[Bug 1111447] New: authorized_keys guide wrong
by Red Hat Bugzilla
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1111447
Bug ID: 1111447
Summary: authorized_keys guide wrong
Product: Fedora Documentation
Version: devel
Component: deployment-guide
Assignee: jhradile(a)redhat.com
Reporter: morten(a)tranebaerkaeret.dk
QA Contact: docs-qa(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
CC: dhensley(a)redhat.com, jhradile(a)redhat.com,
zach(a)oglesby.co
Description of problem: It is not possible to make authorized_keys setup work
by following the guide in the documentation
How reproducible:
Follow the guide on Fedora (I have tested on Fedora 18)
Steps to Reproduce:
1. Create ssh key
2. Change key perm 755
3. Create authorized_keys
4. Change key perm to 644
Actual results:
Is forced to enter password on ssh login
Expected results:
No need to enter password on ssh login
Additional info:
If permissions are changed to 700 and 600 respectively then no password key is
required.
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9 years, 5 months
[Bug 1076963] New: 9.14.5 Recommended Partition Scheme, outdated info
by Red Hat Bugzilla
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1076963
Bug ID: 1076963
Summary: 9.14.5 Recommended Partition Scheme, outdated info
Product: Fedora Documentation
Version: devel
Component: install-guide
Assignee: pbokoc(a)redhat.com
Reporter: bugzilla(a)colorremedies.com
QA Contact: docs-qa(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
CC: pbokoc(a)redhat.com, zach(a)oglesby.co
Existing documentation with the problem is here:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/20/html/Installation_Guide/s2-...
Here's a minimal list of problems and proposed changes for this page.
1. 9.14.5.1 recommends a layout the installer doesn't use by default. To fix
it:
a. Change "partitions" to "mount points", to be consistent with newui
terminology, and to apply to either partitions or LVs since the default is
swap, root, home on LV, and only boot is on a partition.
2. The first NOTE, under "A /boot/ partition (500 MB)":
Let's just remove this. We haven't dealt with cylinders on drives for over 5
years, but rather Logical Block Addresses. I'm not sure what problem this is
trying to solve, other than 2.2+TB drives in which case they need to be GPT and
hope the BIOS doesn't puke. If it does, a separate /boot isn't going to fix it.
Seems like very antiquated advice.
3. A root partition (3.0 GB - 5.0 GB)
Change to 3 GB to 20 GB to be consistent with the body text "full desktop
installation, a minimum of 20GB for the root partition is recommended". Please
also drop the insignificant digit
4. Side bar "Root and /root"
Both sentences are confusing, suggested rewrite:
The / mount point is the top of the Linux Filesystem Hierarchy, and is referred
to as the root file system, or root.The /root directory, sometimes pronounced
"slash-root", is the home directory for the root user.
*I consulted the v2.3 FHS to come up with this.
5. A home partition (at least 100 MB)
100MB is useless for gnome which is our default installation. Its indexer
consumes 3GB for just one person. So if present, it needs to be a lot bigger
than this or it should just be in /.
6. "To store user data separately from system data, create a dedicated
partition within a volume group for the /home directory. This will enable you
to upgrade or reinstall Fedora without erasing user data files."
This is really confusing because it conflates partitions and Logical Volumes in
one sentence. Rewrite as follows:
"To store user data separately from system data, create a mount point for
/home. This will enable you to reinstall Fedora without erasing user data."
7. "If you create many partitions instead of one large / partition, upgrades
become easier."
This should be removed as it's based on partitioning mythology/religion, not
fact. We even say separate /usr is proscribed. Fewer volumes to assemble is
less complex which is easier, but so long as we can upgrade what we permit
users to create, the "ease" of upgrading should be the same and if not then
it's a bug. I'd just strike this whole sentence.
8. 9.14.5.1.1 Advice on partitions.
"Each kernel installed on your system requires approximately 220 MB on the
/boot partition."
Untrue. On /boot, kernel 3.14 takes up 18.1MB total. That includes config*,
initramfs*, System.map*, and vmlinuz*. Debug kernel with a generic non-host
initramfs is 45MB. Even fully installed (to both /boot and /lib) is 141MB. This
should be changed to "approximately 25MB" which leaves a bit of headroom for
growing kernel sizes.
9. Find all instances of "partition" and make sure we mean partition (i.e.
related to an entry in the MBR or GPT) and not either "mount point" or
"volume". Partition is not a good generic term for applying to Logical Volumes
and Btrfs subvolumes.
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9 years, 5 months
[Bug 1139176] New: kickstarts network command not know --biosdevname option
by Red Hat Bugzilla
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1139176
Bug ID: 1139176
Summary: kickstarts network command not know --biosdevname
option
Product: Fedora Documentation
Version: devel
Component: install-guide
Assignee: pbokoc(a)redhat.com
Reporter: mkolman(a)redhat.com
QA Contact: docs-qa(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
CC: anaconda-maint-list(a)redhat.com,
extras-qa(a)fedoraproject.org, franta(a)hanzlici.cz,
g.kaviyarasu(a)hotmail.com, jonathan(a)jonmasters.org,
pbokoc(a)redhat.com, vanmeeuwen+fedora(a)kolabsys.com,
zach(a)oglesby.co
Depends On: 1135692
+++ This bug was initially created as a clone of Bug #1135692 +++
Description of problem:
starting F20 i386 installation from kickstart file which contain network
command
as:
network --onboot=yes --noipv6 --bootproto=dhcp --biosdevname=0 --hostname=mypc
ends with anaconda error:
anaconda 20.25.15-1 for Fedora 20 started.
The following problem occured on line 35 of the kickstart file:
no such option: --biosdevname
Expected results:
option should be accepted. Perhaps should be created (template?) udev config
rules file in /etc/udev/rules.d/ also.
--- Additional comment from bcl(a)redhat.com on 2014-09-03 03:15:05 CEST ---
--biosdevname is no a valid option.
--- Additional comment from Frantisek Hanzlik on 2014-09-06 12:34:43 CEST ---
Then is bug in Fedora 20 Installation Guide, where is (chapter 15.4. Kickstart
Options) this parameter mentioned.
Referenced Bugs:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1135692
[Bug 1135692] kickstarts network command not know --biosdevname option
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9 years, 5 months
[Bug 1029712] New: Suggestions for documentation improvement.
by Red Hat Bugzilla
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1029712
Bug ID: 1029712
Summary: Suggestions for documentation improvement.
Product: Fedora Documentation
Version: devel
Component: install-guide
Severity: low
Assignee: pbokoc(a)redhat.com
Reporter: r.landmann(a)redhat.com
QA Contact: docs-qa(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
CC: lsatenstein(a)yahoo.com, me(a)petetravis.com,
mmcallis(a)redhat.com, pbokoc(a)redhat.com,
r.landmann(a)redhat.com, zach(a)oglesby.co
Depends On: 994794
Thanks Leslie:
Cloning to separate the Document Conventions suggestions from the Install Guide
suggestions.
+++ This bug was initially created as a clone of Bug #994794 +++
Improvement recommendation for Install Guide.
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/19/html/Installation_Guide/Ins...
Under
1.1. Typographic Conventions
The indented paragraph reads
To see the contents of the file my_next_bestselling_novel in your current
working directory, enter the cat my_next_bestselling_novel command at the shell
prompt and press Enter to execute the command.
I would replace the word "see" with view.
To view the contents of the...
See for me, would be the result of issuing the ls command. See the file, view
the contents.
As an aside, for French translation, "to see" translates to "regarder"
whereas view tranlates to "voir". A similar difference is with Spanish
Please correct for Fedora 20.
======
Further on the same page...
Warnings should not be ignored. Ignoring warnings will most likely cause data
loss.
My comment.
Warnings do not cause data loss. Warnings advise of a situation that if not
attended to, will most likely cause data loss.
=======
Follow page with Introduction
Introduction
This guide covers installation of Fedora, a Linux distribution built on free
and open source software.
Please change ... built on ... to built with.
My reasoning... You may be on topic, or build on a foundation, but Fedora is
built with free and open source software
=======
Another question. Would you say, "Install Fedora on a computer," or would you
say "Install Fedora onto a computer"?
My preference is to drop the "on a computer". That would shorten the sentence
and accommodate some future hardware device.
=======
2.1.1. How Do I Download Installation Files?
To follow a Web-based guide to downloading, visit
http://get.fedoraproject.org/. For guidance on which architecture to download,
refer to Section 2.1.2, “Which Architecture Is My Computer?”.
Would the meaning be more clear if the title started with the word "Of" as in
"Of which Architecture Is My Computer?"
(sections 2.1.2 and 2.1.3)
--- Additional comment from Pete Travis on 2013-08-08 20:59:31 EDT ---
The "Typographic Conventions" content is defined by publican, the publishing
tool used to create the guide.
--- Additional comment from Leslie Satenstein on 2013-08-15 15:36:18 EDT ---
In the installation guide, I noted that chapter two and following that
"the discussion is about downloading the various versions of Fedora
(netinstall, dvd, etc)."
Then aas a follow up, there is a long discussion about which version of Fedora
is the one to select from a list of options based on architecture and the like.
Should not the latter documentation section precede the downloading
information? As the comments in the guide were "for new users of Linux and
experienced ones", the guide may (in my opinion) be presenting information that
the individual should know about before downloading or acquiring any version.
Most users of technical manuals do a two pass read.
The first read is to get an appreciation of the product and guide, and the
second pass is to follow the recipe. By following the recipe, it should be
a) step one, determine your version and suitability of hardware
b) step two determine the version of Fedora you want to install (32bit/64bit)
etc.
c) Download/acquire
....
and so forth.
The guide is almost in the step by step recipe sequence,
If you go forward, would the improvements be present before Fedora 20,so the
new sequence could be ready for a reviewer and his comments? And if you keep
the sequence, I presume the update draft would also be ready for the reviewers
and their comments.
--- Additional comment from Leslie Satenstein on 2013-08-15 15:37:32 EDT ---
In the installation guide, I noted that chapter two and following that
"the discussion is about downloading the various versions of Fedora
(netinstall, dvd, etc)."
Then aas a follow up, there is a long discussion about which version of Fedora
is the one to select from a list of options based on architecture and the like.
Should not the latter documentation section precede the downloading
information? As the comments in the guide were "for new users of Linux and
experienced ones", the guide may (in my opinion) be presenting information that
the individual should know about before downloading or acquiring any version.
Most users of technical manuals do a two pass read.
The first read is to get an appreciation of the product and guide, and the
second pass is to follow the recipe. By following the recipe, it should be
a) step one, determine your version and suitability of hardware
b) step two determine the version of Fedora you want to install (32bit/64bit)
etc.
c) Download/acquire
....
and so forth.
The guide is almost in the step by step recipe sequence,
If you go forward, would the improvements be present before Fedora 20,so the
new sequence could be ready for a reviewer and his comments? And if you keep
the sequence, I presume the update draft would also be ready for the reviewers
and their comments.
Referenced Bugs:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=994794
[Bug 994794] Suggestions for documentation improvement.
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9 years, 5 months
[Bug 1149787] New: Add instructions for md5 hashing with powershell
by Red Hat Bugzilla
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1149787
Bug ID: 1149787
Summary: Add instructions for md5 hashing with powershell
Product: Fedora Documentation
Version: devel
Component: install-guide
Assignee: pbokoc(a)redhat.com
Reporter: me(a)petetravis.com
QA Contact: docs-qa(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
CC: pbokoc(a)redhat.com, zach(a)oglesby.co
Powershell is the native scripting language available on all Windows 7 and
Windows 8 machines, and it has functions for md5sum. Rather than refer to
third party tools, we can post a short sample powershell script that will
checksum the download.
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9 years, 5 months
[Bug 1045205] New: post-f19 askmethod behavior should be documented
by Red Hat Bugzilla
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1045205
Bug ID: 1045205
Summary: post-f19 askmethod behavior should be documented
Product: Fedora Documentation
Version: devel
Component: install-guide
Severity: medium
Assignee: pbokoc(a)redhat.com
Reporter: me(a)petetravis.com
QA Contact: docs-qa(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
CC: awilliam(a)redhat.com, g.kaviyarasu(a)hotmail.com,
jonathan(a)jonmasters.org, kanarip(a)kanarip.com,
maurizio.antillon(a)gmail.com, pbokoc(a)redhat.com,
rtguille(a)gmail.com, sbueno(a)redhat.com, zach(a)oglesby.co
Depends On: 889887
+++ This bug was initially created as a clone of Bug #889887 +++
Description of problem:
If one boots the netinstall to install over nfs (or anything that is not
closest mirror) one needs to wait for closest mirror to be ready. In my case it
is about 20 minutes, but that will be different for other people.
The issue is that anaconda has already selected (correctly) closest mirror for
the netinstall iso, but it is cannot be interrupted. I wanted to install from
nfs source over wi-fi but i must wait my SLOW(TM) internet connection prior to
selecting nfs as an INSTALLATION SOURCE.
If anaconda has access to the internet, everything has to wait for closest
mirror to be ready.
Please, consider adding a small timeout that allows one to enter INSTALLATION
DESTINATION to override the closes mirror.
Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable):
F18-TC2
How reproducible:
always
Steps to Reproduce:
1. boot anaconda netinstall
2. wait for closest mirror to be ready
3. select your nfs installation source and install.
Actual results:
long wait for an installation source to be setup which will not be used.
Expected results:
some time to enter INSTALLATION SOURCE and be able to select nfs (or other)
without waiting for closest mirror.
Additional info:
--- Additional comment from Chris Lumens on 2013-01-22 15:30:11 EST ---
I do somewhat agree, given that we've got this shiny installation source UI
that we then don't really let you use. On the other hand, our threading/spoke
stuff doesn't really work in this direction. Threads can wait on other things
to be completed but there's not really any way to stop a thread when you enter
a spoke. So, I think implementation of this would be very difficult.
Would you settle for a check for the old "askmethod" command line parameter and
not immediately fire up the mirror checking stuff if that parameter exists?
--- Additional comment from Reartes Guillermo on 2013-01-23 16:46:11 EST ---
> Would you settle for a check for the old "askmethod" command line parameter
> and not immediately fire up the mirror checking stuff if that parameter exists?
I have no objection for such proposal.
The current workaround (Fedora Release NetInstall ISO) is:
1. Start Anaconda and reach the MAIN HUB
2. Enter NETWORK CONFGURATION and 'disable' the Network
3. Wait for INSTALLATION SOURCE to be back in 'Nothing Selected'
4. Enter NETWORK CONFGURATION and 'enable' the Network
5. Enter INSTALLATION SOURCE and now select NFS or other.
In my test (KVM Guest) it works, but i don't know if this workaround
do work with all network cards at them moment. (It should but there
could be bugs).
Since this workaround is somewhat simple, maybe it should be documented
as the default way of aborting the automatic selection of closest mirror
by Anaconda for NetInstall Images. In that case, nothing new is needed.
Cheers.
--- Additional comment from Adam Williamson on 2013-05-11 02:33:13 EDT ---
Tested with F19 Beta TC3. The askmethod behaviour described in c#1 has been
added. It works, though it's somewhat ugly: it leaves the Installation Source
spoke in an 'error' condition. But it works.
--- Additional comment from Adam Williamson on 2013-05-13 12:38:48 EDT ---
Note, Reartes took the testing further than me, and found that if you actually
try to complete an install with the new parameter, it fails:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=962098 .
--- Additional comment from Reartes Guillermo on 2013-06-01 17:05:55 EDT ---
There parameter 'askmethod', it is still not usable due to the issue in comment
#3.
Re-Tested with F19b RC4 (19.30-1)
--- Additional comment from Adam Williamson on 2013-06-02 13:54:58 EDT ---
How do you mean 'not usable'? It does what it's meant to do: lets you go into
the spoke immediately. I wouldn't call that 'not usable'.
========================================
Also refer to
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Anaconda_Boot_Options?rd=Anaconda/Options
Referenced Bugs:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=889887
[Bug 889887] please add a small timeout in netinstall images for
INSTALLATION SOURCE that permits one to override the 'closest mirror'
selection (and the long wait it might imply)
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9 years, 5 months