On Mon, Jun 20, 2005 at 08:37:08AM +0200, Niclas S?derlund wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> Im searching for a free alternative to byuing an expensive loadbalancer
> appliance. I have two identical servers on the "inside" and need third
> machine on the "outside" doing a round-robin of a couple of ports to
On Sun, Aug 08, 2004 at 07:45:34PM +0800, John Summerfield wrote:
> George Roman wrote:
>
> >" right" is a relative word. debian is the right choice for me, if others
> >(people who use other dist) prefer to reinstall their systems with each
> >new release it is their business.
> >
> >
>
> Which
h I have to type Alt-Meta-q, not just
Meta-q.
The problem showed up with the X update from a couple of weeks ago;
until then everything was working fine and I didn't change anything.
Anyone having a similar problem? Suggestions to where to look to fix
it?
Many thanks,
--
Pete Harlan
[
On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 08:37:29PM +, p wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 09:22:01PM +0200, Micha Feigin wrote:
> > How do I save a mail message to disk with mutt? I want to save it to
> > disk, not another mail folder (saving to a different mail folder appears
> > quite clearly in the docs but
others work horribly. Maybe setting it yourself would help. (Which
to set it to is probably a matter of trial and error; there are only
four combos.)
HTH,
--
Pete Harlan
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t;;
I don't know if that's the right fix (I suspect there's a deeper
problem somewhere with "headers_in"), but it appears to work for us.
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Pete Harlan
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On Mon, Nov 17, 2003 at 01:56:09PM -0600, Pete Harlan wrote:
> Sorry if this was already discu
che, etc. from cpan, no change.
Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks,
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Pete Harlan
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On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 04:07:04PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:21:53PM +0100, mess-mate wrote:
> > On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 07:07:30 -0500
> > Seneca <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > | In ~/.gnupg/gnupg.conf, uncomment or add
> > | "keyserver-options auto-key-retrieve".
> >
>
When you do "dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xfree86", you have a chance to
input keyboard options. Input "altwin:meta_win", which is mentioned
in the dialog box that asks for options, to get the "potato" behavior
or Alt and Windows keys.
HTH,
--Pete
On Sat, Jan 11, 2003 at 03:52:00PM -0500, Richard
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 02:53:47PM -0800, Charlie Reiman wrote:
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Brooks R. Robinson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Monday, December 16, 2002 2:39 PM
> > To: debian
> > Subject: RE: putty logout hang
> >
> >
> > | Hi,
> > | Whenever I login to my woody s
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 02:17:05PM -0500, David Teague wrote:
>...
> Craig and others
>
> Having "undesirable" featuers such as maintaining state or having
> dynamic scoping, does not make a language not be functional. The
I'll agree to disagree on that semantic point. (You could say that
you've
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 03:13:57PM -0800, Craig Dickson wrote:
> Pete Harlan wrote:
>
> > Lisp and Scheme are not functional languages. A functional languge is
> > one that doesn't support mutating data; Lisp and Scheme very much do.
>
> I certainly agree about
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 07:45:34AM -0800, Craig Dickson wrote:
> Kirk Strauser wrote:
>
> > At 2002-12-13T14:52:51Z, Johann Spies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > > Yes. So is Ocaml and I think Scheme also.
> >
> > Since Scheme is a Lisp derivative, yes, it's also a functional language.
>
>
On Fri, Nov 08, 2002 at 04:05:51PM +0800, Patrick Hsieh wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> I'd like to make my debian box to loopback connect when it tries to
> connect to a specific domain name, say "www.foo.com". So I
> configured /etc/hosts and put 127.0.0.1 www.foo.com in it.
>
> When I try to ping www
On Fri, Oct 11, 2002 at 11:58:13AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote:
> check this series of commands:
Are you sure there's not an old /etc/init.d/network or other startup
script that brings the interface up initially using ifconfig?
In my experience, when ifup brings up an interface, ifdown brings i
On Wed, Jun 05, 2002 at 12:47:17PM -0500, Manoj Srivastava wrote:
> >>"Ian" == Ian D Stewart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>
> Ian> Speaking only for myself, it was the condescending tone adopted
> Ian> by one of the developers (don't remember the fellow's name; he
> Ian> was the one ranting a
The X folks have put in support for the Geforce4, but the X server in
Debian testing (or unstable, last time I checked) doesn't yet have
those changes.
So for now either compile X yourself, or use the proprietary driver
from NVidia (directions for installation are available at their
website). The
We had a headless server on the other side of the world that connected
intermittently with a dynamic IP over a 28.8 dialup line. It would
email me its IP address when it connected; at that point I had five
minutes to ssh into that IP address and stop it from disconnecting,
and do whatever admin wo
If you ssh somewhere using openssh protocol 2 and launch a background
task that hasn't closed stdout and stderr, your ssh session will hang
when upon logout, until the launched app closes those descripters
(e.g., when it finishes).
Perhaps /etc/init.d/mysql redirects stdout/stderr to /dev/null? O
> This is a wierd but correct behaviour of IPv6 resolution. There are a
> huge number of bug reports about it.
Do you know the rationale behind IPv6 considering this 'correct'?
If you could explain it for the benefit of myself and everyone else
who gets bit by this and searches the Debian archive
> Nvidia cards require their proprietary driver to work under X.
No, I believe this isn't true. Use the 'nv' driver (included with
XFree86 and open source (obviously)) and you should be okay.
If you want full 3D acceleration (essentially as good as their Windows
driver), then you can use their
On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 01:05:46AM -0700, Alvin Oga wrote:
> i wouldn't give "backups" to people
> ( when the backups contain user passwds and
> ( financial data or other sensitive stuff...
Encrypt the backup, so you don't have to worry about it as much.
Yeah, some folks have the
On Thu, May 16, 2002 at 09:02:25AM +0200, Perceval Anichini wrote:
> When you write
> argv + 1, the compiler will understand : compute the address
> of argv, and add one time the size of the type which is pointed by argv.
> I remember to you that argv[1] = argv + 1. Brackets are only syntactic
> s
In my case it was the wrong adapter between my disk and cable. (It
was an 80<=>68-pin converter thingy.) Replacing it with the right one
solved the problem.
HTH,
--Pete
On Sun, Apr 21, 2002 at 05:54:05PM -0400, Robert Webb wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have a Symbios SCSI controller built onto my M
Same problem here.
I have a Nikon Coolpix 5000 camera, and a Serverworks motherboard
(Thunder 2500). usb-ohci is the only host controller module that
worked at all, and it 'worked' just as shown below.
The camera connects fine in Win98, so it's possible to talk to it from
the Serverworks USB con
ys to do the same
thing; this works for me.
--
Pete Harlan
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On Mon, Apr 08, 2002 at 01:56:30PM -0800, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
>
> On 08-Apr-2002 Holger Rauch wrote:
> > Hi!
> >
> > I noticed that in Debian Woody the Alt key does not work as
You can launch your startup app from /etc/inittab. I used to work for
a company that installed kiosks, and this is how we did it. We ran
our own app, not a browser, and our X needs were very minimal. No
window manager, no windows except our one, no keyboard, no mouse
(touchscreen only), etc. Ju
Well since you don't show what command you actually typed, it's hard
to tell you what you did wrong. But this might give you what you're
looking for:
find /etc -type f | xargs grep -H '10\.'
where /etc is the root of whatever tree you want, obviously, and
"-type f" tells find to only lis
> I leave gnomeicu running all the time and my process table get filled
> with defunct gnomeicu processes. I have to stop/restart gnomeicu to get
> rid of them.
I've had this "fork: ..." message happen when I had only around 300
processes running. /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max is the only relevant
We're seeing something that's baffling me. We queue up a hundred
pages to our locally-attached HP postscript printer, and when the
first pages begin printing they print as fast as you'd expect from the
printer (12ppm or somesuch), but as the queue grows the pages come out
slower and slower (slower
> This would be true if it was true, but it isn't. MySQL is really unsuited
> to multiple readers, unless the reads are trivial select-one-row-by-id
> jobs.
Flame bait. MySQL has been great for us, with scads of multiple
readers with complex queries. Your mileage may differ, hence try them
both
> These guys are great, but if you *must* use a GUI broswer, and also only
> want webmin bound to 127.0.0.1 (Good Idea) you can use ssh to tunnel
> connections there from a client with an X browser on it.
That's true, but be careful with ssh tunnels; without firewall rules,
they'll tunnel any othe
> means everything works. To make it your default:
> ln -s /etc/X11/X /usr/bin/X11/XFree86
That should read:
ln -s /usr/bin/X11/XFree86 /etc/X11/X
--Pete
but I didn't
test it there.
Thanks,
--
Pete Harlan
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> Borland Kylix System Compatibility Test
>
> Checking loaderThis will test whether libc installed on your system has
> a design flaw of the dynamic loading of
> shared objects. By dynamicly loading sh
onf can map the
runlevels however she wants.
Does the LSB have other reasons for specifying runlevels that couldn't
be handled via a mapping in the installer?
--
Pete Harlan
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> I am trying to help someone setup their Diamond Viper V770 Ultra under
> Linux (not sure exactly which distro they use, but I'm a debian person
> myself).
>
> They are having problems with X-windows (what else?) description of
> problem :-
>
> 1) Window appears to be four times it's correct siz
g/debian potato main contrib non-free
deb http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US stable non-US
Each run of apt-get does make about 5mb of progress.
Intel, 28.8 modem link, plenty of disk space/ram, etc.
What dumb thing am I doing wrong?
Thanks in advance,
--
Pete Harlan
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> Check out this page for the list of things you need to update
> from potato:
>
> http://www.debian.org/releases/stable/running-kernel-2.2
Appletalk disk-serving to our Macs stopped working around 2.2.10 or
so. I went back to 2.0.37 and it works again. The above URL didn't
mention netatalk. I
m running slink, upgraded from hamm. I've seen this happen with
'apt' on several machines, but only just saw it from 'ftp' too.
Any ideas how I would go about resolving this?
Thanks,
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
re distribution. One definition is, "non-experimental, but up
to date". Another is, "Changes only for security reasons."
Debian seems to use the latter definition. Perhaps the package
developer has some say; I'm not sure how that works.
--
Pete Harlan
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http://www.artselect.com/
http://www.mealsforyou.com/
> Of course, "better off" wasn't defined... What if "better off" means
> using less electricity? What if it means saving on wear & tear?
Saving on wear & tear uses less electricity, because it takes a ton of
electricity to manufacture a new monitor. I've heard that it takes
more electricity to m
fi
fi
default)
;;
perhaps should have a ;; on the line before the "default)" line.
(Haven't tried this myself yet.)
Good luck,
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Ok, it turns out that
> pppd is somehow affecting my computer. Everything works just fine and fast
> without pppd running, but as soon as I attempt to dial out, things slow
> down.
> How do I go about it?
> Andrew
I had something like this happen to me; it turned out my external
modem was plugge
> How do I configure my emacs so that it will detect the file
> type(*.c, *.h, *.tex, *.pro ) and automatically starts the font lock...
Add this:
(global-font-lock-mode t)
to your .emacs file. (This is for emacs 20.3; don't know about other
versions.)
For more on this, look for help(*) o
n particuar, -a
includes the -R option, which is what you wanted instead of -r (which
make all non-directory files into regular files: man cp).
--
Pete Harlan
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I have the same problem, also with an S3 ViRGE/DX card. I can produce
it by stopping and starting xdm.
Running "setfont" (or is that "seT7onT"?) restores the vc console
fonts, but it's probably a bug in the SVGA's server for this chipset.
Perhaps it's fixed
surprises show up
around every corner.
After being disconcerted that with the latest slink synch I lost all
my X clients (xdm, xterm, etc.), and then re-finding them in the
dselect list, and installing them, I found that Alt-backspace works
properly again in an xterm.
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Pete Harlan
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e who don't read the list complain that their system is broken.
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Pete Harlan
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http://www.artselect.com
Torsten writes:
> Probably the dselect database are not updated by apt-get. Try the apt
> select method in dselect and do an update (using the apt method). Are
> the packages still shown as obsolete?
Yes, they're still obsolete. The update succeeded, to all
appearances.
--Pete
deb http://ftp1.us.debian.org/debian unstable main contrib non-free
deb http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US unstable non-US
When I've installed freshly from the CD, rather than updating, I
haven't had this problem.
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
7;re looking for
is /etc/mail/relay-domains. Put 'irony.org' there, reload, and you
should be ready to roll. This assumes sendmail 8.9.x; you didn't say
what version of Debian you installed. It matters, since 8.8.x (a)
relays by default and (b) often uses different mechanisms for enabling
relaying if you do disable it.
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a real control-d, not two characters in
the final echo. Not all printers need that; HPs seem to.
You will want to change the media type for enscript to suit your needs.
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Pete Harlan
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over that. . . .
The Networking howto (whatever it's called) ought to, or the system
administrator's guide, or lots of different books on system
administration.
Good luck,
--
Pete Harlan
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inked one to try out. Maybe it's a glibc bug somewhere?
No, because remote Bo xterms, which work when sitting at that machine,
don't work when displaying on my Slink machine.
I'm stymied.
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Pete Harlan
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Just to followup on my own message, it's probably not a bug in xterm
because bo's xterm binary misbehaves identically when copied to slink.
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Pete Harlan
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#x27;windows'
key and the 'Alt' key, for example, so Meta is in the 'proper' place),
to no avail.
Outside X, or in Emacs, all works normally.
rxvt does what you describe: It works, but it's reversed (alt acts as
meta and meta is ignored.)
I wonder what the difference between your setup and mine could be...
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
and
should) on a text console or in an Emacs window.)
Does Alt-backspace work for anyone in an xterm (deleting the previous
word on bash input, for example)? This worked fine in Bo and before.
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Yup. For 'dbm' substitute 'hash' and it should work. I suppose the
precompiled debian doesn't have dbm support turned on.
(You have to use 'hash' both in the FEATURE macro and when you create
the database with
makemap hash /etc/virtusertable < /
Wrong passwords produce the "link is not 8-bit clean" message from
pppd. For some reason improper authentication doesn't (can't?) get
reported as such.
I missed the beginning of this thread, so perhaps this has been
mentioned.
Good luck,
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
of
resources when something it's supposed restart keeps dying. The
solution is to find out (by looking at /etc/inittab) why it's trying
to run something, why that thing is dying, and fixing the situation
(perhaps by taking the line out of inittab.)
--
Pete Harlan
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sk-questions-all-at-once install
folks too.
Just a thought. Bloat good.
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PS: Anyone know why Meta-backspace doesn't work in an xterm in hamm/slink?
It works on the console, or when emacs has its own X window, but not
on the xterm[-debian] command-line or emacs when it's in an xterm.
erm-debian.
It does work (sends M-DEL) when emacs is in its own window.
Anyone know a fix offhand? It's amazing how much you grow to rely on
the simplest of things sometimes.
Thanks,
--
Pete Harlan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PS: My system is behaving terribly after the reinstall. Freezes fo
nd setting environment variables in
that login script you're hosed, but I set up the environment I want in
~/.ssh/environment and it works.
Good luck,
--
Pete Harlan
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for the database type; for some reason the sendmail I
had didn't grok dbm, but hash worked fine.
Good luck,
--
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in an X window. If there's a way to colour text on a console or in an
xterm, I don't know it.)
Good luck,
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r more
prudent? Maybe. Are my Debian 1.3.1 systems prehistoric? Yes. Is
that bad? Sometimes.
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to
accept the mail, per se, you just want it to relay it [eventually] to
A.
(Note also that the MX record for B should have a higher number
(corresponding to a lower priority) than the MX record for A.)
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Pete Harlan
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> Netscape in X is another matter though. Would setting the mode to store
> the image in swap speed stuff up?
Netscape maintains its large cache in ~/.netscape/cache, which it
checks somehow on startup. This, I believe, contributes more to its
slow launch than its bulk does.
--
Pete
t with [the nearly prehistoric] Debian 1.3, and it works
fine. Don't know about 2.0.
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I burnt hamm on a CD and now the house smells like bacon and melted plastic.
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to change the duration of the beep, the command is 11
instead of 10, and its argument is the duration in milliseconds.
Happy beeping,
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Pete Harlan
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hen
there's something wrong with your brain (but then you already said you
use vi ;)
HTH,
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ning on doing so the next time I set up a machine with a single
large drive, so let me know if it doesn't ;)
You'd have to make sure you copied your kernels into the right place,
of course. But it saves you the pain of having a bunch of partitions
that never turn out to be the right s
> On Fri, 8 May 1998, R. Chris Ross wrote:
>
...
> > Something like this:
> >
> > church.org local:pastor
>
> I'd probably do it with a virtusertable entry:
>
> @church.org pastor@
Yup, that's the way to go. Read all about it at:
http://www.sendmail.org/virtual-hosting.html
The o
> > And as long as I am here, I have noticed that the escape charactor in
> > kermit does not work ^\. Neither does there seem to be anyway to exit
> > dosemu other than killing the process.
>
> Kermit is full of bugs, and hamm does not have a current version.
Kermit is easy to download, compi
to package this up for
Debian unless source is released. There, now it's on-topic.
And please correct me if source for 5.0 is available...
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ching for "catch 22" brought you to the Debian pages because of
this thread. That's the origin of the phrase.
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> when I'm playing multiplayer quake (1.09) I can't move forwards or
> backwards.. I can in single player mode.. My opponents are win95 tcp/ip
> with quake 1.06.. is there an incompatibility?
IIRC, there is indeed an incompatibility between 1.09 and earlier
quakes. You or they need to down- or u
reate a file /etc/rc.boot/local and throw
whatever you want in there. It will get run as part of the bootup
process, will get run only once, and won't get overwritten when you
upgrade your box.
In ours I set the keyboard speed and rewrite /etc/issue to put the
current kernel version in the logi
connection.
Its drawbacks include a language that is even more poorly-designed
than TeX, bad error messages, and lack of visual tools. (Someone
should put the good concepts there into a proper programming
language.)
There's probably something better out there for what you need.
--
Pete Har
> >> One possible unconfirmed cause (Okay, a guess) Is the Win95
> partition
> >> OSR2? (Fat32?) To my knoweldge, the vfat filesystem doesn't yet
> >> support the alterations made by OSR2.
> >>
> >> Matt
> >
> >I have a bleeding-edge Windows95 OSR2 installation (October1997 OEM)
> >and (Debian
> One possible unconfirmed cause (Okay, a guess) Is the Win95 partition
> OSR2? (Fat32?) To my knoweldge, the vfat filesystem doesn't yet
> support the alterations made by OSR2.
>
> Matt
I have a bleeding-edge Windows95 OSR2 installation (October1997 OEM)
and (Debian) Linux reads it fine as vf
in languages I can't yet read.
Would someone please have mercy on a poor soul who is seeing DFSG
everywhere and has no idea what it stands for, and enlighten him?
Many thanks,
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Pete Harlan
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re?
Though if recompiling the kernel fixes it, maybe it's not a quake
problem.
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ne; not having
learned shell programming any other ways, I can't comment on them.
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Pete Harlan
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"This year will go down in history. For the first time, a civilized
nation has full gun regisration. Our streets will be safer, our
police more efficient, and the world will
. Bruce did this along with a lot of other non-M$ folks.
--
Pete Harlan, answering his own question having been emailed the
answer by Bruce.
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rsion numbering change? (Just
kidding about that last one ;)
Thanks,
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t's not the clearest way to think of it.
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> Now my link seems to be slow - is there a possibility to watch the
> throughput (like x.xx kb/s or sim.)?
"pppstats" isn't perfect, but it does what you ask.
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Pete Harlan
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http://www.mymenus.com/
The Best Recipe Site on the Web
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> How can I clear the scroll-back buffer when a use logs out (other than
> changing tty's)?
Echo four thousand spaces from .bash_logout?
--Pete
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od for five years of
upgrades.
But it's not as cool as getting it to work for free (though you'll
need to spend the $20 anyway on a hat after you tear your hair out).
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Pete Harlan
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[
> My problem is that I could not find the section that describes the features
> that are supported by uugetty but not by mgetty. Can you tell me what are
uugetty is horribly broken; this feature is not supported by mgetty.
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Pete Harlan
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(This is not just a flip answer
> Does anyone know how to take a screenshot of the X desktop?
xwd will grab the data. It's then an issue of converting the format
to one you like (netpbm package is usually the answer for this sort of
thing).
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Pete Harlan
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smail, and the client will use
elm or mail to read/delete email.
Thanks,
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Pete Harlan
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Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
t not Slackware) moving
the file across volumes? In such a case mv, if it works at all (I've
seen this behavior at least once in my life), can "move" by copying
and deleting.
--Pete Harlan
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> For the most part, it means "non-changing". While it would be nice to
> fix each package with a problem, doing so always runs the risk of breaking
> other packages on the system. Verifying the integrity of the system as a
Perhaps this has been taken a little too much to heart; I keep
updating
s/flakey nfs defaults,soft,noauto 0 0
/etc/rc.boot/local: (or wherever you put these things)
---
# Mount flakey soon.
echo mount /nfs/flakey | at now + 1 minute
Works for us; if you don't want to be emailed when it fails you can
redirect 2>/dev/null.
G'Luck,
--
Pet
: this will wipe out your partition!) you will exhaust your
buffers and experience problems on 2.0.30.
We've had no problems whatsoever running pre-patch-7 applied to
2.0.30; I'd recommend at least testing it, because if you don't find
problems with it it will soon become 2.0.31.
> It seems as if the mother board is a bit too new,
> 7100-7113 and 1300 is unknown.
I also had trouble like this (I don't remember the specific unknown
numbers; the machine was a new Dec Venturis FX-2 with Pentium MMX).
It disappeared when I installed Linus's (then-) latest patch,
pre-2.0.31-6.
, so an entry probably had
output it's trying to mail to me. Any way I can tell which one? Any
other ideas?
The machine is runnning Debian 1.2, kernel 2.0.29, and has plenty of
free resources (ram, disk, processes).
Thanks,
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Pete Harlan
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te the md5sums itself
from the packages as it worked.
Does anyone have dpkgcert.deb? If it's unavailable, such a thing
can't be that hard to write...
Thanks,
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Pete Harlan
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