Hello,
I have some questions about setting up INN as a local only
news server.
Is there a way to get INN to send articles as mail to the
people who subscribe to the newsgroup the article was
sent to?
Further more, I seem to have some difficulties setting up
newsfeeds and incoming.conf right.
I
able to gather, Novell Client Trust is a program
that answers requests from Border Manager when I want to go online.
It sort of tells Border Manager that I'm authorized and what rules it
should apply to me.
Has anyone seen this program, or it's eqvivalent, for Linux?
> -Or
Hello,
I have a Debian box that sits behind several firewalls and
other layers of protection, the same as all our workstations
here.
The firewall lets people trough at a certain port. I'm told,
by those more knowledgeable in these matters, that it lets
people trough only if thet are logged in and
Nate,
> im guessing those FAQs and HOWTOs apply to newer versions
> of cyrus. the one in potato and woody and last i checked,
> sid, are all very very old. though they work great, i use
> cyrus 1.5 on at least 4 different systems. never a hiccup.
They do refer to a newer version, yest, but how di
Erik,
> I had the same problem recently, I already forgot how I solved it. Try
> running the saslpasswd as root, I think it creates the file if it does
> not exist.
There is no such file as 'saslpasswd', that's my problem. And yes,
I am running as root.
> btw I just installed cyrus as well,
Hello,
I'm running Debian 2.2r3 with kernel 2.4.6.
I have just installed Cyrus, or more specifically, the four
packages cyrus-common, cyrus-admin, cyrus-imap
and cyrus-pop3.
After a little tinkering, I've been able to get to create two
mailboxes for two regular users using cyradm.
Now... accord
> However, could there be something fishy about where it
> goes first to resolv host names? I'll check that out. It's possible
> that it tries to contact a name server first instead of looking in hosts.
OK... There's obviously a problem here...
A "host [IP]" yields the correct result imidiatly.
A
> check if you have got
> [local host name] [local IP]
> in your /etc/hosts - that's becuse a server need to resolve its host
> name to get itself done.
They are there, and have been since the machine came
online.
However, could there be something fishy about where it
goes first to resolv host n
>> I would like to try to keep the servers in memory at all
>> times to see if that speeds up connection times. A little
>> bit like running smbd and nmbd from daemons instead of
>> from inetd Could the same thing be done for sshd and
>> telnetd? And if so, how?
> please check that if you have an
Hello,
I just installed Debian on an older Pentium 120MHz machine.
It takes forever to connect to this machine via telnet or SSH.
I suspect it is because the respective servers has to start up
when a connection request is recieved. There is, however,
little or no activity on the machine while a c
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