Whileyou may have Strawberry Perl installed, that's not the perl you are using. C:\Strawberry\perl\bin\cpan uses the first perl in your PATH, which isn't your installation of Strawberry Perl. It appears that you are using some unix emulation (Cygwin? MSYS?) and using the perl from that emulation.
If your are using windows and a bash then try to it with cmd or powershell after you applied the changes from @ikegami. Took me some time to figure out, that it had no effect to change the paths for this terminal, as it still took the paths from /usr//perl5/
I tried to do all of the other answers, but it didn't work. Instead it appeared that it doesn't work because I tried to run it from unix shell script (sh in powershell or git bash). After moving it from .sh to .ps1 and running non-unix way it works perfectly.
Becoming anonymous is a very good way to hide ourself form all kind of surveillance. But we get only few option because VPN is really bad, specially those free one. Free VPN's keeps logs and we can be traced.
We can use Tor as a default gateway for our network. Then all the traffic on our PC will transfer via Tor network and it's not possible to trace us. We can do this manually with a server but manual configuration of this will consume a lot of time and hard work. Automated tools will help us.
In today's article we gonna talking about Nipe. This perl script enables us to directly route all our traffic from our computer to the Tor network through which we can use the internet anonymously without having to worry about tracked or traced back.
Then the installation process will start. After the installation we got a notification that some services need to restart, here we press "TAB" button and select OK by pressing ENTER, as we can see in the following screenshot:
After applying these command NIPE services will be started, now again if we can check the status by applying sudo perl
nipe.pl status command then, we can see the output as the following screenshot:
NIPE makes Tor network our default gateway. This is how we can anonymise our total Kali Linux system. This process is enough secure. Practically cracking Tor is close to impossible but as we know theoretically everything is possible.
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I am trying to install NIPE on ubuntu running on my Windows 10 using Windows Subsystems For Linux, I have cloned the file from GitHub and have done some commands which worked, but the command to fully install NIPE ($ perl
nipe.pl install) displays this
I just installed Arch Linux on a workstation I'm using at work and did a fresh install from the 'netinst' CD. I noticed once the machine was up and running that I had to way to view my interface configuration:
I created a forum account just to comment on this thread. First of all: I LOVE ARCH. It's a great system that's helped me to learn SO MUCH about linux that I would not have learned otherwise... I like to truly give thanks to all who make this project possible. Okay, now that I have that out in the open:
Who decided that the net-tools package, or at the very least ifconfig, was no longer worthy of being installed by default? Let me share an example of what just happened to me: During a fresh setup, I made a typo in rc.conf regarding my eth0 subnet. Having not realized this initially, I was not able to connect via pacman to install net-tools an have just spent about an hour trying to understand how in the heck to configure my interface from the shell manually using this "ip addr" command that I previously never knew existed. (Sometimes I don't actually WANT to use the rc.conf file if I'm performing a temporary test of some functionality or want an on-the-fly fix, call me old fashioned...). Now the disclaimer is: Yes, I realize I could have edited the rc.conf file and restarted, but that's not what this post is about. What is IS about is the choice to dis-include a long standing and highly important command that many perceive as "part" of the base-linux-install, if only for the fact that it's been the primary tool to accomplish these activities for so long now, and when a highly used package such as this is simply 404, it can be very distressing to the user if they aren't informed in advance. To be fair, I read the post about how ifconfig is old and going away, or rather, that it won't have any 'new features' added to it. But reality dictates that most people don't use ifconfig for it's fancy new featuresets, they use it because it's SIMPLE and it JUST WORKS. Do we really need ifconfig to configure our interfaces AND do our laundry for us too? I don't know about you, but that's what I have a girlfriend for....
Maybe you should put up a red flag for the user at the time of install such as "Hey (user), you know we just switched to this different network config method, so in case you aren't familiar with the new method would you like to have the old installed as well?". THAT would have been nice.
To be fair, I read the post about how ifconfig is old and going away, or rather, that it won't have any 'new features' added to it. But reality dictates that most people don't use ifconfig for it's fancy new featuresets, they use it because it's SIMPLE and it JUST WORKS
It's not only about fancy new features. The latest stable net-tools release (1.60) is Linux 2.2/glibc 2.2 antique. It's only a matter of time before the tools themselves or their build stops working (btw, it doesn't "just work" already). Besides, the iproute2 package is around for more than 10 years, so most of people could be used to it by now.
although it is good to keep the distro current, it is also good to know what tools which are part of the distro are broken by this change. One example is "cylon" . The network testing is based on ifconfig. is repairing cylon part of the change we users can expect?
The package (as has been mentioned it's in net-tools) still exists, and you shouldn't necrobump 7 year old topics. Furthermore no one in any official capacity will do anything to fix an AUR package, if the package is missing a dep, take it up with the AUR maintainer.
I need to install CPAN and some Perl modules automatically in a Scientific Linux (RHEL) installation script. Unfortunately the specific modules I want (at least one of them) cannot be found as RPM:s as far as I've seen.
This doesn't seem like a very unusual requirement, but I haven't seen any really good documentation on this. The problem is that whenever CPAN is launched for the first time an interactive configuration runs. Can this be skipped somehow? And how do I launch module installations directly from the command line?
If it's a repetitive task, it may pay to spend a few hours with cpan2rpm and turn them into RPM's. In my experience, CPAN runs (even interactive) are too plagued by unexpected events (version quirks, network problems, bogus tests failures) to be relied upon in a (semi-)automatic install.
You may experience this challenge if Jre (Java Runtime Environment) is not installed on your system or you using a non java enabled browser like, google chrome, Safari, Microsoft edge etc. Download and install the latest version of java from
www.java.com and/or use a java-enabled browser like internet explorer or Mozilla Firefox.
NipeX bi-monthly Newsletter - Click Here to download a copy of NipeX Connect (November- December 2017 edition). Police Emergency Number! You can contact the Police Emergency number 767 on all GSM lines in emergency situations. Connections are available to the emergency number even at zero credit.
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