Initial commit

This commit is contained in:
ariane
2021-03-18 15:42:28 +00:00
committed by root
commit e53cb04f1a
973 changed files with 23055 additions and 0 deletions

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default/avahi-daemon Normal file
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# 1 = Try to detect unicast dns servers that serve .local and disable avahi in
# that case, 0 = Don't try to detect .local unicast dns servers, can cause
# troubles on misconfigured networks
AVAHI_DAEMON_DETECT_LOCAL=1

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default/bluetooth Normal file
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# Defaults for bluez
# start bluetooth on boot?
# compatibility note: if this variable is _not_ found bluetooth will start
BLUETOOTH_ENABLED=1
# This setting used to switch HID devices (e.g mouse/keyboad) to HCI mode, that
# is you will have bluetooth functionality from your dongle instead of only
# HID. This is accomplished for supported devices by udev in
# /lib/udev/rules.d/62-bluez-hid2hci.rules by invoking hid2hci with correct
# parameters.
# See /usr/share/doc/bluez/NEWS.Debian.gz for further information.
# Older daemons like pand dund and hidd can be found in bluez-compat package as
# they are deprecated and provided for backward compatibility only.
# Note that not every bluetooth dongle is capable of switching back to HID mode,
# see http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=355497
HID2HCI_ENABLED=0
HID2HCI_UNDO=0

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# Uncomment the following line if you'd like all of your users'
# ~/calendar files to be checked daily. Calendar will send them mail
# to remind them of upcoming events. See calendar(1) for more details.
#RUN_DAILY=true

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default/console-setup Normal file
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# CONFIGURATION FILE FOR SETUPCON
# Consult the console-setup(5) manual page.
ACTIVE_CONSOLES="/dev/tty[1-6]"
CHARMAP="UTF-8"
CODESET="guess"
FONTFACE=""
FONTSIZE=""
VIDEOMODE=
# The following is an example how to use a braille font
# FONT='lat9w-08.psf.gz brl-8x8.psf'

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default/crda Normal file
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# Set REGDOMAIN to a ISO/IEC 3166-1 alpha2 country code so that iw(8) may set
# the initial regulatory domain setting for IEEE 802.11 devices which operate
# on this system.
#
# Governments assert the right to regulate usage of radio spectrum within
# their respective territories so make sure you select a ISO/IEC 3166-1 alpha2
# country code suitable for your location or you may infringe on local
# legislature. See `/usr/share/zoneinfo/zone.tab' for a table of timezone
# descriptions containing ISO/IEC 3166-1 alpha2 country codes.
REGDOMAIN=

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# Cron configuration options
# Whether to read the system's default environment files (if present)
# If set to "yes", cron will set a proper mail charset from the
# locale information. If set to something other than 'yes', the default
# charset 'C' (canonical name: ANSI_X3.4-1968) will be used.
#
# This has no effect on tasks running under cron; their environment can
# only be changed via PAM or from within the crontab; see crontab(5).
READ_ENV="yes"
# Extra options for cron, see cron(8)
#
# For example, to enable LSB name support in /etc/cron.d/, use
# EXTRA_OPTS='-l'
#
# Or, to log standard messages, plus jobs with exit status != 0:
# EXTRA_OPTS='-L 5'
#
# For quick reference, the currently available log levels are:
# 0 no logging (errors are logged regardless)
# 1 log start of jobs
# 2 log end of jobs
# 4 log jobs with exit status != 0
# 8 log the process identifier of child process (in all logs)
#
#EXTRA_OPTS=""

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# This is a configuration file for /etc/init.d/dbus; it allows you to
# perform common modifications to the behavior of the dbus daemon
# startup without editing the init script (and thus getting prompted
# by dpkg on upgrades). We all love dpkg prompts.
# Parameters to pass to dbus.
PARAMS=""

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# Uncomment to set clock even if saved value appears to be in the past
#FORCE=force

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default/hwclock Normal file
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# Defaults for the hwclock init script. See hwclock(5) and hwclock(8).
# This is used to specify that the hardware clock incapable of storing
# years outside the range of 1994-1999. Set to yes if the hardware is
# broken or no if working correctly.
#BADYEAR=no
# Set this to yes if it is possible to access the hardware clock,
# or no if it is not.
#HWCLOCKACCESS=yes
# Set this to any options you might need to give to hwclock, such
# as machine hardware clock type for Alphas.
#HWCLOCKPARS=
# Set this to the hardware clock device you want to use, it should
# probably match the CONFIG_RTC_HCTOSYS_DEVICE kernel config option.
#HCTOSYS_DEVICE=rtc0

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# KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION FILE
# Consult the keyboard(5) manual page.
XKBMODEL="pc105"
XKBLAYOUT="gb"
XKBVARIANT=""
XKBOPTIONS=""
BACKSPACE="guess"

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# File generated by update-locale
LANG=en_GB.UTF-8

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default/networking Normal file
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# Configuration for networking init script being run during
# the boot sequence
# Set to 'no' to skip interfaces configuration on boot
#CONFIGURE_INTERFACES=yes
# Don't configure these interfaces. Shell wildcards supported/
#EXCLUDE_INTERFACES=
# Set to 'yes' to enable additional verbosity
#VERBOSE=no
# Method to wait for the network to become online,
# for services that depend on a working network:
# - ifup: wait for ifup to have configured an interface.
# - route: wait for a route to a given address to appear.
# - ping/ping6: wait for a host to respond to ping packets.
# - none: don't wait.
#WAIT_ONLINE_METHOD=ifup
# Which interface to wait for.
# If none given, wait for all auto interfaces, or if there are none,
# wait for at least one hotplug interface.
#WAIT_ONLINE_IFACE=
# Which address to wait for for route, ping and ping6 methods.
# If none is given for route, it waits for a default gateway.
#WAIT_ONLINE_ADDRESS=
# Timeout in seconds for waiting for the network to come online.
#WAIT_ONLINE_TIMEOUT=300

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# If you do not set values for the NEED_ options, they will be attempted
# autodetected; this should be sufficient for most people. Valid alternatives
# for the NEED_ options are "yes" and "no".
# Do you want to start the statd daemon? It is not needed for NFSv4.
NEED_STATD=
# Options for rpc.statd.
# Should rpc.statd listen on a specific port? This is especially useful
# when you have a port-based firewall. To use a fixed port, set this
# this variable to a statd argument like: "--port 4000 --outgoing-port 4001".
# For more information, see rpc.statd(8) or http://wiki.debian.org/SecuringNFS
STATDOPTS=
# Do you want to start the idmapd daemon? It is only needed for NFSv4.
NEED_IDMAPD=
# Do you want to start the gssd daemon? It is required for Kerberos mounts.
NEED_GSSD=

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# /etc/default/nss
# This file can theoretically contain a bunch of customization variables
# for Name Service Switch in the GNU C library. For now there are only
# four variables:
#
# NETID_AUTHORITATIVE
# If set to TRUE, the initgroups() function will accept the information
# from the netid.byname NIS map as authoritative. This can speed up the
# function significantly if the group.byname map is large. The content
# of the netid.byname map is used AS IS. The system administrator has
# to make sure it is correctly generated.
#NETID_AUTHORITATIVE=TRUE
#
# SERVICES_AUTHORITATIVE
# If set to TRUE, the getservbyname{,_r}() function will assume
# services.byservicename NIS map exists and is authoritative, particularly
# that it contains both keys with /proto and without /proto for both
# primary service names and service aliases. The system administrator
# has to make sure it is correctly generated.
#SERVICES_AUTHORITATIVE=TRUE
#
# SETENT_BATCH_READ
# If set to TRUE, various setXXent() functions will read the entire
# database at once and then hand out the requests one by one from
# memory with every getXXent() call. Otherwise each getXXent() call
# might result into a network communication with the server to get
# the next entry.
#SETENT_BATCH_READ=TRUE
#
# ADJUNCT_AS_SHADOW
# If set to TRUE, the passwd routines in the NIS NSS module will not
# use the passwd.adjunct.byname tables to fill in the password data
# in the passwd structure. This is a security problem if the NIS
# server cannot be trusted to send the passwd.adjuct table only to
# privileged clients. Instead the passwd.adjunct.byname table is
# used to synthesize the shadow.byname table if it does not exist.
ADJUNCT_AS_SHADOW=TRUE

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# Defaults for raspberrypi-kernel
# Uncomment the following line to enable generation of
# /boot/initrd.img-KVER files (requires initramfs-tools)
#INITRD=Yes
# Uncomment the following line to enable generation of
# /boot/initrd(7).img files (requires rpi-initramfs-tools)
#RPI_INITRD=Yes

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# Configuration for the rng-tools initscript
# $Id: rng-tools.default,v 1.1.2.5 2008-06-10 19:51:37 hmh Exp $
# This is a POSIX shell fragment
# Set to the input source for random data, leave undefined
# for the initscript to attempt auto-detection. Set to /dev/null
# for the viapadlock driver.
#HRNGDEVICE=/dev/hwrng
#HRNGDEVICE=/dev/null
# Additional options to send to rngd. See the rngd(8) manpage for
# more information. Do not specify -r/--rng-device here, use
# HRNGDEVICE for that instead.
#RNGDOPTIONS="--hrng=intelfwh --fill-watermark=90% --feed-interval=1"
#RNGDOPTIONS="--hrng=viakernel --fill-watermark=90% --feed-interval=1"
#RNGDOPTIONS="--hrng=viapadlock --fill-watermark=90% --feed-interval=1"

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FIRMWARE_RELEASE_STATUS="default"

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# defaults file for rsync daemon mode
#
# This file is only used for init.d based systems!
# If this system uses systemd, you can specify options etc. for rsync
# in daemon mode by copying /lib/systemd/system/rsync.service to
# /etc/systemd/system/rsync.service and modifying the copy; add required
# options to the ExecStart line.
# start rsync in daemon mode from init.d script?
# only allowed values are "true", "false", and "inetd"
# Use "inetd" if you want to start the rsyncd from inetd,
# all this does is prevent the init.d script from printing a message
# about not starting rsyncd (you still need to modify inetd's config yourself).
RSYNC_ENABLE=false
# which file should be used as the configuration file for rsync.
# This file is used instead of the default /etc/rsyncd.conf
# Warning: This option has no effect if the daemon is accessed
# using a remote shell. When using a different file for
# rsync you might want to symlink /etc/rsyncd.conf to
# that file.
# RSYNC_CONFIG_FILE=
# what extra options to give rsync --daemon?
# that excludes the --daemon; that's always done in the init.d script
# Possibilities are:
# --address=123.45.67.89 (bind to a specific IP address)
# --port=8730 (bind to specified port; default 873)
RSYNC_OPTS=''
# run rsyncd at a nice level?
# the rsync daemon can impact performance due to much I/O and CPU usage,
# so you may want to run it at a nicer priority than the default priority.
# Allowed values are 0 - 19 inclusive; 10 is a reasonable value.
RSYNC_NICE=''
# run rsyncd with ionice?
# "ionice" does for IO load what "nice" does for CPU load.
# As rsync is often used for backups which aren't all that time-critical,
# reducing the rsync IO priority will benefit the rest of the system.
# See the manpage for ionice for allowed options.
# -c3 is recommended, this will run rsync IO at "idle" priority. Uncomment
# the next line to activate this.
# RSYNC_IONICE='-c3'
# Don't forget to create an appropriate config file,
# else the daemon will not start.

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# Options for rsyslogd
# -x disables DNS lookups for remote messages
# See rsyslogd(8) for more details
RSYSLOGD_OPTIONS=""

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# Default settings for openssh-server. This file is sourced by /bin/sh from
# /etc/init.d/ssh.
# Options to pass to sshd
SSHD_OPTS=

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# Defaults for triggerhappy initscript
# sourced by /etc/init.d/triggerhappy
# installed at /etc/default/triggerhappy by the maintainer scripts
#
# This is a POSIX shell fragment
#
# Additional options that are passed to the Daemon.
DAEMON_OPTS=""
# The Triggerhappy daemon (thd) drops its root privileges after
# startup and becomes "nobody". If you want it to retain its root
# status (e.g. to run commands only accessible to the system user),
# uncomment the following line or specifiy the user option yourself:
#
# DAEMON_OPTS="--user root"

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# Default values for useradd(8)
#
# The SHELL variable specifies the default login shell on your
# system.
# Similar to DHSELL in adduser. However, we use "sh" here because
# useradd is a low level utility and should be as general
# as possible
SHELL=/bin/bash
#
# The default group for users
# 100=users on Debian systems
# Same as USERS_GID in adduser
# This argument is used when the -n flag is specified.
# The default behavior (when -n and -g are not specified) is to create a
# primary user group with the same name as the user being added to the
# system.
# GROUP=100
#
# The default home directory. Same as DHOME for adduser
# HOME=/home
#
# The number of days after a password expires until the account
# is permanently disabled
# INACTIVE=-1
#
# The default expire date
# EXPIRE=
#
# The SKEL variable specifies the directory containing "skeletal" user
# files; in other words, files such as a sample .profile that will be
# copied to the new user's home directory when it is created.
SKEL=/etc/skel
#
# Defines whether the mail spool should be created while
# creating the account
# CREATE_MAIL_SPOOL=yes