multimon-ng
Samba
multimon-ng | Samba | |
---|---|---|
15 | 33 | |
899 | 875 | |
- | 0.7% | |
3.0 | 10.0 | |
5 days ago | 12 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
multimon-ng
- Pdw and POCSAG decoding
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message hidden in video from an obscure challenge
I have little experience with decoding radio signals so I don't know if any software decoders are expected to handle the clipping. I tried using multimon-ng and found that its UFSK1200 demodulator can get something out of the audio, but it also keeps repeating Error: stop bit is 0. Bad framing if verbose mode is enabled.
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why am I getting no pages on PDW? I have set EVERYTHING up as per the instructions. I have played with all the settings. nothing
Sorry I gave wrong name, it is multimon https://github.com/EliasOenal/multimon-ng and is capable to decode:
- Funcube dongle with multimon-ng for pocsag decode
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Questions regarding POCSAG receiving
It's likely that the signal is extremely strong. You can probably just pick it up with a short antenna indoors. I used MultiMonNG to decode. It's was pretty boring to be honest.
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Pocsag decoding
Give multimon-ng a whirl. This is CLI based, but can output what it decodes to a simple text file or hex data to do what you need with.
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What do you use your homelab for?
multimon-ng
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A list of things I could do with SDR
POCSAG, FLEX (pagers), Morse, APRS and more with multimon-ng
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What OS has the best software for RTL-SDR? I currently use gqrx but feel its limited.
multimon-ng for decoding various protocols.
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Pager messages
Try this tool; https://github.com/EliasOenal/multimon-ng - It's CLI and you'll ideally want a Linux, but this can decode an awful lot more data modes like such.
Samba
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Homelab Adventures: Crafting a Personal Tech Playground
Samba
- Show HN: Git, from scratch, in Python, Spelled out
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How do I go about hosting a shared drive for both Windows and Linux
The TLDR is that you create the filesystem on Linux/Raspberry Pi. Then you "export" that file system via some software to remote computers. You can use Samba (https://www.samba.org/) to create CIFS shares which can be mounted by either Linux or Microsoft Windows devices. There are of course other software/protocols you can use to export the filesystems like NFS, iSCSI, CEPHFS, etc; but these are a bit more complicated than what a novice can deploy. I would start with Samba/CIFS and then branch out once you get more experienced.
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Go SMB Server?
You could try to use samba via cgo.
- The most common ways for two Linux laptops to share files?
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Is there any r/rust library for "net use"?
I think you want a CIFS/SMB client? A quick search turned up smbc, which looks like it does what you want. All three crates are based on libsmbclient, which is a C implementation from the Samba project.
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Are most companies moving away from on-prem AD in favour of Azure?
Remember kids, there is always Samba.
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Major Linux Problems on the Desktop, 2022 edition
> First, the article doesn't say that "Linux is not ready for the desktop" - or concern itself with this as an abstract question.
Well, it does, but in a sarcastic manner:
"Yeah, let's consider Linux an OS ready for the desktop :-)."
> Also, I find the "GNU/Linux is already ready for the desktop; I and others use it" argument tired. I've used GNU/Linux for the desktop in 1998, but it sure as hell wasn't ready then.
Conversely, that it doesn't work for certain people does not mean that "it is not ready", which the post does state (sarcastically) as I pointed out above.
> Many use cases aside...
I'm not sure how the browsing, docs and email is miserable, maybe you can expand on that. The video editing is indeed a bit limited from my experience too. However, I don't think "limited proprietary options" is a problem. The community largely and specifically avoids proprietary software. Proprietary incursions into the community are generally seen as a negative thing. And for the lack of codecs, software patents for the most part are to blame.
And then it just comes to my original statement; many things stated in the article are non-issues to most Linux users or just falsehoods:
- Neither Mozilla Firefox nor Google Chrome use video decoding and output acceleration in Linux.
Firefox does.
- NVIDIA Optimus technology is a pain
NVIDIA is a pain.
- You don't play games, do you?
I do.
- Linux still has very few native AAA games.
So "it's not ready" because it doesn't have AAA games? What a pitty.
- To be fair you can now run thousands of Windows games through DirectX to Vulkan/OpenGL translation (Wine, Proton, Steam for Linux) but this incurs translation costs and decreases performance sometimes significantly.
No, not 'significantly' for dxvk.
- Also, anti-cheat protection usually doesn't work in Linux.
For good reason. Blame the dev, and don't make it work on Linux.
- Microsoft Office is not available for Linux
Thankfull.
- LibreOffice often has major troubles properly opening, rendering or saving documents created in Microsoft Office.
And whose fault is this? Use ODT.
- Several crucial Windows applications are not available under Linux.
Thankfully. Also, 'crucial' is subjective.
- In 2022 there's still no alternative to Windows Network File Sharing.
It's available since 1992: https://www.samba.org/
- Linux doesn't have a reliably working hassle-free fast native (directly mountable via the kernel; FUSE doesn't cut it) MTP implementation.
I can transfer files to my phone just fine.
- Too many things in Linux require manual configuration using text files.
No.
etc.
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Get linux samba shares to show up in windows again
I have a media server that runs ubuntu, and today I wanted to copy some files off of it from my windows laptop. But the samba shares weren't showing up in file explorer (but they showed up on fine on my macbook).
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Lifelong PC guy about to buy M1 mini. Some questions
brew info samba samba: stable 4.16.0 (bottled) SMB/CIFS file, print, and login server for UNIX https://www.samba.org/ Not installed From: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/HEAD/Formula/samba.rb License: GPL-3.0-or-later ==> Dependencies Build: [email protected] ✔ Required: gnutls ✘, krb5 ✔ ==> Caveats To avoid conflicting with macOS system binaries, some files were installed with non-standard name: - smbd: /usr/local/sbin/samba-dot-org-smbd - profiles: /usr/local/bin/samba-dot-org-profiles ==> Analytics install: 1,477 (30 days), 3,287 (90 days), 6,917 (365 days) install-on-request: 1,459 (30 days), 3,246 (90 days), 6,863 (365 days) build-error: 5 (30 days)
What are some alternatives?
dsd - Digital Speech Decoder
Nextcloud - ☁️ Nextcloud server, a safe home for all your data
direwolf - Dire Wolf is a software "soundcard" AX.25 packet modem/TNC and APRS encoder/decoder. It can be used stand-alone to observe APRS traffic, as a tracker, digipeater, APRStt gateway, or Internet Gateway (IGate). For more information, look at the bottom 1/4 of this page and in https://github.com/wb2osz/direwolf/blob/dev/doc/README.md
syncthing - Open Source Continuous File Synchronization
rtl_433 - Program to decode radio transmissions from devices on the ISM bands (and other frequencies)
minio - The Object Store for AI Data Infrastructure
SDRPlusPlus - Cross-Platform SDR Software
FreeIPA - Mirror of FreeIPA, an integrated security information management solution
sdrangel - SDR Rx/Tx software for Airspy, Airspy HF+, BladeRF, HackRF, LimeSDR, PlutoSDR, RTL-SDR, SDRplay and FunCube
ownCloud - :cloud: ownCloud web server core (Files, DAV, etc.)
pagermon - Multimon-ng pager message parser and viewer
Seafile - High performance file syncing and sharing, with also Markdown WYSIWYG editing, Wiki, file label and other knowledge management features.