Find the proper driver at the NVidia website.
Note: Make sure to select "Linux 64-bit" as your OS
Hit the "Search" button.
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
SOURCE=${BASH_SOURCE[0]} | |
while [ -L "$SOURCE" ]; do # resolve $SOURCE until the file is no longer a symlink | |
DIR=$( cd -P "$( dirname "$SOURCE" )" >/dev/null 2>&1 && pwd ) | |
SOURCE=$(readlink "$SOURCE") | |
[[ $SOURCE != /* ]] && SOURCE=$DIR/$SOURCE # if $SOURCE was a relative symlink, we need to resolve it relative to the path where the symlink file was located | |
done | |
DIR=$( cd -P "$( dirname "$SOURCE" )" >/dev/null 2>&1 && pwd ) |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
export INFO_ENABLED=true | |
export DEBUG_ENABLED=true | |
export TMP_DIR="/tmp/commander" | |
if [[ -d "${TMP_DIR}" ]]; then | |
rm -rf "${TMP_DIR}" | |
fi | |
mkdir -p "${TMP_DIR}" |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
export LANG_VAR_NOT_SET="Variable {var} is not set." | |
export LANG_FROM_TYPE_NOT_RECOGNIZED="from type {type} not recognized." |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51653450/show-call-stack-in-bash | |
stacktrace () { | |
local i=1 line file func | |
while read -r line func file < <(caller ${i}); do | |
echo >&2 "[${i}] ${file}:${line} ${func}()" | |
echo >&2 ">>> $(sed -n "${line}"p "${file}")" | |
((i++)) | |
done |
ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIKCrHoDSGJ1dj9QMj9AysdHAQhmNnNgah5IgTSOT74Ym eddsa-key-20221010 |
Find the proper driver at the NVidia website.
Note: Make sure to select "Linux 64-bit" as your OS
Hit the "Search" button.
As is outlined in this LiveOverflow video, trusting information is hard.
Note that I disagree with some of the key talking points in the video, as you will see later on in this guide.
My credentials, as of time of writing:
This is another quick write-up on getting Debian/Ubuntu to play nicely with LDAP groups. This includes logins, sudoers, home directories, default shells, the works.
This is tested and working on Ubuntu 18 and 20.04 and Windows Server 2016. This setup assumes you already have users/groups in AD/LDAP and have a basic understanding of users/groups.
While this guide is written toward Debian-based systems, some tweaks and downloading the appropriate PBIS script will allow this to work on any Linux-based system.
This guide runs through setting up AptCacherNg on a proxy/server to provide apt caching to clients. The client proxy scripts allow for multiple proxies, and account for proxies being offline.
Note that, for obvious reasons, this only works on Debian-based machines (Ubuntu and derivatives as well).
[[inputs.snmp]] | |
agents = [ "10.0.0.5:161"] | |
interval = "45s" | |
timeout = "10s" | |
retries = 3 | |
max_repetitions = 10 | |
version = 2 | |
community = "616a1b353f21d9495ffe536656f110299a27712a63fd4ae" | |
name = "snmp.NAS" |