The first one does not work and the 2nd one works.
It is strange that when I try to print from Firefox, it shows 3 options (Print to file, BRN_xxxxx, HL-5250DN). The BRN_XXXXX shows the status is online but it cannot be printed.
Web interface (port 631)
- How do you administer CUPS remotely using the web interface?
- Connect your dumb printer to your home network by Raspberry Pi
Troubleshooting
- Pop_OS.If the printer stops working, open the Printers Application again and click the gear icon, and select Remove Printer to remove the printer and its settings. Repeat the steps above to add the printer and try printing the test page again. This process usually resolves many printing issues.
- io.elementary.appcenter took 2GB memory on Pop_OS 20.04; see Pop Shop not closing properly (sometimes)
- Download driver from manufacturer website
- To look at the CUPS (Common Unix Printing System) configuration and status window, please open this webpage: http://localhost:631. The "Help" menu provides help for lots of printer commands.
- Debugging Printing Problems Ubuntu
- avahi-browse -a -v -t -r can show the printer IP
Deep sleeping
- How do I get my brother printer out of deep sleep mode
- Unable to print after the machine has entered "Deep Sleep" - Windows
- Unable to print after the machine has entered "Deep Sleep" - Macintosh
Command line
- lpstat
- lpstat -t: see the status for all of the printers on the system, as well as the scheduler and all jobs
- lpstat -p: Display all installed printers
- lpstat -a: Display only those printers that are currently accepting print requests.
- lpstat -o: Display all active print jobs
- lp
- lp example.pdf: print a single example.pdf file on your default printer
- lp -d MFCL2700DW example.pdf: specify a printer via the -d switch:
- Two-sided printing: lp -o sides=two-sided-long-edge example.pdf
- lp -P 1,3,5-7,16 example.pdf : Print certain pages
- man lp: Help
- lpadmin
- lpadmin -x: Delete a printer. PS I cannot delete a printer either using the GUI or the command line:(
LPR & Cupswrapper*
- Print files from your Linux terminal
- What's the difference between LPR and cupswrapper drivers? How to install printer drivers?
- Brother MFC-L2710DW driver download & manual. It looks this is 2015 product.
- lpstat -t to check the status for CUPS printer OR
- Alt+F2 and enter system-config-printer
- Deb version
- The deb version only has i386 version?
- How to install brother Network printer on ubuntu 2017
- Setting Up Brother MFC-L2700DW on Ubuntu 14.04
- From Brother's website (shell script). See also INSTALLING BROTHER MFC-L2700DW AS NETWORK PRINTER ON UBUNTU 16.04, or this post from PDF Studio for step-by-step instruction with screenshots.
- Download the Driver Install Tool (linux-brprinter-installer-*.*.*-*.gz) under Utilities instead of Linux Printer Driver (deb package).
- Open a terminal window.
- cd Downloads
- gunzip linux-brprinter-installer-*.*.*-*.gz
- su bash linux-brprinter-installer-*.*.*-* "Brother machine name"; e.g. sudo bash linux-brprinter-installer-2.2.0-1 MFC-L2700DW
- The driver installation will start. Follow the installation screen directions. When you see the message Will you specify the DeviceURI ?, For USB Users: Choose N(No) For Network Users: Choose Y(Yes) and DeviceURI number (ipp://BRWFC017C4B27C8.local:631/ipp/print ) or the "Specify IP address" choice (192.168.1.89).
- The install process may take some time. Please wait until it is complete.
- http://192.168.1.89:631. The default password is initpass
- It seems Ubuntu 18.04 can automatically detect the MFC-L2700DW network printer.
- I use this method to install the driver on Ubuntu 18.04 and 20.04.
- I update to the latest version using ios app (2020-04-20). I tried more than 1 time.
- Some commands
$ lpstat -R # check queue
Paper Jam
Brother MFCL2710DW - Clearing paper jam errors
Drum
Graphics driver
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BinaryDriverHowto/Nvidia By default Ubuntu will use the open source video driver Nouveau for your NVIDIA graphics card. This driver lacks support for 3D acceleration and may not work with the very latest video cards or technologies from NVIDIA.
- Fixing Ubuntu Freezing at Boot Time. Ubuntu 18.04. Don't use open source version of NVIDIA drivers. Use proprietary NVIDIA drivers.
- http://www.ubuntugeek.com/install-updated-and-optimized-open-graphics-drivers-radeon-intel-and-nvidia-on-ubuntu-15-0414-04.html
- http://www.howtogeek.com/242045/how-to-get-the-latest-nvidia-amd-or-intel-graphics-drivers-on-ubuntu/
- http://www.binarytides.com/linux-get-gpu-information/
GPU info
$ lspci -vnn | grep VGA -A 12 # OR $ lshw -numeric -C display
To check hardware acceleration
# If glxinfo is not find, run sudo apt-get install mesa-utils $ glxinfo | grep OpenGL
Under Ubuntu-Unity, we can search Additional Drivers to install propriety party drivers instead of using X.org.
On Dell T3600, it shows (pay attention to the line driver=nouveau). See also Installing Nouveau on your Linux computer.
$ sudo lshw -C video [sudo] password for brb: *-display description: VGA compatible controller product: GF108GL [Quadro 600] vendor: NVIDIA Corporation ...
If I change to use the nvidia driver on T3600 which has NVIDIA Quadro 600, the GLX error will happen (OpenGL related. Some programs like Qt Creator, Blender will not be able to run). See the detail.
AMD vs NVIDIA
Should You Use AMD or NVIDIA GPUs on Linux?
Autostart a program after logging into your desktop
- ~/.config/autostart/ (hidden directory) Add .desktop files to here to have programs start automatically at startup. These .desktop files are application shortcuts — you can often create them by dragging-and-dropping an application onto your desktop or even just into the ~/.config/autostart/ window. I am using this way to auto start conky; see here. How can I add new autostart programs in Lubuntu? If you’re not using a desktop environment check out ~/.bash_profile file.
- /etc/xdg/autostart
- search 'Startup Applications Preferences' in Dash/Menu/Preferences. I have 1) Calibre 2) Dropbox 3) SSH Key Agent (/usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon --start --components=ssh) . For Lubuntu, this option is available on version 19.04+.
Resources:
- http://www.howtogeek.com/228467/how-to-make-a-program-run-at-startup-on-any-computer/
- https://developer.toradex.com/knowledge-base/how-to-autorun-application-at-the-start-up-in-linux
- How do I start applications automatically on login?
- How To Launch Startup Applications With A Delay On Linux
Auto start services on boot
- https://geekflare.com/how-to-auto-start-services-on-boot-in-linux/
- https://askubuntu.com/questions/9382/how-can-i-configure-a-service-to-run-at-startup
- Make script run at boot time with init.d directory
On Ubuntu (Let’s say script name is nginx),
- Copy the script in /etc/init.d/ folder
- Execute the below command
update-rc.d nginx defaults
- Reboot the server to ensure services are started.
Take screenshots (and edit them)
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/taking_a_screenshot
- 10 Best Modern Screenshot Apps for Linux 2023/12/28
gnome-screenshot (preinstalled in Ubuntu)
- The Best Methods to Take Screenshots in Ubuntu 22.04
- A comprehensive guide to taking screenshots in Linux using gnome-screenshot
# Current window gnome-screenshot -w # an area gnome-screenshot -a # delay gnome-screenshot --delay=[SECONDS] # interactive mode gnome-screenshot -i # directly save your screenshot gnome-screenshot --file=[FILENAME] # copy to the clipboard gnome-screenshot -c
Shutter (removed)
Shutter screenshot tool was removed from Debian Unstable and Ubuntu 18.10 . Consider flameshot.
# https://launchpad.net/~shutter/+archive/ubuntu/ppa sudo add-apt-repository ppa:shutter/ppa sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install shutter
- After we launch Shutter, the tool sits at the (upper-right) Ubuntu system tray
- The built-in editor (click Edit button on the rhs) is convenient but limited (GIMP is more powerful but complicated). Tools includes
- Select item to move or resize it
- Draw a freehand line
- Highlighter
- Draw a straight line
- Draw an arrow
- Draw a rectangle
- Draw an ellipse
- Add a text
- Censor portions of the screenshot
- Pixelize selected areas
- Crop
- screenshots
- Each taken screenshots are placed in different tabs in Shutter
- If we close Shutter, the unsaved screenshots are still there because by default it automatically save files in the ~/Pictures folder. We can modify the settings from Edit -> Preferences.
- It also supports 'cropping'. Click 'Edit' button, Tool -> Crop, Select a region, Click 'Crop' button on the RHS.
ksnip
Ksnip 1.6.0 Screenshot Software Released With System Tray Icon, Global Hotkeys, Watermarks And More
Note the snap version of the program does not allow me to save the file?
The deb binary file works perfectly.
To crop an image, click the "Crop" icon. It will select the border of the image ready for cropping. All you have to do is drag and resize the rectangle. See a screenshot below.
flameshot (good replacement of shutter)
- https://flameshot.js.org/#/
- Best Tools For Taking and Editing Screenshots in Linux
- It also has a command line function like scrot.
- The text tool cannot change the font size?
- How to Capture and Edit Screenshots on Linux With Flameshot
Annotator
- Annotator: Open-Source App for Linux to Easily Add Essential Annotations to Your Images
- How to Install and Use Annotator: An Image Annotation Tool for Linux
GIMP
File -> Create -> Screenshot
import
command from ImageMagick
scrot
from scrot package. Note that by default the title bar will not be included (see the '-b' option below).
It seems scrot is better for my need.
Note: there seems no way to copy the screenshot to the clipboard.
scrot -c -d 5 screenshot.png # -c is count down, -d is delay scrot -b -c -d 5 -u screenshot.png # -b is title bar, -u is the current foc'u'sed window scrot -u # current window scrot -s screenshot.png # select an area scrot --thumb 50 # 50% of the original screenshot scrot abc.png -e 'gthumb $n' # open gThumb to open the file after taking the screenshot # sudo apt-get install mirage # 105 kB mirage screenshot.png # view the image scrot -b -d 5 '%Y:%m:%d:%H:%M:%S.png' -e 'mv $f ~/Desktop/'
See How to take screenshots in Linux with scrot.
ScreenCloud
- Binary for Ubuntu 16.04 is available
- https://github.com/olav-st/screencloud (Compiling instruction is given there)
- http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2016/06/force-install-screencloud-ubuntu-16-04
Hotshots
Only supports Ubuntu up to 14.04.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntuhandbook1/apps sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install hotshots
mtPaint, MyPaint, Pinta
Either MyPaint (no tool) or Pinta (can't control font size) is not good at adding text to an image. GIMP is still the king.
Screencaster/Record desktop
- https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScreenCasts (seems outdated)
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/4428/how-to-create-a-screencast
- 7 Ways to Record Your Desktop Screen on Linux and Raspberry Pi: Kazam, Simple Screen Recorder, ScreenStudio, RecordMyDesktop, VLC, Asciinema, OBS Studio.
- How to Record Screen and internal Audio? (simplescreenrecorder works for recording the entire screen & a fixed rectangle but not a window!)
- The 8 Best Linux Screen Recording Apps to Capture Your Screen
OBS Studio (cross platform)
- https://obsproject.com/, https://youtu.be/55sP4ytE1uc?t=189
- Screen Recording in Linux With OBS and Wayland
- The 5 Best OBS Studio Alternatives for Live Streaming
Blue Recorder
- https://github.com/xlmnxp/blue-recorder. Snap and Flathub. Blue Recorder captures both audio and video at 60fps stright out of the box. You can define a delay. You can hide the app's interface.
Peek
https://github.com/phw/peek 9.9k star, latest release 2020. It is possible to use Peek in a GNOME Shell Wayland session using XWayland by launching Peek with the X11 backend.
VokaScreenNG
- https://github.com/vkohaupt/vokoscreenNG 895 star, latest release Oct 01, 2023
- Best Screen Recorders for Wayland in Linux (Compared & Tested)
- VokoscreenNG: Open Source Screencasting Tool
- It is used in youtube videos of QML tutorials.
kazam
It seems Kazam does not support Wayland yet. So use OBS Studio instead.
Although Kazam can do screenshots, Shutter (can sit on the system tray) is more convenient for taking care of screenshots.
The default frame rate is only 15. If we want to increase it, go to File -> Preferences -> Screencast tab.
When recording, it will have 5 seconds (adjustable) to wait. After launching Kazam, it will show an icon (video recorder) on the top-right corner. Keyboard shortcuts are available. For example (Windows key=Super key),
- Record=Ctrl + Windows + r,
- Finish=Ctrl + Windows + f,
- Pause=Ctrl + Windows + p.
sudo apt-get install kazam
You can choose fullscreen, window or a specific area. However, if you want to change the window or area once you have chosen one, you have to restart the program. One nice thing with Kazam is the output video is in .mp4 format (not ogv or ogg format). For a 14-seconds video with 15 frames per second (default), the video file size is 1.4MB.
A good introduction Create Screencast Videos With Ease Using Kazam
SimpleScreenRecorder (Qt based)
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:maarten-baert/simplescreenrecorder sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install simplescreenrecorder
Istanbul
Saved files are in the ogg format.
sudo apt-get install istanbul
RecordMyDesktop
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0Tn3Z8OklQ.
- The recorded video is in the ogv format.
- It can be run from the command line.
- We need to run ffmpeg to convert video to flv (Quality seems to be reduced) OR we can use online service (http://video.online-convert.com/convert-to-mp4) to convert ogv file to mp4 file (Same quality as I can tell).
sudo apt-get install recordmydesktop gtk-recordmydesktop
Create animated Gif of a screencast
- Create animated Gif of a screencast and the command line tool Gifify.
- How to record a region of your desktop as animated GIF on Linux
- How to create Animated GIFs with Peek on Ubuntu
Second screen
- cf RustDesk (teamviewer like)
- cf AnyDesk (teamviewer like)
- Deskreen Makes Any Device With A Web Browser A Second Screen For Your Computer, amazon
- The Free Deskreen App Turns Your Old Tablet Into a Wireless Monitor
- Android:
- Firefox works better than Brave/Duckduckgo on Onyx Note Air. I can exit the full screen mode by swiping up to get open apps and then clicking on FF. Dasung Non-Reader is much slow compared to Note Air.
- IOS:
- Safari works well. The latency is low and there is an "X" on top-left corner to exit the full screen mode. Chrome does not work for some reason.
VirtScreen
https://github.com/kbumsik/VirtScreen
Mirroring display/screen
Wallpaper
- How to Use Bing’s Background of the Day as Your Ubuntu Wallpaper
- Download the wallpapers from other distributions like
- Linux Mint. Install Previous Wallpapers in Linux Mint 19. /usr/share/backgrounds/
- Elementary
- Budgie
- Fedora wallpapers
Customize the desktop
Dock
- The Definitive Guide to Using and Customizing the Dock in Ubuntu
- How to Make Ubuntu Look Like macOS in 5 Easy Steps
- Install Cairo-Dock.
Show date in top bar of desktop
- Ubuntu 18.04
dconf write /org/gnome/desktop/interface/clock-show-date 'true'
Remove overlay scroll bar
http://www.itworld.com/article/2698420/disable-overlay-scroll-bars-in-ubuntu-14-04.html
Change scroll bar color
See this post. Run sudo apt-get install gnome-color-chooser.
Go to Engines tab in gnome-color-chooser and choose clearlooks engine for scrollbars.
How to turn off/disable Compiz's “drag to maximize” behaviour?
http://askubuntu.com/questions/72452/how-to-turn-off-compizs-drag-to-maximize-behaviour
On Mint, go to Preferences -> Window Tiling -> Enable Window Tiling and snapping -> Off.
Move a Window Without Clicking the Titlebar
Hold down the Alt key and then click in the window anywhere, and move your mouse.. See here. For recent Ubuntu, we can hold the super key and drag the window anywhere. See Move and resize windows.
On new Ubuntu, the Settings -> Keyboard Shortcuts shows Alt + F7 can be used to move a Window. The method is to use the arrow keys to move the window up/down after we hit Alt + F7.
Snapping windows to left or right
- Drag the window to left or right. I found when I drag the window to right, it just maximizes the window
- Window key + Left/right key. It Works on Ubuntu 18.40.
How to Keep a Window Always on Top
How to Keep a Window Always on Top in Linux
Change mouse cursor size
Settings -> Universal Access
Network Manager
Find Available Network Interfaces On Linux
Find Available Network Interfaces On Linux
- ifconfig -a
- ip link show # OR ip addr
- ls /sys/class/net
- cat /proc/net/dev
- netstat -i
- nmcli device status # OR nmcli connection show
Restart the network
sudo service network-manager restart # OR sudo nmcli networking off sudo nmcli networking on
avahi-daemon
Run sudo apt install avahi-daemon so we can use hostname.local to access the remote machine.
Set static IP
How to Configure Static IP Address on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS or How To Configure Static IP Address In Ubuntu (Easy Guide). Method 1: nmcli Command, Method 2: Netplan, Method 3: nmtui, 4: GUI.
My Ubuntu Server has two IP addresses, but only one is assigned in netplan, any ideas? Solution: assign static ones in the router to your computer's MAC address.
Starting with 17.10 release, Netplan is the default network management tool on Ubuntu. PS. another file we may want to check is /etc/dhcpcd.conf.
PS: replace eth0 as needed. On my Ubuntu box, it should be ens18 according to ip a. We can find out the device name by the default 00-netcfg.yaml file. Setting up Static IP address on Ubuntu Server 22.04.
$ sudo cat /etc/netplan/01-netcfg.yaml network: version: 2 renderer: networkd ethernets: eth0: dhcp4: no addresses: - 192.168.1.199/24 nameservers: addresses: [8.8.8.8, 1.1.1.1] routes: - to: default via: 192.168.1.1 $ sudo netplan apply # or sudo netplan --debug apply $ ip a # no reboot is necessary
Now that I got a message when I tried above on the latest Ubuntu 20.04. `gateway4` has been deprecated, use default routes instead. To fix it, follow the instruction here by replacing gateway4 with routes with to and via.
Multiple IP addresses
- How to Add an Additional IP Address to Your Linux Server
- one Ethernet port can have multiple IP addresses in Ubuntu. This is often referred to as IP aliasing. see How can I (from CLI) assign multiple IP addresses to one interface?.
Change IP address from the command line
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.17 netmask 255.255.255.0 up /sbin/ifconfig eth0
Windows OS.
Local DNS
- Search: local caching stub resolver DNS ubuntu 20.04
- How to Setup Local DNS Resolver using Dnsmasq on Ubuntu 20.04
- Configuring DNS With Dnsmasq and Ubuntu Server 20.04 (video)
- Set Up Local DNS Resolver on Ubuntu 20.04 with BIND9
- systemd-resolve --status can show the real DNS while the dig only shows 127.0.0.53
- dig command can include a DNS IP, for example, dig A www.pcworld.com @8.8.8.8
- nslookup command can also show the DNS IP. I got 127.0.0.53 too.
Set up OpenDNS
Set up OpenDNS on Linux Mint or Set custom DNS servers on Linux with Network Manager or resolv.conf
Select the Method: Automatic (DHCP) addresses only and enter 208.67.220.220, 208.67.222.222 into the DNS field, then click Save.
But after the change (and reboot), I don't have internet anymore.
DNS problem and 127.0.1.1
(Ubuntu 16.04 on Odroid) For some reason, pinging my domain always goes to the wrong IP. If I go to System -> Administration -> Network to change DNS from 127.0.1.1 to 8.8.8.8, it fixes the problem. But if I reboot, the DNS entry goes back to 127.0.1.1 again.
When I follow this post nameserver 127.0.1.1 in resolv.conf won't go away, the DNS will be changed to local IP of my router and the problem is fixed (even I reboot the computer).
See also the next: How to flush the DNS cache
How to flush the DNS cache
- http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/rhel-debian-ubuntu-flush-clear-dns-cache/
- How To Flush DNS Cache On Linux for systemd-resolved (eg Ubuntu 18.04), BIND, Dnsmasq Or nscd
- http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/flush-dns-cache-ubuntu/
sudo /etc/init.d/dns-clean
NM-applet
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NetworkManager
Wifi problem troubleshooting
Wi-Fi Not Working in Linux? Here’s How to Fix it 2024. 1. Hardware or software, 2. Driver, 3. DNS.
How to Connect to WiFi using netplan
How to Connect to WiFi from the Terminal in Ubuntu Linux
Manage wifi network using nmcli and wavemon
- How To Check WiFi Signal Strength From Commandline In Linux
- nmcli - nmcli dev wifi
- iw - sudo iw dev; sudo iw dev wlo1 link
- iwconfig - sudo apt install wireless-tools; sudo iwconfig
- iwlist - sudo apt install wireless-tools; sudo iwlist wlan0 scanning | grep -i --color signal
- wavemon - sudo apt install wavemon; wavemon
- Configure WiFi Connections
nmcli d wifi connect my_wifi password <password>
- Chapter 12. Managing wi-fi connections from redhat.com
- How To Show Available WiFi Networks, Their Channels, Signal Strength And More From The Command Line
nmcli dev status # nmcli d nmcli dev wifi # it works if wifi is on nmcli r wifi on # turn on wifi (by default wifi is on even on Ubuntu server)
- nmcli – View your Network & Wifi details and Control your NetworkManager
nmcli – View your Network & Wifi details and Control your NetworkManager WIFI-device iwconfig nmcli device wifi connect "$SSID" password "$PASSWORD" nmcli dev status nmcli con show
- To list all wifi SSID and their signal with wavemon
sudo apt install wavemon sudo wavemon # The bottom will show a list of keyboard shortcuts # Press F3 to see a list of available wifi # The list will be sorted by dBm level
Turn on/off wifi adapter using nmcli
The command-line equivalent of unchecking the nm-applet's 'Enable Wi-fi' should be
nmcli nm wifi off # OR nmcli radio wifi off # OR sudo ifconfig wlan0 down
Nmtui
How to Manage Linux Wi-Fi Network with Nmtui
Proxy
Internet Shut Down
- This Is Why Half the Internet Shut Down Today, An IoT botnet is partly behind Friday's massive DDOS attack and 駭客襲美 推特等主要網站大掛點 (Oct 21 2016)
- Distributed denial-of-service/DDoS attack from wikipedia.
IP scanner
- Angry IP Scanner (Windows, Mac, Linux). GUI.
- nmap utility; e.g. sudo nmap -sP 192.168.1.1/24
- fing (terminal)
How to get connection to both wifi as well as LAN
- How to get connection to both wifi as well as LAN in ubuntu 14.04 LTS?
- Ubuntu allows multiple connections by default.
- Use LAN for the Intranet and WiFi for the Internet
- How to "prioritise" multiple network connections (using GUI)
- How do I set the priority of network connections in Ubuntu? (using ifmetric package). How To Install ifmetric on Ubuntu 21.04
wireless connection randomly drop off: iwconfig, iwconfig
My wireless adapter is TP-LINK, TL-WN722N.
http://askubuntu.com/questions/73607/wireless-connection-keeps-dropping-with-an-intel-3945abg-card
sudo iwconfig # List available wireless interfaces sudo iwconfig wlan0 power off
5 Best Linux/Ubuntu compatible USB Wifi cards:
- AirLink101 AWLL6075 Wireless N Mini USB Adapter
- Medialink – Wireless N USB Adapter – 802.11n
- ASUS (USB-N13) Wireless-N USB Adapter
- Panda Mini Wifi (b/g/n) 150Mbps Card
- TP-Link TL-WN722N 150Mbps High Gain Wireless USB Adapter
To show (USB) wireless adapter information
sudo lshw -C network sudo lsusb -v iwconfig # get signal level, Bit rate
To check wifi connection information (SSID, channel, address, frequency, qualiyt, signal level, ...). How do I scan for Wireless Access Points?
sudo iwlist wlan0 scan sudo iw dev wlan0 scan | egrep "signal:|SSID:" | sed -e "s/\tsignal: //" -e "s/\tSSID: //" | awk '{ORS = (NR % 2 == 0)? "\n" : " "; print}' | sort # change wlan0 to the right interface
My experience is quality should be at least 50/70 and signal level should be larger than -60dBm.
On my nuc desktop, it got -63 dBm (on Sunday it is -54 dBm). On Raspberry Pi zero, it shows -54 dBm (impressive). On Mint with Qualcomm Atheros AR93xx, it shows -56 dBm. On macbook pro, I got -70. On Raspberry Pi 3B (around the router), it shows -39 dBm.
How to interpret wireless quality indicators?.
VPN
See VPN
DHCP Server
- How to Install a DHCP Server in Ubuntu and Debian
- How to Configure DHCP Server on Ubuntu 22.04 Step-by-Step
File Server
Network File System (NFS)
NFS allows a system to share directories and files with others over a network. By using NFS, users and programs can access files on remote systems almost as if they were local files.
Some of the most notable benefits that NFS can provide are:
- Local workstations use less disk space.
- There is no need for users to have separate home directories on every network machine. Home directories could be set up on the NFS server and made available throughout the network.
Server part:
sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel-server
Configure the directories to be exported by adding them to the /etc/exports file.
/home/USERNAME/SHAREFOLDER 192.168.1.0/24(rw,sync,no_subtree_check) /ubuntu *(ro,sync,no_root_squash) /home *(rw,sync,no_root_squash) # replace * with one of the hostname formats.
where 'ro' means read only. See Linux Home Server Howto. The no_root_squash option will not prevent root on a client machine from writing files to the server as root; by default, NFS will map any requests from root on the client to the 'nobody' user on the server. See digitalocean.
To start the NFS server:
sudo service nfs-kernel-server start
Client part:
PS.
- There is no need to enter any password related to the NFS server.
- See digitalocean for other ways to specify the arguments in </etc/fstab>.
sudo apt-get install nfs-common sudo mount -t nfs example.hostname.com:/ubuntu /mnt/ubuntu # The mount point directory /mnt/ubuntu must exist. # or modify the /etc/fstab file # example.hostname.com:/ubuntu /mnt/ubuntu nfs rsize=8192,wsize=8192,timeo=14,intr # localip:/sharedfolder /mnt/ubuntu nfs defaults 0 0 brb@brb-P45T-A:~$ ps -ef | grep nfs root 675 2 0 11:16 ? 00:00:00 [nfsiod] root 14783 2 0 16:51 ? 00:00:00 [nfsv4.0-svc] brb 14960 13491 0 16:56 pts/0 00:00:00 grep --color=auto nfs
To make the mounting permanently, run sudo nano /etc/fstab and include a line like
1.2.3.4:/home /mnt/nfs/home nfs auto,noatime,nolock,bg,nfsvers=4,intr,tcp,actimeo=1800 0 0
Some help:
- How to configure an NFS server and mount NFS shares on Ubuntu 18.04
- How to configure NFS Server and Client Configuration on Ubuntu 16.10
- Easy NFS Share Setup In Ubuntu, Linux Mint Or Debian With Simple NFS GUI (Server And Client)
Boot from an NFS server
With NFS booting, the core kernel and file systems are kept on a central server and then pushed out onto client systems to be booted on there. That means your files and desktop will always be available wherever you want to log in.
At the end, the client computer does not need any internal storage. Cool!
CIFS (Common Internet File System) and NTLMv2 (NT LAN Manager)
- https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/transfer.html#mapped
- https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MountWindowsSharesPermanently
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MountWindowsSharesPermanently
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Samba/SambaClientGuide
Note that this method is most suitable for transferring small files. Users transferring large amounts of data to and from Helix/Biowulf should continue to use scp or sftp. (nih.gov)
Samba
Change automatic login
Open sudo nano /etc/gdm3/custom.conf and change the logic value true/false
Change the default session when using auto login
See this post. We need to edit the file /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf. Note that on my Ubuntu 12.04, I have the following desktop options.
$ ls -lt /usr/share/xsessions/ total 16 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 205 Apr 19 2012 gnome.desktop -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 188 Apr 19 2012 gnome-shell.desktop -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 208 Apr 19 2012 ubuntu-2d.desktop -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 185 Apr 19 2012 ubuntu.desktop
sudo
How To Grant And Remove Sudo Privileges To Users On Ubuntu
Terminal
Directory color on ssh
When I ssh to biowulf from Gnome/Terminal, the folder color became dark blue which is hard to read when the background color is black. A solution is https://serverfault.com/questions/137649/changing-terminal-colors-in-ubuntu-server.
Note that when we use the terminal app Tabby, the directory color is easy to see.
1. append this to your ~/.bashrc
if [ "$TERM" != "dumb" ]; then [ -e "$HOME/.dir_colors" ] && DIR_COLORS="$HOME/.dir_colors" [ -e "$DIR_COLORS" ] || DIR_COLORS="" eval "`dircolors -b $DIR_COLORS`" alias ls='ls --color=auto' fi
2. create/edit your ~/.dir_colors, for example with
$ dircolors --print-database > .dir_colors
3. Then force a read of your .bashrc file with:
$ source ~/.bashrc
Everything should be pretty.
powerline
- Add power to your terminal with powerline
- Powerline – A Powerful Statusline Plugin For Vim & Bash Terminal
- Github, Installation on Linux
Remember terminal tabs
The trick on this post works for me on my GNOME Terminal 3.6.2 (gnome-terminal --version).
# To save configuration into /home/$USER/terminal.cfg: gnome-terminal --save-config=/home/$USER/terminal.cfg # To load it back: gnome-terminal --load-config=/home/$USER/terminal.cfg
To recall the titles, follow this simple hack. That is, add an entry Title=xxxx to each tab section.
Terminal tab color
If we open several tabs in the (GNOME) Terminal, the default color of the active tab is not quite different from the other tabs. We need a solution to change the tab colors.
Solution: edit ~/.config/gtk-3.0/gtk.css (you might have to create it) and add:
TerminalWindow, TerminalWindow.background { background-color: #6e6e6e; color: #000000; } TerminalWindow .notebook tab { padding: 2; background-color: #6e6e6e; } TerminalWindow .notebook tab:active { background-color: #d1d1d1; }
Then close ALL terminal windows start and test.
How to practically use your Linux terminal for everything
- set alarms, take screenshots, check weather, schedule shutdown
- Send emails, browse internet, listen muscic, play games
Record terminal: script command
- How To Record Everything You Do In Terminal
- Record and Replay Linux Terminal Sessions using ‘script’ and ‘scriptreplay’ Commands
Font
Large text, monitor scaling, HiDPI displays
- This is useful on large screen displays or TVs.
- How to Change HiDPI Scaling Settings on Linux using GNOME, KDE, elementary OS, Xfce
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/HiDPI
Install Microsoft Font in linux suite
Install language packs
sudo apt-get install language-pack-[cod] language-pack-gnome-[cod] language-pack-[cod]-base language-pack-gnome-[cod]-base
For example, [cod]=en or [cod]=zh.
Change locale language and character set
Display Chinese character (from vanilla Debian/Ubuntu system)
sudo apt-get install fonts-arphic-ukai fonts-arphic-uming
sudo apt-get install language-support-fonts-zh # Or sudo apt-get install ttf-arphic-uming ttf-wqy-zenhei # OR sudo apt-get install fonts-arphic-uming fonts-wqy-zenhei
Chinese Input
- ibus/fcitx is a service. Use ps -ef to check if it is running.
- On Ubuntu 18.04, it is Ctrl + Space to switch input methods (the keyboard icon will be changed to "酷"). The "Windows + Space" only changes the drop-down list (en <-> 中) but it has no effect.
- "Windows + Space" may need to be clicked twice to switch the input method (at least on Mint 18.2)
- Log out and Log in seems to be necessary
- Helpful
- type 'language' in Dash search (Or click Power button on the top-right corner -> System Settings...) and click 'Language Support' (this may not be installed from (x)Ubuntu automatically. In such case, IBUS will be missing eg Chewing method). The 'Language Support' is under Settings menu in xUbuntu.
- Click 'Install' if a message popped up with the message 'The language support is not installed completely'. After the installation is done, the 'Language support' dialog comes back.
- Choose between ibus (ubuntu < 16.04) /fcitx (ubuntu 16.04).
- Choose 'IBUS' for keyboard input method system (bottom of the dialog). IBUS is under 'System' menu in xUbuntu.
- Choose 'fcitx'
- Click 'Install/Remove Languages'. Choose Chinese. Click 'Apply'. An 'Applying changes' dialog will appear.
- Click 'Close' button.
- Select Chinese
- System Settings -> Text Entry -> '+' -> Chinese. Or Settings > Keyboard Input Method > Input method > Select an input method > Show only input methods for your region > Chinese 酷 Chewing. If we cannot find this dialog, we can launch it by ibus-setup command. If Chewing is not shown as one of Chinese input methods, we can log out and log in the desktop. If ibus does not have the chewing selection, we should try to install it sudo apt-get install ibus-chewing and/or run ibus restart.
- Dash -> Fcitx Configuration. '+' -> Chewing. PS. On Ubuntu 16.04 it only shows a Chinese option without further options even I installed ibus-chewing.
- Make sure 'Show current input source in the menu bar' is checked.
- Click 'Close' button.
On Ubuntu 14.04, the super key is Windows.
On Ubuntu 16.04, ibus does not work. Use fcitx instead. Chewing(Fcitx) should be added to the "Text Entry" GUI. "fcitx" should be selected in the "Language Support" GUI (it's OK the language for menus and windows does not include 漢語 (臺灣). A linux or keyboard icon should appear in the taskbar.
On Ubuntu 18.04, I don't need to use fcitx (not available by default)
- I follow pingyinjoe to install Chinese from Language Support. Reboot (Log out seems to take forever).
- I follow this post to use sudo locale-gen zh_TW.UTF-8 to add chewing to the list (see next step).
- Type 'region' to search and click "Region and Language". Follow the GUI to add Chinese (Chewing).
- Test it by using Windows + Space to switch input methods.
Note that do not use 'Text Entry' application (shown as one options when we search 'language'). This application will conflict with ibus.
Easy way
Tested on Ubuntu 18.04 and 19.10. Do not to go to "Input Method".
- Language support. Make sure Chinese (traditional) is selected. Log out and log in. This step is not needed when I try Pop!_os. No need to worry about keyboard input method system; the default 'none' is OK. Log out and log in.
- Choose Settings -> Region & Language -> Input Source -> Chinese (Taiwan).
On Debian 11, I first need to run sudo apt-get install ibus-chewing & ibus restart. Then log out and log in again. Go to settings-Region and Language. Input Sources - Other - Chinese. Select Chinese (Chewing). Done. Use Win+Space to switch input languages.
ibus
How To Setup Multilingual Input Method On Ubuntu 18.04.
ibus works fine on Pop_OS 20.04 (it does not have fcitx PLUS ibus is already running) . Step 1 is to make sure Chinese is included in Language Support (it's already in Pop_OS 20.04) Step 2. Use Settings and search for 'input sources'. Use "+" to add Chinese Chewing.
gcin
新注音 New Zhuyin
- Google: ubuntu 英文版 中文輸入
- http://aarontechdiary.blogspot.com/2016/07/ubuntu-1604.html
sudo apt-get install gcin
- blog.xuite.net/yh96301/blog/287374341-Ubuntu+14.04安裝鍵盤輸入法系統gcin
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Gcin
- Show Applications -> gcin Tools
- https://magiclen.org/gcin/
fcitx
https://daviwa.blogspot.com/2017_10_08_archive.html
- On Linux Mint, it cannot show a list of candidate words. The trick of using killall fcitx-qimpanel works.
- On Ubuntu Mate, the fcitx works fine. ps -ef | grep fcitx-qimpanel shows nothing.
- On Lubuntu 18.04 LTS, fcitx works fine.
- add Chinese in 'Language Support'
- log out and log in (For live CD, the user name is lubuntu and the password is empty)
- click on fcitx icon > ConfigureFcitx. Uncheck the option Only Show Current Language in order to get a list of available input methods. Add Chinese Chewing. Close the Window.
- use Ctrl+Space keybinding to switch the language
/usr/lib/ibus/ibus-ui-gtk3 high memory usage
For some reason, the ubuntu 14.04 is not responsive. Htop shows ibus-ui-gtk3 is the culprit. The suggestion is to run
killall ibus-daemon
After I run this command and wait a few seconds, the memory leak problem is solved.
Change time zone
http://wiki.debian.org/TimeZoneChanges
$sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata
The command launches an ncurses based interface which allows arrow keys to be used to select the region specific time zone.
Make script run at boot time with init.d directory
http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/28
For example, see here from running a python script for raspberry pi.
- Create a script /etc/init.d/lcd
- Make the script executable
- Make the script known to the system by using the update-rc.d' command
sudo update-rc.d lcd defaults
/etc/rc.local file
- Executing Commands and Scripts at Reboot & Startup in Linux
- How to Activing rc.local on Ubuntu Server 18.04
- sudo nano /etc/rc.local
- sudo chmod +x /etc/rc.local
- sudo systemctl enable rc-local
- How to Enable /etc/rc.local with Systemd
For CentOS, we use file ‘/etc/rc.d/rc.local’ instead of ‘/etc/rc.local’. We also need to make this file executable before adding any script or command to the file.
Note:
- When executing a script at startup, make sure that the script ends with ‘exit 0’.
- Using /etc/rc.local for custom scripts is a legacy method, and some modern Debian systems might not have this file or might not execute it. Consider using systemd units or other modern methods for more reliable and maintainable solutions.
crontab
Executing Commands and Scripts at Reboot & Startup in Linux
Back up DVDs
Top 5 Linux DVD RIP Software from cyberciti.biz.
dvdbackup command
It works and fast. It will create a new directory (no need to specify beforehand).
sudo apt install dvdbackup dvdbackup # get usage dvdbackup -i /dev/dvd -o ~/Videos/ -M # -M means to back up the whole DVD
We can further create an ISO file from a directory using
genisoimage -o output_image.iso directory_name # Or mkisofs -lJR -o output_image.iso directory_name # -l : Allow full 31 character filenames. # -J : Generate Joliet directory records in addition to regular iso9660 file names. # -R : Generate System Use Sharing Protocol (SUSP) and Rock Ridge (RR) records using the Rock Ridge protocol
Create an iso file from a CD/DVD or HD
See also
Method 1 (Better than Method 2). No need to umount the cdrom.
mkisofs -o /tmp/DVD.iso /tmp/directory/
to make an ISO from files on your hard drive.
Method 2. Make sure the cdrom is NOT mounted. Type mount to confirm it. If cd was mouted automatically unmout it with umount command: like umount /dev/cdrom or umount /mnt/cdrom. Note that no extra forward slash after /dev/cdrom for the command below.
dd if=/dev/cdrom of=~/DVD.iso status=progress # worked in antiX dd bs=4M if=/dev/sr0 of=~/DVD.iso status=progress # Works for me to back up some borrowed DVDs # # Don't add the 'bs' parameter or you'll get an error reading '/dev/sr0': Input/output error # or use VLC to watch a little bit of the DVD first to fix the problem (why it helps?) # note that status=progress does not show the percentage. It shows how much is copied. # OR cat /dev/sr0 > ~/DVD.iso
For some reason I get an Input/output error. But after I use VLC to play the video, the Input/output error is gone when I try it again.
We can mount the iso file to a directory to check the iso file content is correct.
mount -t iso9660 -o loop,ro DVD.iso /mnt
Method 3. Monitor the progress of percentage assume we know the disk size
sudo apt-get install pv dd if=/dev/urandom | pv -s 2G | dd of=/dev/null
Method 4. To see the progress of dd once it's running, open another terminal and enter:
sudo kill -USR1 $(pgrep ^dd)
This will display dd progress in the dd terminal window without halting the process. If you're on BSD or OS X, use INFO instead of USR1. The USR1 signal will terminate dd.
If you would like to get regular updates of the dd progress, then enter:
watch -n5 'sudo kill -USR1 $(pgrep ^dd)'
watch will probe the dd process every -n seconds (-n5 = 5 seconds) and report without halting it.
Note the proper single quotes in the commands above.
HandBrake
It works but it loses the menu page on DVD.
Have fun with /etc/hosts file
su -c "nano /etc/hosts"
127.0.0.1 localhost ::1 localhost 74.125.67.100 DNS_NAME1 DNS_NAME2
- If you want to add aliases for your machine that will lookup to the loopback address you can keep adding them as space separated values on that line.
- "::1" is the ipv6 equivalent of 127.0.0.1 (which is for ipv4).
Block malware, adware
How to Use Your Computer’s Hosts File to Block Tons of Malware, Porn, and Other Types of Websites
Mount a remote file system over ssh
SSHFS: mount a remote file system over ssh
Linux Console File Managers
11 Best Linux Console File Managers
Nautilus Files or Nemo (File Manager)
- The 11 Best Nautilus Tweaks to Get More Out of the File Manager on Linux
- Best File Managers and File Explorers for Linux.
- Dolphin is good. It's lightweight & supports tab view and split view. sudo apt install dolphin. I tested on Debian 12 & Xfce. Open Menu (button) -> Configure -> Configure Dolphin -> Startup -> Begin in split view mode. It remembers the split view after re-open.
- Krusader. Split view is the default. When it was launched the first time, it asked about whether to enable some 3rd party apps (diff utility, email client, batch renamer, checksum utility, ...). Tools -> New Net Connection. Many goodies. The Krusader app is heavily dependent on KDE.
Bookmark the current directory to the sidebar
Ctrl + d. See also Files > Keyboard Shortcuts.
Ctrl + L
Change to a directory
Undo Ctrl+L
Press ESC.
Mount another Linux system in Nautilus
Very easy. Check out howtogeek.com
Eject USB drive
One or more applications are keeping the volume busy. One reason is I cd to one directory in the USB drive on the Terminal. If I move away, I can eject the drive.
Preview a file
Use the space bar to preview a file and click the space bar again or ESC to close the preview. Click "f" or F11 to preview the file in full-screen.
Create a desktop shortcut
- Navigate to your application in Nautilus. Right-click, select "Make Link". Then drag shortcut to your desktop. Works in Ubuntu 12.04.
- Pale moon browser instruction, especially the icon part.
.desktop file format
- Desktop Entry Specification
- "%k" - How can I set the 'Path' variable in a .desktop file to be relative to the location where the desktop file is located? and Getting the current path in .desktop EXEC command
- How do I access an environment variable in a .desktop file's exec line?
Open a terminal
sudo apt-get install nautilus-open-terminal nautilus -q
In Ubuntu 15.10, the functionality is already included in nautilus!
The Linux Directory Structure, Explained
https://www.howtogeek.com/117435/htg-explains-the-linux-directory-structure-explained/
Templates folder in the home directory
What is the “Templates” folder in the home directory for?
What purpose does the Public folder serve
gnome-sushi - Quick look
Get macOS ‘Quick Look’ on Ubuntu with GNOME Sushi
Plugin
- Embedded Nautilus Terminal Plugin 3.4.0 Adds Configurable Toggle Shortcut And Colors
- Nautilus Terminal Updated With Nautilus 40 Support, Context Menus
Nemo
- Nemo is a fork of Nautilus/GNOME Files Wikipedia
- Comparing Search Between Nautilus And Nemo File Managers
- I find I cannot add a remote location (sftp) but once I add it through Nautilus (I install it separately), the remote location appears in Nemo too. (Update) I can use File -> Connect to Server ... in Nemo.
Mount and Unmount Storage Devices from the Linux Terminal
How to Mount and Unmount Storage Devices from the Linux Terminal
Mount iso file
$ sudo mkdir /mnt/iso $ sudo mount -o loop /tmp/file.iso /mnt/iso $ sudo umount /mnt/iso
Check ubuntu version from command line
http://www.howtogeek.com/206240/how-to-tell-what-distro-and-version-of-linux-you-are-running/
lsb_release -a # command not found if we run it from a docker image # OR cat /etc/issue # works on docker image # OR cat /etc/*release # works on docker image # check kernel version uname -r # docker will get this information from the host # check 32/64 bit kernel uname -a # docker will get this information from the host
keyboard shortcuts
Go to keyboard app to change the settings. Note: Super key is also Windows key. Use 'Backspace' key to disable a shortcut.
- List from ubuntu.com
- Super: Open the Dash. Press and hold it to see a cheat sheet with a bunch of other nifty shortcuts.
- Super + Number: Open the application that is at that position in the dock
- Alt/Super/Shift + Mouse: Move an application. Useful if an application's title bar is too high.
- Alt + F2: Run an application by typing its name in the box which appears (same function as the Super key).
- Alt + Space: Activate the window menu. Not useful so I assign this to "Show all applications" (Super + a). This will be consistent with macOS.
- Ctrl + Super + D: To minimize all windows
- sudo apt install gnome-tweaks . From there, go to workspaces on the LHS choose static spaces. Choose the number of workspaces you like. Click on the super key to see all workspaces on the RHS. Drag and drop an app to move it to the desired workspace.
- Super + left/right: snap the window to left/right
- Super + upper/down: maximize/resize the window
- Super + h: hide/minimize a window. I changed it to Super + m (overwrite its original meaning). On macOS, it is Command + m.
On Xubuntu,
- Alt + F1 (Ctrl + ESC): Application menu.
- Alt + F2 (Super + R): Application Finder.
Add a new keyboard shortcut
Let's say I want to assign Ctrl+Alt+s to bring the shutdown dialog.
- System Settings -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Windows -> Toggle shaded state -> Backspace to disable it. For some reason, I cannot assign a new keybinding using the method of Custom Shortcuts' method.
- Open Ubuntu Software Center and install Compiz Config Setting Manager program. Open the program by search Compiz and then create a new command gnome-session-quit --power-off --force with a name like 'Shutdown' and the keyboard binding we want. CCSM -> General -> Commands.
With this approach, it will give a dialog with 4 options (lock suspend restart shutdown) but no one is pre-selected. If we want the shutdown icon being preselected, use this script where the zenity command was used to create a dialog. The zenity program was pre-installed in Ubuntu. See How to Make Simple Graphical Shell Scripts with Zenity on Linux.
Firefox
- Space: page down
- Shift + space: page up
Hardware/Device manager
- How to List Your Computer’s Devices From the Linux Terminal mount , lsblk, df , fdisk , The /proc Files , lspci , lsusb , lsdev , lshw , lsscsi , dmidecode, hwinfo.
- By default, ubuntu does not provide any graphical tool like device manager on Windows. A very close one is lshw (hardware lister). A GUI tool based on it is called lshw-gtk (seems not as informative as the command line one) and can be installed by sudo apt-get install lshw-gtk in Ubuntu/Debian or yum install lshw in Red Hat/Fedora/CentOS.
- As you can see the line containing 'display' shows the motherboard (P45T-A), CPU (Intel Core 2 Duo E8400), graphical card (GeForce 9400 GT in this case), et al.
$ sudo lshw -short
- For storage part, ubuntu provides a graphical tool. See "disk utility" on gnome based ubuntu or search for "disks" in launcher.
- How to Use lsusb in Linux (With a Practical Example)
- Get All Kind of System Information in Linux Terminal With inxi
Hardinfo, Hardinfo2
- How To Install System Information Tool HardInfo 0.6 Alpha (System Profiler And Benchmark) On Ubuntu, Pop!_OS Or Linux Mint From PPA
- Hardinfo2 – Check Hardware Information in Linux
Find out motherboard information
# No root cat /sys/devices/virtual/dmi/id/board_{vendor,name,version} # Root sudo dmidecode | grep -A4 '^Base Board Information'
RAM
Linux Check Ram Speed and Type Commands
sudo apt install dmidecode sudo dmidecode --type 17
Hard drive specification
# hdparm command sudo hdparm -I /dev/sda # OR using lshw command sudo apt-get install lshw lshw -class disk -class storage # Find Out Disks Name Only lshw -short -C disk # smartmontools package sudo smartctl -i /dev/sda
ufw (uncomplicated firewall)
- Do I Need a Firewall if I Have a Router?
- How To Set Up a Firewall with UFW on Ubuntu 18.04
- Gufw, https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Gufw
- How to open ssh 22/TCP port using ufw on Ubuntu/Debian Linux
The default firewall configuration tool for Ubuntu is ufw. Developed to ease iptables firewall configuration, ufw provides a user friendly way to create an IPv4 or IPv6 host-based firewall. By default UFW is disabled.
Suppose I have a virtual machine running a web server at port 8888 (The vm may be initialized by the Vagrant command). I can access the webpage from my host machine using http://localhost:8888.
Now I want the web page to be accessible from other local machines. We can use the ufw command to enable the firewall wall and open ports for certain services.
sudo ufw allow 8888/tcp sudo ufw show added sudo ufw enable sudo ufw status sudo ufw app list sudo ufw delete allow 8069 nmap localhost
Now I can go to another machine, open a browser at http://hostip:8888/. I should be able to get the same result as I got from the host machine.
In one instance sshing to a server failed (connection time) for some reason. The solution is to run the following command on the server
sudo ufw allow 22/tcp
A graphical interface program is called Gufw Firewall.
Other things ufw can do:
- Allow/Deny by ports and (optional) protocols
- Allow/Deny by service name
- Disable ping requests.
- Allow by specific IP
- Allow by subnet
- Allow by specific port and IP address/range. For example, to allow a VNC access from a specific IP.
# https://serverfault.com/a/74024 sudo ufw allow from 192.168.1.0/24 to any port 5900
- Deny by certain IP address
- Deny by certain IP address and certain port
webmin
See http://www.webmin.com/deb.html
wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/webadmin/webmin_1.600_all.deb dpkg --install webmin_1.600_all.deb
The install will be done automatically to /usr/share/webmin, the administration username set to root and the password to your current root password. You should now be able to login to Webmin at the URL http://localhost:10000/. Or if accessing it remotely, replace localhost with your system's IP address.
apt-get install perl libnet-ssleay-perl openssl libauthen-pam-perl libpam-runtime libio-pty-perl apt-show-versions python wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/webadmin/webmin_1.600_all.deb dpkg --install webmin_1.600_all.deb
Virtualize Linux
http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/features/how-to-virtualise-linux-part-1
CPU information
$ grep name /proc/cpuinfo | sort -u model name : AMD Phenom(tm) II X6 1055T Processor # home model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU X7560 @ 2.27GHz # helix model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1650 0 @ 3.20GHz # office
CPU usage
- See Raspberry Pi eink example where python's psutil package was used.
- How to get CPU usage in python 2.7 without using PSUtil
import psutil print psutil.cpu_percent()
Note not like the htop command, the result from psutil fluctuates a lot.
Find out if the OS is running in a virtual environment
Linux adds the hypervisor flag to /proc/cpuinfo if the kernel detects running on some sort of a hypervisor. See here.
cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep hypervisor
Virtualbox
See here.
gksu
- gksu Removed From Ubuntu, Here's The Recommended Replacement
- gksu Removed From Ubuntu, Here’s What You Can Use Instead
VBoxClient: the VirtualBox kernel service is not running
Got the above message on the upper right corner of the screen for every booting. Note I don't install VirtualBox. A solution is run
gksudo gedit /etc/X11/Xsession.d/98vboxadd-xclient
find the line
notify-send "VBoxClient: the VirtualBox kernel service is not running. Exiting."
Now change notify-send to echo.
Thin client
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/ThinClients
UbuntuLTSP
- How to install LTSP (Linux Terminal Server Project) on Ubuntu Server
- Full Tutorial - Install and configure LTSP server and clients (ubuntu, ltsp, howto) Part 1 and Part 2
LTSP
Raspberry Pi
Running Raspberry Pi’s as Thin Clients with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
[https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuLTSP/RaspberryPi UbuntuLTSP/RaspberryPi ]
Remote desktop
Install sshd
apt-get update apt-get install openssh-server
sftp, vsftpd and virtual users
- How to configure chroot SFTP in Linux
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/vsftpd
- http://www.ubuntugeek.com/setup-ftp-server-using-vsftp-and-configure-secure-ftp-connections-using-tlsssl-on-ubuntu-16-04-server.html
- https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/ubuntu-vsftpd/
ProFTPd
Install LAMP
See the page [1]
apt-get install apache2 a2enmod rewrite apt-get install mysql-server [I choose branch name as MYSQL root password] apt-get install php5 php-pear php5-suhosin apt-get install php5-mysql /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
Another instruction including how to set up user directories for Apache web server http://wiki.debian.org/LaMp
apt-get install mysql-server mysql-client mysql_secure_installation apt-get install apache2 apache2-doc apt-get install php5 php5-mysql libapache2-mod-php5 apt-get install python libapache2-mod-python
The apache configuration file is in /etc/apache2/apache2.conf.
For PHP, it is also useful to install php for command line.
sudo aptitude install php5-cli
Restarting apache before testing on web browser
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart
Debian 8
sudo aptitude install apache2 apache2-doc sudo aptitude install mysql-server php5-mysql # optional sudo mysql_secure_installation sudo aptitude install php5-common libapache2-mod-php5 php5-cli sudo service apache2 restart
AMPPS for a local server
http://www.howtogeek.com/219983/how-to-use-ampps-to-install-joomla-locally/
XAMPP is a free, open source cross platform web server solution stack package for Windows, Mac, and Linux. AMPPS is a software stack from Softaculous enabling Apache, MySQL, MongoDB, PHP, Perl, Python, and Softaculous auto-installer on a desktop.
XAMPP
How to Install XAMPP on Ubuntu 20.04
Sandstorm: self-hostable web productivity suite
- Sandstorm Open source platform for self-hosting web apps
- https://apps.sandstorm.io/
- Getting started with Sandstorm, an open source web app platform
Content management systems
PageKit
How to Install PageKit CMS on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
ProcessWire
How to Install ProcessWire CMS on CentOS 7
BookStack
How to Install BookStack on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
A docker image is also available.
Mediawiki
- My Mediawiki
UPnP server
See UPnP.
Storage server GlusterFS
Security
- The Complete Guide to Improving Your Online Security and Defending Your Privacy. It covers web browsers, browser extensions, email providers, search engines, VPN, password managers, OS, mobile, messaging, cloud storage & encryption tools.
Automatic security update
- How to Setup Automatic Security Updates on Ubuntu 16.04
- How to Manually Install Security Updates on Debian/Ubuntu?
TPM
TPM-backed Full Disk Encryption is coming to Ubuntu
https connection
HTTPOXY
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/httpoxy-protect-your-server/
Fail2Ban, Tinyhoneypot and IPv4 security
- https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/security.md
- https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/increase-ipv4-security-with-fail2ban-and-tinyhoneypot-on-debian-jessie/
MYSQL security
Just execute mysql_secure_installation from the command line.
- You can set a password for root accounts.
- You can remove root accounts that are accessible from outside the local host.
- You can remove anonymous-user accounts.
- You can remove the test database, which by default can be accessed by anonymous users.
See http://www.mysql-optimization.com/mysql-secure-installation-program.html
Meltdown and Spectre
- https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SecurityTeam/KnowledgeBase/SpectreAndMeltdown
- https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/software/meltdown-and-spectre-patches-causing-boot-issues-for-ubuntu-16-04-computers/
- https://www.ghacks.net/2018/01/11/check-linux-for-spectre-or-meltdown-vulnerability/
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get dist-upgrade uname -a # 4.4.0-109
HTTPS connection issue
An https connection problem with certificate. Error message comes from Google-chrome and Safari browsers.
Your connection is not private:
If we use wget or curl on a terminal, we will get an error message
$ wget https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz ERROR: cannot verify ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov's certificate, issued by ‘CN=DigiCert SHA2 High Assurance Server CA,OU=www.digicert.com,O=DigiCert Inc,C=US’: Unable to locally verify the issuer's authority. To connect to ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov insecurely, use `--no-check-certificate'. # curl -L https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz -o sratoolkit.tar.gz
It is interesting after a few tries, curl works again and wget works after adding the option --no-check-certificate
$ wget --no-check-certificate https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz $ curl -L -O https://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/sdk/2.7.0/sratoolkit.2.7.0-ubuntu64.tar.gz
HTTPS at NCBI: Guidance for Users
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/home/develop/https-guidance/
Compiling R
Use the following command to download required components before building any R packages. See also ubuntu package for R
sudo apt-get build-dep r-base
Create .deb file
checkinstall command
- http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/162
- http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/using-checkinstall-build-packages-source
- https://www.linux.com/learn/tutorials/307110-easy-package-creation-with-checkinstall
- http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/tutorials/build-your-own-deb-and-rpm-packages
dpkg-buildpackage command
Package maintenance
See Ubuntu package.
Software automation
Ansible
Ansible is a free and open source software that can be used to automate software provisioning, configuration management, and application deployment.
See Ansible
Terminal Assistant
Torrent
Top 6 Torrent Alternatives to The Pirate Bay (7/5/2017)
(old) Popular search sites
- torrentz
- thepiratebay
- isohunt
- kickass torrents
How to set up torrent scheduling on Linux
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-set-up-torrent-scheduling-on-linux/. It covers 'Deluge', 'Transmission' and 'Rtorrent'.
This can be useful for people who want to take advantage of their computer while they are not using it, like during the nighttime for example. This way, large portions of huge files can be downloaded without delaying your work activities, or interrupting/undermining your media consumption.
Torrent client command line: aria2c
aria2 is a lightweight multi-protocol & multi-source command-line download utility. It supports HTTP/HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent and Metalink. aria2 can be manipulated via built-in JSON-RPC and XML-RPC interfaces.
http://linuxconfig.org/aria2-all-in-one-command-line-download-tool
sudo apt-get install aria2 aria2c magnet:?xt=urn:btih:1e99d95f1764644a86a8e99bfd80c ...
Torrent client: transmission-cli
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Transmission
Torrent client command line: rtorrent
We first need to create an .rtorrent.rc file under $HOME directory. Then run
rtorrent XXX.torrent
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/RTorrent
- http://harbhag.wordpress.com/2010/06/30/tutorial-using-rtorrent-on-linux-like-a-pro/ [download a template]
- http://mylinuxbook.com/rtorrent-bit-torrent-client/
In the simplest case, .rtorrent.rc looks like
# On the terminal, mkdir ~/Downloads/rsession download_rate = 0 upload_rate =50 directory = ~/Downloads session = ~/Downloads/rsession port_range = 55556-55560 scgi_port = 127.0.0.1:5000 use_udp_trackers = yes encryption = allow_incoming,try_outgoing,enable_retry
As you can see here, I have created a sub-directory rsession under ~/Downloads/.
- ctrl + q = quit application
- ctrl + d = stop an active download
- ctrl + s = start downloading
glibc
Patch glibc 2.9
- http://www.infoworld.com/article/3033862/security/patch-now-unix-bug-puts-linux-android-and-ios-systems-at-risk.html
- http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-patch-cve-2015-7547-glibc-getaddrinfo-stack-based-buffer-overflow/
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade sudo reboot
SSL
See SSL.
File does not exist: /var/www/favicon.ico from /var/log/apache2/error.log
The reason? You have not created a favicon, also known as a website icon, for your website. It’s the icon that displays in the address bar of your web browser when you connect to a website. A web browser will request this icon file from every website.
If you choose to create one. Use a program such as Gimp and create a 16×16 pixel image and save it as a .ico filetype. Then upload that file to the DocumentRoot of your website. You will need one for each VirtualHost. If you don’t have Gimp, there are online resources such as favicon.cc where you can create a .ico file and download it for your own use.
As you know by now, not having a favicon.ico file, won’t stop web browsers from requesting it each time. But you can tell Apache not to log the event as an error message. You will still see the request in the access.log, but at least you will have a cleaner error.log file.
Add the following block of code to each VirtualHost, or at least the ones which don’t have a favicon file.
Redirect 404 /favicon.ico <Location /favicon.ico> ErrorDocument 404 "No favicon" </Location>
Don’t forget to restart apache after making the change. If you want make a “global” change, which would apply to any and all VirtualHosts, you can create a file in Apache’s conf.d folder with a name such as nofavicon.conf and then add that block of code to the file. That would disable favicon across the board and save you from having to edit each VirtualHost.
Or, you create an empty file with the name “favicon.ico” in the directory root of Apache (for exemple /var/www/).
Show weather on the taskbar
http://www.noobslab.com/2012/10/important-thingstweaks-to-do-after.html
WebCam
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Webcam
Install cheese or guvcview. An example of using computer vision on Raspberry Pi.
Watch TV
Running concrete5 On Nginx (LEMP)
http://www.howtoforge.com/running-concrete5-on-nginx-lemp-on-debian-squeeze-ubuntu-12.10
Open mms stream in google chrom in linux
http://www.thermetics.net/2011/12/07/how-to-open-mms-links-from-chrome-under-ubuntu/
Download mms stream (suitable if mms is an extension; for example, studioclassroom)
- Use mimms (will NOT output to speaker at the same time; so is best in terms of performance)
sudo apt-get install mimms mimms -t 60 mms://example.com/video
where -t option specifies number of minutes. See http://linuxers.org/howto/how-download-mms-streaming-videos-ubuntu The output will have the same extension as the input. But it is not always clear. For example
$ mimms -t 3 mms://bcr.media.hinet.net/RA000073 mms://bcr.media.hinet.net/RA000073 => RA000073.wmv 1.48 MB / ∞ B (8.79 kB/s, ∞ s remaining) Download stopped after user-specified timeout.
- Use mplayer (will output to speaker at the same time, so suffer from performance, anyway do not get output)
mplayer mms:/link/something.xxx -dumpstream -dumpfile file.xxx
mms:/link/something.xxx - link to the stream you wish to download file.xxx - file to which you wish to download the stream, be careful to write the same extension xxx
Wait for the file to download and that's it. See http://ubuntuhowtos.com/howtos/download_mms_stream
Streaming
Keep a linux process running after log out
See also Terminal multiplexer page.
- http://linux.101hacks.com/unix/nohup-command/
- http://serverfault.com/questions/311593/keeping-a-linux-process-running-after-i-logout
- How to Use the nohup Command in Linux
# nohup command-with-options &
If we use ssh -X to connect to a remote computer, the command can launch a GUI application on my local computer (without strange messages shown on the terminal).
Open Firefox in cron job
The trick is to use export DISPLAY=:0
export DISPLAY=:0 firefox http://www.google.com &
Close firefox gracefully
Use wmctrl command.
- http://www.linuxjournal.com/magazine/hack-and-automate-your-desktop-wmctrl
- http://tomas.styblo.name/wmctrl/
sudo apt-get install wmctrl wmctrl -c firefox
Audio
Get normalized sound volume
The sound from some youtube video can be too low. The following solution seems to work on Ubuntu 18.04 (nuc).
Automatically adjust the volume based on content?. It works. A reboot is needed. Tested on this video. See the automatic change in setting after reboot. File:Soundnormalize.png.
Change default audio player
Right-click an MP3 file, and from the menu select “Properties”. In the window that appears, go to the “Open With” tab and select VLC or whatever. Click the “Set As Default” button to set VLC as the default player.
You might also want to set the default player in the sound menu.
Trim
Trim an MP3 on your Mac. Open the file using QuickTime. "Cmd + t" to open the Trim function, or, you can also find the Trim function under the “Edit” menu. The rest is easy.
Compress audio files
How to Compress Large Audio Files: 5 Easy and Effective Ways
Audio editing
The Best Free Audio Editing Software
Audio recorder
Top 5 Audio Recorders for Ubuntu Recommendation
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:audio-recorder/ppa sudo apt update; sudo apt install audio-recorder
Record audio out from your browser using the command line
http://www.pantz.org/software/alsa/recording_sound_from_your_web_browser_using_linux.html
Step 1: Install required programs
sudo apt-get install gnome-media pavucontrol lame
Step 2: Create a script file <recordfm.sh>
#!/bin/bash # Get pulseaudio monitor sink monitor device then pipe it to # sox to record wav, lame to encode to mp3, or flac to encode flac FILENAME="$1" STOPTIME="$2" # Encoding options for lame and flac. LAMEOPTIONS="--preset cbr 192 -s 44.1" if [ -z "$FILENAME" ]; then echo -e " Usage: $0 /path/to/output.mp3 Usage: $0 /path/to/output.mp3 stopinseconds" >&2 exit 1 fi # Get sink monitor: MONITOR=$(pactl list | egrep -A2 '^(\*\*\* )?Source #' | \ grep 'Name: .*\.monitor$' | awk '{print $NF}' | tail -n1) echo "set-source-mute ${MONITOR} false" | pacmd >/dev/null # Record it raw, and pipe to lame for an mp3 echo "Recording to $FILENAME ..." if [[ $FILENAME =~ .mp3$ ]]; then if [ -z $STOPTIME ]; then parec -d $MONITOR | lame $LAMEOPTIONS -r - $FILENAME else echo -e "\nStopping in $STOPTIME seconds" parec -d $MONITOR | lame $LAMEOPTIONS -r - $FILENAME 2>&1 & SPID=$! sleep $STOPTIME kill -9 $SPID fi fi
Step 3: play the music or launch a browser with a desired url.
Step 4: run the bash script
chmod +x recordfm.sh ./recordfm.sh test.mp3 10
where <test.mp3> is the output filename and 10 is recording length (seconds). It works.
Note the script teaches us how to find out the ID for a process we just launched (cleaner than using ps -ef | grep commands). The command is
SPID=$! echo $SPID
Advanced audio control
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/advanced-audio-control-on-linux/
- Alsamixer
- Pulse Audio Volume Control
- Pulse Audio Equalizer
Music player
- The 15 Best Linux Music Player Apps
- Sunamu: Display Lyrics for Currently Playing Music on the Desktop in Linux
Podcast
- The 5 Best Apps for Managing Podcasts on Linux
- Get started with gPodder, an open source podcast client
- How to Make Your Podcast Sound Like NPR
White noise
- The 6 Best White Noise Apps for Linux to Help You Relax
- Blanket: Ambient Noise App For Linux That Helps You Stay Focused And Improves Your Productivity (Linux only)
SMPlayer: video player
MPV - terminal media player including youtube videos
See Youtube
Listen to the radio at the Linux terminal
Listen to the radio at the Linux terminal
SMTube: search and watch youtube
- https://www.smplayer.info/
- http://www.smtube.org/. SMTube is an application that allows to browse, search and play YouTube videos. Videos are played back with a media player (by default SMPlayer) instead of a flash player, this allows better performance, particularly with HD content. No youtube ads.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rvm/smplayer sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install smplayer smtube
GNOME mpv player
Simple GTK+ frontend for mpv.
https://celluloid-player.github.io/ The interface of SMPlayer looks old. The GNOME mpv player (now called celluloid looks better.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xuzhen666/gnome-mpv sudo apt-get update sudo apt install celluloid
Haruna
Haruna Video Player Is A Cool mpv GUI Frontend. It does not have deb package yet.
Youtube command line tools
Play audio only
- Olivia: Cloud-Based Music Player With YouTube Support And Over 25,000 Online Radio Stations
- http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/229787/audio-only-youtube-player/229790#229790
# play in background (prompt will return, a new vlc process will be launched) cvlc --vout none https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1O0W7jSd940 # or play in foreground (prompt will not return) /usr/bin/vlc -I dummy --vout none https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1O0W7jSd940
Using this approach to play audio only will save CPU power. Tested on Odroid.
However, it seems this approach does not work on a playlist, for example, https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6h94tLpXv3LabUa7B0tCz7K0pI5ZzZEi. See mpsyt for a solution!
Youtube-dl
Video editing in Linux
See Video.
Video rip/convert/transcoder
See Video.
Open Websites In A Floating, Borderless Window/Picture in picture
Open Websites In A Floating, Borderless Window With Pennywise
How to install a Ceph Storage Cluster on Ubuntu
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-a-ceph-cluster-on-ubuntu-16-04/
Building a simple Beowulf Like Cluster with Ubuntu
See also the Raspberry Pi page where a simple cluster was built.
MPICH2
Resource:
- http://byobu.info/article/Building_a_simple_Beowulf_cluster_with_Ubuntu/
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MpichCluster
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SettingUpNFSHowTo (NFS configure)
Here is my record for creating a cluster environment based on ubuntu 13.04. The master node is running on ubuntu 13.04 desktop with virtualBox 4.2. The virtualBox has added a host-only adapter (vboxnet0) with ip 192.168.56.1. This adapter will be added to the master node so I can use this ip to identify the master node in the host-only network. Creating cluster using VirtualBox is just for the education purpose, not for real practice.
- (virtualBox) Create two virtual machines running on ubuntu 13.04 server. The ssh server was checked during installation. The host name for each of them is ubuntuNode1 and ubuntuNode2 respectively. The network adapter is left by default (NAT) during installation. But after the installation is done, I shutdown the system and add a host-only adapter (vboxnet0) to each of them. Then after the system is up again, I change the IP so it is static. Do sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces and append the following before running sudo /etc/init.d/networking restart to take the change in effect.
auto eth1 iface eth1 inet static address 192.168.56.101 # use 192.168.56.102 for ubuntuNode2 netmask 255.255.255.0 network 192.168.56.0 broadcast 192.168.56.255
Note that it is better not to add host-only network before installation, or during installation it will ask what is the primary network (confusing). So at the end each new nodes should have both eth0 and eth1 adapters and they should not reside in same subset. ifconfig may not show all adapters so we should use ifconfig -a instead. Although host-only network is used for communication between guest and guest OR guest and host, since each guest node has NAT adapter by default so the guest machine can still access the internet.
- (master node) Edit /etc/hosts so it like like
127.0.0.1 localhost 192.168.56.1 ubuntu1304 192.168.56.101 ubuntuNode1 192.168.56.102 ubuntuNode2
Note that the master node will be used to start jobs on the cluster although it is OK to let the master node as one of nodes to execute the jobs.
- (all nodes) Run
sudo adduser mpiuser --uid 999
It is recommeneded to use the same password for the user. This will create a new directory /home/mpiuser. This is the home directory for user mpiuser and we will use it to execute jobs on the cluster.
- (master node) Run
sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel-server
- (other nodes) Run
sudo apt-get install nfs-client
- (master node) Add the following to the file /etc/exports
/home/mpiuser *(rw,sync,no_subtree_check)
or something like
/home/mpiuser 192.168.56.0/24(rw,sync,no_subtree_check)
Some people create a shared folder under /srv directory.
Now run
sudo service nfs-kernel-server restart
- (master node)
sudo ufw allow from 192.168.56.0/24
- (other nodes)
sudo mount ubuntu1304:/home/mpiuser /home/mpiuser
And if we want to mount the NFS shared directory when the compute nodes are booted, edit /etc/fstab by adding
ubuntu1304:/home/mpiuser /home/mpiuser nfs
- (master node)
sudo apt-get install ssh su mpiuser ssh-keygen ssh-copy-id localhost
We can test if the ssh works without passwords
ssh ubuntuNode1 echo $HOSTNAME
- (all nodes)
sudo apt-get install mpich2 which mpirun which mpiexec
- (master node, mpiuser)
Go to the home directory of mpiuser and create a new file hosts. Include host names for computing nodes (it is OK to include master node, ubuntu1304, as one of computing nodes)
ubuntuNode1 ubuntuNode2
- (all nodes)
sudo apt-get install build-essential
- (master node, mpiuser). Creating a test file <mpi_hello.c>
#include <stdio.h> #include <mpi.h> int main(int argc, char** argv) { int myrank, nprocs; MPI_Init(&argc, &argv); MPI_Comm_size(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &nprocs); MPI_Comm_rank(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &myrank); printf("Hello from processor %d of %d\n", myrank, nprocs); MPI_Finalize(); return 0; }
And compile and run it by
mpicc mpi_hello.c -o mpi_hello mpiexec -n 3 -f hosts ./mpi_hello
We should see something like
Hello from processor 0 of 2 Hello from processor 1 of 2
Successful! That's it.
OpenMPI
- http://auriza.site40.net/notes/mpi/openmpi-on-ubuntu-904/
- http://particlephysicsandcode.wordpress.com/2012/11/04/installing-open-mpi-1-6-3-ubuntu-12-04-fedora/
- http://randomusefulnotes.blogspot.com/2010/12/setting-up-mpi-cluster-on-ubuntu.html
With R
- http://www.open-mpi.org/papers/tr-uni-muenchen-8991/parallelR_techRep.pdf
- http://www.cybaea.net/Blogs/R-tips-Installing-Rmpi-on-Fedora-Linux.html (Fedora)
- http://kiradi.blogspot.com/2011/10/high-performance-computing-with-openmpi.html (Ubuntu)
- http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/doMPI/vignettes/doMPI.pdf
- http://biowulf.nih.gov/user_guide.html#parallel
File sharing in a local network - woof
Sharing internet
Simple Gui approach from GNOME desktop
- How To Create A Wi-Fi Hotspot In Ubuntu 18.04 / Gnome (And Edit Its Settings)
- 3 Ways to Create Wifi Hotspot in Ubuntu 14.04
- https://www.quora.com/How-do-I-create-hotspots-in-Ubuntu-14-04. Notice the last step.
When I tested the method with my rtl8187 wifi adapter by Rosewill (output by lsusb) on Odroid Xu4 running Ubuntu 14.04, I got an error on Step 3 (Create New Wi-Fi Network) ???
Failed to activate connection (32) Access Point (AP) mode is not supported by this device
When I tried the wifi adapter RT2870/RT3070 802.11n by MediaLink (MWN-USB150N), there is no problem to create it. My android device can connect to it. However, there is no internet access:( ...... After some tweaks on command line (iptables; see Sharing internet via wifi: iptables below), it works!!!
And the output of nm-tool command also confirms the wifi device is connected.
odroid@odroid:~/Downloads$ netstat -rn Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth2 10.42.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 wlan3 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth2
The ap hotspot from the wifi adapter has an IP 10.42.0.1 (ifconfig).
See IP scan tools (eg arp-scan) to find out connected devices.
Sharing internet via wifi: ap-hotspot
I cannot make it to work to share the internet via wifi on my Xubuntu 13.04. However the solution in http://askubuntu.com/questions/287251/creating-an-infrastructure-hotspot-using-ubuntu-12-10 works for me.
$ # Under rare situation, we need to run the following line to get 'add-apt-repository' $ sudo apt-get install apt-get install software-properties-common $ sudo su - # add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8 # aptitude update # aptitude install ap-hotspot # ap-hotspot configure # ap-hotspot start
In the step of 'ap-hotspot configure' it will ask for Access Point name and WPA passphrase.
When I run the final line 'ap-hotspot start', it will ask me to disconnect my current wifi first.
At the end, I found my original configuration in ubuntu does not work even its setting is there. apt-hotspot create an infrastracture AP instead of adhoc.
Sharing internet via wifi: iptables
1. Assume the primary wired network connection, eth0 is connected to Internet.
2. Using your distro's network managment tool, create a new ad hoc wireless connection with the following settings:
IP address: 10.99.66.55 Subnet mask: 255.255.0.0 (16)
3. Use the following shell script to share the internet connection
#!/bin/bash #filename: netsharing.sh #Replace 10.99.0.0/16 by your network/netmask #Usage: ./netsharing.sh input_interface output_interface #Example: ./netsharing.sh eth0 wlan0 echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward iptables -A FORWARD -i $1 -o $2 -s 10.99.0.0/16 -m conntrack --ctstate NEW -j ACCEPT iptables -A FORWARD -m conntrack --ctstate ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT iptables -A POSTROUTING -t nat -j MASQUERADE
4. Run the script as follows:
sudo ./netsharing.sh eth0 wlan0
5. Connect your devices to the wireless network you just created with the following settings (Question: how about the SSID here?)
IP address: 10.99.66.56 (and so on) Subnet mask: 255.255.0.0
To make this more convenient, you might want to install a DHCP and DNS server on your machine, so it's not necessary to configure IPs on devices manually. A handy tool for this is dnsmasq which you can use for performing both DHCP and DNS operations.
Credit: Linux Shell Scripting Cookbook
A similar approach discussed on the Odroid forum.
iptables
~/.xsession-errors file is filling the hard disk
It is related to vino-server. See
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/130768/my-home-partition-slowly-fills-up-until-the-system-is-unable-to-complete-even-si
- http://filthypants.blogspot.com/2013/02/xsession-errors-log-filling-hard-drive.html
Short solution is to use "kill -9 xxx" to kill the process and rm to remove ~/.xsession-errors file. The long time solution is to uninstall vino.
JRE and JDK
Notifications
- To see old notifications, use Superkey + M or click the clock.
- How to Get Desktop Notifications from the Linux Command Line with the notify-send command
- Get Notifications On Your Desktop Or Phone When A Long-Running Command Has Finished With Noti
Send email
It is useful to several occations:
Send emails through gmail: mail
Configuring sendmail with GMail relay on Ubuntu 16.04
Send emails through gmail: sSMTP
CPU/system load
Cockpit
- https://cockpit-project.org/
- KVM page
- Cockpit | An Easy to Use Web GUI for Your Linux Servers (video)
Conky: system resource monitor
See Conky.
Stacer - Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring
Stacer – The Linux System Optimizer You’ve Been Waiting For. Qt library. But it seems the memory usage will increase after a while.
Mission Center: Windows Task Manager like
- Mission Center: A Sleek System Monitoring App for Linux
- https://flathub.org/apps/io.missioncenter.MissionCenter
Grafana
- How to Set Up a Simple Grafana Cloud Monitoring Dashboard for Your Linux Server 2022/10
- Bird Feeder Monitor V2.0
Graphite
- https://graphiteapp.org/quick-start-guides/graphing-metrics.html
- How to Install and Configure Graphite Monitoring System on Ubuntu 22.04
- Monitor Your System with Graphite and a Grafana Dashboard
I-Nex
A look at I-Nex – a CPU-Z like Application for GNU/Linux
CPU-G
See this instruction to install CPU-G program for viewing hardware information (process, mb, graphic, memory, system).
CPU-X
CPU-X, An Alternative to CPU-Z for Ubuntu and Other Linux Distributions!. This is pre-installed in Calculate Linux. On ubuntu, run "sudo apt install cpu-x" to install it.
CoreFreq
http://www.tecmint.com/corefreq-linux-cpu-monitoring-tool/
System load indicator on desktop/GNOME resource monitor on taskbar
- System Load Indicator, View Network, Memory And CPU Usage From System Tray In Ubuntu Linux
- It is used to view system information (cpu, memory, network) in real-time.
- It works on Ubuntu 20.04.1. It can show CPU and memory usage. A drawback is the high CPU usage; see gnome-shell 3.26.1 constantly uses 20-30% CPU.
sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload # sudo apt-get install indicator-cpufreq # indicator-cpufreq
Alert When Memory Gets Low
A Shell Script to Send Email Alert When Memory Gets Low
Monitor CPU Utilization And Send Email
Linux Shell Script To Monitor CPU Utilization And Send Email
Top processes sorted by RAM or CPU
Find Top Running Processes by Highest Memory and CPU Usage in Linux
ps -eo pid,ppid,cmd,%mem,%cpu --sort=-%mem | head
Monitor Resource Usage of a Single Process
Monitor Resource Usage of a Single Process
Hard drive: hdparm and smartctl
Hard disk speed
Hard disk directory size
See Display directory size with sorting and human readable by using the ncdu utility.
MART overall-health self-assessment test
On my Samsung SSD 860 EVO 500GB, SMART DATA was greyed out when I try the Disks utility. But GSmartControl and smartctl can get the data out
sudo smartctl --all /dev/sda | grep overall $ SMART overall-health self-assessment test result: PASSED
Monitor/run a short test on a hard disk health by command line/GUI
Using smartctl
sudo apt install smartmontools sudo smartctl -a /dev/sda # Run a short test $ sudo smartctl -t short /dev/sda # It will start the test in the background $ sudo smartctl -l selftest /dev/sda
or the GUI version
sudo apt-get install gsmartcontrol sudo gsmartcontrol
How to check Hard Drive Disk Health in GNU/Linux
Interpretation:
- http://www.linuxjournal.com/magazine/monitoring-hard-disks-smart?page=0,1
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/S.M.A.R.T.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T.
- https://askubuntu.com/questions/20393/how-do-i-interpret-hdd-s-m-a-r-t-results
- How to See If Your Hard Drive Is Dying with S.M.A.R.T. (Windows)
Email warnings for hd problems by smartd
- Configure smartd on server to get email based warnings if problems are detected
- Monitoring hard disk health with smartd under Linux or UNIX operating systems
Debian Linux
- Enable smart by editing /etc/default/smartmontools file.
- Smart Configuration file: /etc/smartd.conf
- Start/Stop smart: /etc/init.d/smartmontools start | stop
Hard disk temperature
http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/howto-monitor-hard-drive-temperature.html
It seems the hddtemp command does not work on SSDs.
sudo apt-get install hddtemp sudo hddtemp /dev/sdb /dev/sdb: ST2000DM001-9YN164: 40°C
For SSD,
sudo apt-get install smartmontools sudo smartctl -a /dev/sda
Hard disk power on time/hours
sudo smartctl --all /dev/sda | grep Power_On_Hours
Sample output:
$ sudo smartctl -A /dev/sda | grep -i power 9 Power_On_Hours 0x0032 034 034 000 Old_age Always - 58541 12 Power_Cycle_Count 0x0032 100 100 020 Old_age Always - 164 $ sudo smartctl -A /dev/sdb | grep -i power 9 Power_On_Hours 0x0032 100 100 000 Old_age Always - 585 12 Power_Cycle_Count 0x0032 100 100 000 Old_age Always - 43 192 Power-Off_Retract_Count 0x0032 200 200 000 Old_age Always - 32
Free up disk space/clean up system space/remove or delete junk files
5 Easy Ways To Free Up Space (Remove Unwanted or Junk Files) on Ubuntu
system's hardware temperatures and voltages
- How to Control the CPU Fan Speed on Linux
- How to monitor your system performance on (Ubuntu) Linux.
$ sudo apt-get install lm-sensors $ sensors
Passwords and keys
The Keyring Concept in Ubuntu: What is It and How to Use it? Mar, 2020
Unlock keyring
I got the prompt of unlocking keyring every time I open google chrome browser.
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/867/how-can-i-stop-being-prompted-to-unlock-the-default-keyring-on-boot (this works)
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/184266/what-is-unlock-keyring-and-how-do-i-get-rid-of-it (this does not help)
- http://superuser.com/questions/311216/why-does-chrome-ask-for-my-gnome-keyring-seahorse-password (works. I create a shortcut to launch chrome)
google-chrome --password-store=basic
It is also helpful to remove ubuntu one from Ubuntu 12.04. See http://hex.ro/wp/blog/removing-ubuntuone-from-ubuntu-12-04/
Password manager
- How to organize your passwords using pass password manager
- pass the standard unix password manager
- Pass – Manage Your Passwords from Linux Command Line
- Install and Configure Passbolt Team Password Manager on Ubuntu 20.04
netcat (nc) - arbitrary TCP and UDP connections and listens
Netcat or nc is a networking utility for debugging and investigating the network.
The nc (or netcat) utility is used for just about anything under the sun involving TCP, UDP, or UNIX-domain sockets. It can open TCP connections, send UDP packets, listen on arbitrary TCP and UDP ports, do port scanning, and deal with both IPv4 and IPv6.
- http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2012/04/nc-command-examples/
- https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-use-netcat-to-establish-and-test-tcp-and-udp-connections-on-a-vps
- https://learn.adafruit.com/raspipe-a-raspberry-pi-pipeline-viewer-part-2?view=all
For example, we can create simple network sockets and use them for text communication. We need two sockets: one listens for connections and the other connects to this one.
# create a listening socket on the local machine nc -l 1234 # connect to the socket from a 2nd computer nc IP_LocalMachine 1234 # send messages. # Type something and press Enter on the terminal from the 2nd computer. # The message will appear on the terminal of the local machine.
To transfer files over the network (no any password is needed!!)
# receiver machine nc -l 1234 > destination_file # sender machine nc IP_Receiver 1234 < source_filename
Netcat (nc) Command with Examples
# receiving host nc -l 5555 | tar xzvf - # sending host tar czvf - /path/to/dir | nc receiving.host.com 5555
List of all services/daemons
Run service --status-all to get a list off all the Upstart services and their status. See
- man service
- man initctl
service --status-all # output format is clean sudo initctl list # show the process number too
where in the output "+" means started, "-" stopped, and "?" unknown.
SysV init
Init is an initialization system
SysV init is named for System V Unix.
Init runs as PID 1. Parent process of all other processes on the system.
Runlevels represent discrete operational states.
- SysV init: Runlevels - Running Programs Automatically on Your Tiny Computer (from adafruit.com)
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runlevel
- How to Change Runlevels (targets) in SystemD
$ runlevel $ less /etc/init.d/ssh $ ls -ld /etc/rc* $ ls -l /etc/rc2.d $ cat /etc/rc.local $ sudo service networking restart $ ls /etc/init.d/
systemd
How to Start, Stop & Restart Services in Ubuntu and Other Linux Distributions
systemd vs upstart
- Ubuntu 16.04 (and newer), RHEL/CentOS 7 (and newer), Arch Linux use systemd but relative old OS uses Upstart service manager.
- Systemd vs SysV vs Upstart — Linux Service Management Throwdown
- SysV, Upstart and systemd init script coexistence. Newer init systems try to maintain compatibility with older ones. In particular, systemd tries to maintain compatibility with both Upstart and SysV init scripts.
- SystemdForUpstartUsers
- What are the pros/cons of Upstart and systemd?
Cloud/online storage
Mounting
- Cryptomator Free client-side encryption for your cloud files. Open source software: No backdoors, no registration
- RcloneTray: Easily Mount Rclone Remotes On Demand Using A GUI
Mega
ownCloud
Use apt to install or go to the download page
One Drive
- onedrive package. Homepage.
- https://github.com/skilion/onedrive
- Mount Microsoft OneDrive in Linux With OneDriver GUI Tool 2021
Dropbox
See Software > Dropbox.
Google Drive
- How to access your Google Drive account using overGrive ($4.99) Support Auto sync and convert Google file format to Office format.
- insync ($30)
- Use rclone program. See http://wiki.linuxquestions.org/wiki/Rsync_with_Google_Drive
- How to access your Google Drive account from Linux command line using Gdrive (Old)
- How To Mount Google Drive Locally As Virtual File System In Linux (10/5/2018)
- How to Access Your Google Drive Account on Ubuntu using Gnome Online Accounts (3/5/2018). In addition to the Google account, the program can be used to log into Nextcloud, Facebook, Microsoft, Flickr, Pocket, Foursquare, Microsoft Exchange and IMAP/SMTP accounts.
- Install software
sudo apt install gnome-online-accounts # Probably already there
- Add google account. Either using the command line gnome-control-center online-accounts or using Settings > Online Accounts > Add an online account. Make sure the Files slider button is on. Close the Online Accounts dialog box.
- Your Google Drive files are mounted in Nautilus now. You can add as many Google Drive accounts as you want. To add another, open Gnome Online Accounts again. Each account is listed separately in the sidebar in Nautilus.
- Install software
Caveats:
- Unlike Windows or macOS, your Google Drive files are not downloaded and stored locally in Ubuntu. You must have an active internet connection to access your account.
- The online account files are located under "/run/user/1000/gvfs/" directory.
- PDF files can be opened by Document Viewer. When the file is loaded, it shows a random file name.
- The doc files cannot be opened by LibreOffice. When I drag and drop the files to Terminal, they show random file names like /run/user/1000/gvfs/google-drive:host=gmail.com,user=XXXXXXX/1LOLKBssIIR0x7TWR7MHIEeSU0uPj9TwK_YuAGTzt'
Back up google photos
- How To Backup Google Photos To Your Computer With gphotos-sync 2019-07-03
- Rclone 1.49 Adds Google Photos Backend, New Web UI 2019-08-28
Office
Libre Office
Install
- How to install LibreOffice 6.1 on Linux Mint, Ubuntu, Xubuntu, Debian…
- https://www.libreoffice.org/download/snap/. sudo snap install libreoffice
WPS Office 2016
ONLYOFFICE Desktop Editors
https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-onlyoffice-desktop-editors-51-on-ubuntu/
Microsoft Office
How to Install and Use Microsoft Office on Linux
Application Launcher
The 9 Best Linux App Launchers to Help You Get Stuff Done Faster
Cerebro
Cerebro is an Open Source OS X Spotlight Equivalent for Linux
Ulauncher
Ulauncher is a Lightweight App Launcher for Linux Desktops
Synapse
Synapse or Albert — What’s Your Favourite App Launcher for Linux?
Gnome Do
Release June 2009
What is the last log in time for users
lastlog # all users last # current user
System Logs: rsyslog
- Handled by rsyslog in /etc/rsyslog.conf
- Rsyslog can send and accept logs over the network. Search configure remote logging.
- How to Set Up Remote Logging on Linux Using rsyslog
logger command
We can write messages to ourself with the logger command.
$ logger "hello from the command line" $ tail /var/log/syslog
Read/view the system logs
How to View System Log Files on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
'Show Application' -> 'Logs'.
$ less /var/log/syslog $ less /var/log/dpkg.log $ ls /var/log $ less /var/log/auth.log # use f/b or arrow keys or / to search # we can search again by using / and enter # we can restrict to lines containing the term by using & and the term $ sudo journalctl | grep shutdown
Log rotate after a set period of time. Use zcat or aless to view archived files.
$ zcat syslog.4.gz
What is the reboot time
The following method does not show the reboot history.
last reboot
It seems the command only show 1 record on Ubuntu 18.04. But it shows lots of records on Ubuntu 20.04/Pop_OS 20.04. On mac, it shows a few records.
The above command only show the 'last' reboot time. If we want to see the boot history, see How to View System Log Files on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. The GNOME Logs utility is best. At the top of the GUI, I can select the logs of the (boot) date. But it has a limit number of dates to choose from. The 2nd choice Log File Viewer utility is not useful since it does not provide a choice of the date. The command line approach is possible if we need to use grep to search of 'boot' in syslog or syslog.1 or syslog.X.gz files under /var/log/ directory. We may search for a very old boot log using this approach. For example, zcat /var/log/syslog6.log | grep boot.
What date/when was the system installed
ls -l /var/log/installer
For other OSs, follow How To Find Exact Installation Date And Time Of Your Linux OS. Replace 'dev/sda1' with the filesystem of the "/" partition. Replace /dev/sda1 with /dev/mmcblk0p2 on Raspbian,
$ sudo su # dumpe2fs /dev/sda1 | grep 'Filesystem created:' # OR # tune2fs -l /dev/sda1 | grep 'Filesystem created:'
Maybe checking /etc/ssh would help if openssh-server was installed (such as sudo apt-get install openssh-server).
Both methods do not apply to the Ubuntu 18.04 from Odroid xu4 but looking at files under /var/log can still give a hint.
systemd-journald
- Beginner's Guide to Analyzing Logs in Linux With journalctl Command, How to Use journalctl to Read Linux System Logs
- How to stop systemd-journal utilizing 100% cpu resource Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Focal Fossa). Check /var/log/journal folder or journalctl --disk-usage
- Free up Disk Space – Clear Systemd Journal Logs in Ubuntu 20.04
- Introduction to the Systemd journal
- Linux Logging with Systemd
- remarkable ebook device. journalctl -f is to show journal logs in real time.
- How to Use journalctl to Analyze Logs in Linux
- journalctl -b. See Read-only filesystem.
Image/Photo
Image viewer on command line
- Feh is a light-weight command-line image viewer for Linux
- 30 Best Free and Open Source Graphical Image Viewers. feh is ranked #1.
Edit images using command line
4 ways to edit photos on the Linux command line
Crop an image
- gthumb: Open an image. Click color palette icon on top-right corner (or use keyboard shortcut 'e'). Click 'crop'. There will be a rectangle on image where you can resize the rectangle.
- Pinta & mtPaint can also take a screenshot of the desktop and crop the image.
- gimp. https://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-tutorial-quickie-crop.html
Rename files in batch
GUI To Batch Rename Files On Linux With Exif And Music Tags Support: Inviska Rename
View exif information
gThumb works fine.
Remove Metadata From Files: exiftool
How to Quickly Remove Metadata From Files on Linux
Mind-mapping
Sticky notes
Top Sticky Notes App for Ubuntu. Indicator-stickynotes is better than Xpad (I cannot move the app) and KNote (I cannot install it in gnome). How Install Sticky Notes in Ubuntu shows we can install a deb file if we don't want to add another PPA.
Password manager
KeePass
KeePass: Password Manager from Odroid magazine.
Choice 1: KeePassXC, KeePass Cross-Platform Community Edition. I can open kdbx file in KeePassXC. It also has a browser integration (auto-fill) functionality. See Getting Started With KeePassXC
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:phoerious/keepassxc sudo apt-get update sudo apt install keepassxc
Choice 2: KeePassX. Note that the kdbx file used in KeePass2 cannot be opened in KeePassX.
Choice 3: KeePass2 (this is what I am using now). There is no need to use ppa.launchpad.net to install from. You can install keepass2 by using sudo apt-get install keepass2 or install the latest version using Julian Taylor’s PPA.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:jtaylor/keepass sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install keepass2
On Android: KeePassDroid
Chrome browser (not OS) integration: See the source code.
Chromebook: KeePass2 for Chromebook
Security:
KeePass with KeeAgent
http://code.mendhak.com/keepass-and-keeagent-setup/
KeeWeb: Free cross-platform password manager compatible with KeePass
- How to Install KeeWeb Password Manager on Ubuntu 20.04, Ubuntu 22.04
- KeeWeb – An Open Source, Cross Platform Password Manager
- It can open from WebDAV, Dropbox (sync and offline access), Google Drive, OneDrive, ...
- A Docker exists for the self hosting method.
1Password
1Password Beta Arrives for Linux
Bitwarden
- How to Install and Use Bitwarden on Linux
- Bitwarden: A Free & Open Source Password Manager
- Install and deploy Bitwarden to your own server
- Best free password managers: Better online security doesn’t have to cost a thing Feb 2021
- How You Can Self-Host Bitwarden at (Nearly) No Cost Using Google Cloud
Bluetooth
- How to send sound through Bluetooth on Linux from HowToForge.
- https://wiki.debian.org/BluetoothUser
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BluetoothSetup
- To turn Bluetooth ON when your systeem starts up
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Bluetooth_headset
- How to install bluetooth for my mouse and keyboard for my Raspberry Pi.
- https://zach-adams.com/2014/07/bluetooth-audio-sink-stream-setup-failed/ Linux Mint
sudo apt-get install bluetooth sudo apt-get install bluetooth bluez-utils blueman
Then run lsusb | grep Bluetooth command which will shows the name of your bluetooth device.
sudo apt-get install bluez
On my bluetooth adapter, the lsusb shows,
$ lsusb Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth Dongle (HCI mode) ... $ sudo hcitool dev Devices: hci0 00:1A:7D:DA:71:09
I can use Ubuntu's bluetooth setting dialog to connect my bluetooth keyboard without any problem (It will ask me to enter some code on pairing).
Note that the MAC address of my bluetooth keyboard shown above is the from the controller/adapter. It is NOT the same as my bluetooth keyboard one (90:7F:61:8F:D0:38) as shown from the bluetooth setting (GUI) dialog.
Bluetooth mouse
My M590 mouse suddenly has a lag in response (Pop_OS 20.04). Don't know how to fix it.
The jerky movement/lag problem may be caused by other reason: nano receiver placement/positioning (e.g. moved the USB wireless receiver from the back to a port on the front of the PC), usb hub, other gadgets (e.g. phone) around the receiver.
Or increase the Mouse Speed in Settings.
Other solutions: How can I get rid of mouse lag under Ubuntu?
Apple Magic Touchpad
Apple Magic Trackpad 2 on Ubuntu Linux 20.04
Bluetooth Audio Receiver
- Bluetooth 4.0 Receiver A2DP Wireless Adapter from Mpow Streambot or DBPOWER
Remember to change the Mode from Telephony Duplex (HSP/HFP) to High Fidelity Playback (A2DP) from Sound Settings dialog (launched from Taskbar). See also Windows OS.
Open the default graphical applications using the command line (mime-types)
See /etc/gnome/defaults.list.
- How to open file with default application from command line?
- How to easily open a PDF (or any) file from command line in Ubuntu
# alias open='xdg-open'. Put this inside your ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_aliases xdg-open [name-of-PDF-file] # If you want to use gnome-open, you need to install a package sudo apt-get install libgnome2-bin gnome-open [name-of-PDF-file] gnome-open [dir-name-or-path] # To open a directory in Nautilus file manager gnome-open https://www.howtoforge.com/ # To open a website in your system's default web browser
xdg-open, xdg-mime
- For some reason, even Chrome is my default browser (Ubuntu -> Settings -> Default applications) but when I use the xdg-open command to open a local HTML file, Brave is called. NB. the xdg-settings also 'thinks' chrome is the default browser. If I uninstall Brave, then VS code will be replaced to open local HTML files by xdg-open.
$ xdg-settings get default-web-browser google-chrome.desktop $ xdg-mime query default x-scheme-handler/http google-chrome.desktop $ xdg-mime query default x-scheme-handler/https google-chrome.desktop $ xdg-mime query filetype myfile.html application/xhtml+xml
The solution that works for me is to run sudo nano /usr/share/applications/defaults.list and remove lines contains 'brave' (the .list file is really a mess). After that, xdg-open myfile.html will use chrome to open it. See xdg-open default applications behavior, xdg-open & XDG MIME Applications & xdg-utils from archlinux.org.
$ env XDG_UTILS_DEBUG_LEVEL=10 xdg-mime query default text/xhtml # A long list
- On Peppermint 11, the open command located in /usr/bin is a symbolic link to /usr/bin/xdg-open.
- How can I change the default application for a content type?
xdg-mime default okularApplication_pdf.desktop application/pdf
- Change the default text editor xdg-mime default code.desktop text/plain
Change the default browser
How to open default browser from command line Linux
Change the default PDF app
Right click a pdf file, choose "Properties". Click on "Open With". Select an app and click "Set as default".
Unity display timeout
Go to Dash -> power setting -> Brightness Settings
Screensaver showing current time
xscreensaver + gltext
http://askubuntu.com/questions/64086/how-can-i-change-or-install-screensavers
sudo apt-get install xscreensaver # sudo apt-get remove gnome-screensaver
Click Dash > xscreensaver or run the command line xscreensaver-demo. Mode = Only One Screen Saver & pick GLText. Click Setting & choose 'Display date and time' ,'Don't rotate'.
gluqlo
[Note that gluqlo uses too much cpu] I like gluqlo (flip clock) screensaver. However, it is not easy to make it to replace the gnome-screensaver.
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:alexanderk23/ppa sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install gluqlo
- Follow the instruction to install it on Ubuntu machine.
- Follow the instruction there to remove gnome-screensaver and install xscreensaver.
- Configure xscreensaver to use only 1 screensaver. Edit ~/.xscreensaver file and add a line like
gluqlo -root \n\
- Still follow the instruction to allow xscreensaver to start when the machine starts up. Don't try to edit ~/.xinitrc file as other sites suggested; start Dash and type 'startup' and follow the screen dialog to add xscreensaver -nosplash.
- Still follow the instruction to add lock screen keyboard shortcut.
Note that the above steps work for Ubuntu 12.04 & 13.10 but not 14.04 (Ubuntu 14.04 changed to use LockScreen instead LightDM program to lock the screen). A solution on Ubuntu 14.04 is to disable screen lock.
- Still follow the above instruction to remove gnome-screensaver and install xscreensaver. Set gluqlo as the only one screensaver.
- Go to Brightness & Lock panel from the Unity Launcher. And set Turn screen off when inactive: to Never.
- Install "Unity Tweak Tool" with sudo apt-get install unity-tweak-tool. Run it from the Launcher and select System > Security > Enhance system security by disabling Desktop lock.
- To enable locking desktop (required a password to unlock the desktop), check 'Lock Screen After' option. I pick 1 minute.
For some reason, gluqlo suddenly uses all my cpu (6 cores) resource (Ubuntu 14.04). The computer thus makes some noise. I have to use 'kill' command to kill them.
Flash for browser
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats/Flash
- http://www.howtogeek.com/193876/using-firefox-on-linux-your-flash-player-is-old-and-outdated/
On Ubuntu 12.04, there is no way to directly install the pepperflashplugin-nonfree plugin. So we have to use ppa from other people. See this post
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install chromium-browser sudo add-apt-repository ppa:skunk/pepper-flash sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install pepflashplugin-installer sudo update-pepperflashplugin-nonfree --install
The last step gives me an error: sudo: update-pepperflashplugin-nonfree: command not found
xed from Cinnamon Desktop
By default, recent open files are not shown (xed 1.6.3). See https://github.com/linuxmint/xed/issues/55.
Open Cinnamon Settings -> Privacy and enable 'remember recent files'.
Text file line ending in DOS and Unix
$ tr -d '\r' < inputfile > outputfile # inputfile and outputfile cannot be the same
or, if the text has only CR newlines, by converting all CR newlines to LF with
$ tr '\r' '\n' < inputfile > outputfile
SQL
MySQL Workbench
http://www.mysql.com/products/workbench/
sqliteman
https://sourceforge.net/projects/sqliteman/
User Interface Designer
Glade - RAD tool to enable quick & easy development of user interfaces for the GTK+ toolkit and the GNOME desktop environment
Devhelp - API documentation browser for GTK+ and GNOME
HTML editor
- Atom
- Bluefish
- Brackets features
- Inline Editors
- Live Preview
- Preprocessor Support
- MonoDevelop
- Kompozer and the installation instruction for Ubuntu.
- BlueGriffon: a new WYSIWYG content editor. The interesting thing is the software BlueGriffon EPUB Edition: a cross-platform Wysiwyg editor able to natively create and edit EPUB2 and EPUB3 ebooks!
npm and Javascript
See npm package manager in Javascript.
Chroot
Check/Diagnostic SD card, read-only file system
- How to make read-only file system writable?. I got the same error message when I try to 'cp' or 'rm' or 'touch' a file on my USB drive. The solution here works.
sudo mount -o remount,rw '/media/brb/KINGSTON8G'
When I check the difference of the output of 'mount' on the USB drive, I see it changes from (ro) to (rw).
# Before $ mount /dev/sdb1 on /media/brb/KINGSTON8G type vfat (ro, ...) # After $ mount /dev/sdb1 on /media/brb/KINGSTON8G type vfat (rw, ...)
- http://askubuntu.com/questions/69932/is-there-an-sd-card-diagnostic-utility. Look for Disk Utility on you dash (Alt+F2 and type 'disk')
- Canot format MicroSD. File system is read-only
- How to fix “sudo: unable to open … Read-only file system”?
sudo fsck -Af -M # If not work, use the next solution sudo fsck.ext4 -f /dev/sdb2 # From a live CD/USB drive, assume /dev/sdb2 is ext4 partition
The above commands do not help in my case.
AppImage file - new way of installing an application
See Snappy
Snappy
See Snappy.
Exclude snap partitions in the df command output
alias df='df -x"squashfs"'
Flatpak
See Snappy
Message Of The Day, login banner /etc/motd
- https://wiki.debian.org/motd
- How to disable ssh motd welcome message on Ubuntu Linux
- How To Disable Ads In Terminal Welcome Message In Ubuntu Server
.Trash-1000 folder
See this post. Ubuntu will create such folders when a file is deleted from a USB drive. Presumably this would allow a file to be restored if you accidentally deleted it.
Try to empty the paperbin or delete the folder with the terminal-command as root: sudo rm -rf /path/to/folder/.Trash-1000
Games
Take to the virtual skies with FlightGear, FlightGear
controller/joystick
- jstest-gtk
- Xbox wireless Gamepad
- How do I configure a joystick or gamepad?
- Ubuntu — play games with joystick
- games that work with gamepads/joysticks
- What racing games run on Ubuntu?
- Super Tux Kart. sudo apt-get install supertuxkart
- Ubuntu - 'Software' app. Search for 'game'. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Games
- 0ad: real-time strategy game of ancient warfare
- DOSBox-X
- retroarch
- ScummVM
- 15 Best free games on Ubuntu Linux 2013
- 33 Ubuntu Games
- 26 Best Free Linux Games That Everyone Should Play
- How to Play Games on Linux | Easy Tutorial for Newbie
- Top 31 Best Linux Games You Can Play for FREE
- Top 10 Ubuntu games
Twitter client
Corebird
- https://gist.github.com/arraytools/4d1af59a7ebd58ab3941 (tested on Ubuntu 14.04)
Birdie
Elasticsearch & Kibana
Elasticsearch and Kibana : installation and basic usage on Ubuntu 16.04
TexLive
- How to properly install and use texlive with package manager in 14.04
- http://brettklamer.com/diversions/statistical/compile-r-for-data-science-to-a-pdf/
Recover files from Windows drives
sudo fdisk –l sudo apt-get install ntfs-3g sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sdaX /PARTITION/POINT
- http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/fix-corrupted-windows-ntfs-filesystem-ubuntu/
- Reset your Windows password
Best apps
- 100 Best Applications for Ubuntu 2018
- Peppermint OS 10: Installing Apps for Business & Study (Step by step)
Adobe alternatives
The 8 Best Alternatives to Adobe Products That Run on Linux
Kernel
How to Roll Back the Kernel
How to Roll Back the Kernel in Linux
System Call
Remove old kernels
Ubuntu 18.04 remove all unused old kernels
/boot directory
Compare some files from two Ubuntu 20.04 machines.
- vmlinuz-5.8.0-48-generic or config-5.8.0-48-generic or System.map-5.8.0-48-generic: same size
- initrd.img-5.8.0-48-generic: not the same size
BIOS
- fwupdmgr. I got the following message when I ran a ssh connection.
1 device has a firmware upgrade available. Run `fwupdmgr get-upgrades` for more information.
- How can I upgrade my device firmware from the command line?
# (The first time only) install & run fwupdmgr sudo apt update \ && sudo apt install fwupd \ && fwupdmgr refresh --force \ && fwupdmgr get-updates \ && fwupdmgr update # (Every subsequent time thereafter) just run fwupdmgr once it's installed fwupdmgr refresh --force \ && fwupdmgr get-updates \ && fwupdmgr update
Other Flavors
Other tiny, lightweight Linux
- 5 tiny Linux distros to try before you die
- 8 Lightweight Linux Distros Ideal for Intel Atom Processor PCs 2022