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well, i have ssh running and a webserver (nginx), but both are actually secure. And my password is also a secure password, plus my router doesn't redirect port 22 to my comp.
Quote from: Sorunome on November 09, 2013, 06:31:46 pmwell, i have ssh running and a webserver (nginx), but both are actually secure. And my password is also a secure password, plus my router doesn't redirect port 22 to my comp.Do you use this password elsewhere, though? A SMF admin's password was guessed on a different forum that was filled with exploits and since that admin used the same password on SMF too, the hacker followed him then stole a copy of the database and passwords.
well, i'm afraid there aren't, unfortunately, any free lunches out there! you'll need to either google for it or write your own (probably faster, i dunno). It may take a while but it may be worth it. keep being resilient and eventually you'll manage to recover the important stuff. I been there too (sort of, my brand new HD simply crashed - but only some of the disk sectors were damaged). i went 'crazy' for a couple of days. After the disaster i keep backing-up the important (programming) stuff much more often.
Sorunome, check the log file auth.log for anything suspicious.
import os, sys, glob, shutildest='/home/'#leave trailing / or it will breakfor f in glob.glob("*.h"): keep=input("Do you want to keep "+f) if keep=='r' or keep=='n': os.remove(f) else if keep='k' or keep=='y': shutil.copy(f,dest+f) else: print("You need to use a valid command y/k keep or r/n remove")