Create a template service file at /etc/systemd/system/[email protected]
. The template parameter will correspond to the name
of target host:
[Unit]
Description=Setup a secure tunnel to %I
After=network.target
import os | |
import stat | |
import pygame | |
import time | |
import random | |
# https://learn.adafruit.com/pi-video-output-using-pygame/pointing-pygame-to-the-framebuffer | |
drivers = ['directfb', 'fbcon', 'svgalib'] | |
background = (255,255,0) |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['AuthenticationMethods'] = 'publickey,keyboard-interactive:pam' | |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['ChallengeResponseAuthentication'] = 'yes' | |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['PasswordAuthentication'] = 'no' |
Create a template service file at /etc/systemd/system/[email protected]
. The template parameter will correspond to the name
of target host:
[Unit]
Description=Setup a secure tunnel to %I
After=network.target
It's not immediately obvious how to pull down the code for a PR and test it locally. But it's pretty easy. (This assumes you have a remote for the main repo named upstream
.)
Getting the PR code
Make note of the PR number. For example, Rod's latest is PR #37: Psiphon-Labs/psiphon-tunnel-core#37
Fetch the PR's pseudo-branch (or bookmark or rev pointer whatever the word is), and give it a local branch name. Here we'll name it pr37
:
$ git fetch upstream pull/37/head:pr37