The debian-installer
project introduced package filenames that
ends in .udeb. In short, it is a micro-.deb format
which doesn't need to follow Debian policy exactly, lacks contents such as
documentation and is meant to be used only by the
debian-installer
, the new Debian installer developed initially for
the Sarge release. The file format of .deb and .udeb
are identical. The udpkg
program used to handle
.udeb packages has more limited capabilities than standard
dpkg
and supports fewer package relationships. The difference in
name is because the Debian archive maintainers weren't happy with
.debs in the archive that didn't follow policy, so a different
name was chosen to accentuate this and to make it less likely that people would
unwittingly install them on real systems. .udebs are used in an
initial ramdisk during the base install only to create a very restricted Debian
system.
This mechanism was provided in order to support safe upgrading of systems from a.out format to ELF format, where the order in which packages were unpacked was critical.
The left-Ctrl-key, the left-Alt-key, and the F1-key are pressed together.
Note that if you edited the greeting message in /etc/motd
, this
will be different.
I have to admit I used to use the superuser account more often than needed just because it was easy and I was sloppy.
It may also be a good idea to install gpm
, emacs21
,
and doc-linux-html
. See Mouse
configuration, Section 3.3 and Editors, Chapter
11.
I tend to name this account created during installation as admin but this can be any arbitrary name.
You may want to add this user penguin to the
adm group to enable read access to the many logfiles in
/var/log/
. See passwd(5)
, group(5)
,
shadow(5)
, group(5)
, vipw(8)
, and
vigr(8)
. For the official meanings of users and groups, see a
recent version of the Users and
Groups
document.
The left-Ctrl-key, the left-Alt-Key, and the Delete are pressed together from
the console. In the default system, this will cause system reboot. You need
to modify /etc/inittab
to have shutdown
command with
-h option as described in Install a few more packages after initial
install, Section 3.8.1.
This is because the Debian system is, even just after the default installation,
configured with the proper file permissions which prevent non-privileged user
to damage the system. Of course, there may still exist some holes which can be
exploited but those who worry about this issue should not be reading this
section but should be reading Securing Debian
Manual
.
The left-Ctrl-key and the d-key are pressed together. No need to press the Shift-key even though these control characters are referred as "control D" with the upper case.
If you enter root instead of penguin here and the corresponding password, you will gain the access to the root account. This procedure will be needed to regain the access to the root account.
If you do not understand what exactly I am talking here, you can do this later.
If one is in a terminal, such as kon
and kterm
for
Japanese, that has issues with certain graphics characters, adding
-a to MC's command line may help prevent problems.
Actually, vi
or nvi
are the programs you find
everywhere. I chose vim
instead for newbie since it offers you
help through F1 key while it is similar enough and more powerful.
If you are uncomfortable with vim
, you can keep using
mcedit
for most system maintenance tasks. Since
mcedit
is 8-bit clean and dumb (it does not care about text
encodings), it sometimes has advantages when editing unknown encoding files.
mcedit
cannot display UTF-8 files correctly.
In this tutorial chapter, the shell means bash
. For more insight
into the different shells, see Shell,
Section 13.2.
On a normal Linux character console, only the left-hand Ctrl and Alt keys work as expected.
You can disable this terminal feature using stty(1)
.
In the X Window environment, the mouse functions in the same way with the Xterm program.
Here I use "Unix" in its generic sense. Any Unix clone OSs usually offer the equivalent commands. The Debian system is no exception. Do not worry if some commands do not work as you wish now. These examples are not meant to be executed in this order.
If alias is used in the shell, their outputs are different.
Unix has a tradition to hide filenames which start with ".". They are traditionally files that contain configuration information and user preferences.
Default pager of the bare bone Debian system is more
which cannot
scroll back. By installing less
package using command line
apt-get install less, less
becomes default pager and
you can scroll back with cursor keys.
The [ and ] in the regular expression enable
grep
to avoid matching itself. The 4* in the regular
expression means 0 or more repeats of character 4 thus enables
grep
to match both exim
and exim4
.
Although * is used in shell filename wild card and regular
expression, their meanings are different.
--bzip2 is used here instead of new short option -j
to ensure this to work with old version of tar
in Potato.
--bzip2 is used here again to ensure compatibility.
Here, I have simplified reality for the newbie. See bash(1)
for
the exact explanation.
To obtain the following output, you need to install French locale, see Locales, Section 9.7.2. This is not essential for the tutorial. This is done only to indicate its potential effects.
The Debian system is a multi-tasking system.
Directories are called folders on some other systems.
While you can use almost any letters or symbols in a file name, in practice it's a bad idea. It is better to avoid any characters that often have special meanings on the command line, including spaces, tabs, newlines, and other special characters: { } ( ) [ ] ' ` " \ / > < | ; ! # & ^ * % @ $ .
If you want to separate words in a name, good choices are the period, hyphen, and underscore. You could also capitalize each word, LikeThis.
There is also another use for the word path. See Command search path, Section 4.3.6. The intended meaning is usually clear from the context.
Of course this method works only for 3 digit wide numeric mode.
If you track testing or unstable you can remove
references to stable from /etc/apt/sources.list
and
/etc/apt/preferences
because testing starts as a copy
of stable.
The difference between upgrade and dist-upgrade only
appears when new versions of packages stand in different dependency
relationships from old versions of those packages. See apt-get(8)
for details.
aptitude upgrade and aptitude dist-upgrade start
aptitude
in the commandline mode. You can switch these to full
screen mode by pressing e key.
Some *config
scripts are disappearing in the newer Sarge release
and the package configuration functionality is moved to the
debconf
system.
recode
allows more convenient aliases than iconv
.
End of lines:
Carriage return means ASCII 13, ASCII 0xD, ^M, and \r.
Line feed means ASCII 10, ASCII 0xA, ^J, and \n.
Files in /etc/default/
contain environment variable assignments
only. Each file is sourced by the init script to which it
corresponds in such a way that these assignments override any default variable
settings in the init script itself. The choice of directory name is peculiar
to Debian. It is roughly the equivalent of the /etc/sysconfig
directory found in Red Hat and other distributions.
Though this is not available in Woody, you can install this from Sarge.
The package in Woody does not work as of 8/2002 due to a change in Microsoft's website. Use Sarge version even in Woody instead.
I don't have any xft1 stuff on my machine anymore, so I'm not sure if you need to restart X or not before this change will take effect. I seem to remember that "xftcache" would update the Xft1 cache, but it'd be good if someone could confirm that for me.
Fontconfig
does not exist in Woody.
Following sections use exim
in examples. For Sarge replace this
with exim4
as needed.
You must follow this rule for any hosts on dial-up, DSL, cable services or LAN through some broadband router. Even if your home host has a fixed IP from your ISP, it is still a good idea to follow this rule. Most workstations and home servers fall into this category.
In this example, 2 bug workarounds are deployed for the version of
blackbox
in 2003. I use sh -c in command. Also
~/.menu/*
entry is not used but root requiring
/etc/menu/*
was used instead.
Use a file name which does not overwrap with any package names.
Use a file name which overwraps with the package name.
The slash in section="/" enables entry to the initial menu, and the leading space in title=" Mozilla Navigator" enables entry to the top of the list.
Note that some Wi-Fi interfaces are really aliases for Ethernet interfaces,
giving access to configuration parameters peculiar to Wi-Fi. These parameters
are controlled using the iwconfig
program.
This is true if IP version 4 is being used. In IPv6 addresses are 128 bits.
See http://www.ipv6.org/
.
The address of the network can be obtained by bitwise ANDing an address on the network with the net mask. The broadcast address can be obtained by bitwise ORing the network address with the 1's complement of the net mask.
This options file is included using the call option.
As of April 2004 there is also a dhcp-client
package available.
This contains version 2 of the ISC DHCP Client. This has been superseded by
version 3 which is currently packaged as dhcp3-client
. The
maintainers plan to rename dhcp3-client
to
dhcp-client
after the release of Sarge.
Make sure you do not have the experimental versions of dhcp-client
installed. ifupdown
does not work with them.
The /etc/network/interfaces
file format for current versions of
ifupdown
is slightly incompatible with the file format for earlier
Potato versions of the package. The ifupdown
post-installation
script should upgrade the file automatically if necessary. However, it is a
good idea to check over the converted file.
See bug #196877
.
See bug #127786
.
This terminology is used in the ifupdown
documentation.
Note that the interfaces named on auto lines must be physical interfaces, not logical interfaces.
Note that this leaves the "stop" links
(/etc/rc?.d/K??foo
) behind. See Runlevels, Section 2.4.2 for more
information.
It may also be configured by any hook scripts that have been installed in
/etc/hotplug.d/net/
. The ifplugd
and
waproamd
packages install hook scripts there, for example.
As of version 0.0.20040329-4 or so, hotplug
can optionally be put
into modes wherein it behaves differently from how it is described here as
behaving. One such mode is so-called "all" mode wherein
hotplug
brings up all hot plugged interfaces. The other such mode
is so-called "auto" mode wherein hotplug
brings up
interfaces only if they are listed on auto lines in
/etc/network/interfaces
. In these alternative modes
ifup
is invoked without the =hotplug suffix.
In past releases of Debian the standard way to configure PCMCIA network cards
was through the cardmgr
hook scripts
/etc/pcmcia/network
and /etc/pcmcia/network.opts
.
These hook scripts were developed in the era before Linux acquired a more
general purpose hot plug capability.
Some people still use the Debian Woody scripts in their default state wherein
they simply call ifup
after the interface is added and
ifdown
when the interface is removed. As noted above, it is now
recommended to use hotplug
to do this.
Others still use the special system of calling low level network configuration
commands that gets activated when certain variables in
/etc/pcmcia/network.opts
are set to "y".
This system has several problems. It is afflicted by race conditions; it only
works for 16 bit PCMCIA cards; it does what is better left to
ifupdown
to do. Consequently it is deprecated.
Here %nn is used to the encoded character of hexadecimal nn.
The TeX source of this book is available at ftp://ftp.dante.de/pub/tex/systems/knuth/tex/texbook.tex
.
ftp://ftp.dante.de/pub/tex/systems/knuth/lib/manmac.tex
contains most of the required macros. You can process this document with
tex
after commenting lines 7 to 10 and adding \input manmac
\proofmodefalse.
It's strongly recommended to buy this book (and all other books from Donald E. Knuth) instead of using the online version but the source is a great example of TeX input!
This WEB has nothing to do with World Wide Web. WEB (for PASCAL) and CWEB (for C/C++) are traditional literate-programming tools.
Debian Reference
osamu#at#debian.org