Recenly I bought used Dell Wyse 3040.
Installed debian on it. Seems to work (althoug I do not use graphical
env on it)
I wanted to check mmc on it and I got:
--8<---cut here---start->8---
root@chamsa:~# mmc extcsd read /dev/mmcblk0|grep EXT_CSD
Device support
> Should I worry? What are these messages I'm seeing? Especially the ones
> that are reporting that the utilities sudo, dpkg-query and dpkg have
> changed. How do I know these are legitimate?
You should know whether the respective packages owning those files were updated
b
x27;, version '0.9.8g', is out of date, and possibly
a security risk.
Warning: Application 'sshd', version '5.1p1', is out of date, and possibly a
security risk.
Should I worry? What are these messages I'm seeing? Especially the ones that
are reporting that the
Incoming from Ralph Katz:
> On 07/28/04 18:10, s. keeling wrote:
>
> >Try /etc/inetd.conf
> >.^
>
> and
>
> On 07/28/04 16:50, Monique Y. Mudama wrote:
>
> > This should be /etc/inetd.conf
>
> Since I removed the services, apt-get remove uw-imapd qpopper, I wasn't
> surprised to
On 07/28/04 18:10, s. keeling wrote:
Try /etc/inetd.conf
.^
and
On 07/28/04 16:50, Monique Y. Mudama wrote:
> This should be /etc/inetd.conf
Since I removed the services, apt-get remove uw-imapd qpopper, I wasn't
surprised to see /etc/inetd.conf had no entries for them:
~$ grep imap
Incoming from Ralph Katz:
> On 07/27/04 21:30, Uli Paul wrote:
> >
> >what does your /etc/inet.conf file look like? Are the entries for imapd
> >and the others commented out (# sign at the beginning of the line)? Did
> >you run any mail client at that time?
> >
> >PS Please CC to me, as I do NOT
On 2004-07-28, Ralph Katz penned:
> On 07/27/04 21:30, Uli Paul wrote:
>> Hi Ralph,
>>
>> what does your /etc/inet.conf file look like? Are the entries for
>> imapd and the others commented out (# sign at the beginning of the
>> line)? Did you run any mail client at that time?
>>
>> Uli
>
On 07/27/04 21:30, Uli Paul wrote:
Hi Ralph,
what does your /etc/inet.conf file look like? Are the entries for imapd
and the others commented out (# sign at the beginning of the line)? Did
you run any mail client at that time?
Uli
PS Please CC to me, as I do NOT regulary read the list.
Thanks Ul
Hi Ralph,
what does your /etc/inet.conf file look like? Are the entries for imapd
and the others commented out (# sign at the beginning of the line)? Did
you run any mail client at that time?
Uli
PS Please CC to me, as I do NOT regulary read the list.
--
Ulrich Paul Paul Elektronik, Erlenweg 18,
While looking for something else, I stumbled over these log entries that
I don't understand. No other users were connected at the time, and no
user has ever used these services. This box should not run the identd,
imapd, or in.qpopper services! I've removed them now just to be sure.
How could
On Wednesday 16 June 2004 04:40, Micha Feigin wrote:
> On my home server I get about once every couple of days an empty email
> sent to myself as the regular user. The headers seem to indicate that
> it originated on the local machine but nothing else.
> Should I be worried about this? Any ideas
On my home server I get about once every couple of days an empty email
sent to myself as the regular user. The headers seem to indicate that
it originated on the local machine but nothing else.
I have smtp access I once setup there but currently its blocked to the
world using the firewall.
chkroo
On Wed, 24 Dec 2003, Tom Vier wrote:
> under heavy writes, i get this:
>
> hde: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error }
> hde: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC }
> hde: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error }
> hde: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatu
under heavy writes, i get this:
hde: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error }
hde: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC }
hde: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error }
hde: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC }
hde: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveRe
Well,
I do not think the fancy gui is what these people need in RH. It is avoiding
having to deal with distro spesific quirks and loose some time and money
becuase they would have to look into something "new". This was what several
told us. Finally we did find a company that took on the task even
On 03 Jun 1999, Anthony Campbell wrote:
> > How will the Debian community be able to fight in a market like this
> > in the future?
> One suggestion, if you're worried, is to make a voluntary donation to
> Debian. Most of the vendors of Debian disks offer the facility to do
> this when you buy the
On Wed, Jun 02, 1999 at 10:44:57PM -0500, Christian Dysthe wrote:
>
> Please tell me I am wrong! :)
>
Not that this is any real consolation to you, but pessimistically
speaking, everyone takes the same risk when depending on any piece of
technology. Unless you are the maintainer of that techno
>> We had a hard time finding someone willing to do our Debian server. All
>> of the ones we contaced to get our web server built told us they felt "more
>> confident doing a RH install" or they said: "RH is pretty strong in this
>> ares",
>> and some of them even had some nifty deals for us if we
On 02 Jun 1999, Christian Dysthe wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I do not really know if this belongs here, but I could not find anywhere else
> seeming more "appropriate" for this than among Debian users.
>
> I have chosen Debian for my personal use, lately my company has chosen Debian
> on several servers (in
On Wed, 2 Jun 1999, Christian Dysthe wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I do not really know if this belongs here, but I could not find anywhere else
> seeming more "appropriate" for this than among Debian users.
It's not that bad a place for it... Let's just hope no one decides to
escalate this to holy war statu
Hi,
I do not really know if this belongs here, but I could not find anywhere else
seeming more "appropriate" for this than among Debian users.
I have chosen Debian for my personal use, lately my company has chosen Debian
on several servers (including our web server), and we have suddenly become v
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