jsveiga

  • 1 Post
  • 200 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 9th, 2023

help-circle
  • I have used yast to configure the network before (not on this host), and it works.

    I quickly looked at the yast log, and there were errors looking for wpa-supplicant. I -think- it’s because my colleague installed this VM months ago, did not configure it, then went on vacation. Now the SUSE “no license” grace period expired, and the host has no access to the repositories.

    If that’s the cause, there are two issues: 1. why does it want to install wpa-supplicant if there’s no wifi (maybe it’s a wicked dependency), and 2. why does it fail silently, concluding the config operation as if it ran ok


  • Yast had the search and nameservers information in, and it even loaded them back when reopening yast (which surprised me, I expected it to read/store from resolv.conf itself). I work with SAP HANA, SUSE is also the supported OS for it (I’ve a SUSE sysadmin certification).

    I commented about yast being a gui that failed (silently) doing something simple that shouldn’t need a gui; I didn’t say SUSE isn’t reliable.



  • No, the SUSE demo license had expired before he configured it for the first time, so there was no repo access.

    He did everything right in yast, but according to the yast log, it was trying and failing to get wpa-supplicant, although this is a VM with no wifi whatsoever. Yast “finished” the configuration with no errors, but failed to place the required entries in resolv.conf and hosts.

    It’s just one example of a useless gui trying to make simple things complicated.


  • jsveigatoLinux@lemmy.mlHey Linux devs - Build a GUI or gtfo
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    1 year ago

    Linux is not a company fighting for profits and market share, with software developers paid to work according to the company’s strategy.

    You want something in Linux that nobody cares to develop? Decelop it yourself or gtfo.

    A few hours ago I was helping a GUI-oriented colleague to get network working in a SUSE test installation. He had configured it in yast (a GUI admin interface), but he couldn’t get to the internets.

    I logged in, got me a command line:

    ip a s (it had an inteface with an IP, and it was up).

    ip r s (it had a default route to the world)

    ping 8.8.8.8 (it worked)

    host google.com (didn’t work, it’s always dns)

    vi /etc/resolv.conf (added search and nameservers, there were none).

    problem fixed (also suggested him to check his /etc/host, as domainame wasn’t set either).

    Why on earth do I want a gui to make simple things complicated - and silently fail while trying to do it? (yast couldn’t find wpa-supplicant, although this is a VM with no wifi).

    IMO, administering Linux through GUI tools is dangerous, because you probably don’t know, or don’t want to know, exactly what the tool is doing. It makes Linux as “inexplicable” as Windows.




  • It is not safe, it will explode, leak poisonous gases, kill everyone and all puppies and kittens, smack Earth out of its orbit into the Sun, and so forth.

    Having said that, some 6 months ago I noticed my 2 year old Samsung A71 had a slightly fat back, so after a few months (it was steady, not growing), I took it to a repair shack to have the battery replaced. The guy asked me if the battery was still holding normal charge, and I said yes, a whole day of usage.

    He asked me if I wanted to just “deflate” it. Well, yes.

    So he did what you said, and the universe is still unharmed.

    But in my case it was just gas trapped in the battery envelope; probably it overheated once while charging, but there was little or no damage to the battery itself. If even after passing gas yours is still swolen, it may mean your electrodes are deformed, which is probably more risky than my case.

    I’m not in any way recommending you to keep using it. It worked for me, but I’m a very lucky person.