From: frank Date: Tue, 17 Jan 2012 07:47:38 +0000 (+0100) Subject: committing changes in /etc after emerge run X-Git-Url: https://git.uhu-banane.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=4dc7acf40dfed1760e25d88ea8d6589da7b873d9;p=config%2Fbruni%2Fetc.git committing changes in /etc after emerge run Package changes: +app-cdr/cdrtools-3.00 --- diff --git a/.etckeeper b/.etckeeper index d8d88c5e..d74e8143 100755 --- a/.etckeeper +++ b/.etckeeper @@ -371,6 +371,8 @@ maybe chmod 0644 './dbus-1/system.d/org.kde.polkitkde1.helper.conf' maybe chmod 0644 './dbus-1/system.d/pulseaudio-system.conf' maybe chmod 0644 './dbus-1/system.d/wpa_supplicant.conf' maybe chmod 0755 './default' +maybe chmod 0644 './default/cdrecord' +maybe chmod 0644 './default/rscsi' maybe chmod 0600 './default/useradd' maybe chmod 0644 './dhcpcd.conf' maybe chmod 0644 './dispatch-conf.conf' diff --git a/default/cdrecord b/default/cdrecord new file mode 100644 index 00000000..6794eeff --- /dev/null +++ b/default/cdrecord @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ +#ident @(#)cdrecord.dfl 1.7 08/12/30 Copyr 1998 J. Schilling +# +# This file is /etc/default/cdrecord +# It contains defaults that are used if no command line option +# or environment is present. +# +# The default device, if not specified elswhere +# Note that since Sommer 2006, cdrecord by default searches for a +# single CD-ROM device. You should set CDR_DEVICE= together with +# an entry in the device table below only if you have more than +# one CR-ROM drive in your system. +# +#CDR_DEVICE=yamaha +#CDR_DEVICE=default + +# +# The default speed (speed=), if not specified elswhere +# +# Note that newer cdrecord versions do not default +# to speed=1. For MMC compliant drives, the default +# is to write at maximum speed, so it in general does +# not make sense to set up a default speed in /etc/default/cdrecord +# +#CDR_SPEED=40 + +# +# The default FIFO size (fs=), if not specified elswhere +# +#CDR_FIFOSIZE=16m + +# +# The default transfer size (ts=), if not specified elswhere +# The cdrecord default transfer size (currently) is 63k because +# Linux and Solaris have problems with bigger transfer sizes. +# If you are on FreeBSD, it is recommened to set CDR_TRANSFERSIZE=126k +# +#CDR_TRANSFERSIZE=32k + +# +# The following definitions allow abstract device names. +# They are used if the device name does not contain the +# the characters ',', ':', '/' and '@' +# +# Unless you have a good reason, use speed == -1 and let +# cdrecord use it's intercal drive specific defaults. +# +# Call cdrecord -scanbus to find the right "device name" for your +# drive. Then set up a list entry with an arbitraty logical name, +# followed by the SCSI device name if the drive. If speed or fifosize +# should stay with the defaults, insert a -1. If you do not need to +# set driveropts, use an empty string. The transfer size entry may be omitted. +# It is recommended to set "burnfree". +# +# The logical device name must be followed by an equal sign, the fields may +# be separated by one or more tab or space. +# +# drive name device speed fifosize driveropts transfersize +# +my-default= 1,0,0 -1 -1 burnfree 63k +sol-default= USCSI:1,0,0 -1 -1 burnfree +ricoh-u= USCSI:0,2,0 -1 -1 burnfree +teac= 1,3,0 -1 -1 "" +teac-max-ts= 1,3,0 -1 -1 "" 32k +panasonic= 1,4,0 -1 -1 "" +plextor= 1,4,0 -1 -1 "" +sanyo= 1,4,0 -1 -1 burnfree +yamaha= 1,5,0 -1 -1 "" +cdrom= 0,6,0 2 1m "" +remote= REMOTE:rscsi@somehost:1,0,0 16 16m burnfree diff --git a/default/rscsi b/default/rscsi new file mode 100644 index 00000000..5c02427b --- /dev/null +++ b/default/rscsi @@ -0,0 +1,64 @@ +#ident @(#)rscsi.dfl 1.3 05/08/09 Copyr 2000 J. Schilling +# +# This file is /etc/default/rscsi +# +# NOTE: If this file is not present, rscsi will reject to work. +# +# If no USER= entry is present, only root is allowed to run rscsi. +# If no ACCESS= entry is present, no device may to be used by remote users. + +# +# The file where debug info should go to. +# If you don't like debugging (e.g. for speed) comment out +# the this line. +# +# Note that rscsi runs as root and thus may be able to overwrite any file. +# Be sure not to allow other people to replace the debug file by a symlink +# to e.g. /etc/passwd. If your system supports append only directories, this +# may be done by "chmod +t /tmp". If you are not sure, do never use /tmp +# but a different directory that is safe against modifications by non root +# users. +# +#DEBUG=/tmp/RSCSI + +# +# Each USER= entry adds the listed user to the users who may run rscsi +# +# A typical passwd entry looks like this: +# rscsi:x:1999:1000:Remote SCSI:/export/home/rscsi:/opt/schily/sbin/rscsi +# +# Add entries for all valid remote users to /export/home/rscsi/.rhosts +# +# USER= entries are checked with a pattern matcher. USER=* matches all users. +# +USER=rscsi +#USER=joerg + +# +# Each ACCESS= entry adds a target or group of targets to the list of visible +# targets for all users that do remote SCSI access from a specific host. +# +# Username is the name of the user that runs rscsi. If you create +# different users, you may assign different permissions to different +# users from the same host. +# +# Hostname must be in the same notation as needed for .rhosts (e.g. in +# the way you will be listed by 'who' if you log in from this host). +# +# bus/chan/target/lun are the numbers from the scanbus output from +# cdrecord or sformat. If you use -1, you allow any value for this +# placeholder. +# +# local user name and remote host name are checked with a pattern matcher. +# ACCESS=* * .... matches all users from all hosts. +# +# NOTE: chan is currently not implementd (set it to 0 or -1) +# +# local remote +# user host bus chan target lun +# name name +# +#ACCESS=rscsi sparky -1 -1 -1 -1 +#ACCESS=rscsi sparky 0 -1 6 -1 +#ACCESS=rscsi sparky 1 -1 3 -1 +#ACCESS=rscsi sparky 1 -1 4 -1