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@nealfennimore
nealfennimore / wireguard.conf
Last active January 29, 2025 10:57
Wireguard VPN - Forward all traffic to server
# ------------------------------------------------
# Config files are located in /etc/wireguard/wg0
# ------------------------------------------------
# ---------- Server Config ----------
[Interface]
Address = 10.10.0.1/24 # IPV4 CIDR
Address = fd86:ea04:1111::1/64 # IPV6 CIDR
PostUp = iptables -A FORWARD -i wg0 -j ACCEPT; iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE; ip6tables -A FORWARD -i wg0 -j ACCEPT; ip6tables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE # Add forwarding when VPN is started
PostDown = iptables -D FORWARD -i wg0 -j ACCEPT; iptables -t nat -D POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE; ip6tables -D FORWARD -i wg0 -j ACCEPT; ip6tables -t nat -D POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE # Remove forwarding when VPN is shutdown
@edro15
edro15 / SynchNTPtoGPS.md
Created February 13, 2018 16:45
[How To] Synchronize NTP server to a GPS/PPS source

So, I want to have a GPS Receiver driving a PPS (pulse-per-second) signal to the NTP server for a highly accurate time reference service.

Introduction

There are at least a couple of ways to propagate the PPS signal to the ntpd (NTP daemon) service, plus some variants in each case. However, the GPS device must be seen as a device that sources two different types of data:

  • the absolute date and time, and
  • the 1Hz clock signal (PPS).

The first one provides the complete information (incl. date and time) about when now is, but with poor accuracy because data is sent over the serial port and then encoded using a specific protocol such as NMEA (National Marine Electronics Association). PPS provides instead a very accurate clock but without any reference to absolute time.

@mohakshah
mohakshah / Instructions.md
Last active July 15, 2023 04:58
Building ZFS on Raspberry Pi 3 running Rasbpian

Introduction

This is a tutorial for building and installing the latest release version (0.7.3 as of writing) of "ZFS on Linux" on a Raspberry Pi 3 running Raspbian Stretch. Specifically, we'll be building the dkms version of ZoL, which saves you the hassle of re-compiling the kernel modules after every kernel update. Even though ZoL added support for building dkms packages for debian in version 0.7.3, the build process on a Raspberry Pi 3 is not quite straight-forward. Hopefully, these instructions will make it easier.

Steps

  1. Install the build dependencies.
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential autoconf libtool gawk alien fakeroot
$ sudo apt-get install dkms zlib1g-dev uuid-dev libattr1-dev libblkid-dev libselinux-dev libudev-dev libssl-dev parted lsscsi wget ksh