Difference between revisions of "CopyPasta"

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= For doing basic setup of an LXC (or pretty much any Linux VM...): =
= For doing basic setup of an LXC (or pretty much any Linux VM...): =
I run this set of commands on nearly every new VM or LXC I spin up. That way, I have a consistant environment to work in with all the tools I rely on.


Note: You CAN copyPasta groups of commands all at once. BUT: in this case, everything indented (after <code>su - '''yourname'''</code>) needs to be pasted AFTER that command has run.
Note: You CAN copyPasta groups of commands all at once. BUT: in this case, everything indented (after <code>su - '''yourname'''</code>) needs to be pasted AFTER that command has run.
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* <code>mkdir bin</code>
* <code>mkdir bin</code>
* <code>source .bashrc</code>
* <code>source .bashrc</code>
 
* <code>apt -y install gnupg tmux htop <span style="color: rgb(22, 145, 121);">### Optional...</span></code>
* <code>apt -y install qemu-guest-agent <span style="color: rgb(22, 145, 121);">### Only on VMs. (Wish it worked for LXCs as well tho...)</span></code>
* <code>adduser '''yourname'''</code>
* <code>adduser '''yourname'''</code>
* <code>adduser '''yourname''' sudo</code>
* <code>adduser '''yourname''' sudo</code>
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= Useful console display for Proxmox Virtual Environment =
= Useful console display for Proxmox Virtual Environment =
I find it nice to have stats & such on the console of a server.  This way I can just look & see what's happening with the machine.


* <code>apt update</code>
* <code>apt update</code>
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Running <code>TMUX-console</code> at the console will create a formatted screen of useful system information that you can reach by attaching to the '''tmux''' session from a terminal (SSH) session.
Running <code>TMUX-console</code> at the console will create a formatted screen of useful system information that you can reach by attaching to the '''tmux''' session from a terminal (SSH) session.


= Installing Brave Browser =
= Simplified installation techniques & instructions =
Some cross-platform software seems to have Linux installation instructions written by people who have never actually used Linux.
 
(Or, at least, people who believe in making life difficult...)
 
So...


* <code>sudo apt install apt-transport-https curl </code>
* [[Installing Brave Browser]]
* <code>sudo curl -fsSLo /usr/share/keyrings/brave-browser-archive-keyring.gpg <nowiki>https://brave-browser-apt-release.s3.brave.com/brave-browser-archive-keyring.gpg </nowiki></code>
* [[Installing TP-Link Omada SDN Controller on a Debian-based LXC]]
* <code>echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/brave-browser-archive-keyring.gpg arch=amd64] <nowiki>https://brave-browser-apt-release.s3.brave.com/</nowiki> stable main"|sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/brave-browser-release.list </code>
Also, many installation instructions are long-winded or confusing...
* <code>sudo apt update </code>
* <code>sudo apt install brave-browser </code>


= Installing TP-Link Omada SDN Controller on a Debian-based LXC =
So...


(Debian 12, 2GB RAM, 4 cores)
* [[Installing Docker on a Debian-based system]]


* <code>sudo apt update && sudo apt install openjdk-17-jre-headless jsvc curl gnupg -y</code>
= Building/Installing things from source =
** <code>wget <nowiki>http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/o/openssl/libssl1.1_1.1.1-1ubuntu2.1~18.04.23_amd64.deb</nowiki></code>
You may have noticed that the various distro repositories tend to have outdated versions of some (most) packages. While this makes perfect sense, sometimes you want the newest features & fixes. (Or maybe you just want to enable something that the repo managers figured wouldn't be useful...)
** <code>sudo dpkg -i libssl1.1_1.1.1-1ubuntu2.1~18.04.23_amd64.deb</code>
* <code>curl -fsSL <nowiki>https://www.mongodb.org/static/pgp/server-4.4.asc</nowiki> | sudo apt-key add -</code>
* <code>echo "deb [ arch=amd64,arm64 ] <nowiki>https://repo.mongodb.org/apt/ubuntu</nowiki> focal/mongodb-org/4.4 multiverse" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/mongodb-org-4.4.list</code>
* <code>sudo apt update && sudo apt install mongodb-org</code>


* <code>sudo systemctl start mongod.service</code>
Annoyingly, it is rather common for build instructions to suck really badly.
* <code>sudo systemctl status mongod</code>
* <code>sudo systemctl enable mongod</code>


* <code>sudo wget <nowiki>https://static.tp-link.com/upload/software/2022/202203/20220322/Omada_SDN_Controller_v5.1.7_Linux_x64.tar.gz</nowiki></code>
So...
* <code>tar zxvf Omada_SDN_Controller_v5.1.7_Linux_x64.tar.gz</code>
* <code>cd Omada_SDN_Controller_v5.1.7_Linux_x64/</code>
* <code>sudo bash ./install.sh</code>


https://'''SERVERADDRESS''':8043/
* [[Arp-Scan from Source{{!}}Arp-Scan]]
* [[FreeCAD from Source{{!}}FreeCAD]]
* [[KiCAD from Source{{!}}KiCAD]]
* [[Mosquitto from Source{{!}}Mosquitto]]

Latest revision as of 15:23, 1 August 2024

For doing basic setup of an LXC (or pretty much any Linux VM...):

I run this set of commands on nearly every new VM or LXC I spin up. That way, I have a consistant environment to work in with all the tools I rely on.

Note: You CAN copyPasta groups of commands all at once. BUT: in this case, everything indented (after su - yourname) needs to be pasted AFTER that command has run.

  • apt update
  • apt -y upgrade
  • apt -y install sudo vim curl mosquitto-clients
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/RootStuff/DOT.bashrc -O .bashrc
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/RootStuff/DOT.vimrc -O .vimrc
  • mkdir bin
  • source .bashrc
  • apt -y install gnupg tmux htop ### Optional...
  • apt -y install qemu-guest-agent ### Only on VMs. (Wish it worked for LXCs as well tho...)
  • adduser yourname
  • adduser yourname sudo
  • su - yourname
    • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/UserStuff/DOT.bashrc -O .bashrc
    • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/UserStuff/DOT.vimrc -O .vimrc
    • mkdir bin
    • source .bashrc

Useful console display for Proxmox Virtual Environment

I find it nice to have stats & such on the console of a server. This way I can just look & see what's happening with the machine.

  • apt update
  • apt -y upgrade
  • apt -y install tmux htop
  • cd /usr/local/bin
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TMUX-console -O TMUX-console
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TM-guestlist -O TM-guestlist
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TM-clusterstatus -O TM-clusterstatus
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TM-systemstatus -O TM-systemstatus
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TM-UPSstatus -O TM-UPSstatus
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TM-FixThis -O TM-FixThis
  • wget https://www.nerdmage.ca/Downloads/PVEStuff/bin/TM-ShowMe -O TM-ShowMe
  • chmod +x TM*

You will need to edit TM-UPSstatus to match local configurations (i.e. UPS name).

Running TMUX-console at the console will create a formatted screen of useful system information that you can reach by attaching to the tmux session from a terminal (SSH) session.

Simplified installation techniques & instructions

Some cross-platform software seems to have Linux installation instructions written by people who have never actually used Linux.

(Or, at least, people who believe in making life difficult...)

So...

Also, many installation instructions are long-winded or confusing...

So...

Building/Installing things from source

You may have noticed that the various distro repositories tend to have outdated versions of some (most) packages. While this makes perfect sense, sometimes you want the newest features & fixes. (Or maybe you just want to enable something that the repo managers figured wouldn't be useful...)

Annoyingly, it is rather common for build instructions to suck really badly.

So...