On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 15:30:52 +0200
Paal Marker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> David Fokkema wrote:
>
> >I bet there's a 2.4 kernel available. While installing the
> >machines, you could have chosen bf24 instead of linux, vanilla or
> >expert signifying that you wanted a 2.4 kernel installed.
> >
>
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 03:30:52PM +0200, Paal Marker wrote:
> David Fokkema wrote:
>
> >On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 03:06:40PM +0200, Paal Marker wrote:
> >
> >
> >>debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
> >>
> >>Still I am configuring the boxes in kiosk mode.
> >>
> >>First now I observe that the debian I down
David Fokkema wrote:
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 03:06:40PM +0200, Paal Marker wrote:
debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
Still I am configuring the boxes in kiosk mode.
First now I observe that the debian I downloaded last week included 2.2
kernel and not 2.4. Wich means I can not use the firewall script
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 03:06:40PM +0200, Paal Marker wrote:
> debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
>
> Still I am configuring the boxes in kiosk mode.
>
> First now I observe that the debian I downloaded last week included 2.2
> kernel and not 2.4. Wich means I can not use the firewall script wich
Ar
debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
Still I am configuring the boxes in kiosk mode.
First now I observe that the debian I downloaded last week included 2.2
kernel and not 2.4. Wich means I can not use the firewall script wich
use iptables. So I have rewritten the script for ipchains. I used the
same
On Tue, Mar 11, 2003 at 11:25:39PM -0300, Franco Galian wrote:
> Hi, I'm having trouble with a kernel update.
> First of all, I'd installed a Debian 3.0-r1. Everything worked fine, except
> for ipchains.
> When I tried to run ipchains -L, the following message appeared:
> "ipchains: Incompatible w
On Tue, Mar 11, 2003 at 11:25:39PM -0300, Franco Galian wrote:
> It says something about "unable to mount root...".
What filesystem do you have? If you are using reiserfs or something else
which is not included in the stock kernels, that would precisely explain
your problem.
Solution: Obtain and
Hi, I'm having trouble with a kernel update.
First of all, I'd installed a Debian 3.0-r1. Everything worked fine, except
for ipchains.
When I tried to run ipchains -L, the following message appeared:
"ipchains: Incompatible with this kernel".
After doing some research, I decided to upgrade the ker
also sprach Andrew Perrin (on Thu, 08 Mar 2001 09:36:55AM -0500):
> Is there any way to check the present value of this? I think it's already
> set for 7200, but it seems to time out earlier.
the only way i could think off is to create a connection that goes
through MASQ and then to inspect the ti
Is there any way to check the present value of this? I think it's already
set for 7200, but it seems to time out earlier.
--
Andrew J Perrin - Ph.D. Candidate, UC Berkeley, Dept. of Sociology
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA - h
also sprach Andrew Perrin (on Wed, 07 Mar 2001 08:11:50PM -0500):
> The problem I'm running into is that my wife's e-mail (which uses
> IMAP) often gets "TCP/IP Connection Dropped" errors. I suspect that these
> happen when ipchains times out her port mapping. Can someone help with
> setting ipchai
Greetings -
I have a small home network set up such that my wife's computer (Win
98), my linux laptop, and a linux sparc workstation all share a dialup
connection managed by my desktop, which is a debian potato machine. I use
ipchains to do this.
The problem I'm running into is that my wife's e-
Hi
I know it's the bleeding edge and maybe I should stay away but anyway I
wanted the support for my on-board sound card (and yes it works).
I've read that the new netfilter method should be able to operate in a
backward compatibility mode with ipchains - however I can not get it to
work. I've tr
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