Trouble is that it cannot find git in the repositories. Glenn ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jude DaShiell" <jdashiel@xxxxxxxxx> To: "K0LNY_Glenn" <glenn@ervin.email>; "Gregory Nowak" <greg@xxxxxxxxx>; <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, August 26, 2022 8:09 PM Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX If you were able to download fenrir there's a requires script in the git directory and the README.md file tells you how to use it and that installs the dependencies for you. Jude <jdashiel at panix dot com> "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940) . On Fri, 26 Aug 2022, K0LNY_Glenn wrote: > I guess I alluded to this when asking for some lines to make a script, but > is there a .deb package for either or speakup or fenrir that would fetch > the > dependencies? > Or would I need to get an espeak-ng .deb file and a speech-dispatcher.deb > file too? > Thanks. > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jude DaShiell" <jdashiel@xxxxxxxxx> > To: "K0LNY_Glenn" <glenn@ervin.email>; "Gregory Nowak" <greg@xxxxxxxxx>; > <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Friday, August 26, 2022 7:12 PM > Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX > > > What happens if ufw --disable is run then the offending computer gets > rebooted? > > Jude <jdashiel at panix dot com> > "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: > soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." > -Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940) > > . > > On Fri, 26 Aug 2022, K0LNY_Glenn wrote: > > > I've considered that, and if I can get any port to open, I will gladly > > use > > telnet. > > Hell, if I could open all 1000 ports now, I would! > > Glenn > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Gregory Nowak" <greg@xxxxxxxxx> > > To: <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > Sent: Friday, August 26, 2022 7:01 PM > > Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX > > > > > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2022 at 02:06:13PM -0500, K0LNY_Glenn wrote: > > > On the antiX I did > > > sudo netcat -l 22 > > > and then on the pine 64, I did sudo nc 10.248.1.143 22 > > > and it does not seem to connect. > > > I wonder if it is because I am using 22 to get from my windows to the > > > Pine64, in order to go linux to linux. > > > > Port 22 is a privileged port. You should consider using 1024 or > > higher. If the listening port is open on the firewall, the commands > > you gave above should connect. If you type something on the client > > side, you should see it typed on the antiX machine, and the other way > > round. This will however not give you a login terminal. To do that, > > you need something that handles logins to listen on your netcat. This > > isn't something I've done, so can't give you more directions here. If > > you don't care about the connection being secure, which you don't seem > > to, you might as well try: > > > > apt install telnetd > > > > and open tcp 23 on your firewall. > > > > > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2022 at 04:12:28PM -0500, K0LNY_Glenn wrote: > > > Well I thought I'd try iptables again. > > > I finally got it to run without any errors, that long iptables command > > > I > > > got > > > earlier. > > > But nmap still sees no ports open on that host. > > > Prior to running iptables, I tried to apt install it, and the message > > > was > > > that I'm already running the latest. > > > So I needed to restart iptables with > > > sudo service iptables restart > > > and it can find no service iptables. > > > I retyped it several times to be sure there was no typos. > > > > This is to be expected, iptables is not a system service. > > > > > So I tried > > > sudo systemctl restart iptables > > > and the system cannot find systemctl > > > > Is antiX running sysvinit, openrc, or something else? This is > > something the antiX documentation should tell you. What does it use > > for PID1 or init? > > > > > question: > > > If I reboot, if the long iptables command worked, will it stick if I > > > reboot? > > > > No. > > > > > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2022 at 05:57:37PM -0500, K0LNY_Glenn wrote: > > > Well it seems ufw is there, but it must not be running automatically, > > > but > > > it > > > does not fix the port problem. > > > I did > > > sudo ufw allow ssh > > > it said tcp port allowed > > > or something like that > > > so I checked on the other computer with nmap > > > 100 ports closed > > > So I did sudo ufw restart > > > and the other computer said 999 ports filtered tcp port 22 closed. > > > I've done iptables too, but that does not stay after a reboot. > > > if I do sudo ufw status > > > it shows tcp port 22 allow > > > but it does not stay from a reboot. > > > > You need to save the firewall configuration once you changed it for it > > to persist across reboots. I haven't used ufw, so you will need to > > read up on how to do that. > > > > If port tcp 22 shows up as not filtered but closed, then the port is > > open, but there is no ssh service running. > > > > Greg > > > > > > > > >