ose issues and more, and has grown into having a whole stack
of features phpnuke didn't have.
They are not the same thing, though. Most people would probably
choose postnuke these days.
--
|All her life she was a dancer, but no
brian moore <[EMAIL PROTEC
tput rules and investigate what it is that's breaking them.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
ere. (Some BIOSes do that, but not mine.)
So I added the following to lilo.conf:
disk = /dev/sda
bios = 0x80
In your case, something like:
disk = /dev/hdb
bios = 0x81
should work fine.
This is covered in the LILO docs.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's edit
ian package? (ispell itself isn't very well maintained, but then, it
also works, so doesn't need much except things like the above patch :))
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He
emon spawn instal-menu that's
having the problem.
My guess is that Todd and I (and anyone else seeing this) have a package
that upgraded on Sunday that has something bogus in the menu setup and
is confusing install-menu.
198M worth of install-menu is a problem. :)
--
Brian Moore
LILO gets it wrong unless you tell
it specifically to use drive 0x80.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
ever happen.
(Though there are certainly ways to do it, the SMTP configuration ain't
part of Mutt.)
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
> probably a solution, but you have to be specific as to your needs. If
> > you can't express what you want, "Too bad" is all that can really be
> > said without you paying someone.
>
> I have been specific. I have even given examples! PMMail and The Bat!
> Screen shots alone for those two products speak volumes!
Source speaks, not screen shots.
If you don't like the way any mail client works, take the source and
make it work the way you want.
-That- is what GNU/Linux is about.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
On Tue, Aug 22, 2000 at 08:21:53PM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 22, 2000 at 06:21:15PM -0700, brian moore wrote:
> > Note that the "filtering" is done by fetchmail. If you don't want
> > filters, then don't specify that portion of the command line.
On Wed, Aug 23, 2000 at 01:04:31AM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 23, 2000 at 12:34:17AM -0700, brian moore wrote:
> > And I fail to see how a single fetchmail process reading from n servers,
> > with m mailboxes on each, and delivering each remote mailbox to some
> >
understand the requirement.
>
> I might have plonked Steve, but don't misstate what he asked.
Except the policy should be 'through outside networks' if they're
serious about it.
(Although your local ISP probably couldn't care less what the contents
of your mail are...
remailer must have takin a
> hit - or is it my pop3 server? I stopped reading them after approx
> 100 and simply deleted the rest of the lot - hope I didn't miss too
> much.
Someone in Hong Kong has a broken mail<->news gateway that is
regurgitating the list.
--
Brian Moor
hundredth of a second.)
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
bit o' php glue.
(Oh, and telling fvwm2 to not maximize the window on Alt-F10, which the
things sends as a 'leadin' character.)
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still
On Fri, Aug 25, 2000 at 12:31:01PM -0700, kmself@ix.netcom.com wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 25, 2000 at 11:37:48AM -0700, brian moore wrote:
> > On Fri, Aug 25, 2000 at 11:20:00AM -0700, Jaye Inabnit ke6sls wrote:
> > >
> > > Greetings,
> > >
> > > ch
A server is a
sort of a catchall and has accelerated support for piles of cards
for the simple reason that having a seperate server for each card is
silly.)
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He
t has nothing to do with hardware: Debian run levels are identical on
X86, SPARC, Alpha and any other port and Solaris run levels are
identical on X86 and SPARC.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
n command, but
that should be trivial I do it as a macro in my editor for the
legacy outfits (like Network Solutions) that insist on clearsigning.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be wait
On Mon, Sep 04, 2000 at 01:18:08PM -0700, Tal Danzig wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> If you have ssh2 installed there is sftp2.
If you have openssh installed, there is 'sftp', even available as a deb
of the same name.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's e
your local network,
as I recall, but that's trivial to change... look at '/etc/postfix/main.cf'
it has an explanation of the settings.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He&
On Mon, Sep 04, 2000 at 05:41:46PM -0700, Tal Danzig wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> On Mon, 4 Sep 2000 17:24:23 -0700, brian moore said:
>
> : On Mon, Sep 04, 2000 at 01:18:08PM -0700, Tal Danzig wrote:
> : > Hi all,
> : >
> : > If you have ssh2 installed th
y/non-US main contrib non-free
The package (in potato and later) is called 'ssh'. The non-free ssh is
now 'ssh-nonfree'.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
x27;ll see the depth up near the top
of each Display section:
screen #0:
dimensions:1280x1024 pixels (433x347 millimeters)
resolution:75x75 dots per inch
depths (1):16
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | I
7;s wrong here?
Well, you -should- use GNU PG instead of PGP gpg doesn't spew a lot
of the noise that PGP does. (There are tricks to quiet PGP down some,
by tricking out the locales stuff to change some of the messages to
empty strings but gnupg works better anyway.)
--
Brian Moore
ope sender,
only people who post will get bounces, not the mailing list server
itself, so it will be unable to autoremove the offending address.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be wa
ee it.
So you have to convince LILO of two things:
1) it should write the boot loader to the SCSI drive
2) it should ask the BIOS to load from device 0x80 (which should be
the scsi drive).
You do this in lilo.conf:
disk = /dev/sda
bios = 0x80
--
Brian Moore | O
et X running without resorting to atrocities like
640x480x16.
It looks like, well, X.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
.imrss.org)
IMRSS shut down a year ago.
You really shouldn't be using them if you want reliable results.
See http://www.imrss.org/imrss/
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waitin
l get a bounce
(assuming their mail configuration is correct, anyway) instead of a
silent discard. (Procmailing out bounces is bad since lots o' spammers
use bogon return envelopes so all you end up doing is filling your
outgoing queue with junk that won't be deliverable.)
--
Br
t /usr/bin/which
#! /usr/bin/csh -f
#ident "@(#)which.csh 1.2 92/07/14 SMI"
#
#
# which : tells you which program you get
#
# Set prompt so .cshrc will think we're interactive and set aliases.
# Save and restore path to prevent .cshrc from messing it up.
(etc... it
ed: Learn how SMTP
works and why envelope sender is important.;
from=<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> to=<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
On Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 01:55:44AM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> brian moore wrote:
>
> > My solution is simply to refuse all mail from
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] with postfix:
> >
> > Sep 23 16:58:25 bifur postfix/smtpd[3101]: reject: RCPT from
> > imsmdm002.
still sometimes did
the above.
Both went back to normal when I backstepped glibc and libdb to the potato
versions.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
s get ironed out. (Or do, and file the proper bugs so the
packages get rebuilt.)
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the
On Tue, Oct 03, 2000 at 12:07:27AM +0700, Umum Wijoyo wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I'd like to provide a web-based mail service for my users.
> Are there any Debian packages for that? What abt its
> security (I mean, when a user enters his/her password)?
apt-get install apache-ssl imp
With apache-ssl, your
bian. If there is such a command what package would
> it be in?
If you use 'zip' on DOS and tell it to split across floppies, you can
unzip on Linux by catting the pieces together and then using 'unzip'.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's edi
when the midi stuff gets loaded? As I recall, that's
where it was for me. I fixed it by dropping the midi crap (if I want
midis, I'll use timidity anyway and midis suck anyway).
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
On Mon, Jun 19, 2000 at 01:00:23PM -0400, Maciej Kalisiak wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 19, 2000 at 12:51:11PM -0400, brian moore wrote:
> > Sure it's not when the midi stuff gets loaded? As I recall, that's
> > where it was for me. I fixed it by dropping the midi crap (if I
don't think it includes a DHCP client, though, so you may need to note
your assigned IP number and such instead of relying on DHCP to assign
that.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be w
out of arch/i386
> I am basically "shopping" for a new distro.
Debian is a pleasure to use and maintain. I've now formatted Slack off
two machines, RH off two and Mandrake off another. (Okay, so the Mandrake
one booted precisely once with Mandrake and lasted a total of 1
rst in the nameserver entries in
> > /etc/resolv.conf.
>
> Both of those files are indeed set up as you suggest and the problem
> persists. It seems strange that imp would be interested in the IP for
> doma.
IMP doesn't care... Apache does.
> Can anyone she
IOS will make it work again.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
oppies. You'll need the Drivers Floppy from
the standard location.
A competing and newer set of Rescue and Driver Floppies for
Adaptec users can be found at
http://www.debian.org/~adric/aic7xxx/.
I had to use one of those images from for my 2940.
--
Brian Moore
ges, that I don't want to install them all...
Ah, glad someone else has discovered the joy of 'rename'. It makes life
so much nicer. :)
As to where it's from:
perl-5.005: /usr/share/man/man1/rename-5.005.1p.gz
perl-5.005: /usr/bin/rename-5.005
Which you should have on Potato
it might be there
> but not everyone does.
It does. See above.
> And what about 2.4test kernels (that I'm running) ? I don't have a
> /proc/sys/kernel/modprobe - what should I do? How do the magic
> scripts in /etc/init.d deal with that
They run kerneld. Wrongl
ou pass a 64 bit
offset to lseek() or get back a 64-bit offset without breaking
existing code?)
Fortunately, this has been worked out. STFW for "Large File Summit" and
read the papers (gack, google is scary). 64-bit-files-on-32-bit-hardware
is coming with the 2.4
an't recall anyone else that has paid, and I
thought Loki was cool enough for that I mailed them a thank you note:
Loki has a ton of ways to place 'free' ads (ain't PR fun?), but they
chose to donate money to Debian.)
> But I have not seen any ads except the few that have l
On Tue, Jul 18, 2000 at 01:05:42PM +0300, Pavel M. Penev wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, brian moore wrote:
>
> > On Sat, Jul 15, 2000 at 11:51:06AM +0100, Jonathan Heaney wrote:
> > > David Wright wrote:
> > > > The scripts /etc/init.d/{kern
ing
> addresses.
> > This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.
> >
> >
> >
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > The users maildir is over the allowed quota (size).
Yep. Lame-ass mail server that sends errors to the 'F
ge of xserver did you install? Try `dpkg -l xserver*`.
> >
>
> He wants the URL to Xfree 3.3.6 debs for Slink. It's out there
> somewhere, I just don't know it. Older xserver-svga doesn't have the
> G200 support.
See http://www.debian.org/~vincent/ for the detail
s a proof of compatibility? I've seen one or two of these
> places on the web, so I know they do exist.. -chris
Lots of places. My personal favorite is ASL Workstations
(http://www.aslab.com/). They ship Mandrake on it (icky) not Debian,
but, then, I reformat and reinstall everything anyw
urceforge, as well
as donating machines to Debian), so spending money with them is
'politically' good.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal
r o m s e c t i o n
It looks like this floppy doesn't have a file system on it like
someone made it with "cp filename /dev/fd0"
You can't mount such things.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
like some basic authentication
and accounting. Since it's cheaper for the ISP, it's often the only
choice for consumers.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
:pd=/etc/netatalk/APLWNTR1.PPD:
Depending on whether your lpr has magicfilter or something like it to
autodetect postscript (as CUPS does), the above silliness will probably
work fine with any old printer that lpr can print to. It's probably not
the 'best' way to do it, but it wor
me up complaining about the the shared libraries. I have
> uninstalled and reinstalled a couple of times to no avail. I'm
> wondering if this is a file permission thing or something. Any
> suggestions? thanks -- dale
No idea.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi i
deb
(and, yep, I just did this yesterday... :))
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
)
The name of the 'top' invoked from the debian Menus, though, is 'Top'.
Probably what you want is:
XTerm*Font: 10x20
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
not like that before. Is
> there a bug somewhere? Am I the only one who have this problem?
As I recall, top has started in a window named 'Top' forever.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'
sn't go to lawyer fee will hopefully be
> donated to the Free Software Foundation. Presently, it is
> my belief that legal action is the only way to get Corel to
> provide an acceptable responce to the fact that violating
> the GPL for six months is not acceptable regardless of
; suggested it.
Yes, you can. (Though I don't know if it works with PPP, I do believe
it works with dhcp.)
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal
broadcast 172.16.1.255
> network 172.16.1.0
> gateway 172.16.1.1
>
>
> I can use ifup for only one of my ethernet interfaces at a time. If both
> are running, I can't ping anything, either local (eth1) or non-local
> (eth0). I have to
en add it first to the other machines
for their sources.. they'll get what they can from your local mirror,
and if they happen to have something unique, they'll download it.
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Ha
#x27;smtphost' line. Unless you really want to snarf mail from
email.psu.edu and send it to smtp.psu.edu
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor.
Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting
Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day.
Netscum, Bane of Elves.
RBOSE=1):
>
> procmail: Executing " echo foo > /tmp/foo"
> procmail: Error while writing to " echo foo > /tmp/foo"
> procmail: Assigning "LASTFOLDER= echo foo > /tmp/foo"
insert:
SHELL=/bin/sh
--
Brian Moore | Of course vi
On Mon, Feb 12, 2001 at 11:39:11PM +, Lee Elliott wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> I'm not able to get hardware rendering/GL running on my G400. Kernel is
> currently 2.4.0-test11 (2.4.0 was a bit wobbly for me - haven't d/loaded
> 2.4.1 yet) and I'm getting the follwing error in /var/log/XFre86.0.lo
On Tue, Feb 13, 2001 at 10:41:35AM -0600, Rob VanFleet wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 13, 2001 at 03:46:11PM +0100, Joris Lambrecht wrote:
> > while it is tru you can remove most scriptin support with removin the
> > microsoft scripting host, what if you're a developer ? Or you're environment
> > requires yo
On Thu, Feb 15, 2001 at 02:41:29PM -0500, Glenn Becker wrote:
>
> Even more, does anyone on list know of a good source for 'Linux laptops'
> now that both linuxlaptops.com and tuxtops.com seem to have suspended
> production?
I buy all my machines from ASL. http://www.aslab.com/ well, all b
On Fri, Feb 16, 2001 at 09:42:08AM -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I would like to install Apache without any MySQL libs. Why does Apache
> depend on MySQL in the first place? Seems like if it depended on any DB it
> should be Postgres. :-)
Um, apache doesn't depend on MySQL.
--
CueCat decoder
On Thu, Feb 22, 2001 at 09:59:47PM -0800, Nate Amsden wrote:
> Brian Stults wrote:
> >
> > As the subject indicates, there are some processes that hang and cannot
> > be killed. Specifically, occasionally dselect will hang while trying to
> > install a package. After waiting for a long time, I t
On Sun, Feb 25, 2001 at 02:08:38PM -0500, Stan Brown wrote:
> Let;s just cut to the chase on this.
>
> I need to be able to create, and work with larg files (> 2G) under
> Debian Linux. Secondly I need the moststable system for doing this,
> as it will be a production machine.
You need many thin
On Sun, Feb 25, 2001 at 04:01:01PM -0500, Stan Brown wrote:
> On Sun Feb 25 14:33:51 2001 brian moore wrote...
> >
> >On Sun, Feb 25, 2001 at 02:08:38PM -0500, Stan Brown wrote:
> >> Let;s just cut to the chase on this.
> >>
> >> I need to be able to cre
On Thu, Mar 01, 2001 at 09:38:12AM +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> If I keep my local mirror of installed packages (using 'apt-move sync' and
> dpkg --get-selections > installed.packages) up to date and backed up, and I
> backup my personal data (I'm including /etc, /home and /var/spool here) on
On Sat, Mar 03, 2001 at 08:52:36AM -0500, Cory Snavely wrote:
> Right now on a big Solaris machine of mine I have about a dozen zombied
> Perls--parent process (Apache) long gone, and when I -9ed them, their PPIDs
> became 1 (init). Classic zombie.
Hrrrm? Not quite. Init eventually inherits zomb
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 05:04:15PM -0800, Jim Richardson wrote:
> I am currently using SuSE (6.4 and 7.0 on various machines) but am getting fed
> up with the name mangling suse performs on packages. For some reason, the
> package names follow the 8.3 msdos naming convention, as if that wasn't bad
(wonders why debian-user was copied on the reply, when I didn't post
there... but what the hell, since you seem to think it's crucial for
the whole world to see)
On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 02:25:08PM -0500, MaD dUCK wrote:
> also sprach brian moore (on Fri, 09 Mar 2001 10:
On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 02:17:06PM -0800, Mike Fedyk wrote:
> Does mutt have any address book support? Autocompletion would be really
yes. either the internal one, or using an external database.
> nice too. Does mutt or gnus have that?
depends on what you mean. auto address completion? sure
On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 02:48:04PM -0800, Michael Epting wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 02:22:37PM -0800, brian moore wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 02:17:06PM -0800, Mike Fedyk wrote:
> > > Does mutt have any address book support? Autocompletion would be really
> &g
On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 04:41:38PM -0800, Michael Epting wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 06:21:32PM -0500, MaD dUCK wrote:
> >
> > abook package where?
>
> In unstable, at least, it's in main/Mail. Just apt-get install abook.
>
> I took my Outlook Express (sorry!) address book and pulled it in
On Sat, Mar 10, 2001 at 02:27:07PM -0500, MaD dUCK wrote:
> also sprach Bjarne S . N?ss (on Sat, 10 Mar 2001 01:40:17PM +0100):
> > This is quite simple. Just run ssh-keygen and an empty passphrase.
> > By default the key generated will be put in .ssh/identify.pub copy
> > the line into the .ssh/a
On Sat, Mar 10, 2001 at 05:35:53PM -0800, hammack wrote:
> Dell has quoted: $2180, INSPIRON 4000, 128MB, 10 GB HD, 850mHZ,
> XGA, V90 Gold Card Modem, 24 X CR-ROM, with RH 7.0 installed. My
> thinking is, test drive the RH for a while. then copy all config
> files for reference to setting up Deb
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 03:39:34PM -0500, Holp, John Mr. wrote:
> Some refinement; port 20 is ftp data
> port 21 is ftp
> port 23 is telnet
And even more refinement
FTP supports two basic modes, 'passive' and 'active'. It's also UGLY
as hell.
On Tue, Mar 13, 2001 at 12:03:33PM +0100, Russell Coker wrote:
> On Tuesday 13 March 2001 11:51, Norman Schmidt wrote:
> > Hi Russell!
> >
> > I have three VIA KT-based Duron servers.
> > One of them has an Adaptec 29160 card wirh an external IDE-to-SCSI (that
> > means the three 40 GB drives are I
On Tue, Mar 13, 2001 at 10:44:18PM +0100, Martin W?rtele wrote:
> hi,
>
> we have ftp users in home/ftpusers and we disabled shell acces for them.
> now we have .bash* files in every user directory under /home/ftpusers.
>
> is there a way to use something like
> find /home/ftpusers -name .bash*
On Wed, Mar 14, 2001 at 01:39:52AM -0700, Jimmy Richards wrote:
> On 14 Mar 2001 01:37:27 -0700, Jimmy Richards wrote:
> > Hello There,
> >
> > I don't know too much about it, other than what it stands for Address
> > Resolution Protocol.
> > I know it's considered to be a 'low-level' protocol.
>
On Wed, Mar 14, 2001 at 11:07:40AM -0500, Mike Dresser wrote:
> D-Man wrote:
>
> > 3) figure out from the docs/driver how to receive input from the
> >scanner -- hopefully it has an interrupt to alert you that it has
> >input for you,
> >
> >the barcode scanners I use at one job connec
On Wed, Mar 14, 2001 at 02:46:48PM -0800, Chris Majewski wrote:
> The computer science department at my university has many Linux
> boxes. Say, on the order of 100. Almost all these boxes run
> RedHat (not Debian, but read on).
>
> I don't like RedHat that much: for example, Re
On Wed, Mar 14, 2001 at 06:00:17PM -0600, Bill Morgan wrote:
> On 3/14/01 4:17 PM, "Noah L. Meyerhans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > It's really quite easy. By default Debian boots to runlevel 2, and xdm
> > (or gdm, wdm, whatever is installed) is started at each runlevel.
>
On Thu, Mar 15, 2001 at 10:15:57AM -0700, Ray Percival wrote:
> Not knowing about *BSD's jails I'm not sure if you want to
> restrict a user to only one part of the filesystem why not use
> chroot?
Because root can break out of a chroot().
Trivially.
It's not related to devices, like some seem
On Tue, Mar 20, 2001 at 03:18:05PM -0500, Ron Peterson wrote:
> Debian FAQ item 7.2 says that "The kernel (filesystem) in Debian
> GNU/Linux systems supports replacing files even while they're being
> used."
>
> How is this accomplished? If I roll my own kernel, do I need to patch
> it first to s
On Wed, Mar 21, 2001 at 09:15:10AM +0100, Sebastiaan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I saw this message on the list, shocked as I am to see that it has been
> tried to send to different subdomain's on my domain.
No it hasn't. It was sent to debian-user, and your mail server changed
the headers.
> What could
On Wed, Oct 11, 2000 at 11:39:20PM -0400, Paul McHale wrote:
> > The server IP_NUM isn't running SMTP ?
> > There is a firewall between your host and IP_NUM ?
> > You're not connected to the same network ?
>
> > The host is refusing your connection. It's either IP filtered, denied
> > through /et
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 09:08:16AM +0200, Manuel Hendel wrote:
> Manuel Hendel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > > Oct 12 21:45:11 cohiba postfix/master[356]: fatal: bind "(IP-Adress)"
> > > port 25: This Ip-Adress is already in use.
> >
> > Please post the output of (in bash)
> >
> > cat "
On Sun, Oct 15, 2000 at 01:16:34AM -0400, E. Jay Berkenbilt wrote:
>
> [I'm not currently subscribed to this list, so please cc me on responses.]
>
> After about September 20, the RSA patent has expired in the USA.
> Also, earlier this year, the USA finally relaxed its export laws
> concerning en
On Tue, Oct 17, 2000 at 02:17:15PM -0400, J. Bruce Fields wrote:
> I recently got myself a used Matrox Millenium (there are several---I got
> the one with the 220MHz RAMDAC and 4Megs WRAM), and am very happy with it.
> The online manual is available at
> http://www.matrox.com/mga/support/user_man
On Wed, Oct 18, 2000 at 11:33:17PM -0400, Chris Gray wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 18, 2000 at 11:04:32PM -0400, Chris Gray wrote:
> > On Wed, Oct 18, 2000 at 04:48:16PM -0700, Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
> > > sorry, but i'm trying to write some tools for beowulf administration.
> > >
> > > consider the prog
On Sat, Oct 21, 2000 at 01:20:02PM -0500, Lance Hoffmeyer wrote:
>
> I have a number of subdirectories where I have files with - such as
> name - title.txt and I wish to convert them to:
> name: title.txt
>
> In bash I tried:
>
> for i in *-*;do mv $i `echo $i | sed -e 's/ - /:/'`'done
>
> bu
On Fri, Oct 27, 2000 at 03:53:25PM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> Robert Waldner writes:
> > could be that your ISP has more than one kind of accesserver (or slightly
> > different configured ones) in their huntgroup.
>
> That doesn't explain why he doesn't always get 'CONNECT' from his modem. I
> t
On Sat, Oct 28, 2000 at 08:36:47PM +0200, Robert Waldner wrote:
> On Sat, 28 Oct 2000 10:06:56 PDT, Peter Jay Salzman writes:
> >also, i noticed that some accounts which are disabled are given a shell of
> >/bin/false:
> >
> > ftp:x:100:65534::/home/ftp:/bin/false
> >
> >tiger seemed to hate th
On Tue, Oct 31, 2000 at 09:18:37PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> Leen Besselink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Yes, that is ONE person doing the packaging for KDE2 (ofcourse KDE2 is
> >not a one-man show), he just 'resinged' though, because ONE person out
> >there said bad things to him.
>
> Hmm - I
1 - 100 of 214 matches
Mail list logo