Whew, end of the fall semester. It seemed to fly by rather quickly. So anyways, I’m finally at home and able to do some full-time KDE hacking. I originally came home wednesday night, and found that Kuiper (my firewall box) had bit the dust some time ago. It’s fedora core 3 (hey, remember that one?) install seemed to have eaten its root partition alive somehow, as fsck couldn’t recover it, complaining about missing superblocks and such. I didn’t really want to spend a lot of time on a fancy recovery process, so I opted to install m0n0wall on it. I eventually got that accomplished. It took a while (I’ll explain it later this week), but it more or less works now. I need to add more memory to Kuiper’s case, as 64Mb isn’t cutting the mustard for the latest beta. I’m using the beta for the IPv6 support, which is really cool by the way. Yay modernization.
My internet on campus for my last few weeks on campus wasn’t cooperating (in short, I no longer trust UA’s network with /anything/), combined with finals kept me from pouring a lot of effort into KDE into KDE/Glovebox/Pointything. I haven’t been entirely out of the loop though, as I’ve managed to keep up with the commit mail and KDE mailing lists.
I’m not entirely done settling in yet though. I’ve got a few important things to do I didn’t get done last summer:
I already knocked one thing off my list with my install of m0n0wall: figure out port forwarding. Right now wm161.kicks-ass.net should have my home network’s IP address, and port 80 redirects to Saturn, while ssh goes to Jupiter. Both of those machines are down right now, as Jupiter is being stubborn and not turning on. Without Jupiter’s LDAP, saturn is clueless. I’m thinking its getting close to retire Jupiter from constant service anyways, now that Kuiper is capable of supporting an IPv6 tunnel and dynamic DNS updates to permit remote access to my network.