>
> Thank you for your answer, unfortunately you're quite right
> :( It didn't even
> cross my mind until I read your mail and checked the homepage
> of my ISP, and
> there it stood, the announcement of blocking the port 25.
> That sucks, but I
> guess there's not much I can do except change
>
> I have this strange problem that Postfix stopped working all of a
> sudden. Actually, it does work locally but remotely, both sending and
> receiving don't work. And this seems to (or could) be more of
> a problem
> with my firewall (firestarter) than that of postfix. Because even as I
> have
The exact same problem was reported earlier on this mailing list - see
http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2004/11/msg03080.html
HTH
Dan
> -Oorspronkelijk bericht-
> Van: Robert Parker [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Verzonden: donderdag 25 november 2004 22:47
> Aan: Debian User
> Onderwer
> I feel the need to learn something new today. How could the
> user replace
> the root owned files in a directory that they own?
>
Suppose the root-owned file (readable for non-root user) is a. Then one does
'cp a b; rm a; mv b a' and we have the same file a owned by the regular
user. Key obser
> Er... sorry to all, but I just noticed that I am STILL getting a lot
> of requests (sorry for marking this as solved!... my mistake).
Maybe some of the websites 'abusing' you still have you listed as an open
proxy. This would mean the requests are made, but not succesfully answered
by your serve
> For example, as I mentioned in an earlier reply, I might not want
> normal users to be able to run ftp, telnet, ssh, wget, gcc, or any
> other number of commands. I still want users to be able to run the
> bulk of the commands available on the system, though. I might also
> want to allow another
> Indeed: http://packages.debian.org/dns-utils
Pardon me: http://packages.debian.org/dnsutils
Dan
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> http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages#search_contents
>
> Alexis
>
I don't think the package you're looking for is in that search result,
though.
However, a google search on 'debian package dig' leads one to
http://lists.ethernal.org/dunlug-0204/msg00077.html, which tells you that
what you
> #apt-get update
> #apt-get dist-upgrade
> Reading Package Lists... Done
> Building Dependency Tree... Done
> Calculating Upgrade... Done
> 0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
It means you're totally up to date and don't have to do anything! You're
done! Go and have cof
Hi,
> First,I installed win xp pro in /dev/hda1,
> then installed debian with sid net-installer,
> and partitioned for linux with installer,
> everything went well.But
> after rebooted ,grub just couldn't recognize the NTFS partition
> and wouldn't boot the windows xp.
> Even worse,i could
> The only thing that might cause a problem would be if it
> updates a large
> package (say Apache or Perl) and has a small configuration bug that
> makes you run around and pull your hair out trying to figure
> out what's
> changed and how to fix it. This is when reading the Debian-user list
>
Hi,
> I am wondering what the best way is to go about staying up to
> date. If I run
> apt-get -s upgrade I'm told that apt wants to upgrade about
> 15 packages, most
> of which seem to be related to X (we won't ever be using X on
> this server. it
> wasn't originally installed and I"d like
> So you can use the "pdnsd" package or, as Andrew suggested, the
> "dnsmasq". I'm not sure but even bind9 should have some caching system
> of the resolved domain...
I believe the default behaviour of bind9 is a caching-only name server.
You'd only need to adjust the "allow-query"-directive in or
>
> RTM
So my post should have started with 'STW'? ;)
Regards
Dan
--
There's never enough time to do all the nothing you want.
-- Calvin
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> How is it possible to adjust the frequency of such entries?
> I'd like to make it less frequent than 20 minutes.
Googling on 'mark interval syslog' gives:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-security/2000/10/msg00027.html
which says:
You can change the interval of the --Mark-- by adding
> Then the machine rebooted itself and it has come up
> with a kernel panic. My guess is that this is related
> to some problem with the bootloader or LILO. I was
> just hoping that someone could refer me to a likely
> fix for this since I'm not even in the city with the
> machine and I have to for
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