e curl. Look at the --upload-file option.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
'04 ZX-10R, '98 ZX-7R "Wasabi", '02 BMW R1150RS "Troll"
Adventure is what happens to the incompetent.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PR
On Wed, 2003-02-12 at 22:04, Rob Weir wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 12, 2003 at 10:37:34AM -0800, Brandon High wrote:
> > On Wed, 2003-02-12 at 03:22, Vladimir Kozlov wrote:
> > > We've just bought the Promise SX4000 ATA RAID card, but there sre no drivers for
>Debian.
>
&
;Other OS".
If you're using kernel 2.4.20 or higher, it may detect the card as a I2O
device and work.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Epinions, Inc. Unix System Administrator
The world is a comedy to those
on the 6th.
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/02/07/0413207&mode=nested&tid=130
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Epinions, Inc. Unix System Administrator
The earth is like a tiny grain of sand, only much, much
main
> thing I am concerned with is that it does RAID5 and is
> supported by stable.
We just put together a few 2U machines based on ASUS motherboards and
3ware 7500-8 controllers in SuperMicro SC822I 2U cases.
The case is pretty good quality, and easy to work in.
-B
00-2. The -4 can
do RAID5 in hardware as well. The -2 is about $110, the -4 is about
$250.
Best of all, they're supported by the default Linux kernel.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Epinions, Inc. Unix System
Does anyone have an install boot disk that supports the SX6000? The card
should support I20, but apparently this is broken for kernels < 2.4.20.
Thanks
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Epinions, Inc. Unix Sys
problem. No idea how to diagnose same, but you've indicated
> this is older hardware.
If it is a PCI problem, you might not have to replace the card. With some
PCI busses, moving the card from one slot to another can help due to
resource allocations. It
art of ProFTPd as everything else seems fine...
ProFTP has a lot of problems... I wouldn't recommend using it in a situation
where security is even optional.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you have to vacuum the bed, it is time to change the sheet
from the last 5 years should support your hardware.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Things are more like they are today than they ever have been before.
pgp7kwbN6IE7Z.pgp
Description: PGP signature
o install these
> from the Debian installer but it kept failing, maybe those were the ISA
> drivers.
I've got both cards in my firewall box.
If you're building your own kernel, use
CONFIG_NET_EISA=y
CONFIG_EEXPRESS_PRO100=y
CONFIG_NET_ETHERNET=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_3COM=y
CONFIG_VORTE
multiplier on the Slot A and Socket A
Athlons, but vary from simple to not so simple. See the above sites for more
info.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Drink your Coffee! There are people in India sleeping.
pgpRXUo7IAqAI.pgp
Description: PGP signature
s will allow you to block
certain ports and provide IP masquerade functions, but won't give you the
alerting provided by ZoneAlarm. You'll need to install an IDS (intrusion
detection system) as well.
I can't recommend one offhand, but you may want to ask on debian-secu
On Tue, Aug 21, 2001 at 12:49:59PM -0700, Brandon High wrote:
>
> Look in /etc/rc2.d/ for a file called (something like) S50diald (though the
> number may be different. It should be a link to /etc/init.d/diald (or
> similar).
I just remembered that Debian has an easier way. Just do:
#
led (something like) S50diald (though the
number may be different. It should be a link to /etc/init.d/diald (or
similar).
You can rename the link to K50diald (but keep the numeric value the same).
Next time you boot, diald won't start. You can manually start it by doing
'/etc/init.
x27;s a way to
specify a secondary optional source in apt.
Your idea would work, but it's a lot more work than is needed, especially if
there is a testing or sid package for the software.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Love is like a roller coas
ll any
> packages that are dependant on the program i just compiled. Anyway, I
Sometimes it's possible to download the package source from testing or
frozen and build and install that. It keeps you from having to make a new
package, and is a mostly automated
state 0x11, keycode 62 (keysym 0xffe2, Shift_R), same_screen YES,
XLookupString gives 0 characters: ""
Any idea on how I can fix this?
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nothing is fool-proof to a sufficiently talented fool.
pgpexQJr4pYuZ.pgp
Description: PGP signature
bly be assigned eth0 and eth1.
Check http://www.scyld.com/network/index.html#pci to see if the chipset is
listed with any notes.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Just think: in a few million years, Barney will be motor oil.
,
> and (b) any jumper settings up front, so that actual downtime is 30
> minutes...
You'll need to know the board manufacturer and BIOS version before upgrading
the processor. You may need to flash the BIOS to make sure that it supports
the new CPU.
-B
--
Brandon High
stem?
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is it time for your medication or mine?
tuning via hdparm?
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If we really needed to find Jesus his face would be on milk cartons.
happy with
my Pac Bell DSL either. I guess I'm just too damned picky.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I feel like I am diagonally parked in a parallel universe.
to do something like:
# tar cf - /usr | ( cd /new_partition ; tar xf - )
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm not a complete idiot; some parts are missing!
before
> I can login.
It worked fine for me. I was upgrading from Helix Gnome, so that could be a
reason.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I took an IQ test and it came back negative.
^/~~~ ~\^_^/~~~ ~\^+^/~~~ ~\^:^/~~~ ~\^v^/~~~
> + Osamu Aoki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, GnuPG-key: 1024D/D5DE453D +
> + My debian quick-reference, http://www.aokiconsulting.com/quick/+
>
>
> --
> To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> with a subject of &qu
re of.
> The computer has an award bios (1996).
More reason to believe that the BIOS can't recognize the large drive. Check
for updates.
> Is the drive faulty? What else should I try?
I doubt the drive is faulty if you just bought it. The fact that it's not
recognized by
proto may be tcp, udp
> or file. For example, if you are serving http with apache at port 80:
>
> #fuser -a -n tcp 80
>
> It will return the pid(s) that apache is using.
lsof can also be used in a similar manner.
# lsof -i :80
-B
--
Brandon High
n packages. Is
> there a way to prevent this?
You can tell dpkg to "hold" the packages that you do not want upgraded.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No, my powers can only be used for good.
es that you
can configure on top of ipchains as well to provide more monitoring.
Ideally have minimal ports open. My gateway box has only 5 ports open for
misc sevices such as http and ssh.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you lend someone $20, and never see th
primary PS.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Just think: in a few million years, Barney will be motor oil.
hen
> simply hangs. No furthur output. The floppies are OK and work fine on
> other systems with more RAM.
I remember way back running Linux 1.0.x and 1.2.x on a 4 MB machine. I
believe that you could compile a custom kernel that will fit, but you will
be paging almost constantly.
-B
s something like:
> modprobe: can't locate module nls_iso8859-1
It's for something called Native Language Support. I'm not sure exactly what
that is, but...
You can build the modules for 2.2.19 but choosing the NLS option under the
Filesystems.
-B
--
Brandon High
reliable motherboard, such as an ASUS
CUSL2 (for Intel) or ASUS A7V133 (For AMD) and putting PCI controllers in.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Money can't buy love. But it CAN rent a very close imitation.
ple apt-get update;upt-get dist-upgrade
I didn't bother to remove any gnome packages and the installation went
rather smoothly. There are some dependancy problems with the Ximian
packages. You'll need to manually choose the packages "gconf",
"scrollk
good job setting up
dependencies at all. To fix it, do:
apt-get install scrollkeeper
In order for most apps to work, you'll also need to install gconf and oaf.
gconf requires oaf, but doesn't have it as a dependency. So do:
apt-get install gconf oaf
-B
--
Brandon High
strictions = hash:/etc/postfix/access, reject_maps_rbl
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Money can't buy happiness. But it sure makes misery easier to live with.
> apt-get build-dep hotplug
I think that the build-dep command is supported by apt-get on potato.
You may have to look at the *.dsc file and manually install the
build-depends.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"I can't die yet! I don't
After moving to kernel 2.2.19, I'm getting an error along the lines of
"nfs warning: mount version older than kernel"
Anyone have an idea of what this means? I think it's because 2.2.19 has
NFSv3, and the server only supports up to v2. Things seem to work fine,
but I'd like to know if there is
Joseph Dane wrote:
Here's what I'd like to have: a mail client that I can access via a
nice, flashy GUI when I'm sitting at my desk, or via a simple
text-mode interface when I'm connecting remotely.
I do something similar to what you plan on: Mozilla mail for the
desktop, and pine for remote
nclude/netinet/ip_icmp.h for an explanation of ICMP types. The
type is listed after the : on your host address.
Type 0 is ICMP_ECHOREPLY
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
War is Peace. Slavery is Freedom. AOL is the Internet.
t won't save much
> wattage/heat, but it will open up a drive bay for other purposes.
Correct, the drive only draws noticeable power when in use. I don't know what
else you'll use the 3.5" drive bay for though. A tape drive maybe? A floppy
drive only
e TNT2. It's the same
model as what's in my other machine. I see no reason why the new card would
perform differently.
I've been a fan of Matrox for 2D ever since the Millenium. (In fact, there's
one of those in another machine here...) I was amazed at the relatively poor
image q
ems,
> rexd is less secure than a wildcard in /etc/hosts.equiv.
>
> /usr/share/doc/libwrap0/README.gz
It may also interest you to set up ipchains to do packet filtering. This
will protect you at the interface level for all IP traffic, not just TCP.
Combined wi
Dan wrote:
>
I work at a local ISP here in Gallup, New Mexico and I am looking
for some software that monitors network time and as well as filtering
software for a Public Access Computer Lab. We woll be running OpenBSD
or Debian GNU/Linux the latest version. The time monitoring will
a
en corrected in XF86-4? Or should I just stick with the G200?
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Honk if you love peace and quiet.
On Fri, 6 Apr 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> anyone hear about any security fixes for ftpds that were
> found a few weeks ago ? haven't seen any news on
> security.debian.org.
Try asking on the debian-security list. I haven't seen anything about ftp on
the list though
a GET) but I want
> something more thorough and paranoid.
Try hacking code into Squid or Apache's mod_proxy, then configure your
browser to go through the proxy.
-B
--
Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm not crazy, I've just been in a very bad mood for 20 years.
48 matches
Mail list logo