Re: [gentoo-user] app-crypt/pinentry - major rework: "/usr/bin/pinentry-gtk-2" missing
On 2021-01-31 13:03, Ramon Fischer wrote: > The USE flag "gtk" was not removed: > >-IUSE="caps emacs gnome-keyring fltk gtk ncurses qt5" >+IUSE="caps emacs gnome-keyring gtk ncurses qt5" > > Since when is this obsolete and is there any alternative? I cannot comment directly on the obsolescence of pinentry-gtk2 (most certainly a decision upstream), but the alternative is pinentry-gnome3. The gtk flag was not removed because it now configures pinentry-gnome3 instead of -gtk2. You should be able to select that using 'eselect pinentry', but because of [1] you'll have to enable the gtk flag for app-crypt/gcr first and then rebuild app-crypt/pinentry. [1] https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767424 -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Nvidia GeForce GTX 960
Hi Silvio, I think the problem is that you have told portage to use both nouveau and nvidia as a driver for your card. If you have both drivers installed and do not blacklist one of them, the other will not work. > # modprobe nvidia > modprobe: ERROR: could not insert 'nvidia': No such device If nouveau takes control of the card first, for example, you will not be able to load the nvidia module anymore, just as it happens to you here. > # lspci | grep VGA > 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GM206 [GeForce GTX 960] > (rev a1) You can run 'lspci -k' to see which driver is in use for a PCI device. This will probably return 'nouveau' for you. You can also check lsmod for the 'nouveau' module. > # cat /etc/portage/make.conf | grep VIDEO > VIDEO_CARDS="nouveau nvidia" I'm assuming you want the proprietary driver, so change this to read the following and run 'emerge -c' to get rid of the superfluous driver: VIDEO_CARDS="nvidia" -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Upgrade to rsync-3.2.0-r1 results in "didn't get server startup line"
Hi Steve, On 2020-06-30 20:35, Steve Freeman wrote: > I have a local gentoo repo mirror that has been running well for > years. It is essentially the same setup as described at > https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Local_Mirror except that it runs on a > non-default port. I sadly cannot reproduce this on my systems with a similar setup. Could you attach the full rsyncd.conf file? Perhaps there's also custom settings in /etc/conf.d/rsyncd. > rsync: didn't get server startup line > [Receiver] _exit_cleanup(code=5, file=main.c, line=1777): entered > rsync error: error starting client-server protocol (code 5) at main.c(1777) > [Receiver=3.2.0] > [Receiver] _exit_cleanup(code=5, file=main.c, line=1777): about to call > exit(5) I've had a look in the code, and that particular message is only triggered in one place: if (!read_line_old(f_in, line, sizeof line, 0)) { rprintf(FERROR, "rsync: didn't get server startup line\n"); return -1; } read_line_old is described thusly: /* Read a line of up to bufsiz-1 characters into buf. Strips * the (required) trailing newline and all carriage returns. * Returns 1 for success; 0 for I/O error or truncation. */ int read_line_old(int fd, char *buf, size_t bufsiz, int eof_ok) > Running rsync as a non-daemon appears to work fine regardless of > server/client versions; it's only rsyncd that fails. > > With no useful logs or output, I'm finding this impossible to > diagnose. Does anyone have any ideas? I have no concrete ideas, but given that read_line_old seems to fail, maybe it's helpful checking out actual network traffic with wireshark or tcpdump. You could compare traffic between the working and the broken version. A simple capture filter of 'port 5873' should be enough. Since there really doesn't seem to be any better debug functionality (there's --debug, but it didn't really add anything for me), perhaps you could also build rsync with debug symbols and throw gdb at it. Finally, have you tried accessing the rsync endpoint manually without invoking 'emerge --sync'? Does the following also raise an error? rsync --port 5873 10.10.10.10:: If not, perhaps try syncing a single file manually. I also see that version 3.2.1 is in the tree now, could be worth a shot too. -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Bitwarden, anyone?
On 2020-06-16 12:05, Peter Humphrey wrote: > So I created a ~/.cache/bwtmp directory and passed TMPDIR= to > bitwarden, but then it threw another error. I'd better take this up > with BitWarden. I just tried getting it to work again. If this is anything like on my system, once the noexec problem is fixed, the app fails here because it doesn't find libsecret. I'm not sure why this is not bundled in the AppImage, but emerging app-crypt/libsecret fixes this for me, and I can run the app without any further issues. I might have other libs it depends on installed already, so I can't say for sure without looking at the error message. Hope that helps. -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Bitwarden, anyone?
On 2020-06-14 23:20, Peter Humphrey wrote: > On Sunday, 14 June 2020 19:06:36 BST Wynn Wolf Arbor wrote: > > That was a good idea - but it didn't help, so that's not the answer. If you're still interested in debugging this, did the error message stay the same? At least the path "/tmp/.org.chromium.Chromium.QkN0cP" should have change to indicate the new TMPDIR. It should also have created files there. > Yes, I understand that. Oh, sorry if I misunderstood something then. I had assumed that you thought Java was needed for the Bitwarden app. There's no indication on the site that it is (though then again it also doesn't say that it is an Electron app), so I thought the confusion came from "JavaScript" in the error message. Good to hear that the bitwarden-cli app works for you. -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Bitwarden, anyone?
On 2020-06-14 18:45, Peter Humphrey wrote: > Yes; this is what I get: > > $ ./Bitwarden*/opt/Bitwarden/bitwarden > A JavaScript error occurred in the main process > Uncaught Exception: > Error: /tmp/.org.chromium.Chromium.QkN0cP: failed to map segment from shared > object > --->8 >From what I remember this is caused by having /tmp mounted with noexec. Sadly the app tries to execute a process directly from within the temporary directory and fails. Try something like this to confirm: mkdir $HOME/.cache/bitwarden-tmp TMPDIR=$HOME/.cache/bitwarden-tmp ./Bitwarden*/opt/Bitwarden/bitwarden To see whether you've mounted /tmp with noexec: mount | grep /tmp Should give something like this: tmpfs on /tmp type tmpfs (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime) Note that having /tmp mounted with noexec is usually a good idea. I used to create a wrapper script that launched these kinds of app with a special TMPDIR. > I haven't played with java before, so I'm trying to follow the gentoo > wiki. My first question is whether I need a jdk as well as a jre. The > wiki talks blithely about virtual machines, and I'm left to guess > whether the jre is the jvm, as it seems. I'm currently installing > openjre and openjdk; icedtea-bin is also installed. The JRE is the Runtime Environment. It includes all things necessary to run a compiled Java program (so it does indeed include the JVM). The JDK is the Development Kit - it includes the JRE, but also ships with the javac compiler and a few other tools. So, if you intend to just run an already compiled Java program (usually in the form of a .jar), you just need the JRE. If you need to compile Java programs, you should instead install the JDK (and can remove the JRE fully). Regardless of that, JavaScript is not Java [1]. There's no need for the JRE if you want to run JavaScript code. The Bitwarden desktop app does not need a JRE or JDK. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript#Java -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Bitwarden, anyone?
Hi Peter, On 2020-06-14 12:43, Peter Humphrey wrote: > Afternoon all, > > Has anyone some experience of bitwarden on Gentoo? It doesn't run for > me, and I suspect a java problem. I have icedtea here. > > I'm talking about the installed version, not the firefox extension, > which seems to work. Which installed version are you talking about? I don't see the Bitwarden desktop or command line app in the tree - I guess you downloaded one from their site? I used to run the desktop app myself, and am pretty sure it does not require a Java runtime. If you use the AppImage version, there might be certain libs missing (tested it out just now, and it fails to start because it cannot find libsecret). Have you tried running it from the command line to see what it says? -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Nvidia driver plus kernel info questions
Hi, I'm currently using the 390 slot since when I installed that card, that is what it showed. I'm almost 100% certain I checked this when installing this card. My question is, is it normal for nvidia to change the series of drivers for cards like this? A driver series is not necessarily bound to a specific card, so it is normal to see newer driver series supporting older devices. I'd assume that 390 was the current stable series back when you checked it. The current series is 440. For the current series, you also have drivers separated into a "long-lived" and a "short-lived" branch - as far as I know that only marks how long a driver receives official support, but don't quote me on that. The most recent driver is 440.82 in the long-lived branch. You can find a list of all Unix drivers at [1] without having to fill out any forms. Then there's also the legacy driver series specifically for devices that the current driver no longer supports. A GTX 480 card, for example, would need the 390 series. There's a list at [2] and more info about support timeframes at [3]. According to that the 440 series supports the 5.6 series of kernel. It doesn't indicate a specific version tho. Does that mean I can go to the very latest version or do I need to look elsewhere to see what is supported? In this case you can go with the very latest release, yes. Any future 440.* driver will work for you. Once a new series is released (I don't know how frequent that is) you might want to check whether your card still supports that, however. Hope this helped clear up the confusion. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/drivers/unix/ [2] https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/drivers/unix/legacy-gpu/ [3] https://nvidia.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3142 -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Trouble with backup harddisks
On 2020-05-01 09:18, tu...@posteo.de wrote: A very *#BIG THANK YOU#* for all the great help, the research and the solution. I myself am back in "normal mode" :) Glad it helped! One thing remains... I want to prevent this kind of hassle in the future... ;) The most important thing to keep in mind here is to _always_ partition and format a drive yourself. That way, you know what is on there and how it was partitioned. Perhaps it is a good idea to re-partitions the disk to get rid of any bogus bit, format the partition and copy back the data then. Whilst you can definitely just change the partition type from EE to 83, now that you can move the data around safely, I'd probably repartition the drives fully, yeah. What is the most reasonable setup here: GPT without any hybrid magic and ext4 because it is so common? Any other, possible more robust configuration, which is also common with rescue tools and -distributions? For external backup disks like these I'd go with GPT and ext4. Seems to be the most robust configuration for that use case. If by "hybrid magic" you mean the Protective MBR, that is not something you can simply disable. The standard includes the Protective MBR, and tools adhere to that. Bottom line: Repartition the disks with GPT, then create the necessary file systems. Don't turn on any special knobs, the tool's defaults are all decent. -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Trouble with backup harddisks
On 2020-04-30 22:21, Andrea Conti wrote: It won't, as long as it recognizes it as a protective MBR. Which is the right thing to do, as a disk with a protective MBR and no valid GPT is inherently broken. True. It was more my intention to depict what the system "should" do in order to access the file system. ... or just bypass the partition table altogether. The filesystem starts at sector 1, i.e. 1*512B, so: mount -o ro,offset=512 /dev/sdb /mnt/xxx Interesting, thanks. I was initially considering something like this myself, but after a cursory check of the manual, I was under the assumption that 'offset' was only valid with loop devices and dismissed that solution. Turns out if you mount a drive like this, the kernel uses a loop device in the background and you can use the 'offset' option with block devices as well. I feel the documentation could be improved here. -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Trouble with backup harddisks
Hi Meino, On 2020-04-30 21:46, tu...@posteo.de wrote: I had booted into my old system, attached the disks and both show the same behaviour: Only the device itself (/dev/sdb) was recognized. Now that is very curious. Just to make sure, the old system definitely does not understand GPT? CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION should be unset. 'file' shows the following output: file sdb-data sdb-data: Linux rev 1.0 ext4 filesystem data, UUID=2f063705-0d3a-4790-9203-1b4edab7788c (extents) (64bit) (large files) (huge files) Looks better than I have thought...or? This does indeed look promising (and is what I expected in the best case). Now, of course, the problem is figuring out how to get to that data. I will take a deeper look tommorrow...I am too tired to "fix partition tables manually" this evening! Read you tommorrow! :) Hope the rest of your evening will be more relaxing! -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Trouble with backup harddisks
All the following assuming that the disk was originally partitioned as GPT, but after that exclusively accessed as an MBR disk. PT fdisk (gdisk) version 1.0.5 Caution: invalid main GPT header, but valid backup; regenerating main header from backup! This makes sense since the GPT backup at the very end of the disk would most likely still be intact. gdisk identifies it correctly, but assumes (wrongly) that the data on the disk is governed by the GPT layout. Since the disk was only ever accessed through an operating system that knew solely about MBR, the GPT data meant nothing to it. It happily wrote data past the MBR headers. Because the protective MBR is positioned before GPT information, the primary GPT header was destroyed and most likely overwritten with the file system. See also [1], the actual file system data probably begins somewhere past LBA 0. Caution! After loading partitions, the CRC doesn't check out! Warning: Invalid CRC on main header data; loaded backup partition table. Warning! Main and backup partition tables differ! Use the 'c' and 'e' options on the recovery & transformation menu to examine the two tables. This is because the backup GPT written when first partitioned does no longer match the data present at the very beginning of the disk. If the initial assumption is correct, GPT *must not* be restored. Your modern PC sees the GPT partition type and assumes the existence of a GPT. It should, however, access the MBR layout and interpret the partition marked with the GPT ID as a regular partition. Now, how to fix this? Like Andrea already said earlier: Since the disk is only 1TB, there is no reason to use GPT at all, so your best bet is to use fdisk to make that a standard MBR by changing the partition type from 'ee' to '83'. This would *not* repartition or reformat any data, it would simply tell your modern operating system to access the protective partition as a regular one. It would, however, require writing the new type to disk. What you could do to be more safe here is to take a backup of the first 512 bytes with `dd', then change the partition ID with `fdisk', and try mounting it. If it works, great. If not, you can restore the first 512 bytes of the disk with the backup. "fix manually" scares me...especially because I have no place for 1TB of an image file to with which I can experiment ... Any ideas which could ease my burden and to un-scare my "need to fix it manually" ??? ;) ;) There's a few alternatives: 1) Boot an older system that only understands MBR, and mount the disk there. This was suggested earlier but was dismissed because we assumed the sector size had something to do with it. I do not think this is the case anymore - the old system should be able to read it. 2) Boot a VM with a kernel that only understands MBR, pass USB through to the virtual machine, mount the disk there. 3) Try confirming that there exists file system data past the MBR header. Maybe something like this: # dd if=/dev/sdb of=sdb-data bs=512 skip=1 count=16384 $ file sdb-data As established, the block size is 512 bytes. We skip the first 512 bytes since that is the protective MBR. sdb-data should then contain the first 8MiB worth of actual file system data. The `file' utility can tell you what kind of data it is. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table#/media/File:GUID_Partition_Table_Scheme.svg -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Trouble with backup harddisks
Hi Meino, Thanks very much for the info. At this point I'm convinced you're running into the problem Andrea described in another reply in this thread - best to follow up there :) -- Wolf
Re: [gentoo-user] Trouble with backup harddisks
Hi, On 2020-04-30 13:17, Wols Lists wrote: All I can suggest is to check the kernel and see if it's an option that has been disabled (512-byte sectors, that is). As far as I know the kernel still uses 512 bytes internally [1], and I do not recall having seen an option that enables or disables support for 512/4K sectors. That said, the problem may well be stemming from a sector size discrepancy, but as I understand it, it would have to do with how and when the partition table was created. That is, like described in [2], some USB enclosures seem to be a bit overzealous with obscure features, and might take eight disk sectors and bundle them together into one 4K sector. If the disk was partitioned in the exact same enclosure, and is read from the exact same enclosure right now, there shouldn't be any problems. Is this the case, Meino? Also, when did you last access the drives successfully, and with which system? On 2020-04-30 11:32, Meino wrote: Disk /dev/sdb: 931.49 GiB, 1000170586112 bytes, 1953458176 sectors Disk model: Elements 25A2 Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Disklabel type: dos Disk identifier: 0x16f2a91f Device Boot StartEndSectors Size Id Type /dev/sdb1 1 1953458175 1953458175 931.5G ee GPT Interestingly, this reads *exactly* like the Protective MBR [3] that GPT has. That is, the disklabel type is DOS whilst the partition ID is EE. There's a single partition that spans the entire drive (and it's also seemingly not aligned properly - usually you see Start at 2048). As a comparison, here's the output from fdisk for the Protective MBR from one of my GPT drives: Disklabel type: dos Disk identifier: 0x Device Boot StartEndSectors Size Id Type /dev/sdc1 1 4294967295 4294967295 2T ee GPT I'd assume that the missing disk identifier here is coming from different tools writing the protective MBR differently. With that said, are you absolutely certain that you did not partition this drive with GPT instead of MBR? Did you do the partitioning in something like fdisk (which asks you specifically what you want), or some other application? Did you maybe format this drive on a Windows system? I'm not one to discount entirely strange things happening, but I have never before seen a proper MBR laid out like a protective MBR. Indeed it would be quite impossible to have systems access data through such a table, since the partitions are hidden within that one huge contiguous block. Ordinarily I'd point to fdisk not reading the partition table properly, but it seems that although your kernel has support for GPT, it doesn't seem to see the partitions either (assuming a proper GPT exists at all). Do you have some other GPT drives you can access successfully? I'd say that this requires some more forensic work. Perhaps extracting the first few megabytes of the disk and seeing whether there's a proper GPT or not. This would of course require manual work. A few more things to try: To see what the kernel uses for a particular disk, you can run the following: cat /sys/block/sdb/queue/{physical,logical}_block_size fdisk takes a sector size with -b, --sector-size (should be non-destructive as long as you don't write anything, but I am not sure). Also, fdisk has a compatibility mode for dos with -c=dos. Might be worth a short. fdisk should support GPT starting with util-linux 2.23, but you can also try gptfdisk (it's in the tree). Hope this helps. [1] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/include/linux/types.h#L120 [2] https://superuser.com/questions/679725/how-to-correct-512-byte-sector-mbr-on-a-4096-byte-sector-disk/679800#679800 [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table#PROTECTIVE-MBR -- Wolf