From slitt at troubleshooters.com Tue Jul 5 01:52:56 2022 From: slitt at troubleshooters.com (Steve Litt) Date: Mon, 4 Jul 2022 18:52:56 -0400 Subject: GoLUG online presentation: DIY Spellchecker: My Adventures and Misadventures Message-ID: <20220704185256.79cc8db0@mydesk.domain.cxm> Hi all, Wednesday Evening, July 6, 2022, at 7pm Eastern Daylight time, you can attend the "DIY Spellchecker: My Adventures and Misadventures" presentation at the monthly GoLUG online meeting. Plenty of questions, answers and laughs. You can see all the details, the good, the bad and the ugly, at http://golug.info . When: 7pm Eastern Daylight time on Wednesday, July 6, 2022. Starts right on time. Where: https://meet.jit.si/golug Presenter: Steve Litt For more information: See http://golug.info Thanks, SteveT Steve Litt GoLUG Publicity Coordinator Greater Orlando Linux User Group From d.s at daniel.shahaf.name Wed Jul 13 15:34:17 2022 From: d.s at daniel.shahaf.name (Daniel Shahaf) Date: Wed, 13 Jul 2022 12:34:17 +0000 Subject: Installation report: Bootstrapping a first installation bootable USB Message-ID: <1a2ad968-de59-454d-a05c-cdfeb21c68cb@www.fastmail.com> I tried to walk a friend through using Windows 10 to create a bootable Linux USB disk, so they'd install their first Linux box. Debian (and FreeBSD) recommend win32diskimager. Arch suggested a few other tools, of which I tried Rufus 3.19 and "dd for windows". The first and third didn't work at all; the second worked once but not again on the same image. Rather than try a fourth tool, I went ahead and created the bootable USB disk for my friend myself using good old dd(8) on one of my existing Linux machines. Now I wonder how a random Windows user is supposed to bootstrap themselves a bootable Linux USB disk. Perhaps my experience is not representative. Cheers, Daniel From mark.e.fuller at gmail.com Wed Jul 13 16:41:14 2022 From: mark.e.fuller at gmail.com (Mark E. Fuller) Date: Wed, 13 Jul 2022 16:41:14 +0300 Subject: Installation report: Bootstrapping a first installation bootable USB In-Reply-To: <1a2ad968-de59-454d-a05c-cdfeb21c68cb@www.fastmail.com> References: <1a2ad968-de59-454d-a05c-cdfeb21c68cb@www.fastmail.com> Message-ID: For Fedora, we have the "Fedora Media Writer" available for all platforms to write USB disks: (yes, it can write your Debian image as well, not just Fedora) See the download page for how it's integrated into "user experience" with download links Download Fedora Workstation (getfedora.org) Source and binaries: FedoraQt/MediaWriter: Fedora Media Writer - Write Fedora Images to Portable Media (github.com) Mark E. Fuller, Ph.D. HaShikma 19, Apt. 24 Nesher 3681219, Israel +972 (0)53-872-6579 +1 401-236-4526 mark.e.fuller at gmail.com mark.e.fuller at gmx.de @mefuller:matrix.org https://www.stossrohr.net PGP Fingerprint: 73F1 A30C BDF4 DB4B C75F FD0F D599 E76C FFCA BF60 mark.e.fuller at gmail.com mark.e.fuller at gmx.de @mefuller:matrix.org https://mefuller.github.io/ On Wed, Jul 13, 2022 at 3:35 PM Daniel Shahaf wrote: > I tried to walk a friend through using Windows 10 to create a bootable > Linux USB disk, so they'd install their first Linux box. > > Debian (and FreeBSD) recommend win32diskimager. Arch suggested a few > other tools, of which I tried Rufus 3.19 and "dd for windows". The > first and third didn't work at all; the second worked once but not again > on the same image. > > Rather than try a fourth tool, I went ahead and created the bootable USB > disk for my friend myself using good old dd(8) on one of my existing > Linux machines. > > Now I wonder how a random Windows user is supposed to bootstrap > themselves a bootable Linux USB disk. Perhaps my experience is not > representative. > > Cheers, > > Daniel > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From shlomo.solomon at gmail.com Wed Jul 13 17:21:31 2022 From: shlomo.solomon at gmail.com (Shlomo Solomon) Date: Wed, 13 Jul 2022 17:21:31 +0300 Subject: Installation report: Bootstrapping a first installation bootable USB In-Reply-To: <1a2ad968-de59-454d-a05c-cdfeb21c68cb@www.fastmail.com> References: <1a2ad968-de59-454d-a05c-cdfeb21c68cb@www.fastmail.com> Message-ID: <20220713172131.57751445@shlomo1.solomon> As far as I know Etcher has a Windows version - never tried it, but it works well on Linux so should be a good alternative - and (at least the Linux version) has a nice GUI so should be good for a Windows user. On Wed, 13 Jul 2022 12:34:17 +0000 "Daniel Shahaf" wrote: > I tried to walk a friend through using Windows 10 to create a bootable > Linux USB disk, so they'd install their first Linux box. > > Debian (and FreeBSD) recommend win32diskimager. Arch suggested a few > other tools, of which I tried Rufus 3.19 and "dd for windows". The > first and third didn't work at all; the second worked once but not > again on the same image. > > Rather than try a fourth tool, I went ahead and created the bootable > USB disk for my friend myself using good old dd(8) on one of my > existing Linux machines. > > Now I wonder how a random Windows user is supposed to bootstrap > themselves a bootable Linux USB disk. Perhaps my experience is not > representative. > > Cheers, > > Daniel > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il -- Shlomo Solomon http://the-solomons.net Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 From d.s at daniel.shahaf.name Wed Jul 13 23:50:54 2022 From: d.s at daniel.shahaf.name (Daniel Shahaf) Date: Wed, 13 Jul 2022 20:50:54 +0000 Subject: Installation report: Bootstrapping a first installation bootable USB In-Reply-To: <20220713172131.57751445@shlomo1.solomon> References: <1a2ad968-de59-454d-a05c-cdfeb21c68cb@www.fastmail.com> <20220713172131.57751445@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: Thank you both for the suggestions; I'll keep them in mind next time. (For the time being, I have a bootable disk for my friend so I'm all set.) Cheers, Daniel From shlomo.solomon at gmail.com Sun Jul 17 16:49:46 2022 From: shlomo.solomon at gmail.com (Shlomo Solomon) Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2022 16:49:46 +0300 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy Message-ID: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others handle/prevent what happened to me. I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental backups using: rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors --backup I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few days later. BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. -- Shlomo Solomon http://the-solomons.net Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 From dotan at shavitos.com Sun Jul 17 17:14:07 2022 From: dotan at shavitos.com (Dotan Shavit) Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2022 17:14:07 +0300 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: Consider raid + zfs + daily snapshoots ?????? ??? ??, 17 ????? 2022, 16:50, ??? Shlomo Solomon ?< shlomo.solomon at gmail.com>: > I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. > > I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I > have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others > handle/prevent what happened to me. > > I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. > > My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental > backups using: rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors --backup > I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, > missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for > example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few > days later. > > BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed > up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: > rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors > I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. > > So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on > one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script > "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. > Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those > same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. > > So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old > garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I > deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. > > > > -- > Shlomo Solomon > http://the-solomons.net > Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From marcvolovic at me.com Sun Jul 17 18:13:53 2022 From: marcvolovic at me.com (Marc Volovic) Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2022 18:13:53 +0300 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: ZFS without raid (given that zfs itself functions as raid). On July 17, 2022 5:14:07 PM GMT+03:00, Dotan Shavit wrote: >Consider raid + zfs + daily snapshoots > >?????? ??? ??, 17 ????? 2022, 16:50, ??? Shlomo Solomon ?< >shlomo.solomon at gmail.com>: > >> I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. >> >> I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I >> have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others >> handle/prevent what happened to me. >> >> I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. >> >> My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental >> backups using: rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors --backup >> I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, >> missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for >> example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few >> days later. >> >> BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed >> up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: >> rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors >> I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. >> >> So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on >> one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script >> "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. >> Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those >> same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. >> >> So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old >> garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I >> deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. >> >> >> >> -- >> Shlomo Solomon >> http://the-solomons.net >> Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Linux-il mailing list >> Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il >> http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il >> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vordoo at yahoo.com Sun Jul 17 22:17:40 2022 From: vordoo at yahoo.com (Vordoo) Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2022 22:17:40 +0300 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dyasny at gmail.com Mon Jul 18 17:33:26 2022 From: dyasny at gmail.com (Dan Yasny) Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2022 10:33:26 -0400 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: Inline On Sun, Jul 17, 2022 at 9:50 AM Shlomo Solomon wrote: > I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. > > I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I > have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others > handle/prevent what happened to me. > > I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. > > My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental > backups using: rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors --backup > I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, > missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for > example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few > days later. > > BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed > up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: > rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors > I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. > > So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on > one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script > "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. > Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those > same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. > I would consider an external backup that's cheap and not really limited in terms of space - glacier or something similar. Drop a monthly archive there without --delete and even if some garbage accumulates, it's not a big deal. It all really depends on the amount of data in question, if it's not insanely huge, you can simply buy some cheap drives and do the same thing. Tiered backups aren't anything new, it is best practice to have a set of fresh hot backups, like your dailies, a weekly or biweekly warm archive in case you need to pull out something older, and a cold archive that's essentially a big dump of ancient stuff on very cheap and very slow medium, used for emergencies. > > So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old > garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I > deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. > For this, I would run a seperate infrequent backup without --delete, and dump it on the cold storage, just in case. Another option, if you want to save space, would be to drop rsync and switch to something like backy2 or it's alternatives. > > > > -- > Shlomo Solomon > http://the-solomons.net > Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dyasny at gmail.com Mon Jul 18 17:35:11 2022 From: dyasny at gmail.com (Dan Yasny) Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2022 10:35:11 -0400 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: On Sun, Jul 17, 2022 at 10:15 AM Dotan Shavit wrote: > Consider raid + zfs + daily snapshoots > > RAID/ZFS/replication are NOT backups. This is a common problem that needs explaining every time :) https://www.raidisnotabackup.com/ > ?????? ??? ??, 17 ????? 2022, 16:50, ??? Shlomo Solomon ?< > shlomo.solomon at gmail.com>: > >> I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. >> >> I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I >> have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others >> handle/prevent what happened to me. >> >> I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. >> >> My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental >> backups using: rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors --backup >> I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, >> missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for >> example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few >> days later. >> >> BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed >> up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: >> rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors >> I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. >> >> So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on >> one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script >> "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. >> Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those >> same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. >> >> So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old >> garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I >> deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. >> >> >> >> -- >> Shlomo Solomon >> http://the-solomons.net >> Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Linux-il mailing list >> Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il >> http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il >> > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rabin at rabin.io Wed Jul 20 13:14:26 2022 From: rabin at rabin.io (Rabin Yasharzadehe) Date: Wed, 20 Jul 2022 13:14:26 +0300 Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: Using ZFS with sanoid ZFS will give you all the benefits of COW filesystem, compression, and snapshots (and much more), combined with sanoid utility will allow you to automate the snapshots and send them to a remote system, and because ZFS is block-level aware of the changes between snapshots, send&recive is much more efficient, because unlike Rsync which needs to stats and compare each file to determine what to sync, ZFS only need to compile a list of block which have changed between 2 snapshots and send only them. which also works if the volume is encrypted, which allows you to have a remote system, which is encrypted on rest, and keep pushing/sending snapshots to it without having to unlock it. -- Rabin On Sun, 17 Jul 2022 at 16:50, Shlomo Solomon wrote: > I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. > > I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I > have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others > handle/prevent what happened to me. > > I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. > > My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental > backups using: rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors --backup > I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, > missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for > example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few > days later. > > BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed > up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: > rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors > I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. > > So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on > one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script > "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. > Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those > same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. > > So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old > garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I > deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. > > > > -- > Shlomo Solomon > http://the-solomons.net > Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mark.e.fuller at gmail.com Wed Jul 20 13:24:25 2022 From: mark.e.fuller at gmail.com (Mark E. Fuller) Date: Wed, 20 Jul 2022 10:24:25 +0000 (UTC) Subject: slightly OT - backup strategy In-Reply-To: References: <20220717164946.725c4714@shlomo1.solomon> Message-ID: <7e796011-1693-434c-be6a-5cd0220e6978@gmail.com> 20 Jul 2022 13:15:13 Rabin Yasharzadehe : > Using ZFS with sanoid[https://github.com/jimsalterjrs/sanoid] > > ZFS will give you all the benefits of COW filesystem, compression, and snapshots (and much more), > combined with sanoid utility will allow you to automate the snapshots and send them to a remote system, > and because ZFS is block-level aware of the changes between snapshots, send&recive is much more efficient, > because unlike Rsync which needs to stats and compare each file to determine what to sync, > ZFS only need to compile a list of block which have changed between 2 snapshots and send only them. > which also works if the volume is encrypted, which allows you to have a remote system, which is encrypted on rest, > and keep pushing/sending snapshots to it without having to unlock it. > > > -- > Rabin > > > On Sun, 17 Jul 2022 at 16:50, Shlomo Solomon wrote: >> I recently lost some files because of a bad disk - hardware problem. >> >> I do regular backups so I was not really worried, but I now see that I >> have a problem with my backup strategy so I'd like to know how others >> handle/prevent what happened to me. >> >> I backup files using rsync and I basically have 2 types of backups. >> >> My most important files are backed up every night. I do incremental >> backups using:? ? rsync -aqrlvtogS --ignore-errors? --backup >> I keep about 4 months of backups. So if a file is damaged, >> missing or accidentally deleted, I can find a good file - even if, for >> example I screwed up the file and only discovered the problem a few >> days later. >> >> BUT, all the rest of my files - music, videos, pictures, etc are backed >> up daily and weekly on 2 different physical drives using: >> rsync -qrlvtogS --delete --ignore-errors >> I use --delete to prevent accumulating garbage on my backup disks. >> >> So here's the problem: Because of a hardware problem, several files on >> one of my disks were lost. As a result, the daily backup script >> "thought" that those files should be deleted from the daily backup. >> Unfortunately, I did not notice the problem. A few days later, those >> same files were also deleted from the weekly backup. So they are lost. >> >> So on one hand, I need --delete to avoid keeping backups of old >> garbage, but on the other hand, the --delete option does not know if I >> deleted the file or if it's gone because of a hardware problem. >> >> >> >> -- >> Shlomo Solomon >> http://the-solomons.net >> Claws Mail 3.17.5 - KDE Plasma 5.18.5 - Kubuntu 20.04 >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Linux-il mailing list >> Linux-il at cs.huji.ac.il >> http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il Coming to this late, I use "backintime" which is a Python wrapper and GUI for rsync. One of the settings, "smart remove" is set to remove old snapshots, but keep some for exactly the kind of problem described here, e.g. 2/day for the last week, then 1/week for a month, then 1/month for the previous year, etc. (you set all these yourself) I made a similar deletion error once which propagated through my Dropbox that I only noticed after I was past the 30 day backup there, but I easily pulled the files off my backup HDD from an old image -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From borissh1983 at gmail.com Wed Jul 27 09:23:22 2022 From: borissh1983 at gmail.com (borissh1983 at gmail.com) Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 09:23:22 +0300 Subject: hamakor.org.il planet is down , and impossible to reach the team Message-ID: <2698689.sfrdHELrdY@beast> Hi, Since early June , the planet is broken, updated storied are not shown. I had tried e-mailing to website [at] hamakor.org.il but got a 550. ** Address not found ** Your message wasn't delivered to websites [at] hamakor.org.il because the address couldn't be found, or is unable to receive mail. The response from the remote server was: 550 5.1.1 : Recipient address rejected: User unknown in virtual mailbox table Some people at whatsup had complained : https://whatsup.org.il/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&t=64817[1] and https://whatsup.org.il/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&p=432379[2] p.s. Some people had been BCCed (who I think may know someone who may know one of the admins) -------- [1] https://whatsup.org.il/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&t=64817 [2] https://whatsup.org.il/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&p=432379 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From yeh at uda.co.il Wed Jul 27 15:20:35 2022 From: yeh at uda.co.il (Yehuda Deutsch) Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 08:20:35 -0400 Subject: hamakor.org.il planet is down , and impossible to reach the team In-Reply-To: <2698689.sfrdHELrdY@beast> References: <2698689.sfrdHELrdY@beast> Message-ID: Hi, Thank you, we migrated the planet service to a new server, and being a really old service with no one to ask how it is configured, well, you can imagine that not all settings were entirely correct. I have now fixed the continuous collecting of stories and the contact email address. In general, for anything relating to Hamakor infrastructure, just drop an email to hostmaster at hamakor.org.il and I'll do my best to address it. Yehuda ------------------------------ *Yehuda Deutsch | IT Developer* On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 2:26 AM wrote: > Hi, > > Since early June , the planet is broken, updated storied are not shown. > > I had tried e-mailing to website [at] hamakor.org.il but got a 550. > > > ** Address not found ** > > Your message wasn't delivered to websites [at] hamakor.org.il because > the address couldn't be found, or is unable to receive mail. > > > > The response from the remote server was: > > 550 5.1.1 : Recipient address rejected: > User unknown in virtual mailbox table > > > > > Some people at whatsup had complained : > https://whatsup.org.il/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&t=64817 > and https://whatsup.org.il/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&p=432379 > > > p.s. Some people had been BCCed (who I think may know someone who may know > one of the admins) > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: