Solaris 11 links

Download Media

https://www.oracle.com/solaris/solaris11/downloads/solaris-downloads.html

Create IPS repository

https://www.thegeekdiary.com/solaris-11-ips-hand-on-lab-creating-ips-repository/

http://www.snatchbrain.com/?p=401

Hands-On labs for solaris 11

https://www.oracle.com/technical-resources/articles/solaris11/solaris-labs.html

Device driver for Broadcom BCM4401 100Base-T NIC

https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E86824_01/html/E54777/bfe-7d.html

Solaris 11 training path

Download Solaris SW

https://fsck.technology/software/Sun%20Microsystems/Solaris%20Install%20Media/Sun%20Solaris%2010/

https://archive.org/details/SunSolaris9OperatingEnvironmentSPARCPlatformEdition

Opencsw IPS repository

http://sfe.opencsw.org/quickrepolinks

Set Kodi to autostart in the VGA port in ElementaryOS

Create file /lib/systemd/system/kodi.service with contents

[Unit]
Description = Kodi Media Center
After = remote-fs.target network-online.target
Wants = network-online.target
[Service]
User = root
Group = root
Type = simple
ExecStart = /scripts/kodi.sh
Restart = on-abort
RestartSec = 5
[Install]
WantedBy = multi-user.target

Run: systemctl daemon-reload

create /scripts/kodi.sh

#!/bin/sh
xinit /scripts/kodi.bash
exit $?

create /scripts/kodi.bash

#!/bin/sh
(while true;do
xrandr --output LVDS-1 --off --output VGA-1 --auto > /var/log/xrandr.log 2>&1
sleep 2
done) &
/usr/bin/kodi-standalone
exit $?

Setup the system to start on multiuser level: systemctl set-default multi-user.target

To go back to the default login level: systemctl set-default graphical.target

Good openwrt mwan3 config

You need to install ip full by issuing: opkg update; opkg install ip-full

/etc/config/mwan3

config globals ‘globals’

config interface ‘wan’
option family ‘ipv4’
option initial_state ‘online’
option track_method ‘ping’
option check_quality ‘0’
option enabled ‘1’
option count ‘1’
option recovery_interval ‘1’
option reliability ‘1’
option interval ’20’
option size ‘8’
option max_ttl ’70’
option down ‘5’
option up ‘1’
option timeout ’10’
option failure_interval ‘3’
list track_ip ‘8.8.4.4’

config interface ‘wanb’
option family ‘ipv4’
option count ‘1’
option initial_state ‘online’
option track_method ‘ping’
option check_quality ‘0’
option enabled ‘1’
option reliability ‘1’
option recovery_interval ‘1’
option failure_interval ‘5’
option down ‘3’
option size ‘8’
option max_ttl ’70’
option timeout ‘8’
option interval ’60’
option up ‘1’
list track_ip ‘8.8.8.8’

config policy ‘balanced’
option last_resort ‘unreachable’
list use_member ‘wanb_m2_w2’
list use_member ‘wan_m1_w1’

config rule ‘default_rule’
option dest_ip ‘0.0.0.0/0’
option proto ‘all’
option use_policy ‘balanced’
option sticky ‘0’

config member ‘wan_m1_w1’
option interface ‘wan’
option metric ‘1’
option weight ‘1’

config member ‘wanb_m2_w2’
option interface ‘wanb’
option weight ‘2’
option metric ‘1’

config rule ‘https’
option dest_ip ‘0.0.0.0/0’
option dest_port ‘443’
option proto ‘tcp’
option sticky ‘1’
option use_policy ‘balanced’

This is the status:

root@router:~# mwan3 status
Interface status:
interface wan is online 00h:04m:25s, uptime 00h:36m:51s and tracking is active
interface wanb is online 00h:04m:20s, uptime 00h:37m:01s and tracking is active

Current ipv4 policies:
balanced:
wan (33%)
wanb (66%)

Current ipv6 policies:
balanced:
unreachable

Directly connected ipv4 networks:
127.0.0.0/8
192.168.0.0/24
224.0.0.0/3
192.168.3.0/24
192.168.5.0/24

Directly connected ipv6 networks:
fe80::/64

Active ipv4 user rules:
314 45085 – balanced all — * * 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0
0 0 S https tcp — * * 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 multiport dports 443

Active ipv6 user rules:
12 1823 – balanced all * * ::/0 ::/0
0 0 S https tcp * * ::/0 ::/0 multiport dports 443

Ubuntu automatic/unattended updates

# apt install unattended-upgrades

in /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50unattended-upgrades

“Ubuntu:bionic-updates”;”Ubuntu:bionic-updates”;
Unattended-Upgrade::Remove-Unused-Kernel-Packages “true”;
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot “true”;
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot-Time “03:00”;

in /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/20auto-upgrades

APT::Periodic::Update-Package-Lists "1";
APT::Periodic::Download-Upgradeable-Packages "1";
APT::Periodic::AutocleanInterval "7";
APT::Periodic::Unattended-Upgrade "1";

You can test running:

# unattended-upgrades –dry-run –debug