No I mean unix passwords are not known. Servers are not running by default.
No open door that I know, no obvious way to get hacked easily.
Not even me remember built in passwords. VM starts to desktop, so you can
change unix passwords and start sage notebook/server with physical access,
which wa
You mean the notebook password? I'm more worried about the unix user/root
password in the VM. They can of course be changed with physical access but
not in a particularly user-friendly way ;-)
On Tuesday, September 2, 2014 3:48:04 PM UTC+1, Emil Widmann wrote:
>
> I used bridged network, becau
I used bridged network, because I preconfigured a small sage server.
Passwords are not known, but can be reset in the VM.
Am Dienstag, 2. September 2014 13:42:20 UTC schrieb Volker Braun:
>
> That depends on whether the virtualbox networking is set to NAT or bridged
> mode.
>
> I'm strongly in f
That depends on whether the virtualbox networking is set to NAT or bridged
mode.
I'm strongly in favor of NAT as default when providing a VM with known
password(s). Of course we could have a UI that locally asks for passwords
and then changes them in the VM before making it available on the net
Does that show the IP from the point of view of the guest, or from the host?
If the ports are correctly forwarded, localhost or 127.0.0.1 should work.
El martes, 2 de septiembre de 2014 11:41:16 UTC+2, Emil Widmann escribió:
>
> Thanks for that line, looks promising! - you sure know your Vbox
>
Thanks for that line, looks promising! - you sure know your Vbox
commandline options. I am going to give that a try.
cheers
emil
Am Dienstag, 2. September 2014 08:33:08 UTC+2 schrieb Jori Mantysalo:
>
> On Mon, 1 Sep 2014, Emil Widmann wrote:
>
> > Sure, more work is needed.
>
> > I just i
On Mon, 1 Sep 2014, Emil Widmann wrote:
Sure, more work is needed.
I just included the vanilla vbox installer and thought some verbosity might
be good for a prototype (back in 2011).
I have a different setup of the network, so localhost:8080 may not work.
If virtual machine has additions in
Sure, more work is needed. Thanks for interest, testing and feedback,
especially to your wife!
I just included the vanilla vbox installer and thought some verbosity might
be good for a prototype (back in 2011).
I have a different setup of the network, so localhost:8080 may not work.
If you start