If you have a LUKS-encrypted partition on another disk, it's easy to mount it inside WSL.
List your disks:
> wmic diskdrive list brief
Mount the whole disk inside WSL (using --bare
so WSL doesn't attempt to mount it automatically):
If you have a LUKS-encrypted partition on another disk, it's easy to mount it inside WSL.
List your disks:
> wmic diskdrive list brief
Mount the whole disk inside WSL (using --bare
so WSL doesn't attempt to mount it automatically):
I recently got a Thinkpad sporting an Intel® Core™ i5-1140G7 Processor 11. gen (1,80 GHz, Turbo Boost, 4 Cores, 8 Threads, 8 MB Cache with an Integrated Intel® Iris® Xe. Sadly graphics drivers did not work out-of-the-box and also not with the latets 5.12 kernel from xenmod. You can tell it's not working when graphics are slow, backlight adjustment buttons don't work and this is the output of inxi -G
(you might need to sudo apt install inxi
):
simon@pop-os:~$ inxi -G
Graphics:
Device-1: Intel driver: N/A
Device-2: IMC Networks Integrated Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
Display: x11 server: X.Org 1.20.9 driver: fbdev unloaded: modesetting,vesa
resolution: 2256x1504~95Hz
{ | |
"bip": "172.26.0.1/16", | |
"default-address-pools": [ | |
{"base":"172.27.0.0/16", "size":24} | |
] | |
} |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<style> | |
* { | |
font-family:Roboto, "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; | |
} | |
</style> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="email-wrapper" style="padding-top:32px;background-color:#ffffff;"><tbody> |
A modest proposal for a first-class destiny operator equivalent in Svelte components that's also valid JS.
Svelte 2 has a concept of computed properties, which are updated whenever their inputs change. They're powerful, if a little boilerplatey, but there's currently no place for them in Svelte 3.
This means that we have to use functions. Instead of this...
<!-- Svelte 2 -->
<h1>HELLO {NAME}!</h1>
The purpose of this document is to explain how to deploy an Upspin server on a Debian or Ubuntu based machine - which can be a Raspberry Pi - and, optionally, use Google Drive to back the data.
Effectively, this will give you all the nifty advantages Upspin gives you in terms of file sharing without requiring a costly server.
# Make coding more python3-ish | |
from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function) | |
from abc import ABCMeta | |
from array import array | |
from base64 import b64encode, b64decode | |
from Crypto import Random | |
from Crypto.Cipher import AES | |
from Crypto.Hash import SHA256 |
*update: TBC, but this new might affect how easy it is to use this technique past August 2024: Authy is shutting down its desktop app | The 2FA app Authy will only be available on Android and iOS starting in August
This gist, based in part on a gist by Brian Hartvigsen, allows you to export from Authy your TOTP tokens you have stored there.
Those can be "standard" 6-digits / 30 secs tokens, or Authy's own version, the 7-digits / 10 secs tokens.