On Monday, 8 June 2020 12:39:54 BST Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> > I think that anyone wanting to install wireguard on a Pi at the moment
> > is probably better off waiting until it makes its way into the
> > mainstream repository.
>
> https://www.wireguard.com/compilation/ looks easy. ;-)
Hurrumph !
Hi Terry,
> I've just created a brand new, clean installation of Raspberry Pi OS
> four more times. Apart from changing the password, hostname and
> enabling I2C and SSH in each case, I've done nothing more than run
> through the tutorial at
> https://www.electromaker.io/tutorial/blog/raspberry-p
Hi,
Fifth attempt to install VPN
So after yesterday's debacle, I've just created a brand new, clean
installation of Raspberry Pi OS four more times. Apart from changing the
password, hostname and enabling I2C and SSH in each case, I've done nothing
more than run through the tutorial at ht
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 17:41:10 BST PeterMerchant wrote:
> I think that I have only used this once, with no adverse effects. I usually
> use 'sudo apt-get update'.
>
> Is this different?
Yes. What you use is the right command. The command sudo rpi-update is now
out of date and only to be used
Oh, found the cause.
https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/raspbian/applications/rpi-update.md
rpi-update is a command line application that will update your
Raspberry Pi OS kernel and VideoCore firmware to the latest
pre-release versions.
WARNING: Pre-release ve
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 17:02:45 BST Keith Edmunds wrote:
> It's in the Buster backports repo on Debian:
>
> $ apt policy wireguard
> wireguard:
> Installed: (none)
> Candidate: 1.0.20200513-1~bpo10+1
> Version table:
> 1.0.20200513-1~bpo10+1 100
> 100 http://mirror.bytemark.co.u
On Sun, 07 Jun 2020 16:38:30 +0100, d-...@hadrian-way.co.uk said:
> If you want Wireguard then you'll have to manually install it.
It's in the Buster backports repo on Debian:
$ apt policy wireguard
wireguard:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 1.0.20200513-1~bpo10+1
Version table:
1.0.2020
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 16:19:57 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> > Yes, I'd pursue fixing that rather than adding Debian Unstable.
>
> I'll post a query on the Raspberry Pi Forums.
Here's the answer from the Forum:
You're seeing it in the repo because Wireguard will be part of Debian Bullseye
which is
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 16:13:43 BST Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Another site with cut-and-paste instructions!
> Unless you think they have high pedigree, e.g. it's the official line
> from the Raspberry Pi Foundation, don't use them.
Lesson learned.
> Start with a fresh install.
I did. Unfortunatel
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 16:10:36 BST Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Not found, it hasn't heard of the package, or not found, it's heard of
> it but has problems installing it?
Not found.
> Yes, I'd pursue fixing that rather than adding Debian Unstable.
I'll post a query on the Raspberry Pi Forums.
It m
Hi Terry,
> > > Perhaps downgrading back to v4.9.x will help?
> >
> > How do I do that? All I've found so far are pages which ask that question
> > and the responses say 'why on earth do you want to do that?' No-one ever
> > actually seems to answer the original question.
>
> I've just found a
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 15:39:13 BST Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty wrote:
> Perhaps downgrading back to v4.9.x will help?
It didn't I'm afraid. It looks like another clean install is needed ;-(
I won't do the firmware update this time.
--
Terry Coles
--
Next meeting: Onlin
Hi Terry,
> > AFAICS Raspbian ships WireGuard already packaged which I would use
> > instead of adding a Debian Unstable package as that tutorial
> > suggests.
>
> I did try to install using apt before I ran through that tutorial, but
> got a 'not found'.
Not found, it hasn't heard of the package
On 07/06/2020 15:52, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Sunday, 7 June 2020 15:48:45 BST Terry Coles wrote:
>>> Perhaps downgrading back to v4.9.x will help?
>> How do I do that? All I've found so far are pages which ask that question
>> and the responses say 'why on earth do you want to do that?' No-one ev
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 15:48:45 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> > Perhaps downgrading back to v4.9.x will help?
>
> How do I do that? All I've found so far are pages which ask that question
> and the responses say 'why on earth do you want to do that?' No-one ever
> actually seems to answer the origina
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 15:39:13 BST Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty wrote:
> Please note that running rpi-update just as a matter of due course isn't
> recommended any more, as it installs development/experimental updates
> (https://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/4355/do-i-still-need-rpi-up
> date-
On 07/06/2020 15:31, Terry Coles wrote:
> The default installation of Raspberry Pi OS installs kernel 4.9. I
> subsequently did sudo apt full-upgrade and sudo rpi-update to upgrade the
> firmware and that got me to 5.4. The tutorial then downloads the linux
> headers, which ultimately (allege
On Sunday, 7 June 2020 15:12:01 BST Ralph Corderoy wrote:
Ralph,
> AFAICS Raspbian ships WireGuard already packaged which I would use
> instead of adding a Debian Unstable package as that tutorial suggests.
I did try to install using apt before I ran through that tutorial, but got a
'not found'.
Hi Terry,
> I built a new SD Card with nothing but the latest Raspberry Pi
> OS installed and basic configuration completed.
>
> I then attempted to follow the tutorial at the bottom of the page at
> https://www.electromaker.io/tutorial/blog/raspberry-pi-vpn-server
AFAICS Raspbian ships WireGua
Hi,
Following on from our earlier discussions about creating macvlan links and VPN
in general; I've made some progress but also hit a new snag.
So macvlan first. I've successfully managed to make macvlan links using the
code on the Raspberry Pi Forum. However, by then, I'd got interested in u
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