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PK ! �Ϭ)V V mdadmnu �[��� # mdadm Debian configuration # # You can run 'dpkg-reconfigure mdadm' to modify the values in this file, if # you want. You can also change the values here and changes will be preserved. # Do note that only the values are preserved; the rest of the file is # rewritten. # # AUTOCHECK: # should mdadm run periodic redundancy checks over your arrays? See # /etc/cron.d/mdadm. AUTOCHECK=true # AUTOSCAN: # should mdadm check once a day for degraded arrays? See # /lib/systemd/system/mdmonitor-oneshot.service AUTOSCAN=true # START_DAEMON: # should mdadm start the MD monitoring daemon during boot? START_DAEMON=true # DAEMON_OPTIONS: # additional options to pass to the daemon. DAEMON_OPTIONS="--syslog" # VERBOSE: # if this variable is set to true, mdadm will be a little more verbose e.g. # when creating the initramfs. VERBOSE=false PK ! �a�Z Z acpidnu �[��� # Options to pass to acpid # # OPTIONS are appended to the acpid command-line #OPTIONS="" # Linux kernel modules to load before starting acpid # # MODULES is a space separated list of modules to load, or "all" to load all # acpi drivers, or commented out to load no module #MODULES="battery ac processor button fan thermal video" #MODULES="all" PK ! D��B� � open-iscsinu �[��� # List of LVMed iSCSI Volume Groups. # Multiple Volume Groups can be specified with spaces # # This list defines the Volume Groups that should be activated at boot # after iSCSI has been activated. If you use dynamic activation of LVM # volumes (lvmetad), you can (and should) leave this empty. # # On shutdown, this setting typically has no effect, since open-iscsi # tries to determine all active VGs on iSCSI and deactivate them. # However, if you have a really complicated stacking setup that isn't # automatically detected, volume groups defined here will also be # deactivated. # # To see whether open-iscsi is able to properly detect your setup for # shutdown, execute the following on a running system: # /lib/open-iscsi/umountiscsi.sh --dry-run # This will tell you what steps will betaken at shutdown before logging # out of the iSCSI session. LVMGROUPS="" # Handle _netdev devices # You can specify your iSCSI (LVMed or Multipathed or DM Encrypted) # devices with the _netdev mount option and open-iscsi will treat them # accordingly. # # Note: however, handling _netdev devices comes with the caveat that # other _netdev mounts, like an NFS share, also get pulled in with it. # # If this option is set to 0, no iSCSI mounts in /etc/fstab will be # automatically mounted on systems running sysvinit. This setting is # not necessary when using systemd as init system (Debian's default). HANDLE_NETDEV=1 # Additional mounts to exclude at shutdown. # # If you have additional mounts on iSCSI that shouldn't be umounted at # shutdown by open-iscsi (by default, open-iscsi excludes / and on # systemd systems als /usr), place them here. iSCSI sessions that carry # these mounts will also be kept open. # # If any of these mountpoints contain spaces, please use the same # escaping as in /etc/fstab, i.e. replace the spaces with \040. EXCLUDE_MOUNTS_AT_SHUTDOWN="" # Don't logout from ANY iSCSI session on shutdown # # When shutting down, if the root filesystem is on iSCSI, open-iscsi # tries to determine which sessions are still required for the root # filesystem. By default, the host will still logout from all other # sessions. # # If you are running a very complicated setup of your root filesystem # (multiple mapping levels stacked on top of each other), it may be the # case that the autodetection logic doesn't work propery. You may then # enable this setting to keep around all iSCSI sessions. # # Note that /etc/iscsi/iscsi.initramfs must exist for this option to # have any effect at all. # # This was the default behavior in previous versions of this package # up to the version that shipped with Debian 8 (Jessie). # ISCSI_ROOT_KEEP_ALL_SESSIONS_AT_SHUTDOWN=0 PK ! �� � motd-newsnu �[��� # Enable/disable the dynamic MOTD news service # This is a useful way to provide dynamic, informative # information pertinent to the users and administrators # of the local system ENABLED=1 # Configure the source of dynamic MOTD news # White space separated list of 0 to many news services # For security reasons, these must be https # and have a valid certificate # Canonical runs a service at motd.ubuntu.com, and you # can easily run one too URLS="https://motd.ubuntu.com" # Specify the time in seconds, you're willing to wait for # dynamic MOTD news # Note that news messages are fetched in the background by # a systemd timer, so this should never block boot or login WAIT=5 PK ! !��0� � keyboardnu �[��� # KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION FILE # Consult the keyboard(5) manual page. XKBMODEL="pc105" XKBLAYOUT="us" XKBVARIANT="" XKBOPTIONS="" BACKSPACE="guess" PK ! ���^ ^ useraddnu �[��� # Default values for useradd(8) # # The SHELL variable specifies the default login shell on your # system. # Similar to DSHELL in adduser. However, we use "sh" here because # useradd is a low level utility and should be as general # as possible SHELL=/bin/sh # # 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 PK ! ��ĺ� � cryptdisksnu �[��� # Run cryptdisks initscripts at startup? Default is Yes. CRYPTDISKS_ENABLE=Yes # Mountpoints to mount, before cryptsetup is invoked at initscripts. Takes # mountpoins which are configured in /etc/fstab as arguments. Separate # mountpoints by space. # This is useful for keyfiles on removable media. Default is unset. CRYPTDISKS_MOUNT="" # Default check script. Takes effect, if the 'check' option is set in crypttab # without a value. CRYPTDISKS_CHECK=blkid PK ! �H* localenu �[��� LANG="C.UTF-8" PK ! �T�$ console-setupnu �[��� # CONFIGURATION FILE FOR SETUPCON # Consult the console-setup(5) manual page. ACTIVE_CONSOLES="/dev/tty[1-6]" CHARMAP="UTF-8" CODESET="Uni2" FONTFACE="Fixed" FONTSIZE="8x16" VIDEOMODE= # The following is an example how to use a braille font # FONT='lat9w-08.psf.gz brl-8x8.psf' PK ! C3[�H H amd64-microcodenu �[��� # Configuration script for amd64-microcode version 3 # # initramfs helper # # # Set this to "no" to disable automatic microcode updates on boot; # Set this to "early" to always install microcode updates to the early initramfs # Set this to "auto" to autodetect mode for current system (default); # #AMD64UCODE_INITRAMFS=auto PK ! �8�* * pollinatenu �[��� # These the options that are used by pollinate(1) by default. # Note that any option here can be overriden on the command line # at invocation time. Please see pollinate(1) for documentation. BINARY=1 QUIET=0 WAIT=10 DEVICE="/dev/urandom" SERVER="https://entropy.ubuntu.com/" POOL="" CURL_OPTS="" PK ! ,k��� � chronynu �[��� # This is a configuration file for /etc/init.d/chrony and # /lib/systemd/system/chrony.service; it allows you to pass various options to # the chrony daemon without editing the init script or service file. # Options to pass to chrony. DAEMON_OPTS="-F 1" # Sync system clock in containers or without CAP_SYS_TIME (likely to fail) # See /usr/share/doc/chrony/README.container for details. SYNC_IN_CONTAINER="no" PK ! �D� intel-microcodenu �[��� # Configuration script for intel-microcode version 3 # # initramfs helper # # Set this to "no" to disable automatic microcode updates on boot; # Set this to "auto" to use early initramfs mode automatically (default); # Set this to "early" to always attempt to create an early initramfs; #IUCODE_TOOL_INITRAMFS=auto # Set this to "yes" (default) to use "iucode_tool --scan-system" to reduce # the initramfs size bloat, by detecting which Intel processors are active # in this system, and installing only their microcodes. # # Set this to "no" to either include all microcodes, or only the microcodes # selected through the use of IUCODE_TOOL_EXTRA_OPTIONS below. # # WARNING: including all microcodes will increase initramfs size greatly. # This can cause boot issues if the initramfs is already large. #IUCODE_TOOL_SCANCPUS=yes # Extra options to pass to iucode_tool, useful to forbid or to # force the inclusion of microcode for specific processor signatures. # See iucode_tool(8) for details. #IUCODE_TOOL_EXTRA_OPTIONS="" PK ! �A=K) ) dbusnu �[��� # 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="" PK ! �E�$t t irqbalancenu �[��� # irqbalance is a daemon process that distributes interrupts across # CPUs on SMP systems. The default is to rebalance once every 10 # seconds. This is the environment file that is specified to systemd via the # EnvironmentFile key in the service unit file (or via whatever method the init # system you're using has). # # IRQBALANCE_ONESHOT # After starting, wait for a minute, then look at the interrupt # load and balance it once; after balancing exit and do not change # it again. # #IRQBALANCE_ONESHOT= # # IRQBALANCE_BANNED_CPUS # 64 bit bitmask which allows you to indicate which CPUs should # be skipped when reblancing IRQs. CPU numbers which have their # corresponding bits set to one in this mask will not have any # IRQs assigned to them on rebalance. # #IRQBALANCE_BANNED_CPUS= # # IRQBALANCE_BANNED_CPULIST # The CPUs list which allows you to indicate which CPUs should # be skipped when reblancing IRQs. CPU numbers in CPUs list will # not have any IRQs assigned to them on rebalance. # # The format of CPUs list is: # <cpu number>,...,<cpu number> # or a range: # <cpu number>-<cpu number> # or a mixture: # <cpu number>,...,<cpu number>-<cpu number> # #IRQBALANCE_BANNED_CPULIST= # # IRQBALANCE_ARGS # Append any args here to the irqbalance daemon as documented in the man # page. # #IRQBALANCE_ARGS= PK ! e�� grub.d/init-select.cfgnu �[��� # Work around a bug in the obsolete init-select package which broke # grub-mkconfig when init-select was removed but not purged. This file does # nothing and will be removed in a later release. # # See: # https://bugs.debian.org/858528 # https://bugs.debian.org/863801 PK ! E�t9� � grub.d/40-force-partuuid.cfgnu �[��� # Force boot without an initramfs by setting GRUB_FORCE_PARTUUID # Remove this line to enable boot with an initramfs GRUB_FORCE_PARTUUID=b4b91ea5-ac2a-4289-9a10-c53cba170810 PK ! �G�֭ � grub.d/50-cloudimg-settings.cfgnu �[��� # Cloud Image specific Grub settings for AWS EC2 images # CLOUD_IMG: This file was created/modified by the Cloud Image build process # Set the recordfail timeout GRUB_RECORDFAIL_TIMEOUT=0 # Do not wait on grub prompt GRUB_TIMEOUT=0 # Set the default commandline GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="console=tty1 console=ttyS0 nvme_core.io_timeout=4294967295" # Set the grub console type GRUB_TERMINAL=console GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0.1 PK ! ���� � networkd-dispatchernu �[��� # Specify command line options here. This config file is used # by the included systemd service file. networkd_dispatcher_args="--run-startup-triggers" PK ! ��I�i i ufwnu �[��� # /etc/default/ufw # # Set to yes to apply rules to support IPv6 (no means only IPv6 on loopback # accepted). You will need to 'disable' and then 'enable' the firewall for # the changes to take affect. IPV6=yes # Set the default input policy to ACCEPT, DROP, or REJECT. Please note that if # you change this you will most likely want to adjust your rules. DEFAULT_INPUT_POLICY="DROP" # Set the default output policy to ACCEPT, DROP, or REJECT. Please note that if # you change this you will most likely want to adjust your rules. DEFAULT_OUTPUT_POLICY="ACCEPT" # Set the default forward policy to ACCEPT, DROP or REJECT. Please note that # if you change this you will most likely want to adjust your rules DEFAULT_FORWARD_POLICY="DROP" # Set the default application policy to ACCEPT, DROP, REJECT or SKIP. Please # note that setting this to ACCEPT may be a security risk. See 'man ufw' for # details DEFAULT_APPLICATION_POLICY="SKIP" # By default, ufw only touches its own chains. Set this to 'yes' to have ufw # manage the built-in chains too. Warning: setting this to 'yes' will break # non-ufw managed firewall rules MANAGE_BUILTINS=no # # IPT backend # # only enable if using iptables backend IPT_SYSCTL=/etc/ufw/sysctl.conf # Extra connection tracking modules to load. IPT_MODULES should typically be # empty for new installations and modules added only as needed. See # 'CONNECTION HELPERS' from 'man ufw-framework' for details. Complete list can # be found in net/netfilter/Kconfig of your kernel source. Some common modules: # nf_conntrack_irc, nf_nat_irc: DCC (Direct Client to Client) support # nf_conntrack_netbios_ns: NetBIOS (samba) client support # nf_conntrack_pptp, nf_nat_pptp: PPTP over stateful firewall/NAT # nf_conntrack_ftp, nf_nat_ftp: active FTP support # nf_conntrack_tftp, nf_nat_tftp: TFTP support (server side) # nf_conntrack_sane: sane support IPT_MODULES="" PK ! 絙'� � cronnu �[��� # This file has been deprecated. Please add custom options for cron using # $ systemctl edit cron.service # or # $ systemctl edit --full cron.service PK ! g�6 rsyncnu �[��� # 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. PK ! ��j, , apache-htcachecleannu �[��� # This file must only contain KEY=VALUE lines. Do not use advanced # shell script constructs! ## run mode: cron, daemon ## run in daemon mode or as daily cron job ## default: daemon HTCACHECLEAN_MODE=daemon ## cache size HTCACHECLEAN_SIZE=300M ## interval: if in daemon mode, clean cache every x minutes HTCACHECLEAN_DAEMON_INTERVAL=120 ## path to cache ## must be the same as in CacheRoot directive #HTCACHECLEAN_PATH=/var/cache/apache2/mod_cache_disk ## additional options: ## -n : be nice ## -t : remove empty directories HTCACHECLEAN_OPTIONS="-n" PK ! j\�f� � grubnu �[��� # If you change this file, run 'update-grub' afterwards to update # /boot/grub/grub.cfg. # For full documentation of the options in this file, see: # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration' GRUB_DEFAULT=0 GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden GRUB_TIMEOUT=0 GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian` GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="" # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs # This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains # the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...) #GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef" # Uncomment to disable graphical terminal (grub-pc only) #GRUB_TERMINAL=console # The resolution used on graphical terminal # note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE # you can see them in real GRUB with the command `vbeinfo' #GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480 # Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux #GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true # Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries #GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true" # Uncomment to get a beep at grub start #GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1" PK ! I�/u� � apportnu �[��� # set this to 0 to disable apport, or to 1 to enable it # you can temporarily override this with # sudo service apport start force_start=1 enabled=1 PK ! ܙ;e� � sshnu �[��� # Default settings for openssh-server. This file is sourced by /bin/sh from # /etc/init.d/ssh. # Options to pass to sshd SSHD_OPTS= PK ! �z+r anycast_delaynu �[��� 100 PK ! �J~ app_solicitnu �[��� 0 PK ! 6]�� base_reachable_timenu �[��� 30 PK ! ���y base_reachable_time_msnu �[��� 30000 PK ! W9= delay_first_probe_timenu �[��� 5 PK ! 6]�� gc_intervalnu �[��� 30 PK ! ݟ4� gc_stale_timenu �[��� 60 PK ! �$v� gc_thresh1nu �[��� 128 PK ! G�� gc_thresh2nu �[��� 512 PK ! ��X� gc_thresh3nu �[��� 1024 PK ! 70D interval_probe_time_msnu �[��� 5000 PK ! �z+r locktimenu �[��� 100 PK ! �J~ mcast_resolicitnu �[��� 0 PK ! ўgU mcast_solicitnu �[��� 3 PK ! ײ�� proxy_delaynu �[��� 80 PK ! �ZX� proxy_qlennu �[��� 64 PK ! �z+r retrans_timenu �[��� 100 PK ! ���� retrans_time_msnu �[��� 1000 PK ! ўgU ucast_solicitnu �[��� 3 PK ! �K0k unres_qlennu �[��� 101 PK ! ��k unres_qlen_bytesnu �[��� 212992 PK ! x5�1� � grub.md5sumnu �[��� dfad90339e4227d432636ed7d4483744 experimental_1.96+20081129-1 e916b60d7de71969dd7bad5a809fb9dc lenny_1.96+20080724-16 965e5137eff659cded3adb640357c33d maverick_1.98+20100705-1ubuntu1 PK ! ��I� spintimenu �[��� 500 PK ! K՞` timeslicenu �[��� 200 PK ! ��~�� � nssnu �[��� # /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 PK ! �r1�# # swapfilenu �[��� FILE=/var/tmp/swapfile.swp SIZE=0 PK ! �Ϭ)V V mdadmnu �[��� PK ! �a�Z Z � acpidnu �[��� PK ! D��B� � open-iscsinu �[��� PK ! �� � � motd-newsnu �[��� PK ! !��0� � � keyboardnu �[��� PK ! ���^ ^ � useraddnu �[��� PK ! ��ĺ� � cryptdisksnu �[��� PK ! �H* # localenu �[��� PK ! �T�$ h console-setupnu �[��� PK ! C3[�H H � amd64-microcodenu �[��� PK ! �8�* * H pollinatenu �[��� PK ! ,k��� � � chronynu �[��� PK ! �D� } intel-microcodenu �[��� PK ! �A=K) ) �$ dbusnu �[��� PK ! �E�$t t &