Setting a root password for a Docker image created with USER

If you have a Docker image created with a non-root user using USER in your Dockerfile, but you need to su to root to install or update something owned by root, without setting a root password you won’t be able to su to root.

Instead, add a password for root in your Dockerfile (this is described here):

RUN echo "root:Docker!" | chpasswd

This is probably not a good idea for security reasons (especially if you are sharing your Dockerfile), but I needed to create something in a container to reuse when creating other new containers, so did this one-time to get the file I needed and then reused the file in containers with another image without the root user/password.

Direwolf soundcard packet on Linux, with ax25 and LinPac

I’ve been playing around with Direwolf soundcard packet radio decoder on Linux. On Windows I use the packet terminal app that comes with the UZ7 soundcard modem, which you can connect to Direwolf’s AGW port over a network. The only comparable app on Linux that I’ve found seems to be LinPac.

Linpac connects over an ax25 port. To get LinPac to connect to Direwolf there’s a few steps to jump through.

Install Direwolf

Download the source from: https://home.comcast.net/~wb2osz/site/?/home/

(or after Oct 8 2015, https://github.com/wb2osz/direwolf)

Install libasound2-dev:

sudo apt-get install libasound2-dev

Compile Direwolf:

make
sudo make install

If you get this error when compiling Direwolf then you missed the libasound-dev step:

audio.c:80:28: fatal error: alsa/asoundlib.h: No such file or directory
#include <alsa/asoundlib.h>

Copy the supplied direwolf.conf file (from the downloaded source) to your home dir. To find out what input and output sound devices you have, run

aplay - l

and

arecord -l

You’ll see something like this:

**** List of CAPTURE Hardware Devices ****

card 0: NVidia [HDA NVidia], device 0: ALC1200 Analog [ALC1200 Analog]

  Subdevices: 1/1

  Subdevice #0: subdevice #0

card 0: NVidia [HDA NVidia], device 2: ALC1200 Alt Analog [ALC1200 Alt Analog]

  Subdevices: 1/1

  Subdevice #0: subdevice #0

Get the device numbers for the soundcard you are using and edit direwolf.conf. For device 0 subdevice 0, edit this line and set 0,0:

ADEVICE  plughw:0,0

Using a Rigblaster Plug and Play on Ubuntu 14.04, it was automatically recognized and showed up per the docs on /dev/ttyUSB0. Direwolf will use this for PTT on your radio. I uncommented this line to enable this:

PTT /dev/ttyUSB0 RTS

To give my current user access to ttyUSB0 (and avoid running with sudo) I had to add my user to the dialout group (per post here):

sudo usermod -a -G dialout $USER

Start up alsamixer and make sure the mic inputs and outputs are not muted (M), and the volume levels are around 3/4.

Install the ax25 network suport:

sudo apt-get install libax25 ax25-apps ax25-tools

To enable an ax25port, edit /etc/ax25/axports, I added a line like this:

1 KK6DCT-1 1200 255 2 2m packet

The first column is the port name. Start up direwolf with the -p option to enable a KISS port, you’ll see something like this (-t 0 t0 suppress the colors):

kev@kevs-ubuntu:~$ direwolf -t 0 -p
Dire Wolf version 1.2
Audio device for both receive and transmit: plughw:0,0  (channel 0)
Channel 0: 1200 baud, AFSK 1200 & 2200 Hz, E+, 44100 sample rate.
Ready to accept AGW client application 0 on port 8000 ...
Ready to accept KISS client application on port 8001 ...
Virtual KISS TNC is available on /dev/pts/0
WARNING - Dire Wolf will hang eventually if nothing is reading from it.
Created symlink /tmp/kisstnc -> /dev/pts/0

Note the /dev/pts/X value, and use this with a kissattach command to connect Direwolf to ax25:

sudo /usr/sbin/kissattach /dev/pts/0 1 44.56.4.118

The 1 value following /dev/pts/0 is the port number from the axports file.

Per the Direwolf PDF doc, if you see this error:

kissattach: Error setting line discipline: TIOCSETD: Device or resource busy
Are you sure you have enabled MKISS support in the kernel
or, if you made it a module, that the module is loaded?

Then try this instead:

sudo /usr/sbin/kissattach /dev/pts/ptmx 1 44.56.4.118

Install LinPac

Download the LinPac source. Build and install:

./configure
make
make install

The first time you startup LinPac it creates a LinPac dir in your home folder. Edit macro/init.mac in this folder and change the port value to match the port name from your axports change (1 in the above example):

;; Default port
port 1

Start LinPac with:

linpac -m

(I’m not sure what the -m option is for, I found this in a post online, but without it I get errors on startup about ax25 port not found).

Connect to a node with :c nodename

Done!

Ubuntu 14.04 with nvidia drivers

I’ve been on a kick installing various flavors of OS recently (I’ve been repurposing an older desktop and starting with an empty hdd). In the past the brownish/orange colors of Ubuntu have just put me off, and the Unity desktop I thought was just a bit too unusual to be useful. So I started with Mint Cinnamon, That’s been my main desktop OS for a couple of months. Then I started looking at Fedora 22. This gave me no end of installation pain.

I’m installing on a HP Pavillion with an AMD quadcore, and nvidia 6150 onboard graphics. Seems this older gpu is killing me. Fedora 22 hangs on install around 33%. Fedora 21 will install in simple graphics mode. Trying to get the nvidia graphics installed though gave me a few late nights. No matter which instructions I’d follow, I could not get the nouveau graphics unloaded, and so would always get the error messages about the nouveau kernel modules are still loaded. I tried various tips from online sources, and eventually gave up.

A while back I noticed the noobslab site with a easy to follow apt-get steps to install new themes for Ubuntu. Huh, so if I can install a different theme then I can get rid of the brown default theme? I’ve played with Ubuntu Tweaks a while back and didn’t spend enough time playing with it to end up with something that I liked. but ready to give it another go. So I installed Tweak:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:tualatrix/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-tweak

Installed Crunchy themes from noobslab, and now I’m all set. Looks pretty cool too… this will do for a while.

My previous steps for installing nvidia-304 work fine on Ubuntu 14.04 too. So all set.