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usr/share/doc/libldap-2.5-0/README.Debian 0000644 00000001727 15027546126 0013352 0 ustar 00 Notes about Debian's libldap2 package ------------------------------------- It has been reported that using libnss-ldap can cause a failure to unmount /usr on system shutdown. The reason is that the nss module uses libldap from /usr and is used by the shell in the system scripts executed on shutdown/reboot. More precisely bash uses the getpwuid function to get the data of the current user which pulls in the nss modules which includes the ldap libraries if you are using that module. Possible solutions to this problem are: a) use another shell that does not utilize getpwuid for getting info about the current user (take dash for example). b) make sure that the nsswitch.conf is replaced by a version which does not mention ldap before the system is shut down (and have a startup script that installs the "full" version of that file). c) move the libraries to /lib (not recommended). -- Torsten Landschoff <torsten@debian.org> Mon, 30 Sep 2002 11:06:22 +0200 usr/share/doc/pure-ftpd-common/README.Debian 0000644 00000002437 15027547512 0014477 0 ustar 00 pure-ftpd for Debian -------------------- Please note that these packages use a complete new configuration scheme, read the pure-ftpd-wrapper manual page for more information. pure-ftpd for Debian is provided in 4 flavours: vanilla (pure-ftpd), MySQL (pure-ftpd-mysql), PostgreSQL (pure-ftpd-postgresql) and LDAP (pure-ftpd-ldap). The pure-ftpd-control script invokes the init script for the installed flavour. Each flavour comes with two binaries, one with support for virtual chroots and one without, e.g. /usr/sbin/pure-ftpd-virtualchroot and /usr/sbin/pure-ftpd. You can select which binary is called by the init script via debconf or by editing /etc/default/pure-ftpd-common. The location of the file with the directory aliases is /etc/pure-ftpd/pureftpd-dir-aliases. Using PureDB ------------ Initialize the database with at least one user: pure-pw useradd www -u 1000 -g 1000 -d /www pure-pw mkdb Create symlink to add PureDB to authentication methods: cd /etc/pure-ftpd/auth ln -s ../conf/PureDB 50pure Disable PAM authentication unless you need it: echo no > /etc/pure-ftpd/conf/PAMAuthentication Restart PureFTPd with the corresponding init script for your selected Debian package (usually /etc/init.d/pure-ftpd). -- Stefan Hornburg (Racke) <racke@linuxia.de>, Wed Aug 3 00:10:58 2005 usr/share/doc/intltool-debian/README.Debian 0000644 00000000741 15027547513 0014364 0 ustar 00 Intltool is a collection of scripts written by the GNOME project to help its localization. It supports many file formats, and I submit patches for our rfc822 format files. They are incorporated upstream, but this support is still not finalized. As debconf l10n is now performed via intltool scripts, the intltool-debian package is intended to quickly fix bugs when found, without breaking the GNOME part. -- Denis Barbier <barbier@debian.org> Thu, 2 Oct 2003 00:29:23 +0200 usr/share/doc/libmagic-mgc/README.Debian 0000644 00000000552 15027550273 0013610 0 ustar 00 Between architectures, the compiled magic at /usr/lib/file/magic.mgc differs only in the endianness. The libmagic library can auto-detect wrong endianness and handle that situation gracefully, at a significant performance cost though. Therefore: If you run file/libmagic in a mixed-endianness multi-arch setup, choose the architecture for libmagic-mgc wisely. usr/share/doc/libpython3.10-minimal/README.Debian 0000644 00000000364 15027550362 0015233 0 ustar 00 The documentation for this package is in /usr/share/doc/python3.10/. A draft of the "Debian Python Policy" can be found in /usr/share/doc/python Sometime it will be moved to /usr/share/doc/debian-policy in the debian-policy package. usr/share/doc/vim-common/README.Debian 0000644 00000003273 15027550515 0013360 0 ustar 00 Vim for Debian --------------- 1. The current Debian Vim scripts policy can be found in the vim-doc package under /usr/share/doc/vim-common and <http://pkg-vim.alioth.debian.org/vim-policy.html/>. 2. Before reporting bugs, check if the bug also exists if you run vim with "vim -u NONE -U NONE". If not, make sure that the "bug" is not a result of a setting in your ~/.vimrc before reporting it. -- Stefano Zacchiroli <zack@debian.org> Mon, 10 Apr 2006 09:59:41 -0400 MzScheme Vim variant -------------------- As requested by the current MzScheme maintainer (Ari Pollak <ari@debian.org>), a vim-mzscheme variant is not being built. The reasons stated are as follows: 1) MzScheme does not build on many of Debian's supported architectures. 2) The MzScheme package is not versioned based on the library. 3) The MzScheme ABI changes with every upstream version. -- James Vega <jamessan@debian.org> Mon, 10 Apr 2006 09:48:25 -0400 Modeline support disabled by default ------------------------------------ Modelines have historically been a source of security/resource vulnerabilities and are therefore disabled by default in $VIMRUNTIME/debian.vim. You can enable them in ~/.vimrc or /etc/vim/vimrc with "set modeline". In order to mimic Vim's default setting (modelines disabled when root, enabled otherwise), you may instead want to use the following snippet: if $USER != 'root' set modeline else set nomodeline endif The securemodelines script from vim.org (and in the vim-scripts package) may also be of interest as it provides a way to whitelist exactly which options may be set from a modeline. -- James Vega <jamessan@debian.org> Sun, 04 May 2008 03:11:51 -0400 usr/share/doc/keyboard-configuration/README.Debian 0000644 00000003010 15027550755 0015737 0 ustar 00 SHARED KEYBOARD LAYOUT In Debian the default keyboard layout is shared between the console and X. It is specified in /etc/default/keyboard. USING DEBCONF FOR EASIER CONFIGURATION While it will be safe to edit directly the configuration files (/etc/default/keyboard and /etc/default/console-setup) perhaps it will be easier to use dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration dpkg-reconfigure console-setup If your keyboard configuration is too complex, Debconf may refuse to reconfigure it. This doesn't mean this configuration is not supported and can not be used on the console. It only means you have to edit the configuration files by hand. Consult the manual pages keyboard(5), console-setup(5) and setupcon(1). DEBIAN PACKAGES keyboard-configuration This package creates and maintains the configuration file /etc/default/keyboard. console-setup This package is responsible for the actual configuration of the console (font and keyboard). It is responsible for the configuration file /etc/default/console-setup. console-setup-mini This is a limited version of console-setup. It doesn't create a file /etc/default/console-setup but it will use such a file if it exists. Notice that if /etc/default/console-setup doesn't exist, then no font will be loaded so some non-ASCII symbols will not display correctly. However, Unicode/non-Unicode mode and the charmap will still be configured according to the current locale. -- Anton Zinoviev <zinoviev@debian.org>, Mon, 28 Mar 2011 22:14:16 +0300 usr/share/doc/ethtool/README.Debian 0000644 00000002514 15027551167 0012756 0 ustar 00 ethtool for Debian ------------------ Most settings that can be controlled through ethtool can be specified in /etc/network/interfaces. They will then be applied to interfaces that are brought up automatically at boot time or using the 'ifup' command. The following settings are supported: Link mode (--change): link-speed <speed> link-duplex half|full Ethernet settings (--change): ethernet-autoneg on|off|<mask> ethernet-port <port> ethernet-wol <mode> [<pass-key>] Driver control (--change): driver-message-level <level> Ethernet flow control (--pause): ethernet-pause-rx on|off ethernet-pause-tx on|off ethernet-pause-autoneg on|off Protocol offload (--offload): offload-rx on|off offload-tx on|off offload-sg on|off offload-tso on|off offload-ufo on|off offload-gso on|off offload-lro on|off (etc.) Hardware tuning (--coalesce, --ring): hardware-irq-coalesce-adaptive-rx on|off hardware-irq-coalesce-adaptive-tx on|off hardware-irq-coalesce-rx-usecs <n> hardware-irq-coalesce-rx-frames <n> (etc.) hardware-dma-ring-rx <size> hardware-dma-ring-rx-mini <size> hardware-dma-ring-rx-jumbo <size> hardware-dma-ring-tx <size> Example: iface eth0 inet dhcp link-speed 100 link-duplex full ethernet-autoneg off ethernet-wol s 46:65:62:69:61:6e -- Ben Hutchings <ben@decadent.org.uk>, Sat, 4 Jun 2011 20:37:08 +0100 usr/share/doc/libgeoip1/README.Debian 0000644 00000001350 15027551214 0013141 0 ustar 00 geoip for Debian ---------------- The library comes with a free country database which does not contain all the information that can be accessible via the GeoIP API. To find other database editions, please visit http://www.maxmind.com/ (all of them except for the one included in the package require you to purchase a license from MaxMind) If you have obtained the license, you must install the geoip-bin package and copy the /etc/GeoIP.conf.default file to /etc/GeoIP.conf and edit it entering the licensing data. Updating databases ------------------ If you need to update your database very frequency, then you can install the geoip-database-contrib package. -- Patrick Matthäi <pmatthaei@debian.org> Sat, 15 Jan 2011 19:13:05 +0100 usr/share/doc/procps/README.Debian 0000644 00000002043 15027562014 0012574 0 ustar 00 README for Debian package of procps =================================== ipv6 sysctl keys ---------------- Modern Debian kernel packages have the IPv6 module compiled in by default. This means that the /proc/sys/net/ipv6 directory exists when the procps startup script runs. However if you make your own kernel then you may make ipv6 a module and get a race condition between the netbase and procps startup scripts. This is because netbase, by default, causes ipv6 module to be loaded but they don't (and cannot) depend on each-other. The solution is to either: - Not put ipv6 keys into /etc/sysctl.d/* or /etc/sysctl.conf - Compile the ipv6 module into the kernel - Load the module early by putting ipv6 into /etc/modules - Make a init script dependency by adding netbase to the Required-Start line in /etc/init.d/procps pgrep ----- pgrep is a new program, using the Unix standard name for something that greps for processes. If you are looking for Perl compatible regular expression grep, it is called pcregrep. Craig Small <csmall@debian.org> usr/share/doc/libfwupdplugin5/README.Debian 0000644 00000001342 15027566235 0014420 0 ustar 00 signed vs unsigned fwupd programs ------------------------------------ fwupd 1.1.0 is configured to understand when to use a signed version of the EFI binary. If the signed version isn't installed but secure boot is turned on, it will avoid copying to the EFI system partition. This allows supporting secure boot even if not turned on at install, or changed later after install. In Ubuntu, both fwupd-signed and fwupd are seeded in the default installation. Nothing is installed to the ESP until it's needed. In Debian, the package name for the signed version is slightly different due to different infrastructure. fwupd-signed-$ARCH and fwupd should both be installed and then things will work similarly to what's described above. usr/share/doc/lsphp83-apcu/README.Debian 0000644 00000001312 15027566251 0013522 0 ustar 00 NOTES FOR DEBIAN USERS ====================== 1. Viewing statistics and tunning your userland cache The script apc.php that comes with APCu provides detailed information about your cache statistics. In Debian you will need to copy or symlink script from /usr/share/doc/php-apcu to your desired location (like a docroot) and access it from the browser. The script will provide additional graphics if you install the php-gd package. In order to understand the information and use it to tune you cache refer to the APCu documentation at: http://pecl.php.net/package/APCu -- Ondřej Surý <ondrej@debian.org>, Tue, 8 Dec 2015 14:38:58 +0100 usr/share/doc/kbd/README.Debian 0000644 00000001614 15027572002 0012027 0 ustar 00 Only binary executable commands are included in the kbd Debian binary package. Support for console keymaps and fonts requires you to install other packages. * console-setup (Current default choice) * console-data (Previous default choice) * console-cyrillic (Special purpose) * console-braille (Special purpose) ... The console-setup package unifies the keyboard configuration for the Linux console and the X Window System. Its installation time dialogue can be run again as follows: # dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration # dpkg-reconfigure console-setup The console-data package only supports the Linux console. Its installation time dialogue can be run again as follows: # dpkg-reconfigure console-data console-data users may also find the install-keymap(8) utility useful for making a keymap available early in the boot process. It is provided in the console-common package.
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