;m suspecting the code in rcmd() code to start.
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Computer Engineering | http://lore.ece.utexas.edu/~rkilgore/
The University of Texas at Austin | (512) 471-8011
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hing?
>
> Thanks, Roy
There's a new package whiptail-xxx.deb. You can find it in
/debian/Incoming on llug.sep.bnl.gov.
later,
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Computer Engineering | http://lore.ece.utexas.edu/~rkilgore/
Th
/bootpart.htm.
This is a handy utility to have anyway.
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Computer Engineering | http://lore.ece.utexas.edu/~rkilgore/
The University of Texas at Austin | (512) 471-8011
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s a handful of m4 commands that are
used to create sendmail.cf. But the sendmail.mc is a much more
human readable (and WAY shorter) file. So if you want, you can
easily quickly modify stuff in the sendmail.mc file to try stuff
out.
good luck!
- rick
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Richard Kilgore
called for own IP address
Anyone have a clue? Please? Connecting to the net via modem
kinda sucks when I'm paying for a cable modem.
thanks,
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Computer Engineering | http://lore.ece.utexas.edu/~r
from XTerm to XTerm-color, and change the "#include"
line in XTerm-color to include XTerm-nocolor. Then, I think you
have to invoke the xterm command with the "+cm" options.
later,
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Comput
at's a pretty difficult question, since I'm not sure there are
many around who remember that much about what vi originally
looked like. However, vim has an option for running in
vi-compatible mode. Put the line "set compatible" in your
~/.vimrc file. You're giving up an
; replace with 129.168.200
>! ; repeat for all occurrences
>
>This is fewer keystrokes than vi.
Not exactly:
:% s/129.168.1\./129.168.200/g
later,
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Computer Engineering | h
eate others. One problem I noticed already is
that ash doesn't seem to recognize ~usr or even ~.
- rick
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Richard Kilgore | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Computer Engineering | http://lore.ece.utexas.edu/~rkilgore/
The University of Texas at Austin | (512) 471-8011
lution?
Change the command in.rshd in your /etc/inetd.conf file to read
in.rshd -h. Same works for in.rlogind, if you want easier rlogin.
Someone changed this a few months ago and did not document it
well.
later,
- rick
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