On Wed, Jun 27, 2001 at 11:54:57AM -0700, Vineet Kumar wrote: > Hello, > > I recently upgraded one machine to the 2.4.5 kernel from the 2.2 > series. As it's running now, I have an iptables script which sets up > my NAT and filtering rules. I was rather proud of myself having gotten > my script to work fine on the first try, but I'm not sure what's the > clean Debian Way to do things. > > Now, I have cooked my own /etc/init.d/iptables which simply executes > the script that I have placed in /etc/iptables. Another way I > considered would be to mimc the /etc/init.d/ipchains script that comes > in the ipchains package, with something like > s/ipchains-\(save|restore\)/iptables-\1/ . I wasn't sure on the > state of those functions, so I didn't do so yet, but by now I > started thinking there should be a clean Debian Way to do it. How do > others load their firewall rulesets? > > If there's an obvious answer (an "automatic" way I just missed) that > would be great, otherwise I'd like to hear about your own personal > setups.
apt-get install ipmasq /etc/init.d/ipmasq restart ipmasq -v unless i've missed something? -- DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #50 from Will Trillich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : Want to specify EDITOR SETTINGS WHEN LAUNCHING FROM MUTT? Put something like this in your ~/.muttrc file: set editor="vim -c 'set ft=mail tw=64'" That ensures that Vim syntax highlighting is set for "mail" patterns, and that text will wrap automatically at 64 columns. (For more info, try ":help tw" or ":help ft" when inside Vim. Also, browse /usr/share/doc/mutt/html/manual.html for the full scoop on customizing Mutt.) Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ...