Just re-checking because I hadn't gotten a response. Anyone know how to
do this?
Thanks,
Jeremy
Jeremy Brown wrote:
Is there any script or command in Debian that will install development
header subpackages for all of the packages on my system?
If you'd like to compile software
I noticed that even if new versions of the kernel are available in the
Debian repository, "apt-get update; apt-get upgrade" won't retrieve them.
Is there any way I can have apt check to see if a new kernel version is
available and if so, obtain it?
Thanks,
Jeremy
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Christian Convey wrote:
I don't think I agree. I'm talking about cases where a good driver
exists in both Windows and Linux. My question is: given an existing
good driver, why is there more manual work to get a device like a
trackball useable under Linux rather than Windows?
Where I'm going i
Ron Farrer wrote:
On Wed, December 15, 2004 13:18, Ron Johnson said:
On Wed, 2004-12-15 at 14:49 -0500, Jeremy Brown wrote:
I noticed that even if new versions of the kernel are available in the
Debian repository, "apt-get update; apt-get upgrade" won't retrieve
them.
Is
user
jeremy.brown from :::172.28.2.115 port 1814 ssh2
Can anyone help me? I have always relied on the RedHat "authconfig"
application for setting up LDAP authentication and know very little
about configuring pam or pam-ldap by hand.
Thanks in advance,
Jeremy Brown
[EMAIL
OK, as per the suggestions given, I've changed my pam config files to read:
/etc/pam.d/common-account:
account sufficient pam_ldap.so
account required pam_unix.so try_first_pass
/etc/pam.d/common-auth:
auth sufficient pam_ldap.so
auth required pam_unix.so try_first_pass
/etc/pam.d/common-session:
s
Artur M. Piwko wrote:
Jeremy Brown wrote:
Now I can log in as jeremy.brown (although my home directory doesn't
exist on this machine), but once logged in my user name becomes "I
have no name!":
login as: jeremy.brown
Password:
Last login: Wed Oct 13 10:44:16 2004 from 172.28.
Robert Tilley wrote:
Make was issued as root. Why can't root connect to the xserver?
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/linux-2.6.8.1# make xconfig
HOSTCC scripts/basic/fixdep
HOSTCC scripts/basic/split-include
HOSTCC scripts/basic/docproc
HOSTCC scripts/kconfig/conf.o
HOSTCC scripts/kconfig/kco
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Brown
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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sufficient pam_unix.so use_first_pass
authrequired pam_deny.so
Jeremy
Jeremy Brown wrote:
The subject line is fairly self-explanatory. Currently users who
connect to my debian testing machine at work are prompted for their
username, then their password only once. If a user enters a bad
password,
Michael Sims wrote:
Jeremy Brown wrote:
The subject line is fairly self-explanatory. Currently users who
connect to my debian testing machine at work are prompted for their
username, then their password only once. If a user enters a bad
password, he or she is kicked out immediately and must
Michael Sims wrote:
Are your users using PuTTY? For me, the problem only manifests itself with
PuTTY, connecting from every other SSH client I tried gave the expected
behavior (3 password requests).
Actually, that seems to be the case here as well. I mostly use PuTTY,
so I hadn't even tried t
Michael Sims wrote:
Jeremy Brown wrote:
Debian:
Permission denied (publickey,keyboard-interactive).
Fedora:
Permission denied (publickey,password,keyboard-interactive).
Perhaps getting PAM to spit out this extra data would be more, eh,
amiable to PuTTY?
That's some good info. I no
Is there any script or command in Debian that will install development
header subpackages for all of the packages on my system?
If you'd like to compile software above and beyond what is shipped with
Debian, I've found that you end up manually searching for -dev packages
for each piece of softw
I've been trying Debian out off and on for the last two weeks and was
following the instructions about creating and installing a Sun Java SDK
package located in the java-common package...I was going to create a
file "/etc/profile.d/jdk.sh" (to initialize some environment variables,
mainly) when
Cameron Hutchison wrote:
A program must not depend on environment variables to get reasonable
defaults. (That's because these environment variables would have to
be set in a system-wide configuration file like `/etc/profile', which
is not supported by all shells.)
Sorry for the
Michael Satterwhite wrote:
Having just installed Sarge on my laptop, I tried downloading and installing
the Sun J2SE (from Sun - I didn't see it - or expect to see it! - in apt).
Unfortunately, it wouldn't install because of a missing library.
I *KNOW* there are many people writing Java on Debia
Jeremy Brown wrote:
I respect the established Debian policy...but I do disagree. I think
it is possible to build an environment-variable-setting system that
works with multiple shells, like the one currently in Slackware.
OK, I eat my words. After about 5 hours of thinking about this off and
John Summerfield wrote:
X stuff exceptions are xterms and imitations which can be configured
to run login shells.
I assume you get a login shell when you log in via GDM though, right?
--j
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Jeremy Brown wrote:
I'm relatively new to Debian, but am considering installing it on
several new servers I'm setting up. At least one of the servers will
need its root partition stored on a software RAID volume though, and a
casual glance at both the Debian stable and testing
Hello List,
I'm relatively new to Debian, but am considering installing it on
several new servers I'm setting up. At least one of the servers will
need its root partition stored on a software RAID volume though, and a
casual glance at both the Debian stable and testing installers seems to
ind
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