Why KeePass? Today, you have to remember many passwords. You need a password for a lot of websites, your e-mail account, your webserver, network logins, etc. The list is endless. Also, you should use a different password for each account, because if you would use only one password everywhere and someone gets this password, you would have a problem: the thief would have access to all of your accounts.
KeePass is a free open source password manager, which helps you to manage your passwords in a secure way. You can store all your passwords in one database, which is locked with a master key. So you only have to remember one single master key to unlock the whole database. Database files are encrypted using the best and most secure encryption algorithms currently known (AES-256, ChaCha20 and Twofish). For more information, see the features page.
Is it really free? Yes, KeePass is really free, and more than that: it is open source (OSI certified). You can have a look at its full source code and check whether the security features are implemented correctly.
Installing Keepass on Ubuntu 20.04:
Keypass can be installed on Ubuntu 20.04 really quickly and easily in 3 quick commands:
Update Ubuntu 20.04.
sudo apt update
Wait for the updater to check for updates and finish:
Add the repository into apt by running the following command.
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:jtaylor/keepass
Press Enter to add the repository.
Once finished the installer will go back to the command line:
Run updates again to add the repository.
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade -y
Install keypass by running.
sudo apt-get install keepass2 -y
Type y and enter to install keepass2.
Wait for keepass to install.
Check the version of keepass2 by typing keepass2 –version.
keepass2 --version
This will show the current installed verions.
To open Keepass click on Show Applications
Type Keepass2
Click on the KeePass2 Icon. KeePass will Open.
To create a new database click on New.
Click OK.
Type the new name for the database and click Save.
Type in a new master password and press enter.
Click Yes to use the password
Add a database name and click OK.
Choose Yes or No to print an emergency sheet or not.
The database is ready to use.
For more Ubuntu articles as how too’s click on our Ubuntu Category.
There have been a number of times that I have wanted to access my Ubuntu 20.04/20.10 PC from a Windows PC using Remote Desktop Access (RDP). This is how I have configured it to work.
Enable RDP on the Ubuntu 20.04/ 20.10 PC:
Open the terminal and type the following command:
sudo apt install xrdp
Type your password and enter.
Enter Y and enter.
Xrdp will be installed:
Once installed the installer will return to the command line:
Enable xrdp to start after reboot and to run now type:
sudo systemctl enable --now xrdp
The command will run and then return to the command line:
Run the following command to open the rdp port on the local firewall for incoming traffic.
sudo ufw allow from any to any port 3389 proto tcp
The rules will be added:
Run the following command to find the ip address of the machine. This will be needed to rdp from the windows machine.
sudo ip a
The ip address of the machine is highlighted in red:
This is all you have to do on the Ubuntu PC. Now go onto the windows PC and connect to the Ubuntu PC as follows:
Connecting to the Ubuntu PC from Windows using RDP.
Click on the start button and type mstsc. Click on Open.
Type in the ip address of the Ubuntu PC and click Connect.
Click Yes.
Type the username and password and click OK.
You will now have access to the linux desktop. Yay.
To log off again just click on the x of the RDP window or log out:
Troubleshooting:
Black Screen at logon:
If there is a user logged in on the Ubuntu PC you may get a black screen when you rdp to the PC. This can be resolved by logging off of the Ubuntu PC.
For more things to do with your new Ubuntu 20.10 Desktop go to my other articles HERE.
Authentication Required login
In some cases you will get the following window appear and even though you log in it will not disappear:
A permanent fix for this is to edit the following file:
sudo vim /usr/share/polkit-1/actions/org.freedesktop.color.policy
Ubuntu 20.10 Desktop (Groovy Gorilla) was released on October 22, 2020. Here is what Canonical says about Groovy Gorilla:
“Ubuntu 20.10 establishes another milestone in Canonical’s long-term commitment to delivering a carrier-grade private cloud. The 33rd release of the most popular Linux distribution in the data centre space, Groovy Gorilla, brings various improvements that enable easier consumption of the fast networking stack across both VMs and containers, straightforward compliance with common security benchmarks and a reference telco cloud implementation.
Join the team of Canonical data centre experts to learn about new features in Ubuntu Server, MAAS, Charmed OpenStack and Charmed Kubernetes. In this webinar, we will present the key highlights of our core data centre products as well as our long-term vision towards data centre implementation.”
Click HERE to check out the Ubuntu 20.10 release video.
To install Ubuntu 20.10 Desktop, download the ISO from HERE and create boot media and boot from it.
Installing Ubuntu 20.10 Desktop:
On the first screen choose the language of the installer and the type of install that you want to perform by clicking on the Try or Install Ubuntu buttons:
Choose the desired keyboard layout and click Continue:
Select the Installation type and update options and click Continue.
Select the disk options and click Install now.
Click on Continue if you want to start the installation and Go Back if you want to go back and change some of the settings.
Select where you are and click Continue.
Add the PC and user details and click continue.
the installation will now run:
Click Restart now to reboot the Installation and boot from the PC hard drive:
Remove the Installation Media and press ENTER to reboot:
The PC will now boot to the Ubuntu 20.10 Desktop login page:
Login with the user created during Installation:
If you want to setup online accounts now do so in the Setup wizard other wise click Skip to move to the next wizard.
Choose your preferred option for helping to improve Ubuntu and click Next.
Select Next to move to the next wizard.
Click Done to close the Wizard.
Click Install Now to installed the latest updates.
You will now see the updater icon in the taskbar:
Click the icon to open the software updater.
Click on Details to see all the details:
Wait for the updates to complete. Then click on Restart Now.
The PC will now reboot and install the updates that needed a reboot. Once it it back at the login screen log in again.
The PC is now ready to use.
For more things to do with your new Ubuntu 20.10 Desktop go to my other articles HERE.
This is my guide to Installing Windows 10 Pro on a PC/VM. The process is basically the same for both after you have booted from the boot media.
Windows 10 boot media can be created by downloading the Windows 10 Media Creation tool from HERE.
For a walk through of creating Windows 10 boot media click HERE.
Installing Windows 10 Pro:
Once the Windows 10 boot media is created boot the machine to be installed from the media. The install will land on the following page. Select the correct regional settings and click Next:
Click Install now.
If you have a key add it and click Next. If you do not have a key (which I do not) click I don’t have a key:
Choose the version of Windows 10 that you want to install (Pro in this case) and click Next to move to the next step. This will install the 180 day trial version of Windows 10 Pro.
Accept the license terms and click Next
Click on Custom to install a clean version of Windows 10
Click next to use the new unallocated space.
Windows 10 will now install.
Click restart now or wait for the timer to restart the PC
Windows 10 will start booting
Select the correct Region and click Yes to continue
Choose the correct keyboard layout and click Yes to continue
Click skip unless you want to add a second keyboard layout in which case click Add layout
Wait
Chose to set up for personal use if not adding to a domain or for an organisation if you are. I selected Set up an organisation and pressed the Next button.
To not use a Microsoft account to login click on Offline account
Click on Limited experience to not have to create a Microsoft account
Add the user name and click Next
Type a password for the new user (Make sure that you type the password correctly as it is the only user on the PC). Click on the icon on the right of the password field to show the password to make sure it is typed correctly. Click Next
Retype the password and type Next
Select a security questions, type an answer and click Next
Select don’t use speech recognition unless you want it, click Accept
Choose the desired option for location service and click Accept
Select the desired option for Find my device and click Accept
Choose the desired diagnostics settings and Accept
Choose the desired setting for inking and typing and Accept
Choose the desired diagnostics data option and Accept
Choose the desired advertising ID and click Accept
Click Not Now if you do not want Cortana help
Finally the installation will start creating the user profile.
After what feels like forever windows will actually finish booting. Click Yes to allow the PC to be discoverable or No for it not to be
Click on Get started to start configuring Edge or Maybe later to not do it now.
Click complete setup
Click Continue without Signing-in
Edge setup is now complete
Windows is now Installed and ready to use.
It is now highly advisable to run Windows updates as there are bound to be a bunch of missing updates which is never a good idea.
Instructions of how to Install Windows Updates can be found HERE.
Although running Windows 10 updates is a simple procedure it is a crucial process for keeping a Windows 10 machine as secure as possible so it is worth documenting.
For more information about Windows updates take a look at this great post on TechRepublic.
Install Windows 10 Updates:
To run windows updates click on the start button
Click on the Settings button
Scroll to the bottom and select Update & Security
Click Check for updates and wait for Windows to check if it has any missing updates
Windows will then start installing the updates
If the updater asks for a reboot click Restart Now to reboot:
Updates will then be installed and the PC will be rebooted
Once the Updates have installed and the PC has rebooted log in and check to see if there are any more updates needing installing
There will most likely be more to install so continue installing until there are no new updates to install:
Ubtuntu 20.04 is the newest version of the popular Ubuntu OS and we are going to install the Desktop Version today.
The Ubuntu 20.04 Desktop can be downloaded from HERE.
Once the ISO has been downloaded make the boot media and boot off of it.
Install Ubuntu 20.04 Desktop:
The First Screen that will appear is the Install Screen. This screen has the installation language selection and options to Try Ubuntu which will boot ubuntu from the boot media and not install it on the machines hard drive. The second Option is Install Ubuntu which as its name suggests will install Ubuntu:
Click the Install Button to Start the Install Wizard:
Select the default Keyboard Layout and click Continue to go to the next page.
Leave the default as they are for the Updates and other software to run a Normal Installation and Download updates during the installation. There is currently a bug where the Install third-party software option breaks the installation so its probably a good idea to avoid that option for now. Click on Continue to move to the next page.
Again choose the default options for the Disk setup unless you want to do any advanced formatting. Click Install Now to start the installation.
Click on Continue ti format the disk
Choose your location and click continue to progress
Add your admin user details and select continue to start the instalation
The installation wizard will now install Ubuntu 20.04:
Click on Restart now to restart the Machine and finish the installation.
Remove the Installation Media and press enter to restart:
The Machine will now boot to the login screen.
The PC is now ready to log in and start using.
For ideas on what to do next got to my other Ubuntu 20.04 posts HERE.
It is also highly recommended that you check for updates which is covered HERE.
This post gives a walkthrough of How too install OwnCloud on Ubuntu 20.04 Server which elaborates on Owncloud’s own documentation on their website.
ownCloud is a file server that enables secure storage, collaboration and sharing. It is convenient to store files in the cloud, so they are available on any device and can be shared with a few clicks. There are a lot of popular providers like Google, Apple, Facebook, Twitter and Dropbox.
Install LAMP stack on your Ubuntu 20.04 machine:
BEFORE this process is run the server must have a fully functioning LAMP stack installed and configured.
A LAMP Stack consists of the following components:
Linux: The operating system.
Apache: The web server.
MySQL: The database
PHP: The programming language.
The installation of the LAMP stack is beyond the scope of this article but a good easy to follow step by step guide of how to install LAMP Instructions can found HERE.
Install OwnCloud stack on your Ubuntu 20.04 machine:
Create a new database for Owncloud to use
Open the MySql shell by running the following:
sudo mysql -u root -p
This will take you to the mysql command line:
Owncloud
Run the following commands to create the database:
CREATE DATABASE ownclouddb;
CREATE USER 'ownclouduser'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'Pa55word!';
GRANT ALL ON ownclouddb.* TO 'ownclouduser'@'localhost';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
exit