Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-11 Thread p...@ymail.ne.jp
Richard Hector wrote: Thunderbird? Works on Debian as well, so you can keep using it when you upgrade  second on thunderbird. where you can quote the specified messages and reply. regards Yong

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-11 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2023-03-11 10:22:15 +0900, John Crawley wrote: > On 11/03/2023 00:29, Vincent Lefevre wrote: > > Moreover, the above path > >/usr/lib/systemd/system/rc-local.service.d/debian.conf > > is incorrect. This should be > >/lib/systemd/system/rc-local.service.d/debian.conf > > On recent

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-11 Thread Richard Hector
On 10/03/23 15:16, Corey Hickman wrote: On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 9:44 AM > wrote: I'm much happier with a "real" email client. what real email client do you use? :) I am using Mac as the regular desktop, Mac's Mail App is hard to use. Though my server is

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread David Wright
On Fri 10 Mar 2023 at 23:21:57 (-0500), Greg Wooledge wrote: > On Sat, Mar 11, 2023 at 10:20:04AM +0800, cor...@free.fr wrote: > > Is rc.local a regular service? I was thinking it's just a shell script run > > by systemd. > > rc-local.service is a systemd service. It's enabled by default. > >

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Sat, Mar 11, 2023 at 10:20:04AM +0800, cor...@free.fr wrote: > Is rc.local a regular service? I was thinking it's just a shell script run > by systemd. rc-local.service is a systemd service. It's enabled by default. /etc/rc.local is the program that it will execute, if you create it and make

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread davidson
On Fri, 10 Mar 2023 David Wright wrote: On Fri 10 Mar 2023 at 18:47:02 (+0100), Vincent Lefevre wrote: On 2023-03-10 18:00:41 +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote: Am Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:29:34PM +0100 schrieb Vincent Lefevre: On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: On Fri, Mar 10,

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread coreyh
On 11/03/2023 10:04, David Wright wrote: On Fri 10 Mar 2023 at 18:47:02 (+0100), Vincent Lefevre wrote: On 2023-03-10 18:00:41 +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote: > Am Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:29:34PM +0100 schrieb Vincent Lefevre: > > On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > > On

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread David Wright
On Fri 10 Mar 2023 at 18:47:02 (+0100), Vincent Lefevre wrote: > On 2023-03-10 18:00:41 +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote: > > Am Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:29:34PM +0100 schrieb Vincent Lefevre: > > > On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > > > On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200,

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread John Crawley
On 11/03/2023 00:29, Vincent Lefevre wrote: On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote: Nicolas George writes: Anssi Saari (12023-03-09): After=network.target # /usr/lib/systemd/system/rc-local.service.d/debian.conf [Unit]

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2023-03-10 18:00:41 +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote: > Am Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:29:34PM +0100 schrieb Vincent Lefevre: > > Bonjour Vincent, > > > On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > > On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote: > > > > Nicolas George

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread Christoph Brinkhaus
Am Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:29:34PM +0100 schrieb Vincent Lefevre: Bonjour Vincent, > On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote: > > > Nicolas George writes: [snip - almost everything] > > The man pages are most likely

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: > On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote: > > Nicolas George writes: > > > > > Anssi Saari (12023-03-09): > > >> Perhaps a note, since today in Debian by default it's systemd which runs > > >> /etc/rc.local. There's no

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote: > Nicolas George writes: > > > Anssi Saari (12023-03-09): > >> Perhaps a note, since today in Debian by default it's systemd which runs > >> /etc/rc.local. There's no guarantee it's done last like there was in SysV > >> init since

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-10 Thread Anssi Saari
Nicolas George writes: > Anssi Saari (12023-03-09): >> Perhaps a note, since today in Debian by default it's systemd which runs >> /etc/rc.local. There's no guarantee it's done last like there was in SysV >> init since systemd runs stuff in parallel. Network availability also >> isn't

Re: KMail3 (was: question about rc.local)

2023-03-09 Thread Felix Miata
rhkramer@... composed on 2023-03-09 23:24 (UTC-0500): > I use kmail, the version that comes with kde3. I don't know if there is a > way to use that on a Mac. My Mac has TDE, the KDE3 fork of over a dozen years ago, which does provide KMail, but I don't do mail on it, or KMail on anything. --

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Charles Curley
On Thu, 9 Mar 2023 20:44:43 -0500 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote: > (1) I rarely use the gmail webmail client, but (2) when I do, it is > not easy to bottom post, from memory, what I do is click on the place > near the bottom of a message that inserts the previous message (or, > at least shows it),

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread rhkramer
On Thursday, March 09, 2023 09:16:18 PM Corey Hickman wrote: > On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 9:44 AM wrote: > > I'm much happier with a "real" email client. > > what real email client do you use? :) > I am using Mac as the regular desktop, Mac's Mail App is hard to use. > Though my server is debian

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Corey Hickman
On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 9:44 AM wrote: > > > I'm much happier with a "real" email client. > > > what real email client do you use? :) I am using Mac as the regular desktop, Mac's Mail App is hard to use. Though my server is debian system.

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2023-03-10 09:05:24 +0800, Corey Hickman wrote: > I found debian 11 doesn't need to change /etc/default/rsync for rsync > daemon starting. > But ubuntu 22.04 should have to edit that. > Where can I check the startup mech for these two systems? As said in Greg's message: systemctl cat

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread rhkramer
On Thursday, March 09, 2023 08:05:24 PM Corey Hickman wrote: > Thanks > (btw, gmail does use top-posting by default, I don't know where to change > it.) (1) I rarely use the gmail webmail client, but (2) when I do, it is not easy to bottom post, from memory, what I do is click on the place near

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Corey Hickman
Hello, I found debian 11 doesn't need to change /etc/default/rsync for rsync daemon starting. But ubuntu 22.04 should have to edit that. Where can I check the startup mech for these two systems? Thanks (btw, gmail does use top-posting by default, I don't know where to change it.) On Fri, Mar

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Thu, Mar 09, 2023 at 05:54:40PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote: > Michel Verdier (12023-03-09): > > systemd launch init.d > > No. Check. For the record: unicorn:~$ systemctl cat rsync.service # /lib/systemd/system/rsync.service [Unit] Description=fast remote file copy program daemon

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Michel Verdier
Le 9 mars 2023 Vincent Lefevre a écrit : > Really? > > /etc/default/rsync says: > > # This file is only used for init.d based systems! > # If this system uses systemd, you can specify options etc. for rsync > # in daemon mode by copying /lib/systemd/system/rsync.service to > #

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Nicolas George
Michel Verdier (12023-03-09): > systemd launch init.d No. Check. -- Nicolas George signature.asc Description: PGP signature

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Michel Verdier
Le 9 mars 2023 Vincent Lefevre a écrit : > Really? > > /etc/default/rsync says: > > # This file is only used for init.d based systems! > # If this system uses systemd, you can specify options etc. for rsync > # in daemon mode by copying /lib/systemd/system/rsync.service to > #

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Vincent Lefevre
On 2023-03-09 17:22:01 +0100, Michel Verdier wrote: > Le 9 mars 2023 Greg Wooledge a écrit : > > > So... apparently this service is enabled by default (I didn't touch it), > > and simply needs one to create an /etc/rsyncd.conf file in order to make > > it work upon the next boot. > > > > If you

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Michel Verdier
Le 9 mars 2023 Greg Wooledge a écrit : > So... apparently this service is enabled by default (I didn't touch it), > and simply needs one to create an /etc/rsyncd.conf file in order to make > it work upon the next boot. > > If you don't want to reboot, then you may need to do a > "systemctl start

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Thu, Mar 09, 2023 at 02:35:55PM +0100, Markus Schönhaber wrote: > 09.03.23, 14:16 +0100, cor...@free.fr: > > What’s the right way to run rsync —daemon then? Thanks > > "The right way" is what woks best for you, I suppose. > > But since Debian's rsync package installs a systemd service unit,

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Nicolas George
Charles Curley (12023-03-09): > Why do you want to? Normally starting rsync on the client will start it > up on the server. No special action on the server is required. That is true for rsync over ssh if the client has a shell account on the server. It is not the only mode for rsync. Regards,

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Charles Curley
On Thu, 09 Mar 2023 21:16:02 +0800 cor...@free.fr wrote: > What’s the right way to run rsync —daemon then? Thanks Why do you want to? Normally starting rsync on the client will start it up on the server. No special action on the server is required. -- Does anybody read signatures any more?

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Markus Schönhaber
09.03.23, 14:16 +0100, cor...@free.fr: Please don't top-post. What’s the right way to run rsync —daemon then? Thanks "The right way" is what woks best for you, I suppose. But since Debian's rsync package installs a systemd service unit, it might be easiest to simply use that. -- Regards

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Nicolas George
cor...@free.fr (12023-03-09): > What’s the right way to run rsync —daemon then? Thanks Please do not top-post. If you do not know what it means, look it up. Same answer as my first mail: it depends on your personal definition of “right way”. Note that on top of the many possibilities to start a

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Nicolas George
Anssi Saari (12023-03-09): > Perhaps a note, since today in Debian by default it's systemd which runs > /etc/rc.local. There's no guarantee it's done last like there was in SysV > init since systemd runs stuff in parallel. Network availability also > isn't guaranteed. See man

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread coreyh
What’s the right way to run rsync —daemon then? Thanks On 09/03/2023 21:02, Greg Wooledge wrote: On Thu, Mar 09, 2023 at 01:32:54PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote: Corey Hickman (12023-03-09): > does debian 11 still use /etc/rc.local for startups after rebooting? No, Debian does not use it. It

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Anssi Saari
Corey Hickman writes: > does debian 11 still use /etc/rc.local for startups after rebooting? > > for instance, I want to start a process after system rebooting, where should > I put the command? Perhaps a note, since today in Debian by default it's systemd which runs /etc/rc.local. There's no

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Thu, Mar 09, 2023 at 01:32:54PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote: > Corey Hickman (12023-03-09): > > does debian 11 still use /etc/rc.local for startups after rebooting? > > No, Debian does not use it. It lets you use it if you so want. For the record, if you *do* want to use it, you'll have to

Re: question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Nicolas George
Corey Hickman (12023-03-09): > does debian 11 still use /etc/rc.local for startups after rebooting? No, Debian does not use it. It lets you use it if you so want. > for instance, I want to start a process after system rebooting, where > should I put the command? SHOULD? It depend how cleanly

question about rc.local

2023-03-09 Thread Corey Hickman
does debian 11 still use /etc/rc.local for startups after rebooting? for instance, I want to start a process after system rebooting, where should I put the command? thanks & regards, Corey H