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Andrew Fletcher
•
When managing a server or developing applications, particularly on an Ubuntu system running Nginx, it's often necessary to verify the existence of files. This is crucial for tasks like deploying new versions, checking configuration files, or ensuring that required assets are in place. In this article, we'll explore how to use command-line queries to check if a file exists, highlighting various options and methods you can use.
Basic File Check with test Command
The test command is a simple...
Andrew Fletcher
•
To review the content of files being generated in the /tmp directory on an...
Andrew Fletcher
•
A growing list of commands I've used and what they do in no specific order
sudo...
Andrew Fletcher
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When Solr is displaying results on the site, first step is to log in the server...
Andrew Fletcher
•
When executing the following command, the response I'm getting is
npm ERR! code...
Andrew Fletcher
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To resolve the CVE-2022-48624 vulnerability on Ubuntu using Nginx, it's crucial to understand that the issue lies within the "less" package, not Nginx itself. The vulnerability affects "less" before version 606, where close_altfile in filename.c in less omits shell_quote calls for LESSCLOSE, potentially allowing shell command injection.
The current less version is 551, which is vulnerable. You'll need to upgrade "less" to a version at or beyond 606.
CVE-2022-48624
close_altfile in filename.c in...
Andrew Fletcher
•
In many terminal text editors, you use find command as reference in Terminal...
Andrew Fletcher
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In an environment that is running
Ubuntu 20.02
Nginx
Solr
The default...
Andrew Fletcher
•
You can perform the following steps:
Check Apache Modules
Apache Struts 2 is...
Andrew Fletcher
•
To use OpenAI to summarise text from a PDF using Python 3.11.6, you'll first...
Andrew Fletcher
•
I'm receiving an issue with a previous release on Google Play
android.permission.REQUEST_INSTALL_PACKAGESI'm seeing the following message in Google Play
Request install packages permission
error - Not started - Your app isn't compliant
A permission that allows your app to install packages. If your app doesn't need access to this permission, you must remove it from your app.To check the offending release go to App bundle explorer, and view each of the active releases.
In my situation, I'm seeing...
Andrew Fletcher
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The "keystore password was incorrect" error in keytool indicates that the...
Andrew Fletcher
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How to generate a new private key and submit it to Google Play for signing your...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Permission error
Traceback (most recent call last):
File...
Andrew Fletcher
•
To set an environment variable on Ubuntu, can be achieved via a few options....