Removed post description, modified old post yaml

Signed-off-by: Ettore <noettore@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
2019-05-25 18:09:49 +02:00
parent 578f913cd0
commit 7e68b0968c
4 changed files with 14 additions and 29 deletions

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date = "2016-02-14T23:35:41+01:00"
draft = false
title = "BackupPc"
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[BackupPC](http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/) is the coolest and best featured open source cross-platform project for disk-to-disk backup. However almost nobody talks about it and therefore many folks unfortunately never heard of it.
It's designed for enterprise environment and will run on any \*nix based server. Moreover it's able to backup UNIX-like and Microsoft Windows systems due to the fact that **no client is necessary**.
Yeah, I know, it could resemble a bit outdated, not keeping up with flashy graphics fashion, but it just works, and it works well, without constant need of maintenance and upgrades.
It supports NFS, SSH, SMB and rsync protocols and **hard linking, data deduplication, pooling and compression**.
It's included in major distribution repositories and with [cygwin](https://cygwin.com/) you're able to use tar, rsync and ssh on windows systems. Why not to use SMB you might ask: ARE YOU FUCKING KIDDING ME?
It's well documented and online you could find plenty of articles on how to set it up on homogeneous and mixed environment.
So go on and spread the word, BackupPC is the answer!

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date = "2017-06-12T11:44:46+02:00"
title = "How to: backup google authenticator app two-factor secrets"
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---
title: "How to: backup google authenticator app two-factor secrets"
date: "2017-06-12T11:44:46+02:00"
tags: ["gauth", "root", "android", "2fa"]
categories: ["recipe"]
---
Quick and dirty:

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date: 2019-05-22T18:54:00+02:00
draft: false
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## How to create and update a DDNS entry in ISPConfig
If you manage your DNS server(s) with ISPConfig you may want a *dynamic entry* that gets updated automatically every time the target host changes its IP address.

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date = "2016-03-13T01:18:27+01:00"
draft = false
title = "Wireless Monitor Mode and Network-Manager"
---
title: "Wireless Monitor Mode and Network-Manager"
tags: ["ispconfig", "ddns", "dns"]
categories: ["recipe"]
date: "2016-03-13T01:18:27+01:00"
draft: false
---
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Sometimes it could be usefull to capture Wireless Lan packets: it could be done in various ways, with iwconfig, Kismet, Wireshark, nprobe and many others, all of them involving putting the wireless card into "monitor mode" (or promiscous), letting you view and record all packets sent on a defined channel by others WiFi devices nearby.
One of the tools almost every linux distro provides you is [`iw`](https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/documentation/iw), meant to replace `iwconfig` being more powerful for configuring wireless devices.