l be in
/usr/src/linux-x.x.x/arch/i386/boot (if you compiled for intel
processor); cd into the ../arch/i386/boot directory and do a "cp
bzImage /boot/vmlinuz-2.2.19-1" (again, substitue the correct kernel
version - extraversion numbers for 2.2.19-1).
As jb said, don't forget to edit /etc/lilo.conf, and run /sbin/lilo.
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was called but it shouldn't be hard to find.
>
> Emmanuel Seyman
>
> PS: Try the RPMS that contain "magic" in their names (`rpm -qa | grep
> magic`).
I think it's either 'magicdev' or magic-dev' (I
On Wednesday 18 April 2001 14:39, Jack Gillis wrote:
> On Wed, 18 Apr 2001 13:49:00 -0400, Larry Grover wrote:
> >If all you want to do is run a few windows programs, and you don't
> > mind paying a reasonable price for a piece of closed-source
> > software, then I re
ps I needed to run. Maybe it works better
now.
I haven't tried Plex86, so I won't comment on it.
If all you want to do is run a few windows programs, and you don't mind
paying a reasonable price for a piece of closed-source software, then I
recommend Win4lin.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
link that does.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> MB
http://hotwired.lycos.com/webmonkey/reference/browser_chart/
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0,1,0 /path/to/image
Your "speed" and "dev" options may be different from mine. If you
don't know what to use for "dev", run "cdrecord -scanbus".
To run cdrecord you need to be root, or you need to change
http://gnosis.cx/publish/programming/regular_expressions.html
The "regex" man page (section 7) is also good.
--
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Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Tuesday 10 April 2001 15:10, Mitchell Henderson wrote:
> hi
> try searching google for reg
On Thursday 05 April 2001 15:39, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For windows, I suggest putty:
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
It's free and open source.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
> I think http://www.openssh.org is a good
to select a window manager, and start
it up (you can get to the gnome control center throught the "foot" menu
on the panel (look under "settings"), or by typing "gnomecc" in a
terminal window). You might also be able to start saw
elpful information here:
http://www.idir.net/~gromitkc/winmodem.html
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What happens if you try an "rpm
-Uvh" or "rpm -ivh" instead?
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On Tuesday 27 March 2001 22:38, lee wrote:
> trying to do rpm -Fvh ( had to reformat /reinstall ) on the redhat 7
> gcc files
>
&g
2 machine), this will break
programs that link to librpm.so.0:
[grover@muaq165 grover]$ gnorpm
gnorpm: error in loading shared libraries: /usr/lib/librpm.so.0:
undefined symbol: fdio
[grover@muaq165 grover]$ kpackage
kpackage: error in loading shared libraries: /usr/lib/librpm.so.0:
und
running. You will
find that they are a (small) subset of the installed modules.
--
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Assoc Prof of Physiology
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On Wednesday 21 March 2001 04:24, Neil Hollow wrote:
-snip-
> Maybe someone on the list can answer a question that has puzzled me-
> w
is username.
To avoid "fudging" your system, make a backup copy of your .xinitrc
file before you edit it (good advice for any configuration files you
want to change). That way, if it things don't work as you expect, you
can copy the old file back.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Ass
ave your own use account, right? So make your
.xinitrc file read "exec startkde" and your wife's .xinitrc file read
"exec gnome-session".
__
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Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
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On Wednesday 14 March 2001 12:17, ABrady wrote:
> On 14-Mar-2001 Larry Grover opined:
> > On Wednesday 14 March 2001 08:00, Silviu Cojocaru wrote:
> >> On Wed, 14 Mar 2001, at 07:07 -0500, Mike Burger wrote:
> >> > Currently, Wolverine is the beta of RH7.1. It has a
tely, the good looks sometimes get in
the way of functionality.
3. No key board short-cuts (for file cut, copy, paste, etc). It would
be a real chore to use this thing on a laptop.
My reaction was to install KDE 2.1 -- which I'm very pleased with.
__
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Assoc Prof of Physio
Look through the configure file (or try "./configure --help"), you may be able to
specify the location of your qt files by giving an option to ./configure, eg:
./configure --with-qt-dir=/usr/lib/qt-2.3.0
__
Larry Grover, PhD
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Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On M
To stop gnome from "autorunning" when you insert a cd, you need to remove the magicdev
package.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Mon, 12 Mar 2001 10:00:27 -0600, eric clover <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> to stop it from comin
: http://www.alsa-project.org/
So, you will need something like this in your modules.conf file:
alias sound-slot-1 your-module-here
alias sound-service-1-0 your-module-here
What you substitute for "your-module-here" depends one what your
Thanks for the suggestion. I'll give it a try.
__
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Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Thu, 01 Mar 2001 10:06:04 -0700 (MST), John Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> It's the log.* in /etc/logrotate.d/samba. I changed mine to explic
?
Any clues, hints, or solutions are greatly appreciated.
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> to find out what that IP address translates to and for north-american IPs,
> you go to whois.arin.net. If you get something OTHER than a domain name, it
> should tell you which regional registrar to query. :-)
He asked for a web site, not a command.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
t luck. Is there a
> specific web site that I can go to for this lookup?
Try:
http://www.geektools.com/cgi-bin/whois.cgi
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https:
safe procedure as long as you leave your old kernel on the
system (install, don't upgrade).
If you haven't already done so, now is the time to make a boot disk (or two). Test
them before you try to install the new kernel.
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/dev/ttyS3 (modem), from 666 to 644 (I think). Once I changed the permissions back, I
had no more problems.
So maybe you should check the permissions on your /dev/ttySx (wherever you have your
modem)?
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
ns -A input -p tcp -s $REMOTENET -d $LOCALNET 6000 -j DENY
/sbin/ipchains -A input -p udp -s $REMOTENET -d $LOCALNET 6000 -j DENY
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then type "xlock -mode blank" in an xterm. This locks the X
display, leaving a blank screen.
-OR-
Install vlock, switch to a virtual terminal (ctl-alt-f2, etc), then type "vlock -a".
This locks all the virtual consoles (and will prevent switching back to the X display,
b
ou could try commenting out the options line in modules.conf? or maybe change
the value you have for int in the options line to whatever value you got from
/proc/interrupts?
-Also, are there any error messages relating to eth0 in /var/log/bootlog? or any of
the other logs?
--
Larr
bring eth0 up, if you've got 1-3 above set up correctly.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
> On 23-Jan-01 lee johnson opined:
>> i've read docs but can't decipher why linux isn't auto conneting me to
>> my @home
>>
One more package you might want to look at: Glove.
http://www.newplanetsoftware.com/glove/
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Wed, 17 Jan 2001 13:13:56 -0500 (EST), David Brett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This message pointed me in
t who will help you get your
firewall set up.
(4) Then set up portsentry, if you want to. There are other useful tools you might
want to look at too, like tripwire. Also, make it a habbit to reagularly read through
your log files.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sc
card/chip uses, you can probably find out by
reading though the kernel docs (or asking on this list -- someone here may have the
same hardware).
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Bob, my RH7 system does not have "bin86", but I do have the dev86 package installed.
I think this package provides what you are looking for:
[grover@localhost grover]$ rpm -qi dev86
-snip-
Description:
The dev86 package provides an assembler and linker for real mode 80x86
in
nd module ($alias)" modprobe $alias
RETURN=$?
But I guess it's probably documented somewhere...
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Sun, 24 Dec 2000 20:48:04 -0500 (EST), Justin Zygmont <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> how did y
dprobe the sound module (cs4232) after the boot-up
process is done?
On my computer, I had to move the the loading of the sound modules from
/etc/rc.sysinit to rc.local, since the sound modules refused to load any earlier
during the system start-up.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiolog
On Tue, 09 Jan 2001 20:17:00 -0400 (AST), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Luke C Gavel) wrote:
>
> How much to get that type of CPU? This would make a nifty
> upgrade for my socket 7 mtb.
I bought a K6-2 500 for $50 (US) back in October.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Un
max
the default is 4096.
You can raise the limit by, for example:
echo 8192 > /proc/sys/fs/file-max
or so I have read (I've never actually had to do this myself). You can read more
about this in the kernel docs.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of M
ferent version of RH than you are running. For instance, an rpm built
for RH7 may not install on a RH6.2 system, etc.
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e sure
> that the AMD K6-2 is a stable CPU and is compatible with Red Hat.
>
> Thanks for any input.
I've got a ~1.5 yr old machine with a K6-2 (400 initially, but recently 500 MHz)
processor in it. I've had no problems with it (currently running RH6.2 on it).
__
Larry Grove
check:
Is "soundcore.o" present under "/lib/modules//" or
"/lib/modules//misc/"?
Also, do you have an "/etc/conf.modules" and/or an "/etc/modules.conf" file? Your
system might be looking for mod
ir own cd now (RH7 comes on 5 CDs).
You need the doc CD or else download the howto you want from
ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/redhat-7.0/doc/en/HOWTOS/
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[E
e; I remember
> to compile the IP masquerading in the kernel;; it
> seems that it is not needed to run ipchains?
The 2.4 kernel uses iptables in place of ipchains. You can read about it here:
http://netfilter.kernelnotes.org
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiolo
t that walls off X (since it does
it's job, and there's no reason for anyone to connect to this machine at port 5999
anyway).
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
> just curious why you use 5999:6003. I thought they started at 6000 (that's
r ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
#
# Contributors:
# terminus ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (ICQ & DHCP, @home testing)
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What's
the URL? Do any applet's work? You do have java enabled in your preferences?
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://www.redhat.com/support/errata/RHSA-2000-109.html
You'll need to download 2 fairly large rpm's (several MBytes), either netscape-common
+ netscape-communicator or netscape-common + netscape navigator.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
__
> > > > I wonder if anyone can help here. When I am in
>> Netscape and bring up a
>> > > > video clip, I get this error:
>> > > >
>>
> I have the similar problem that couldn't run applet on
> netscape, and I found I didn't have
our system? maybe copying it into your ~/.netscape
directory will fix your problem?
Or else you could try setting the variable CLASSPATH so it point to the right location:
CLASSPATH=/path/to/java40/jar; export CLASSPATH
(then put it in your ~/.bash_profile to make it permenant).
--
Larry
ome across other programs for
recording sound under linux (some for the console, some for X), but I don't have the
program name or URL handy. You should be able to locate some of these programs at
freashmeat, linuxberg, rpmfind, or by doing a google search.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof
mkbootdisk.
The manpage explains how to use it (it's really simple). Basically, just "mkbootdisk
.
On Fri, 29 Dec 2000 23:36:19 -0800, Aaron Prohaska <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I don't currently have a boot floppy. Is there a command that will create
> one?
>
> thanks,
>
> Aaron
>
> Uncl
other lines in the file (put a "#" at the beginning of the line), and
maybe stick a few comment of your own in there (to remind yourself in 2 months what
you did to get this to work).
I can't help with your second problem, sorry.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
I think that either of these URL's will work:
http://huxley.real.com/real/player/unix/unix.html?src=rpbform
http://scopes.real.com/real/player/unix/unix.html?src=rpbform
This will get you rp8, which I guess must be the most recent RealPlayer for linux.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
a user, not root. You should also be able to do this manually -- for rp7, the
files are rpnp.so and raclass.zip, and they're located in /usr/lib/RealPlayer7/.
There should be some documentation installed by the rpm which explains how to do this.
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Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physi
reclaimed space, and then move some of your files over to the new partition.
For instance, if you can carve out enough new space for linux, you maybe able to move
/home over to the new partition.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
error messages which might indicate what is going wrong?
(3) Look in /var/httpd/ for any stale lock files (httpd.lock.#). Assuming httpd is
not running, delete the lock files.
(4) Are your disk(s) full? What's the output from df -h?
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eth0 succeeded
>
> the kernel.sysrq is in my sysctl.conf. this is a cat of that:
>
> [root@bl /etc]# cat sysctl.conf
> # Disables packet forwarding
> net.ipv4.ip_forward = 0
Don't you need net.ipv4.ip_forward set to 1 for ipmasq-ing? Or do you set thi
3.3.3?
>>
>> $ rpm -q XFree86
>> XFree86-4.0.1-1
>>
>> thornton
>
> I just tried the above and it says xfree86 is not installed?? Funny where I
> am running KDE2 etc... Don't I need xfree86 for that?
Did you try "rpm -q XFree86" or "rpm -q
21 1396) is running...", if httpd is running.
Have you checked your logs for any error messages?
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artition,
and reinstalled under linux/win4lin. I was able to reclaim > 500 MB of space, and I
don't have to reboot just to run one of the 3-4 programs I still need windows for.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
You can do this with ipmasqadm, which you can get here:
http://juanjox.kernelnotes.org/
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Tue, 19 Dec 2000 08:40:54 -0600, "Mulcahy, Chris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This message is in MIME f
linux even starts, then it is not an OS compatibility
problem. Maybe the sound card is bad? You might try exchanging it where you bought
it before giving up on it.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
On Sat, 16 Dec 2000 21:08:57 -0800, Aaron Prohaska <[EM
n box? Try
"http://207.200.89.226" -- this should take you to www.netscape.com.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Thu, 07 Dec 2000 21:57:12 +0100, Roadrunner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I still got the same prob
to mannually look up a name (ie,
type "nslookup home.netscape.com")?
Do you have an /etc/resolv.conf file? and what are its contents?
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internal modem look for an ISA modem with jumpers to setup
interrupt, I/O port, etc (avoid plug-n-pray), avoid PCI and USB modems.
5. Good luck!
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Wed, 22 Nov 2000 22:47:18 +, Oussama Dbaibo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
t to my user and group numbers -- and I
don't get the error message about "preserving permissions".
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
On Fri, 24 Nov 2000 13:06:37 -0500 (EST), David Brett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi Larry
>
&
You probably want to add the "umask" option to your "mount" command. I mount my win
partition with umask=0.
The umask option is described in the manpage for mount.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
On Fri, 24 Nov 2000 11:36:15 -050
etc.
When you run fdisk/cfdisk be careful not to print the partition table (unless you're
sure you want to make changes).
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Yes, I have one in the machine I'm using right now -- running the redhat 2.2.16-3
kernel -- and sndconfig recognizes it on my machine.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Wed, 22 Nov 2000 14:04:29 -0300, Toni Guedes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr
Reilly web site, you can view sample chapters from each.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Mon, 13 Nov 2000 10:26:11 -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I'm interested in buying a reference book on Linux, it does not necessarily
> have to be
On Sun, 12 Nov 2000 23:22:09 -0500, David Kramer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Larry Grover wrote:
>>
>> Starting this morning, I'm getting dozens of entries like this in my maillog:
>>
>> Nov 8 13:01:04 muaq165 sendmail[3941]: NAA03940: forward
>/
I fixed my problem.
Sendmail wasn't complaining about my home directory, "/home/grover", it was
complaining about the permissions on the parent directory, "/home".
When I made a new "/home" on the new drive, it got created with mode 775, I chmoded it
Thanks for your answer, but my home directory is not group writable (sorry, I should
have included this with my first post):
drwx-- 99 grover grover 8192 Nov 8 18:12 grover
I did just put a second hard drive in the machine, copied all of /home over to the new
drive (cp -a), and
Starting this morning, I'm getting dozens of entries like this in my maillog:
Nov 8 13:01:04 muaq165 sendmail[3941]: NAA03940: forward
/home/grover/.forward.muaq165: Group writable directory
Nov 8 13:01:04 muaq165 sendmail[3941]: NAA03940: forward /home/grover/.forward: Group
wri
gt; if you're not the owner of that directory, there's no way you can
> see its contents as it stands.
>
> rday
To see the contents of this directory you'll need to either:
(1) su/login as root (or as the owner of the directory)
or
(2) persuade the owner to chmod the d
cat /etc/issue or cat /etc/redhat-release
for example:
# cat /etc/issue
Red Hat Linux release 6.2 (Zoot)
Kernel 2.2.16-3 on an i586
/etc/issue gets written by rc.local every time the system boots.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Thu, 02 Nov
Do you have a line that says "PERSIST=yes" in your
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ppp0 file?
If so, I think you need to change it to "PERSIST=no", or else just remove the line.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
On Mon, 30 Oct 2000
inary package will be under:
/usr/src/redhat/RPMS/
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
On Mon, 30 Oct 2000 00:26:22 -0500, Etienne Larrivee
> [root@acolyte01 /root]# rpm -U ~kexkey/glibc-2.1.92-14.i686.rpm
> error: failed dependencies:
> r
x27;d look somewhere else -- maybe the ThinkPad.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Sun, 29 Oct 2000 09:05:00 -0500, Jason Costomiris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I've already been to the Linux-Laptop site. It's a fantastic resource
>
I don't know if this is the URL you were thinking of, but here's a page that does this
(at http://grc.com):
https://grc.com/x/ne.dll?bh0bkyd2
I don't think it does a thorough scan, but it does probe for some of the common
services (ftp, telnet, http, etc).
--
Larry Grover, Ph
`halt` command.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Fri, 27 Oct 2000 14:23:02 -0400 (EDT), Charles Galpin
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> yeah, but not much more use. So I downloaded the source, and see that in
> halt.c the halt/poweroff com
I found the answer to one of these questions myself:
rc.sysinit (line 540) rm's /halt, /poweroff, and a few other files that might be lying
around.
But I haven't found out what creates these files during shutdown. Does anyone know?
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Mar
halt or a halt -p.
>
> Strange, but true (I think).
Yes, I think this is strange too, but it appears to be true.
Does anyone know what script or program creates the /poweroff and /halt files? or what
script cleans them up when the system re-starts?
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Phys
s originally installed by 7.0.
I have no idea how this change in behavior would affect someone who boots into graphic
mode (run level 5).
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Mon, 23 Oct 2000 20:05:35 +0200, Gustav Schaffter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrot
er is supposed to be turned off, or else to create the file `/halt` if the power is
to be left on??
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Sun, 22 Oct 2000 14:21:50 -0500, "Chad W. Skinner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Larry,
>>
&g
your comments, I think maybe something like this was intended:
if [ -x /sbin/poweroff -o -x /sbin/halt ]; then
HALTARGS="$HALTARGS -p"
fi
I'll try this out the next time I'm at my laptop (the only machine I shutdown
regularly).
Thanks for your thoughts!
__
Larry Grover, PhD
$HALTARGS
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
On Sat, 21 Oct 2000 19:46:58 -0400, "John P. Verel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Just upgraded to RH7 and all went fine. One question, though. With
> the 6.2 UP Kernel, my machine would aut
on
your system.
7. Read your logs regularly. This can be a pain if your logs get big, but there are
lots of tools our there which can summarize your logs to make the reading easier.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
__
the
floppy, add "-o umask=000".
You can find out more about the umask and other mount options by reading the manpage
for mount.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Tue, 17 Oct 2000 16:18:27 +0600, Selim Jahangir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
f ipchains is that if a packet does not match a DENY or REJECT rule,
then it is allowed through. So in order to restrict access to your http server you
need to have at least two rules: one to allow connections you want, and one (or more)
to reject connections you don't want.
__
Larry Gr
same thing.
I think comparing differences between "/etc/rc.d/init.d/halt" in RH6.2 and RH7.0 will
point to an obvious solution, but I haven't yet had time to explore this.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
__
check under the /usr/src/redhat/SPECS and
/usr/src/redhat/SOURCES dirs.
If you have Midnight Commander (mc) on your system, you can use that program to look
inside RPMs before you install (mc can also look inside *.tar.gz files too).
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall
#x27;s an attempted crack? If not what would
>cause that?
>
> JW
I think this is from logrotate, which gets run out of /etc/cron.daily (at 4:02 AM on
all of my systems) -- I think a typical RH installation sets this up by default.
__
Larry
stall many packages. Evolution does more than just email, and that may
be a plus or a minus, depending on what you're looking for. It's also fairly new, and
may not be real stable yet.
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Sun, 08 Oct 2000 19:07:0
You might take a look at the scientific/technical section on:
http://www.linuxapps.com
You'll find information on about a dozen plotting/graphing apps (many are free, but I
think at least some are commercial).
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
O
232
and I suppose I could get around the problem by putting these two lines into my
rc.local file.
But I'd prefer to know what is causing the problem, so I can fix it properly.
Can anyone help with this??
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof
lems (every 'halt' since has gone smoothly).
Can anyone tell me what happened here?
Does this sound like a hadrware or a software problem?
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
___
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[
.
Wow, what a difference: SO5.2 is noticeably bigger and slower than SO5.1, with no
additional features (that I could see). I nuked SO5.2 pretty quickly, and put SO5.1
back on the system.
--
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch Med
___
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
Well, sod == "piece of dirt".
That seems to work (at least, if you intended an insult).
On Fri, 06 Oct 2000 12:08:55 -0400 (EDT), Charles Galpin
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> mmh. I'm not sure. Can anyone clarify? I think the intent was clear though
>:)
>
> On Fri, 6 Oct 2000, Burke, Thoma
cked and is being used to attempt
attacks on others? Should I contact the admin of that machine?
__
Larry Grover, PhD
Assoc Prof of Physiology
Marshall Univ Sch of Med
On Tue, 03 Oct 2000 16:24:00 -0400, "Burke, Thomas G."
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Looks to me like som
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