Paul Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is there a way I can see how much information has been sent between my
> computer and another computer?
>
> Thanks
> -Paul
There are various tools in the "netdiag" package that you can use to
monitor network activity. Checkout "netwatch" in that package
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Stern) writes:
> Hi,
>
> I've tried a lot of editing apps (and conversion utilities) in hamm,
> but I can't find one that edits postscript or acrobat files. Does
> anyone know what package I can use to edit a ps or pdf form that uses
> Times-Roman fonts in a variety of
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> Hello!
>
> I just installed the latest unstable version of Debian on Saturday
> and am either doing something wrong or I have found a bug. On top
> of this, I have followed the mini-howto for upgrading from libc5
> to libc6 and installed all of the suggested packages.
Martin Schulze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'd suggest a different solution:
>
> Create a local key using ssh-keygen, don't set a password and copy
> your .ssh/identity.pub to .ssh/authorized_keys on the remote machine.
>
>
> Regards
>
> Joey
And, if you still have problems, study the
"Orn E. Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
>
> I was wondering if anyone knew of a tool, that will basically
> connect to a site through port 80, using HTTP and download a document
> in the background?
>
> Some sites are very slow, and they only provide HTTP access to the
> informatio
"Eloy A. Paris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Probably this does not apply to you or it won't solve your problems
> (because your SCSI controller is different than mine) but I was getting
> SCSI timeouts with 2.0.30 and an Adaptec AHA-2940U with two hard disks
> and one DAT tape unit. I was unable
"Orn E. Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> If you have to remove all the classes in c++ to get threads working,
> there isn't much sense in using c++ :-)
>
> I've had the same problem, and as far as I've been able to collect,
> g++ simply isn't, and won't be thread safe. If you wish for a threa
"Orn E. Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> If you have to remove all the classes in c++ to get threads working,
> there isn't much sense in using c++ :-)
>
> I've had the same problem, and as far as I've been able to collect,
> g++ simply isn't, and won't be thread safe. If you wish for a thre
Are the latest libg++ and threads happy together? I have libg++272 version
2.7.2.8-0.1 installed, and I'm running mostly libc6 stuff.
Here's my program, reduced to illustrate the problem precisely.
[ begin program ]
#include
#include
#include
#include
#define THREADS 10
main() {
pthrea
Bruce Perens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I would suggest that the program create its own temporary directory under
> /tmp and delete it when it is done, rather than insist that ~/tmp exist.
> Set your umask so that others do not have write permissions on the directory
> and its files _before_ yo
Stephen Zander <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Mine has
>
> ./include
> ./include/X11
> ./lib
> ./lib/X11
> ./lib/X11/XErrorDB
> ./lib/X11/XKeysymDB
> ./lib/X11/app-defaults -> ../../../X11R6/lib/X11/app-defaults
> ./lib/X11/locale -> /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale
>
> The XErrorDB & XKe
Daniel Mashao <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> why not put /var and /tmp in the same root partition?
When you run out of space on your root partition while compiling, it's a
real pain. I've had it happen. I've never run out of space on /var, or on
/ if I don't have /tmp on it. So, I have /tmp soft
Philippe Troin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> This is a lot of space wasted unless you have large spool directories
> (news/mail). For a reasonable single-user station, 64MB should be
> largely enough on /var. /tmp is left to your choice (16 is a good
> number).
I would find 16M for /tmp WAY to
Stephen Zander <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Sorry for being so slow.
No problem. You did disprove my theory of mine however. Normally, when I
post to this list, if I don't get a response within 15 minutes one never
comes. :-)
> Did either of you add the /usr/i486-linuxlibc1 fix? There was a b
"Collin Rose" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> What command you use to find out how much free space you have on your =
> hard drive?
Try "df". Also, try "du" to find out where all of that space is being
taken up.
Later,
Dale
--
+ finger for pgp public key ---
Hamish Moffatt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I think I have all of 3.3.1; would you believe it still doesn't work?
> Bus error. WIth a whole lot of XKeysymDB errors before it, which
> are fixable by setting XKEYSYMDB to the appropriate directory IIRC.
I'm having the same problem. Like you said -
Christopher Jason Morrone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> There appears to be a problem in the X3.3 packages. I have a #9 Motion
> 771. I can run XF86Setup, and I can enter all of the setup info. But
> then when I click "Done" and it tries to start the server for my card, it
> dies.
>
> It says
Lukas Eppler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I just wanted to remind you that libc6 is unstable and in development. So
> problems about it should go in [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
>
Thanks for the reminder. As I suspected, 99% of the problems I was
having with NIS were from misconfiguration of nsswitch.co
Hello. As I have mentioned on this list several times, I have
upgraded my machine to a fair amount of libc6 stuff. In general, it
seems to be working pretty well, but a lot of the NIS stuff is messed
up. It is my understanding that this is because the NIS stuff used to
be handle by a user level
Dale Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Here's another datapoint on this problem - root (for our domain - not
me - doh!) gets this mail when I run it:
[ begin included mail ]
-- To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Illegal user
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Illegal DOSEMU user: uid=7023
[ e
I _have_ to be missing something simple. My /etc/dosemu/users looks
like:
dmartin c_all
root c_all
I'm user "dmartin". I type "xdos", and it says:
~> xdos
Illegal User!!!
I have read/write permission on /var/lib/dosemu/hdiamge.first, and the
floppy drive.
Here are the permissions of /usr
Ralph Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Trying to make lftp work, I'd downloaded the version in hamm. This
> called for a new lic5 which caused the removal on damn near everything.
> Included in that was the locales package. I've restored almost
> everything, with the exception of the locale
Leszek Gerwatowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi!
>
> Can anyone tell me which 100MB Ethernet Card is best for Debian (driver
> quality, stability, support and also performance)? I'm planning to switch
> to 100MB Ethernet Network and want to be shure that my new network card
> will work withou
Nicola Bernardelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > -cut--
> > 2.0.31-pre7 seems to be working ok (no deadlocks).
> > 2.0.30 or 2.0.29 with the deadlock-patch 6 works fine too.
> > --cut--
>
> Suppose that after buying a 2 CPU motherboard you find that with some I/O
> intensive app
I was just curious - since libc6 is thread safe, and GUIs seem to be
something that can be "naturally" multithreaded, is XFree86
multithreaded under Linux? (or any other system, for that matter?)
I'm about to get a second PPro for my box at home, and I already have
SMP at work, so the prospect of
David M <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello guys!
>
> If one were to buy a laptop these days what would be a good brand that is
> widely supported by Linux (Debian)?
>
> Thank you.
>
> Dave
I've installed Debian on both a Toshiba Satellite 220CDS, and a
Toshiba Tecra 740CDT. The 740CDT has a
Andy Kahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i've never seen TOB, but regarding tar'ing directly to a device:
> you can do multiple tar's to device (e.g., tape device). to do
> this, let's say you already tar'd once. to do it again, but append
> it to the first one, you need to forward past the first
Peter S Galbraith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I posted about this and received no replies. I thought I'd report back
> about what I wound up doing...
What you're doing looks pretty cool. I was looking in to backing up
my /home (which isn't too big) onto a Zip disk. I was checking out
TOB (t
Frank Barknecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Conclusion:
> I don't have start-stop-daemon under /sbin but one in /usr/sbin/ that is not
> a.out or ELF.
> My start-stop-daemon is a perl-script, I can read its content.
That's how it was under older versions of Debian, I believe. In
Debian-1.2.
Note - these are not complaints. I _know_ that unstable is unstable,
and the risk I take by using it. Just thought others might want to
know.
I have a "raid0" md partition that consists of two 2G partitions
striped together. Today, I ran my machine out of virtual memory and
it locked up (might
Hello. I'm running a Debian 1.3.1 system, which has also had a
significant number of upgrades from "hamm" - until this mrning, mostly
from the "devel" and "libs" subdirs. (I'm interested in helping debug
libc6 problems.) This morning, I upgraded my "base" stuff to hamm,
and now I have a strange
Shaya Potter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I haven't had any problem with the 4 gig Barracuda I've been using in my
> Linux box, except for getting bitten by the glibc/fsck bug.
What bug is that? Just curious, as I'm running glibc on a 4G
barracuda, and 2 2G Quantum Atlases. (With a large stripe
Someone else answered this with a summary of the solution. I just
wanted to add that I found the Samba Home Page with about 5 seconds of
looking on Yahoo. On the Samba homepage, they give VERY detailed
instructions on how to fix this problem.
My machine running NT 4.0 plus service pack 3 can see
Oliver Landsmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Any hints or maps for me ?
Here are my maps:
amd.home -cache:=inc /cad amd.direct -type:=direct /information amd.direct
-type:=direct /packages amd.direct -type:=direct /local amd.direct
-type:=direct /source amd.direct -type:=direct /Vhdl amd.dire
Philippe Troin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have no pam whatsoever. I have the debian nis package, and when the
> NIS server goes down login hangs and dies, even on the console.
> The root entry is not exported via NIS and is present on the machine's passwd.
> Am I alone experiencing this ?
>
"Stan Brown" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So that leads to the question. How can I non-interactivley (IE in a
> script) fetch a web document?
I have used "snarf", which is a debian package. I was displaying a
current satellite image as my background in X (updated every hour via
cron)
Mark Phillips <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Any ideas, or things I can tell him to try?
Hi. I don't really have any experience with the problem that your
friend is having, but I was just reading the other day about using
PCMCIA on Toshiba Notebooks (http://www.cck.uni-kl.de/misc/tecra710)
and ma
Hamish Moffatt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Anyone else having this problem? Unfortunately I don't
> subscribe to linux-kernel because I expect the volume is very high.
>
> Hamish
I have read that SMP is enabled by default in the newer kernels, and
this gives very poor performance (in 2.1.42 sp
Alexander Stavitsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It seems to be withdrawn from bo distribution. Is there an explanation
> somewhere?
As someone else mentioned, it's back in bo. Also, version 19.15 is
in hamm, and it can coexist with "regular" emacs. I've been using it
for a week or two, and asi
Hello. I recently upgraded to libc6 (dev,dbg, pic, etc) using the
package from the "hamm" directory. (I realize this is VERY unstable
stuff - I'm just glutton for punishment :-) Everything appears to be
working well, although I have hit two minor snags.
The first is that the new version of "am
Rick Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> This is completely false. I don't care what is done to a password. If it
> is constant and repeatable, as password's need to be, then it's only a
> matter of time. If the method is public knowledge as with the source code
> to encrypt passwords, it can b
Daniel Quinlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> Syrus Nemat-Nasser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> With 256M of RAM, more of your cost is probably going towards RAM than
> CPU. I'd consider going with a Pentium Pro.
Definitely. You can get PPro 150 chips for about $175 right now -
you're not g
Larry James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
[ snip ]
> and when I run dselect or dpkg, I get lots of error messages. The most
> significant seem to be "bash: command install not found", and
> ...configure not found". Where should these commands be? It's kind of a
> pickle because I don't see h
Hello. Sorry if this isn't quite the right place to ask this - I have
looked around and can't seem to find the answer. I've got a lot of
linux experience, but I only recently had to start dealing with mail
being delivered to my local machines.
I would like "procmail" to be run automatically (usi
Pete Templin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi there,
> 1) Do I need to do anything to ensure that my /dev/md0 has been started if
> I expect to use it in /etc/fstab? If so, where do I put that? My kernel
> has md compiled in (not a module).
Other people have addressed this question.
> 2) Can
Hello,
I'm trying to use the win32 compiler included in debian-1.2.x and
compile some code that uses sockets. I get the following error
messages, and I wondered if anyone had any hints...
[ begin verbatim errors ]
~> i386-unknown-cygwin32-gcc mything.o r_stdlib.o desc.o cmf.o -o mydes
cmf.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> Hi,
>
> Does anybody here have experience with the multiple device drivers
> under linux?
[ snip ]
> My main worry is reliability of the driver. And speed matters, too.
>
> Hints and recommendations welcome!
I've been using it for a few months on a machine that
Jesse Goldman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> Hi,
>
> I've got Debian running on one of the office PC's communicating through
> NIS with a few other debian machines and some SGI's, one of which is the
> NIS server. Recently, I shut down the machine to repair something and,
> after rebooting, it
Hello,
I have built a PCCTS source package - PCCTS is the "Purdue
Compiler-Construction Tool Set" - it produces LL(K) parsers. I'm
using it in a project which I will eventually Debianize. The PCCTS
package is close to ready to upload, except it has some libraries in
it, and I would like
Christian Lynbech <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> Apparently, the keyboard combinbation of ALT+CTRL+Backspace is set up
> to kill the X server.
>
> Is there any way to rebind/remove this feature?
>
> It shadows the handy emacs function of backward-kill-sexp and I have
> just lost one too many
Dirk Luetjens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello
>
> less does not do backspace and delete correct, when having the
> variable TERM=xterm set.
>
> While using the search command backspace sends delete and delete sends
> ESC[3~. With TERM=linux it's ok.
> Backspace and delete are doing the righ
Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have been interested in interviews for debian so I could package up mxv,
> a rather good sound editing program. I've never gotten mxv to compile,
> though, but maybe I'd have more luck if I didn't have to compile the
> interviews stuff on my own too.
>
>
"Brian S. Julin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> There should be a simple way for people to make available halfway
> complete or "one shot" debian packages. (You can make developer
> status necessary to get into the normal distribution directories
> if you are worried about nobody wanting to sign
Hello. When writing papers, I have always used "idraw" to make my
figures - I like it alot more than "xfig" for various reasons.
Anyways, Interviews has been largely unsupported for the last year or
two, so I took one of my trusty old Slackware CDs and made an
interviews package. Note that the bi
Fundamental <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> my crontabs wont run ...?
>
> i login as root, type crontab -e and they come up, but they dont run
> ... am i doing something wrong? or is there another way of doing
> cronjobs on debian 1.1 ?
>
> thanks
I noticed this too. Cron was not running. Note
Hugo HAAS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> On Fri, 13 Dec 1996, Chris R. Martin wrote:
>
> > I can't seem to find the color-ls package. Has it been replaced by
> > something else?
>
> ls includes now the option color :
>
>--color, --colour, --color=always, --colour=always
>
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > 3) but after installing the fvwm2 & afterstep Window managers. I
> > > get:
> > >
> > > fvwm2: can't load library 'libXpm.so.4'.
> > > afterstep: can't load library 'libXpm.so.4'
> > >
> > > What package do I need to in
Dale Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
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>
>
> --
> TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to
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>
Sorry a
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> "Martin" == Martin Konold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Martin> On Wed, 19 Jun 1996, Larry Riedel wrote:
>> I am using the boot floppy from the 1.1 distribution. I have an
>> ASUS P55T2P4 (Triton II) motherboard with the ASUS SCSI adaptor
>> (NCR 53c8x0) and a generic ISA VGA video card. Th
> "Eric" == Eric Hoeltzel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Eric> I have had the same problem, I think, for some time. After
Eric> connecting to my isp's dialup with ppp route will just hang as
Eric> Mark mentioned. I have just merrily ignored it and manually
Eric> typed 'route add -net default ppp0
It would appear that the boot disks for debian 1.1 beta don't have
generic ncr-810 SCSI support - the .93 disks did. Are there
alternative boot disks available with this support? I perused the
installation document and saw no mention of it.
Thanks,
Dale
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