22halomedia

Category: Open Source

  • WP Battle Goes to Court

    WP Battle Goes to Court

    A Personal Perspective on the WP Engine and Automattic Conflict

    First and foremost, I want to clarify that this article reflects my personal opinion and should not be considered professional journalism. That said, we are witnessing a dramatic moment in WordPress history. As someone who considers themselves a bit of a computer and website geek, I feel compelled to share my thoughts on the ongoing conflict between WP Engine and Automattic, particularly involving WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg.

    Context of the Conflict

    While I won’t delve into all the details—I’ll leave that for you to research—this situation is significant. The legal battle could set a precedent for how open-source projects manage trademark licensing and contributions from for-profit companies utilizing their software. My primary hope is that WordPress continues to thrive amidst these power struggles.

    Impacts on the Community

    As this legal dispute unfolds, it may create opportunities for new players in the WordPress hosting space and potentially reshape how companies contribute to the WordPress core. For instance, the temporary ban on WP Engine’s access to WordPress.org resources has directly affected site updates for their customers, highlighting how these disputes can impact end-users.

    The Strength of Community

    It’s crucial to remember that WordPress is built on the contributions of many. It remains a vibrant playground for everyone on the web. At the end of the day, the strength of WordPress lies in its diverse community. My hope is this legal battle doesn’t deter individuals from engaging with the platform, but instead brings greater awareness to more transparent and equitable practices within the ecosystem.

    Conclusion

    While this conflict poses challenges, it also presents an opportunity for growth and evolution within the WordPress community. I encourage everyone involved to remain engaged and optimistic about what lies ahead. 

    Resources I Used to Form My Opinion

    Don’t Forget to do Your Own Research to Form YOUR Opinion.

    https://wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Complaint-WP-Engine-v-Automattic-et-al-with-Exhibit.pdf

    https://wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Cease-and-Desist-Letter-to-Automattic-and-Request-to-Preserve-Documents-Sent.pdf

    Articles to Read Next

    How to Setup WireGuard VPN on Rocky 9 Linux

    Secure Remote Support on LAN with x11vnc over SSH on Rocky Linux

    How to Install Virtual Box and Answering “What is a Hypervisor?”

    How to Enable Bidirectional Shared Clipboard on VirtualBox VM

    How to Create a Linux VM with VirtualBox

    Affiliate Links

    Form your business with Northwest registered agent

    Create a website with namedotcom

    Secure your website with Wordfence

    My work laptop

    Affiliate Disclaimer

    Please note that my website and content may contain affiliate links. This means that when you click on these links and make a purchase, I may earn a commission. Rest assured, all the products I promote are ones that I believe to be of high quality, and I personally use them as a consumer myself. Your support through these links helps me continue to create valuable content. Thank you for your support!

  • How to Setup WireGuard VPN on Rocky 9 Linux

    How to Setup WireGuard VPN on Rocky 9 Linux

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    Read this same article on the Rocky Linux Documentation website

    Introduction

    WireGuard is a free and open-source peer-to-peer (P2P) Virtual Private Network (VPN). It is a lightweight and secure modern alternative to conventional VPNs with large codebases that rely on TCP connections. Since WireGuard is a P2P VPN, each computer added to the WireGuard network communicates directly with each other. This guide uses a hub-spoke model, with a WireGuard peer assigned a public IP address as a gateway to pass all traffic. This allows WireGuard traffic to bypass Carrier Grade NAT (CGNAT) without enabling port-forwarding on your router. This requires a Rocky Linux system with a public IP address. The easiest way to achieve this is to spin up a virtual private server (VPS) through a cloud provider of your choice. At the time of writing, Google Cloud Platform offers a free tier for its e2-micro instances.

    Prerequisites and assumptions

    The minimum requirements for this procedure are the following:

    • The ability to run commands as the root user or use sudo to elevate privileges
    • A Rocky Linux system with a publicly accessible IP address

    Installing WireGuard

    Install Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL):

    sudo dnf install epel-release -y
    

    Upgrade system packages:

    sudo dnf upgrade -y
    

    Install WireGuard:

    sudo dnf install wireguard-tools -y
    

    Configuring WireGuard Server

    Create a folder to put your WireGuard configuration files and keys:

    sudo mkdir -p /etc/wireguard
    

    Create a configuration file with a name of your choice ending with the .conf extension:

    Note

    You can create multiple WireGuard VPN tunnels on the same machine, each using a different configuration file, network address, and UDP port.

    sudo touch /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
    

    Generate a new private and public key pair for the WireGuard server:

    wg genkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/wg0 | wg pubkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/wg0.pub
    

    Edit the configuration file with your editor of choice.

    sudo vi /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
    

    Paste the following:

    [Interface]
    PrivateKey = server_privatekey
    Address = x.x.x.x/24
    ListenPort = 51820
    

    You must replace the server_privatekey with the private key generated earlier. You can view the private key with:

    sudo cat /etc/wireguard/wg0
    

    Next, you will need to replace x.x.x.x/24 with a network address within the private IP address range defined by RFC 1918. The network address used in this guide is 10.255.255.0/24.

    Finally, you can choose any UDP port to accept connections with WireGuard VPN. UDP port 51820 is used for the purposes of this guide.

    Enable IP forwarding

    IP forwarding allows the routing of packets between networks. This allows internal devices to communicate with each other through the WireGuard tunnel:

    Turn on IP forwarding for IPv4 and IPv6:

    sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_forward=1 && sudo sysctl -w net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding=1
    

    Configure firewalld

    Install firewalld:

    sudo dnf install firewalld -y
    

    After installing firewalld, enable it:

    sudo systemctl enable --now firewalld
    

    Create a permanent firewall rule allowing traffic on UDP port 51820 in the public zone:

    sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=public --add-port=51820/udp
    

    Next, traffic from the WireGuard interface will be allowed to other interfaces in the internal zone.

    sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-interface=wg0 --zone=internal
    

    Add a firewall rule to enable IP masquerading on internal traffic. This means that packets sent between peers will replace the packet IP address with the server’s IP address:

    sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=internal --add-masquerade
    

    Finally, reload firewalld:

    sudo firewall-cmd --reload
    

    Configure WireGuard peer

    Since all computers in a WireGuard network are technically peers, this process is nearly identical to configuring the WireGuard server, but with slight differences.

    Create a folder to put your WireGuard configuration files and keys:

    sudo mkdir -p /etc/wireguard
    

    Create a configuration file, giving it a name of your choice, ending with the .conf extension:

    sudo touch /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
    

    Generate a new private and public key pair:

    wg genkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/wg0 | wg pubkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/wg0.pub
    

    Edit the configuration file with your editor of choice, adding this content:

    [Interface]
    PrivateKey = peer_privatekey
    Address = 10.255.255.2/24
    
    [Peer]
    PublicKey = server_publickey
    AllowedIPs = 10.255.255.1/24
    Endpoint = serverip:51820
    PersistentKeepalive = 25
    

    Replace peer_privatekey with the peer’s private key stored in /etc/wireguard/wg0 on the peer.

    You can use this command to output the key so you can copy it:

    sudo cat /etc/wireguard/wg0
    

    Replace server_publickey with the server’s public key stored in /etc/wireguard/wg0.pub on the server.

    You can use this command to output the key so you can copy it:

    sudo cat /etc/wireguard/wg0.pub
    

    Replace serverip with the public IP of the WireGuard server.

    You can find the server’s public IP address using the following command on the server:

    ip a | grep inet
    

    The peer’s configuration file now includes a PersistentKeepalive = 25 rule. This rule tells the peer to ping the WireGuard server every 25 seconds to maintain the VPN tunnel’s connection. Without this setting, the VPN tunnel will time out after inactivity.

    Enable WireGuard VPN

    To enable WireGuard, you will run the following command on both the server and peer:

    sudo systemctl enable wg-quick@wg0
    

    Then start the VPN by running this command on both the server and peer:

    sudo systemctl start wg-quick@wg0
    

    Add the client key to the WireGuard server configuration

    Output the peer’s public key and copy it:

    sudo cat /etc/wireguard/wg0.pub
    

    On the server, run the following command, replacing peer_publickey with the peer’s public key:

    sudo wg set wg0 peer peer_publickey allowed-ips 10.255.255.2
    

    Using wg set only makes temporary changes to the WireGuard interface. For permanent configuration changes you can manually edit the configuration file and add the peer. You will need to reload the WireGuard interface after making any permanent configuration changes.

    Edit the server’s configuration file with your editor of choice.

    sudo vi /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
    

    Add the peer to configuration file. The contents should look similar to below:

    [Interface]
    PrivateKey = +Eo5oVjt+d3XWvFWYcOChaLroGj5vapdXKH8UZ2T2Fc=
    Address = 10.255.255.1/24
    ListenPort = 51820
    
    [Peer]
    PublicKey = 1vSho8NvECkG1PVVk7avZWDmrd2VGZ2xTPaNe5+XKSg=
    AllowedIps = 10.255.255.2/32
    

    Bring interface down:

    sudo wg-quick down wg0
    

    Bring interface up:

    sudo wg-quick up wg0
    

    View WireGuard interfaces and test connectivity

    You can view WireGuard information on both the server and peer with:

    sudo wg
    

    You can test connectivity by sending a ping to the server from the peer:

    ping 10.255.255.1
    

    Conclusion

    Following this guide, you have successfully set up a WireGuard VPN using the hub-spoke model. This configuration provides a secure, modern, and efficient way to connect multiple devices across the internet. Check the official WireGuard website.

    Articles to Read Next

    How to Setup WireGuard VPN on Rocky 9 Linux

    Secure Remote Support on LAN with x11vnc over SSH on Rocky Linux

    How to Install Virtual Box and Answering “What is a Hypervisor?”

    How to Enable Bidirectional Shared Clipboard on VirtualBox VM

    How to Create a Linux VM with VirtualBox

    Affiliate Links

    Form your business with Northwest registered agent

    Create a website with namedotcom

    Secure your website with Wordfence

    My work laptop

    Affiliate Disclaimer

    Please note that my website and content may contain affiliate links. This means that when you click on these links and make a purchase, I may earn a commission. Rest assured, all the products I promote are ones that I believe to be of high quality, and I personally use them as a consumer myself. Your support through these links helps me continue to create valuable content. Thank you for your support!

  • Rocky 9 Linux HP All-in-One Printer Installation and Setup

    Rocky 9 Linux HP All-in-One Printer Installation and Setup

    Introduction

    Printing and scanning with an all-in-one HP printer is possible on linux thanks to HPLIP.

    This guide was tested with an HP Deskjet 2700 series.

    See All Supported Printers to see if the HPLIP package supports your printer.

    Download and Install HPLIP

    HPLIP is third-party software by HP that contains necessary printer drivers. Install the 3 packages below for full support with a graphical user interface.

    sudo dnf install hplip-common.x86_64 hplip-libs.x86_64 hplip-gui

    Scanner Support

    While you can scan using cli commands with the HPLIP package, they do not supply a scanner app. Install xsane, an easy to use scanner utility.

    sudo dnf install sane-backends sane-frontends xsane

    Conclusion

    After installing HPLIP and xsane you should now be able to print and scan on your all-in-one HP printer.

    Articles to Read Next

    How to Setup WireGuard VPN on Rocky 9 Linux

    Secure Remote Support on LAN with x11vnc over SSH on Rocky Linux

    How to Install Virtual Box and Answering “What is a Hypervisor?”

    How to Enable Bidirectional Shared Clipboard on VirtualBox VM

    How to Create a Linux VM with VirtualBox

    Affiliate Links

    Form your business with Northwest registered agent

    Create a website with namedotcom

    Secure your website with Wordfence

    My work laptop

    Affiliate Disclaimer

    Please note that my website and content may contain affiliate links. This means that when you click on these links and make a purchase, I may earn a commission. Rest assured, all the products I promote are ones that I believe to be of high quality, and I personally use them as a consumer myself. Your support through these links helps me continue to create valuable content. Thank you for your support!