On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 11:57:20PM +0200, Julio Merino wrote:
> would you like to recognize fastly if you're a normal user or root?
> Change the default debian PS1 to something like this for your user:
>
> PS1='\[\e[22m\e[40m\e[32m\]\h:\w\$\[\e[22m\e[40m\e[37m\] '
My /etc/profile has the long
Gutierrez Family writes:
> Basically, I can't do anything after 'wvdial' calls up 'pppd'
"Can't do anything" doesn't tell us much. What, _exactly_, have you tried
and what, _exactly_, happened?
> If I type 'ifconfig', I see the following for the ppp0 device:
Looks normal.
> My understanding is
On 15-Sep-2000 John Hasler wrote:
> Pollywog wrote:
>> About half the time that I experience power failures, I need to run fsck
>> on my Debian system.
>
> How is your system partitioned? One big root partition is not a good idea
> for someone who suffers frequent power failures.
I have one big
I come from Windows background and am interested in learning unix/linux cause i
am a
nerd. For learning things, I come from the "drink from the firehouse" school of
thought so I like Debian. its a little more hardcore, but still usable to me. I
am
still trying other flavors, but So far I prefer d
Pollywog wrote:
> About half the time that I experience power failures, I need to run fsck
> on my Debian system.
How is your system partitioned? One big root partition is not a good idea
for someone who suffers frequent power failures.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler)
Dancing Hors
Hello,
I'm having trouble connecting to my ISP.
I'm using 'wvdial' to dial in and I've also run 'pppconfig' and entered all the
appropriate information. Basically, I can't do anything after 'wvdial'
calls up 'pppd':
--> Sending: (password)
Entering PPP Session.
IP address is 64.154.14
> Matheson wrote:
>
> Hey,
>
> I've been working on getting my Voodoo 3 3000 AGP to work, but I can't
> seem to. I've compiled the 3dfx module, but when I try to insmod it,
> it gives me the error:
>
> 3dfx: Could not set MTRR for Voodoo card
if i remember right i had a similar problem a while
On 14 Sep 2000, John Hasler wrote:
> > floppy. Just seems a little wierd seeing DOS as the default on a Linux
> > manpage...
>
> FAT16 is a pretty good format for floppies (that's what it was designed
> for). Ext2 isn't.
ext2 does fine with floppies, it has a little more overhead than DOS, but
On 15-Sep-2000 Michael Soulier wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Pollywog wrote:
>
>> About half the time that I experience power failures, I need to run fsck on
>> my
>> Debian system.
>
> So, have you had to reinstall packages? With RedHat/Mandrake, I
> would immediately do an rpm -Va to ver
On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Pollywog wrote:
> About half the time that I experience power failures, I need to run fsck on my
> Debian system.
So, have you had to reinstall packages? With RedHat/Mandrake, I
would immediately do an rpm -Va to verify everything, but I quickly found
out that several
Quoth Mike Werner,
> Is the list owner about? If so, could you *please* find the offendor and
> remove them from this list? This is getting to be a bit much.
While I agree that it's very annoying, in the meantime you can be
proactive and filter them into the bit-bucket.
I use maildrop, so the
On 14 Sep 2000, John Hasler wrote:
> Michael Soulier writes:
> > Seems it's still two steps, superformat and then mkfs to make an ext2
> > floppy. Just seems a little wierd seeing DOS as the default on a Linux
> > manpage...
>
> FAT16 is a pretty good format for floppies (that's what it was desig
> On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 08:42:45PM +0100, Jeff Green wrote:
> > Yes loads but without you specifing some sort of geographical location
> > how would I know which one to recommend?
> > Jeff
> >
> > Dan Pomohaci wrote:
> > >
> > > Are any free Internet providers for Linux?
>
> loads
About half the time that I experience power failures, I need to run fsck on my
Debian system.
On 15-Sep-2000 Michael Soulier wrote:
> So I ask, what aspect of Debian makes it superior in this
> respect? What's causing the wonderful lack of corruption during power
> failures?
>
>
On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Damon Muller wrote:
> Try the pop3d server which is part of the qmail package. It's the only
> pop3 server that I know of which works with maildir.
>
ipop[23]d also supports maildir.
--
Jaldhar H. Vyas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Michael Soulier writes:
> Seems it's still two steps, superformat and then mkfs to make an ext2
> floppy. Just seems a little wierd seeing DOS as the default on a Linux
> manpage...
FAT16 is a pretty good format for floppies (that's what it was designed
for). Ext2 isn't.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PR
I get thousands of the following messages when installing a kernel I
compiled myself:
depmod: ELF file not a relocatable object
depmod: not an ELF file
depmod: error reading ELF header: No such file or directory
kernel version 2.2.17 and pcmcia version 3.1.20 from deb packages,
using make-kpkg cl
Is the list owner about? If so, could you *please* find the offendor and
remove them from this list? This is getting to be a bit much.
- Forwarded message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] -
> Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2000 10:44:03 +0800
> Subject: Error: undelivered email - recipient email storage limit
If it's any interest I can't see this email either.
I'm using pronto.
Tal
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000 01:58:04 +0100, Bruce Richardson said:
: No viewable part found.
--
| Tal Danzig | Join #libranet on the |
If it's any interest I can't see this email either.
I'm using pronto.
Tal
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000 01:58:04 +0100, Bruce Richardson said:
: No viewable part found.
--
| Tal Danzig | Join #libranet on the |
Michael Soulier wrote:
> problems easily fixed by fsck without manual control necessary. I noticed
> the entries in /etc/inittab for powerloss, but the script it's pointing to
> for me is not installed, so it's not that, although I'd like to know what
> this /etc/init.d/powerfail script is.
IIRC
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 10:00:55PM -0400, Michael Soulier wrote:
:
: How do you guys feel about SUID root? For example, I'm here using
:supermount, finding it mildly annoying that I have to login as root to
:format a floppy. Is it against the "Debian way" to SUID root on supermount
:and mform
Huh, that's weird. I used RH more than a little -- my home system had RH
(5.2 and 6.0) over a year before it was graced with Debian, and I've used
RH 6.1 and 6.2 at work. Though there are bookoos of things I like better
about Debian, I never had the problem you described below.
I had the power
How do you guys feel about SUID root? For example, I'm here using
supermount, finding it mildly annoying that I have to login as root to
format a floppy. Is it against the "Debian way" to SUID root on supermount
and mformat for convenience? Does that cause a major security hole?
M
My biggest complaint about RedHat/Mandrake while I was using them
was the fact that if I lost power, the disk caching would cause the
filesystem to be corrupted, often seriously so. I'd cringe when I booted
up again, because inevitably, I'd be prompted to login as root and run
fsck myself.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
[ set pgp_create_traditional ]
> Does this work? Can Pine users etc see this?
Nope. I was only able to read your mail by saving it to a file...or by
opening it in mutt. 8^( Pine says this when viewing it:
[ Part 1, Application/PGP 1.1KB. ]
[ Not Sh
On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 11:49:13PM +0200, Julio Merino wrote:
:I started emacs for first time and appered instantaneously... In
:Debian it tooks a while to load a lot of files. Any pointers to this?
my *guess* is that (your) Debian has alot more site-lisp packages
installed that take time to load
> ...Looking around the web
> it looks like there are lots of places in Holland which sell
> devices for making machines quieter. Here in the wild west
> it looks like everybody sells the same generic power supply
> and any attempts to obtain information about quieter ones are
> typically met with
On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 02:53:56PM -0400, Fraser Campbell wrote:
:Jonathan D. Proulx wrote:
::
:
:At work we use almost exclusively RedHat because of the kickstart install
:option. I can make a kickstart file, put configuration information in the
:post install (of the kickstart) and with one
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Michael Soulier wrote:
> So, what's with superformat? I went to format a floppy and was
> told by fdformat that it was obsolete and that I should use
> superformat. Then I check the manpage, and it tells me that it defaults
> to making DOS floppies? What's with that?
So, what's with superformat? I went to format a floppy and was
told by fdformat that it was obsolete and that I should use
superformat. Then I check the manpage, and it tells me that it defaults
to making DOS floppies? What's with that?
Mike
"To listen to the words of the learned
> "Damon" == Damon Muller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Damon> Quoth Bob Billson,
>> I do have a question. What is a good POP server to use with
>> maildir mailboxes? I have few users who want to use POP
>> instead of imap. Any suggestions?
Damon> Try the pop3d server whi
What version of mutt are you using? If I remember correctly, for the
potato version you need to add "set pgp_default_version = gpg" or
similar to ~/.muttrc.
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:15:58PM -0500, Will Trillich wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 07:49:15PM +1100, Damon Muller wrote:
> > Hi Will,
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 03:44:55PM +0200, Julio Merino wrote:
:In Hurd you can replace any of the existing servers (disk filesystem
:servers, network servers, etc.) without rebooting. The only thing you
:can't change is the microkernel (gnumach) but that's not needed often
::)
Just to see if I ca
Hey,
I've been working on getting my Voodoo 3 3000 AGP
to work, but I can't seem to. I've compiled the 3dfx module, but when I
try to insmod it, it gives me the error:
3dfx: Could not set MTRR for Voodoo
card
I've made the device, and set the permissions, so
I'm not sure what else to
Yup...installed 5.2 over the weekend.so far no problemshowever, the
Starwriter files saved as Word 5, Word 9X and Word 2000 was not
compatible..i.e. when I tried opening these files in Word 97, it said
something about file permissions.in Windoze 95!!!
I hope the Sun and Gnome folks imp
Our company has a Win2000 Domain server which has DNS and DHCP
services. I have installed dhcpcd on our Debian Linux machines
(PowerMac G4, PowerBook Pismo and a P133 machine) and they obtain the IP
address and gateway from the Win2000 server without any problems. The
problem I have is that the D
Hi Will, Chris,
I have the following in my ~/.muttrc
[rei:~]%grep pgp ~/.muttrc
set pgp_default_version=gpg
set pgp_autosign
set pgp_sign_as=
set pgp_timeout=7200
It works fine like that, you shouldn't need much more.
cheers,
damon
Quoth Chris Gray,
> On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:15:58PM -050
pgpJvzdNbVxOs.pgp
Description: PGP message
Quoth Bob Billson,
> I do have a question. What is a good POP server to use with maildir
> mailboxes? I have few users who want to use POP instead of imap. Any
> suggestions?
Try the pop3d server which is part of the qmail package. It's the only
pop3 server that I know of which works with mail
Success! First of all, a big THANK-YOU! to this list! The suggestions
helped me install Applix. I have to say that it took a little bit from
each suggestion to finally get it to work. Also I still have one very
small problem with the program: it can't find the 12 pt Helvetica
font.
Overview: I use
I'm trying to create a filesystem in RAM. I've got the rd.o module, but
when I try to create the fs I get:
16:18:04# mkfs -t ext2 -v /dev/ram 2048
mke2fs 1.19, 13-Jul-2000 for EXT2 FS 0.5b, 95/08/09
mkfs.ext2: error in loading shared libraries: mkfs.ext2: undefined symbol:
e2p_edit_feature
Rei
Stuart Ballard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Sorry to reply to myself, but I've come to the conclusion after further
> testing that my floppy drive is 100% busted and I'm not going to be able
> to do anything useful off it. I also can't (practically) replace it. I
> do have a fully functioning Red
I have several versions of the stdc libraries installed. Is this going to be
a problem? Should I uninstall the older versions or leave things as they are?
lilypad:~$dpkg -l | grep libstdc++
ii libstdc++2.102.95.2-14The GNU stdc++ library
ii libstdc++2.10-dev
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 12:31:27PM -0700, kmself@ix.netcom.com wrote:
> The advantage in a multiuser environment is that you providing (and
> controlling) root access at the user level rather than at the system
> level. Eg, Tim, Bob, Alice, and Nate have access to a system. Tim,
> Alice, and Nat
I am configuring Apache (1.3.9) for server-side includes, but don't want
them to be able to execute cgi scripts. Things are working fine (a litte
too fine, actually). Included documents are parsed and included, but if I
try the following:
then the output of the script is placed into the do
I'm trying to figure out how to get Netscape to open up an application to
view a Word document. I've edited the Applications category within the
Navigator preferences to start StarOffice when a Word document is
selected. StarOffice does start up, but it doesn't open the Word document.
So, I'm think
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 12:16:06PM -0400, Bob Billson wrote:
> I do have a question. What is a good POP server to use with maildir
> mailboxes? I have few users who want to use POP instead of imap. Any
> suggestions?
Check out qmail's website at http://www.qmail.org/
There is a default pop se
"Sean 'Shaleh' Perry" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > Why was pump made the default DHCP client ? I have been unable to get
> > pump working with my @Home setup. dhcp-client, however, works very
> > well.
> >
>
> dunno, apparently it was small or something. Plus if it worked for Red Hat
Ju
>
> Why was pump made the default DHCP client ? I have been unable to get
> pump working with my @Home setup. dhcp-client, however, works very
> well.
>
dunno, apparently it was small or something. Plus if it worked for Red Hat
..
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
> Mathew Johnston
> Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2000 9:47 PM
> To: Christian Pernegger
> Subject: Re: Need help analyzing firewall log message
I thank you for trying to help, but ...
> ICMP messages can b
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Sean McIlwain wrote:
> Is there a linux program that will allow a demo to be generated? For
> example, A tutorial on how to use a program that will produce a movie of a X
> desktop with the correct sequence of commands shown.
Hmmm, not quite what you are asking for, but may
Has anyone faced this problem with WU-FTPD?
I have to websites which need to be just the same. Both of them are
running the debianized wu-ftpd. The directory that needs to be mirrored
is enormous, with lots and lots of files.
The problem is that the secondary machine (the one which uses mirror)
Sorry to reply to my own mail, but hey, I finally got my cable
connection working and I'm willing to share what I've learnt. ;-)
The problems I experienced were with the method my cable provider uses
to get their clients authenticated / initialized / connected.
This is what happens:
o Fi
debs,
i need to reinstall potato (after losing my pcmcia
modem to a custom kernel).
w/o having to "dselect" or "apt-get" over and over, is
there a way for the system, with one "apt-get"
command, to get and install the *.deb files in
/var/cache/apt/archives?
ia, t.
bentley taylor
(potato on 2
Hello!
The way I did it is not very good if you want only deb-packages on your
system, because I used a generic tar of apsfilter
(->http://www.freebsd.org/~andreas/apsfilter/index.html). But it works very
well. Apsfilter has an own setup program, it's very easy to set it up,
because you almost onl
[please wrap lines at column 72 (or at least less than 80)]
> X refuses to load now, complaining that it cannot find it's default font,
> `fixed'.
apt-get install xfonts-base
regards
--
Hi! I'm a .signature virus! Copy me into your ~/.signature, please!
--
Real programmers don't comment their
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:15:58PM -0500, Will Trillich wrote:
> mutt is now back to displaying
> [-- PGP output follows (current time: Thu Sep 14 13:08:42 2000) --]
> sh: /usr/bin/pgp: No such file or directory
> [-- End of PGP output --]
> for any email from anyone who's got a s
I tried that too. Still no luck. However, here is the lpc status all now...
lp35_05:
queuing is enabled
printing is enabled
no entries
no daemon present
lp35A:
queuing is enabled
printing is enabled
5 entries in spool area
lp35A is
I tried what you suggested. It seemed to be a step in the right direction.
After I issued lpc start all, and then checked lpc status all, I got reasonable
results. Moreover, I didn't get the "connection refused" messages from my print
jobs that I had before. However, having said all that, nothi
Sometimes, printers give the code that they are off-line (ran out of ink,
someone
physically took it off line), or the "I'm OK and ready to do your bidding,
master"
signal doesn't get recieved, so lpd thinks that the printer isn't working. You
should be able to see this with lpc status, and a qu
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Adam Lazur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I don't use $(( )) ever since I found $[ ] and got used to using $( )
>instead of ` `
Yes however $(( )) is Posix (posixized ksh-ism) and $[ ] is a bashism.
$ ash
$ echo $[2+3]
$[2+3]
$ echo $((2+3))
5
Mike"ism".
--
Deadloc
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Bob Billson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I've had very good luck with courier. Setting it up can be a little
>tricky especially with getting authentication to play nice.
>
>I do have a question. What is a good POP server to use with maildir
>mailboxes? I have few
I recently had a sudden "ain't going to print" problem (although not on a
network), and I got around it by dropping into root and going to "lpc".
Then I issued the "abort" command, followed by "start all". When I exited
lpc, everything was back to normal.
YMMV, though. I don't know why it happend
Nmap shows I have rpasswd listening on port 774. Anyone know which
package it belongs to?
Cheers,
Tim
On 14-Sep-2000 brian moore wrote:
>> 2000-09-11 16:50:46 recipients refused from murphy.debian.org
>> [216.234.231.6]
>> (RBL dssl.imrss.org)
>
> IMRSS shut down a year ago.
>
> You really shouldn't be using them if you want reliable results.
Thanks, I visited their website after this problem g
On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 10:23:14PM -0800, Ethan Benson ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 08:56:32PM -0700, Bob Nielsen wrote:
> >
> > I use sudo, logged in as a regular user. It's generally considered a
> > security risk to be logged in as root, and a bit less of a risk to use
At 09:45 AM 9/14/00 -0400, you wrote:
Sorry to reply to myself, but I've come to the conclusion after
further
testing that my floppy drive is 100% busted and I'm not going to
be able
to do anything useful off it. I also can't (practically) replace it.
Bugger!
Go buy a
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >From: Julio Merino <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> It doesn't. If I create /root/.bash_profile, bash uses
> it. BUT root then gets a user path, not the special
> root path.
>
> Now, on my RH machine, I have this in .bash_profile:
>
> PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH
>
At 10:31 AM 9/14/00 +, you wrote:
My /var/log/syslog is filing up with lots of:
Sep 14 10:24:16 hurricane nmbd[1753]: ERROR: nmbd is already running. File
/var/lock/samba/nmbd.pid exists and process id 1546 is running.
Sep 14 10:24:16 hurricane inetd[205]: /usr/sbin/tcpd: exit status 0x1
S
Is there a linux program that will allow a demo to be generated? For
example, A tutorial on how to use a program that will produce a movie of a X
desktop with the correct sequence of commands shown.
Thanks,
Sean McIlwain
Quoting Piotr Krukowiecki ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> But let me quote:
>
> > Debian has to be built for people who *do* care, so advice that
> > compromises security is not to be welcomed here
>
> For me it says sth like this:
> Debian is only for users who care about security, so if you don't, we
>
On Mon, Sep 11, 2000 at 05:28:46PM +, Pollywog wrote:
> I am surprised to find that posts from the list are being rejected this
> morning. I have added debian.org to my rbl_exept list to get around this
> problem.
>
> Does anyone know what is going on?
>
>
>
> 2000-09-11 16:43:00 recipient
Hi,
I have just upgraded my debian system from 2.2 test-cycle 1 to 2.2 final
release. I have encountered a small problem. X refuses to load now,
complaining that it cannot find it's default font, `fixed'. I am using xfs,
and when I run fslsfonts all the fonts are listed there, including the
Thanks.
I know that there are types of ICMP packets and I know that
they are specified as like port numbers in firewall rules, but
I still don't know...:
1) There is a source and destination "port number". Which is
relevant? A packet sure couldn't have to ICMP types?
2) What does the one sending
Alright Ladies and Gentlemen, here is round three of the still-not-solved
network printing problem.
upon typing the command:
lpr -Plp35 test.txt
I get:
lpr; connect: Connection refused
jobs queried, but cannot start daemon.
I ran
lpq -Plp35
and got:
Warning:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 01:20:01PM +0200, Jorge David Ortiz Fuentes wrote:
> When I run fetchmail with the -a flag, I get the following messages in
> my syslog:
> Sep 14 12:51:52 hpspsabc fetchmail[11594]: SMTP< 451
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>... Sender domain must resolve
> Sep 14 12:51:52 hpspsabc fetc
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 04:45:27AM -0800, Ethan Benson wrote:
>
> actually i think bash looks for ~/.profile first and ~/.bash_profile
> last. and iirc only uses one, not both.
Call me Mr. Stupid. There's a /root/.profile there. %-X
--
Bruce
A problem shared gives the consolation that some
>From /usr/src/linux/include/linux/icmp.h:
#define ICMP_ECHOREPLY 0 /* Echo Reply */
#define ICMP_DEST_UNREACH 3 /* Destination Unreachable */
#define ICMP_SOURCE_QUENCH 4 /* Source Quench*/
#define ICMP_REDIRECT
> -Original Message-
> From: Will Trillich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2000 8:16 PM
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: pgp vs. mutt
>
>
> mutt is now back to displaying
> [-- PGP output follows (current time: Thu Sep 14 13:08:42 2000) -
Hi,
I have a laptop with a broken keyboard (g, h and several vital symbols
are untypeable). I previously had Red Hat 5.2 on this machine and had
configured the keyboard into a usable state by editing a file called
uk.map (the laptop has a uk keyboard layout). This file had entries
like:
keycode
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 07:49:15PM +1100, Damon Muller wrote:
> Hi Will,
>
> A lot of people on this list are probably using GnuPG (gpg), which is a
> GNU replacement for PGP. As long as you have a non-us line in your apt
> cources.list do an apt-get install gnupg.
so i did
# apt-get --purge rem
On Fri, Jun 09, 2000 at 11:12:03AM +0200, Antonio Moragues Ramón wrote:
> > grep -r / -e lawpc34 -H &> lawpc34.log &
> > but that doesn't seem to work
> Try grep -r lawpc34 / > lawpc34.log &
Or: find / -exec grep lawpc34 \{\} \; -print > lawpc43.log
Maybe, but that is how I'd do it.
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 07:49:15PM +1100, Damon Muller wrote:
> Hi Will,
>
> A lot of people on this list are probably using GnuPG (gpg), which is a
> GNU replacement for PGP. As long as you have a non-us line in your apt
> cources.list do an apt-get install gnupg.
>
> The pgp you have installed
Had mutt set to save mail to "outbox" and was trying to get KMail to get
my work mail. Of course it uses "outbox" to store messages to be sent. I
caught it before too many were sent out, my apologies to all.
--
Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your
Sep 14 19:41:44 jesus kernel: Packet log: \
input DENY eth1 PROTO=1 10.34.15.1:3 x.x.x.x:13 L=56 S=0x00 I=3405 F=0x
T=255 (#4)
Happens in bursts of ~7, once a day, maybe more
eth1 is the external interface, connected to a cable modem that is fully
transparent.
(That is I block all incoming/ou
Hi Debian users,
Just installed Debian over RH system. Previously I had printing set up to
print to a win95 machine using the RH printtool (via samba somehow). Does
anyone know of the easiest way to achieve this in debian?
what printing solutions do poeple suggest - pdq?
Tom
Hey, didn't you hear - they split the company and the "l" went to Agilent! ;-)
--On Thursday, September 14, 2000 15:35 +0200 Oswald Buddenhagen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Organization: Hewett Packard
^
you're really sure, that this is correct? ;-)
not that i would care muc
Hi Julio!
Try this page: http://www.rollanet.org/chat/acronyms.html
Cheers,
Jason.
--On Thursday, September 14, 2000 14:17 +0200 Julio Merino <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Hi all,
because I'm not english I don't understand all the abbreviations you
use in the mail... can anybody explain to me
On Mon, May 22, 2000 at 10:57:16PM -0400, William T Wilson wrote:
> It is the average number of processes in the 'R' (running/runnable) state
> (or blocked on I/O). Very simple really. Unfortunately interpreting
> these numbers is something of a black art. If your load average is
> regularly ove
On Sat, May 20, 2000 at 06:29:01PM -0500, w trillich wrote:
> "apropos"? okay, i'll try that...
man -k is easier to type. :P
> CONCLUSION:
> there are #NO# pointers from a standard cd-install of slink,
Of course not. Correct me if I'm wrong but apt didn't really come into
its
Joachim Trinkwitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > So apt wants to replace libesd-alsa0 with libesd0. But why?
> > Sure, xtux depends on `libesd0 (>= 0.2.14-0.2)' but `libesd-alsa
> > 0.2.17-7' which is installed provides `libesd0'. What is the
> > point in replacing `libesd-alsa 0.2.17-7' with `
On Wed, Sep 13, 2000 at 02:23:13PM -0700, C. R. Oldham wrote:
> where I'm supposed to put calls to ipchains to setup my firewalling and
masquerading?
Will Trillich wrote:
> # apt-get install ipmasq
>
Great!
The other thing I figured out is that if you don't want to install the package
you
sho
Placing an extract of the freshmeat daily newsletter of 12 Sep 2k.
This may be the kind of stuff you guys are looking for. Never did
try it out myself, so no comments ...
If any of you guys give it a try .. do let me know. Perhaps others
in the list would also be interested as well. Sounds
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 12:04:58PM -0500, Will Trillich wrote:
-|On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 02:09:16PM +0200, Julio Merino wrote:
-|> Ooopss. I mistaked again of list. Sorry.
-|>
-|> Anybody can help? When using mutt and hitting reply in a message from
-|> a mailing list it sets the to: field to the
Subject: OT: abbreviations
Date: Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 02:17:40PM +0200
In reply to:Julio Merino
Quoting Julio Merino([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> Hi all,
>
> because I'm not english I don't understand all the abbreviations you
> use in the mail... can anybody explain to me ? :)
>
> IM
Don't know if this is the recommended way, but sure it
is the easiest and most effective way.
After the initial questions you are placed in the edit
mode of your specified editor (vi by default) by mutt.
At that point just go to the second line where "To: "
is written and edit the addressee.
Hello!
I only had a good experience when I installed it (ver 5.0a, 5.1, 5.2). Never
had any problems. But personally, I don't like it.
Kind Regards,
Stephan Hachinger
- Original Message -
From: "Andreas Palsson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2000 4:41 PM
Subject
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 09:54:42AM +0100, Max Lock wrote:
>
> Hi Folks,
>
> I'm interested in setting up a DNS server which will store _all_ of
> it's information in an SQL database of some kind.
>
> Are there any good references/code for doing this that anyone knows
> of?... There's a bind 8
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 02:09:16PM +0200, Julio Merino wrote:
> Ooopss. I mistaked again of list. Sorry.
>
> Anybody can help? When using mutt and hitting reply in a message from
> a mailing list it sets the to: field to the person who wrote it... How
> can I change this behavivour to make it sent
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