> At the prompt, I did the following command:
>
> # sh sign.sh server.csr
> : command not foundline: 6:
> 'usr/sbin/sign.sh: sign.sh: line 15: syntax error near
> unexpected token `in
> 'usr/sbin/sign.sh: sign.sh: line 15: `case $CSR
> in
>
> Now, what I don't understand is that I used the sy
Hello again, Servie.
Since sign.sh is a script, have you checked that the interpreter
at line number 1 (should be "#!/bin/sh" in this case) is correct?
Maybe the path is different in your system, or another interpreter
is required like ksh or bash (that would be #!/bin/ksh or #!/bin/bash
on lin
> Hello Anders,
Hi, Servie.
> I am just puzzled if doing rpm -Uvh *.rpm is not
> allowed at all by FC3? AFAIK, with Red Hat distros
> 7.3, 8.0 or 9.0 I could install all the rpm all
> together. Not very sure, if this is a new security
> feature by FC3?
Not very sure myself. I have'nt tried
Hello Servie.
Have you checked that the directory, where gcc is located,
is in your PATH environment variable?
You can check by doing either of this:
echo $PATH
or:
type gcc
In order to add the directory where gcc is located, before
running make, do this:
PATH=$PATH:
export PATH
Then run ma
There is also the possibility to use the getpeername() function
on a connected socket.
Here are some pieces of code:
struct sockaddr_in addr;
int address_size;
address_size = sizeof(addr);
if(getpeername(sd, &addr, &address_size) != -1)
{
addr.sin_addr.
Hello everyone.
I am quite new to ssl, so I have a question.
While a connection between a pc client and
a web server is encrypted, I do not know if
the connection that may result thereafter is
encrypted too, that is, if ssl.conf contain
an entry that look like this:
SetHandler weblogic-handl