On Thursday 27 August 2020 09:38:08 am William Morder via trinity-users wrote: > Okay guys, so I am stumped and confuzzled. > > I just did an upgrade to Devuan Beowulf (= Debian Buster), and everything > went fine; except once up and running, I couldn't download more than a few > of Trinity's packages. > > After trying different repositories, and playing with my sources list, I > managed to do just a bit better, then I saved the day with some extreme > voodoo using about config (scrolling through the manpages to find something > that work). I ended up getting enough the Trinity packages to download by > using --ignore-hold and dselect-upgrade options. I even searched out the > links to deb packages on the developers' repositories, and downloaded them > with wget, so that I could try forcing install using dpkg. > > Now at least (at last) I do have a working system which is a reasonable > facsimile of my previous one, but it does seem like it ought to have been > easier. For about the past three days now, I've lived in the command-line. > > Also I would like recommendations for a firewall that displays active > connections and rules, etc., like the old Firestarter used to do. I catch > all kinds of problems by noticing activity on my firewall, but now I cannot > seem to find one that displays active connections, and Firestarter can no > longer be hacked to make it work on a newer system. Hi Bill, Ah, yeah, something’s wrong with Devuan Beowulf then? Maybe a bad base install? I installed MX19 (Debian Buster) a month ago and had zero problems installing TDE on it (other than my own typo’s). For various testing I’ve installed it to two machines about 6 to 8 times since. > Also I would like recommendations for a firewall that displays active > connections and rules The firewall I’m using is this (which does both of those): michael@local [~]# aptitude show gufw Package: gufw Version: 18.10.0-1 State: installed Automatically installed: no Priority: optional Section: admin Maintainer: Python Applications Packaging Team <python-apps-team@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Architecture: all Uncompressed Size: 3,534 k Depends: gir1.2-gtk-3.0, gir1.2-webkit2-4.0, policykit-1, python3-gi, ufw (>= 0.34~rc), python3:any Description: graphical user interface for ufw gufw is an easy and intuitive way to manage your Linux firewall. It supports common tasks such as allowing or blocking pre-configured, common p2p, or individual port(s), and many others! Homepage: https://gufw.org/ Tags: admin::configuring, implemented-in::python, interface::graphical, interface::x11, network::firewall, role::program, scope::utility, security::firewall, uitoolkit::gtk, use::configuring, x11::application active connections> Report tab rules > Rules tab It came included in MX (guessing it’s standard Buster). ufw (backend of gufw) does seem to spam your log files though with with [UFW BLOCK] and [UFW AUDIT] entries*, so I eventually turned ufw logging off. In: Edit, Preferences HTH!, Michael * Filled a 50GB root partition in 30 days. https://forum.mxlinux.org/viewtopic.php?f=108&t=60085 --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list messages on the web archive: http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not to top-post: http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting