Until now, the configuration must be stored under '/etc/lcd4linux.conf'.
So that the configuration can also be changed dynamically, it makes
sense to store this under /tmp and load them from this directory.
The init script first checks whether there is a configuration under
'/etc/lcd4linux.conf' and only then does it try to find it under
'/tmp/lcd4linux.conf'. If there is no configuration, an error message
is shown.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
libwolfsslcpu-crypto has to be taken into consideration when selecting
the default SSL backend.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
Changes since 4.2 are extensive, as always.
https://libwebsockets.org/git/libwebsockets/tree/changelog?h=v4.3-stable#n4
Eg, Adds CBOR, support for reduced memory CA verification, cookie jars,
mqtt client gains qos2, mbedtls v3, fault injection apis, better support
for event loops.
Signed-off-by: Karl Palsson <karlp@etactica.com>
Section 'Persistence' in 'luci-app-mosquitto' is unusable without 'persistence'
section in config file.
Signed-off-by: Ptilopsis Leucotis <PtilopsisLeucotis@yandex.com>
* remove obsolete block-lists from config
* add removal of obsolete lists to config-update
* add AdGuard team's block-list to config
* improve allow command
* improve nftset support
* move config load to uci_load_validate, which required some code refactoring which
looks dramatic, but isn't
* always use dnsmasq_restart instead of dnsmasq_hup for all dns resolution options
for dnsmasq
Signed-off-by: Stan Grishin <stangri@melmac.ca>
snowflake-proxy doesn't write any files
=> run in read-only rootfs environment
the process needs to read SSL certs but no other files
=> only exposed path is /etc/ssl/certificates (read-only)
running as unpriviledged user with no additional capabilities
=> set no-new-privs bit
By default procd-ujail also isolates the process by executing it in
a separate new IPC and PID namespace.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Package Tor's Snowflake system components so users can offer e.g.
a standalone Snowflake proxy on their routers or other devices.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
8988247 Makefile: Enable warnings as errors (-Werror)
aea39ca Makefile: Respect the CFLAGS and LDFLAGS that have been passed in
189594f poemgr: Fix compiler warnings in poemgr.c
0e1a8cf pd69104: Avoid self-induced pointer casts
2d53298 uswflex: Remove unused variables and declarations
d345441 poemgr: Reorganize poemgr.h to remove forward declarations
df1a7bc contrib: remove unneccessary functions.sh loading
056a6a9 poemgr: Fix name based profile selection
b8f8f23 poemgr: prolong the power budget detection delay
9e8344a poemgr: configure power_budget to override detected limit
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
Gatling is a high-performance webserver from fefe. It gives a
fairly decent feature-set at really small size. And its fast.
Co-authored-by: Josef Schlehofer <pepe.schlehofer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Hübner <martin.hubner@web.de>
mausezahn is a multicast traffic generator which is part of the
netsniff-ng sources. This utility is needed for the upcoming
kernel-selftests-net-forwarding package. Add a new package for it.
netsniff-ng will automatically detect all installed dependencies and
build only the utilities whose dependencies are installed (meaning:
mausezahn is not build when for example libcli is not installed and
other tools are not build if for example zlib is missing). Depending
on the selected packages (netsniff-ng or mausezahn) the OpenWrt build
system has to trigger netsniff-ng's configure script, which will then
pick up and automatically build the programs (mausezahn, netsniff-ng,
trafgen, ...) for which all dependencies are installed.
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>
This package is a dependency for building mausezahn as part of the
netsniff-ng sources. mausezahn is a multicast traffic generator used by
the upcoming kernel-selftests-net-forwarding package.
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>