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Consult the User's Guide for information on using the wiki software.

Getting started

Jochen Hayek's personal stuff

office utilities for languages

German

English

online translation of your words and sentences "from whatever language to whatever language" presented in whatever language

dictionaries (LANGUAGE-2-LANGUAGE, not just English-2-German)

bills on web-sites – in German: "Rechnung online"

books

misc

foreign wiki articles living here, their local categories

Some foreign wikis look abandoned – so how to continue working on them? Export them remotely, import them here!

Arts

Arts/Literature/Authors

Arts/Literature/Authors : Arno Geiger

Arts/Literature/Authors : Joachim Meyerhoff

Arts/Literature/Authors : Amos Oz

Arts/Music – my favourite YouTube links

Arts/Television/Programs

Business

Business/Employment/Resumes_and_Portfolios/Digital_Format

xmlresume

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services : EBICS vs FinTS/HBCI

  • both standards cover the communication between bank client and bank
  • I got the vague idea, that EBICS is superior to FinTS and may be suitable to replace it – I would like to discuss this (TBD)
  • why do banks restrict use of EBICS to corporate clients?

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services : BCS-FTAM

  • a communications standard for banking based on X.25, i.e. non-TCP/IP based (cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FTAM)
  • the predecessor of EBICS
  • when the telcos announced, they would discontinue X.25 services (the basis of FTAM), the banks started developing a TCP/IP based replacement, in France and Germany EBICS got developed

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services : EBICS

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services : FinTS, HBCI, …

HBCI4Java etc.
Willuhn, jameica, hibiscus
HBCI4Java within Tomcat
HBCI4Java with JRuby and Rails
pecuniabanking.de

AqBanking

AqBanking with Ruby

SUSEMBLY Banking 4

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services : ISO 20022

how I view and navigate camt.052 XML files
clarifications
PartyIdentification32
  • PartyIdentification32 (camt.052.000.02)
  • PartyIdentification43 (camt.052.000.03, camt.052.000.04)
  • used for the SEPA creditor id, also called CdtrSchmeId
ExternalOrganisationIdentification1Code
  • ExternalOrganisationIdentification1Code (camt.052.000.*), published separately …
  • http://www.iso20022.org/external_code_list.page 9-OrganisationIdentification
  • does not include SEPA
  • includes CBID (Central Bank Identification Number)
  • isn't that code list good for the creditor id code? but maybe go for CBID?!?
ExternalPurpose1Code
  • ExternalPurpose1Code (camt.052.000.*)
  • http://www.iso20022.org/external_code_list.page published separately 4-CategoryPurpose includes: SALA (SalaryPayment), PENS (PensionPayment), GOVT (GovernmentPayment), SSBE (SocialSecurityBenefit)
  • http://www.iso20022.org/external_code_list.page published separately 11-Purpose includes: SALA (SalaryPayment), PENS (PensionPayment), CBFF (capital building fringe fortune, in German: vermögenswirksame Leistungen), GOVT (GovernmentPayment), SSBE (SocialSecurityBenefit), BENE (UnemploymentDisabilityBenefit), CHAR (CharityPayment)
  • what column should be used?

Business/Financial_Services/Banking_Services : SEPA

Computers

non-DMOZ

Computers/Data_Formats/Document/Publishing/PDF/Software

Computers/Data_Formats/File_Systems

AFP = Apple Filing Protocol

AFS = Andrew File System

NFS

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_File_System AKA NFS
  • the Network File System is a distributed file system protocol originally developed by Sun Microsystems in 1984
  • my Synology NAS provides access via NFS – actually NFS seems to me the fastest and most stable way of accessing files via a LAN or WIFI

SMB/CIFS and Samba

Computers/Data_Formats/Markup_Languages/XML/Document_Types

Computers/Emulators/Intel_x86_Architecture/VirtualBox

Computers/Internet/Chat/Instant_Messaging

Computers/Internet/On_the_Web/Weblogs

  • WordPress – my blogging software and installations

Computers/Multimedia/Music_and_Audio/MIDI

Computers/Open_Source/Open_Content/Encyclopedias/Wikipedia

German WP weirdos

Computers/Programming/Languages

Computers/Programming/Languages/Perl

My usual starting point before installing a CPAN module:

$ perlbrew switch stable
$ perlbrew install-cpanm # e.g. – never a bad idea
$ cpanm Date::Calc # e.g.
ipkg perl on Synology DSM enhanced by me
root@diskstation # ipkg install perl
root@diskstation # ipkg install perl-digest-sha1
root@diskstation # ipkg install perl-io-socket-ssl

root@diskstation # chown -R johayek.users /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl

$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/JSON*       /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl   
$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/Getopt      /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl
$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/Authen      /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl
$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/Net/XMPP*   /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl/Net
$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/XML/Stream* /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl/XML
$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/Digest      /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl       
$ rsync -va opensuse132:/usr/local/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.16.1/lib/site_perl/5.16.1/Data        /opt/lib/perl5/site_perl     
perlbrew
perlbrew for "ipkg" on Synology DSM5.2
$ ipkg install patch
$ ipkg install gcc
$ perlbrew available
$ perlbrew install   perl-5.20.2
# breaks because of missing cc
root@diskstation # cd /opt/bin && ln -s gcc cc
$ less /usr/local/perlbrew/build.perl-5.20.2.log

cc -fstack-protector -L/opt/lib -o miniperl \
    perlmini.o opmini.o miniperlmain.o   gv.o toke.o perly.o pad.o regcomp.o dump.o util.o mg.o reentr.o mro.o keywords.o hv.o av.o run.o pp_hot.o sv.o pp.o scope.o pp_ctl.o pp_sys.o doop.o doio.o regexec.o utf8.o taint.o deb.o universal.o globals.o perlio.o perlap
i.o numeric.o mathoms.o locale.o pp_pack.o pp_sort.o caretx.o   -lnsl -lgdbm -ldb -lc -lgdbm_compat 
pp.o: In function `Perl_pp_int':
pp.c:(.text+0x5e74): undefined reference to `floor'
pp.c:(.text+0x5ef3): undefined reference to `ceil'
pp.o: In function `Perl_pp_sin':
pp.c:(.text+0x6203): undefined reference to `sin'
pp.c:(.text+0x62b5): undefined reference to `sqrt'
pp.c:(.text+0x6320): undefined reference to `cos'
pp.c:(.text+0x633f): undefined reference to `log'
pp.c:(.text+0x6357): undefined reference to `exp'

$ perlbrew install   5.18.4
# same problem

Computers/Programming/Languages/PHP

Computers/Programming/Languages/Ruby

Computers/Software/Business/Small_Business : Lexware Quicken

Lexware Quicken

Computers/Software/Configuration_Management/Tools

  • CVS cookbook – versioning software used by certain customers

Computers/Software/Groupware/Wiki/Wiki_Engines/PHP

MediaWiki installation on my NAS

  • /volume1/web/MediaWiki – this is where the NAS's package manager installed it itself first, but then I replaced it with an original MediaWiki one, only copied

MediaWiki installation at my web-space provider

Computers/Software/Networking

  • computer network monitoring (empty for the time being – currently I like it better inline within the TOC itself a little further down)

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Unix/Administration/Software : load monitoring etc

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/*ix/Projects/System_Management/Package_Management

RPM

$ rpm --query -f FILE
  • list the contents of PACKAGE:
$ rpm --query PACKAGE
$ rpm --query --queryformat "[%{=NAME}-%{=VERSION}-%{=RELEASE}:\t%-50{FILENAMES} %10{FILESIZES}\n]" PACKAGE

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Linux

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Linux : systemd

systemd and the journal
# this is the code suggested by Lennart Poettering,
# but it does not work for me
# (complains improperly about $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR) :
$ journalctl --since=yesterday -p err
# but this works:
$ journalctl -b -p err
# and this too:
$ journalctl --since=yesterday
# so I guess, journalctl is a little buggy, but there are ways to cope with it

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Linux/Distributions

BusyBox

openSUSE

SuSE Linux Enterprise Server

Debian Wheezy / Raspbian

Raspberry Pi – the Raspi, Raspbian, …

Synology DSM

Synology DSM

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Linux/Networking/Projects

(MediaWiki full text search seems to not look at URLs, so I need to add also the keywords themselves, even if … – that's why!)

poor man's monitoring: GKrellM

taking "poor man's monitoring" a little further
  • you may have quite a few servers to survey, so you also got quite a few front ends
  • you may find it a nuisance to start the front ends "again and again"
  • so you can just as well run the front ends within a VNC server, so the front ends can just run for the time being …
  • of course the VNC server may run itself within a VM
  • and you connect to the VNC server using a VNC viewer – on whatever platform (within your LAN)

network / monitoring for my SOHO network

on a Synology Diskstation
running a high-class application within a VM

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Unix/Documentation

manual pages

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Unix/Shell

books

Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Unix/Shell books

Computers/Systems

Synology NAS servers

$ for i in 000 001 002 003; do echo -n "*** $i *** "; ssh -A diskstation$i /bin/uname -a; done
$ for i in 000 001 002 003; do echo "*** $i ***"; ssh -A diskstation$i /bin/uname -a; done
*** 000 *** Linux DiskStation000 2.6.32.12 #5022 SMP Wed Jan  7 14:18:42 CST 2015 ppc      GNU/Linux synology_qoriq_213+
*** 001 *** Linux DiskStation001 2.6.32.12 #5022     Wed Jan  7 14:19:44 CST 2015 armv5tel GNU/Linux synology_88f6282_112+
*** 002 *** Linux DiskStation002 3.2.40    #5022     Wed Jan  7 14:18:59 CST 2015 armv7l   GNU/Linux synology_armada370_ds115j
*** 003 *** Linux DiskStation003 3.10.35   #5532 SMP Wed Mar 11 12:09:56 CST 2015 x86_64   GNU/Linux synology_cedarview_713+
$ for i in 000 001 002 003; do echo -e "\n\n*** $i ***\n"; ssh -A diskstation$i grep -i bogomips /proc/cpuinfo; done
*** 000 ***

bogomips	: 133.33
bogomips	: 133.33
total bogomips	: 266.66

*** 001 ***

BogoMIPS	: 1985.74

*** 002 ***

BogoMIPS	: 795.44

*** 003 ***

bogomips	: 4256.06
bogomips	: 4256.06
bogomips	: 4256.06
bogomips	: 4256.06

World/Deutsch/Medien/Fernsehen/Sendungen/Shows