• Re: For you SBBS Sysops o

    From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to GAMGEE on Sat Jun 8 10:29:00 2024
    Now, it did also come with cfdisk set as the default partitioning program back then. Removing it and replacing with fdisk fixed
    any issues. ;)

    That's funny, as I actually still use (and prefer) cfdisk... Hahaha

    I fat fingered something once and somehow wound up with two partitions that overlaped and eventually caused a lot of system errors, forcing a complete reinstallation of the whole system.

    When I reported it as a bug in cfdisk, I was informed that is should allow
    you to make such mistakes and not even warn you because that was "freedom."
    When I told them I was pretty sure that fdisk wouldn't let me, and I knew
    that M$'s FDISK wouldn't, they got real mad.

    That was when cfdisk went bye-bye. ;)


    * SLMR 2.1a * All of the stars are to be found only up in the sky.
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Dumas Walker on Sat Jun 8 18:33:00 2024
    Dumas Walker wrote to GAMGEE <=-

    Now, it did also come with cfdisk set as the default partitioning program back then. Removing it and replacing with fdisk fixed
    any issues. ;)

    That's funny, as I actually still use (and prefer) cfdisk... Hahaha

    I fat fingered something once and somehow wound up with two
    partitions that overlaped and eventually caused a lot of system
    errors, forcing a complete reinstallation of the whole system.

    Oooof. That doesn't sound fun.

    When I reported it as a bug in cfdisk, I was informed that is
    should allow you to make such mistakes and not even warn you
    because that was "freedom."
    When I told them I was pretty sure that fdisk wouldn't let me,
    and I knew that M$'s FDISK wouldn't, they got real mad.

    Yeah, that seems a little silly on their part.

    That was when cfdisk went bye-bye. ;)

    To be fair... it wasn't so much cfdisk's fault... as it was the jerkoffs giving you a hard time about it. But I hear ya. ;-)



    ... Gone crazy, be back later, please leave message.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to GAMGEE on Sun Jun 9 08:44:00 2024
    That was when cfdisk went bye-bye. ;)

    To be fair... it wasn't so much cfdisk's fault... as it was the jerkoffs giving you a hard time about it. But I hear ya. ;-)

    Pretty much that and the fact that cfdisk would have allowed me to make
    such an error in the future and never stop to warn me about it. Sometimes
    my fingers work faster than my brain so I could not risk it. :D


    * SLMR 2.1a * Directory of Z:\
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to GAMGEE on Fri Jun 28 10:57:00 2024
    Ubuntu, it just works. Everyone should use it.

    Well.... it works for some. Certainly not everyone. :-)

    Ubuntu worked fine here, until I tried to upgrade to the next release. Any time I have tried to upgrade to the next release, on any machine, it bricks
    the machine until I freshly install something else on it (usually Debian).

    Debian, the distro that Ubuntu is derived from, does not give me that
    issue. It just works. Devuan, another Debian derivative, also does not
    give me that issue (although I have found on some hardware it is better to install it as a cli-only OS).


    * SLMR 2.1a * The well resolved mind is single & one pointed
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    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Dumas Walker on Fri Jun 28 21:30:00 2024
    Dumas Walker wrote to GAMGEE <=-

    Ubuntu, it just works. Everyone should use it.

    Well.... it works for some. Certainly not everyone. :-)

    Ubuntu worked fine here, until I tried to upgrade to the next release.
    Any time I have tried to upgrade to the next release, on any machine,
    it bricks the machine until I freshly install something else on it (usually Debian).

    Interesting - I haven't heard of that happening. I've not used Ubuntu for
    more than a few minutes at a time, and not long enough to upgrade it.

    Debian, the distro that Ubuntu is derived from, does not give me that issue. It just works. Devuan, another Debian derivative, also does
    not give me that issue (although I have found on some hardware it is better to install it as a cli-only OS).

    I need to give that Devuan a look one of these days. Debian without 'systemd', sounds like a winner. I've been a Slackware user for a couple of decades, and still am, mostly; although I'm starting to use MX Linux on a few machines, including this new Framework laptop I'm on now. Really like it a lot, it's another Debian descendant without systemd.



    ... Windows 3.1 - From the people who brought you EDLIN.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Gamgee on Sat Jun 29 07:22:36 2024
    On Sat, 29 Jun 2024 02:30:00 -0500, you wrote:

    Interesting - I haven't heard of that happening. I've not used Ubuntu for more than a few minutes at a time, and not long enough to upgrade it.

    I'm not sure that's a recent thing, any more. It was back when Linux devs couldn't get their heads around proprietary graphics drivers (and maybe still can't). Now that they've gone mostly open source with those, the chances of that happening is far less than it used to be.

    I need to give that Devuan a look one of these days. Debian without 'systemd', sounds like a winner. I've been a Slackware user for a couple of decades, and
    still am, mostly; although I'm starting to use MX Linux on a few machines, including this new Framework laptop I'm on now. Really like it a lot, it's another Debian descendant without systemd.

    Not sure what you have against systemd. I gladly switched over when it was introduced, and have never had an issue. A lot less scripting involved, that's for sure.

    Anyway, the other day I was bored and installed Manjaro (Gnome) and Manjaro (KDE) in a couple Virtualbox VMs, to see how that distro as well as the latest and greatest from the two most popular desktop environments were getting along these days. It was a much nicer experience than I remember back when they first started (Manjaro, that is, obviously KDE and Gnome are much older than that).

    I just have no need for a full GUI Linux desktop system at this point, so I stick with Arch.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
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  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Accession on Sat Jun 29 13:14:00 2024
    Accession wrote to Gamgee <=-

    On Sat, 29 Jun 2024 02:30:00 -0500, you wrote:

    Interesting - I haven't heard of that happening. I've not used Ubuntu for more than a few minutes at a time, and not long enough to upgrade it.

    I'm not sure that's a recent thing, any more. It was back when Linux
    devs couldn't get their heads around proprietary graphics drivers (and maybe still can't). Now that they've gone mostly open source with
    those, the chances of that happening is far less than it used to be.

    Yes, I would agree with all of that. Graphics drivers almost certainly
    the cause of such problems, and many others.

    I need to give that Devuan a look one of these days. Debian without 'systemd', sounds like a winner. I've been a Slackware user for a couple of decades, and
    still am, mostly; although I'm starting to use MX Linux on a few machines, including this new Framework laptop I'm on now. Really like it a lot, it's another Debian descendant without systemd.

    Not sure what you have against systemd. I gladly switched over when it
    was introduced, and have never had an issue. A lot less scripting involved, that's for sure.

    I guess it's mostly the (assumed) philosophy that "let us manage all
    your startup processes the way we think is best, and you don't worry
    about the details". I know that isn't quite accurate, because you can
    of course tweak systemd like most anything else, but that's as close as
    I can come to a reason. I like to know exactly what's happening and
    have as much control over that as I can. Another claim is that systemd
    does things "in parallel all at once" and thereby reduces boot time. I
    don't care one little bit about that, as I don't reboot often and don't
    care if it takes 12 seconds, or 14 seconds.

    Anyway, the other day I was bored and installed Manjaro (Gnome) and Manjaro (KDE) in a couple Virtualbox VMs, to see how that distro as
    well as the latest and greatest from the two most popular desktop environments were getting along these days. It was a much nicer
    experience than I remember back when they first started (Manjaro, that
    is, obviously KDE and Gnome are much older than that).

    Yes, I've toyed with Manjaro a few times and liked it OK. I suppose
    those are the two most popular desktops, with Gnome only being there
    because of Ubuntu, IMHO. I used to love Gnome but it became so
    dumbed-down looking (I think it looks like a Fisher-Price toy) that I
    moved (years ago) to XFCE and love it. Kind of Gnome-ish but light and
    fast, and very configurable.

    Next time you're bored, spin up a VM with MX Linux (xfce desktop) and
    see what you think. It's about the only one I like any more.

    I just have no need for a full GUI Linux desktop system at this point,
    so I stick with Arch.

    I use Linux as my daily driver, on mulitiple desktop/laptops, so it's important to me. Servers/BBS run on Slackware, and even my daily laptop
    has been Slackware for many years. Transitioning to a new laptop and
    decided to go with MX Linux, as it's just less work. The only two
    Windows computers in the house are my work laptop and my wife's desktop.
    :-)

    Regards,
    Dan



    ... Clones are people two.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Gamgee on Sat Jun 29 16:42:04 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Accession on Sat Jun 29 2024 01:14 pm

    Not sure what you have against systemd. I gladly switched over when it

    I guess it's mostly the (assumed) philosophy that "let us manage all your startup processes the way we think is best, and you don't worry about the details". I know that isn't quite accurate, because you can of course tweak systemd like most anything else, but that's as close as I can come to a reason. I like to know exactly what's happening and have as much control over that as I can. Another claim is that systemd does things "in parallel all at once" and thereby reduces boot time. I don't care one little bit about that, as I don't reboot often and don't care if it takes 12 seconds, or 14 seconds.

    How do you normally run Synchronet on your system? When I moved my BBS from Windows to Linux a couple years ago, for a little while I was just directly running sbbs from a command prompt, but I later set it up to run with systemd. I think one of the advantages of the systemd setup is it runs in the background, and I think I wouldn't even have to log in for it to be running. Also, systemd can monitor and restart processes that have crashed. On Windows, every so often I saw Synchronet crash, seemingly randomly, and at one point when doing some debugging, it looked to me like the crash was caused by something in the Mozilla JavaScript library. I didn't bother to debug further (I'd probably have to compile the JS libraries in debug mode), but I was using something for Windows that would monitor whether Synchronet was running and re-start it if it wasn't. I feel like it's good that that feature is built-in with systemd.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Nightfox on Sat Jun 29 20:19:00 2024
    Nightfox wrote to Gamgee <=-

    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Accession on Sat Jun 29 2024 01:14 pm

    Not sure what you have against systemd. I gladly switched over when it

    I guess it's mostly the (assumed) philosophy that "let us manage all your startup processes the way we think is best, and you don't worry about the details". I know that isn't quite accurate, because you can of course tweak systemd like most anything else, but that's as close as I can come to a reason. I like to know exactly what's happening and have as much control over that as I can. Another claim is that systemd does things "in parallel all at once" and thereby reduces boot time. I don't care one little bit about that, as I don't reboot often and don't care if it takes 12 seconds, or 14 seconds.

    How do you normally run Synchronet on your system? When I moved my BBS from Windows to Linux a couple years ago, for a little while I was just directly running sbbs from a command prompt, but I later set it up to
    run with systemd. I think one of the advantages of the systemd setup is
    it runs in the background, and I think I wouldn't even have to log in
    for it to be running. Also, systemd can monitor and restart processes
    that have crashed. On Windows, every so often I saw Synchronet crash, seemingly randomly, and at one point when doing some debugging, it
    looked to me like the crash was caused by something in the Mozilla JavaScript library. I didn't bother to debug further (I'd probably
    have to compile the JS libraries in debug mode), but I was using
    something for Windows that would monitor whether Synchronet was running and re-start it if it wasn't. I feel like it's good that that feature
    is built-in with systemd.

    I just run it from a terminal window while in the /sbbs/exec directory,
    with './sbbs syslog' . I have several other terminals open tailing
    several logs, and another terminal for checking on things like
    backlogged mail or system load, etc.

    I do not want it starting automatically when the computer is booted up, because perhaps I'm going to do something with the computer such as OS/security updates, or BBS updates, or tweaking of some kind; before
    the BBS starts. When I'm ready for it to come up, I bring it up. Doesn't
    take much effort or time. That way I also get to see that it did indeed
    start properly, ports are opened/listening, etc. I like to pay attention
    to the small details to make sure all is running smoothly.


    ... She sells unix shells by the sea shore.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Gamgee on Sat Jun 29 19:55:58 2024
    I just run it from a terminal window while in the /sbbs/exec directory,
    with './sbbs syslog' . I have several other terminals open tailing
    several logs, and another terminal for checking on things like
    backlogged mail or system load, etc.

    I do not want it starting automatically when the computer is booted up, because perhaps I'm going to do something with the computer such as OS/security updates, or BBS updates, or tweaking of some kind; before
    the BBS starts. When I'm ready for it to come up, I bring it up. Doesn't take much effort or time. That way I also get to see that it did indeed start properly, ports are opened/listening, etc. I like to pay attention
    to the small details to make sure all is running smoothly.

    You can do that when running it with systemd by monitoring the logs (which you can do in real-time if you want).

    Nightfox

    ---
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Gamgee on Sat Jun 29 23:20:04 2024
    On Sat, 29 Jun 2024 18:14:00 -0500, you wrote:

    Yes, I would agree with all of that. Graphics drivers almost certainly
    the cause of such problems, and many others.

    Proprietary graphics drivers, to be specific. This was before there were any open source drivers out there. When open source drivers were introduced, there were problems at first, but then most of the graphic related problems went away.

    I guess it's mostly the (assumed) philosophy that "let us manage all
    your startup processes the way we think is best, and you don't worry
    about the details". I know that isn't quite accurate, because you can
    of course tweak systemd like most anything else, but that's as close as
    I can come to a reason. I like to know exactly what's happening and
    have as much control over that as I can. Another claim is that systemd does things "in parallel all at once" and thereby reduces boot time. I don't care one little bit about that, as I don't reboot often and don't care if it takes 12 seconds, or 14 seconds.

    Yeah, I don't care about losing a couple seconds on boot time, whatsoever. I make just about every one of my systemd startup scripts myself, so in a sense, I'm pushing the 'what to do', and systemd takes care of the "how to do it".

    I guess I'm all for moving forward as long as it doesn't take away from the original goals.

    Yes, I've toyed with Manjaro a few times and liked it OK. I suppose
    those are the two most popular desktops, with Gnome only being there because of Ubuntu, IMHO. I used to love Gnome but it became so
    dumbed-down looking (I think it looks like a Fisher-Price toy) that I
    moved (years ago) to XFCE and love it. Kind of Gnome-ish but light and fast, and very configurable.

    Gnome is definitely different from how it used to be. Once they began catering to tablets and touchscreens, I lost interest. However, nowadays, they definitely still do that, but have relaxed the focus they used to have on that a bit to continue to do actual desktop environment kind of stuff.

    I didn't mind it, and to be honest, I may have liked it a little bit better (aesthetically) than whatever direction they went with KDE. The bouncing icon next to the mouse pointer was cool 10 years ago, not now. The default window borders aren't all that exciting. However, programs like Konsole I like better than Gnome Terminal, Konversation for IRC, KTorrent, K3b, Kate, and a couple others are better than the Gnome variants, if Gnome even has a variant of some of those.

    Next time you're bored, spin up a VM with MX Linux (xfce desktop) and
    see what you think. It's about the only one I like any more.

    Thanks for the heads up, I've downloaded the XFCE as well as the Fluxbox (brings back memories) variants, and will give them a shot in the morning and get back to you.

    The only issue I see is that it's Debian based. The first thing from Debian that turns me off is that it's usually so far behind the times (I get it, their main focus is stability, but damn). For example, MX XFCE 64bit uses a 6.6 kernel, and here on Archlinux I'm using 6.9.7 currently, and it's rock solid stable. *shrug*

    I use Linux as my daily driver, on mulitiple desktop/laptops, so it's important to me. Servers/BBS run on Slackware, and even my daily laptop has been Slackware for many years. Transitioning to a new laptop and decided to go with MX Linux, as it's just less work. The only two
    Windows computers in the house are my work laptop and my wife's desktop. :-)

    Understood completely. My main PC here is Windows, just because I have a Steam library that would cripple most people here. I still like to play AAA games, and Linux just hasn't convinced them to port their stuff just yet.

    Anything BBS/FTN/server related though, goes straight to my server machine, running nothing but Linux. I may have a 'tinkering' FreeBSD VM just to mess around, but it will most likely never go further than that.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
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  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Nightfox on Sat Jun 29 23:24:48 2024
    On Sat, 29 Jun 2024 21:42:04 -0700, you wrote:

    How do you normally run Synchronet on your system? When I moved my BBS from Windows to Linux a couple years ago, for a little while I was just directly running sbbs from a command prompt, but I later set it up to
    run with systemd.

    You may have missed all the great years of sysvinit if you just jumped ship somewhat recently. Everything was scripted (and still is, if you choose a distro that doesn't use systemd and still uses it).

    I liked it, it did what I needed it to do. I just migrated to systemd when my OS of choice did the same, and it works just as well (for me, anyway).

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Accession on Sat Jun 29 23:01:39 2024
    You may have missed all the great years of sysvinit if you just jumped ship somewhat recently. Everything was scripted (and still is, if you choose a distro that doesn't use systemd and still uses it).

    I've used Linux tor a long time, but for other things. I dabbled woth Slackeare in the mid 90s and used SuSE a bit around 2000, and worked in a fully Linux environment at a job from 2003 to 2007.. I remember seeing sysvinit but I don't remember if I made mudh use of it.

    Nightfox

    ---
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Digital Man@VERT to Nightfox on Sat Jun 29 23:44:46 2024
    Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Nightfox to Accession on Sat Jun 29 2024 11:01 pm

    You may have missed all the great years of sysvinit if you just jumped ship somewhat recently. Everything was scripted (and still is, if you choose a distro that doesn't use systemd and still uses it).

    I've used Linux tor a long time, but for other things. I dabbled woth Slackeare in the mid 90s and used SuSE a bit around 2000, and worked in a fully Linux environment at a job from 2003 to 2007.. I remember seeing sysvinit but I don't remember if I made mudh use of it.

    Your Linux system circa 2003-2007 was definitely using sysvinit to start-up, run services/daemons, etc.
    https://www.computernetworkingnotes.com/linux-tutorials/differences-between-sysvinit-upstart-and-systemd.html
    --
    digital man (rob)

    Sling Blade quote #17:
    Charles Bushman: A shovel just makes too goddamned much racket.
    Norco, CA WX: 67.1øF, 76.0% humidity, 0 mph N wind, 0.00 inches rain/24hrs
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Vertrauen þ Home of Synchronet þ [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Accession on Sun Jun 30 08:40:00 2024
    Accession wrote to Gamgee <=-

    Yes, I would agree with all of that. Graphics drivers almost certainly
    the cause of such problems, and many others.

    Proprietary graphics drivers, to be specific. This was before there
    were any open source drivers out there. When open source drivers were introduced, there were problems at first, but then most of the graphic related problems went away.

    No doubt. I am a combat-wounded veteran of the Nvidia Wars. ;-)

    I guess it's mostly the (assumed) philosophy that "let us manage all
    your startup processes the way we think is best, and you don't worry
    about the details". I know that isn't quite accurate, because you can
    of course tweak systemd like most anything else, but that's as close as
    I can come to a reason. I like to know exactly what's happening and
    have as much control over that as I can. Another claim is that systemd does things "in parallel all at once" and thereby reduces boot time. I don't care one little bit about that, as I don't reboot often and don't care if it takes 12 seconds, or 14 seconds.

    Yeah, I don't care about losing a couple seconds on boot time,
    whatsoever. I make just about every one of my systemd startup scripts myself, so in a sense, I'm pushing the 'what to do', and systemd takes care of the "how to do it".

    That's cool, and I could live with that. Perhaps some of my resistance
    is the lack of time/motivation to learn enough about it to be able to do
    that. I'm only a few years from retiring, so maybe I'll get there then.

    I guess I'm all for moving forward as long as it doesn't take away from the original goals.

    Hard to argue with that - although I've always believed the Unix
    philosophy was (paraphrasing) "Each tool should do ONE job, and do it
    well." I feel like systemd wants to "Do all jobs, and sort of do them
    well enough". Haha! Not completely accurate but you get the idea.

    Yes, I've toyed with Manjaro a few times and liked it OK. I suppose
    those are the two most popular desktops, with Gnome only being there because of Ubuntu, IMHO. I used to love Gnome but it became so
    dumbed-down looking (I think it looks like a Fisher-Price toy) that I
    moved (years ago) to XFCE and love it. Kind of Gnome-ish but light and fast, and very configurable.

    Gnome is definitely different from how it used to be. Once they began catering to tablets and touchscreens, I lost interest. However,
    nowadays, they definitely still do that, but have relaxed the focus
    they used to have on that a bit to continue to do actual desktop environment kind of stuff.

    I didn't mind it, and to be honest, I may have liked it a little bit better (aesthetically) than whatever direction they went with KDE. The bouncing icon next to the mouse pointer was cool 10 years ago, not now. The default window borders aren't all that exciting. However, programs like Konsole I like better than Gnome Terminal, Konversation for IRC, KTorrent, K3b, Kate, and a couple others are better than the Gnome variants, if Gnome even has a variant of some of those.

    I've never been able to stand using KDE. Not sure exactly why but I
    just don't like it. Maybe it reminds me of Windows a little. I have
    always used and loved K3b for burning discs though, but that's the only
    app I like.

    Next time you're bored, spin up a VM with MX Linux (xfce desktop) and
    see what you think. It's about the only one I like any more.

    Thanks for the heads up, I've downloaded the XFCE as well as the
    Fluxbox (brings back memories) variants, and will give them a shot in
    the morning and get back to you.

    The only issue I see is that it's Debian based. The first thing from Debian that turns me off is that it's usually so far behind the times
    (I get it, their main focus is stability, but damn). For example, MX
    XFCE 64bit uses a 6.6 kernel, and here on Archlinux I'm using 6.9.7 currently, and it's rock solid stable. *shrug*

    Ahhhh, yes it is Debian-based, but is NOT the same as Debian-stable.
    Forgot to mention - there is a version of MX called "AHS" (for advanced hardware) and that's what I'm using. After installation and a routine
    update, 'uname -a' reports this:

    Linux rivendell 6.9.6-1-liquorix-amd64 #1 ZEN SMP PREEMPT liquorix 6.9-5~mx23ahs (2024-06-25) x86_64 GNU/Linux

    So... not bad. That's probably the version you want, assuming fairly
    recent hardware (and I've run that version just fine on 7-8 year old hardware).

    I use Linux as my daily driver, on mulitiple desktop/laptops, so it's important to me. Servers/BBS run on Slackware, and even my daily laptop has been Slackware for many years. Transitioning to a new laptop and decided to go with MX Linux, as it's just less work. The only two
    Windows computers in the house are my work laptop and my wife's desktop. :-)

    Understood completely. My main PC here is Windows, just because I have
    a Steam library that would cripple most people here. I still like to
    play AAA games, and Linux just hasn't convinced them to port their
    stuff just yet.

    Nice, and no argument here about Linux gaming. It's come a long way but
    not yet (and likely never) will it catch all the way up.

    Anything BBS/FTN/server related though, goes straight to my server machine, running nothing but Linux. I may have a 'tinkering' FreeBSD VM just to mess around, but it will most likely never go further than
    that.

    Same... I've always felt like I "should" learn/use a 'BSD, and have
    gotten various flavors running, but eventually said "OK, now what?".
    "What does this do that I can't already do on Linux?". "Why put any
    more effort into this?". And that's the end of it.

    R/
    Dan


    ... Users come in two types: Those who have lost data, and those who will.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Nightfox on Sun Jun 30 08:44:00 2024
    Nightfox wrote to Gamgee <=-

    I just run it from a terminal window while in the /sbbs/exec directory,
    with './sbbs syslog' . I have several other terminals open tailing
    several logs, and another terminal for checking on things like
    backlogged mail or system load, etc.

    I do not want it starting automatically when the computer is booted up, because perhaps I'm going to do something with the computer such as OS/security updates, or BBS updates, or tweaking of some kind; before
    the BBS starts. When I'm ready for it to come up, I bring it up. Doesn't take much effort or time. That way I also get to see that it did indeed start properly, ports are opened/listening, etc. I like to pay attention
    to the small details to make sure all is running smoothly.

    You can do that when running it with systemd by monitoring the logs
    (which you can do in real-time if you want).

    Yes, I get that, but... as I said above I don't always want it starting
    the BBS automatically when I bring up (or reboot) the computer. Also if
    I want to take the BBS down for some maintenance or tweaking, it seems
    much easier to just stop it, do the work, and then just start it again manually. I know you can stop/start stuff with 'systemctl' but somehow
    I find that awkward. Maybe I'm just set in my ways... Haha.



    ... I was wondering why the baseball was getting bigger. Then it hit me.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Accession on Sun Jun 30 09:15:42 2024
    On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 04:20:04 -0500, you wrote:

    Next time you're bored, spin up a VM with MX Linux (xfce desktop) and
    see what you think. It's about the only one I like any more.

    Thanks for the heads up, I've downloaded the XFCE as well as the Fluxbox (brings back memories) variants, and will give them a shot in the
    morning and get back to you.

    Following up on this, both versions are snappy, and installation was a breeze. However (and this has been long-standing), I would have to spend a good amount of time changing themes, icons, window borders, etc. because the stock ones that come with XFCE and Fluxbox are old, plain, blacked out, squared corners and just flat out ugly, to me anyways (always have been).

    The Fluxbox version is on an older kernel (6.1 compared to 6.6) than the XFCE version, which they tout as their flagship. I have always had a place for Fluxbox, though. And it looks like now you're able to have a decent dash to dock type thing like Gnome uses in there as well. I've always liked how you can right click anywhere on the desktop and pull up a nice, straightforward application launcher menu. Again, though, default window borders and icons leave something to be desired.

    Besides my anal retentiveness on how things actually look, it seems to operate nicely, and that's the important part. If I were to ever go with a GUI on Linux, it would probably either be a slimmed down version of Gnome (if there's still some kind of gnome-light version or whatever) in order to try and keep it fast, or I would have to completely change up the aesthetics of a default XFCE or Fluxbox install.

    I still imagine as far as speed goes, you're probably better off installing a base like Debian, or Archlinux, or Slackware, or whatever you're into, and then installing your desktop environment on top of that. That way you control what else gets installed after that, since most of these distros add their own apps and bloatware that you may never actually need. Obviously, people pick these distros to avoid the extra work it takes to do all that, and MX definitely seems to be able to compete with the rest of them.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
    * Origin: _thePharcyde distribution system (Wisconsin) (723:1/1)
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ _thePharcyde telnet://bbs.pharcyde.org (Wisconsin)
  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to ACCESSION on Sun Jun 30 09:59:00 2024
    Interesting - I haven't heard of that happening. I've not used Ubuntu for more than a few minutes at a time, and not long enough to upgrade it.

    I'm not sure that's a recent thing, any more. It was back when Linux devs couldn't get their heads around proprietary graphics drivers (and maybe still can't). Now that they've gone mostly open source with those, the chances of that happening is far less than it used to be.

    (1) it happened here earlier this year
    (2) it had nothing to do with graphic drivers, as best as I can tell, as I could see the screen enough to know that the machine was not working.

    I remember the graphic driver issue days and this didn't look anything like
    the colorful mess you could wind up with after an install in those days.

    I suspect it has a lot more to do with them being more "cutting edge." I
    also suspect it had something to do with the messages about certain
    packages no longer being available in the "non-paid support" release.

    apt spit out some messages about packages (with names I didn't recognize as important) no longer being available that, if I didn't know better, would make me think ubuntu was purposefully removing them to get people to move get
    $$$ out of people. Those packages ARE available in other non-ubuntu deb-based releases, so it is not a case of them being unsupported.

    apt under Debian and Devuan spits out no such messages. They "just work"
    like they are supposed to.

    Not sure what you have against systemd. I gladly switched over when it was introduced, and have never had an issue. A lot less scripting involved, that's
    for sure.

    There has been some recent noise about something else they have rolled into systemd that was causing folks issues. Here, I found that on certain
    machines, installing a systemd based distro resulted in unrequested, random reboots. Installing devuan made that stop happening on system #1 (a more critical system). System #2, the same hardware, required a GUI and Debian proper was left on it. It is not so critical and still reboots at odd
    times.


    * SLMR 2.1a * My other vehicle is a Galaxy Class Starship ...
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to NIGHTFOX on Sun Jun 30 10:00:00 2024
    How do you normally run Synchronet on your system? When I moved my BBS from Windows to Linux a couple years ago, for a little while I was just directly running sbbs from a command prompt, but I later set it up to run with systemd.
    I think one of the advantages of the systemd setup is it runs in the background, and I think I wouldn't even have to log in for it to be running. Also, systemd can monitor and restart processes that have crashed. On Windows
    every so often I saw Synchronet crash, seemingly randomly, and at one point when doing some debugging, it looked to me like the crash was caused by something in the Mozilla JavaScript library. I didn't bother to debug further
    (I'd probably have to compile the JS libraries in debug mode), but I was using
    something for Windows that would monitor whether Synchronet was running and re-start it if it wasn't. I feel like it's good that that feature is built-in
    with systemd.

    You can run things daemonized (i.e. in the background) without systemd.


    * SLMR 2.1a * Something Amiss? Hi, I'm Something Amister.
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to ACCESSION on Sun Jun 30 10:02:00 2024
    I liked it, it did what I needed it to do. I just migrated to systemd when my >OS of choice did the same, and it works just as well (for me, anyway).

    Aside from the aforementioned issues on a couple of boxes, that is also
    what I did. IMHO, they really don't seem to boot much faster, if at all.


    * SLMR 2.1a * Salesmen do it with their tongues.
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Gamgee on Sun Jun 30 11:37:20 2024
    On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 13:40:00 -0500, you wrote:

    No doubt. I am a combat-wounded veteran of the Nvidia Wars. ;-)

    Same here, it was definitely a rough time. Then once one figured out how to remove the old driver and all of it's remnants *before* installing the new driver, things worked much better.

    That's cool, and I could live with that. Perhaps some of my resistance
    is the lack of time/motivation to learn enough about it to be able to do that. I'm only a few years from retiring, so maybe I'll get there then.

    You'll probably be surprised at how simple it really is. But I completely understand not being super excited to break away from something you already know all too well. :)

    I've never been able to stand using KDE. Not sure exactly why but I
    just don't like it. Maybe it reminds me of Windows a little. I have always used and loved K3b for burning discs though, but that's the only
    app I like.

    I agree, it definitely reminds me of Windows, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, I guess. However, my biggest gripe is the dependencies. Even with K3b, for example.. if you want to use it and you're using Gnome, you end up installing half of KDE and most of it's libraries just for that one app. They're definitely not meant to be standalone applications to use anywhere, that's for sure.

    Ahhhh, yes it is Debian-based, but is NOT the same as Debian-stable.
    Forgot to mention - there is a version of MX called "AHS" (for advanced hardware) and that's what I'm using. After installation and a routine update, 'uname -a' reports this:

    Linux rivendell 6.9.6-1-liquorix-amd64 #1 ZEN SMP PREEMPT liquorix 6.9-5~mx23ahs (2024-06-25) x86_64 GNU/Linux

    That is the one I'm using, and while messing with it last night, it never told me I had updates available, until this morning I manually clicked "Check for Updates". Now that both versions are updated, the XFCE variant's kernel is 6.9.6-1, and the Fluxbox variant's kernel is 6.1.0-22.

    So... not bad. That's probably the version you want, assuming fairly recent hardware (and I've run that version just fine on 7-8 year old hardware).

    Yeah, definitely not as behind as it first seemed. Also realized that XFCE has a right click application launcher menu just like Fluxbox does. Learn something new every day. Honestly, I don't have a lot of experience with XFCE as the default look was always off-putting for me. But slowly widdling away at it to make it easier on my eyes I'm finding a lot of unexpected things (so far, all good things).

    Same... I've always felt like I "should" learn/use a 'BSD, and have
    gotten various flavors running, but eventually said "OK, now what?".
    "What does this do that I can't already do on Linux?". "Why put any
    more effort into this?". And that's the end of it.

    Hah. That's basically exactly how it's been going for me, too. :)

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
    * Origin: _thePharcyde distribution system (Wisconsin) (723:1/1)
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ _thePharcyde telnet://bbs.pharcyde.org (Wisconsin)
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Accession on Sun Jun 30 12:55:00 2024
    Accession wrote to Accession <=-

    On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 04:20:04 -0500, you wrote:

    Next time you're bored, spin up a VM with MX Linux (xfce desktop) and
    see what you think. It's about the only one I like any more.

    Thanks for the heads up, I've downloaded the XFCE as well as the Fluxbox (brings back memories) variants, and will give them a shot in the
    morning and get back to you.

    Following up on this, both versions are snappy, and installation was a breeze. However (and this has been long-standing), I would have to
    spend a good amount of time changing themes, icons, window borders,
    etc. because the stock ones that come with XFCE and Fluxbox are old, plain, blacked out, squared corners and just flat out ugly, to me
    anyways (always have been).

    Yes, I also change up the theme/cosmetics some, but it's not too bad to
    tweak up the way I like it.

    The Fluxbox version is on an older kernel (6.1 compared to 6.6) than
    the XFCE version, which they tout as their flagship. I have always had
    a place for Fluxbox, though. And it looks like now you're able to have
    a decent dash to dock type thing like Gnome uses in there as well. I've always liked how you can right click anywhere on the desktop and pull
    up a nice, straightforward application launcher menu. Again, though, default window borders and icons leave something to be desired.

    I've always found Flux (and similars like blackbox/openbox) to be a
    little more minimalistic than I prefer.

    Besides my anal retentiveness on how things actually look, it seems to operate nicely, and that's the important part. If I were to ever go
    with a GUI on Linux, it would probably either be a slimmed down version
    of Gnome (if there's still some kind of gnome-light version or
    whatever) in order to try and keep it fast, or I would have to
    completely change up the aesthetics of a default XFCE or Fluxbox
    install.

    I think Gnome only comes in the Bloatware size any more. There may be
    some variations though, as I recall in Mint Linux (I think) that you can choose between "Cinnamon" and "Mate" and the Cinnamon was almost
    tolerable for me. But it's been a while.

    I still imagine as far as speed goes, you're probably better off installing a base like Debian, or Archlinux, or Slackware, or whatever you're into, and then installing your desktop environment on top of
    that. That way you control what else gets installed after that, since
    most of these distros add their own apps and bloatware that you may
    never actually need. Obviously, people pick these distros to avoid the extra work it takes to do all that, and MX definitely seems to be able
    to compete with the rest of them.

    You may be right, but I don't see nearly as much "extra" in MX as I have
    seen in other distros. Glad you gave it a look.



    ... Bug free, cheap, on time, works. Pick two.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Dumas Walker on Sun Jun 30 11:53:46 2024
    On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 14:59:00 -0500, you wrote:

    (1) it happened here earlier this year
    (2) it had nothing to do with graphic drivers, as best as I can tell,
    as I could see the screen enough to know that the machine was not working.

    I remember the graphic driver issue days and this didn't look anything like
    the colorful mess you could wind up with after an install in those days.

    I suspect it has a lot more to do with them being more "cutting edge." I also suspect it had something to do with the messages about certain packages no longer being available in the "non-paid support" release.

    I would hope that may be more specific to Ubuntu, then. I guess I haven't really heard of that happening anywhere else, and I've definitely heard about the woes of upgrading Ubuntu plenty of times in the past.

    apt under Debian and Devuan spits out no such messages. They "just work" like they are supposed to.

    That's a good thing. I take it you're using Devuan now? That may be another one I might have to take a look at. I'm not really in the market for a GUI distro, but it cures boredom at times. :)

    There has been some recent noise about something else they have rolled into
    systemd that was causing folks issues. Here, I found that on certain machines, installing a systemd based distro resulted in unrequested, random
    reboots. Installing devuan made that stop happening on system #1 (a more critical system). System #2, the same hardware, required a GUI and Debian proper was left on it. It is not so critical and still reboots at odd times.

    Maybe I'm lucky then, but I haven't had a single issue with systemd in all the years I've used it. Definitely never had a Linux distro randomly reboot on me, which almost sounds more like hardware failure than anything else.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
    * Origin: _thePharcyde distribution system (Wisconsin) (723:1/1)
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ _thePharcyde telnet://bbs.pharcyde.org (Wisconsin)
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Dumas Walker on Sun Jun 30 11:55:50 2024
    On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 15:02:00 -0500, you wrote:

    I liked it, it did what I needed it to do. I just migrated to systemd
    when my
    OS of choice did the same, and it works just as well (for me, anyway).

    Aside from the aforementioned issues on a couple of boxes, that is also what I did. IMHO, they really don't seem to boot much faster, if at all.

    True, we're probably talking nanoseconds here at this point. There was a much bigger difference (at least noticeable) in boot times between BIOS and UEFI, though.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
    * Origin: _thePharcyde distribution system (Wisconsin) (723:1/1)
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ _thePharcyde telnet://bbs.pharcyde.org (Wisconsin)
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Accession on Sun Jun 30 12:30:35 2024
    Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Accession to Gamgee on Sun Jun 30 2024 11:37 am

    I've never been able to stand using KDE. Not sure exactly why but I just

    I agree, it definitely reminds me of Windows, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, I guess. However, my biggest gripe is the dependencies. Even

    Years ago, I read that KDE was initially designed to be user-friendly for people who are used to Windows.

    These days, I tend to like Cinnamon (which I think is also supposed to be familiar for people who are used to Windows), and I also think Xfce is pretty good too. There are editions of Linux Mint (my current favorite Linux distro) that come with Cinnamon or Xfce. I've been using Linux Mint on a secondary PC (which I mainly set up to run Plex Media Server) since about 2015 and generally it just works and has been very stable. I was running my BBS in a Windows VM on that until a copule years ago, when I moved my BBS to run in the Linux Mint host OS.

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Gamgee on Sun Jun 30 12:33:11 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Accession on Sun Jun 30 2024 12:55 pm

    I think Gnome only comes in the Bloatware size any more. There may be some variations though, as I recall in Mint Linux (I think) that you can choose between "Cinnamon" and "Mate" and the Cinnamon was almost tolerable for me. But it's been a while.

    I like Linux Mint, and yes, there are editions with Cinnamon and Mate. I tend to like Cinnamon, but I also like Xfce. And I know a GUI isn't really necessary on a computer running services, but I have the Mint Xfce edition on my PC running my BBS (and I also run Plex Media Server on that PC). With the GUI environment, I often like to have Synchronet's umonitor running (to show my BBS node status etc.) and also have a terminal window running to show the Synchronet log in real-time, etc..

    Nightfox

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
  • From Arelor@VERT/PALANTIR to Accession on Sun Jun 30 17:55:29 2024
    Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Accession to Gamgee on Sat Jun 29 2024 07:22 am

    Not sure what you have against systemd. I gladly switched over when it was introduced, and have never had an issue. A lot less scripting involved, that's for sure.

    I like bootup scripts.

    The real problem with systemd is not how it manages booting. The problem is it was conceived from the get-go as a tool from the Red Hat ecosystem to take over strategical userspace components of the Linux sphere (such as sudo, syslogd, the myriad seat managers, you name them). Since it was a political tool it was used politically and many software projects started adopting it as a required dependency well before they had technical reasons to do so (such as when Gnome announced it would classify it as a blessed dependency).

    SystemD is like the Seamonkey web-browser: a semi-modular solution that incorporates lots of functions not related to its declared purpose at all. Sometimes that is exactly what you need, and that is fine. Sometimes you only need a web browser and would rather use Netsurf. The problem is lots of software projects jumped the gun for no very good (official) reason and made it hard for everybody to use anything but SystemMonkeyD... current systemdless solutions that actually work exist due only to massive effort from the FOSS community.

    BTW there are enough pieces of circumpstancial evidence to suggest systemd's blessed side effect was to cripple the BSD ecosystem explicitly. Not that it is working that well. The BSDs have a tendency not to try to be Linux.


    --
    gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Arelor@VERT/PALANTIR to Gamgee on Sun Jun 30 18:00:32 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Nightfox on Sat Jun 29 2024 08:19 pm

    I do not want it starting automatically when the computer is booted up, because perhaps I'm going to do something with the computer such as OS/security updates, or BBS updates, or tweaking of some kind; before
    the BBS starts. When I'm ready for it to come up, I bring it up. Doesn't take much effort or time. That way I also get to see that it did indeed start properly, ports are opened/listening, etc. I like to pay attention
    to the small details to make sure all is running smoothly.


    I think the elegant solution is to define a "maintenance" runlevel for when you want to boot up without starting all your user facing services, rather than having your main runlevel start only the basics and then force you to start your services manually.

    I mention this because the point of computers is doing stuff automatically :-)


    --
    gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Arelor@VERT/PALANTIR to Nightfox on Sun Jun 30 18:04:44 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Nightfox to Gamgee on Sat Jun 29 2024 07:55 pm

    You can do that when running it with systemd by monitoring the logs (which you can do in real-time if you want).

    And you can also do that using a system hacked together with runit and busybox. That does not mean a runit+busybox frankenmonster is superior to a traditional init.


    --
    gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken

    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Nightfox on Sun Jun 30 17:42:00 2024
    Nightfox wrote to Gamgee <=-

    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Accession on Sun Jun 30 2024 12:55 pm

    I think Gnome only comes in the Bloatware size any more. There may be some variations though, as I recall in Mint Linux (I think) that you can choose between "Cinnamon" and "Mate" and the Cinnamon was almost tolerable for me. But it's been a while.

    I like Linux Mint, and yes, there are editions with Cinnamon and Mate.
    I tend to like Cinnamon, but I also like Xfce. And I know a GUI isn't really necessary on a computer running services, but I have the Mint
    Xfce edition on my PC running my BBS (and I also run Plex Media Server
    on that PC). With the GUI environment, I often like to have
    Synchronet's umonitor running (to show my BBS node status etc.) and
    also have a terminal window running to show the Synchronet log in real-time, etc..

    Sounds very similar to what I'm doing. Slackware with XFCE, and
    multiple xfce-terminal windows open. One where I started the BBS and
    therefor has the log and "controls" (keypresses) available at the bottom
    (like 'Q' to exit the BBS). Then I have a window tailing sbbs.log
    (using the 'lnav' utility which rocks); another window tailing
    sbbsecho.log with lnav, and another tailing with a grep for any 'tickit' activity. Then one more open terminal for general looking around at
    stuff on the computer. Instead of umonitor I like to have gtkmonitor
    open, as it looks nicer. While I can do most anything I need to do at a
    CLI interface, it is sometimes nice to use a GUI file manager or even
    Firefox to check the Wiki or something. All seems to work well for me.

    The cool thing about all this discussion lately is that it doesn't much
    matter which *distro* you want to use, in the end, the operation on
    Linux is nearly identical other than cosmetics. :-)



    ... If it weren't for Edison we'd be using computers by candlelight
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Arelor on Sun Jun 30 19:10:00 2024
    Arelor wrote to Gamgee <=-

    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Nightfox on Sat Jun 29 2024 08:19 pm

    I do not want it starting automatically when the computer is booted up, because perhaps I'm going to do something with the computer such as OS/security updates, or BBS updates, or tweaking of some kind; before
    the BBS starts. When I'm ready for it to come up, I bring it up. Doesn't take much effort or time. That way I also get to see that it did indeed start properly, ports are opened/listening, etc. I like to pay attention
    to the small details to make sure all is running smoothly.

    I think the elegant solution is to define a "maintenance" runlevel for when you want to boot up without starting all your user facing
    services, rather than having your main runlevel start only the basics
    and then force you to start your services manually.

    Hahaha! Yes, I guess that would be possible. But worth the effort?

    I mention this because the point of computers is doing stuff
    automatically :-)

    That's the point, to a point. ;-)




    ... If it weren't for Edison we'd be using computers by candlelight
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Palantir BBS * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL
  • From Accession@VERT/PHARCYDE to Arelor on Sun Jun 30 19:59:26 2024
    On Sun, 30 Jun 2024 22:55:28 -0500, you wrote:

    I like bootup scripts.

    I didn't mind them either. They did their job (and still do) well. I just ran into systemd when it was introduced into Archlinux, and kept going with it. I didn't go out of my way to go back to sysvinit, that's all.

    Otherwise, I don't worry too much about politics in general, especially Linux politics.

    Sometimes you only need a web browser and would rather use Netsurf. The problem is lots of software projects jumped the gun for no very good (official) reason and made it hard for everybody to use anything but SystemMonkeyD... current systemdless solutions that actually work exist
    due only to massive effort from the FOSS community.

    I do remember when all of this went about. I don't really know if "jumped the gun" is the best description, or if they just "followed suit" because everyone else was doing it.

    BTW there are enough pieces of circumpstancial evidence to suggest systemd's blessed side effect was to cripple the BSD ecosystem
    explicitly. Not that it is working that well. The BSDs have a tendency
    not to try to be Linux.

    Looks as though FreeBSD forums are already discussing something similar to systemd, if not already in the ports tree. MacOS already has something called "launchd" which is similar. So, who knows what they're doing.

    Regards,
    Nick

    ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
    --- Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:115.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderb
    * Origin: _thePharcyde distribution system (Wisconsin) (723:1/1)
    ï¿­ Synchronet ï¿­ _thePharcyde telnet://bbs.pharcyde.org (Wisconsin)
  • From Arelor@VERT/PALANTIR to Gamgee on Mon Jul 1 04:58:15 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Arelor on Sun Jun 30 2024 07:10 pm

    I think the elegant solution is to define a "maintenance" runlevel for when you want to boot up without starting all your user facing services, rather than having your main runlevel start only the basics and then force you to start your services manually.

    Hahaha! Yes, I guess that would be possible. But worth the effort?


    Slackware's init system is so hackable that I think achieving this is actually easy. If you have to manually launch your services more than 6 times in the lifetime of your OS instance then I'd think implementing this is actually worth the 7 minutes it takes. Plus it will be fun for you to learn how inittab and company work if you don't know already.

    And fun is the main reason why people keeps hobby home labs, isn't it?


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  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Arelor on Mon Jul 1 08:00:00 2024
    Arelor wrote to Gamgee <=-

    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Arelor on Sun Jun 30 2024 07:10 pm

    I think the elegant solution is to define a "maintenance" runlevel for when you want to boot up without starting all your user facing services, rather than having your main runlevel start only the basics and then force you to start your services manually.

    Hahaha! Yes, I guess that would be possible. But worth the effort?

    Slackware's init system is so hackable that I think achieving
    this is actually easy. If you have to manually launch your
    services more than 6 times in the lifetime of your OS instance
    then I'd think implementing this is actually worth the 7 minutes
    it takes. Plus it will be fun for you to learn how inittab and
    company work if you don't know already.

    True enough, would be easy to do. It doesn't change the fact though,
    that I basically *never* want the BBS to start automatically at bootup.
    So at least for me, it's not applicable. I don't mind starting it
    manually, and in fact want to do it that way. ;-)

    And fun is the main reason why people keeps hobby home labs,
    isn't it?

    Indeed.


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  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to ACCESSION on Mon Jul 1 08:11:00 2024
    apt under Debian and Devuan spits out no such messages. They "just work"
    like they are supposed to.

    That's a good thing. I take it you're using Devuan now? That may be another on
    I might have to take a look at. I'm not really in the market for a GUI distro,
    but it cures boredom at times. :)

    On the box in question, I replaced the broken ubuntu upgrade with debian.
    I am running devuan on two other systems, though. One is older, the other
    is an sbc that does not have the x-server installed (cli only). It seems
    to be as stable as debian, once you get it installed and tweaked.

    Maybe I'm lucky then, but I haven't had a single issue with systemd in all the >years I've used it. Definitely never had a Linux distro randomly reboot on me, >which almost sounds more like hardware failure than anything else.

    Could be, but devuan (without GUI) on the same hardware does not random
    reboot. I suspect that not running systemd *might* make it a little less memory intensive, but I could be 100% wrong.


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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Gamgee on Mon Jul 1 10:19:53 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Nightfox on Sun Jun 30 2024 05:42 pm

    terminal for general looking around at stuff on the computer. Instead of umonitor I like to have gtkmonitor open, as it looks nicer. While I can

    I was using gtkmonitor for a while, but there was a point where I updated the code and gtkmonitor failed to build. I asked Digital Man about it, and at the time I think he said gtkmonitor wasn't being updated very often, so I started using umonitor instead.

    The cool thing about all this discussion lately is that it doesn't much matter which *distro* you want to use, in the end, the operation on Linux is nearly identical other than cosmetics. :-)

    Yep :)

    Nightfox

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  • From Gamgee@VERT/PALANTIR to Nightfox on Mon Jul 1 22:05:00 2024
    Nightfox wrote to Gamgee <=-

    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Gamgee to Nightfox on Sun Jun 30 2024 05:42 pm

    terminal for general looking around at stuff on the computer. Instead of umonitor I like to have gtkmonitor open, as it looks nicer. While I can

    I was using gtkmonitor for a while, but there was a point where I
    updated the code and gtkmonitor failed to build. I asked Digital Man about it, and at the time I think he said gtkmonitor wasn't being
    updated very often, so I started using umonitor instead.

    That has happened here too (gtkmonitor fail to build after an update).
    When it happens I go to the gtkmonitor directory in ../src/sbbs3 and
    build it again there, and it has worked. I should probably switch to
    umonitor as well though, as everything else I'm doing is non-GUI.

    The cool thing about all this discussion lately is that it doesn't much matter which *distro* you want to use, in the end, the operation on Linux is nearly identical other than cosmetics. :-)

    Yep :)

    Linux helps people get along! ;-)



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  • From Amessyroom@VERT/TL-QWK to Nightfox on Mon Jul 1 22:08:16 2024
    Re: Re: For you SBBS Sysops o
    By: Nightfox to Gamgee on Mon Jul 01 2024 10:19 am

    I was using gtkmonitor for a while, but there was a point where I updated the code and gtkmonitor failed to build. I asked Digital Man about it, and at the time I think he said gtkmonitor wasn't being updated very often, so I started using umonitor instead.

    Thanks for mentioning umonitor. I had not read anything about it.

    I got gtkmonitor to work, but I'm running on a VPS so I have tunnel X11 back over SSH which is slow over the internet.

    I keep learning something everyday. Thanks for sharing.

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