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LINOXIDE

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Home » content


TODAY'S HOWTOS


Submitted by Roy Schestowitz on Friday 3rd of December 2021 01:08:30 PM Filed
under
 * HowTos



 1.  EDIT VIDEO ON LINUX WITH KDENLIVE | OPENSOURCE.COM
     
     > Whether it's due to snow days, a seasonal vacation, or time off for any
     > number of holidays, December is a great time to settle down in front of
     > your computer and get creative. One of my favorite pastimes is cutting
     > video footage together. Sometimes I edit video to tell a story. Other
     > times I edit video to convey a mood or a single idea, and sometimes I do
     > it to provide visuals to music I've either discovered or composed. Maybe
     > it's because I learned to edit film at a school while aiming for a career
     > in the field, or maybe it's just because I like powerful open source
     > tools. Still, my favorite video editing application to this day remains
     > the formidable Kdenlive, a robust and professional editing software
     > providing an intuitive workflow and plenty of effects and transitions.

 2.  ADDING FUSIONAUTH TO KUBERNETES - CONTAINER JOURNAL
     
     > FusionAuth is a platform for adding authentication and authorization to
     > your apps. It’s practically a plug-and-play platform, allowing you to
     > focus on your own app development and leave the security aspects to the
     > security experts. In November 2021, FusionAuth announced that their
     > product can now be run in a Kubernetes environment. Let’s take a look at
     > how to do that. Our goal here is to get a simple Kubernetes setup running
     > on your own development machine and deploy FusionAuth to a container.

 3.  HOW TO INSTALL GRAFANA ON DEBIAN 11 - IDROOT
     
     > In this tutorial, we will show you how to install Grafana on Debian 11.
     > For those of you who didn’t know, Grafana is the open-source analytics
     > and monitoring solution for every database. Grafana provides charts,
     > graphs, and alerts, usually when it is connected to supported data
     > sources (Graphite, Elasticsearch, OpenTSDB, Prometheus, and InfluxDB).
     > You can also create your own dashboard for your own apps or
     > infrastructure performance monitoring.
     > 
     > This article assumes you have at least basic knowledge of Linux, know how
     > to use the shell, and most importantly, you host your site on your own
     > VPS. The installation is quite simple and assumes you are running in the
     > root account, if not you may need to add ‘sudo‘ to the commands to get
     > root privileges. I will show you through the step-by-step installation of
     > the Grafana monitoring on a Debian 11 (Bullseye).

 4.  HOW TO CHANGE HOSTNAME ON FEDORA 35 - IDROOT
     
     > In this tutorial, we will show you how to Change the Hostname on Fedora
     > 35. For those of you who didn’t know, A hostname is a human-readable
     > string that helps people refer to a computer by a familiar name. As a
     > system administrator, it is imperative to have a short but recognizable
     > hostname to separate the server machines from each other. Often, a
     > hostname is set during the installation process, but there are times when
     > it needs to be changed.
     > 
     > This article assumes you have at least basic knowledge of Linux, know how
     > to use the shell, and most importantly, you host your site on your own
     > VPS. The installation is quite simple and assumes you are running in the
     > root account, if not you may need to add ‘sudo‘ to the commands to get
     > root privileges. I will show you through the step-by-step change your
     > hostname on a Fedora 35.

 5.  HOW TO INSTALL UBUNTU 20.04 LTS ON A MACBOOK AIR – LINUXBSDOS.COM
     
     > This post is a step-by-step account of how I installed Ubuntu Desktop
     > 20.04 LTS on a MacBook Air (13-inch) and even got the wireless card to
     > work without a hassle. This is a MacBook Air that I bought back in 2018
     > and whose battery is effectively dead. Over the almost 4 years I’ve been
     > using it, I wasn’t really impressed with the operating system, though it
     > has its bright spots.

 6.  HOW TO SCHEDULE TASKS WITH WEBMIN - UNIXCOP THE UNIX / LINUX THE ADMINS
     DEAMS
     
     > Hello, friends. Continuing the work and operation with Webmin in this
     > post, you will learn how to schedule tasks with Webmin.
     > 
     > We already know that Webmin is a great application that allows us to
     > manage a Debian system graphically through a very neat web interface.
     > 
     > One of the many things we can do with Webmin is to set a task in the
     > system. This task is powered by Cron so if you are not very agile in
     > this, this post will fit you like a glove.
     > 
     > So, let’s go for it.

 7.  HOW TO SET UP AN SFTP SERVER ON OPENSUSE LEAP 15.3 SERVER
     
     > In this guide we are going to set up an sftp server on an OpennSUSE Leap
     > 15.3. We will also set up a form of chroot where users can only access
     > sftp with the shared credentials.
     > 
     > The File Transfer Protocol is a standard communication protocol used for
     > the transfer of computer files from a server to a client on a computer
     > network.
     > 
     > FTP isn’t popular today because it Lacks Security. When a file is sent
     > using this protocol, the data, username, and password are all shared in
     > plain text, which means a hacker can access this information with little
     > to no effort. For data to be secure, you need to use an upgraded version
     > of FTP like SFTP.

 8.  HOW TO INSTALL ATOM TEXT EDITOR ON ELEMENTARY OS 6.0 - INVIDIOUS [ED: NOT A
     GOOD IDEA; MICROSOFT CONTROLS IT AND USES IT TO PUSH PROPRIETARY SOFTWARE]

 9.  HOW TO INSTALL OPENTOONZ ON A CHROMEBOOK - UPDATED TUTORIAL
     
     > Today we are looking at how to install OpenToonz on a Chromebook. Please
     > follow the video/audio guide as a tutorial where we explain the process
     > step by step and use the commands below.
     > 
     > This tutorial will only work on Chromebooks with an Intel or AMD CPU
     > (with Linux Apps Support) and not those with an ARM64 architecture CPU.

 10. HOW TO INSTALL PHP 8.1 ON UBUNTU 21.04 – NEXTGENTIPS
     
     > In this tutorial, I am going to show you how to install the current
     > stable release version of PHP 8.1 on Ubuntu 21.04.

 11. 3 GUI FRAMEWORKS FOR WRITING USER-FRIENDLY APPLICATIONS IN PYTHON | ENABLE
     SYSADMIN
     
     > Learn how to choose the right graphical user interface library for
     > writing user-friendly apps.

 12. HOW TO INSTALL MYSQL 8.0 ON RHEL/CENTOS 8/7 AND FEDORA 35
     
     > MySQL is an open-source free relational database management system
     > (RDBMS) released under GNU (General Public License). It is used to run
     > multiple databases on any single server by providing multi-user access to
     > each created database.
     > 
     > This article will walk through you the process of installing and updating
     > the latest MySQL 8.0 version on RHEL/CentOS 8/7/6/ and Fedora using MySQL
     > Yum repository via YUM utility.

 13. HOW TO INSTALL WORDPRESS ON ALMALINUX 8 | ROCKY LINUX 8 - LINUX SHOUT
     
     > In this tutorial, we are providing the steps to install WordPress with
     > Apache web server on ALamLinux or Rocky Linux 8 running VPS, Cloud
     > Hosting, or local Server using the command line.
     > 
     > WordPress doesn’t need any introduction whosoever is in blogging or web
     > development would already know about this opens source content management
     > system. Millions of websites are currently running on it with the help of
     > Apache-webserver. And if you have recently purchased some cloud or
     > virtual private hosting server where you are running Alamlinux or Rocky
     > Linux 8 and want to install your WordPress along with LAMP (Linux,
     > Apache, MySQL, PHP) stack then here are the steps to follow.
     > 
     > Note: We recommend using any Web hosting control panel to install and
     > manage WordPress such as Cpanel or any open source, here is the list of
     > best open source hosting control panels.

 14. DEPENDENCY CONFUSION IN THE ANSIBLE GALAXY CLI | DIE-WELT.NET
     
     > I hope you enjoyed my last post about Ansible Galaxy Namespaces. In there
     > I noted that I originally looked for something completely different and
     > the namespace takeover was rather accidental.
     > 
     > Well, originally I was looking at how the different Ansible content
     > hosting services and their client (ansible-galaxy) behave in regard to
     > clashes in naming of the hosted content.


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SOME GNOME STUFF

 * SIZABLE NEWS
   
   > For the upcoming GTK 4.6, we have overhauled a lot of the sizing
   > infrastructure to make widgets fit even tighter and to make sure our sizing
   > infrastructure actually does what it says. When using the GtkWidget::halign
   > or GtkWidget::valign properties, GTK 4.4 would look at the default size of
   > the widget and then place the widget accordingly. This leaves a lot of
   > extra space when one of the values was set to fill. In GTK 4.6, GTK will
   > measure the size of the other dimension relative to the filled dimension.
   > This makes the widget thinner but avoids extra space.

 * A QUICK PSA ON WRITING PORTAL-FRIENDLY APPLICATION CODE
   
   > For various reasons, desktop applications sometimes need to know whether
   > they are running under a sandbox made by a technology such as Flatpak or
   > Snap. Some portal APIs, such as the file chooser dialog, are used
   > transparently so that the application code doesn’t need to make any
   > distinction between the sandboxed and unsandboxed cases, and if you ask me
   > that’s a pretty impressive magic trick on its own. Other portal APIs such
   > as the screencast one are used by both sandboxed and unsandboxed apps
   > thanks to the secure architecture of Wayland compositors. But still other
   > portal APIs are used conditionally depending on whether the app is running
   > sandboxed; this is the case for the OpenURI portal used by Epiphany.


TEXT EDITOR HAPPENINGS



Text Editor has really been shaping up in the past couple weeks as we race
towards getting things ready for GNOME 42. We removed the preferences sidebar
experiment because it was a bit clunky and none of the other core apps shared
the design metaphor. Instead we’ve brought back a preferences dialog, albeit
with an improved design. It builds on the previous GtkSourceStyleSchemePreview
work but with a filtered set based on the current light/dark desktop setting.


EPEL 9 IS NOW AVAILABLE

On behalf of the EPEL Steering Committee, I’m pleased to announce the
availability of EPEL 9. This is the culmination of five months of work between
the EPEL Steering Committee, the Fedora Infrastructure and Release Engineering
team, and other contributors. Package maintainers can now request dist-git
branches, trigger Koji builds, and submit Bodhi updates for EPEL 9 packages.
Instructions to enable the EPEL repository are available in our documentation.
If there is a Fedora package you would like to see added to EPEL 9, please let
the relevant package maintainer know with a package request.


OPEN HARDWARE/MODDING: RISC-V, ARDUINO, AND MORE

 * SIFIVE PERFORMANCE P650 RISC-V CORE TO OUTPERFORM ARM CORTEX-A77 PERFORMANCE
   PER MM2 - CNX SOFTWARE
   
   > About six months have passed since the SiFive announcement of the
   > Performance P550 “fastest 64-bit RISC-V processor” ever, and the company
   > has now introduced an even faster RISC-V core with the Performance P650
   > that’s expected to match Cortex-A77 performance. Building upon the
   > Performance P550 design, the SiFive Performance P650 is scalable to sixteen
   > cores using a coherent multicore complex, and delivers a 40% performance
   > increase per clock cycle based on SiFive engineering estimated performance
   > in SPECInt2006/GHz, thanks to an expansion of the processor’s
   > instruction-issue width. The company compares P650 to the Arm family by
   > saying it “maintains a significant performance-per-area advantage compared
   > to the Arm Cortex-A77”.

 * ON SERVERS MAYBE MOVING TO M.2 NVME DRIVES FOR THEIR SYSTEM DRIVES
   
   > We've been looking into getting some new servers (partly because a number
   > of our existing Dell R210 IIs are starting to fail). Although we haven't
   > run into this yet ourselves, one of the things we've heard in the process
   > of this investigation is that various lines of basic servers are trying to
   > move to M.2 NVMe system disks instead of 3.5" or 2.5" disks. People are
   > generally unhappy about this, for a number of reasons including that these
   > are not fancy hot-swappable M.2 NVMe, just basic motherboard plug-in M.2.

 * ONE WAY A BUILDER CULTURE CAN FAIL
   
   > I've told some stories about what happens when you end up at a company that
   > builds nothing and instead rents everything from some vendor. Given that,
   > it's only fair that I describe something bad that can happen at a company
   > which is known for building stuff.

 * COUNT DOWN TO CHRISTMAS WITH THE ARDUINO-POWERED HACKVENT CALENDAR | ARDUINO
   BLOG
   
   > Along with the typical Christmas decorations of trees and elves sitting on
   > shelves Tom Goff was motivated to build a DIY “Hackvent” calendar after
   > being inspired by his son’s request for one. The design differed from the
   > traditional Advent calendar in that it features an array of 25 lights, one
   > for each day, that light up sequentially whenever a button is pressed.
   > After the final day is reached, the system begins to play a song and makes
   > the lights dance around. To create the calendar’s housing, Goff designed a
   > 2D panel with cutouts for all the LEDs and an additional one for a single
   > button. After laser cutting a piece of plywood, he got to work coming up
   > with a circuit. The components included an Arduino Mega, 25 LEDs and
   > resistors that are directly driven by the Mega’s GPIO pins, an ISD 1760
   > module that plays music from its embedded ROM, and a small 2W speaker.

 * SCHEMATIC-O-MATIC AUTOMATICALLY CREATES KICAD SCHEMATICS FROM YOUR BREADBOARD
   | ARDUINO BLOG
   
   > Breadboards are the first tool you break out in any prototyping journey and
   > almost every project will utilize a breadboard at some point. Those
   > breadboards often turn into a rats’ nest of overlapping wires that are
   > difficult to trace, which makes it difficult to create an accurate
   > schematic when it is time to design your PCB. To make your life easier,
   > Nick Bild came up with a script that analyzes your physical breadboard to
   > automatically generate a KiCAD schematic. A breadboard is, at its core, a
   > series of connectors. This script’s purpose is to identify every connection
   > and associate it with the corresponding pin on a component. It is able to
   > do that using a special breadboard that has every row of pins connected to
   > an Arduino Due board I/O pin. A Python script running on a connected PC
   > then checks every row for continuity. The user then inputs the component
   > located at connection, and the script will draw a KiCAD schematic with
   > wires between every component’s pins.


LATEST NEWS

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


17 BEST FREE AND OPEN SOURCE WALLPAPER SETTERS



Do you find your Linux desktop background rather mundane but have problems in
finding attractive wallpapers? That’s where automatic wallpaper changes can
help. And many wallpaper tools access online sources which make it easy to liven
up your desktop. They can find and download awesome wallpapers and change them
periodically. Some wallpaper tools even support live wallpapers. Here’s our
recommendations. All of the tools are free and open source goodness.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


THIS WEEK IN KDE: NEW SPECTACLE FEATURES AND TONS OF BUGFIXES



Ark can now open zip archives that contain malformed PHP files (Albert Astals
Cid, Ark 21.12) Dolphin now displays the correct data when you create a folder
while filtering the view (Eduardo Cruz, Dolphin 22.04) Opening .m3u* playlist
files in Elisa using the file manager now works properly (Bharadwaj Raju, Elisa
22.04) Task Manager tooltips for single-window-non-web-browser apps that are
playing media but don’t display the media name in the window title once again
show album art instead of a window thumbnail (Bharadwaj Raju, Plasma 5.23.4)
Bluetooth status is now saved on logout when using the “remember” option (me:
Nate Graham, Plasma 5.23.5) Plasma panels now load faster on login and look less
visually glitchy while doing so (David Edmundson, Plasma 5.23.5) Discover no
longer crashes when you open the description page of a Flatpak app you just
removed (Aleix Pol Gonzalez, Plasma 5.24) Discover is now faster to check for
Flatpak app updates (Aleix Pol Gonzalez, Plasma 5.24)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


DISCOVERING EXTRA SOFTWARE FREEDOM WITH LIBREWOLF

Today I decided to refresh my mind and read about the beloved Operating System
called GNU/Linux. It is such a privilege to know and to have used this OS for so
many reasons. For starters: It's free - as in free-of-charge and free/libre (so
both gratis and free as in free speech). You are free - free to modify/tweak and
share it with everybody... ah, freedom. It is highly secure and reliable and
that is why it has been used by supercomputers (or really huge servers) for so
long - in companies, in education, and the largest enterprises. Last but not
least, it's easy. It used to be fairly difficult for a new user to try out
Linux, mostly because installation itself was difficult, but this is no longer
an issue as websites and how-tos are all widely available when needed, as well
as other useful things.

There are communities, real communities, always ready to assist, whenever you
need a helping hand. I'm glad that I have tried Ubuntu with Unity as the desktop
environment, as I liked the experience and now I'm using Debian with KDE as the
desktop environment. Different distro and desktop environment, but it's the same
freedom I've enjoyed all along. The most recent change I made was, I decided
ditch Mozilla Firefox (as my default browser) and I changed to LibreWolf, so I'm
still exploring and familiarising myself with the interface. It's a bit
different, but I already love it. █


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 * Raven Reader
 * Sparky 6.1




LINUX JOURNAL

 * What Version of RHEL am I Using?
 * Want to Upgrade RHEL 8.3? Here's the Best Way to Upgrade to RHEL 8.4
 * Configuring TACACS+ Server With A Simple GUI
 * How Can You Install Google Chrome Browser on Debian?
 * Sending Emails? Send them from Linux Terminal




LINUX TODAY

 * Tips for Using the cd Command in Linux
 * How to Create and Extract cpio Archives on Linux with Examples
 * New Ubuntu Linux Kernel Security Patches for 6 Vulnerabilities




SYSTEM 76

 * Open Up: Contributions and Collaborations
 * Robert Bunn is developing an AI to prevent preterm births
 * Marquita Wiggins is Developing her Open Source Graphic Design Program:
   Designy
 * Massimo Pascale and his Lemur Pro Explore Dark Matter Substructure with the
   Sunburst Arc




KERNEL PLANET

 * Paul E. Mc Kenney: Stupid RCU Tricks: Creating Branches For the -rcu Tree
 * Dave Airlie (blogspot): video decode: crossing the streams
 * Dave Airlie (blogspot): h264: more AMD hw worked on
 * Dave Airlie (blogspot): h264 video decoding: i-frames strike back
 * Dave Airlie (blogspot): What do you know about video decoding/encoding?




PURISM

 * Adding Visual Interest with Effects and Compositions
 * Taking Stock of Librem 14
 * True Convergence is Here: PureOS 10 is Released for all Librem Products
 * November Librem 5 update: Byzantium Released
 * Librem 14 EC Upgrade Hardware Method





LINUXSECURITY.COM ADVISORIES

 * SUSE: 2021:555-1 suse/sle15 Security Update>
 * SUSE: 2021:548-1 suse/sles12sp3 Security Update>
 * SUSE: 2021:772-1 sles-15-sp3-chost-byos-v20211202 Security Update>
 * SUSE: 2021:771-1 suse-sles-15-sp3-chost-byos-v20211202-hvm-ssd-x86_64
   Security Update>
 * SUSE: 2021:770-1 suse-sles-15-sp3-chost-byos-v20211202-gen2 Security Update>




DEBIAN

 * Paul Tagliamonte: Transmitting BPSK symbols (Part 2/5)
 * Dirk Eddelbuettel: littler 0.3.15 on CRAN: Package Updates
 * Petter Reinholdtsen: A Brazilian Portuguese translation of the book Made with
   Creative Commons
 * Evgeni Golov: Dependency confusion in the Ansible Galaxy CLI
 * Jonathan McDowell: Building a desktop to improve my work/life balance




IT'S FOSS

 * How to Install and Use Latte Dock on Ubuntu and Other Linux Distributions
 * Installing and Using Homebrew Package Manager on Linux
 * System Monitoring Center is an Ideal Task Manager & Resource Monitor for
   Linux
 * 13 Best Dark GTK Themes for Your Linux Desktop
 * Manage Flatpak Permissions Graphically With Flatseal




OMG! UBUNTU!

 * Blender 3.0 is Out, And It’ll Blow Your Socks Off
 * Vivaldi Web Browser Turns 5, Celebrates with New Features
 * Xiaomi’s CyberDog Robot Runs Ubuntu




GAMINGONLINUX

 * Wine 6.23 is out now continuing the PE conversion work
 * More BattlEye titles for Proton on Linux including DayZ, ARMA 3 now supported
 * Blender 3.0 is out now with a visual refresh, huge new features
 * Dinosaur survival MMO Path of Titans adds the Allosaurus and baby dinos
 * God simulator WorldBox is now officially live in Early Access on Steam




SLASHDOT

 * AWS Embraces Fedora Linux for Its Cloud-Based 'Amazon Linux'
 * Nvidia's DLSS Has Come To Linux Gaming
 * A German State is Switching Its 25,000 Computers From Windows to Linux




DW LATEST RELEASES

 * 12/02 openSUSE 15.4-alpha
 * 11/30 NixOS 21.11
 * 12/03 CentOS 9




DISTROWATCH

 * Distribution Release: EndeavourOS 21.4
 * Distribution Release: CentOS 9
 * Development Release: openSUSE 15.4 Alpha



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FSF

 * Life's better together when you avoid Windows 11
 * FSF job opportunity: Outreach and communications coordinator
 * FSF announces JShelter browser add-on to combat threats from nonfree
   JavaScript
 * A wake-up call for iPhone users -- it's time to go




UBUNTU BUZZ

 * Setup C++/Qt SDK on Parabola and Hyperbola GNU/Linux Systems
 * How To Install KDE Plasma Desktop on Parabola GNU/Linux
 * How To Install Hyperbola KDE on a Virtual Machine
 * Setup C++/Qt SDK Programming Environment on Ubuntu 21.10 Impish Indri
 * How To Install Parabola GNOME on a Virtual Machine




LINUXLINKS

 * 17 Best Free and Open Source Wallpaper Setters
 * Best Free and Open Source Software – November 2021 Updates
 * Best Free and Open Source Alternatives to Corel AfterShot Pro
 * 5 Best Free and Open Source Haskell Static Site Generators
 * 15 Utilities, Scripts and Ways to Interrogate Your PC



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