From 83f7fe4b8402bab171d110703a1b1115efbc9b28 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Lukasz Kasprzak Date: Tue, 14 Apr 2026 22:32:43 +0200 Subject: cleaned up many scrits and deleted some that were of no use; renamed a lot --- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/alloy | 16 --- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/anacron | 25 ----- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/bluetooth | 20 ---- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/console-setup | 16 --- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cron | 28 ------ straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cryptdisks | 12 --- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dbus | 7 -- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dnsmasq | 42 -------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/docker | 20 ---- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/fail2ban | 39 -------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grafana-server | 24 ----- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub | 39 -------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub.ucf-dist | 39 -------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/i2pd | 6 -- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/intel-microcode | 26 ----- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/keyboard | 10 -- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/networking | 31 ------ straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nginx | 10 -- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nss | 37 ------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/openipmi | 68 ------------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus | 5 - .../boot/etc-default/prometheus-node-exporter | 6 -- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/rsync | 47 --------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/smartmontools | 9 -- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/ssh | 5 - straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/tor | 75 -------------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/useradd | 37 ------- straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/zfs | 111 --------------------- 28 files changed, 810 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/alloy delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/anacron delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/bluetooth delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/console-setup delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cron delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cryptdisks delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dbus delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dnsmasq delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/docker delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/fail2ban delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grafana-server delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub.ucf-dist delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/i2pd delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/intel-microcode delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/keyboard delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/networking delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nginx delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nss delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/openipmi delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus-node-exporter delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/rsync delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/smartmontools delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/ssh delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/tor delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/useradd delete mode 100644 straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/zfs (limited to 'straper/db/public/boot/etc-default') diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/alloy b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/alloy deleted file mode 100644 index 57a4350..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/alloy +++ /dev/null @@ -1,16 +0,0 @@ -## Path: -## Description: Grafana Alloy settings -## Type: string -## Default: "" -## ServiceRestart: alloy -# -# Command line options for Alloy. -# -# The configuration file holding the Alloy config. -CONFIG_FILE="/etc/alloy/config.alloy" - -# User-defined arguments to pass to the run command. -CUSTOM_ARGS="" - -# Restart on system upgrade. Defaults to true. -RESTART_ON_UPGRADE=true diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/anacron b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/anacron deleted file mode 100644 index bf6e0ba..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/anacron +++ /dev/null @@ -1,25 +0,0 @@ -# Environment File for anacron - -# ANACRON_RUN_ON_BATTERY_POWER -# -# NOTE: -# For ANACRON_RUN_ON_BATTERY_POWER, settings here only works -# when you are not using systemd. -# Please read /usr/share/doc/anacron/README.Debian -# to see how to adjust program behaviour on AC power. -# -# If set to "yes", start anacron even when on battery power. By -# default, the /etc/init.d/anacron script tries to avoid running -# anacron unless on AC power, so as to avoid running down the battery. -# (Things like the locate updatedb cause a lot of I/O.) - -ANACRON_RUN_ON_BATTERY_POWER=no - -# ANACRON_ARGS -# -# Arguments/options to pass to anacron. -# By default, "-s" is used to ensure serialised job arrangements. -# If you want tasks to execute in parallel when the jobs are due to -# start, do not pass "-s" here. - -ANACRON_ARGS=-s diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/bluetooth b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/bluetooth deleted file mode 100644 index 2c310b9..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/bluetooth +++ /dev/null @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ -# Defaults for bluez - -# start bluetooth on boot? -# compatibility note: if this variable is _not_ found bluetooth will start -BLUETOOTH_ENABLED=1 - -# This setting used to switch HID devices (e.g mouse/keyboard) to HCI mode, that -# is you will have bluetooth functionality from your dongle instead of only -# HID. This is accomplished for supported devices by udev in -# /lib/udev/rules.d/62-bluez-hid2hci.rules by invoking hid2hci with correct -# parameters. -# See /usr/share/doc/bluez/NEWS.Debian.gz for further information. - -# Older daemons like pand dund and hidd can be found in bluez-compat package as -# they are deprecated and provided for backward compatibility only. - -# Note that not every bluetooth dongle is capable of switching back to HID mode, -# see http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=355497 -HID2HCI_ENABLED=0 -HID2HCI_UNDO=0 diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/console-setup b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/console-setup deleted file mode 100644 index dc3ea7f..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/console-setup +++ /dev/null @@ -1,16 +0,0 @@ -# CONFIGURATION FILE FOR SETUPCON - -# Consult the console-setup(5) manual page. - -ACTIVE_CONSOLES="/dev/tty[1-6]" - -CHARMAP="UTF-8" - -CODESET="Lat15" -FONTFACE="Fixed" -FONTSIZE="8x16" - -VIDEOMODE= - -# The following is an example how to use a braille font -# FONT='lat9w-08.psf.gz brl-8x8.psf' diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cron b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cron deleted file mode 100644 index 1d8b7ed..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cron +++ /dev/null @@ -1,28 +0,0 @@ -# Cron configuration options - -# Whether to read the system's default environment files (if present) -# If set to "yes", cron will set a proper mail charset from the -# locale information. If set to something other than 'yes', the default -# charset 'C' (canonical name: ANSI_X3.4-1968) will be used. -# -# This has no effect on tasks running under cron; their environment can -# only be changed via PAM or from within the crontab; see crontab(5). -READ_ENV="yes" - -# Extra options for cron, see cron(8) -# -# For example, to enable LSB name support in /etc/cron.d/, use -# EXTRA_OPTS='-l' -# -# Or, to log standard messages, plus jobs with exit status != 0: -# EXTRA_OPTS='-L 5' -# -# For quick reference, the currently available log levels are: -# 0 no logging (errors are logged regardless) -# 1 log start of jobs -# 2 log end of jobs -# 4 log jobs with exit status != 0 -# 8 log the process identifier of child process (in all logs) -# -EXTRA_OPTS="" - diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cryptdisks b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cryptdisks deleted file mode 100644 index c1f837c..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/cryptdisks +++ /dev/null @@ -1,12 +0,0 @@ -# Run cryptdisks initscripts at startup? Default is Yes. -CRYPTDISKS_ENABLE=Yes - -# Mountpoints to mount, before cryptsetup is invoked at initscripts. Takes -# mountpoins which are configured in /etc/fstab as arguments. Separate -# mountpoints by space. -# This is useful for keyfiles on removable media. Default is unset. -CRYPTDISKS_MOUNT="" - -# Default check script. Takes effect, if the 'check' option is set in crypttab -# without a value. -CRYPTDISKS_CHECK=blkid diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dbus b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dbus deleted file mode 100644 index 4bc8e1b..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dbus +++ /dev/null @@ -1,7 +0,0 @@ -# This is a configuration file for /etc/init.d/dbus; it allows you to -# perform common modifications to the behavior of the dbus daemon -# startup without editing the init script (and thus getting prompted -# by dpkg on upgrades). We all love dpkg prompts. - -# Parameters to pass to dbus. -PARAMS="" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dnsmasq b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dnsmasq deleted file mode 100644 index daa4201..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/dnsmasq +++ /dev/null @@ -1,42 +0,0 @@ -# This file has six functions: -# 1) to completely disable starting this dnsmasq instance -# 2) to set DOMAIN_SUFFIX by running `dnsdomainname` -# 3) to select an alternative config file -# by setting DNSMASQ_OPTS to --conf-file= -# 4) to tell dnsmasq to read the files in /etc/dnsmasq.d for -# more configuration variables. -# 5) to stop the resolvconf package from controlling dnsmasq's -# idea of which upstream nameservers to use. -# 6) to avoid using this dnsmasq instance as the system's default resolver -# by setting DNSMASQ_EXCEPT="lo" -# For upgraders from very old versions, all the shell variables set -# here in previous versions are still honored by the init script -# so if you just keep your old version of this file nothing will break. - -#DOMAIN_SUFFIX=`dnsdomainname` -#DNSMASQ_OPTS="--conf-file=/etc/dnsmasq.alt" - -# The dnsmasq daemon is run by default conforming to the Debian Policy. -# To disable the service, -# for SYSV init, use "update-rc.d dnsmasq disable", -# for systemd, use "systemctl disable dnsmasq". - -# By default search this drop directory for configuration options. -# Libvirt leaves a file here to make the system dnsmasq play nice. -# Comment out this line if you don't want this. The dpkg-* are file -# endings which cause dnsmasq to skip that file. This avoids pulling -# in backups made by dpkg. -CONFIG_DIR=/etc/dnsmasq.d,.dpkg-dist,.dpkg-old,.dpkg-new - -# If the resolvconf package is installed, dnsmasq will use its output -# rather than the contents of /etc/resolv.conf to find upstream -# nameservers. Uncommenting this line inhibits this behaviour. -# Note that including a "resolv-file=" line in -# /etc/dnsmasq.conf is not enough to override resolvconf if it is -# installed: the line below must be uncommented. -#IGNORE_RESOLVCONF=yes - -# If the resolvconf package is installed, dnsmasq will tell resolvconf -# to use dnsmasq under 127.0.0.1 as the system's default resolver. -# Uncommenting this line inhibits this behaviour. -#DNSMASQ_EXCEPT="lo" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/docker b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/docker deleted file mode 100644 index 60136c0..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/docker +++ /dev/null @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ -# Docker SysVinit configuration file - -# -# THIS FILE DOES NOT APPLY TO SYSTEMD -# -# Please see the documentation for "systemd drop-ins": -# https://docs.docker.com/engine/admin/systemd/ -# - -# Customize location of Docker binary (especially for development testing). -#DOCKERD="/usr/local/bin/dockerd" - -# Use DOCKER_OPTS to modify the daemon startup options. -#DOCKER_OPTS="--dns 8.8.8.8 --dns 8.8.4.4" - -# If you need Docker to use an HTTP proxy, it can also be specified here. -#export http_proxy="http://127.0.0.1:3128/" - -# This is also a handy place to tweak where Docker's temporary files go. -#export DOCKER_TMPDIR="/mnt/bigdrive/docker-tmp" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/fail2ban b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/fail2ban deleted file mode 100644 index 35bb377..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/fail2ban +++ /dev/null @@ -1,39 +0,0 @@ -# This file is part of Fail2Ban. -# -# Fail2Ban is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify -# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by -# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or -# (at your option) any later version. -# -# Fail2Ban is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, -# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of -# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the -# GNU General Public License for more details. -# -# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License -# along with Fail2Ban; if not, write to the Free Software -# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA -# -# Author: Cyril Jaquier -# -# $Revision$ - -# Command line options for Fail2Ban. Refer to "fail2ban-client -h" for -# valid options. -FAIL2BAN_OPTS="" - -# Run fail2ban as a different user. If not set, fail2ban -# will run as root. -# -# The user is not created automatically. -# The user can be created e.g. with -# useradd --system --no-create-home --home-dir / --groups adm fail2ban -# Log files are readable by group adm by default. Adding the fail2ban -# user to this group allows it to read the logfiles. -# -# Another manual step that needs to be taken is to allow write access -# for fail2ban user to fail2ban log files. The /etc/init.d/fail2ban -# script will change the ownership when starting fail2ban. Logrotate -# needs to be configured separately, see /etc/logrotate.d/fail2ban. -# -# FAIL2BAN_USER="fail2ban" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grafana-server b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grafana-server deleted file mode 100644 index cd0580a..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grafana-server +++ /dev/null @@ -1,24 +0,0 @@ -GRAFANA_USER=grafana - -GRAFANA_GROUP=grafana - -GRAFANA_HOME=/usr/share/grafana - -LOG_DIR=/var/log/grafana - -DATA_DIR=/var/lib/grafana - -MAX_OPEN_FILES=10000 - -CONF_DIR=/etc/grafana - -CONF_FILE=/etc/grafana/grafana.ini - -RESTART_ON_UPGRADE=true - -PLUGINS_DIR=/var/lib/grafana/plugins - -PROVISIONING_CFG_DIR=/etc/grafana/provisioning - -# Only used on systemd systems -PID_FILE_DIR=/run/grafana diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub deleted file mode 100644 index 88eb3dd..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub +++ /dev/null @@ -1,39 +0,0 @@ -# If you change this file or any /etc/default/grub.d/*.cfg file, -# run 'update-grub' afterwards to update /boot/grub/grub.cfg. -# For full documentation of the options in these files, see: -# info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration' - -GRUB_DEFAULT=0 -GRUB_TIMEOUT=5 -GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`( . /etc/os-release && echo ${NAME} )` -GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet pcie_aspm=off" -GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="" - -# If your computer has multiple operating systems installed, then you -# probably want to run os-prober. However, if your computer is a host -# for guest OSes installed via LVM or raw disk devices, running -# os-prober can cause damage to those guest OSes as it mounts -# filesystems to look for things. -#GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER=false - -# Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs -# This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains -# the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...) -#GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef" - -# Uncomment to disable graphical terminal -#GRUB_TERMINAL=console - -# The resolution used on graphical terminal -# note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE/GOP/UGA -# you can see them in real GRUB with the command `videoinfo' -#GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480 - -# Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux -#GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true - -# Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries -#GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true" - -# Uncomment to get a beep at grub start -#GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub.ucf-dist b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub.ucf-dist deleted file mode 100644 index 88eb3dd..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/grub.ucf-dist +++ /dev/null @@ -1,39 +0,0 @@ -# If you change this file or any /etc/default/grub.d/*.cfg file, -# run 'update-grub' afterwards to update /boot/grub/grub.cfg. -# For full documentation of the options in these files, see: -# info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration' - -GRUB_DEFAULT=0 -GRUB_TIMEOUT=5 -GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`( . /etc/os-release && echo ${NAME} )` -GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet pcie_aspm=off" -GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="" - -# If your computer has multiple operating systems installed, then you -# probably want to run os-prober. However, if your computer is a host -# for guest OSes installed via LVM or raw disk devices, running -# os-prober can cause damage to those guest OSes as it mounts -# filesystems to look for things. -#GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER=false - -# Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs -# This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains -# the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...) -#GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef" - -# Uncomment to disable graphical terminal -#GRUB_TERMINAL=console - -# The resolution used on graphical terminal -# note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE/GOP/UGA -# you can see them in real GRUB with the command `videoinfo' -#GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480 - -# Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux -#GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true - -# Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries -#GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true" - -# Uncomment to get a beep at grub start -#GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/i2pd b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/i2pd deleted file mode 100644 index f229584..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/i2pd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,6 +0,0 @@ -# Additional options that are passed to the Daemon. -# see possible switches in /usr/share/doc/i2pd/configuration.md.gz -#DAEMON_OPTS="--conf=/etc/i2pd/i2pd.conf --tunconf=/etc/i2pd/tunnels.conf --tunnelsdir=/etc/i2pd/tunnels.conf.d --pidfile=/run/i2pd/i2pd.pid --logfile=/var/log/i2pd/i2pd.log --daemon --service" - -# If you have problems with hunging i2pd, you can try increase this -ulimit -n 4096 diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/intel-microcode b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/intel-microcode deleted file mode 100644 index b958464..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/intel-microcode +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -# Configuration script for intel-microcode version 3 - -# -# initramfs helper -# - -# Set this to "no" to disable automatic microcode updates on boot; -# Set this to "auto" to use early initramfs mode automatically (default); -# Set this to "early" to always attempt to create an early initramfs; -#IUCODE_TOOL_INITRAMFS=auto - -# Set this to "yes" (default) to use "iucode_tool --scan-system" to reduce -# the initramfs size bloat, by detecting which Intel processors are active -# in this system, and installing only their microcodes. -# -# Set this to "no" to either include all microcodes, or only the microcodes -# selected through the use of IUCODE_TOOL_EXTRA_OPTIONS below. -# -# WARNING: including all microcodes will increase initramfs size greatly. -# This can cause boot issues if the initramfs is already large. -#IUCODE_TOOL_SCANCPUS=yes - -# Extra options to pass to iucode_tool, useful to forbid or to -# force the inclusion of microcode for specific processor signatures. -# See iucode_tool(8) for details. -#IUCODE_TOOL_EXTRA_OPTIONS="" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/keyboard b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/keyboard deleted file mode 100644 index 3fecbcc..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/keyboard +++ /dev/null @@ -1,10 +0,0 @@ -# KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION FILE - -# Consult the keyboard(5) manual page. - -XKBMODEL="pc105" -XKBLAYOUT="us" -XKBVARIANT="" -XKBOPTIONS="" - -BACKSPACE="guess" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/networking b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/networking deleted file mode 100644 index 9655359..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/networking +++ /dev/null @@ -1,31 +0,0 @@ -# Configuration for networking init script being run during -# the boot sequence - -# Set to 'no' to skip interfaces configuration on boot -#CONFIGURE_INTERFACES=yes - -# Don't configure these interfaces. Shell wildcards supported/ -#EXCLUDE_INTERFACES= - -# Set to 'yes' to enable additional verbosity -#VERBOSE=no - -# Method to wait for the network to become online, -# for services that depend on a working network: -# - ifup: wait for ifup to have configured an interface. -# - route: wait for a route to a given address to appear. -# - ping/ping6: wait for a host to respond to ping packets. -# - none: don't wait. -#WAIT_ONLINE_METHOD=ifup - -# Which interface to wait for. -# If none given, wait for all auto interfaces, or if there are none, -# wait for at least one hotplug interface. -#WAIT_ONLINE_IFACE= - -# Which address to wait for for route, ping and ping6 methods. -# If none is given for route, it waits for a default gateway. -#WAIT_ONLINE_ADDRESS= - -# Timeout in seconds for waiting for the network to come online. -#WAIT_ONLINE_TIMEOUT=300 diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nginx b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nginx deleted file mode 100644 index 09b8fd0..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nginx +++ /dev/null @@ -1,10 +0,0 @@ -# Note: You may want to look at the following page before setting the ULIMIT. -# http://wiki.nginx.org/CoreModule#worker_rlimit_nofile -# Set the ulimit variable if you need defaults to change. -# Example: ULIMIT="-n 4096" -#ULIMIT="-n 4096" - -# Define the stop schedule for nginx -# see the start-stop-daemon --retry documentation for more information -# -#STOP_SCHEDULE="QUIT/5/TERM/5/KILL/5" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nss b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nss deleted file mode 100644 index c43e88b..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/nss +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -# /etc/default/nss -# This file can theoretically contain a bunch of customization variables -# for Name Service Switch in the GNU C library. For now there are only -# four variables: -# -# NETID_AUTHORITATIVE -# If set to TRUE, the initgroups() function will accept the information -# from the netid.byname NIS map as authoritative. This can speed up the -# function significantly if the group.byname map is large. The content -# of the netid.byname map is used AS IS. The system administrator has -# to make sure it is correctly generated. -#NETID_AUTHORITATIVE=TRUE -# -# SERVICES_AUTHORITATIVE -# If set to TRUE, the getservbyname{,_r}() function will assume -# services.byservicename NIS map exists and is authoritative, particularly -# that it contains both keys with /proto and without /proto for both -# primary service names and service aliases. The system administrator -# has to make sure it is correctly generated. -#SERVICES_AUTHORITATIVE=TRUE -# -# SETENT_BATCH_READ -# If set to TRUE, various setXXent() functions will read the entire -# database at once and then hand out the requests one by one from -# memory with every getXXent() call. Otherwise each getXXent() call -# might result into a network communication with the server to get -# the next entry. -#SETENT_BATCH_READ=TRUE -# -# ADJUNCT_AS_SHADOW -# If set to TRUE, the passwd routines in the NIS NSS module will not -# use the passwd.adjunct.byname tables to fill in the password data -# in the passwd structure. This is a security problem if the NIS -# server cannot be trusted to send the passwd.adjuct table only to -# privileged clients. Instead the passwd.adjunct.byname table is -# used to synthesize the shadow.byname table if it does not exist. -ADJUNCT_AS_SHADOW=TRUE diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/openipmi b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/openipmi deleted file mode 100644 index 715c6e4..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/openipmi +++ /dev/null @@ -1,68 +0,0 @@ -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Enable standard hardware interfaces (KCS, BT, SMIC) -## Type: yesno -## Default: "yes" -## Config: ipmi -# Enable standard hardware interfaces (KCS, BT, SMIC) -# You probably want this enabled. -IPMI_SI=yes - -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Enable /dev/ipmi0 interface, used by ipmitool, ipmicmd, -## Type: yesno -## Default: "yes" -## Config: ipmi -# Enable /dev/ipmi0 interface, used by ipmitool, ipmicmd, -# and other userspace IPMI-using applications. -# You probably want this enabled. -DEV_IPMI=yes - -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Enable IPMI_WATCHDOG if you want the IPMI watchdog -## Type: yesno -## Default: "no" -## Config: ipmi -# Enable IPMI_WATCHDOG if you want the IPMI watchdog -# to reboot the system if it hangs -IPMI_WATCHDOG=no - -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Watchdog options - modinfo ipmi_watchdog for details -## Type: string -## Default: "timeout=60" -## Config: ipmi -# Watchdog options - modinfo ipmi_watchdog for details -# watchdog timeout value in seconds -# as there is no userspace ping application that runs during shutdown, -# be sure to give it enough time for any device drivers to -# do their cleanup (e.g. megaraid cache flushes) -# without the watchdog triggering prematurely -IPMI_WATCHDOG_OPTIONS="timeout=60" - -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Enable IPMI_POWEROFF if you want the IPMI poweroff module to be loaded. -## Type: yesno -## Default: "no" -## Config: ipmi -# Enable IPMI_POWEROFF if you want the IPMI -# poweroff module to be loaded. -IPMI_POWEROFF=no - -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Enable IPMI_POWERCYCLE if you want the system to be power-cycled on reboot -## Type: yesno -## Default: "no" -## Config: ipmi -# Enable IPMI_POWERCYCLE if you want the system to be power-cycled (power -# down, delay briefly, power on) rather than power off, on systems -# that support such. IPMI_POWEROFF=yes is also required. -IPMI_POWERCYCLE=no - -## Path: Hardware/IPMI -## Description: Enable "legacy" interfaces for applications -## Type: yesno -## Default: "no" -## Config: ipmi -# Enable "legacy" interfaces for applications -# Intel IMB driver interface -IPMI_IMB=no diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus deleted file mode 100644 index 5f2b5f7..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus +++ /dev/null @@ -1,5 +0,0 @@ -# Set the command-line arguments to pass to the server. -# Due to shell escaping, to pass backslashes for regexes, you need to double -# them (\\d for \d). If running under systemd, you need to double them again -# (\\\\d to mean \d), and escape newlines too. -ARGS="" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus-node-exporter b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus-node-exporter deleted file mode 100644 index 4b1b736..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/prometheus-node-exporter +++ /dev/null @@ -1,6 +0,0 @@ -# Set the command-line arguments to pass to the server. -# Due to shell escaping, to pass backslashes for regexes, you need to double -# them (\\d for \d). If running under systemd, you need to double them again -# (\\\\d to mean \d), and escape newlines too. -ARGS="--web.listen-address=127.0.0.1:9100 --collector.textfile.directory=/var/lib/prometheus/node-exporter" - diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/rsync b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/rsync deleted file mode 100644 index 424b1c0..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/rsync +++ /dev/null @@ -1,47 +0,0 @@ -# defaults file for rsync daemon mode -# -# This file is only used for init.d based systems! -# If this system uses systemd, you can specify options etc. for rsync -# in daemon mode by copying /lib/systemd/system/rsync.service to -# /etc/systemd/system/rsync.service and modifying the copy; add required -# options to the ExecStart line. - -# start rsync in daemon mode from init.d script? -# only allowed values are "true", "false", and "inetd" -# Use "inetd" if you want to start the rsyncd from inetd, -# all this does is prevent the init.d script from printing a message -# about not starting rsyncd (you still need to modify inetd's config yourself). -RSYNC_ENABLE=false - -# which file should be used as the configuration file for rsync. -# This file is used instead of the default /etc/rsyncd.conf -# Warning: This option has no effect if the daemon is accessed -# using a remote shell. When using a different file for -# rsync you might want to symlink /etc/rsyncd.conf to -# that file. -# RSYNC_CONFIG_FILE= - -# what extra options to give rsync --daemon? -# that excludes the --daemon; that's always done in the init.d script -# Possibilities are: -# --address=123.45.67.89 (bind to a specific IP address) -# --port=8730 (bind to specified port; default 873) -RSYNC_OPTS='' - -# run rsyncd at a nice level? -# the rsync daemon can impact performance due to much I/O and CPU usage, -# so you may want to run it at a nicer priority than the default priority. -# Allowed values are 0 - 19 inclusive; 10 is a reasonable value. -RSYNC_NICE='' - -# run rsyncd with ionice? -# "ionice" does for IO load what "nice" does for CPU load. -# As rsync is often used for backups which aren't all that time-critical, -# reducing the rsync IO priority will benefit the rest of the system. -# See the manpage for ionice for allowed options. -# -c3 is recommended, this will run rsync IO at "idle" priority. Uncomment -# the next line to activate this. -# RSYNC_IONICE='-c3' - -# Don't forget to create an appropriate config file, -# else the daemon will not start. diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/smartmontools b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/smartmontools deleted file mode 100644 index 6a8a6e2..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/smartmontools +++ /dev/null @@ -1,9 +0,0 @@ -# Defaults for smartmontools initscript (/etc/init.d/smartmontools) -# This is a POSIX shell fragment - -# List of devices you want to explicitly enable S.M.A.R.T. for -# Not needed (and not recommended) if the device is monitored by smartd -#enable_smart="/dev/hda /dev/hdb" - -# uncomment to pass additional options to smartd on startup -#smartd_opts="--interval=1800" diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/ssh b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/ssh deleted file mode 100644 index 3040422..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/ssh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,5 +0,0 @@ -# Default settings for openssh-server. This file is sourced by /bin/sh from -# /etc/init.d/ssh. - -# Options to pass to sshd -SSHD_OPTS= diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/tor b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/tor deleted file mode 100644 index 7a1b832..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/tor +++ /dev/null @@ -1,75 +0,0 @@ -# Defaults for tor initscript -# sourced by /etc/init.d/tor -# installed at /etc/default/tor by the maintainer scripts -# -# Note that this file is not being used for controlling Tor-startup -# when Tor is launched by systemd. -# - -# -# This is a bash shell fragment -# -RUN_DAEMON="yes" - -# -# Servers sometimes may need more than the default 1024 file descriptors -# if they are very busy and have many clients connected to them. The top -# servers as of early 2008 regularly have more than 10000 connected -# clients. -# (ulimit -n) -# -# (the default varies as it depends on the number of available system-wide file -# descriptors. See the init script in /etc/init.d/tor for details.) -# -# MAX_FILEDESCRIPTORS= - -# -# If tor is seriously hogging your CPU, taking away too much cycles from -# other system resources, then you can renice tor. See nice(1) for a -# bit more information. Another way to limit the CPU usage of an Onion -# Router is to set a lower BandwidthRate, as CPU usage is mostly a function -# of the amount of traffic flowing through your node. Consult the torrc(5) -# manual page for more information on setting BandwidthRate. -# -# NICE="--nicelevel 5" - -# Additional arguments to pass on tor's command line. -# -# ARGS="$ARGS " - -# -# Uncomment the ulimit call below, and set "DisableDebuggerAttachment 0" -# in /etc/tor/torrc, if you want tor to produce coredumps on segfaults -# and assert errors. -# -# Keeping coredumps around is some sort of security issue since they -# may leak session keys, sensitive client data and more, should such -# files fall into the wrong hands. Therefore coredumps are not enabled -# by default. -# -# ulimit -c unlimited - -# -# Config option for the weekly cron file: Whether or not to remove old -# coredumps in /var/lib/tor. Coredumps can hold sensitive data, as such -# they probably should not be kept lying around if nobody will ever look -# at them. This option makes /etc/cron.weekly/tor clean out files older -# then three weeks. -# -CLEANUP_OLD_COREFILES=y - -# -# By default the tor init script will launch Tor using apparmor iff -# /usr/sbin/aa-status exists and is executable and calling it with --enabled -# returns true, /usr/sbin/aa-exec is executable, there is a -# /etc/apparmor.d/system_tor policy, and USE_AA_EXEC is set to 'yes'. -# -# USE_AA_EXEC="yes" # default -# USE_AA_EXEC="no" - -# Let the vidalia package override some of our settings. -# People who have vidalia installed might not want to run Tor as a system -# service. The vidalia .deb can ask them that and then set run-daemon to no. -if [ -e /etc/default/tor.vidalia ] && [ -x /usr/bin/vidalia ]; then - . /etc/default/tor.vidalia -fi diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/useradd b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/useradd deleted file mode 100644 index 2cb8167..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/useradd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -# Default values for useradd(8) -# -# The SHELL variable specifies the default login shell on your -# system. -# Similar to DSHELL in adduser. However, we use "sh" here because -# useradd is a low level utility and should be as general -# as possible -SHELL=/bin/sh -# -# The default group for users -# 100=users on Debian systems -# Same as USERS_GID in adduser -# This argument is used when the -n flag is specified. -# The default behavior (when -n and -g are not specified) is to create a -# primary user group with the same name as the user being added to the -# system. -# GROUP=100 -# -# The default home directory. Same as DHOME for adduser -# HOME=/home -# -# The number of days after a password expires until the account -# is permanently disabled -# INACTIVE=-1 -# -# The default expire date -# EXPIRE= -# -# The SKEL variable specifies the directory containing "skeletal" user -# files; in other words, files such as a sample .profile that will be -# copied to the new user's home directory when it is created. -# SKEL=/etc/skel -# -# Defines whether the mail spool should be created while -# creating the account -# CREATE_MAIL_SPOOL=no - diff --git a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/zfs b/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/zfs deleted file mode 100644 index e5ca5ba..0000000 --- a/straper/db/public/boot/etc-default/zfs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,111 +0,0 @@ -# OpenZFS userland configuration. -# shellcheck disable=SC2154 - -# NOTE: This file is intended for sysv init and initramfs. -# Changing some of these settings may not make any difference on -# systemd-based setup, e.g. setting ZFS_MOUNT=no will not prevent systemd -# from launching zfs-mount.service during boot. -# See: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=901436 - -# To enable a boolean setting, set it to yes, on, true, or 1. -# Anything else will be interpreted as unset. -# shellcheck disable=SC2034 - -# Run `zfs load-key` during system start? -ZFS_LOAD_KEY='yes' - -# Run `zfs unload-key` during system stop? -ZFS_UNLOAD_KEY='no' - -# Run `zfs mount -a` during system start? -ZFS_MOUNT='yes' - -# Run `zfs unmount -a` during system stop? -ZFS_UNMOUNT='yes' - -# Run `zfs share -a` during system start? -# nb: The shareiscsi, sharenfs, and sharesmb dataset properties. -ZFS_SHARE='yes' - -# Run `zfs unshare -a` during system stop? -ZFS_UNSHARE='yes' - -# By default, a verbatim import of all pools is performed at boot based on the -# contents of the default zpool cache file. The contents of the cache are -# managed automatically by the 'zpool import' and 'zpool export' commands. -# -# By setting this to 'yes', the system will instead search all devices for -# pools and attempt to import them all at boot, even those that have been -# exported. Under this mode, the search path can be controlled by the -# ZPOOL_IMPORT_PATH variable and a list of pools that should not be imported -# can be listed in the ZFS_POOL_EXCEPTIONS variable. -# -# Note that importing all visible pools may include pools that you don't -# expect, such as those on removable devices and SANs, and those pools may -# proceed to mount themselves in places you do not want them to. The results -# can be unpredictable and possibly dangerous. Only enable this option if you -# understand this risk and have complete physical control over your system and -# SAN to prevent the insertion of malicious pools. -ZPOOL_IMPORT_ALL_VISIBLE='no' - -# Specify specific path(s) to look for device nodes and/or links for the -# pool import(s). See zpool(8) for more information about this variable. -# It supersedes the old USE_DISK_BY_ID which indicated that it would only -# try '/dev/disk/by-id'. -# The old variable will still work in the code, but is deprecated. -#ZPOOL_IMPORT_PATH="/dev/disk/by-vdev:/dev/disk/by-id" - -# List of pools that should NOT be imported at boot -# when ZPOOL_IMPORT_ALL_VISIBLE is 'yes'. -# This is a space separated list. -#ZFS_POOL_EXCEPTIONS="test2" - -# Should the datasets be mounted verbosely? -# A mount counter will be used when mounting if set to 'yes'. -VERBOSE_MOUNT='no' - -# Should we allow overlay mounts? -# This is standard in Linux, but not ZFS which comes from Solaris where this -# is not allowed). -DO_OVERLAY_MOUNTS='no' - -# Any additional option to the 'zfs import' commandline? -# Include '-o' for each option wanted. -# You don't need to put '-f' in here, unless you want it ALL the time. -# Using the option 'zfsforce=1' on the grub/kernel command line will -# do the same, but on a case-to-case basis. -ZPOOL_IMPORT_OPTS="" - -# Full path to the ZFS cache file? -# See "cachefile" in zpool(8). -# The default is "/etc/zfs/zpool.cache". -#ZPOOL_CACHE="/etc/zfs/zpool.cache" -# -# Setting ZPOOL_CACHE to an empty string ('') AND setting ZPOOL_IMPORT_OPTS to -# "-c /etc/zfs/zpool.cache" will _enforce_ the use of a cache file. -# This is needed in some cases (extreme amounts of VDEVs, multipath etc). -# Generally, the use of a cache file is usually not recommended on Linux -# because it sometimes is more trouble than it's worth (laptops with external -# devices or when/if device nodes changes names). -#ZPOOL_IMPORT_OPTS="-c /etc/zfs/zpool.cache" -#ZPOOL_CACHE="" - -# Any additional option to the 'zfs mount' command line? -# Include '-o' for each option wanted. -MOUNT_EXTRA_OPTIONS="" - -# Build kernel modules with the --enable-debug switch? -# Only applicable for Debian GNU/Linux {dkms,initramfs}. -ZFS_DKMS_ENABLE_DEBUG='no' - -# Build kernel modules with the --enable-debuginfo switch? -# Only applicable for Debian GNU/Linux {dkms,initramfs}. -ZFS_DKMS_ENABLE_DEBUGINFO='no' - -# Keep debugging symbols in kernel modules? -# Only applicable for Debian GNU/Linux {dkms,initramfs}. -ZFS_DKMS_DISABLE_STRIP='no' - -# Optional arguments for the ZFS Event Daemon (ZED). -# See zed(8) for more information on available options. -#ZED_ARGS="-M" -- cgit v1.3